OPINION
Defendant asserts that Mexican Army personnel, acting in effect as agents of the United States, engaged in misconduct in the course of his expulsion from that country and delivery to the United States officers at the border; he contends that he is entitled to have his prosecution for offenses against the United States terminated under the supervisory power of the courts in order to discourage prosecutorial misconduct. We adhere to our former decisions, and affirm this narcotics conviction.
Lovato relies upon
United States v. Toscanino,
We note further that the Second Circuit, after its decision in
Toscanino,
has refused to extend that holding to a Toscanino codefendant who also claimed that he had been kidnaped by South Americans who were the paid agents of, and directed by, United States government agents.
See United States ex rel. Lujan v. Gengler,
In the case at bar, when Lovato’s affidavit is stripped of its opinions, suspicions, and conclusions, his allegations amount to little more than the scenario of a routine expulsion by Mexican officers of an undesirable alien. Lovato’s delivery at the United States border into the hands of officers who were undoubtedly expecting him created no bar to his prosecution.
Affirmed.
Notes
.
Ker v. Illinois,
.
United States v. Cotten,
