Rorinthas wrote:
If someone reported a crime and had a bench warrant for trespassing, should they be arrested?
Hopwin wrote:
Criminals reporting crimes should = amnesty is the argument here? Or is this more like a plea deal? Don't deport me and I will tell you which houses sell crack or brew meth?
For me, it's just a cost/benefit analysis. I'm more concerned with busting people who commit violent crimes and serious property crimes than I am with busting illegal immigrants, so I favor looking the other way on the immigration violation when an illegal immigrant reports a crime, based on the theory that doing so will increase the likelihood of reporting.
I don't reach the same conclusion when the reporter's crime is something other than an immigration violation, though, for
two *three* reasons: (i) I suspect the population of illegal immigrants is much larger, more stable and more integrated into "normal life" than the population of parole violators and people with bench warrants, so the cost/benefit effect of having or not having a "reporter amnesty" is much larger and longer-lasting when applied to illegal immigrants; (ii) I consider immigration violations to be low-damage, largely victimless crimes, whereas the kinds of crimes for which people would be on parole (and in violation thereof) and/or be subject to a bench warrant are probably more directly harmful ones; and (iii) I think the parole violators and bench warrant folks are probably much more likely to go out and commit further crimes of a serious and directly harmful nature.
*ETA reason number (iii), which, upon further reflection, I realize is kind of crucial.