Did you know illegals kill 12 Americans a day?
INS/FBI Statistical Report on Undocumented Immigrants
2006 (First Quarter) INS/FBI Statistical Report on Undocumented
Immigrants
CRIME STATISTICS 95% of warrants for murder in Los Angeles are for illegal aliens.
83% of warrants for
murder in Phoenix are for illegal aliens.
86% of warrants for
murder in Albuquerque are for illegal aliens.
75% of those on the most
wanted list in Los Angeles, Phoenix and Albuquerque are illegal aliens.
24.9% of all inmates in
California detention centers are Mexican nationals here illegally
40.1% of all inmates in
Arizona detention centers are Mexican nationals here illegally
48.2% of all inmates in
New Mexico detention centers are Mexican nationals here illegally
29% (630,000) convicted
illegal alien felons fill our state and federal prisons at a cost of $1.6
billion annually
53% plus of all
investigated burglaries reported in California, New Mexico, Nevada, Arizona and
Texas are perpetrated by illegal aliens.
50% plus of all gang
members in Los Angeles are illegal aliens from south of the border.
71% plus of all
apprehended cars stolen in 2005 in Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada and
California were stolen by Illegal aliens or “transport coyotes".
47% of cited/stopped
drivers in California have no license, no insurance and no registration for the
vehicle. Of that 47%, 92% are illegal aliens.
63% of cited/stopped
drivers in Arizona have no license, no insurance and no registration for the
vehicle. Of that 63%, 97% are illegal aliens
66% of cited/stopped
drivers in New Mexico have no license, no insurance and no registration for the
vehicle. Of that 66% 98% are illegal aliens.
BIRTH STATISTICS 380,000
plus “anchor babies” were born in the U.S. in 2005 to illegal alien parents,
making 380,000 babies automatically U.S.citizens.
97.2% of all costs
incurred from those births were paid by the American taxpayers.
66% plus of all births in
California are to illegal alien Mexicans on Medi-Cal whose births were paid for
by taxpayers
THE
INVADING CRIMINALS:
A county by county
chart:
Report: Trump Deploying ‘Elite Tactical Agents’ to 10 Sanctuary Cities
2:27
President Trump is deploying a group of “elite tactical agents” to sanctuary cities across the United States to increase the number of arrests of criminal illegal aliens, a report states.
According to sources who spoke to the New York Times, Trump is sending about 100 agents of the elite U.S. Border Patrol tactical unit known as BORTAC to sanctuary cities such as:
- Detroit, Michigan
- Chicago, Illinois
- New York City, New York
- Newark, New Jersey
- San Francisco, California
- New Orleans, Louisiana
- Los Angeles, California
- Atlanta, Georgia
- Houston, Texas
- Boston, Massachusetts
The BORTAC agents are expected to help Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents with deportation operations between February and May in an effort to increase arrests of criminal illegal aliens by 35 percent, according to emails read to the Times.
Acting ICE Director Matthew Albence told the Times in a statement:
“As we have noted for years, in jurisdictions where we are not allowed to assume custody of aliens from jails, our officers are forced to make at-large arrests of criminal aliens who have been released into communities,” he said. “When sanctuary cities release these criminals back to the street, it increases the occurrence of preventable crimes, and more importantly, preventable victims.”
The added BORTAC agents aiding ICE with arrests of criminal illegal aliens comes as federal immigration officials reportedly requested more help in the sanctuary cities that shield fugitives from deportation.
Most recently, the Trump administration has released a full-fledged federal campaign to take on sanctuary jurisdictions. At the Justice Department, Attorney General William Barr has filed lawsuits against the sanctuary state of New Jersey and the sanctuary county of King County, Washington for their obstruction of national immigration law.
“When we are talking about sanctuary cities, we are talking about policies that are designed to allow criminal aliens to escape … their express purpose is to shelter aliens whom local law enforcement has already arrested for other crimes,” Barr said this week.
John Binder is a reporter for Breitbart News. Follow him on Twitter at @JxhnBinder.
Critics of illegal immigration argue that the
crime rates of illegal aliens are higher than those of the American population
generally, or at least of legal immigrants. The New York Times has denied that illegals commit more crime than other groups, but
the paper bases its claim on a Cato Institute study that relies on questionable data. In fact, nobody can calculate
with accuracy the crime rates of illegal immigrants or any other social group
unless they have reliable data on the size of the group, and we simply don’t
know how many illegal aliens there are in the United States.
Nationwide data on crime by illegal aliens is
unavailable mainly because most states don’t keep such records. For
instance, California, with Hispanics making up more than 43 percent of its
incarcerated population, provides no information on the alienage of its
inmates. Texas does, though, and its Department of Public Safety reports that illegal aliens were arrested and charged with more
than 298,000 crimes, an average of over 39,000 per year, from June 1, 2011 to
the end of 2018. Though some of these arrests were for nonviolent crimes, such
as theft, burglary, or drug offenses, they also include many violent crimes:
624 homicides, 1,911 robberies, and 3,955 sexual assaults (which, under Texas
law, include rapes).
While these figures sound disturbing, we can’t
say with certainty if they are high relative to the size of the illegal
immigrant population because, as noted above, we really don’t know how many
there are. A 2014 estimate by the Pew Research Center pegged the Texas figure at
1,650,000, or 6.3 percent of the state’s entire population. Homeland Security
offered a higher estimate for 2015: 1,940,000, which accounted for 7.3 percent of
the state’s population.
Among all arrests for selected offenses over the
period 2012 to 2017, illegal aliens were taken into custody for homicide (which
includes murder and manslaughter) in numbers greater than their population size
would predict. They accounted for nearly 10 percent of all apprehended killers,
whereas, using the high-end DHS estimate, they make up 7.3 percent of the Texas
population. For all other crimes, however, including burglary, drugs, theft,
robbery, and weapons offenses, their apprehension percentages ranged from 2.5
to 6.7 percent—in other words, below their putative population size.
The crime of homicide provides the most accurate
measure, though, because a much higher proportion of murders are solved by
police—around 70 percent—than for any other crime; by contrast, fewer than 15
percent of property offenses lead to an arrest. As a result, we have much more
accurate demographics for murderers than for, say, burglars. The indication
that illegal aliens commit disproportionate numbers of murders is corroborated
by crime rates, shaky though they may be, for 2014 and 2015—the two years for
which we have population estimates from Pew and DHS. In 2014, Texas
illegal-alien murder-arrest rates were 4.99 per 100,000—56 percent higher than
the rates for all other apprehended murderers (3.2 per 100,000). In 2015, the
rates were 35 percent higher for illegal aliens (4.2 per 100,000, versus 3.1
per 100,000).
Granted, neither the rates nor the percentages of
illegal aliens arrested are overwhelmingly high. And the rates and percentages
for other crimes that they commit are below those of the arrested citizen and
legal-alien populations. Still, illegal aliens account for nearly 10 percent of
the apprehended murderers in Texas, and over 39,000 of the annual arrests for
crime overall. These figures are significant, reflecting crime in a single
state with an outsize number of illegal aliens—a small part of the nationwide
picture.
No amount of crime by those who enter this
country unlawfully should be acceptable, because it is “extra” crime that
wouldn’t occur if our border security were effective. Crime by illegal aliens
is costly. The
real issue underlying the current public
debate is whether the
crimes of illegal
immigrants are so numerous that they
provide a compelling
reason, or at least a
powerful supporting argument, for urgent
spending to
secure our southern border.
Judging by Texas the answer, though not
incontestable, seems to be “yes.”
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