This recent article in the Oregonian details five cases of Saudi citizens, all young men, who have mysteriously disappeared from custody or control of Oregon authorities for alleged crimes.
These students have been accused of sexual assault, possession of child pornography, drunk driving resulting in serious injury, and the death of 15-year-old Fallon Smart, who was killed by a car driven by one of them at a high rate of speed when she was crossing the street in a marked crosswalk.
Four of these instances involved the Saudi government posting bail money for the suspects, then the suspects absconding before trial. The fifth one (a Saudi citizen sentenced to 90 days in jail for seriously injuring a man while driving drunk) disappeared after one instance of serving the jail time on a weekend.
Some people have a heightened concern over people not having the proper paperwork and getting jobs in the United States that citizens and permanent residents do not want. However, they totally ignore these incidents where citizens of a county where apartheid and slavery are practiced flouting the law — where the government actively intervenes in obstructing justice and helping the defendants flee the country.
Notice how different the reactions of the Saudi government are in these cases versus the one of Rahaf Mohammed al-Qunun — an 18-year-old woman who decided to flee the state where gender apartheid is law, and where apostasy is punishable by death.