Juan Garcia-Avalino (“Garcia-Avalino”) appeals the revocation of his supervised release. He argues that the district court lacked jurisdiction to consider the violation of his supervised release because the warrant on which he was arrested was not supported by oath or affirmation.
Garcia-Avalino pleaded guilty to illegally reentering the United States after deportation in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1326. The district court sentenced him to twenty-one months’ incarceration and three years’ supervised release. He was deported to Mexico the day he was released from prison. His period of supervised release began that day and was set to expire in January 2004.
In March 2003, Garcia-Avalino was arrested for felony hit-and-run, among other offenses. He was indicted on these charges that August. In October 2003, the United States Probation Officer assigned to Garcia-Avalino’s case in the Eastern *445 District of Texas submitted to the district court an unsworn application for the revocation of Garcia-Avalino’s supervised release. The district court issued a warrant for Garcia-Avalino’s arrest on the basis of that application. In December 2004, the Probation Office submitted an amended application for revocation containing the same allegations as the first application but also including the attestation: “I declare under penalty of law that the foregoing is true and correct.” The district court signed a second warrant on the basis of this application.
At his revocation hearing, Garcia-Avalino filed a motion to dismiss on the ground that the district court did not have jurisdiction in the case. He argued that both warrants were defective, the first because it was not supported by oath or affirmation and the second because it was issued after Garcia-Avalino’s period of supervised release had expired. The district court denied the motion to dismiss. GarciaAvalino pleaded guilty to the allegations of revocation but reserved the right to appeal the district court’s jurisdictional ruling.
“We review the district court’s jurisdiction to revoke a defendant’s supervised release
de novo.” United States v. English,
Garcia-Avalino argues that the first warrant, issued before his term of supervised release expired, was defective because it was not supported by oath or affirmation. Conceding that the statute does not contain an express oath or affirmation requirement, he directs our attention to a Ninth Circuit opinion holding that “the plain meaning of the term ‘warrant’ means a document that is based upon probable cause and supported by sworn facts.”
See United States v. Vargas-Amaya,
In reaching its conclusion that a sworn-facts requirement is implicit in the term “warrant,” the Ninth Circuit pointed to the Fourth Amendment’s Oath or affirmation requirement and multiple statutes that require arrest warrants to be based upon sworn statements. See U.S. Const. Amend. IV; Fed. R. Crim. P. 4, 9. Explicit oath or affirmation requirements, however, are not proof that there is an implicit sworn-facts requirement embedded in the very meaning of the word “warrant” as a legal term. If anything, such examples suggest the converse, i.e. that a valid warrant need not be supported by sworn facts unless a specific statutory provision requires such support. Garcia-Avalino cites, and we can find, no statute that does not contain a sworn-facts requirement but that has been read to require support by sworn facts anyway.
By contrast, at least two statutes have authorized the issuance of a warrant not supported by sworn facts. Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3148(b), a district court may issue a warrant for the arrest of someone on pretrial release based solely on a motion
*446
by the government.
2
While this statute applies in a context different from the one at issue in this case, “its existence refutes [the] suggestion that issuing warrants based on unsworn allegation is statutorily unprecedented.”
United States v. Vargas-Amaya,
Garcia-Avalino next contends that section 3583(f) should be read to incorporate the Fourth Amendment’s Oath or affirmation requirement to avoid an unconstitutional interpretation of the statute. In other words, he argues that a warrant for the arrest of a supervised releasee must comport with the Oath or affirmation requirement. This proposition does not find support in the case law. The
Jarman
court, for example, held that warrants for the retaking of parolees are not true arrest warrants that must comport with the Fourth Amendment.
Jarman,
Neither the plain language of section 3583 nor the principle of constitutional avoidance suggests that the district court did not have jurisdiction over Garcia-Avalino because the warrant was not supported by sworn facts. For that reason, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. Because the warrant at issue in English was substantially different from the one in question in Vargas-Amaya, we did not have a full opportunity to consider whether the latter was correctly decided. Our favorable citation to that case is dicta and is not binding on us here.
. The statute reads:
The attorney for the Government may initiate a proceeding for revocation of an order of release by filing a motion with the district court. A judicial officer may issue a warrant for the arrest of a person charged with violating a condition of release, and the person shall be brought before a judicial officer in the district in which such person's arrest was ordered for a proceeding in accordance with this section.
18 U.S.C. § 3148(b).
. While section 3583 extends the jurisdiction of a court to hold revocation hearings after the term of supervised release has expired, section 3606 actually governs the issuance of warrants for the arrest of probationers or supervised releasees.
. That statute stated:
If the warden of the prison ... from which the prisoner was paroled or the Board of Parole or any member thereof shall have reliable information that the prisoner has violated his parole, then said warden, at any time within the term or terms of the prisoner's sentence may issue his warrant to any officer hereinafter authorized to execute the same for retaking of such prisoner.
18 U.S.C. § 717 (1934).
.We do not distinguish between parolees and those on supervised release for the purpose of determining their constitutional rights.
Tip-pens,
