Minnesota state Sen. Karin Housley on Wednesday seized on the 
killing of a young Iowa college student — and the reported 
confession of an immigrant with disputed legal status — to take 
the fight on the immigration issue to her Democratic opponent, 
U.S. Sen. Tina Smith.
Housley, a Republican from the Stillwater area, released a 
statement calling the murder a “preventable tragedy.” She 
charged that Smith and “liberal Democrats … are more concerned 
about protecting criminal aliens than protecting innocent lives 
like Mollie Tibbetts.”
Smith did not directly address Housley’s attack: “This is an 
awful tragedy and my heart breaks for Mollie’s family. I can 
imagine nothing worse than losing a child. The individual 
responsible for this heinous crime must be brought to justice 
and punished,” Smith said in a statement to the Star Tribune.
Cristhian Bahena Rivera was charged with Tibbetts’ murder 
Tuesday, and authorities said he was in the country illegally. 
But on Wednesday his lawyer filed a motion stating his client is 
living and working in Iowa legally.
On Wednesday, a member of Tibbetts’ extended family, Sam Lucas, 
a recent graduate of the University of Missouri, tweeted angrily 
that the death should not be used as “political propaganda.” In 
addition, Tibbetts’ aunt, Billie Jo Calderwood, urged people in 
a Facebook post to remember that “evil comes in all colors.”
Republicans — and especially President Donald Trump — have 
sought to shine a light on millions of people here in violation 
of American immigration law, and who Republicans say pose a 
threat to the nation’s safety.
Democrats, outraged by the Trump administration’s policy of 
separating families seeking asylum and other aggressive 
deportation tactics, have grown increasingly defiant, including 
calls from some — though not Smith — to abolish the Immigration 
and Customs Enforcement arm of the federal government.
In her statement, Smith detailed her own views on immigration: 
“Since coming to the Senate, I have voted to increase funding 
for border security by more than $25 billion. I also believe we 
need better intelligence and more effective technology at the 
border. And we need to make sure reform includes a tough but 
fair path to citizenship for people who are in this country 
working, paying taxes and contributing to our society.”
Housley and Trump, who favor a border wall and want to force 
cities and states to aggressively enforce immigration laws, say 
violent crime is a natural outgrowth of an uncontrolled border.
According to a 2015 National Academy of Sciences report, 
however, “Immigrants are in fact much less likely to commit 
crime than natives, and the presence of large numbers of 
immigrants seems to lower crime rates.”
Jessica Vaughan, the policy director of the Center for 
Immigration Studies, which favors tighter immigration controls, 
said the data are inconclusive. “Anyone who says they know the 
answer to that question is misleading you” because the vast 
majority of jurisdictions don’t track the immigration status of 
criminals and the census data on the immigration status of the 
incarcerated is a flawed measure of crime rates, Vaughan said.
Vaughan said the relevant policy questions are about deterring 
people from coming, the swift removal of those who commit crimes 
and a crackdown on those who hire them.
Alex Nowrasteh, an immigration policy analyst with the Cato 
Institute, said it is clear that undocumented immigrants commit 
fewer crimes, citing a preponderance of peer-reviewed studies, 
including a Cato study of Texas, the rare jurisdiction that 
tracks the immigration status of criminals.
The problem with an emphasis on crime committed by immigrants 
not in the country legally, Nowrasteh said, is that “they’re 
focusing government resources on a population less likely to 
commit murders. That’s a waste of resources that could have been 
used to prevent murder in populations that are more likely to 
commit them.”
Trump, who made immigration a centerpiece of his presidential 
campaign, is hammering Democrats on the issue in the run-up to 
the election that could decide which party controls Congress.
At a campaign rally in West Virginia Tuesday, Trump blamed 
faulty immigration law for Tibbetts’ murder: “You heard about 
today with the illegal immigrant coming in, very sadly, from 
Mexico and you saw what happened to that incredible, beautiful 
young woman,” Trump told the crowd in Charleston. “Should’ve 
never happened. Illegally in our country. We’ve had a huge 
impact, but the laws are so bad. The immigration laws are such a 
disgrace, we’re getting them changed, but we have to get more 
Republicans. We have to get ’em.”
Housley’s campaign cited a string of public statements and votes 
by Smith since her appointment as senator in early 2018. Smith 
is against a border wall, and attacked Trump’s order ending 
protections for Liberian Minnesotans from deportation. She also 
voted against a measure that would restrict law enforcement 
grant money to sanctuary jurisdictions, and a proposal by Iowa 
Sen. Charles Grassley to eliminate the diversity visa lottery 
program and limit which individuals can become naturalized 
citizens.
“It was a wake-up call for all of us to have a young innocent 
girl lace up her shoes and go for a run and be raped and 
murdered. It makes me think of my own daughters and how it could 
happen in any community,” Housley said in a Star Tribune 
interview. “Tina Smith and the Democrats are part of the 
problem,” she said.
The Smith campaign pointed to Housley’s changing position on 
Trump’s border wall. She told the Mankato Free Press in January 
that it’s not feasible but is now attacking Smith for her 
opposition to the wall. The Grassley amendment, meanwhile, faced 
bipartisan opposition, including from 14 Republicans.
Although the Tibbetts murder has attracted national attention, 
Housley pointed to another recent case in which a woman was 
killed, this one in Minnesota. The man charged with fatally 
stabbing his ex-girlfriend in a Shakopee apartment before 
slashing his own throat has a criminal history that led to his 
deportation to Mexico, federal officials said Tuesday.
The Associated Press and the Washington Post contributed to this 
report.
http://m.startribune.com/index.php/mollie-tibbetts-murder-
becomes-fodder-in-minnesota-senate-race/491493401/