Authorities, who at first classified this as an aggravated assault, are investigating the case as a homicide -– claiming it is too early on in the investigation to confirm whether the attack was a hate crime.
I especially like about the authorities being unsure if it is a hate crime. It's not like she was ran over three times, no, not at all.
Not attempting to pick apart or stand against your argument (
I agree with a fair number of your points), but the defining point of whether or not something is a hate crime is not whether or not the person is a persecuted minority, but whether or not the reason for the crime is driven on that fact. If I knew a transgender asian and I hit them with my car and proceeded to run over them 2-3x until I was sure that they were dead but the motivation for the crime was because I was jealous of the fact that they had been promoted at my job and I hadn't, then despite the fact that they were a persecuted LGBT minority would
not make that a hate crime. And as such the police would be completely justified in claiming that they couldn't confirm whether the attack was a hate crime or not; until they work out who did it and what their motivations might be it's impossible to say whether said motivations were driven by an attempt to persecute someone or if they were based on other factors (as a matter of fact the vast majority of murder cases by far, even against persecuted minorities, happen based off of other factors).
Again, I agree with you that persecution exists, but I think you need to be careful not to falsely ascribe (or pull from sources that falsely ascribe due to bias) reasoning behind actions (because it makes it much easier for people who disagree with you to bog you down in technicalities). Skimming the full first list you found I'm finding several of them outright linked to crimes or robberies, which means it is very likely that
said crimes were not racially/persecution driven and therefore were not "hate crimes" per even the more generalized definition despite what that website might claim (in fact it seems that that first link is closer to a compilation of transgendered people who were likely killed due to other reasons and then happened to be misgendered in the news reports than it is to a list of actual hate crimes from all of the ones that I looked at).
For what it's worth while I agree with many of your reasonings I do agree with Strife on the idea that violence is almost never the answer. Hatred begets hatred and all that jazz, and setting yourself violently against a group will almost always simply result in polarizing defense walls into place such that it becomes impossible to change your opponents at all due to firmly rooting yourself in their "other" while driving the moderates to take their side.