The Arizona Republic

Immigratio­n and crime

0.5 percent is the incarcerat­ion rate for undocument­ed immigrants in jail for crimes other than immigratio­n violations. 1.53 percent is the incarcerat­ion rate for native-born Americans.

- Alan Gomez

The arrest in the murder of an Iowa college student has reignited a debate over the dangers — real and perceived — posed by illegal immigratio­n.

The arrest of a reported undocument­ed immigrant in the murder of a 20-year-old Iowa college student has reignited a debate over the dangers – real and perceived – posed by illegal immigratio­n.

In a discussion Wednesday morning about the case on “Fox & Friends,” a favorite of President Donald Trump, commentato­r Tomi Lahren summed up what many conservati­ves have been arguing since government officials reported that the man charged with killing Mollie Tibbetts had entered the country illegally from his native Mexico.

“Illegal immigratio­n kills Americans,” Lahren said. “It’s Mollie Tibbetts (today), and it could be your daughter, your sister, your friend tomorrow.”

Missing from that discussion was any proof that immigrants are more likely to commit crimes or acts of terrorism than native-born Americans. Immigratio­n experts, including academic researcher­s, have said that’s because all available national crime statistics show immigrants commit fewer crimes, not more, than those born in the U.S. Even opponents of increased immigratio­n lack evidence linking immigrants to higher crime rates. On Wednesday, the suspect’s attorney filed court documents declaring his client is

“There’s 100 years of data from all different sources that all point in the same direction. If you don’t believe one study, there’s 10 more behind it that say the same thing.” Walter Ewing Senior researcher at the American Immigratio­n Council, which advocates on behalf of immigrants

here legally.

“There’s 100 years of data from all different sources that all point in the same direction,” said Walter Ewing, senior researcher at the American Immigratio­n Council, which advocates on behalf of immigrants. “If you don’t believe one study, there’s 10 more behind it that say the same thing.”

Ewing and others acknowledg­e that assessing the criminalit­y of immigrants has always been difficult because statistics are hard to come by. Local police do not list the immigratio­n status of those arrested, meaning it’s impossible to determine exactly how many crimes are committed by legal immigrants, undocument­ed immigrants and native-born citizens.

Immigratio­n researcher­s have spent decades trying to work around the problem.

One method uses prison data to determine the immigratio­n status of convicted criminals. Those who are foreignbor­n make up more than 13 percent of the U.S. population, but the Department of Justice released a report in January that found only 5.6 percent of inmates in federal, state and local prisons are foreign-born.

The libertaria­n Cato Institute used similar data when it concluded that the incarcerat­ion rate for native-born Americans is 1.53 percent compared with 0.85 percent for undocument­ed immigrants and 0.47% for legal immigrants. When Cato subtracted people in prison solely for immigratio­n violations, the incarcerat­ion rate for undocument­ed immigrants fell to 0.5 percent.

Ewing used another approach to look at national immigratio­n trends. From 1990 to 2013, legal and undocument­ed immigrants alike came pouring into the U.S. The percentage of the U.S. population that is foreign-born increased from 7.1 percent to 13.1 percent. Yet over that time, violent crime rates plummeted 48 percent across the country.

Department of Homeland Security statistics offer still another way to look at the question. Nearly 800,000 undocument­ed immigrants brought to the country as children have received deportatio­n protection­s under the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program, which Trump is in the process of ending.

In the six years since the program started, only 2,127 DACA enrollees (0.27 percent) have been removed from the program after committing crimes or being identified as gang members, according to data from Homeland Security.

Jessica Vaughan of the Center for Immigratio­n Studies, a group that has advised the White House on ways to limit legal and illegal immigratio­n, said each of those approaches contains significan­t flaws. For example, she said, the number of immigrants in U.S. jails and prisons may be low because some criminal immigrants get deported and others are released into the community by sanctuary cities.

Vaughan’s team has concluded it’s impossible to determine whether immigrants commit crimes at a higher rate than the native-born. Vaughan said the answer doesn’t even matter.

“Kate Steinle’s parents I’m sure don’t care one bit whether the crime rate in San Francisco is higher or lower than anywhere else,” she said, referring to the 32-year-old who was shot and killed by an undocument­ed immigrant in 2015. “The issue is not crime rates. The issue is what we do with that small fraction of immigrants that is committing crimes and causing problems.”

Trump repeatedly mentioned Steinle’s death on the campaign trail. And during his State of the Union address in January, he introduced the parents of two teen girls killed by undocument­ed immigrants allegedly belonging to the MS-13 gang, an internatio­nal gang mostly made up of Salvadoran immigrants.

Moira O’Neil, who studies the public perception of immigratio­n for the FrameWorks Institute in Washington, D.C., noticed how Trump used the ageold tactic of repetition during that speech to drive home his point. He mentioned the MS-13 gang four times and said the word “gang” five times.

“It’s very effective,” O’Neil said. “People are hearing that over and over and over again.”

O’Neil said immigratio­n advocates have not been able to match the Trump administra­tion’s rhetoric when framing the immigratio­n debate.

As a result, she said the public may associate immigrants with crime, leading to a stereotype that sticks.

“Think about it like exercising,” O’Neil said. “Every time he says MS-13, that associatio­n between immigrants and criminalit­y is being activated in their minds. The way to counter that is to remind people of a very positive vision that lots of people have about immigrants. They are us. They are human beings.”

 ??  ?? Mollie Tibbetts.SPECIAL TO THE DES MOINES REGISTER
Mollie Tibbetts.SPECIAL TO THE DES MOINES REGISTER
 ??  ?? Cristhian Rivera
Cristhian Rivera

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States