High speed chases have been illegal all over for decades.
That is because the chase itself is what endangers everyone, much more than any criminal could possibly alone.
The correct procedure us to use surveillance to try to determine who they are and where they are going, and to then arrest them later.
Same with the pit maneuver.
What if there are innocents in the vehicle, like children or hostages?
You are not authorized to kill people over the fact they are frightened enough to try to flee.
That is a normal human emotional response. Its called "Flight or Fight".
And flight is the vastly preferable choice.
And crossing the border without proper procedures is a regulator offense, not a crime.
It is like over staying a parking meter.
A crime is something contemptable by definition.
A regulatory offence is just being in violation, but not inherently evil.
Ethnicity and nation of origins are ALL that matter.
The European immigrants who stole the US from the natives, were criminals who now are trying to prevent the natives from returning to the US.
That is incredibly illegal and corrupt.
The natives have inherent ownership rights that we are illegally trying to deny.
Your great grandfather came here totally illegally, by the murder of 98% of the natives, and illegal eviction of most of the rest.
For example, states like CA, UT, NV, AZ, FL, OK, NM, CO, were sold to the US under the provision that the million or so Mexican land owners could stay, without becoming citizens. But they were murdered or forced off their land anyway, illegally.
For example, look up the massacre of natives by the Texas Rangers.
One as recent as 1918.
“People say the past is the past, and you’ve got to move on. Unfortunately, that is just not the case. Violence against Latinos ... has become more relevant."
www.nbcnews.com
{...
'Porvenir, Texas' details massacre of Mexican Americans by U.S. soldiers, rangers
“People say the past is the past, and you’ve got to move on. Unfortunately, that is just not the case. Violence against Latinos ... has become more relevant."
...}