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<dc:title>115 HR 1727 IH: Emmett Till and Will Brown Justice for Victims of Lynching Act of 2021</dc:title>
<dc:publisher>U.S. House of Representatives</dc:publisher>
<dc:date>2021-03-10</dc:date>
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<dc:language>EN</dc:language>
<dc:rights>Pursuant to Title 17 Section 105 of the United States Code, this file is not subject to copyright protection and is in the public domain.</dc:rights>
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<distribution-code display="yes">I</distribution-code><congress display="yes">117th CONGRESS</congress><session display="yes">1st Session</session><legis-num display="yes">H. R. 1727</legis-num><current-chamber>IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES</current-chamber><action display="yes"><action-date date="20210310">March 10, 2021</action-date><action-desc><sponsor name-id="B001298">Mr. Bacon</sponsor> (for himself, <cosponsor name-id="T000479">Mr. Taylor</cosponsor>, and <cosponsor name-id="M001196">Mr. Moulton</cosponsor>) introduced the following bill; which was referred to the <committee-name committee-id="HJU00">Committee on the Judiciary</committee-name></action-desc></action><legis-type>A BILL</legis-type><official-title display="yes">To amend title 18, United States Code, to specify lynching as a deprivation of civil rights, and for other purposes.</official-title></form><legis-body id="H7A4A9BE6BA53475E87C8137539405516" style="OLC"><section id="HF12BCCFD466141BBB4B14878EE75CA0B" section-type="section-one"><enum>1.</enum><header>Short title</header><text display-inline="no-display-inline">This Act may be cited as the <quote><short-title>Emmett Till and Will Brown Justice for Victims of Lynching Act of 2021</short-title></quote>.</text></section><section id="HA4A17730CF0A4652BDD04466757CD710"><enum>2.</enum><header>Findings</header><text display-inline="no-display-inline">Congress finds the following:</text><paragraph id="HF76A5D27CE084A41A0004DE53E18B0C3"><enum>(1)</enum><text>The crime of lynching succeeded slavery as the ultimate expression of racism in the United States following Reconstruction.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="HEA2471C08CAB4E20AB314D98DFBE1E80"><enum>(2)</enum><text>Lynching was a widely acknowledged practice in the United States until the middle of the 20th century.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="HF4FBAA396AB4441CB86F06C050EE341F"><enum>(3)</enum><text>Lynching was a crime that occurred throughout the United States, with documented incidents in all but 4 States.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="H51F2617AC8B84822912527B26F3AFE8E"><enum>(4)</enum><text>At least 4,742 people, predominantly African Americans, were reported lynched in the United States between 1882 and 1968.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="HF5D9B47A8EE9429AB42C9574B1AEDA85"><enum>(5)</enum><text>Ninety-nine percent of all perpetrators of lynching escaped from punishment by State or local officials.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="HB3054FCB0EA847989FF57DAC56ED2D51"><enum>(6)</enum><text>Lynching prompted African Americans to form the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (referred to in this section as the <quote>NAACP</quote>) and prompted members of B'nai B'rith to found the Anti-Defamation League.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="HB83BA961E75A4E47948FAF15F8DB5C63"><enum>(7)</enum><text>Mr. Walter White, as a member of the NAACP and later as the executive secretary of the NAACP from 1931 to 1955, meticulously investigated lynchings in the United States and worked tirelessly to end segregation and racialized terror.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="HF0CB2A41D5864C52A343FA92CA29A226"><enum>(8)</enum><text>Nearly 200 anti-lynching bills were introduced in Congress during the first half of the 20th century.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="HB42422A540DA4DC1B7CF4B3974F57F87"><enum>(9)</enum><text>Between 1890 and 1952, 7 Presidents petitioned Congress to end lynching.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="H62BBE987DACF493B821332DBBEB8D53F"><enum>(10)</enum><text>Between 1920 and 1940, the House of Representatives passed 3 strong anti-lynching measures.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="H4EB1271971464078A4890380506C8CA6"><enum>(11)</enum><text>Protection against lynching was the minimum and most basic of Federal responsibilities, and the Senate considered but failed to enact anti-lynching legislation despite repeated requests by civil rights groups, Presidents, and the House of Representatives to do so.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="HF83FBA76738348928F9E704C67DE4648"><enum>(12)</enum><text>The publication of <quote>Without Sanctuary: Lynching Photography in America</quote> helped bring greater awareness and proper recognition of the victims of lynching.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="H840E1FE2DEA841C4A08C6AE6FDDA0292"><enum>(13)</enum><text>Only by coming to terms with history can the United States effectively champion human rights abroad.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="H8AF09E65B6C241C1AC2FA02C7AD29C08"><enum>(14)</enum><text>An apology offered in the spirit of true repentance moves the United States toward reconciliation and may become central to a new understanding, on which improved racial relations can be forged.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="H98F9311F9C0349A1B321AB16AD1C450F"><enum>(15)</enum><text>Having concluded that a reckoning with our own history is the only way the country can effectively champion human rights abroad, 90 Members of the United States Senate agreed to Senate Resolution 39, 109th Congress, on June 13, 2005, to apologize to the victims of lynching and the descendants of those victims for the failure of the Senate to enact anti-lynching legislation.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="HB5C38E1C85D8462889A64AE047E1D717"><enum>(16)</enum><text>The National Memorial for Peace and Justice, which opened to the public in Montgomery, Alabama, on April 26, 2018, is the Nation’s first memorial dedicated to the legacy of enslaved Black people, people terrorized by lynching, African Americans humiliated by racial segregation and Jim Crow, and people of color burdened with contemporary presumptions of guilt and police violence.