Immigrants accused
of homicide are a tiny fraction of ICE arrests
Russell Contreras
https://www.axios.com/2024/12/05/trump-mass-deportations-ice-arrests-homicide?
Immigrants arrested for
homicides accounted for less than 1% of "at-large" arrests by
Immigration and Customs Enforcement over the last six years, an Axios review
found.
Why it
matters: President-elect Trump has vowed to launch the "largest
deportation of
criminals in American history" — often focusing on the slaying of college
student Laken Riley by an undocumented immigrant — but data shows
crimes like homicide and sexual assault feature in only a small fraction of ICE
arrests.
By the
numbers: An Axios review
of data for nearly 180,000 ICE at-large arrests broken
down by criminal convictions from October 1, 2017 through Sept. 30,
2023 found:
- The largest numbers concerned immigration-related
offenses (16%); driving under the influence (15%); dangerous drugs (15%),
assault (9%) and traffic offenses (9%).
- 3% of the crimes were larceny, 1.7% sexual
assault and .7% homicide.
- ICE at-large arrests are those made in public
settings as opposed to when ICE picks up someone who's already in jail or
prison.
Overall, ICE figures released earlier this year said there have
been more than
425,000 noncitizen
immigrants with criminal convictions in the past 40 years or more.
- About 13,100 — or 3% — were convicted of
homicide, while 15,811 (3.7%) were convicted of sexual assault.
- Many are imprisoned in federal, state or local
facilities and may enter deportation proceedings after serving their
sentences.
Trump transition spokesperson Karoline Leavitt, reached for
comment by Axios, didn't address the disparity in the ICE arrest data and
Trump's claims about immigrant crime.
- In a statement, Leavitt said Trump will marshal
all resources for "the largest deportation operation of illegal
criminals, drug dealers, and human traffickers in American history."
Reality
check: The federal
government has prioritized deporting immigrants with criminal records since the
Obama administration, Amy Maldonado, an immigration lawyer in
Michigan, tells Axios.
- "What Trump is proposing is nothing new.
We've never let murderers and rapists just roam the streets."
- "They're lying. This is just an excuse for
mass deportations," Maldonado says.
The big picture: Study after study has indicated that immigrants — those in the
U.S. legally or without authorization — commit crimes at lower rates than U.S.
citizens.
- There are roughly 24.5 million total noncitizen
immigrants in the U.S., according to the Pew
Research Center. About
11 million of them don't have legal status.
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