• Study links Biden migrants to New York crime surge

    From John Smyth@21:1/5 to All on Tue Aug 26 18:49:14 2025
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.politics.republicans, alt.computer.workshop

    No kidding. It takes a study to figure this out?

    'Study links Biden migrants to New York crime surge'

    <https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2025/aug/26/study-links-biden-migrants-new-york-crime-surge/>

    'The illegal immigrants who streamed into New York City over the past
    four years led to increases in crime near the hotels where they were
    housed, according to a new academic study that lends some credence to
    President Trump’s claims of a Biden migrant crime surge.

    William LeRoy, an incoming professor at Charles University in Prague,
    crunched crime report data and found that arrests of Hispanics, the
    dominant demographic of the largely Venezuelan newcomers, rose in the
    immediate areas around the hotels.

    The significant increase was in lower-level thefts.

    “The baseline increase in Hispanic arrest rates is driven primarily by cash-generating offenses, such as petit and grand larceny, indicating
    that economic hardship is a leading factor behind criminal behavior,”
    Mr. LeRoy concluded.

    He said the crime increases seemed to be tied to the lack of job
    prospects for the new arrivals.

    Using Hispanics as proxies for illegal immigrants, Mr. LeRoy compared
    crime reports with ZIP codes where migrants showed up in city-funded
    housing. He found a 5.5% increase, relative to the average, in the
    percentage of Hispanic arrests starting with the arrival of the first
    bus of migrants sent in August 2022 by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott.

    The study lends credence to New Yorkers’ angst over the migrants
    flooding their city under President Biden. It also challenges the
    assurances of immigrant rights advocates who dismissed crime fears as unfounded.

    Residents of Denver, Chicago and Boston complained of increased crime associated with illegal immigrants, but New York drew a lot of attention because of its prominent welcoming policies and the sheer number of
    migrants taking advantage of them.

    The city said it received nearly 230,000 migrants from spring 2022
    through the start of this year. About 45,000 were sent on buses by Mr.
    Abbott, who was looking to spread Texas’ border-state pain.

    Residents were shocked by high-profile crimes, including the beating of
    two New York Police Department officers outside a migrant hotel and
    reports of migrants roaming the streets on mopeds and grabbing handbags
    and phones from pedestrians.

    Mr. LeRoy said theft was far more common in his data. Two-thirds of the
    crime increase he identified was tied to misdemeanors, particularly cash
    crimes such as larceny.

    He said the lack of job prospects seemed to explain the crimes.

    As illegal immigrants, the newcomers were generally forbidden from
    holding jobs, but many tried to find work as day laborers. Mr. LeRoy
    said the crime increase disappeared in locations near Home Depot stores, frequent gathering spots for illegal immigrants trying to hire out for a day’s work.

    Mr. LeRoy used Hispanics as a proxy for illegal immigrants because no citizenship data was associated with the crime reports. He said it was a
    safe assumption because of the demographics of the newcomers, who were
    heavily Hispanic and, in particular, largely Venezuelan.

    Alex Nowrasteh, a Cato Institute scholar who has studied migrants and
    crime, expressed concern with that equation.

    “The author acknowledges this, but this undermines the paper’s claims,” he said.

    It’s not clear how much the findings affect the broader debate about
    illegal immigrants and crime.

    Mr. LeRoy said the poor economic conditions might not apply to
    longer-term illegal immigrants who have either managed to secure work
    permits or have found jobs in the underground economy.

    Still, he said, cities with influxes of illegal immigrants, particularly
    from busing, might have experienced similar increases in crime.

    Mr. Nowrasteh said Mr. LeRoy looked at a particular population —
    migrants who were bused or made their way to New York and who ended up
    in government-provided housing — that it can’t be extrapolated to other illegal immigrants.

    Steven Camarota, research director at the Center for Immigration Studies
    and a regular debater with Mr. Nowrasteh on migrant crime, said Mr.
    LeRoy’s findings make sense.

    “It is not surprising that the arrival of migrants, often men, in a
    place where they have few ties will be associated at least in the short
    term with an increase in crime,” Mr. Camarota said.

    “This is one of those sorts of social disorder things that comes with
    high levels of immigration, and, of course, it might have continued but
    for the cutting-off of the flow,” he said.

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  • From pothead@21:1/5 to John Smyth on Tue Aug 26 23:32:03 2025
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.politics.republicans, alt.computer.workshop

    On 2025-08-26, John Smyth <[email protected]> wrote:


    No kidding. It takes a study to figure this out?

    'Study links Biden migrants to New York crime surge'

    <https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2025/aug/26/study-links-biden-migrants-new-york-crime-surge/>

    'The illegal immigrants who streamed into New York City over the past
    four years led to increases in crime near the hotels where they were
    housed, according to a new academic study that lends some credence to President Trump’s claims of a Biden migrant crime surge.

    William LeRoy, an incoming professor at Charles University in Prague, crunched crime report data and found that arrests of Hispanics, the
    dominant demographic of the largely Venezuelan newcomers, rose in the immediate areas around the hotels.

    The significant increase was in lower-level thefts.

    “The baseline increase in Hispanic arrest rates is driven primarily by cash-generating offenses, such as petit and grand larceny, indicating
    that economic hardship is a leading factor behind criminal behavior,”
    Mr. LeRoy concluded.

