Customs, Border and Immigration News

Not Many Companies Actually Get Busted For Hiring Illegal Immigrants, Study Finds

  • A study by Syracuse University finds few people have been prosecuted for hiring illegal aliens in the past 12 months. 
  • Only 11 individuals have been prosecuted for knowingly hiring illegal aliens in the past year, despite nearly 86,000 people getting prosecuted for illegal entry into the country during the same time period. 
  • Immigration hawks argue that nationwide implementation of E-Verify, a program that checks a worker’s immigration status, would alleviate the problem. 

A new study finds that, despite a record-setting number of immigrants illegally entering the country, relatively few employers are prosecuted for hiring undocumented aliens.

From April 2018 to March 2019, only 11 individuals were prosecuted for knowingly employing migrants without proper documentation, according to information compiled by the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse at Syracuse University. No individuals have been prosecuted in the past two months, and no companies were prosecuted in the last last year.

The low levels of legal reprimand appear as an oddity given the surge of illegal aliens appearing at the U.S. southern border — many of them claiming they emigrated in search of better work opportunities.

Border apprehensions have increased every month since January, with the months of March and April witnessing back-to-back migrant encounters of over 100,000. Altogether, over half a million illegal immigrants have been apprehended since the beginning of the fiscal year.

“Given the millions of undocumented immigrants now working in this country, the odds of being criminally prosecuted for employing undocumented workers appears to be exceedingly remote,” the study noted. “Not only are few employers prosecuted, fewer who are convicted receive sentences that amount to more than token punishment. Prison sentences are rare.”

The Syracuse study did find a sizable number of people being held accountable for illegal entry into the U.S.

Nearly 86,000 individuals were prosecuted in the past year — April 2018 to March of this year — for illegally entering the U.S. During that same time period, 34,617 were prosecuted for illegal re-entry, and 4,733 were prosecuted for either bringing in or harboring illegal migrants.

Estimates vary on the number of illegal immigrants currently living in the U.S. Earlier studies put the total number of undocumented aliens at around 11 million. However, more recent studies, such as the one published by Yale in 2018, places the number closer to 22 million.

While the Trump administration has reportedly considered mandating a nationwide program, such as E-Verify, that checks whether employees are allowed to work in the U.S., no such proposal has been implemented yet. Only a few states have required employers to use E-Verify, and many immigration hawks believed the program should be more widely used.

“U.S. employers are expected to comply with the federal ban on employing illegal aliens. It has been well established that a primary factor motivating illegal immigration is the possibility of landing a job in the U.S.,” Matthew Tragesser, spokesperson for the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR), stated to The Daily Caller News Foundation on Friday. “Mandating E-Verify, a free, online program that verifies the work authorization of employees, would certainly help employers from hiring illegal aliens.”

FAIR’s comments closely those in the Trump administration. Acting Homeland Security Secretary Kevin McAleenan and others in the Trump administration say the department, understaffed and underfunded, needs additional money from Congress in order to deal with the record number immigrants.

“ICE’s worksite enforcement strategy aims to curb employers from hiring illegal aliens, but the reality is the agency is stretched to capacity and requires more individuals and funding to fully carry out its mission. Despite having national oversight, ICE is smaller than the NYPD, revealing the challenge of prosecuting employers across the nation,” Tragesser continued.

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Jason Hopkins

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Jason Hopkins

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