Article IV, Section 2 of the Constitution orders it.
Presumably you are asking about the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850, which was a part of the Great Compromise of 1850. This law tried to more strongly enforce the Constitutional requirement to return runaway slaves; before 1850, many Northern states were passing laws that made it difficult to return slaves, such as by giving them the right to a trial.
The Fugitive Slave Act set up special government commissioners who held considerable power to return slaves, and it overruled laws that would give slaves rights like the right to trial or even to testify in court. Police and other government officials who were caught not complying with the Act were automatically given very large fines and even prison sentences.
Fugitive Slaves Laws APEX
The Fugitive Slave Act of 1850
fugitive slave act
the officials.
The runaway slaves traveled at night, so nobody could catch them, because the darkness made it hard for others to see them. ceyquan salmon
The Fugitive Slave Act.
Fugitive Slaves Laws APEX
The Fugitive Slave Act of 1850
fugitive slave act
the officials.
The runaway slaves traveled at night, so nobody could catch them, because the darkness made it hard for others to see them. ceyquan salmon
Virus
If their fellow slaves had run away then the slave owner would not allow his or her other slaves to assist them, because they might have led the owner in a wrong direction to make sure the runaway wasn't ever brought in to justice. In short, no, because they couldn't trust the other slaves not to mislead them.
The Fugitive Slave Act. It was part of the Compromise of 1850.
If the cars are already runaway, then it would be hard to catch up to them to put them in neutral.
catch them
Slave catchers