What they're not telling you: # EU Crime report-police-id-original-suspect-in-1974-murde.html" title="After FBI Issued Flawed Forensic Report, Police ID Original Suspect in 1974 Murder" style="color:#1a1a1a;text-decoration:underline;text-decoration-style:dotted;font-weight:500;">report-police-id-original-suspect-in-1974-murde.html" title="After FBI Issued Flawed Forensic Report, Police ID Original Suspect in 1974 Murder" style="color:#1a1a1a;text-decoration:underline;text-decoration-style:dotted;font-weight:500;">Report: Spanish Rape Reports Surge 322% Over Last Decade, EU Sees 150% Increase Spain's rape reports have exploded 322 percent in a single decade—more than double the EU average—yet official Eurostat data conspicuously omits who is committing these crimes. New statistics released by Eurostat this week document the scale of the problem with clinical precision: Spain registered 5,222 reported sexual violations in 2024 compared to just 1,239 in 2014. While the EU average sexual crime increase stands at 150 percent, Spain's surge dwarfs that figure.
What the Documents Show
The numbers alone would merit urgent policy discussion, but mainstream coverage has largely treated the statistics as abstract data points rather than examining the demographic breakdown that other research has already compiled. A CEU-CEFAS Demographic Observatory report titled "Demography of Crime in Spain" provides the context Eurostat deliberately omits. According to this analysis, foreigners comprise 31 percent of Spain's prison population while committing per capita 500 percent more rapes and 414 percent more murders than Spanish citizens. The report identifies Arabs and Latinos as having the highest offending rates, with many originating from countries with documented severe crime problems. This demographic reality—however uncomfortable for policymakers—directly correlates with Spain's immigration patterns, which have seen 3.8 million migrants arrive per decade in recent years.
Follow the Money
The trajectory reveals not a gradual trend but acceleration. Penetrative rape cases alone jumped 143 percent between 2019 and 2024, climbing from 2,143 to 5,206 cases. Attempted murders nearly doubled in just four years, from 836 cases in 2019 to 1,507 by 2023, despite Spain's murder rate remaining static at approximately 300 annually. This pattern suggests the influx itself—rather than broader social factors—is driving the surge. Notably, Spain's aging population demographic should theoretically predict declining crime rates, yet the opposite has occurred. The research indicates that this apparent paradox resolves when accounting for the "imported crime" phenomenon directly correlated with migration volumes.
What Else We Know
Regional data further supports this analysis. In Spanish autonomous communities including the Basque region, crime statistics demonstrate massive overrepresentation of foreigners in serious offenses. Foreigners commit robbery with violence at rates 440 percent higher than Spanish nationals. Yet these findings remain largely compartmentalized in regional studies rather than integrated into continental policy discussions. For ordinary Spanish citizens navigating daily life, the implications are concrete. Official crime statistics are presented as neutral information divorced from causation, allowing policymakers to acknowledge the problem while avoiding solutions that address its root cause.
Primary Sources
- Source: ZeroHedge
- Category: Government Secrets
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