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One thing I've noticed with the culture of law-enforcement in the US is that there seems to be a mental divide of people into bins of "criminals" and "not criminals."[1] People in the second bin get treated reasonably and people in the first bin get zero benefit of the doubt.

By breaking the law, these travellers got sorted into the "criminals" bin and are now treated like shit. In addition, the high punitive nature of merely being arrested means that probable cause has replaced due process in our system. If a LEO treats you like a criminal (i.e. like human garbage) and has probable cause to do so, you are left with essentially no legal recourse.

1: There's also a 3rd bin of "law enforcement" but that is tangential to this article.



> In addition, the high punitive nature of merely being arrested means that probable cause has replaced due process in our system.

Going beyond that, border patrol has special leeway above and beyond what regular law enforcement can do. They don't need a warrant or even probable cause to search you or your property, and they've been known to intentionally mislead people about their rights and detain them without access to an attorney or a phone call. It's pretty much anything-goes.


I see this a lot in the US: The "Good Guy" vs. "Bad guy" theme is very commonly used, and portrayed news, politics, film, etc.

I find this to be a dangerous oversimplification. I have never met a single "bad person".

All humans are driven by desires, fears within the constraints of their environment. Some of decisions turn for the better, others for the worse. All criminal activity I have seen comes from people who have manoeuvred themselves into bad situations, from which they can't entangle. So they resort to violence or other kinds of criminal activity in order to bring themselves to a seemingly better place. I don't want to make excuses for anyone, but the idea that someone is a "bad" or "good" person, just does not make any sense.


I love your optimistic view but lets be real..there are truly evil people in the world. It makes no sense to say we are all only just products of our environment or you could excuse any action that way. Yes people get into situations and I don't think that in most cases it defines that person, like say a person who committed and assault, I think they can go on to live a good life helping little old ladies across the street, but there are just broken toys out there that truly in my mind have little use on this earth. Back in the day the faces of death videos were popular, I can't stomach that stuff but every once in a while someone would suggest I "check this out" and it would be some video of some guy being skinned alive or something. You will not convince me after seeing that, that some people are not truly evil.


It makes more sense when you realize the two bins are also labeled “not white” and “white.”

(Which also explains the shock white people experience when circumstances result in them being sorted into the “not white” bin — suddenly they’re experiencing treatment from law enforcement they otherwise would never see.)


Also US citizens and foreigners. God help you if you intersect more than one of the bad sides.


It is more subtle than that. In most cases a female PoC in business attire is more likely to be sorted into the "not criminal" bin than a white man with a typical "white trash" look.

The racism comes in when you compare reactions to casually dressed white vs casually dressed PoC. And it gets dialed up even higher if the PoC is showing any ethnic styles.

If you use a model of "Random officer X encounters random citizen Y" if citizen Y is a PoC, they are more likely to be prejudged into the "criminal" bin, but this is not the only factor (gender, inferred socioeconomic class, &c. will also play a role).

This is very different than labeling the bins "not white" and "white"


What racist drivel right here on HN.


I may be extrapolating too much but it seems this is an aspect of American culture in general. We dichotomize things a lot it seems, from the two party system, to culture war. Even when trying to get rid of a dichotomy, like gender activist culture which tries to get rid of gender dichotomy, is ironically still putting people into two bins of being an ally or not.

fixed wording


First, I think there's some trouble in your statement about irony, because you're generalizing all Americans and some perspectives on Americans and then saying they contradict each other. Contradictions aren't valid when they're based on hand-wavy generalizations.

But second, to your point, polarization is studied, and it has grown in American as well as elsewhere on the planet. I've been listening to the Argument Ninja podcast [0] about the topic, as well as reading the series by Tim Urban [1] to better understand what's happening, and hopefully learn what, if any, solutions (and hope) exist.

[0] https://kevindelaplante.com/podcast/

[1] https://waitbutwhy.com/2019/08/story-intro.html


Oh the irony bit was just pointing out how it even occurs in groups of people that are trying to get rid of a dichotomy (that there are more than two genders), but ironically they still form a different kind of dichotomy. (not taking sides here just supporting initial argument)


>By breaking the law, these travellers got sorted into the "criminals" bin and are now treated like shit.

Only its immigration law so its civil not criminal law.

That's the biggest mental divide I come across, there is a certain group that is very quick to label people as "illegal immigrants" or "illegal aliens" or just plain "illegals". Of course the intent is to convey and suggest illegal = criminal. This group can't wrap their mind around the fact immigration status isn't a crime.


https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/8/1325

IANAL, but up to 6 months in prison for first infraction under Title 18 (which is US Criminal code).

