Working paper

The Police as Gatekeepers of Information: Immigration Salience and Selective Crime Reporting

Ashrakat Elshehawy, Arun Frey, Violeta I. Haas, Sascha Riaz, and Tobias Roemer

Abstract

What drives the supply of crime news? While prior research focuses on the news media, we study a crucial upstream gatekeeper of information: the police. We argue that the police act as strategic bureaucrats who increase the disclosure of out-group cues (ethnicity, nationality) when immigration is salient to signal competence and transparency to the public. To test this, we use LLMs to annotate a novel dataset of about one million press releases published by local police stations across Germany between 2014 and 2024. Using a regression discontinuity in time design, we demonstrate an increase in out-group cues in police communications (1) following a nationwide shock to immigration salience (the 2015/16 Cologne New Year’s Eve assaults), and (2) in the days before regional elections in which immigration is a salient campaign issue. Our findings demonstrate how bureaucratic discretion shapes the supply of politically charged information.

Keywords

bureaucratic politics; immigration; large language models, natural language processing, police;

See also

Published in

TSE Working Paper, n. 25-1693, November 2025