That'd certainly be a creative way of dealing with them. But I'm confused by that part of the account- how could they have been charged with illegal immigration when not on American soil?
I found a, imo, more thorough article on the Greenland events here on the same site. They're reference to the radio team says the following...
A few days earlier the Sledge Patrol had reported to the Northland that a suspicious-looking party of men had landed near the entrance of Franz Joseph Fjord. On Sept. 12, the Northland spotted a fishing trawler flying Norwegian colors in MacKenzie Bay, some 500 miles to the south. The boarding party Smith sent aboard the ship, whose name was the Buskoe, found a sophisticated radio set. Questioning of the Buskoe's crew established that it had indeed dropped off a party of men and a radio transmitter.
That night one of the Northland's officers, LT Leroy McCluskey, went ashore with a party of 12 armed men. They found a supposed hunter's shack and surrounded it while McCluskey kicked in the door. Inside were three surprised but not particularly belligerent German radiomen, who promptly surrendered, offered McCluskey a cup of coffee, and started building a fire to heat it. He confiscated a German codebook just before it went into the flames. The Buskoe and its crew were sent to Boston for internment. The Northland had made the first American naval capture of World War II.
Interesting stories, without a doubt- but I'd need more specific info before I could relate it to this debate.
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