Alejandro Pacheco-Medina appeals his conviction and sentence for being found in the United States after he had been deported. See 8 U.S.C. § 1326. He claims that the evidence will not support the conviction because it shows that he did not actually manage to enter the United States. We agree and reverse for entry of an acquittal.
BACKGROUND
There can be little doubt that Pacheco was deported from the United States on December 7, 1998. 2 There is no doubt *1163 whatsoever that he was caught on his way-back into the United States just two days later.
On December 9, 1998, Pacheco and two others began climbing the international boundary fence that separates the United States from Mexico. On this side of the border was the parking lot of the United States Customs compound. A surveillance video camera detected them as they scaled the fence, and the monitor immediately contacted Border Patrol Agent Dionicio Delgado, who was on bike patrol at the time. Within a matter of seconds Agent Delgado responded to the call.' He arrived at the lot just as the three landed. They dropped off the fence and were crouched in preparation for escape into the country at large.
Pacheco’s two companions were nabbed immediately, but Pacheco ran by the agent, who instantly gave chase. Pacheco never left the agent’s sight except for a split second as he rounded a corner, and within a few yards of the border 3 he was captured and taken into custody. Thereafter, he admitted many of the elements of the crime.
At trial, Pacheco moved for an acquittal. See Fed.R.Crim.P. 29. He claimed that because he was never free from official restraint, in legal contemplation he had not even entered the United States. The district court disagreed, he was convicted and sentenced, and this appeal ensued.
JURISDICTION AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
The district court had jurisdiction pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3231. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
We review the denial of a motion for acquittal under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 29 de novo.
See United States v. Neill,
DISCUSSION
As we begin to consider whether Pacheco committed a crime, we do so with the knowledge that he was an alien, he had been removed from the country, and he had again, just two days later, set foot on United States soil. It is also clear that it is a crime for an alien to enter, attempt to enter, or “at any time [be] found in” the United States after having once been deported from this country. 8 U.S.C. § 1326(a). Rhus, a general reading would suggest that Pacheco did commit the crime because he surely left Mexico for the United States, and he just as surely was found on our soil after he came over the border fence. But as a matter of law it is not quite that easy because physical presence is not enough. That is most clearly shown in the concept of “entry,” a concept which has a long judicial history. As the Supreme Court has pointed out, “[t]he definition of ‘entry’ as applied for various purposes in our immigration laws was evolved judicially.”
Rosenberg v. Fleuti,
The notion was expressed in a 1908 case where aliens had crossed the border and proceeded for a quarter of a mile along railroad tracks, but had been under the surveillance of border inspectors from before the time they crossed until their actual physical capture.
See Ex parte Chow
*1164
Chok,
They were not “permitted to enter,” or allowed to enter, within the meaning and intent of the law. “Enter” means more than the mere act of crossing the border line. Those who seek to enter in the sense of the law, and those the policy of the law seeks to prevent from entering, are those who come to stay permanently, or for a period of time, or to go at large and at will within the United States. These persons, on entering, were at once surrounded by officers, silently taken in charge, in effect arrested, and from that time effectually deprived of their liberty and prevented from going at large within the United States.
Id.
at 630;
see also Zhang v. Slattery,
In a trilogy of cases, we have found that leitmotif running through § 1326, and in so doing have composed the rule that resolves the case now before us. The first of those cases involved a defendant who was convicted of aiding and abetting aliens to enter the United States.
See United States v. Oscar,
In Oscar, we reversed because, as we said, the government had to prove that the aliens in question did enter before it could hold Oscar responsible for an entry. See id. at 493-94. We recognized that the aliens had crossed the international border and had, therefore, set foot in this country, but that, we said, was not enough because they had never managed to get past secondary inspection. See id. at 493. We pointed out that the concrete fact of entry did not suffice because as a legal matter “ ‘entry’ ... has not been accomplished until physical presence is accompanied by freedom from official restraint.” Id. As it was, the aliens did not enter at all “because they were never free from the official restraint of the customs officials at the San Ysidro Port of Entry.” Id.