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="H5E7EC010890647A6AE97907A17975789"><enum>(17)</enum><text>Notwithstanding the Senate’s apology and the heightened awareness and education about the Nation’s legacy with lynching, it is wholly necessary and appropriate for the Congress to enact legislation, after 100 years of unsuccessful legislative efforts, finally to make lynching a Federal crime.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="H1904840644454E8EA05ACAA61E84FA19"><enum>(18)</enum><text>Further, it is the sense of Congress that criminal action by a group increases the likelihood that the criminal object of that group will be successfully attained and decreases the probability that the individuals involved will depart from their path of criminality. Therefore, it is appropriate to specify criminal penalties for the crime of lynching, or any attempt or conspiracy to commit lynching.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="H63796C248E0E4E5090F6480BB47CA6F3"><enum>(19)</enum><text>The United States Senate agreed to unanimously Senate Resolution 118, 115th Congress, on April 5, 2017, <quote>[c]ondemning hate crime and any other form of racism, religious or ethnic bias, discrimination, incitement to violence, or animus targeting a minority in the United States</quote> and taking notice specifically of Federal Bureau of Investigation statistics demonstrating that <quote>among single-bias hate crime incidents in the United States, 59.2 percent of victims were targeted due to racial, ethnic, or ancestral bias, and among those victims, 52.2 percent were victims of crimes motivated by the offenders’ anti-Black or anti-African American bias</quote>.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="HE3BB00711A4548B4A68ACF2B46F812E0"><enum>(20)</enum><text>On September 14, 2017, President Donald J. Trump signed into law Senate Joint Resolution 49 (<external-xref legal-doc="public-law" parsable-cite="pl/115/58">Public Law 115–58</external-xref>; 131 Stat. 1149), wherein Congress <quote>condemn[ed] the racist violence and domestic terrorist attack that took place between August 11 and August 12, 2017, in Charlottesville, Virginia</quote> and <quote>urg[ed] the President and his administration to speak out against hate groups that espouse racism, extremism, xenophobia, anti-Semitism, and White supremacy; and use all resources available to the President and the President’s Cabinet to address the growing prevalence of those hate groups in the United States</quote>.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="H44AD6D0A2C7649B8A947C4C15E513633"><enum>(21)</enum><text>Senate Joint Resolution 49 (<external-xref legal-doc="public-law" parsable-cite="pl/115/58">Public Law 115–58</external-xref>; 131 Stat. 1149) specifically took notice of <quote>hundreds of torch-bearing White nationalists, White supremacists, Klansmen, and neo-Nazis [who] chanted racist, anti-Semitic, and anti-immigrant slogans and violently engaged with counter-demonstrators on and around the grounds of the University of Virginia in Charlottesville</quote> and that these groups <quote>reportedly are organizing similar events in other cities in the United States and communities everywhere are concerned about the growing and open display of hate and violence being perpetrated by those groups</quote>.</text></paragraph><paragraph id="HA912F65782BB439DAA6E7C2FFD33E02F"><enum>(22)</enum><text>Lynching was a pernicious and pervasive tool that was used to interfere with multiple aspects of life—including the exercise of federally protected rights, as enumerated in section 245 of title 18, United States Code, housing rights, as enumerated in section 901 of the Civil Rights Act of 1968 (<external-xref legal-doc="usc" parsable-cite="usc/42/3631">42 U.S.C. 3631</external-xref>), and the free exercise of religion, as enumerated in section 247 of title 18, United States Code. Interference with these rights was often effectuated by multiple offenders and groups, rather than isolated individuals. Therefore, prohibiting conspiracies to violate each of these rights recognizes the history of lynching in the United States and serves to prohibit its use in the future.</text></paragraph></section><section id="H88B4FD250009482895EFC6B0EF7C07C7"><enum>3.</enum><header>Lynching</header><subsection id="H596FA9A51BEF408DB448B4055F3195E4"><enum>(a)</enum><header>Offense</header><text><external-xref legal-doc="usc-chapter" parsable-cite="usc-chapter/18/13">Chapter 13</external-xref> of title 18, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following:</text><quoted-block display-inline="no-display-inline" id="H7DEEE45CAF554C23AE7E75490CD4E58E" style="USC"><section id="H45469232B9BE49489117E4E8C1010516"><enum>250.</enum><header>Lynching</header><text display-inline="no-display-inline">Whoever conspires with another person to violate section 245, 247, or 249 of this title or section 901 of the Civil Rights Act of 1968 (<external-xref legal-doc="usc" parsable-cite="usc/42/3631">42 U.S.C. 3631</external-xref>) shall be punished in the same manner as a completed violation of such section, except that if the maximum term of imprisonment for such completed violation is less than 10 years, the person may be imprisoned for not more than 10 years.</text></section><after-quoted-block>.</after-quoted-block></quoted-block></subsection><subsection id="H35984FABCD8D4A78A6974AD83D9C45CF"><enum>(b)</enum><header>Table of sections amendment</header><text>The table of sections for <external-xref legal-doc="usc-chapter" parsable-cite="usc-chapter/18/13">chapter 13</external-xref> of title 18, United States Code, is amended by inserting after the item relating to <external-xref legal-doc="usc" parsable-cite="usc/18/249">section 249</external-xref> the following:</text><quoted-block id="H218813186CB74794A1DA6804A2BC645C" style="OLC"><toc><toc-entry idref="H45469232B9BE49489117E4E8C1010516" level="section">250. Lynching.</toc-entry></toc><after-quoted-block>.</after-quoted-block></quoted-block></subsection></section></legis-body></bill> 

