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BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) — Louisiana is poised to become the first state in the nation to expand its hate-crime laws to protect police, firefighters and emergency medical crews — a move that could stir the national debate over the relationship between law enforcement and minorities.

If signed by the governor, the new law would allow prosecutors to seek additional penalties against anyone convicted of intentionally targeting first responders because of their profession.

Louisiana’s current law provides for more fines and jail time if a person is targeted because of race, gender, religion, nationality, sexual orientation or affiliation with certain organizations.

Gov. John Bel Edwards, a Democrat whose grandfather, father and brother have served as sheriffs, is expected to sign the bill into law this week, said his spokeswoman, Shauna Sanford.

Lawmakers in five other states have recently tried to pass similar so-called Blue Lives Matter bills, but each effort stalled, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

Critics regard the laws as unnecessary and say they could weaken current hate crimes statutes.

People convicted of assaulting police officers already face increased penalties in many states, including Louisiana. And crimes against public-safety officials are already being “investigated and prosecuted vigorously under current Louisiana law,” said Allison Goodman, regional director of the Anti-Defamation League, who wrote the Louisiana governor asking for his veto.

Expanding the hate-crime laws may open the door to other job categories being added, and thereby dilute the laws’ impact, she wrote.

The national Black Lives Matter movement spread quickly after the 2014 police killing of 18-yeaar-old Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, and it now advocates for reforms in policing nationwide.

Louisiana’s legislation was prompted by a number of high-profile attacks on police, including the killing of a suburban Houston deputy who was shot 15 times in an August 2015 ambush, according to the Republican lawmaker who proposed the bill.

“This gives more of a deterrent for people just to pick out a law officer because he’s a law officer and attack him,” said state Rep. Lance Harris of Alexandria.

Maryland state legislator Steven Arentz, who filed a similar proposal, said he was not even familiar with the Blue Lives Matter language being used to describe these bills.

“People are getting killed just because they’re cops,” he said. “And they are black and white wearing the uniform.”

Rep. Ken Buck, a Colorado Republican, has proposed a federal Blue Lives Matter Act that is supported by the national Fraternal Order of Police, according to Buck spokesman Kyle Huwa. Supporters say federal legislation would protect officers in states that do not have police hate crime laws and would help provide federal investigative resources in such cases.

Under the Louisiana measure, people convicted of felony hate crimes singling out police or other first responders would face an additional five years in prison and up to a $5,000 fine. In misdemeanor cases, penalties could increase by $500 or up to six months in prison.

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