Burying the Lead on Illegal Alien Crime
Crime reports that lead with genericdescriptions like a “Dallas man” or an “Oklahoma mother” can mislead casualreaders and listeners as to the actual identity of perpetrators. Peruse thissmall sampling of news items from the past two weeks:
- “A Dallas man who authorities believe killed 12 elderly women in the Dallas/Fort Worth area says he’s innocent and was surprised by his recent indictments on capital murder charges, his attorney said.”
- “A 26-year-old Massillon, Ohio, man accused of raping an 11-year-old girl who became pregnant will get a new interpreter to ensure he understands his court case.”
- “An Oklahoma mother facing charges in connection with the death of her 5-year-old son, who was hit by a car after falling from a rented Lime scooter she was driving, has fled the country, police said.”
- “King County [Wash.] prosecutors Monday charged a 51-year-old Burien man with second-degree assault for allegedly trying to drag a 14-year-old girl into his truck.”
- “Three Maryland teenagers have been charged in the brutal slaying of a 14-year-old girl who police said may have planned to go to authorities about a crime she and the suspects committed.”
In each case, the suspects and defendants areillegal aliens.
Though news writers eventually got around tonaming and placing them, burying immigration status has the effect of mutingthe reality: that illegal aliens commit violent crimes at alarming rates.
Open-borders advocates are in on the downplay. The left-leaning Marshall Project resorted to weasel words and meaningless qualifiers recently when it opined: “Most types of crime had an almost flat trend line, indicating that changes in undocumented populations had little or no effect on crime in the various metro areas under survey. Murder was the only type of crime that appeared to show a rise, but again, the difference was small and uncertain (effectively zero).”
Dismissing President Donald Trump’s concerns about illegal-alien crime, the Washington Post disingenuously declares that the “available evidence does not support a count of thousands of deaths a year.”
The operative phrase there is “available evidence.” Noone knows how many violent crimes are committed by illegal aliens because nonational database contains that information. All the research is, in fact, anecdotaland incomplete.
Some things are certain, however:
- Theaforementioned crimes – a random sample of vicious acts attributed to illegalaliens so far this month – would not have occurred without their presence inthis country.
- The defendantsstarted their criminal careers here by violating U.S. immigration laws (in somecases repeatedly).
- The cases do not include federal crimes such as money laundering and drug smuggling, for which illegal aliens are serving prison time. More than 20,000 were sentenced on federal charges last year.
While Americans await a long-overdue accountingof illegal-alien crime, perhaps the Ivory Tower apologists and obfuscators careto share exactly what level of criminality is acceptable at the hands of peoplehere illegally. It should be somewhere around zero.