A Church Arson Epidemic?
It's Smoke and Mirrors
By Michael Fumento
The Wall Street Journal, July 8, 1996
Copyright 1996 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
Responding to the reported wave of arson against black churches in the
South, President Clinton proclaimed in a radio address that "racial hostility
is the driving force." The president exhorted: "I want to ask every citizen
in America to say . . . we are not slipping back to those dark days."
OK, Mr. President, I'll say it. I'll say it because this supposed "epidemic
of hatred" is a myth, probably a deliberate hoax. There is no good evidence
of any increase in black church burnings. There is, however, compelling
evidence that a single activist group has taken the media and the nation
on a wild ride.
USA Today claims to have compiled "the most comprehensive statistics
available on church arsons in the South in the 1990s." According to the
newspaper, "The numbers confirm that a sharp rise in black church arsons
started in 1994 and continues."
But
USA Today's own chart belies this claim. It shows that two of the
states didn't start reporting data until 1993 and a third one didn't until
1995. Naturally, when they did, the numbers went up. Among states that
have compiled data going back to 1990, the number of black church arsons
shown in the USA Today chart for that year (13) was two more than
in 1994. The number in 1991 (16) was the same as in 1995. As for the 1996
numbers, law enforcement officials consider them unrepresentative because
media publicity has generated copycat crimes.
What about federal data? The FBI doesn't keep such statistics, and Department
of Justice data are too scattered and sketchy to be useful. The Bureau
of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms doesn't give out data anymore because
"people started using the numbers in contexts that weren't justified,"
spokesman Jim Limbach told me. Only recently has the agency been ordered
to investigate all church fires. Its earlier records mainly cover federal
cases, while most arsons are under state jurisdiction. This and other
problems – including a recent surge in calls from people reporting fires
that happened some time ago – make the bureau's current numbers worthless
in measuring trends, Mr. Limbach said.
But he did refer me to a private group, the National Fire Protection
Association. While its data don't break down churches by race, they do
show a dramatic drop in the number of church arsons – from 1,420 in 1980
to 520 in 1994. While arson committed against a house of worship is a
heinous crime, it should be reassuring to know there have been far fewer
recently than in years past.
So where did the story of black church burnings come from? It turns
out the main source is the Center for Democratic Renewal, a group whose
mission, says its promotional literature, is to work "with progressive
activists and organizations to build a movement to counter right-wing
rhetoric and public policy initiatives." Originally called the National
Anti-Klan Network, it changed its name when the Klan largely fell apart
in the 1980s. But instead of seeing that as a sign of declining bigotry,
the CDR has continued for more than a decade to issue statements and reports
"discovering" a sudden resurgence in racist activity.
The CDR's agenda goes well beyond rooting out genuine bigotry; the group
tars mainstream conservatives with the same brush as racist criminals.
"There's only a slippery slope between conservative religious persons
and those that are really doing the burning," the Rev. C.T. Vivian, the
CDR's chairman, has said. Liberals like Jesse Jackson and Mary Frances
Berry, chairman of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, have picked up
the theme.
In late March, the CDR held a press conference and released a preliminary
report showing a tremendous surge in arsons against black churches beginning
in 1990. "You're talking about a well-organized white-supremacist movement,"
the Rev. Mac Charles Jones, a CDR board member, told the Christian Science
Monitor. On CNN he referred to "domestic terrorism." From there the story
snowballed. A database search turns up more than 2,200 articles on the
subject to date – including three huge layouts in USA Today on consecutive
days.
The CDR claims there have been 90 arsons against black churches in nine
Southern states since 1990, and that the number has risen each year, reaching
35 in 1996 as of June 18. Each and every culprit "arrested and/or detained,"
it stresses, has been white.
But when I contacted law enforcement officials in several states on
the CDR list, a very different picture emerged. The CDR, it turns out,
regularly ignored fires set by blacks and those that occurred in the early
part of the decade, and labeled fires as arsons that were not – all in
an apparent effort to make black church torchings appear to be escalating.
