After U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) released a report on arrests of people who requested Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), Alex Nowrasteh, director of immigration studies at the Cato Institute, penned an opinion piece in The National Interest comparing those numbers to the general population.
“No matter how you compare the arrest rate for DACA applicants to all others, the former group has a lower arrest rate,” Nowrasteh concludes. “Since the USCIS report and this post just measure arrest rates, the criminal conviction rate is necessarily lower as there are more arrests than convictions – as I show in Texas. The USCIS report is just further evidence that illegal immigrants have a lower crime rate than native-born Americans.”
Welcome to Monday’s edition of Noorani’s Notes. Have a story you’d like us to include? Email me at [email protected].
NOLA – Delmer Joel Ramírez Palma, a Honduran citizen and construction worker who tried to warn management about the dangers of the deadly Hard Rock Hotel collapse in New Orleans, will be deported today, reports Lauren Zanolli in The Guardian. “Immediately after the accident, he was interviewed by a Spanish-language media outlet. Two days later, he was arrested by immigration authorities while fishing with his family in a national wildlife refuge. He has lived in New Orleans for 18 years.”
“PROUD AMERICAN” – “Nearly a quarter century before he was elected to the Sacramento City Council, Eric Guerra was a 4-year-old child smuggled from Mexico into this country without the permission of the U.S. government. This was an act of desperation by Guerra’s parents,” Marcos Bretón writes for The Sacramento Bee. It wasn’t until President Ronald Reagan signed the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 that Guerra’s life turned around — he was able to come out of the shadows and go to college, and eventually became the first Latino elected to the Sacramento City Council. “I’m a proud American,” Guerra says. “In no other country, including Mexico, can you see someone grow up dirt poor and be given a fair chance to accomplish things.”
FOREIGNER TO FAMILY – For the past two years, local volunteers from the Embassy Church have been visiting detainees at the Aurora Contract Detention Facility in Denver, writes Angela K. Evans in Christianity Today. While detained and isolated in a new country, Martin Akwa, an asylum seeker from Cameroon, found solace in these visits from volunteers — and was eventually released to live with some of them while his asylum case was processed. Since then, he has made a life in Denver joining the church and playing soccer. “On October 22, Akwa won his asylum case. He no longer lives in fear of deportation.”
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