OPINION
On April 26, 2001, a man claiming to be Alejandro Ceja-Prado was arrested and charged with entering into a conspiracy to sell methamphetamine. Ceja-Prado pled guilty to the offense, and was sentenced to 151 months of imprisonment with three years of supervised release. Although Ceja-Prado testified during his plea collоquy that he was twenty-one when the crime was committed, he now presents evidence purporting to establish that he was a juvenile at the time of the crime. If this is true, there is presently, and was at the time of the conviction, no federal jurisdiction over Ceja-Prado’s case. The Federal Juvenile Delinquency Act, 18 U.S.C. §§ 5031 et seq., prоvides that federal courts have no jurisdiction over certain prosecutions for acts of juvenile delinquency unless the cases have been certified for prosecution by the Attorney General or his specified representatives, and no such certification has been lodged in this case. Becausе every federal court has a continuing obligation to ensure that it possesses subject-matter jurisdiction, we remand for an evidentiary hearing on the jurisdictional facts put in question by the newly presented evidence.
I
The defendant, who presented himself as Alejandro Ceja-Prado until the present appeal, is a Mexican national who entered the United States several years ago. On April 26, 2001, Ceja-Prado and a co-defendant attempted to sell methamphetamine to an undercover officer, and were arrested and charged with conspiracy to distribute, distribution, and possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine, and carrying a firearm during and in relation to a drug trafficking crime. See 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1), 841(b)(1)(A), 841(b)(1)(C), 846; 18 U.S.C. §§ 2, 924(c)(1)(A)(i). On September 10, 2001, pursuant to a revised information charging only the conspiracy count, Ceja-Prado entered a guilty plea. During Ceja-Prado’s plea colloquy, the district judge twice asked his age, and *1048 consistent with the November 14, 1979, birthday that he repоrted to his arresting officers, Ceja-Prado twice replied that he was “[t]wenty-one.” At his sentencing hearing three months later, after his purported birthday, Ceja-Prado was asked if he was twenty-two years old, to which he replied, “Yes.”
Ceja-Prado timely appealed his conviction and sentence, and on May 17, 2002, he filed а motion for remand to the district court. 1 In the motion papers, Ceja-Prado asserted for the first time that he is not Alejandro Ceja-Prado, who was age twenty-one at the time of the crime, but rather Javier Ceja-Prado, who was only sixteen years old at that time. The motion addressed only Ceja-Prado’s identity and age; in it, the defendant did not deny that he is the person who committed the acts set forth in the revised information.
Ceja-Prado now insists that he is Javier, that he had been using his older brother Alejandro’s identification papers in order to find work in this country, and that he showed these papers to the arresting officers. He did not disclose his true identity prior to this aрpeal, he contends, because he feared the consequences of his use of false identification, and did not understand the special procedural protections afforded juveniles. Now, however, he presents several documents purporting to establish that he is Javier and was a juvenile at thе relevant time: an authenticated birth certificate establishing that Javier Ceja-Pra-do was born on December 25, 1984; sworn declarations from family members attesting to his “true” identity and date of birth; an authenticated picture of Alejandro Ceja-Prado; and an authenticated picture of himself. Ceja-Prado also рoints to evidence that a government informant involved in the arrest knew him as “Javier,” not as “Alejandro.”
Whether Ceja-Prado is Javier or Alejandro, and whether he was a juvenile or an adult at the time he committed the crime, are factual questions, the answers to which may compel the conclusion that the district court lacked jurisdiction to accept his plea. The Federal Juvenile Delinquency Act (the “Act”) prescribes special procedural protections for a juvenile who allegedly commits an act of juvenile delinquency — an act undertaken “prior to his eighteenth birthday which would have been a crimе if committed by an adult,” 18 U.S.C. § 5031. These protections include a procedural prerequisite for prosecution in federal court: such juveniles “shall not be proceeded against in any court of the United States” unless the Attorney General or certain other federal officials follow the certification procedures required by 18 U.S.C. § 5032. We have squarely held that this certification process is a jurisdictional requirement.
United States v. Doe,
If Ceja-Prado was in fact born on December 25, 1984, the Act — and its jurisdictional certification requirement — applies to his prosecution. It is undisputed that no such certification occurred in this case. Therefore, if Ceja-Prado’s assertion is factually correct, the district court had no jurisdiction to proceed with his case, and the conviction must be vacated.
