Hate crimes jumped 51 per cent in part spurred by pandemic, Toronto police report
TORONTO — Hate crime complaints and arrests in the country’s largest city jumped sharply last year, with Jewish and Black people the most common targets, according to an annual police report released on Thursday.
The report cites the COVID-19 pandemic first reported in Wuhan, China, and the police murder of George Floyd, a Black man in Minneapolis, as contributing to the spike in hate-crime incidents.
The service called the increase unprecedented.
In all, 210 complaints were reported to police, up from 139 in 2020 — a 51 per cent jump — and well above the average of 152 incidents per year noted over the past decade.