ORDER
The governments’s request for publication is GRANTED. The memorandum disposition filed September 15,1997, is redesignated as an authored opinion by Judge Goodwin.
OPINION
Pedro Gutierrez-Cervantez appeals his conviction for violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1826(b)(2), illegal reentry after deportation following an aggravated felony conviction. He contends that the district court erred in not suppressing statements he made in previous deportation proceedings. He argues that the district court erred in not allowing him to collaterally аttack his three prior state court convictions. He also argues that the district court erred in not departing downward at sеntencing. We affirm.
Facts and Procedural Background
In late 1995, Border Patrol Agent Mark Herring arrested Gutierrez-Cervantez and brought him to the Yuma Border Patrol station. Upon questioning, Gutierrez-Cervan-tez could not remember the name he initially used when arrested by Herring. After faxing his fingerprints to the FBI, Border Patrol agents learned that Gutierrez-Cervantez had three prior aggravated felony convictions based upon guilty pleas in California state courts. The record also revealed that Gutierrez-Cervantez had been deported for these crimes in 1994, and that he did not have the consent of the Attorney General of the United States to re-enter the United States in 1995.
Gutierrez-Cervаntez was charged with one count of illegal reentry after deportation following an aggravated felony convictiоn in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1326(b). He filed a motion to suppress statements made in previous immigration proceedings and a motion to dismiss the indictment based on a collateral attack against the guilty pleas from his previous convictions. The district court deniеd both motions.
Gutierrez-Cervantez then pled guilty to the indictment. He objected, however, to two omissions from the presentenee report. He claimed that the report should have recognized as bases for a downward departure from the Sentencing Guidelines: 1) his agreement to an expedited deportation and 2) the allegation that, as an alien, he will suffer greater punishment than a citizen would suffer in prison. The district court rejected these arguments for a downward departure in Gutierrez-Cervantez’s sentence, sentencing him to 70 months. Gutierrez-Cervantez appealed.
I. Suppression of Statements
Gutierrez-Cervantez argues that the district court erred in denying his motion to suppress the statements that he made at his deportation hearing sixteen months before the currеnt charge because the statements resulted from custodial interrogation without
Miranda
warnings. We have recently considered this issue and have held that such evidence is admissible.
United States v. Solano-Godines,
*462 II. Collateral Attack
Gutiеrrez-Cervantez argues that the district court should have dismissed his indictment because his prior felony convictions were constitutiоnally defective and therefore cannot form an element of the crime of illegal reentry after deportation following an aggravated felony conviction. The Supreme Court has held that the Constitution requires only that collateral attacks be. allowed , against predicate convictions obtained in violation of the right to appointed counsel.
Custis v. United States,
Discussing § 1326(b)(2), we have already held that the distinction between sentencing enhancements and elements of the crime is irrelevant for purposes of determining whether the predicate crime qualifies as an aggravated felony.
United States v. Lomas,
Just as in
Lomas, the
distinction between sentencing еnhancements and elements of the crime is irrelevant for purposes of determining when the Constitution allows collaterаl attack on prior convictions. The constitutionality of a prior conviction is a question of law, and allowing collаteral attacks in § 1326(b) proceedings “would require sentencing courts to rummage through frequently nonexistent or difficult to obtain statе court transcripts or records that may date from another era, and may come from .any one of the 50 states.”
Custis,
Thus, following Custis and Lomas, the Constitution requires only that collateral attacks in illegal re-entry after deportation prоceedings be allowed on convictions obtained in violation of the right to counsel. As Gutierrez-Cervantez had counsel during his stаte court criminal proceedings, he cannot now challenge those convictions.
III. Sentencing Departures
Gutierrez-Cervantez argues that thе district court erred in denying him a sentencing departure because,- as an alien, he will suffer greater punishment in the Bureau of Prisons and because he agreed to an expedited deportation. A district court’s discretionary refusal to depart downward is unreviewable on appeal.
United States v. Estrada-Plata,
Gutierrez-Cervantez relies on language in the district court’s ruling that it rеjected Gutierrez-Cervantez’s argument for a downward departure “in its entirety” as proof of the court’s belief that it had no authority to depart.
This language demonstrates nothing of the kind. At sentencing, .neither party argued that the district court was without authority tо depart. The parties just took contrary positions on whether the district court should depart in this particular case. Thе district court’s statements that it rejects both of Gutierrez-Cervantez’s bases for departure “in [their] entirety” does not reflect a mistaken belief that it lacked authority to depart. Rather, the district court expressed its refusal to depart downward in forceful terms, and
*463
we cannot review this exercise of discretion.
Estrada-Plata,
AFFIRMED.
