
The rest of the country could only hope to have crime rates as low as those on the border.

By Alex Nowrasteh
Senior Immigration Policy Analyst
Cato Institute
Shocking images and anecdotes of crime along the border fuel Trump’s narrative, but rarely are facts deployed to make the case.
Weโve addressed the terrorism and crime arguments frequently, but only rarely touch on border crime. Border counties have far less crime per capita than American counties that are not along the border.
If the entire United States in 2017 had crime rates identical to those in counties along the U.S.-Mexico border, there would have been 5,720 fewer homicides, 159,036 fewer property crimes, and 99,205 fewer violent crimes across the entire country. If the entire United States had crime rates as low as those along the border in 2017, then the number of homicides would have been 33.8 percent lower, property crimes would have been 2.1 percent lower, and violent crimes would have dropped 8 percent.

The numbers in Table 1 come from the FBIโs Uniform Crime Reports for 2017 that we obtained via a special request from the FBI. The crime rates are organized by county, with all crimes reported to sub-county agencies added up using county codes from the FBIโs 2012 Law Enforcement Agency Identifiers Crosswalk. The population figures also come from the FBI and are based on the intercensal reports obtained by the FBI from the Census Bureau. The 23 border counties are lumped together as one and compared to the non-border counties. The numbers for the entire United States are in the last row.

Sheriff Ronny Dodson of Brewster County Texas said, โA lot of politicians are running on securing the border. Oneโs got a six point plan, oneโs got a nine point plan. Theyโre throwing tons of money at this border. I wish theyโd just shut up about it.โ Dodson went on to say, โI think theyโre [politicians] just throwing money at the border for nothing. I think people on the interior see all these shows about the border where thereโs violence.โ
Although Dodsonโs comment is just rhetoric, there is a lot more empirical support for his claims than there is for those who claim that there is a border crime crisis.
Originally published by CATO Institute, 01.08.2019, under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license.
