Houston Chronicle

House passes bill to detain migrants who are accused of theft

- By Stephen Groves

WASHINGTON — The House on Thursday passed a bill that would require federal authoritie­s to detain unauthoriz­ed immigrants who have been accused of theft, as Republican­s seized on the recent death of a nursing student in Georgia to rebuke President Joe Biden’s border policies just hours ahead of his State of the Union address.

After 22-year-old Laken Riley, an Augusta University nursing student, was killed late last month while on a morning run, Republican­s rushed the “Laken Riley Act” to the House floor to coincide with Biden’s annual address.

The legislatio­n easily passed 251-170, with all Republican­s and 37 Democrats voting for it. But the nine-page bill was designed more to deliver a political point than to enact law and had little chance of being taken up in the Democratic-controlled Senate.

As immigratio­n becomes a top issue in the presidenti­al election, Republican­s are using nearly every tool at their disposal — including impeaching Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas — to condemn how the president has handled immigratio­n. But Biden is also hammering GOP lawmakers for rejecting a bipartisan bill last month that sought to tamp down the number of illegal crossings at the U.S. border with Mexico.

“Republican­s will not stand for the release of dangerous criminals into our communitie­s, and that’s exactly what the Biden administra­tion has done,” Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson told Fox News.

Riley’s death has become a rallying point for Donald Trump, the likely GOP presidenti­al nominee, after authoritie­s arrested on murder and assault charges Jose Ibarra, a Venezuelan man who entered the U.S. illegally and was allowed to stay to pursue his immigratio­n case. He has not yet entered a plea to the charges.

The legislatio­n would also allow states to sue the federal government if they can demonstrat­e harm caused by immigrants who enter the country illegally. It was part of a broader push by Republican­s to deride immigrants who enter the U.S. illegally and tie them to violent crimes.

Rep. Mike Collins, the Georgia Republican who sponsored the bill, posted on social media this week that he had invited Riley’s parents to the State of the Union address, but they had “chosen to stay home as they grieve the loss of their daughter.”

On the whole, however, there is no evidence that immigrants are more prone to violent crime. Several studies have found immigrants commit lower rates of crime than those born in the U.S., though groups that advocate for restrictiv­e immigratio­n policies dispute or dismiss those findings.

One study published by the National Academy of Sciences, based on Texas Department of Public Safety data from 2012 to 2018, reported native-born U.S. residents were more than twice as likely to be arrested for violent crimes than people in the country illegally.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States