ILL IMM GAO Report on Criminal Alien Statistics: Incarcerations, Arrests, and Costs

Mixin

Veteran Member
From the U.S. Government Accountability Office

Trending Now: Most viewed, downloaded, and shared. This report is second to the #1 report: Illegal Aliens: Extent of Welfare Benefits Received on Behalf of U.S. Citizen Children

Criminal Alien Statistics:
Information on Incarcerations, Arrests, and Costs

GAO-11-187: Published: Mar 24, 2011. Publicly Released: Apr 21, 2011.

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) estimated that as of fiscal year 2009 the total alien--non-U.S.-citizen--population was about 25.3 million, including about 10.8 million aliens without lawful immigration status. Some aliens have been convicted and incarcerated (criminal aliens). The federal government bears these incarceration costs for federal prisons and reimburses states and localities for portions of their costs through the Department of Justice's (DOJ) State Criminal Alien Assistance Program (SCAAP). GAO was asked to update its April and May 2005 reports that contained information on criminal aliens.

This report addresses
(1) the number and nationalities of incarcerated criminal aliens;
(2) the types of offenses for which criminal aliens were arrested and convicted; and
(3) the costs associated with incarcerating criminal aliens and the extent to which DOJ's methodology for reimbursing states and localities for incarcerating criminal aliens is current and relevant.
GAO analyzed federal and SCAAP incarceration and cost data of criminal aliens from fiscal years 2003 through 2010, and conviction and cost data from five states that account for about 70 percent of the SCAAP criminal alien population in 2008. GAO analyzed a random sample of 1,000 criminal aliens to estimate arrest information due to the large volume of arrests and offenses. GAO also estimated selected costs to incarcerate criminal aliens nationwide using

The number of criminal aliens in federal prisons in fiscal year 2010 was about 55,000, and the number of SCAAP criminal alien incarcerations in state prison systems and local jails was about 296,000 in fiscal year 2009 (the most recent data available), and the majority were from Mexico. The number of criminal aliens in federal prisons increased about 7 percent from about 51,000 in fiscal year 2005 while the number of SCAAP criminal alien incarcerations in state prison systems and local jails increased about 35 percent from about 220,000 in fiscal year 2003. The time period covered by these data vary because they reflect updates since GAO last reported on these issues in 2005. Specifically, in 2005, GAO reported that the percentage of criminal aliens in federal prisons was about 27 percent of the total inmate population from 2001 through 2004.

Based on our random sample, GAO estimates that the criminal aliens had an average of 7 arrests, 65 percent were arrested at least once for an immigration offense, and about 50 percent were arrested at least once for a drug offense. Immigration, drugs, and traffic violations accounted for about 50 percent of arrest offenses. About 90 percent of the criminal aliens sentenced in federal court in fiscal year 2009 (the most recently available data) were convicted of immigration and drug-related offenses. About 40 percent of individuals convicted as a result of DOJ terrorism-related investigations were aliens.

SCAAP criminal aliens incarcerated in selected state prison systems in Arizona, California, Florida, New York, and Texas were convicted of various offenses in fiscal year 2008 (the most recently available data at the time of GAO's analysis). The highest percentage of convictions for criminal aliens incarcerated in four of these states was for drug-related offenses. Homicide resulted in the most primary offense convictions for SCAAP criminal aliens in the fifth state--New York--in fiscal year 2008.

GAO estimates that costs to incarcerate criminal aliens in federal prisons and SCAAP reimbursements to states and localities ranged from about $1.5 billion to $1.6 billion annually from fiscal years 2005 through 2009; DOJ plans to update its SCAAP methodology for reimbursing states and localities in 2011 to help ensure that it is current and relevant.

DOJ developed its reimbursement methodology using analysis conducted by the former Immigration and Naturalization Service in 2000 that was based on 1997 data. Best practices in cost estimating and assessment of programs call for new data to be continuously collected so it is always relevant and current. During the course of its review, GAO raised questions about the relevancy of the methodology. Thus, DOJ developed plans to update its methodology in 2011 using SCAAP data from 2009 and would like to establish a 3-year update cycle to review the methodology in the future. Doing so could provide additional assurance that DOJ reimburses states and localities for such costs consistent with current trends. In commenting on a draft of this report, DHS and DOJ had no written comments to include in the report.

http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-187

Also see the full 71 pg report at this link, includes charts
http://www.gao.gov/assets/320/316959.pdf
 

Be Well

may all be well
I haven't had time to add to the long Immigration thread in some days; I'll try to either today or tomorrow. There have been a lot of important articles I've seen but did post. The GAO numbers I *think* were discussed in one article but I could be wrong, and if they were, not in as much detail. I just remember something about it. And the numbers are from 2011. Just imagine now. This alone should be proof that the problem has to get fixed.
 