- South Carolina. This state has by far the most arsons on the CDR
list (27). But seven of those fires were either found not to be arsons
or have not had their causes determined, according to Chief Robert Stewart
of the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division in Columbia. (In a note,
the CDR's report admits that two of the 27 fires were probably not arsons,
but insists they are still suspicious. It makes no mention of the other
five.) Moreover, far from all the arsonists having been white, eight
of 18 arrested in South Carolina were black. While it's not clear that
all these arrests were made in time to make the CDR's report, two were
arrested more than a year ago.
- Georgia. Of the five fires the CDR lists as black church arsons,
only two can be confirmed as such, says John Bankhead, public affairs
officer at the Georgia Bureau of Investigation. And one of those occurred
at a church where "the congregation has about 1,000 members, of whom
about a dozen are black." What's more, Mr. Bankhead's records include
one black church arson from 1995 that the CDR's report omitted. The
arsonist was black.
- Alabama. The CDR lists 10 church fires, all between 1994 and 1996.
But State Fire Marshal John Robison says that only one of these was
a confirmed arson (the perpetrator being a white fireman). One fire
was determined to have been an accident, another is too recent to be
classified, and four are being treated as possible arsons but are as
yet undetermined. That leaves three more incidents on the CDR's list
of "Southern States Black Church Burnings" for Alabama. All were in
Sumter County in February 1994. The Sumter County Sheriff's Department
confirmed that none were fires but rather vandalism. The CDR's claim
they were arson, I was told, was "a bald-faced lie." Surprisingly, the
CDR omitted one bona fide 1994 black church arson in which the culprits
were white. It also left out two 1994 arsons committed by blacks. (One
of them was the pastor of the church.) Moreover, the group left out
10 black church arsons that took place before 1994, again creating the
illusion that the burning of black churches is a recent phenomenon.
- Mississippi. Of nine Mississippi fires in the CDR's report, only
three are confirmed arsons, says James Ingram, commissioner of public
safety. And while the CDR reports no black church fires before 1993,
Mr. Ingram's list includes five between 1990 and 1992. One was committed
by a black man; in another, black church members were suspected. Two
of the Mississippi fires the CDR lists occurred this June 17; Mr. Ingram
says they were clearly "copycat" crimes, spurred by the recent publicity.
Even the claim that black churches have been singled out for arson is
questionable. In 1995, according to USA Today, there were 45 arsons
against white churches and 27 against black ones in the surveyed states.
Since whites outnumber blacks by four to one in these states, that seems
on the surface to suggest a strong racist element.
But as
USA Today pointed out, "a higher percentage of black churches are
in economically depressed areas, traditionally a factor in arson." Further,
black churches tend to be smaller and therefore must be more numerous.
Among the black churches USA Today surveyed, 67 percent had 100
or fewer members. Southern black churches often are in dark, lonely areas,
are quite old and are made of wood. In other words, they're an arsonist's
dream. Catholic churches, on the other hand, are virtually always made
of brick or stone, and almost all are predominantly white.
So other than saying that some black churches over the years have fallen
prey to racists, we can't easily infer motives. "We have not uncovered
in 38 cases a single piece of information to substantiate racially motivated
fires," said Alabama's Mr. Robison. Further, the arsons have "been happening
for at least seven years," he said. "There have been no dramatic increases,
except for this year because of the media hype." Other states' officials
have told him the same.
Here lies the ultimate irony. By claiming there has been an epidemic
of black church burnings, it appears that the CDR and the media may have
actually sparked one. They have also fomented tremendous racial division
and caused great fear among Southern black churchgoers. What the Ku Klux
Klan can no longer do, a group established to fight the Klan is doing
instead.
Read Michael Fumento's additional work on the
Great Church Burning Epidemic and on the media. Michael Fumento is the author of numerous books.
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