Trump Administration Addresses Alleged Immigrant-Driven Crime Wave By Arresting Non-Criminal Immigrants
Trump Administration Addresses Alleged Immigrant-Driven Crime Wave By Arresting Non-Criminal Immigrants
Despite the Trump administration’s insistence on an immigrant-driven crime wave, the government has been arresting many migrants with no criminal record at all.NBC News reports that the phenomenon has been picking up its pace in the past year. Even as the president draws attentions to atrocities like the killing of 20-year old Iowan Mollie Tibbets, Trump’s enforcement agencies aren’t netting an unusual amount of violent offenders.“Unshackling ICE has really allowed it to go after more individuals,” said Sarah Pierce, policy analyst with the Migration Policy Institute. She told NBC that the continued apprehension of noncriminal immigrants is “a defining characteristic of this administration’s approach to immigration.”No matter what the Trump administration may say, its statistics tell a different story.ICE arrests of noncriminal aliens, reports NBC, increased 66 percent through the first nine months of the 2018 fiscal year. Arrests of convicts and immigrants with criminal records rose, in contrast, by just 2 percent.Deportations have disproportionately affected noncriminal migrants, including those who have or had permission to live and work in the United States.In terms of percentages, expulsions of immigrants without criminal histories has skyrocketed—the rate is 174 percent higher in 2018 than it was last fiscal year.Fiscal years, for the federal government, end in September and begin afresh on October 1st.The result of Trump’s low-tolerance approach to immigration has been overburdened immigration courts. NBC News cites the case of 45-year old Ruben Moroyoqui, a 45-year old mechanic from Tucson, AZ.Moroyoqui only had one encounter with law enforcement, during a routine traffic stop. The second question the officer asked, after requesting to see his license, was whether Moroyoqui was in the United States legally.Like many illegal immigrants, Moroyoqui had entered the country legally but overstayed his visa. He remained in the United States due to a lack of economic opportunities in his own country.But Moroyoqui was promptly handed off from local law enforcement to the federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency.
Image via US-ICE/Flickr. Public domain.
Sources
ICE arresting more non-criminal undocumented immigrantsTrump's immigrant roundups increasingly net noncriminals
About Ryan J. Farrick
Ryan Farrick is a freelance writer and small business advertising consultant based out of mid-Michigan. Passionate about international politics and world affairs, he’s an avid traveler with a keen interest in the connections between South Asia and the United States. Ryan studied neuroscience and has spent the last several years working as an operations manager in transportation logistics.