We returned to the area in United States v. Marbin-Plascencia, 532 F.2d 1316 (9th Cir.1976). There an intrepid alien, who was “out of the view of the immigration officials,” managed to get through one fence and then through another one without detection. Id. at 1317. He found himself within the United States, but fifty yards later he encountered a concrete wall which separated the port of entry area from the streets of San Ysidro. As he tried to scale that wall, he was finally detected and arrested. 4 See id. We upheld the juvenile adjudication based upon his illegal entry because, as we said, he “was at no instant up until the moment . of his arrest under any type of official restraint, but to the contrary was exercising his free will, youthful enterprise, and physical agility in evading fixed physical barriers in accomplishing his entry.” Id. That freedom from official restraint while he was on our soil distinguished Martin’s case from Oscar’s.
*1165
We took the question up again when a defendant claimed that undercover surveillance was enough to keep an alien under official restraint for the seven months after she illegally crossed the border into the United States.
See United States v. Agui
lar,
In short, on the facts of this case, the conclusion that Pacheco did not “enter” the United States is ineluctable. The almost-century-old case of Chow Chok so indicates; the BIA’s approach so indicates; the other circuits so indicate; and our cases so indicate. But wait a minute, says the government, this case is distinguishable because Pacheco was convicted of being “found in” the United States, and not of entry as such. As we will discuss, that argument is little more than an amphilo-gism, which exploits the slight ambiguity of the “found in” concept versus the “entry” concept.
No doubt courts have made it clear that § 1326 sets forth three distinct offenses: “enter,” “attempt to enter,” and “found in.”
See United States v. Hernandez,
*1166
In
Chow Chok,
We, therefore, reject the argument that because proof of the crime of “entry” is not needed to prove the crime of “found in,” cases involving the former do not irradiate the latter) We, instead, hold that the concept of entry not only illuminates but also is embedded in the “found in” offense. No doubt, an entry, as defined legally, is required before a person can be guilty of the crime of entry. By the same token, it logically follows that an entry, as defined legally, is required before a person is “found in”' the United States. To put it another way, it is apodictic that Pacheco cannot have been found in a place he did not succeed in entering. He never once got himself into our free air; he was, rather, under official restraint the whole time because he was found before he got in.
In a last attempt to save the day, the government glissades to an irrelevancy. It asserts that IIRIRA 6 has changed the definitions in the Immigration and Nationality Act, and that instead of defining entry the INA now defines the term “admission.” 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(13)(A). Just why that should matter at all is far from clear. The new definition itself speaks of “entry” as do many other parts of the INA. See, e.g., 8 U.S.C. §§ 1101(a)(13)(C), 1326. It certainly does not change the preexisting, and still existing, judicial development of what an entry is. 7
CONCLUSION
Pacheco was removed from this country and attempted to reenter just two days later. His persistence' is impressive, although perhaps Pacheco is a mere epigone compared to Martin (51 immigration arrests by age 15). At any rate, his attempt to return resulted in good news and bad news for him. The bad news was that, because he was never free' from official restraint, he did not get in. The good news was that, because he was never free from official restraint, he did not commit the crime of being found in the United States. Therefore, a judgment of not guilty must be entered.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
. Pacheco raises a number of issues besides sufficiency of the evidence. Among them is a claim that his expedited removal was improper and cannot serve to sustain a § 1326 conviction. Others include attacks on the district court's discovery, evidentiary and sentencing rulings. In light of our disposition of the primary claim, we need not and do not decide those.
. At one point, Delgado said five yards, but then he said fifteen to twenty yards. At any rate, Pacheco did not get far:
. He was 14 or 15 years old, and it was his 51st arrest for immigration law violations. See id. at 1317.
. It is true that during his brief run he had not yet been seized for constitutional purposes.
See California v. Hodari D.,
. Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act, Pub.L. 104-208, § 301(a), 110 Stat. 3009 (1996).
. The old statutory definition declared that an entry was "any coming of an alien into the United States...." 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(13)(A) (1996). The elimination of that statement can have no significance here. Again, the meaning was developed long before the definition was spelled out in the INA.
See Fleuti,
