Hundreds of Roman Catholic churches have been attacked since the violence that erupted nationwide following George Floyd's death in May 2020, according to a Catholic nonprofit.

Since May 2020, there have been nearly 300 attacks against U.S. Catholic churches as far afield as Emmonak, Alaska, with the most recent tally at 275 as of Sunday, according to a tracker from CatholicVote.

The religious nonprofit organization noted that "while the riots and looting mostly died down in the summer of 2020, the attacks on Catholic churches have continued and escalated."

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Destroyed statue in El Paso church

A 90-year-old Sacred Heart of Jesus statue was destroyed in an act of vandalism in a Texas cathedral in September 2020, according to a report. (Catholic Diocese of El Paso)

The attacks against churches include arson, broken windows, decapitated statues and satanic graffiti. Some 118 incidents were logged since the May 2022 leak of the draft Supreme Court decision in Dobbs v. Jackson's Health Organization, which overturned Roe v. Wade's federal abortion protections.

While some of the attacks involved theft, the "vast majority" of recorded incidents were simply destruction of property, which the group said indicates "that the primary motive is not material gain," the report said.

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Holy Rosary Catholic Church in Houston vandalized with pro-choice message.

Holy Rosary Catholic Church in Houston was vandalized with a pro-choice message. (Fox 26 Houston)

A report from the Family Research Council released in December also found that church attacks spiked following the overturning of Roe v. Wade.

The council's report, titled "Hostility Against Churches Is on the Rise in the United States," found there were 420 acts of hostility against 397 churches between January 2018 and September 2022. The attacks took place across 45 U.S. states and Washington, D.C., according to the report.

Front door of the St. Bernard Catholic Church

The front door of the St. Bernard Catholic Church in Madison, Wisconsin, was vandalized July 3, 2022. (Fox 47 Madison)

That report's authors attributed the rise in attacks to "a collapse in societal reverence and respect for houses of worship and religion — in this case, churches and Christianity."

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"Americans appear increasingly comfortable lashing out against church buildings, pointing to a larger societal problem of marginalizing core Christian beliefs, including those that touch on hot-button political issues related to human dignity and sexuality," the report said.

Washington Catholic Church vandalism

A message spray-painted in June on the wall of St. Louise Catholic Church in Bellevue, Washington, reads, "religion of hate." (FOX13 Seattle)

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CatholicVote noted that only 25% of the church attacks it has recorded have led to an arrest.

In December 2021, CatholicVote President Brian Burch sent a letter to the Department of Justice, citing at least 114 instances since May 2020 and criticizing its leadership for making "no meaningful effort to raise awareness or address the disturbing rise in hate-filled attacks on Catholic religious symbols, shrines, statues and churches."

Boulder church vandalism

Vandalism on the Sacred Heart of Mary Church in Boulder, Colorado, last May. (Mark Haas)

Associate Attorney General Vanita Gupta responded to Burch's letter on Jan. 28, 2022, promising a "15-day review to ensure that all appropriate resources are being deployed to protect houses of worship."

"The FBI works closely with our law enforcement partners to investigate threats and attacks against houses of worship," the FBI told Fox News Digital in a statement. "Frequently, these investigations are conducted jointly by the FBI and state and local law enforcement and are prosecuted under state statutes."

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"If an investigation determines that a suspect violated one of the federal hate crime statutes, then the FBI will coordinate our investigation with the Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division, which will make the final determination about whether or not the suspect would be charged and prosecuted with a federal hate crime," the FBI continued.

CompassCare vandalism

CompassCare, which has pro-life pregnancy centers throughout upstate New York, recently announced that it was joining forces with the Thomas More Society. (CompassCare)

Pro-life facilities have also faced a barrage of attacks since the Dobbs decision. CompassCare, a network of crisis pregnancy centers in upstate New York, announced earlier this month that it had hired private investigators to look into a firebomb attack against one of its facilities last June.

CompassCare CEO Jim Harden noted that while the FBI is offering a $25,000 reward for information leading to the arrest of anyone involved with the attacks against pregnancy centers, he remains skeptical of federal law enforcement's resolve to get to the bottom of them.

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"What it appears to us is that they have made decisions about how they're allocating investigative resources, and they have chosen not to allocate," Harden told Fox News Digital. "You've got 78 bona fide violations of the FACE Act on pro-life organizations specifically targeting them. We know they're hate crimes. They fit that definition. Where's the manhunt?"

An FBI agent uses a gun in action

"The FBI works closely with our law enforcement partners to investigate threats and attacks against houses of worship," the FBI told Fox News Digital in a statement. (iStock)

The FBI told Fox News Digital that the bureau is "continuing to investigate a series of attacks and threats targeting pregnancy resource centers, faith-based organizations, and reproductive health clinics across the country, as well as to judicial buildings, including the U.S. Supreme Court."

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"The incidents are being investigated as potential acts of domestic violent extremism, FACE Act violations, or violent crime matters, depending on the facts of each case," the FBI continued. "The FBI takes all violence and threats of violence very seriously, and we are working closely with our law enforcement partners at the national, state, and local levels to investigate these incidents."