But the arrest - and, yes, even the strip search - of an Indian diplomat accused of visa fraud also revealed a simple and longstanding reality of the US justice system: Everyone charged with a crime here is supposed to be treated the same, whether wealthy or poor, prominent or ordinary, citizen or foreigner.
"There is a remarkable and almost charming egalitarianism in it," said New York City defense attorney Ron Kuby.
"Everybody is treated in exactly the same disrespectful, casually brutal and arrogant fashion."
Indian officials have been angry over the way federal marshals handled Devyani Khobragade, the country's deputy consul general in New York, calling the treatment degrading and inhumane. Yet most Americans would find the procedures fairly typical for a criminal case - though certainly not pleasant.
Khobragade, who was arrested last week outside her daughter's school, complained that she was strip-searched and held in a cell "with drug addicts" until her appearance before a judge.
The case stirred widespread outrage in India, where the idea of an educated, middle-class woman being strip-searched is almost unheard of, except in the most extraordinary crimes. The fear of public humiliation resonates strongly there, and heavy-handed treatment by the police is normally reserved for the poor.
US Attorney Preet Bharara, who brought the charges, was born in India and raised here. He said the diplomat was "fully searched" by a female deputy, which is "standard practice for every defendant ... In order to make sure that no prisoner keeps anything on his person that could harm anyone, including himself."
In India, the wealthy fearing arrest often approach courts for anticipatory bail, a means of avoiding arrest. The poor cannot afford that luxury because they are not in a position to hire prominent attorneys and pay legal costs.
Influential politicians sometimes feign illness after an arrest to get shifted to hospitals rather than prisons. But in the US, defendants of all types are routinely searched, photographed and fingerprinted before going to court.
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