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December 15, 2006
NYT Asks "Do Immigrants Make Us Safer?," We Answer!
See also:
Facts And Factoids on Immigrant Crime and
Sampson's
Silly Theory On Immigrants And Crime
Crime rates have declined
precipitously over the last 15 years. The
immigrant population increased by more than 50
percent during that period.
Are the two trends related?
Is everything we "know"
about criminality among immigrants wrong?
That’s the premise of a recent
article in the New York Times Magazine by
Eyal Press, a contributing writer for
The Nation. [Do
Immigrants Make Us Safer?, December 3, 2006,
also
here.]
As "evidence" Press cites several
small scale studies of selected metropolitan areas – for
example:
"Ramiro
Martinez Jr., [send
him
mail]
a professor of criminal justice at Florida
International University, has sifted through homicide
records in border cities like
San Diego and
El Paso, both heavily populated by Mexican
immigrants, both places where violent crime has fallen
significantly in recent years. ‘’Almost without
exception,’ he told me, ‘I've discovered that the
homicide rate for Hispanics was lower than for other
groups, even though their
poverty rate was very high, if not the highest, in
these metropolitan areas.’…’
"The most prominent advocate of the ''more immigrants,
less crime'' theory is Robert J. Sampson,
[send
him
mail]
chairman of the sociology department at Harvard. A
year ago, Sampson was an author of an article in The
American Journal of Public Health[
PDF]
that reported the findings of a detailed study of
crime in Chicago. Based on information gathered on
the perpetrators of more than 3,000 violent acts
committed between 1995 and 2002, supplemented by police
records and community surveys, it found that the rate of
violence among Mexican-Americans was significantly lower
than among both non-Hispanic whites and blacks."
A couple of
thoughts spring to mind.
No one
should be surprised, therefore, that
cities where Hispanic immigrants have
displaced blacks as the largest minority have
experienced lower crime rates.
 | Second,
it’s equally clear, based on national incarceration
data [Paige Harrison and Allen J. Beck, "Prisoners
in 2005," Bureau of Justice Statistics Bulletin,
November 2006. Table 12.
PDF], that Hispanics are more violence prone
than non-Hispanic whites. |
Ideally, we
would like to examine data on offenses and arrests by
race and Hispanic ethnicity. Unfortunately, the
Department of Justice’s crime stats lump Hispanic
perpetrators in
with non-Hispanic whites. This has the effect of
narrowing the gap between black and white crime rates
(by inflating the white rate) while suppressing
information on
Hispanic criminality.
Inescapable
conclusion: many DOJ bureaucrats are
too PC to present the truth on immigrant, largely
Hispanic, criminality.
Luckily, the
folks who prepare the incarceration statistics
for DOJ didn’t get the memo. Their statistics
distinguish between Hispanic, non-Hispanic white, and
non-Hispanic black prisoners. (Wow! Can data for the
foreign-born of each group be far behind?) These
incarceration statistics also show the type of crime for
which
prisoners of each race were convicted.
In 2003, the
latest available data, there were 219,200 Hispanics in
state correctional facilities and 39.9 million Hispanics
in the U.S. population. That’s an incarceration rate of
549 per 100,000 population.
The
incarceration rate for
non-Hispanic whites was 230 per 100,000—or less than
half the Hispanic rate.
The black
incarceration rate—1,580 per 100,000— was 2.9-times the
Hispanic rate and 6.9-times the white rate.
For every
offense except fraud, Hispanic incarceration rates were
above those of whites. (Table
1.) For example:
 |
Murder: Hispanic: 72 per 100,000 |
white: 24 per 100,000 |
 |
Robbery: Hispanic: 71 per 100,000 |
white: 20 per 100,000 |
 |
Assault: Hispanic: 70 per 100,000 |
white: 20 per 100,000 |
 |
Drug
offenses: Hispanic: 126 per 100,000 |
white: 33 per 100,000 |
 |
Motor vehicle theft: Hispanic: 12 per
100,000 |
white: 4 per 100,000 |
Harvard’s
Professor Sampson does not deny the incarceration rate
gap, and even acknowledges that
Hispanic crime may be underreported because of
immigrants’ aversion to interacting with the
authorities. Yet he insists the higher immigration,
lower crime linkage is real—
"That these two trends might be related has been
overlooked, he says, in part because immigrants, like
African-Americans, often
trigger negative associations regardless of how they
actually behave."
''In particular,'' Sampson [and his co-author] found,
‘the proportion of blacks and the proportion of Latinos
in a neighborhood were related positively and
significantly to perceived disorder.’ Once you adjusted
for the ethnic, racial and class composition of a
community, ‘much of the variation in levels of disorder
that appeared to be explained by what residents saw was
spurious.'’
Get it? The
notion that Blacks or Hispanics commit crimes at higher
rates than the rest of us is based on
stereotypes and misperceptions—despite the DOJ
incarceration data.
Clearly, the
DOJ data collectors need
sensitivity training.
Edwin S. Rubenstein (email
him) is President of
ESR Research Economic Consultants in Indianapolis. |
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