August 25, 2007
Forbidden Subject: Illegal Aliens And Crime

Last Reporter
Chet Dembeck

Illegals_crime

Even bringing up the subject about the crime being committed by illegal aliens and the costs associated with this byproduct of the quiet invasion of our country, guarantees you will be labeled by the big media and radical advocacy groups as a "racist."

When I worked as a reporter for several newspapers in Maryland, I was forced to steer clear of this subject, and if I even brought up the possibility of exploring crime being committed by the more than 12 million illegals who have entered our country, I was instantly rebuked by my editors.

But today, I have no such restrictions, so the purpose of this article is to bring my fellow citizens up to speed on the growing illegal alien crime problem mushrooming in our country.

The number of illegal aliens committing crimes in our country is growing geometrically.

For example, in 1980, our federal and state prisons housed fewer than 9,000 criminal aliens. However, by 1999, these same prisons housed 68,000 criminal aliens, according to the Federal Bureau of Prisons.

Fastest growing segment

Today, criminal aliens account for more than 29% of prisoners in these facilities, and are now the fastest growing segment of the federal prison population.

Over the last five years, an average of more than 72,000 illegal aliens have been arrested annually on just drug charges!

Incarceration Costs are skyrocketing

In 1999, the incarceration of criminal aliens cost state prisons about $624 million. In 2002, the incarceration of criminal aliens cost federal prisons about $891 million, according to the latest figures from the Bureau of Justice statistics.

While latest statistics for the costs associated with crime committed by illegal aliens are coming in sporadically, they are extremely alarming.

The New York State Senate Committee on Cities estimates that the annual criminal justice costs for criminal aliens is $270 million for the state.

The Illinois Governor's Office estimates the state spends more than $40 million just on the incarceration of criminal aliens.

The cost to Florida's judicial and corrections system for criminal aliens was $73 million in 1993.

California taxpayers have spent more that $1 billion in the last five years to keep these convicted felons in prison.

So how do we solve the problem?

While the situation is spiraling out of control, it can be slowed down and eventually stopped -- if enough American citizens make their voices heard to local, state and federal elected officials, with their votes!

The Federation For American Immigration Reform (FAIR), offers four real solutions for dealing with the illegal alien crime problem in our country that if implemented today would go a long way to alleviating the crisis.

1. We must secure our borders. Denying jobs to illegal aliens through a centralized secure identity verification system is important to that effort.

2. We must assure that the criminal conviction of an alien leads to deportation and permanent exclusion from the United States

3. All asylum applicants should be screened expeditiously and excluded if their claims are not credible. Even if they appear to have credible claims, they should be detained until background checks are done.

4. Other corrective measures include greater ICE and local government cooperation to identify criminal aliens, additional detention facilities for those in deportation proceedings, and improved databases and screening procedures to identify deported aliens if they try to return here either overtly or covertly.

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