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Legal expert urges clearer hate-crime statutes and community impact statements in sentencing

6548356 · October 16, 2025
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Professor Christina Miller, an experienced former prosecutor, told the commission that Massachusetts law should be clarified to reduce mixed-motive uncertainty in hate-crime prosecutions, improve jury instructions, and allow community impact statements when hate crimes affect broader communities.

Christina Miller, associate clinical professor of law at Suffolk University and a former chief of district court and community prosecutions, told the commission that prosecutors face three common patterns in hate-motivated incidents: group attacks, reactive incidents tied to publicity around foreign events, and unplanned assaults by persons with addiction or mental-health challenges. She warned that "mixed motive" cases '1 where an act (for example, a robbery) includes bias-motivated language or selection '1 can obscure charging and jury comprehension.

Miller…

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