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>>175890Alex Jones @RealAlexJones - LIVE: The DOJ Lied On Saturday When They Falsely Told Congress & Americans That ALL Epstein Files Had Been Released! The Files We Have Seen Are Over-The-Top Satanic! Alex Jones Is About To Lay Out What The System Is Hiding & How The People Can Fight Back!
https://x.com/i/broadcasts/1PlJQOOVPPNKEhttps://x.com/RealAlexJones/status/2023442539248783649Al Goodwyn @Al_Goodwyn - The claim that those in the country illegally commit fewer crimes than those who are legally present or native-born overlooks a key distinction. It’s not just the per capita crime rate of any group that matters, but the absolute number of new victims those crimes produce.
For instance, the Cato Institute analyzed comprehensive Texas Department of Public Safety data over the 10-year period from 2013 to 2022 and found that undocumented immigrants had an average annual criminal conviction rate of 685 per 100,000 people. This is about half the rate for native-born Americans. But the rate isn’t the only important factor; consider the added number of victims.
In a hypothetical scenario where there are zero new illegal entries, there are zero new crimes and thus zero additional victims from that source.
The net undocumented population grew substantially during the Biden administration, rising by an estimated 30%–40% above the pre-2021 baseline of roughly 11 million. The most evidence-based figure for the net increase is around 3–5 million (per analyses from Pew Research Center, the Migration Policy Institute, and Cato Institute), fueled by border surges from 2021 through early 2024 before dropping off during campaign season (coincidence? wink wink). Raw border encounters were much higher (~7–10 million+), but many did not result in permanent stays.
Using 4 million as a conservative estimate for the net additions during this period, that population would generate an additional 27,400 criminal convictions each year (calculated as 685 convictions per 100,000 × 4,000,000). Assuming each conviction involves just one victim, that translates to 27,400 new victims annually.
Keep in mind that many crimes create more than one victim. For example, a burglary of a home with four residents is typically counted as only one household victimization in standard crime data systems like the National Crime Victimization Survey, not four separate ones. Similarly, the murder of a married mother of three is recorded as one victim (the mother), even though the other four family members suffer profound harm.
Turning to murder specifically, the conviction rate for undocumented immigrants is 2.2 per 100,000, again lower than the native-born rate. Applied to the added 4 million people, that still results in an additional 88 murders per year!
In the end, the sheer scale of the undocumented population matters most: the more people present in the country illegally, the greater the total volume of crime committed and the higher the number of victims created.
This underscores why population size, not just relative rates, is a critical factor in assessing the real-world impact on public safety.
https://x.com/Al_Goodwyn/status/2023458627948876137Al Goodwyn @Al_Goodwyn - Abigail Spanberger, the moderate candidate for Virginia Governor wins in the recent off-year election, and goes from centrist Democrat to progressive as fast as you can say, “bait and switch.” Even faster than she can say “screw it,…let’s go with more taxes, sanctuary state, energy regulations, and gerrymandering!”
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