I think, in Voight’s mind, that was enough of a penalty or a punishment for what he did, and that was the thing that sort of pushed him to not arresting him.
Then, based on the eulogy and where Roman speaks about there’s no such thing as absolution and you carry around with you what you’ve done forever…
We considered having Voight arrest him at the end, and then we thought about him not arresting him at the end, and then we thought about what would he really do?