Las Vegas Review-Journal

Sessions mischaract­erized study’s results, author says

- By Jenny Wilson Las Vegas Review-journal

During his speech Wednesday in Las Vegas, U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions misreprese­nted the findings of a 2016 study from the University of California, Riverside.

Sessions cited the study to support his position that crime increases when cities limit the extent to which local law enforcemen­t officers will enforce federal immigratio­n policies. He said the UC Riverside study proves ”cities with these policies have more violent crime on average than those that don’t.”

But the author of the study, when reached by phone Wednesday, described Sessions’ statement as an “incorrect assessment of our study.”

“Our findings revealed that when a city becomes a sanctuary city, there’s no statistica­lly generaliza­ble evidence that crime rates increase or decrease,” said study author Loren Collingwoo­d, an assistant professor of political science at UC Riverside. “Some increase, some decrease, some see no effect. … There’s no meaningful connection between a sanctuary city policy and a crime outcome.”

Study authors defined sanctuary city as “a city or police department that has passed a resolution or ordinance expressly forbidding city or law enforcemen­t officials from inquiring into immigratio­n status and/or cooperatio­n with ICE.”

ICE refers to U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t.

Earlier this year, Collingwoo­d said, study authors refuted a blog post published on the conservati­ve online news site, Worldnewsd­aily. com, which also mischaract­erized the findings.

“My guess is that’s where they got that informatio­n from,” Collingwoo­d said of the attorney general’s office.

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