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Is Zimmerman White because a "Hate Crime" form doesn't list Hispanic as one of the options? (PDF)
FBI.gov ^ | 3/23/2012 | Vanity

Posted on 03/23/2012 9:45:24 AM PDT by servo1969

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To: servo1969

Hispanics are Caucasian.

If you don’t believe it, look it up.


41 posted on 03/23/2012 11:05:42 AM PDT by FNU LNU (Nothing runs like a Deere, nothing smells like a john)
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To: ROLF of the HILL COUNTRY

You are correct. But that is not how it is used in government and institutional classifications. Hispanic is called a “race” in idenitification.

Why? Because Liberals wanted to divide them from whitey in the hate and blame whitey diversity power effort. Hispanic Christians have more in common culturally with whites in the US than they do with Blacks. Liberals wanted to isloate them from whites so they made them into an invented race tribe.


42 posted on 03/23/2012 11:05:50 AM PDT by SaraJohnson
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To: Buckeye McFrog

They would speak up if he were being portrayed as hispanic and being railroaded. As long as they say he is white, hispanics will be quiet.


43 posted on 03/23/2012 12:17:26 PM PDT by Netizen (Path to citizenship = Scamnesty. If you give it away, more will come. Who's pilfering your wallet?)
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To: Phantom Phixer

This isn’t what you were looking for, but it is kind of interesting.

Race and the Application of the Death Penalty

http://www.capitalpunishmentincontext.org/issues/race

Questions of whether or not the death penalty was applied fairly along racial lines surfaced in McCleskey v. Kemp. McCleskey argued that there was racial discrimination in the application of Georgia’s death penalty. As evidence for this claim, McCleskey presented the results of an extensive statistical study by Professor David Baldus of the University of Iowa Law Schooland his colleagues. Baldus’ study collected information about all the capital defendants in Georgia—whether or not they were sentenced to death. This information allowed the researchers to control for hundreds of variables about the offender, victim and crime—thereby permitting a statistical comparison of cases in order to see what factors influenced whether a person was sentenced to death. Professor Baldus found, among other things, that:

Fewer than 40% of Georgia homicide cases involve white victims, but in 87% of the cases in which a death sentence is imposed the victim is white. White-victim cases are roughly eleven times more likely than black-victim cases to result in a sentence of death.

When the race of the defendant is added to the analysis, the following pattern appears: 22% of black defendants who kill white victims are sentenced to death; 8% of white defendants who kill white victims are sentenced to death; 1% of black defendants who kill black victims are sentenced to death; and 3% of white defendants who kill black victims are sentenced to death. (Only 64 of the approximately 2500 homicide cases studied involved killings of blacks by whites, so the 3% figure in this category represents a total of two death sentences over a six-year period. Thus, the reason why a bias against black defendants is not even more apparent is that most black defendants have killed black victims; almost no cases are found of white defendants who have killed black victims; and virtually no defendant convicted of killing a black victim gets the death penalty.)

No factor other than race explains these racial patterns. The multiple-regression analysis with the greatest explanatory power shows that after controlling for non-racial factors, murderers of white victims receive a death sentence 4.3 times more frequently than murderers of black victims. The race of the victim proves to be as good a predictor of a capital sentence as the aggravating circumstances spelled out in the Georgia statute, such as whether the defendant has a prior murder conviction or was the primary actor in the present murder.

Only 5% of Georgia killings result in a death sentence; yet, when more than 230 non-racial variables are controlled for, the death-sentencing rate is 6% higher in white-victim cases than in black-victim cases. A murderer therefore incurs less risk of death by committing the murder in the first place than by selecting a white victim instead of a black one.

The effects of race are not uniform across the spectrum of homicide cases. In the least aggravated cases, almost no defendants are sentenced to death; in the most aggravated cases, a high percentage of defendants are sentenced to death regardless of their race or their victim’s; it is in the mid-range of cases which, as it happens, includes cases like McCleskey’s that race has its greatest influence. In these mid-range cases, death sentences are imposed on 34% of the killers of white victims and 14% of the killers of black victims. In other words, twenty out of every thirty-four defendants sentenced to die for killing a white victim would not have received a death sentence if their victims had been black.


44 posted on 03/23/2012 2:02:19 PM PDT by Netizen (Path to citizenship = Scamnesty. If you give it away, more will come. Who's pilfering your wallet?)
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To: scotts8826

Only one thing wrong with your point: While the form does not list “Hispanic” as the offender, it lists “anti-Hispanic” as a motivation. It’s not consistent, and has not been for a very long time.

This has let to skewed statistics, it’s been known, and DoJ refuses to address the anomaly.


45 posted on 03/23/2012 2:14:57 PM PDT by Cyber Liberty (The only flaw is that America doesn't recognize Cyber's omniscience. -- sergeantdave)
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