Legal Sidebari 
 
Overview of Recent Anti-Lynching Proposals 
Updated November 18, 2020 
This Legal Sidebar was initially published on June 29, 2020, but has been updated to reflect changes to 
the Justice in Policing Act. 
Following the death of George Floyd i
n  police custody in May and the fata
l February shooting of Ahmaud 
Arbery, interest has heightened in legislation  that would criminalize lynching—often described as death 
or
 bodily injury caused by two or more individuals acti
ng without legal authority. A number 
of states have 
enacted anti-lynching laws, as localized crimes like
 murder tend to be a subject of state
, rather than 
federal law. Although the conduct criminalized under those state laws can implicate various federal laws 
such as 18 U.S.C. 
§§ 241, 242, there i
s no federal law expressly governing lynching notwithstanding 
decades of legislative  proposals on that front. In June
, Members introduced two police reform bil s—
t
he George Floyd Justice in Policing Act of 2020 (Justice in Policing Act) and the
 Just and Unifying 
Solutions To Invigorate Communities Everywhere Act of 2020 (JUSTICE Act)—both of which original y 
included “substantivel
y identical” sections described as anti-lynching provisions. The anti-lynching 
provision wa
s later removed from t
he version of the Justice in Policing Act that passed the House. 
Sections like the one contained in the JUSTICE Act and original y  contained in the Justice in Policing Act 
build on earlier legislation  from this and other Congresses. Indeed, these anti-lynching provisions were 
largely
 identical to the conduct proscribed in two previously-introduced standal
one bil s. One, t
he Justice 
for Victims of Lynching Act of 2019 (H.R. 3536, S. 488), passed the Senate on February 14, 2019. A 
nearly identical anti-lynchi
ng bil   titled the Emmett Til  Anti-Lynching Act 
(H.R. 35) passed the House on 
February 26, 2020. Similar attempts to enact federal anti-lynching laws did not achieve bicameral 
approval in the 115th Congress—a fate for approximatel
y 200 anti-lynching proposals in the last century. 
For example, in 1918 Representative Leonidas Dyer of Missour
i introduced an anti-lynching bil  to 
remedy the refusal of states to prosecute “the perpetrators of . . . lynchings” under their own laws. 
Although Dyer’s bil 
  eventual y “passed the House of Representatives in 1922 . . . it was ultimately 
blocked by filibuster in the Senate.” 
Like the stand-alone House or Senate passed anti-lynching provisions from earlier in the 116th Congress, 
Title IV of the JUSTICE Act would 
“create a new section of the federal criminal code entitled 
‘Lynching.’” 
It would make it a federal crime to “conspire[] with another person to violate” one of the 
following four federa
l hate crimes statutes:  
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https://crsreports.congress.gov 
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Congressional Research Service 
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18 U.S.C. § 245, which, among other things, prohibits interference with an individual’s 
participation in certain protected activity because of race, color, religion, or national 
origin; 
  
18 U.S.C. § 247, which prohibits conduct including certain destruction of religious real 
property because of the religious character of the property, or because of the race, color, 
or ethnic characteristics of the people associated with that property; 
  
18 U.S.C. § 249, which, among other things, prohibits causing bodily injury to another 
because of that person’s actual or perceived race, color, religion, or national origin, or 
because of that person’s actual or perceived religion, national origin, gender, sexual 
orientation, gender identity, or disability  where there is a sufficient interstate nexus; 
  
42 U.S.C. § 3631, which, among other things, prohibits interference through threatened 
or actual force with housing rights because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial 
status, or national origin. 
Proponents of the legislation point to both its substantive a
nd symbolic effects. Conspiring to violate the 
statutes listed above is already a crime under
 18 U.S.C. § 371, a federal statute that broadly prohibits 
conspiracies to “commit any offense against the United States” when at least one person “do[es] any act 
to effect the object of the conspiracy . . . .” Ordinarily, to prove a § 371 conspiracy the government must 
demonstrate “(
1) an agreement between two or more persons to pursue an unlawful objective; (2) the 
defendant’s knowledge of the unlawful objective and voluntary agreement to join the conspiracy; and (3) 
an overt act by one or more of the members of the conspiracy in furtherance of the objective of the 
conspiracy.” Federa
l prosecutors have used § 371 to prosecute hate crime conspiracies. A key distinction 
between § 371 and the anti-lynching provision in the
 JUSTICE Act, however, is that the JUSTICE Act 
would increase the maximum applicable  prison term fr
om five years under § 371 to ten years—or longer 
when authorized by the underlying statute. Moreover, the findings of the JUSTICE Act note the symbolic 
value of creating a distinct anti-lynching statute that “recognizes t
he history of lynching in the United 
States” and thereby facilitates “reconciliation and . . . 
a new understanding, on which improved racial 
relations can be forged.” 
One criticism of anti-lynching legislation has been that it could impose significant penalties for relatively 
minor offenses. Earlier this year, Senate consideration of a stand-alone House-passed anti-lynching 
proposa
l stal ed followi
ng objection by Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky, who expressed concern that the 
bil   would impose up to ten years of imprisonment for “any bodily injury, including a cut, an abrasion, or 
a bruise, physical pain, il ness, or any other injury to the body no matter how temporary.” And, in fact, 
many of the hate crimes laws above cove
r non-violent actions, and hate crimes conspiracies may be 
established with a showing of just an agreement, intent, and an overt act. However, conspiracies to violate 
hate crimes statutes are already subject to a five year penalty under an existing federal statute. In addition, 
the scope of the anti-lynching proposals contained 
in H.R. 35, S. 488, and the JUSTICE Act depends in 
part on the underlying hate crimes statutes—which appl
y to offenses motivated by a specific bias when 
there is sufficient federal jurisdiction. Practical y speaking, the scope of the hate crimes statutes is also 
limited 
by prosecutorial discretion, which involves a “policy judgment” regarding whether “the 
fundamental interests of society require the application of federal criminal law to a particular set of 
circumstances.” In certain instances federal prosecutors have pursued hate crimes prosecutions of 
shootings, arsons, assaults, and murders committed because of racial, religious, and other biases. 
Nevertheless
, states “general y prosecute most hate crimes.” 
  
Congressional Research Service 
3 
Author Information 
 Peter G. Berris 
   
Legislative Attorney  
 
 
 
 
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