February 09, 2007
Revolving Door Deportations - Feds Clueless As
Usual
On October 25, 2006,
California
Judge Richard Oberholzer sentenced Jose Richard Leiva,
24, for the 2006 molestation of a 13 year old girl.
Leiva had been convicted at jury trial of three counts
of child molestation. At the time he committed these
offenses, he was on misdemeanor probation for
unlawful sexual intercourse with a
14 year old girl, which occurred less than 9 months
earlier.
The Probation Department
recommended a sentence of ten years. But Oberholzer
imposed three years, the minimum possible prison
sentence. He announced he was giving the defendant a
more lenient sentence
because he is an illegal alien.
[Sentence
for illegal immigrant questioned|Punishment doesn’t
fit the severity of the crime, district attorney says,
BY JESSICA LOGAN, Bakersfield Californian, Dec 14
2006]
Judge Oberholzer claimed that he didn’t
want the taxpayers to have to pay for a lengthier
incarceration and that the defendant would be deported
sooner if he was given a shorter sentence.
(Ironically, the defendant had been offered the shorter
sentence but elected for an expensive trial, so Judge
Oberholzer was in reality encouraging defendants to
gamble on acquittal at taxpayer expense).
Unfortunately, this isn’t a joke.
The judge is right about relative
costs...sort of. Incarcerating an inmate in Federal
prison
costs about $23,200/year. So deportation might look
like a comparative bargain, even factoring in the cost
of
DHS lawyers,
detention space, and of
transporting criminal aliens to their home country.
Hizzoner may also know that
criminal alien deportations have increased—from a very
small base—since passage of the
Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility
Act in 1996. That law reduced the length of sentence
time for
crimes deemed deportable from five years to one year
and also eliminated nearly all grounds for appeal,
making deportations virtually automatic. And IIRAIRA was
retroactive, making immigrants
deportable for crimes that did not warrant
deportation at the time they were committed.
In the mid-1990s about 33,000
criminal aliens were deported annually. By 2005,
despite a decade of falling national crime rates,
criminal deportations had grown nearly three-fold, to
90,000. (Table 1.) There were criminal deportations in
the past, but the number in 2005 alone exceeded the
total between 1905 and 1986.
Perspective check: there are
10-20
million illegals in the U.S.
Problem: Judge Oberholzer
presumably assumes, like many people, that the number of
deportations reflects the number of people who are
deported.
Wrong! The statistics double- (or
triple-, or [fill in-a-number]-) count
repeat deportees. Thus they are a measure of
deportation “events” rather than permanently
deported individuals.
Needless to say, the Federal
government is clueless (as usual) about the exact
magnitude of the deportation over-count. But it could be
quite large.
In Mexico, for example, criminal
deportees regularly remain in border towns where U.S.
immigration agents drop them off by bus. There they
await their chance to slip back into the United States,
where
"sanctuary policies" often
prohibit police from reporting them to
immigration authorities.
Many stay here decades after
receiving their deportation orders. Nationally an
estimated
80,000 to 100,000 illegal immigrants who have been
convicted of serious crimes
still walk the streets. Some of them have already
been deported and returned.
But statistics can’t convey the
horrific downside to such recidivism.
Michelle Malkin made this point five years ago. In
her book Invasion
she
summarized the story of
Angel Resendiz, the
“Railway Killer,” a Mexican who repeatedly
entered the U.S. illegally over a 25 year period, had at
least 25 encounters with U.S. law enforcement, was
deported three times and “voluntarily returned”
at least four times. Between 1997 and 1999 Resendiz is
known to have who
murdered at least 12 Americans–the
last four after being released by the INS, although
there were already warrants outstanding for his arrest.
(Resendiz liked to fracture his
women victims’ skulls and
rape them as they died—a deportable crime
even pre-IIRAIRA.)
BTW: Mexico was home to 77 percent
of the criminals deported from the U.S. in 2005. [Dept.
of Homeland Security, 2005 Yearbook of Immigration
Statistics, November 2006.
PDF]
The pro-immigration lobby blunted
the impact of IIRAIRA with a blitzkrieg of legal
exceptions. Even
violent gang members were given byes, as described
in report by the non-partisan Migration Policy
Institute:
“With
the passage of the Nicaraguan Adjustment and Central
American Relief Act (NACARA) in 1997, Nicaraguans were
offered an opportunity to adjust their status to LPR
[Legal Permanent Resident], and certain Guatemalans
and Salvadorans became eligible to have their cases
reviewed under pre-IIRAIRA standards, which only
required seven years of presence in the country and
demonstration of hardship to the individual.”
“Although a byproduct of changing immigration policies
during the 1990s, deportations have played a key role in
the growth of transnational gangs. As a law enforcement
strategy, incarceration and subsequent deportation have
not succeeded in permanently removing a gang population
that, although foreign born, has been essentially US
raised. [National
Policies and the Rise of Transnational Gangs by
Mary Helen Johnson Migration Policy Institute
April 1, 2006]
And, as if these unanticipated
consequences weren’t enough:
“Further, these policies have
exported a violent population to some of the most
vulnerable communities in Central America. Rather than
curbing the threat gangs pose, deportations have helped
members establish, reinforce, and expand ties across
Central America and the United States.”
Yes, Judge Oberholzer, deportations
look cheaper…..but sometimes you get what you pay
for.
Edwin S. Rubenstein (email
him) is President of
ESR Research Economic Consultants in Indianapolis.