San Francisco‘s sanctuary city policies have inadvertently provided significant assistance to drug dealers from Honduras, resulting in a surprising consequence a real estate boom in their home country.
The San Francisco Chronicle conducted an investigation and conducted interviews with Honduran migrants involved to sell drugs and drug trafficking within San Francisco
According to the migrants, sanctuary city policies significantly reduce the risk of deportation and lead to shorter prison sentences for drug-related offenses and other crimes. In fact, one drug dealer disclosed that approximately half of the drug dealers that sell drugs in his hometown were now selling drugs in San Francisco due to the city’s lenient enforcement policies.
The drug dealer explained, “In San Francisco, it’s like you’re here in Honduras. The lack of deportations is the problem. Many choose San Francisco because it’s a sanctuary city. You go to jail and come out again.”
The lucrative profits generated by these drug dealers to sell drugs enabled them to send substantial amounts of money back to Honduras, fueling a surge in the local real estate market. One former drug dealer that sell drugs proudly stated, “San Francisco gives me the money, the free money.
Even when some drug dealers that sell drugs were deported, they found their way back into the United States illegally, with one individual claiming to have been deported nine times
The Chronicle’s investigation also uncovered instances of Hondurans adorning their homes and vehicles with symbols associated with San Francisco sports teams, such as the San Francisco 49ers and the San Francisco Giants, as a symbol of their drug-dealing ties to the city.
This revelation highlights the unintended consequences of sanctuary city policies, showcasing how the desire to protect undocumented immigrants that sell drugs can inadvertently facilitate criminal activities and stimulate unexpected economic growth in their home countries.