Because that is something that never happened. The complete lack of record of Jesus in the Talmud highlights that he was of no concern to the Sanhedrin.
Sanhedrin
No he was arrested by the Sanhedrin, a council of Jewish judges.
Blasphemy, which is not punishable by death during that time.
The Sanhedrin was a council of Jewish religious leaders in biblical times responsible for religious and legal matters. It was made up of 71 members and played a significant role in Jewish society during the time of Jesus.
The Romans did not want Jesus. Jesus was taken to Poltius Pilates, the Roman governor of Judea by the Jewish judges of the Sanhedrin. They considered Jeusus to be a blasphemous heretic and wanted the Romans to execute him.
There is no clear historical evidence that Pontius Pilate repented for his actions in condemning Jesus to crucifixion.
The answer is in the synoptic gospels, Jesus was taken to the Jewish religious court, the Sanhedrin, so that it could determine the charges against Jesus to be brought to the Roman governor, Pontius Pilate. The author of John's Gospel was aware that the Sanhedrin would never have sat at night to try Jesus, so changed this. In John, Jesus was brought to the home of Annas, father-in-law to Caiaphas, the high priest John 18:13). Annas interrogated Jesus and then sent him to the house of Caiaphas (John 18:24), who in turn sent him for trial under Pontius Pilate..
Caiaphas, the high priest during the trial of Jesus, was not specifically punished in the Bible. However, some interpretations suggest that the Jewish leaders faced repercussions for their role in condemning Jesus.
He was publicly executed by crucifixion after a trial by the Jewish Sanhedrin judicial council, with the consent of the Roman governor. I thought that the sword by the Roman Solider killed him.
Christianity is, in fact, an offshoot of Judaism. From a liberal Jewish perspective, Jesus appears to have been squarely in the Jewish prophetic tradition -- condemning those who practiced the rituals of Judaism while more or less ignoring its ethical principles. At the time of Jesus' life, many Jews were in hopes that the Messiah would appear to release them from Roman oppression. After Jesus' death, his disciples encouraged the belief that Jesus had, in fact, been the promised Messiah, and that the Davidic empire would be restored. When the majority of Jews rejected this belief, the Jewish Christians began to evangelize non-Jews, and the two faiths split.
Most Jews at the time, and for centuries afterward, never heard of him. But for those who did, the Christian narratives quote him as saying things that are not in keeping with Jewish tradition and beliefs.
One was Joseph of Arimathea - a follower of Jesus and the oowner of the tomb in which they laid Jesus. He originally pleaded with Pilate for him to release the body.The other was Nicodemus, a member of the Jewish ruling class, the Sanhedrin, who, because of his position, followed Jesus in secret.