Thе defendant pleaded guilty to the crime of having been found in the United States, without the express consent of the Attorney General to be here, after having been deported (in his ease, twice deported). 8 U.S.C. § 1826(a)(2). Because he had been deported after being convicted of an aggravated felony, he was subject to a maximum imprisonment of 20 years rather than the normal 2 years, see §§ 1326(a), (b)(2), and was in fact sentenced to 80 months. His appeal, which is based on
United States v. Anton,
Of the eleven federal circuits besides the Seventh that have a criminal jurisdiction, all but the D.C. and Third Circuits have now spoken to the issue that divided our court in
Anton.
Every one of the other nine circuits has, in numerous decisions and without so much аs a single dissent, rejected the position that we took in
Anton.
See
United States v. Guzman-Ocampo,
Upon reexamination, we have concluded that our colleagues are right and that intent to reenter the country without the Attorney General’s express consent is not an element of section 1326. Intent to reentеr is an element,
United States v. Quintana-Torres,
Nothing in the statute’s language or background suggests that an illegally returning deportee cаnnot be convicted unless he knew he lacked the Attorney General’s express consent to reenter. On the contrary, the requirement that the Attorney General’s consent be “express” is a warning that the alien not try to infer consent from ambiguous circumstances. The present defendant admitted signing a form, prior to his second deportation, that warned him that “should you wish to return to the United States you must write this office [i.e., the INS] or the United States Consular Office nearest your residence abroad as to how to obtain permission to return after deportation” and that if he did not obtain the Attorney General’s express consent to return he would be punished under section 1326. It is unclear tо us what room is left for a defendant to argue plausibly that, while failing to obtain the Attorney General’s consent, he had not intended to reenter the country in violation of the law.
The statute is limited to persons who have previously been deported from the United States. They are persons who were in this country illegally, and obviously knew it when they were deported. “[DJeportation itself is sufficient to impress upon the mind of the deportee that return is forbidden. No one in that position could innocently assume that thе INS is a travel agency. The statute simply, and logically, makes the presumption of unlawful intent conclusive.”
United States v. Torres-Echavarria, supra,
The defendant points out that strict liability is a disfavored basis for criminal punishments, e.g.,
Staples v. United States,
AFFIRMED.
