OPINION
Gildardo Navarro-Diaz, a citizen of Mexico, was arrested by the police when he was found in a hotel room with several other men who were armed and in possession of marijuana. After the district court denied Navarro-Diaz’s motion to suppress his identity, he pled guilty to being an alien who had previously been deported and who was present in the United States without the permission of the Attorney General, in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1326. He was sentenced to 57 months in prison.
On appeal, Navarro-Diaz argues that the district court (1) erred in denying his motion to suppress his identity, and (2) committed plain error in enhancing his sentence based upon his prior felony convictions. For the reasons set forth below, we AFFIRM Navarro-Diaz’s conviction, but VACATE his sentence and REMAND the case to the district court for resentenc-ing in accordance with
United States v. Booker,
—U.S.-,
I. BACKGROUND
In January of 2003, the police in Xenia, Ohio were called to a Holiday Inn to investigate reports that a strong odor of marijuana was emanating from one of the guest rooms. The hotel manager told the police officers that the room in question was occupied by two African-American males, *583 but that three Hispanic males had joined them in the room. When the officers knocked on the door, they heard a “commotion” inside. Five minutes passed before one of the African-American males, Leroy Swindle, opened the door.
Swindle said that the five men were “waiting for some ladies to show up.” He admitted that he had been smoking marijuana, but stated that he was the only one in the room who had been doing so. When the officers asked him if he had any more marijuana in his possession, Swindle gave them a small bag of marijuana, containing less than half an ounce, which was then flushed down the toilet by the officers. The five men in the room were asked to identify themselves, and all except Navarro-Diaz produced identification. Navarro-Diaz told the officers that his name was Jose Perez, and he gave them his purported date of birth. He also said that he had been issued an Ohio driver’s license, but did not have the license with him. When the officers entered the information provided by Navarro-Diaz into the police database, however, they discovered that no one with that name and date of birth had been issued a driver’s license in Ohio.
At this point, the officers decided to release Swindle and the other African-American male without citing them for misdemeanor marijuana possession because there was only a small quantity of drugs at issue, and because the police database indicated that neither of them was wanted on an outstanding warrant. The three remaining men, all Hispanic males, were kept in the room while the officers attempted to run a background check on Navarro-Diaz. When the officers asked Navarro-Diaz for his name and date of birth a second time, he insisted that his name was Jose Perez, but he provided a different date of birth. This information also did not match any known person in the police database.
The hotel manager was anxious to have the police and the remaining occupants of the room leave the premises, so the officers decided to take Navarro-Diaz and his two companions to the police station to continue the investigation. As everyone was leaving the room, however, an officer noticed that one of the men, Juan Cande-lez, was hanging back and fidgeting with something in his pocket. When asked to empty his pockets, Candelez produced the magazine to a handgun. Candelez was immediately handcuffed and frisked, whereupon the officers discovered a loaded handgun tucked in his belt. He was promptly arrested for possession of a concealed weapon. A subsequent search of the room revealed a second handgun rolled up in a towel in the bathroom.
Candelez then consented to a search of his car, which was parked in the hotel lot. In searching the car, the officers found a wallet that contained an identification card for a man who resembled Navarro-Diaz. When the officers showed Navarro-Diaz the identification card, he finally admitted that his name was not Juan Perez, but rather Gildardo Navarro-Diaz. The officers ran this information through their database and discovered that Navarro-Diaz had an outstanding warrant in Dayton, Ohio for failure to appear in traffic court. Navarro-Diaz was then arrested both for providing false information to the police and on the basis of the outstanding warrant. After he had been booked at the police station, the officers called representatives of the Immigration and Naturalization Service (now the Department of Homeland Security), who questioned Navarro-Diaz over the phone for several minutes.
Navarro-Diaz was charged in a one-count indictment with the offense of being *584 an alien who had previously been deported and who was found to be in the United States without the permission of the Attorney General, in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1326. He moved to suppress the evidence that was obtained from him during the questioning at the hotel — this being his identity and date of birth — because the officers had allegedly detained him without having a reasonable suspicion that he was engaged in illegal conduct.
At his suppression hearing, Navarro-Diaz admitted that he had been convicted of felony drug offenses in 1994, 1996, and 1997, and that he had been deported from the United States five times previously. In a written decision, the district court denied Navarro-Diaz’s motion to suppress. Navarro-Diaz then entered a conditional guilty plea, reserving his right to appeal the denial of his motion. He was sentenced to 57 months of imprisonment. This timely appeal followed.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Standard of review
In reviewing a ruling on a motion to suppress, we will uphold a district court’s factual findings unless they are clearly erroneous, but will conduct a de novo review of a district court’s legal determinations.
United States v. Moncivais,
B. The district court did not err in denying Navarro-Diaz’s motion to suppress his identity
Navarro-Diaz maintains that the district court erred in failing to suppress his identity because the information was obtained in violation of his Fourth Amendment rights. Specifically, Navarro-Diaz claims that the police officers at the hotel lacked reasonable suspicion to detain him, and that they learned his name and date of birth only as a result of this unlawful detention.
See Terry v. Ohio,
Navarro-Diaz’s motion to suppress was denied by the district court after it found that “the only evidence which the officers obtained from the Defendant as a result of their confrontation with him on January 13, 2003, was an admission that he was Gildardo Diaz and his date of birth.” The district court declined to reach the issue of whether Navarro-Diaz’s detention violated the Fourth Amendment because the court concluded that
INS v. Lopez-Mendoza,
In
Lopez-Mendoza,
the Supreme Court considered “whether an admission of unlawful presence in this country made subsequent to an allegedly unlawful arrest must be excluded as evidence in a civil deportation hearing.”
