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Indicator Gauge Icon Legend

Legend Colors

Red is bad, green is good, blue is not statistically different/neutral.

Compared to Distribution

an indicator guage with the arrow in the green the value is in the best half of communities.

an indicator guage with the arrow in the yellow the value is in the 2nd worst quarter of communities.

an indicator guage with the arrow in the red the value is in the worst quarter of communities.

Compared to Target

green circle with white tick inside it meets target; red circle with white cross inside it does not meet target.

Compared to a Single Value

green diamond with downward arrow inside it lower than the comparison value; red diamond with downward arrow inside it higher than the comparison value; blue diamond with downward arrow inside it not statistically different from comparison value.

Trend

green square outline with upward trending arrow inside it green square outline with downward trending arrow inside it non-significant change over time; green square with upward trending arrow inside it green square with downward trending arrow inside it significant change over time; blue square with equals sign no change over time.

Compared to Prior Value

green triangle with upward trending arrow inside it higher than the previous measurement period; green triangle with downward trending arrow inside it lower than the previous measurement period; blue equals sign no statistically different change  from previous measurement period.

green chart bars Significantly better than the overall value

red chart bars Significantly worse than the overall value

light blue chart bars No significant difference with the overall value

gray chart bars No data on significance available

More information about the gauges and icons

Hate Crime Offenses

County: Sacramento
Measurement Period: 2022
This indicator shows the number of hate crime offenses reported by law enforcement officials.

Why is this important?

A hate crime is committed when the motivation for committing the crime is based on bias against people or groups with specific characteristics that are defined by the law. This includes crime committed based on the victim’s perceived or actual race, color, religion, national origin, sexual orientation, gender, gender identity, or disability. Hate crimes affect families, communities, and at times, the entire nation. It is estimated that an average of 250,000 hate crimes are committed in the United States each year. The majority of these are not reported to law enforcement. Reporting hate crimes allows communities and law enforcement to fully understand the scope of the problem in a community and put resources toward preventing and addressing attacks based on bias and hate (U.S. Department of Justice).

Considerations for Equitable Approaches: Over the past 10 years, the largest proportion of reported hate crimes have been committed based on race/ethnicity/ancestry, followed by religion and sexual orientation. Hate crimes committed based on anti-Black or African American bias are the largest category of all bias motivation categories. Of religion-related incidents, anti-Jewish incidents make up the largest bias category (U.S. Department of Justice, Federal Bureau of Investigation). In addition to actions by law enforcement, communities can work to address hate crimes by creating community policing models, developing law enforcement-community partnerships, assessing the problem utilizing the SARA (scanning, analyzing, responding, assessing) model, and creating community-wide public awareness campaigns (U.S. Department of Justice).

More...
116
offenses
Source: California Department of Justice
Measurement period: 2022
Maintained by: Conduent Healthy Communities Institute
Last update: February 2024

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Filed under: Community / Crime & Crime Prevention, Health Behaviors