Because we always hold out hope for the rehabilitation of users. We give people repeated chances to reform their behavior after being educated about what they did wrong. Many, many people never repeat the troubling behavior after being warned and go on to become very productive members of the site. You would be surprised at the number of candidates in the previous election who were once warned about breaking site rules like this.
In cases of voting fraud, once the sock puppet accounts are removed and anomalous votes invalidated, all of the detrimental affects to the system will have been removed. Any improper unicorn points they amassed evaporate, and the artificially high votes on their posts return to normal. All that's left is to make sure this doesn't happen again, thus the warnings and temporary suspensions.
Suspensions are primarily intended to put a short hold on troubling behavior and to get someone to pay attention, not as a punitive measure. In fact, over the last year or so I've been experimenting with just warning, not even suspending, users who commit voting fraud. Suspensions can sometimes lead to people leaving the site permanently, or for them to flip out and become an even worse problem. A gentle, private warning to a user is often enough to get them to feel bad about what they did and to nudge them to become a productive member of the site.
My goal is not to punish people for misbehaving, it's simply to make sure that the site is kept clean and that visitors can trust the honesty of the voting system. Had we outright banned anyone who was suspected of voting fraud, we would have lost many people who went on to be great contributors.
;-)