    He said the crime increases seemed to be tied to the lack of job
    prospects for the new arrivals.

    Using Hispanics as proxies for illegal immigrants, Mr. LeRoy compared
    crime reports with ZIP codes where migrants showed up in city-funded
    housing. He found a 5.5% increase, relative to the average, in the
    percentage of Hispanic arrests starting with the arrival of the first
    bus of migrants sent in August 2022 by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott.

    The study lends credence to New Yorkers’ angst over the migrants
    flooding their city under President Biden. It also challenges the
    assurances of immigrant rights advocates who dismissed crime fears as unfounded.

    Residents of Denver, Chicago and Boston complained of increased crime associated with illegal immigrants, but New York drew a lot of attention because of its prominent welcoming policies and the sheer number of
    migrants taking advantage of them.

    The city said it received nearly 230,000 migrants from spring 2022
    through the start of this year. About 45,000 were sent on buses by Mr. Abbott, who was looking to spread Texas’ border-state pain.

    Residents were shocked by high-profile crimes, including the beating of
    two New York Police Department officers outside a migrant hotel and
    reports of migrants roaming the streets on mopeds and grabbing handbags
    and phones from pedestrians.

    Mr. LeRoy said theft was far more common in his data. Two-thirds of the
    crime increase he identified was tied to misdemeanors, particularly cash crimes such as larceny.

    He said the lack of job prospects seemed to explain the crimes.

    As illegal immigrants, the newcomers were generally forbidden from
    holding jobs, but many tried to find work as day laborers. Mr. LeRoy
    said the crime increase disappeared in locations near Home Depot stores, frequent gathering spots for illegal immigrants trying to hire out for a day’s work.

    Mr. LeRoy used Hispanics as a proxy for illegal immigrants because no citizenship data was associated with the crime reports. He said it was a
    safe assumption because of the demographics of the newcomers, who were heavily Hispanic and, in particular, largely Venezuelan.

    Alex Nowrasteh, a Cato Institute scholar who has studied migrants and
    crime, expressed concern with that equation.

    “The author acknowledges this, but this undermines the paper’s claims,” he said.

    It’s not clear how much the findings affect the broader debate about illegal immigrants and crime.

    Mr. LeRoy said the poor economic conditions might not apply to
    longer-term illegal immigrants who have either managed to secure work
    permits or have found jobs in the underground economy.

    Still, he said, cities with influxes of illegal immigrants, particularly
    from busing, might have experienced similar increases in crime.

    Mr. Nowrasteh said Mr. LeRoy looked at a particular population —
    migrants who were bused or made their way to New York and who ended up
    in government-provided housing — that it can’t be extrapolated to other illegal immigrants.

    Steven Camarota, research director at the Center for Immigration Studies
    and a regular debater with Mr. Nowrasteh on migrant crime, said Mr.
    LeRoy’s findings make sense.

    “It is not surprising that the arrival of migrants, often men, in a
    place where they have few ties will be associated at least in the short
    term with an increase in crime,” Mr. Camarota said.

    “This is one of those sorts of social disorder things that comes with
    high levels of immigration, and, of course, it might have continued but
    for the cutting-off of the flow,” he said.


    Well, crime in NYC as well as a major decrease in the quality of living started under
    the DeBlasio administration. the soft on crime, bail reform, not supporting the NYPD and
    other democrat policies have also contributed to the high crime in NYC.

    The only way to eliminate crime is to have strict, no nonsense laws and a policy
    of do the crime, do the time.
    That's what Guiliani did and it cleaned up NYC quite quickly.

    Being soft on crime is a welcome mat to the bad guys to head to NYC in order
    to do their dirty works.

    Of course democrats and liberals take the side of criminals instead of the victims,
    so that's that.


    --
    pothead

    "Our lives are fashioned by our choices. First we make our choices.
    Then our choices make us."
    -- Anne Frank

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  • From Anonymous@21:1/5 to Governor Swill on Wed Aug 27 21:44:29 2025
    XPost: alt.computer.workshop, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.politics.republicans

    Governor Swill wrote:
    On 26 Aug 2025 23:50:55 GMT, Brock McNuggets
    <[email protected]> wrote:

    Ah, the old "NYC is doomed because Democrats love criminals" routine. A few >> reality checks:

    * Crime peaked in NYC in the early '90s -- long before de Blasio or bail
    reform. Even under de Blasio, NYC was still one of the safest big cities in >> America. The recent bumps? National trend, red and blue cities alike. Hmmm, >> what might be driving civil unrest on a nation wide scale?

    * Bail reform didn't unleash chaos. What it did was stop poor people from
    rotting in Rikers because they couldn't afford $500 bail. Wanting a justice >> system that doesn't punish poverty isn't "siding with criminals."

    Why spend thousands of dollars keeping somebody locked up for stealing
    a scarf or a carton of cigarettes?

    It's the principle of the matter. But strictly speaking, the government
    doesn't need to. The shopkeeper should have the right to lock a first-time offender into a pillory with a sign reading 'Nigger' around his neck while
    the shopkeeper and the general public get to whip him.

    The second time offender gets his hand cut off. Another offense after that
    gets him hanged.

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