This was a recent debate that I remember was started anew back when that man was dragged to death in Texas. Everyone started clamoring for hate crimes legislation, and it was also a central theme to the murder of that gay guy in the Midwest.
My feeling is that does the motive for the murder really matter all that much in these cases? First degree murder is first degree murder, whether it is motivated by racial hatred, religious hatred, or just a general disregard for human life. Does the death of a black man at the hands of a white man mean more than the death of a white man by the same murderer?
I can understand legislation that plugs a hole and increases the penalty in certain cases that might otherwise allow a racist criminal to escape with a light sentence, perhaps assault with minimal physical injury (not battery). Murder, however, is already punishable to the maximum extent allowed -- how do you further criminalize it?
Anyway, I just wonder what others think of that.
My feeling is that does the motive for the murder really matter all that much in these cases? First degree murder is first degree murder, whether it is motivated by racial hatred, religious hatred, or just a general disregard for human life. Does the death of a black man at the hands of a white man mean more than the death of a white man by the same murderer?
I can understand legislation that plugs a hole and increases the penalty in certain cases that might otherwise allow a racist criminal to escape with a light sentence, perhaps assault with minimal physical injury (not battery). Murder, however, is already punishable to the maximum extent allowed -- how do you further criminalize it?
Anyway, I just wonder what others think of that.
