After being rescued from captivity by Walt, why doesn't Jesse immediately surrender to the police?

After being rescued from captivity by Walt, why doesn't Jesse immediately surrender to the police? - From above of plates with remains of various dishes left after festive dinner on table with cutlery and flowers

In the final episodes of "Breaking Bad," Jesse had been collaborating with Hank and Gomez to "nail" Walt.

Though Hank and Gomez are now (after the shoot-out in the desert between Hank & Gomez and the Aryan Nation) dead and thus unable to corroborate any such claims Jesse might make in this regard, Hank's wife, Marie, could do so (she remained there while Jesse was living in their home as a "safe house").

In addition to Marie's direct testimony, there is also certainly a great deal of secondary and circumstantial evidence pointing to Jesse having "come clean" with Hank and even having risked his life to help Hank "nail" Walt. For example, a copy of Jesse's DVD confession - with Hank off-camera, posing questions to Jesse, etc. - might still exist. If, after being liberated by Walt, Jesse were to have run directly to the APD or DEA and turned himself in, he could have told a convincing and true story about how he had intended to burn down Walt's house, how Hank interrupted him, how Hank convinced him to become a police informant / collaborator, etc.

The scene where Hank and Gomez are murdered and Jesse is taken prisoner would also speak in Jesse's favor. His months of brutalization (evidenced by scars, etc.) while in captivity by the Aryan Nation, being forced to manufacture meth, would have likewise buttressed his claim to "victim" status and elicited the court's sympathy.

So why doesn't Jesse, upon being liberated by Walt at the beginning of "El Camino," immediately turn himself in to the authorities? At the very least, he could have claimed that Hank had promised him immunity (whether or not Hank had that authority is moot - the claim, alone, would have given Jesse the jury's sympathy). Forensic evidence (of the cage in which Jesse was housed for months) would have further supported Jesse's claim that he was an innocent party - and even a victim. In a "worst-case" scenario, he might have gotten a year of probation.

Additionally, some "insider" knowledge that Jesse possessed (the location of the buried housekeeper that Todd had murdered; the hidden money in Todd's apartment) would have further burnished Jesse's image.

And what, actually, were the charges that could have been levelled against Jesse? His only outstanding charge was throwing $500,000 out of his car window onto people's front lawns. As far as I recall, that was the only charge against him - and subsequent events (backed by hard, but also circumstantial, evidence) could place that in a very positive light for Jesse.



Best Answer

As far as Jesse knew, he was wanted. He had little trust in law enforcement and his one contact with law enforcement is killed in front of him. He was being treated as a wanted criminal so his instinct was to flee.




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How long did Jesse stay in captivity?

The series ended with White dying from a gunshot wound after using a remote-controlled machine gun to kill an Aryan Brotherhood gang and free Pinkman, who had been held captive for six months. \u201cEl Camino\u201d picks up after a scar-faced, dusty Pinkman flees the bloody scene in a stolen El Camino vehicle.

How did Jesse end up in captivity?

Pinkman is captured by Jack's gang during the ensuing chaos and spends many months forced to cook meth against his will. At one point, Pinkman nearly breaks out of captivity, but he is caught. Pinkman is forced to witness the gang murder Andrea, with Jack threatening to kill Brock if Pinkman attempts to escape again.

Why was Jesse in captivity?

26) The Nazis fail to produce drugs of Jesse and Walt quality, so their international distributor Lydia (Laura Fraser) has been freaking out. Which is very bad news for Jesse: After they let Walt go, they literally cage Jesse up for months and force him to make Heisenberg-level meth.



Bad Influence | Dead Freight | Breaking Bad




More answers regarding after being rescued from captivity by Walt, why doesn't Jesse immediately surrender to the police?

Answer 2

Jesse had two motivations by the end of Breaking Bad:

  1. He didn't want to bring Walt to justice as much as he wanted to just make him pay for poisoning Brock. Turning witness for the DEA was a means, not an end.
  2. He so sorely wanted to leave all this behind. Remember that were it not for the unfinished business with Walt, he was ready and willing to get a new identity. Seeing Andrea die just cuts his ties further from the Albuquerque community.

Seeing Walt die (or at least dying, with law enforcement on the way) satisfies the first one and so the character-consistent thing for him to do was to run away, that is, attempt his second motivation. He never really wanted to take responsibility for closing the loose ends of the Heisenberg case, nor did he want to return to his old life. He wanted a complete reset.

What I find really poetic in the end of Breaking Bad as well as El Camino is how, finally, Jesse is on the driver's seat! No Walt, nor Mike, nor Hank driving him to their idea of his responsibility. He chooses his own road (Camino in Spanish) and at that moment he decides his only responsibility is to have a fresh start for himself, getting that new identity.

Answer 3

Jesse had just spent months in a cage and was in a near feral state. He suddenly found himself free but with the looming prospect of being immediately incarcerated again for all of the crimes he had committed in the course of the series, including murder. He absolutely, positively did not want to trade one concrete cell for a slightly better one. As the season's premiere alluded in its title: "Live Free or Die."

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