Analyst leaves CNN host speechless after he reveals why migrants choose New York City — not Florida — for criminal activity



CNN anchor Erica Hill was left stunned on Friday when she learned why migrants aren't committing brazen crimes in Florida.

During a report on the group of migrants accused of attacking New York City police officers over the weekend — at least four of whom police now believe are fleeing the country — CNN analyst John Miller explained why migrants are committing crimes in New York City.

After noting that the vast majority of migrants are not criminals, Miller said, "There is this one-percenter criminal element that looks at a different opportunity here."

Miller explained:

These individuals — I went over their rap sheets yesterday, multiple charges, grand larceny, robbery, attempted robbery, grand larceny, grand larceny — this particular crew operated on mopeds and scooters. They were doing organized retail theft. They were doing snatches on the street: iPhones, iPads, clothing. One of them that they are still seeking has ten charges on one day because he's part of a pattern that's been going on.

And I'm looking at the dates that their arrest started, which is probably close to when they got here. They've only been here a couple of months.

The former NYPD deputy commissioner then relayed what NYPD detectives have told him.

"What the detectives are telling me is they have crews here that operate in New York, do all their stealing, then go to Florida to spend the money and then come back," Miller recounted.

"And I'm like, 'Well, why don't they just stay and steal in Florida?' And they said, 'Because there, you go to jail,'" he explained.

When Miller finished his report, Hill appeared stunned and only managed to say, "Oh." Co-anchor Phil Mattingly then broke the silence by applauding Miller's "great reporting."

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Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) responded to the report on Friday by noting that, "We’re doing it right here."

"You can see why people are fleeing some of those areas that can’t even keep the streets safe, they can’t even keep homeless off the streets, its been really, really problematic in many parts of our country," he said.

It remains unclear why Manhattan prosecutors did not request bail for the accused migrants and why a judge approved their release.

"This was a bail eligible offense. Why bail wasn't asked for, we don't have an answer for that, but the judge also had an opportunity to step in and remand them to Rikers," said NYPD chief of patrol John Chell. "The whole system needs to be looked at."

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Top CNN analyst says the quiet part out loud about far-left criminal justice reform after mass riots in Philly



The top law enforcement analyst at CNN admitted Wednesday that progressive criminal justice reform is wreaking havoc on cities and driving up crime.

Philadelphia police arrested dozens of people late Tuesday into early Wednesday after large, organized groups of rioters — whom interim police Commissioner John Stanford called "criminal opportunists" — terrorized the city's downtown area. A second night of mass looting erupted on Wednesday night into Thursday morning.

According to CNN chief law enforcement analyst John Miller, the situation in Philadelphia is endemic of a larger problem striking Democrat-controlled cities.

That problem, Miller said, is that looters exploit protests using "sophisticated communications networks" to organize mass crime sprees. They are emboldened by progressive criminal justice reform that seeks to decrease the penalty for property crimes, he explained, suggesting that "the litmus test" for such reform is to see where organized property crime is occurring.

"You are seeing this kind of looting happening — I mean shoplifting and organized retail theft happen — in places like New York, Los Angeles, Philadelphia," he observed.

"If you look at where Target closed nine stores yesterday — four stores in San Francisco, stores in Seattle, stores in Portland, stores in New York — these are places where bail reform laws, criminal justice reforms have taken the inside of a jail cell out of the equation," Miller explained. "So shoplifting is a crime where a judge can't set bail."


To prove his point, Miller cited data from New York City.

"Think about this: In New York City there are just over 300 people who have between them 4,000 arrests; 70% of them are not in jail, and they account for 30% of all shoplifting in New York. This is actually their job. They go out to steal every day," he said.

"And that has gone up significantly because they know getting put in jail is not in the equation any longer because of the laws that say 'it's a no-bail offense' and DA's policies are they don't want people in custody for what they call nonviolent crimes," he explained.

The end result of such criminal justice reform policies, Miller said, is that criminals realize it "is just like shopping without money."

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