*585
The question in the present case— whether a defendant’s name and date of birth must be suppressed when they are disclosed as a result of an allegedly unconstitutional police detention — is a matter of first impression in this circuit. Courts in the Fifth, Eighth, Ninth, and Tenth Circuits, however, have all addressed the question in cases similar to Navarro-Diaz’s, where an alien had been indicted under 8 U.S.C. § 1326. The Ninth Circuit concluded, in reliance on
Lopez-Mendoza,
“that the simple fact of who a defendant is cannot be excluded, regardless of the nature of the violation leading to his identity.”
United States v. Del Toro Gudino,
The Eighth Circuit, in contrast, initially declined to follow “the broad interpretation given
Lopez-Mendoza
by the Fifth and Ninth Circuits.”
United States v. Guevara-Martinez,
But in two subsequent cases, the Eighth Circuit has narrowed the holding of
Guevara-Martinez. See United States v. Rodriguez-Arreola,
The cases before the Fifth, Ninth, and Tenth Circuits, on the other hand, involved the suppression of only the defendant’s identity.
See Del Toro Gudino,
The conclusion that a defendant’s identity cannot be suppressed comports with the decisions of other courts that have ruled on the issue outside of the immigration context. For instance, the Fourth Circuit was presented with a case where the police stopped a van without reasonable suspicion, learned the identity of the occupants of the van, and then later connected the occupants to a crime in the area.
United States v. Arias,
In
Crews,
the Supreme Court permitted a defendant to be brought to trial even though he was illegally arrested. The Court held that, although “the exclusionary sanction applies to any ‘fruits’ of a constitutional violation,” a defendant “is not himself a suppressible ‘fruit.’ ”
Crews,
In the present case, Navarro-Diaz asks us to part ways with the other courts of appeal that have ruled on this issue and hold that a defendant’s identity may be suppressed in a criminal proceeding if the identity is obtained through police conduct violative of the Fourth Amendment. Navarro-Diaz’s argument is not frivolous, especially in the context of a § 1326 violation. An alien present in the United States without the Attorney General’s permission, after having been previously deported, has committed a crime. 8 U.S.C. § 1326. The only evidence that the police must obtain in order for the government to prosecute someone who has committed this crime is the person’s identity. Navarro-Diaz argues that if the police are free to detain and question anyone they want in order to obtain the person’s identity, they may be tempted, even in the absence of reasonable suspicion, to single out people *587 of certain ethnic backgrounds for questioning.
The Supreme Court’s language in
Lopez-Mendoza
— that “[t]he ‘body’ or identity of a defendant or respondent in a criminal or civil proceeding is never itself suppressible as a fruit of an unlawful arrest” — when taken out of context, could be read to suggest that random, widespread detentions and questioning of suspected aliens would not implicate Fourth Amendment rights.
Like the defendant in
Lopez-Mendoza,
Navarro-Diaz was not the victim of an “egregious violation[ ] of the Fourth Amendment.”
Moreover, there is a significant practical problem with Navarro-Diaz’s argument. Navarro-Diaz “is a person whose unregistered presence in this country, without more, constitutes a crime. His release within our borders would immediately subject him to criminal penalties.”
See Lopez-Mendoza,
*588
Directing the district court to grant Navarro-Diaz’s suppression motion, therefore, would not affect the ultimate outcome of the charge against him. If the government were forced to drop its prosecution of Navarro-Diaz, the police could simply approach him on his way out of the courtroom door and demand that he identity himself.
See Hiibel v. Sixth Judicial Dist.,
Because Navarro-Diaz could simply be reindicted for the same offense, suppressing his identity would have little deterrent effect upon the police who questioned him during his allegedly unlawful detention.
See United States v. Rodriguez-Arreola,
C. The district court committed plain error in sentencing Navarro-Diaz under the then-mandatory Sentencing Guidelines
Navarro-Diaz also argues that the district court committed plain error in enhancing his sentence based upon his three prior felony-drug convictions, and he asks that his case be remanded to the district court for resentencing in light of
United States v. Booker,
— U.S.-,
In sentencing Navarro-Diaz, the district court hinted that it might have imposed a sentence that was shorter than the minimum if such a sentence were allowed under the Sentencing Guidelines. The court justified its decision to sentence Navarro-Diaz at the low end of the enhanced range because cases “involving defendants who will be deported result, in effect, in harsher time because they are not eligible for halfway house placement .... So this defendant will be serving six months longer in an institution than someone who is an American citizen.”
Navarro-Diaz’s sentencing enhancement was based solely on his prior criminal convictions. “Booker’s holding, that the Sixth Amendment bars mandatory enhancements based on judicial fact-finding, does not apply to the fact of a prior criminal conviction.”
United States v. Poole,
Regardless, Navarro-Diaz was sentenced under the then-mandatory Sentencing Guidelines. “[E]ven absent a Sixth Amendment violation, this Court has decided that a defendant sentenced under the mandatory Guidelines regime is entitled to a remand for resentencing under the now-advisory Guidelines unless there is evidence in the record to rebut the presumption of prejudice.”
United States v. Alva,
III. CONCLUSION
For all of the reasons set forth above, we AFFIRM Navarro-Diaz’s conviction, but VACATE his sentence and REMAND the case to the district court for resentenc-ing in light of Booker.