Sasquatch

Veteran Member
Here is a Texas Criminal Alien Arrest report from Aug 17, 2015.

165,000 arrested over a 49 month period = 3,367 criminal aliens arrested each and every month in just Texas.


Texas Criminal Alien Arrest Data

According DHS status indicators, over 165,000 criminal aliens have been booked into local Texas jails between June 1, 2011 and July 31, 2015. During their criminal careers, these criminal aliens were charged with more than 443,000 criminal offenses. Those arrests include 900 homicide charges; 52,214 assault charges; 13,456 burglary charges; 51,896 drug charges; 546 kidnapping charges; 32,669 theft charges; 35,311 obstructing police charges; 2,993 robbery charges; 4,657 sexual assault charges; and 6,650 weapons charges. Of the total criminal aliens arrested in that timeframe, over 109,000 or 66% were identified by DHS status as being in the US illegally at the time of their last arrest.

According to DPS criminal history records, those criminal charges have thus far resulted in over 198,000 convictions including 356 homicide convictions; 19,385 assault convictions; 6,466 burglary convictions; 25,998 drug convictions; 189 kidnapping convictions; 14,669 theft convictions; 17,474 obstructing police convictions; 1,479 robbery convictions; 2,089 sexual assault convictions; and 2,822 weapons convictions. Of the convictions associated with criminal alien arrests, over 132,000 or 66% are associated with aliens who were identified by DHS status as being in the US illegally at the time of their last arrest.

txCriminalAlienStatistic.jpg


Note: These are Texas charges for these criminal alien arrestees as reported to DPS by local agencies – the arrestees charted here may have offenses in other states. Texas arrestees who have not had interaction with the DHS which resulted in the collection of fingerprints are not included as their identity cannot be biometrically verified by DHS.

https://www.txdps.state.tx.us/administration/crime_records/pages/txCriminalAlienStatistics.htm
 

Mixin

Veteran Member
I need a head-exploding smilie every time I post something on illegal immigration. Those Texas stats are unreal...

I was curious about the percentages of drug, sex and homicide offenses; here is what I found in the full report,taken from the pie charts:

"To determine the types of offenses for which criminal aliens were arrested, we obtained the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) arrest histories of about 203,000 criminal aliens incarcerated in state prisons and local jails from July 1, 2004, through June 30, 2008, and 48,000 criminal aliens incarcerated in federal prisons as of December 27, 2008, for a total of 251,000 criminal aliens. Due to the large volume of arrests and offenses, we selected a random sample of 1,000 criminal aliens and analyzed their arrest records to estimate the number and types of offenses in our study population of approximately 249,000.6 There were nearly 1.7 million arrest records relating to nearly 3 million offenses for these 249,000 criminal aliens."

Figure 2: Country of Citizenship for Criminal Aliens Incarcerated in Federal Prisons as of Dec 2010
68% Mexico
5% each for Colombia and Dominican Republic
3% Cuba
2% each for El Salvador and Honduras
1% Guatemala
10% Remaining 172 countries

I think the differences in crimes committed in the following states are interesting. The charts show stats for homicide, larceny/theft, kidnapping, weapons violations, other, burglary, assault, sex offenses, robbery and drugs.
The first three I show are the top three; if sex offenses and homicide were not in the top 3, I added them below. I wonder why murder and sex offenses are so low in Arizona?

Figure 12: Arizona State Convictions for SCAAP Illegal Aliens in Fiscal Year 2008 by Offense
30% Drugs
13% Traffic Violations
11% Assault
4% each Sex Offenses and Homicide (not 4th on the list)

Figure 13: California State Primary Convictions of SCAAP Illegal Aliens in Fiscal Year 2008 by Offense
27% Drugs
13% Assault
11% Sex Offenses
9% Homicide

Figure 14: Florida State Convictions of SCAAP Illegal Aliens in Fiscal Year 2008 by Offense
16% Drugs
13% Sex Offenses
13% burglary
8% Homicide ( not 4th on the list)

Figure 15: New York State Primary Convictions of SCAAP Illegal Aliens for Fiscal Year 2008 by Offense
27% Homicide
23% Drugs
12% Robbery
11% Sex Offenses

Figure 16: Texas State Primary Convictions of SCAAP Illegal Aliens for Fiscal Year 2008 by Offense
20% Drugs
18% Sex Offenses
12% Assault
9% Homicide (not 4th on the list)
 

Be Well

may all be well
I will copy Mixin's and Sasquatch's info onto the long thread tomorrow. Unless someone gets to it first. :-)
 
Top