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Latino and Hispanic Youth in the Juvenile Justice System

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• Accord<strong>in</strong>g to 2009 data, 94 percent of defendants accused of immigration-related<br />

federal crimes were deta<strong>in</strong>ed prior to disposition of <strong>the</strong>ir cases, outpac<strong>in</strong>g defendants<br />

deta<strong>in</strong>ed for violent crimes (86.9 percent) <strong>and</strong> weapon offenses (82.3 percent).<br />

• Of <strong>in</strong>dividuals charged with immigration-related crimes by <strong>the</strong> federal government, 99<br />

percent plead guilty.<br />

• Of <strong>in</strong>dividuals deta<strong>in</strong>ed for immigration related offenses, 48 percent have a crim<strong>in</strong>al<br />

record, about 80 percent for non-immigration-related offenses. The majority of <strong>the</strong>m are<br />

from Mexico (77 percent), Guatemala (6 percent), Honduras (6 percent), <strong>and</strong> El<br />

Salvador (5 percent).<br />

• Immigrants with crim<strong>in</strong>al records removed from <strong>the</strong> United States have been convicted<br />

of:<br />

Drug related convictions (22 percent);<br />

Crim<strong>in</strong>al traffick<strong>in</strong>g (23 percent); <strong>and</strong><br />

Immigration related offenses (20 percent).<br />

Notes<br />

*Note that some states are excluded from this tabulation: Alaska, Connecticut,<br />

District of Columbia, Hawaii, Ill<strong>in</strong>ois, Iowa, Ma<strong>in</strong>e, Massachusetts, Michigan,<br />

M<strong>in</strong>nesota, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Dakota, Rhode Isl<strong>and</strong>,<br />

Vermont, West Virg<strong>in</strong>ia, <strong>and</strong> Wiscons<strong>in</strong>. [Connecticut <strong>and</strong> New Mexico repealed<br />

<strong>the</strong> death penalty prospectively. The men already sentenced <strong>in</strong> each state rema<strong>in</strong><br />

under sentence of death.<br />

This excerpt has been repr<strong>in</strong>ted with permission from <strong>Lat<strong>in</strong>o</strong> Stats: American<br />

<strong>Hispanic</strong>s by <strong>the</strong> Numbers, by Idelisse Malavé <strong>and</strong> Esti Giordani, <strong>and</strong> published<br />

by The New Press, 2015.<br />

Page 27 of 112

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