Dr. John Lott talked to Stephen Bannon on WarRoom about Lott’s latest piece at the Federalist titled: “As Deportations Rise, The U.S. Is On Track For The Lowest Murder Rate On Record.”
June 16, 2025

Dr. John Lott talked to Stephen Bannon on WarRoom about Lott’s latest piece at the Federalist titled: “As Deportations Rise, The U.S. Is On Track For The Lowest Murder Rate On Record.”
June 16, 2025
https://youtu.be/6T0iKaSW-D0 Dr. John Lott appeared on the Carl Jackson show to discuss Trump’s ICE enforcement record. See also Dr. Lott's latest piece at the New York Post titled "How Trump’s ICE enforcement record blows Obama’s out of the water— by a lot."...
Dr. John Lott, President of the Crime Prevention Research Center, appeared on the Talk Back program to discuss the Supreme Court’s review of a Hawaii case on whether private property is presumptively gun-free, and recent ICE enforcement in Minnesota. See also Dr....
In some states the last four digits of one's Social Security numbers are often used for identity verification during voter registration. The number of non-citizens provided Social Security numbers by fiscal year, though this includes both those who can legitimately...
The primary driver of the peak in crime in the 1990s and the subsequent decline is the removal of lead from the atmosphere. There is a ton of medical literature on this. It turns out that crime follows atmospheric lead levels with a 22 year lag. This is a pattern that is consistent over multiple jurisdictions in multiple countries. The reason is that lead damages the part of the brain associated with impulse control, and the damage is done when the victims are children, but the effects show up in crime statistics in late teens and early adulthood. The source of the atmospheric lead was leaded gasoline, which was phased out in the 1970s. Thus, the peak was 20 years later in the 1990s. Since then, crime has been dropping lockstep with the decrease in atmospheric lead. Now it’s about back to baseline and other things will have more of an effect.
In particular, look at Figure 2 in the second reference by Mielke and Zahran.
There is a similar, though less obvious, relation between lead in the soil and crime as well (Guinn, B., 2018. Lead and crime: an ecological study between lead contaminated topsoil and violent crime.) and prenatal exposure (Wright, J.P., Dietrich, K.N., Ris, M.D., Hornung, R.W., Wessel, S.D., Lanphear, B.P., Ho, M. and Rae, M.N., 2008. Association of prenatal and childhood blood lead concentrations with criminal arrests in early adulthood. PLoS medicine, 5(5), p.e101.)
Here’s just a taste of the literature:
Taylor, M.P., Forbes, M.K., Opeskin, B., Parr, N. and Lanphear, B.P., 2016. The relationship between atmospheric lead emissions and aggressive crime: an ecological study. Environmental health, 15, pp.1-10.
Mielke, H.W. and Zahran, S., 2012. The urban rise and fall of air lead (Pb) and the latent surge and retreat of societal violence. Environment international, 43, pp.48-55.
Stretesky, P.B. and Lynch, M.J., 2004. The relationship between lead and crime. Journal of Health and Social Behavior, 45(2), pp.214-229.
Taylor, M.P., Forbes, M.K., Opeskin, B., Parr, N. and Lanphear, B.P., 2018. Further analysis of the relationship between atmospheric lead emissions and aggressive crime: an ecological study. Environmental Health, 17, pp.1-4.
Herrnstadt, E., Heyes, A., Muehlegger, E. and Saberian, S., 2016. Air pollution as a cause of violent crime: Evidence from Los Angeles and Chicago. Manuscript in preparation.
Bondy, M., Roth, S. and Sager, L., 2020. Crime is in the air: The contemporaneous relationship between air pollution and crime. Journal of the Association of Environmental and Resource Economists, 7(3), pp.555-585.