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Home Local news South Carolina Needs Hate Crime Law, Urges Black Man Targeted in Shooting While Waiting for Work
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South Carolina Needs Hate Crime Law, Urges Black Man Targeted in Shooting While Waiting for Work

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Black man shot at while waiting to go to work says South Carolina needs hate crime law
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Published on 07 September 2025
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COLUMBIA, S.C. – When Jarvis McKenzie made eye contact with the man in the car, the animosity he perceived was unmistakable. As the man lifted a rifle, discharged it overhead, and shouted “you better get running, boy!” while McKenzie sought refuge behind a brick wall, he understood it was fueled by his being Black.

McKenzie recounted his experience a month following the incident, highlighting that South Carolina and Wyoming remain without state-specific hate crime legislation.

In an effort to exert pressure on the South Carolina Senate, around twenty-four local jurisdictions have enacted their own hate crime laws. These ordinances are part of a wider push for a state law imposing harsher penalties on crimes motivated by the victim’s race, religion, sexual orientation, gender, or ethnicity.

Despite a decade-long campaign involving business entities, survivors of the Charleston church massacre in which nine individuals perished, and some Republican senators, legislative approval remains elusive.

Local governments pass hate crime laws but with very light penalties

Richland County, where McKenzie resides, has implemented a hate crime ordinance, making it the first to charge the white man caught on surveillance footage as he grabbed the rifle and fired it before driving into the neighborhood on July 24.

Local ordinances are, however, limited to misdemeanor charges with jail time not exceeding a month. The proposed state-level hate crime law, supported by business groups, aims to enhance sentencing lengths for offenses like assault and other violent acts.

McKenzie sat in the same spot at the edge of his neighborhood for a year at 5:30 a.m. waiting for his supervisor to pick him up for work. For him and his family, every trip outside now is met with uneasiness if not fear.

“It’s heartbreaking to know that I get up every morning. I stand there not knowing if he had seen me before,” McKenzie said.

Hate crime law efforts have stalled since 2015 racist Charleston church massacre

The lack of a statewide hate crime law rapidly became a sore spot in South Carolina after the 2015 shooting deaths of nine Black worshippers at Emanuel AME Church in Charleston. After a summer of racial strife in 2020, business leaders made it a priority and the South Carolina House passed its version in 2021.

But in 2021 and again in the next session in 2023, the proposal stalled in the South Carolina Senate without a vote. Supporters say Republican Senate leadership knows it will pass as more moderate members of their own party support it but they keep it buried on the calendar with procedural moves.

The opposition is done mostly in silence and the bill gets only mentioned in passing as the Senate takes up other items, like in May 2023 when a debate on guidelines for history curriculum on subjects like slavery and segregation briefly had a longtime Democratic lawmaker ask Republican Senate Majority Leader Shane Massey why hate crimes couldn’t get a vote.

“The problem right now is there is a number of people who think that not only is it feel good legislation, but it is bad legislation. It is bad policy not because people support hate but because it furthers division,” Massey responded on the Senate floor.

Supporters say federal hate crime laws aren’t enough

Opponents of a state hate crimes law point out there is a federal hate crimes law and the Charleston church shooter is on federal death row because of it.

But federal officials can’t prosecute cases involving juveniles, they have limited time and resources compared to the state and those decisions get made in Washington, D.C., instead of locally, said Richland County Sheriff Leon Lott who pushed for the hate crime ordinance in his county.

“It’s common sense. We’re making something very simple complicated, and it’s not complicated. If you commit a crime against somebody just because of the hate for them, because of who they are, the religion, etcetera, we know what that is,” Lott said.

Democrats in the Senate were especially frustrated in this year’s session because while senators debated harsher sentences for attacking health care workers or police dogs, hate crimes again got nowhere.

Supporters of a state hate-crime law say South Carolina’s resistance to enact one emboldens white supremacists.

“The subliminal message that says if you’re racist and you want to commit a crime and target somebody for their race, gender, ethnicity, sexual orientation or whatever it is you can do it here,” said McKenzie’s attorney, Tyler Bailey.

Governor says South Carolina laws provide punishment without new hate crime bill

Republican Gov. Henry McMaster understands why local governments are passing their own hate crime laws, but he said South Carolina’s laws against assaults and other violent crimes have harsh enough sentences that judges can give maximum punishments if they think the main motivation of a crime is hate.

“There’s no such thing as a love crime. There is always an element of hatred or disrespect or something like that,” said the former prosecutor who added he fears the danger that happens when investigators try to enter someone’s mind or police their speech.

But some crimes scream to give people more support in our society, Lott said.

“I think it’s very important that we protect everybody. My race, your race, everybody’s race, your religion, there needs to be some protection for that. That’s what our Constitution gives us,” the sheriff said.

And while the man charged with assault and battery of a high and aggravated nature for shooting at McKenzie faces up to 20 years in prison if convicted, the man who was just waiting to go to work feels like the state where he lives doesn’t care about the terror he felt just because of his race.

“I feel like somebody is watching me. I feel like I’m being followed,” McKenzie said. “It spooked me.”

Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

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