September 13, 2006
Facts and Factoids
On Immigrant Crime
In her column on Pat Buchanan’s new book
State of Emergency: The Third World Invasion and
Conquest of America,
Linda Chavez finds "…factoids ad nauseam, all
with the purpose of blaming Mexicans for just about
everything wrong with America." [Banishing
Factoids, August 23, 2006]
Hold it right there! I
provided many of those "
factoids"
and am kindly thanked by Buchanan in his
acknowledgements. Just as the definition of "racist"
is,
notoriously, "anyone who is winning an argument
with a
liberal", so it now appears that "factoids"
are simply “facts that immigration enthusiasts don’t
like”.
Chavez focuses on
Buchanan’s report that 95 percent of all outstanding
homicide warrants in Los Angeles are for illegal aliens.
Buchanan cited an article by the Manhattan Institute’s
Heather Mac Donald. [The
Illegal-Alien Crime Wave, City Journal,
Winter 2004]
Chavez does not challenge MacDonald’s testimony that she
was told this by a source in the
Los Angeles Police Department. But she makes much of
the fact that the LAPD "doesn't
collect information on the
immigration status of criminals, much less
suspects."
Of course, the real question here is: why doesn’t the LAPD,
and American government in general, collect information
on the immigrant status of criminals? (Answer:
because it doesn’t want to know.)
But Ms. Chavez then goes on to bring a true factoid to
bear on the immigrant crime question. She writes:
"University of California professor
Ruben Rumbaut, an expert on immigration and crime,
looked at 2000 Census data on the institutionalized
population in the United States, most of whom are in
prisons, and came up with these astonishing facts.
Immigrants are far less likely to be in
jail or prison than other U.S. residents." [Debunking
the Myth of Immigrant Criminality: Imprisonment Among
First- and Second-Generation Young Men, June 1,
2006]
"Of the U.S. population of 45.2 million men ages 18 to
39 (those most likely to be in the criminal population),
3 percent were incarcerated, or about 1.3 million at the
time of the 2000 Census. But of these, blacks, whites
and U.S.-born Hispanics had incarceration rates that
dwarfed those of immigrants. Only .7 percent of
Mexican-born males were in prison or jail, compared with
3.51 percent of all U.S.-born males, which includes 1.71
percent of
non-Hispanic whites, 11.6 percent of
blacks and 5.9 percent of
Mexican Americans."
(Note carefully, as Chavez does not, that high rate of
incarceration for "Mexican-Americans". We will
return to this point later).
Are "immigrants"
really less crime prone than the U.S.-born?
Here’s some perspective: Non-citizens
account for 7.2 percent of the total U.S. population, according to a
2003 Census survey. Their share of the incarcerated
population that year was 12.9 percent—more than half
again as large. Approximately 27 percent of all
prisoners in Federal custody are criminal aliens. The
majority (63 percent) are
citizens of Mexico.
[GAO,
Letter to Representative John Hostettler, April 7, 2005(
PDF)]
In fact, contrary to what Chavez seems to think,
Professor Rumbaut [send
him mail] does not provide overall figures for
"immigrants" or, oddly, even for for Hispanic
immigrants. He mostly deals with individual
national-origin groups. (In the table that follows I’ve
estimated overall
Hispanic immigrant incarceration from this
material).
And even his own data show that
Hispanic immigrants of any nationality—including
Mexicans—are more likely to be imprisoned than
non-Hispanic white immigrants. Here are
incarceration rates for foreign-born males 18 to 39:
But why does this factoid—the relatively low
incarceration rates of Mexican males—exist anyway?
There are several possibilities. Perhaps, as
Steve Sailer notes, it’s because immigrants
typically enter America past the prime crime ages—18 to
24. Perhaps location matters—Puerto Ricans, Dominicans
and Cubans, for example, tend to be concentrated in
crime-rich big cities. Perhaps Mexican immigrant
criminals can
disproportionately avoid incarceration by
fleeing to Mexico.
Or perhaps the sheer number of Mexicans entering the
U.S. every year ((161,000 entered legally in 2005[
Excel
Spreadsheet] and on net maybe as many again
illegally) distorts the data. Maybe they just haven’t
had time yet to finish up in the slammer.
But whatever the reason, it really is a
factoid—a bad guide to
reality. Rumbaut reveals this, no doubt
inadvertently, in the last part of his paper. It focuses
on imprisonment of second-generation immigrant males,
ages 18 to 24, in
San Diego.
Overall, 12 percent of the second-generation immigrant
males in San Diego reported they had been incarcerated
at some time during the years covered by the survey.
However, according to Rumbaut:
"The Mexicans were about
twice
as likely to report having been arrested and
incarcerated as all of the other groups (as well as
reporting that
family members had been arrested and incarcerated)…"
"Specifically, 28 percent of Mexican-origin men in the
sample reported having been arrested and 20 percent
reported having been incarcerated in the years since
1995—i.e., between the ages of 18 and 24—a much higher
proportion than the
Vietnamese men, who came next at 17 percent arrested
and 15 percent incarcerated, as well as the smaller
samples of other
Asians and other Latin Americans, with rates of
arrest and incarceration approximating the latter."
Notes
the Professor:
"Given
the huge size of the Mexican-origin second generation
compared to all other groups in the United States this
is a finding fraught with implications for the future."
Apparently Linda Chavez
never got to this part of Professor Rumbaut’s paper.
Edwin S. Rubenstein (email
him) is President of
ESR Research Economic Consultants in Indianapolis.