II
Whether a criminal defendant may present evidence on appeal that, if true, would establish that the district court lacked jurisdiction over his case — even though in the district court he represented the facts to be to the contrary, thus leading the court *1049 to believe that jurisdiction existed — appears to be an issue of first impression in any circuit. We recognize at this point that Ceja-Prado has falsely represented his age, either to us or to the district court, and we unequivocally state that we do not sanction this conduct. Moreover, we appreciate the oddity of considering, at this late stage, evidence not presented to the trial court. 2 Nevertheless, because this evidence raises a “serious question” regarding the existence of federal jurisdiction — the аbsence of which we may not simply ignore — we remand for an eviden-tiary hearing to determine Ceja-Prado’s true age. 3
Under these circumstances, our obligation to investigate and ensure our own jurisdiction overrides the equitable or jurisprudential considerations that might otherwise prevent Ceja-Prado from raising new аnd contradictory evidence at this point. We have repeatedly recognized that federal jurisdiction cannot be created by the parties through waiver or through estoppel, in cases in which jurisdiction otherwise does not exist. It is clear, for example, that this court has a continuing obligation to assess its own subject-matter jurisdiction, even if the issue is neglected by the parties entirely or raised for the first time on appeal.
See Dittman v. California,
Instead, when it has come to the attention of the court that there exists a “serious question” regarding the factual predicate for subject-matter jurisdiction, we have remandеd for a finding to resolve the jurisdictional question.
See, e.g., Matheson v. Progressive Specialty Ins. Co.,
We acknowledge that our disposition of two diversity cases suggests that there may be an exception to the general rule requiring us to investigate serious questions of fact affecting our jurisdiction no matter when they arise. In
Albrecht v. Lund,
If so, we would not extend any such diversity exception beyond its present bounds, or to any other category of cases. Certainly, the policy reasons that might support a diversity exception are not aрplicable to federal criminal cases, much less to criminal pleas from which convictions necessarily follow. Criminal defendants ordinarily have no incentive to foist jurisdiction on the federal courts in order to be able to plead guilty. More generally, only in the rarest of cases will a criminal defendant believe that he will benefit from misleading a federal court into concluding that it has jurisdiction over the charges against him. There is, indeed, little conceivable reason that any defendant would want to subject himself unnecessarily to the tender mercies of the federal criminal justice system, with its mandatory minimum sentences and hаrsh sentencing guidelines. Even more rarely will any such defendant subsequently change his mind and present the true jurisdictional facts on appeal. It is, in part, for this reason that we are faced here with a question of first impression.
In light of the above, we would not abandon, even if we could, the firmly established principle that we hаve an obligation to ensure our own jurisdiction when serious questions regarding the validity of that jurisdiction arise. “Nothing is to be more jealously guarded by a court than its jurisdiction. Jurisdiction is what its power rests upon. Without jurisdiction it is nothing.”
In re Mooney,
The evidence accompanying CejaPrado’s motion for remand creates such a “serious question” in this case. If credited, the evidence may be sufficient to estаblish that the Ceja-Prado who pled guilty was a juvenile at the time of the alleged crime, and that because certification was lacking, federal jurisdiction did not exist to take his plea. To fulfill our obligation to ensure our own jurisdiction, we therefore remand this case to the district court for a determination of Cejа-Prado’s true age. If Ceja-Prado was younger than eighteen at the time of the crime, we direct the district court to vacate his conviction and dismiss the information without prejudice, for lack of federal jurisdiction.
See United
*1052
States v. Doe,
REMANDED.
Notes
. On June 27, 2002, the Ninth Circuit Appellate Commissioner denied the motion without prejudice to its later renewal. At oral argument, Ceja-Prado renewed it.
. The government cites
United States v. Frasquillo-Zomosa,
. The documents presented on appeal were never presented to the district court. In a case in which a party attempts to present on appeal evidence that the district court has evaluated and refused to credit, we would naturally afford the district judge's determination the normal deference that is due factfind-ing in the trial court. Here, it is precisely because the judge has not yet had the opportunity to weigh the relevant evidence that we remand the case for an evidentiary hearing.
.
Schnabel
devoted only one sentence to explaining its rationale for refusing to consider new facts affecting the court's jurisdiction;
Albrecht’s
discussion is confined to a parenthetical.
Schnabel,
. Other courts have imposed monetary sanctions in order to punish and deter efforts to manipulate jurisdiction.
See, e.g., Itel Cоntainers Int’l Corp. v. P.R. Marine Mgmt., Inc.,
.
But see Owen Equip. and Erection Co. v. Kroger,
. Despite the potential loss in judicial economy, we may not decide the merits of Ceja-Prado's appeal before the jurisdictional issue is resolved.
See Steel Co.,
