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Many jurisdictions already have harsher sentences for US citizens. There is a present and spreading trend to consider immigration consequences when selecting charges to bring against alien defendants, and local policies are being emplaced that mandate charging "alternative offenses" or "reasonable modifications" to sentencing when the usual charge and/or sentence might result in removability.Harsher sentences are absolutely an option for US citizens convicted of crimes. My point was why have harsher sentences based on someone’s legal immigration status?
So in Brooklyn, for example, an alien might be charged with trespassing when a US citizen would be charged with a drug offense because the trespass charge doesn't make them removable or inadmissible, but a USC gets stuck with a drug conviction forever. No future employer's going to care about a trespass conviction.