Recently, a woman in San Francisco
was killed
seemingly randomly allegedly by an illegal alien with a long rap sheet of
violent crime, deported five times. But he had been under city detention fewer
than three months previously – except that San Francisco, as part of the “sanctuary
movement,” long ago began to refuse to forward information about illegal
immigrants it detains to the federal government, even though legally local law
enforcement agencies must do so. Following the law enables the Immigration and
Customs Enforcement Agency to take custody of and deport them.
It’s no accident that “sanctuary
cities,” or those like San Francisco with an official policy of law enforcement
not asking about citizenship status, are larger cities with higher proportions of immigrants that have
higher crime rates. Given that population studies of the nation’s jails
show these contain disproportionately more non-citizens than their incidence in
the general population, and that a sample of diverse local jurisdictions reveals
the proportion of illegal aliens jailed is much higher than their estimated
population proportion, it’s likely that sanctuary cities (which would not keep
citizenship statistics) have even higher and more disproportionate numbers of
illegal aliens imprisoned. While the valid data about this are uncoordinated,
overall they point to increased numbers of illegal aliens elevate criminal
activity.