There are additionally civil penalties.


What I said is "status is not a crime." Illegal entry into the Country is a crime, whether you are a citizen or not, its a crime.

Nevertheless, these people were not charged with a crime or illegally entering the Country, nor does Immigration Court have jurisdiction over criminal cases.

They are currently being held in an Immigration Detention Center and facing removal (deportation), thats civil, not criminal.

If they were charged with a crime, they would 1st go to criminal court. It happens all the time, an undocumented person commits a crime (of fraud or moral turpitude), gets charged, found guilty, serves time, then upon release from jail/prison ICE is there to meet them, detain them in a Immigration Detention Center/facility while they face the civil Immigration case.


Just because they weren't charged with a crime doesn't mean they weren't arrested for a crime. People get arrested for crimes they are never charged for all the time.

[edit]

> The occupants were arrested for illegally entering the US without inspection. During processing, records revealed the two adults that had previously been denied access to the US, CBP said on Tuesday.

Source:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-50067575


>People get arrested for crimes they are never charged for all the time.

Yes and the point is we don't call those folks "illegals."

You responded to my comment, specifically:

>This group can't wrap their mind around the fact immigration status isn't a crime.

Your pointing to a criminal charge that has nothing to do with my point. Sure citizens and immigrants alike can commit crimes, including illegal boarder crossing, but illegal border crossing has nothing to do with immigration status. Immigration status is itself not a crime.


I was responding to the first half of your comment, not the second, specifically:

>> By breaking the law, these travellers got sorted into the "criminals" bin and are now treated like shit.

> Only its immigration law so its civil not criminal law.

[edit]

And to respond to your second half, colloquially the word "illegal" is used to refer to civil matters all the time (e.g. illegally parked car). Not all undocumented immigrants are here illegally, but those who would be legally deported if discovered are.


>the word "illegal" is used to refer to civil matters all the time (e.g. illegally parked car)

That's referring to a thing not a person. You would not label the owner of that illegally parked vehicle as an "illegal", "illegal car owner", etc... If a person illegally breaches a contract you don't call them a "illegal contractor". The term "illegal" is applied to undocumented immigrants because it fits a narrative.

>By breaking the law, these travellers got sorted into the "criminals" bin and are now treated like shit.

Going back to your illegally parked car, do we put the owner of that illegally parked car in the criminal bin and treat them like shit. Of course not, that would be ridiculous. Undocumented immigrants should be extended the same courtesy, and even if detained and put into civil removal proceedings they should not be treated as criminals or like shit for that matter.

> Not all undocumented immigrants are here illegally, but those who would be legally deported if discovered are.

Sorry, I don't know what your trying to say here. Any undocumented immigrant can be detained and subjected to removal/deportation proceedings at anytime...they don't need to commit any crime for this to happen.


Being put into a prison without a bed and separating a mother from her child for a wrong turn seems like it's criminal, not civil. Civil would be being asked to show up to court, not being imprisoned.


Yes it does seem criminal...but its not. Thats my point Immigrants in detention centers/immigration proceedings are treated like criminals, but they aren't (certainly a immigrant could be a criminal, but thats separate from anything to do with Immigration detention and Immigration Courts).


one of the elements of a crime is the formulated intent.

if you kill someone with the intent to do so, you are commiting murder. if you didnt intend to harm someone, but were intentionally negligent with your parking brake and someone dies, you didnt intend to harm , thus notmurder, but manslaughter, or negligent harm of some sort is the crime.

these people didnt intend to cross the border illegally, most certainly the passengers didnt, and i would estimate, they all would have surrendered to inspection and turned around to disembark,given the choice


1- the civil aspect handles part of this. It only requires equitable enforcement.

2- the act of traveling on the road was intentional, even if they were lost. What you are arguing would be more applicable if they were in a wreck, and pushed across the border. But even that is a stretch.

They may have been advised of this, hence playing up the "swerved to not hit an animal" part of their story.


I think it was "avoiding wildlife" rather than swerving.

in that region there are herds of caribou, buffalo and sometimes quite contrary pods of moose. The traffic delay can be extreme as you have to wait for them to move on, as it is a major offense to interfere with wildlife migration, even tangentially. a lot of people get lost or stranded on a fire/logging road trying to skirt around the crossing.

Ive encountered such people many times and helped them out to the road. I do have to wonder if there was a hue of skin that was stimulating to those border agents, no mention of anything like that, so im left to wonder about it. Most border agents in those areas are quite cordial and deal with hikers and hunters all the time, usually its just a matter of showing passport, explaining what your doing and where you crossed, then turn around and dont make the same mistake for a long while.


