White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre unsuccessfully tried yesterday to falsify data showing the number of illegal alien rapists, murderers and other dangerous criminals roaming American streets.
The data comes directly from Immigration and Customs Enforcement, but Jean-Pierre claimed it is “misrepresented.” And fact-checking in left-wing mainstream media proves that, she argued.
As The New American reported last week, ICE data shows more than 650,000 criminal illegal aliens are running free, including more than 13,000 convicted murderers.
Not surprisingly, new data reported by the Daily Mail shows that criminal deportations have fallen by almost 75 percent under the Biden-Harris administration.
KJP vs. Doocy
Jean-Pierre and Fox News' Peter Doocy engaged in a numbers battle during a White House press conference.
Given that “13,000 people illegally crossed the border, have been convicted of murder, and live with us,” Doocy said, “We are in awe of how much American communities are at risk right now.” “Is that true?” he asked.
Jean Pierre, a Haitian immigrant whose countrymen are committing crimes, pulled the pin on a smoke grenade.
“I think it's important to set the record straight here,” Jean-Pierre said.
It's been fact-checked by some of your colleagues here, multiple news outlets. It has been misrepresented and debunked here. Therefore, we must call it out.
Therefore, Americans should believe that ICE's numbers are yet another “debunked” conspiracy theory.
Doocy moved forward. “Could you please clarify what is a misrepresentation?” he asked.
“If we're going to report on something, the data that's out there, we have to report it in a way that doesn't confuse the American people and definitely doesn't lie,” Jean-Pierre said. Ta.
If you look at total revenues and removals over the past year, they are higher than every year since 2010 under the previous administration.
However, the numbers are not confusing. they are simple. And they show that thugs, rapists, and murderers roam America's cities and towns.
numbers
As The New American reported last week, citing ICE data released by U.S. Rep. Tony Gonzalez of Texas, there are more than 650,000 criminal illegal aliens on U.S. streets.
This includes those who have been convicted of a crime and those facing criminal charges.
Convicted criminal:
Murder: 13,099
Assault: 62,231
Sexual assault: 15,811 cases
Sexual crimes: 9,461 cases
Criminal charges:
Murder: 1,845
Raid: 42,915
Sexual assault: 4,250
Sexual crimes: 2,650 cases
As of July, an attached letter from a senior ICE official stated that “there were 662,566 noncitizens with criminal records on ICE's domestic register (including those in ICE custody) and the agency's non-custodial register. “There was,” it is explained. Of these, 435,719 people have been convicted and 226,847 have criminal charges pending. ”
The official also explained that ICE agents can release illegal aliens at their discretion.
Deportations significantly reduced
Jean-Pierre's denial of the truth about the harmful consequences of the Biden-Harris administration's immigration policies comes at the same time as other data show the administration has all but given up on deporting criminal illegal aliens. .
“The number of criminal illegal aliens being deported from the United States has fallen by 74% under the Biden-Harris administration, according to public figures compiled by the National Center for Immigration and Control first provided to DailyMail.com.” The website reported:
In the past three fiscal years under the Biden-Harris administration, only 134,617 convicted criminal aliens have been removed, even as large numbers of migrants continue to move across the border. It was.
The numbers come as no surprise to those who have watched the administration blatantly rewrite or violate U.S. immigration law.
For example, the Guidelines for Enforcement of Civil Immigration Laws released in September 2021 impeached Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas and declared that a federal court had unilaterally and illegally rewritten the nation's immigration laws.
Mayorkas wrote that “noncitizens who present a current threat to public safety due to serious criminal activity are generally a priority for arrest and removal.” However, “whether a non-national poses a present threat to public safety should not be determined according to sharp boundaries or categories; instead, it requires an assessment of the individual and the totality of the facts and circumstances.”
Although illegal alien crimes may be “aggravating factors that favor enforcement,” he wrote, “they may also provide mitigating factors that weaken enforcement.”
The list of “mitigating factors” is almost twice as long as the “aggravating factors,” which may explain the sharp decline in criminal deportations. They include:
• Advanced or soft age.
• Stay in the United States for a long time.
– A mental condition that may have contributed to the criminal act or a physical or mental condition that requires care or treatment.
• Status as a victim of a crime, a victim, a witness, or a party to a legal proceeding.
• The impact of relocation on families in the United States, including loss of health care providers and caregivers.
• Whether the non-citizen is entitled to humanitarian protection or other immigration relief.
• Military or other official service of a non-citizen or his or her immediate family.
• Time elapsed since the crime and evidence of rehabilitation.
• The conviction is set aside or set aside.
So maybe even if a 50-year-old illegal alien killer is caring for his 80-year-old mother, the Biden-Harris administration won't deport him.
The New American, citing information from the Center for Immigration Studies, reported a decline in deportations in December 2021, the end of the administration's first full year.
“Under policies imposed by the Biden administration, removals are down 80 percent from last year's lows during pandemic lockdowns and 90 percent from 2019, the last year ICE operations were operating normally. ” CIS reported.
The number of foreign nationals removed due to felony convictions also decreased by more than 50 percent from 2020 and by 65 percent from 2019.