Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2015
Publication Title
Denver University Law Review
Abstract
Immigration crimes are the most prosecuted federal crimes in America. This Article examines the benefits of the federal prosecution of immigration crimes (training, deterrence, and signaling/expression) and balances those benefits against the costs of such prosecutions (court- house costs, alternative prosecution, and incarceration). I conclude that deportation immediately following a conviction for an immigration crime appears to capture the key benefit of this system (signaling/expression) while alleviating its greatest expense (incarceration).
Volume
92
First Page
863
Recommended Citation
Kit Johnson, A Cost-Benefit Analysis Of The Federal Prosecution Of Immigration Crimes, 92 Denv. U. L. Rev. 863 (2015).