I don't know why I read it that way, but you're right. "Avoiding wildlife." I had a picture of an unavoidable turn in my head.

Which maybe goes to show they're being a bit over-ambiguous. Or maybe I just read it wrong.

>a hue of skin that was stimulating to those border agents, no mention of anything like that

If they weren't white, they almost certainly would have mentioned it, with the story being so sympathetic to their victimhood. The media doesn't pass on the chance to play up racism for stories like these.


It's only civil for a first infraction, like the people in this story. Disobeying any immigration order or being deported and then returning is civil and criminal.


>It's only civil for a first infraction

No. As a preliminary matter there is no such thing as an immigration infraction.

>Disobeying any immigration order...

There is nothing special about an "immigration order" its a court order, the same as any other court order and has nothing to do with ones immigration status.

>or being deported and then returning is civil and criminal.

This 2nd part just goes to my point about mental divides, no where did you mention after deportation the vast majority of deportees have a temporary bar to return and thereafter they may return legally...again this goes to your attempted point about "first infractions." People get deported multiple time, it doesn't become a criminal case after the first deportation.


Illegal entry (8 usc 1325)

This is/was generally waived as a matter of policy for a first offence.

The status of being/remaining in the country is a civil matter, and not necessarily criminal.

But crossing the border illegally is criminal.

>court order

It's an immigration "court" order, which is administrative/executive (under the DOJ), and which is not an article III court.

So immigration order might not be 100% accurate, but it's no more wrong than calling it a court order.


>Illegal entry (8 usc 1325) This is/was generally waived as a matter of policy for a first offence.

That isn't an Immigration Law, that is a criminal law. An Immigration Court wouldn't have jurisdiction over those cases. Whether you are a citizen or non citizen if you illegally enter the country thats a crime, and in either case you would go before a criminal court not an immigration court. Again immigration status is not a crime.

>So immigration order might not be 100% accurate, but it's no more wrong than calling it a court order.

Federal Immigration Judges would disagree, Immigration Court is a...Court, and Immigration Judge's issue Court Orders, subject to the same penalties as violating any other court order.


It's a criminal law that has direct bearing on a person's ability to immigrate. Immigration status directly affects the penalties of 8 usc 1325 & 1326. ICE/CBP is going to enforce both.

>Federal Immigration Judges would disagree

They can disagree all they want, but only do it when it's convenient. They're arguing right now they don't even have decision making making capabilities, and can only do what's directed by the executive branch (for the sake of keeping their union). The DOJ can single handily over-rule any order signed by an immigration judge. They're a completely different animal than Article III courts. And so are the orders that they generate.

Can they be enforced by federal officers? Yes, but that's my point, the whole immigration system is complicated and is comprised of many different aspects of government and law.

But you can't split hairs on the intricacies between civil and criminal law (when for immigration, they're highly interwoven) and at the same time argue that a subsidiary of the executive branch should be treated as if it's part of the judiciary branch.

>Again immigration status is not a crime

The article is about crossing the border. By foreigners without a visa. Illegally.


>But you can't split hairs on the intricacies between civil and criminal law (when for immigration, they're highly interwoven)

Its not splitting hairs, its how the law and courts work. There is a difference between civil and criminal laws and courts.

Point to a single Immigration Court case where the Court has sentenced someone to jail/prison for a criminal act. You can't because Immigration Courts don't have jurisdiction over criminal cases.

>The article is about crossing the border. By foreigners without a visa. Illegally.

No criminal charge was brought against these folks. They are NOT in a federal prison awaiting a federal criminal case. They are in an Immigration Detention Facility waiting to appear before a civil Immigration Judge.

Could criminal charges be filed? sure, but then the Immigration Court would lose jurisdiction, they would go to a Federal Prison and appear before a Federal Criminal Court for the criminal case. Even if they were sentenced for the crime of illegal boarder crossing and sentenced to prison, they would serve their term in a federal prison not in a immigration detention facility, and likely ICE would be waiting outside the prison the day they get released and ICE would re-detain them, put them back in a Federal Immigration Detention Center pending civil removal (deportation proceedings) in Immigration Court.


You only need to see a bad guy try to sweet talk the cops once to understand why law enforcement is so skeptical of anyone with a hint of possible guilt. This is doubly frustrating if you're the victim of a crime.

Not saying it justifies the treatment, but it does explain the binning, to some extent.




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