The Government has identified Defendant Oscar Lara-Garcia as a previously deported alien. Defendant objects to the means by which the Government discovered his identity. In this case we hold that a federal agent’s failure to provide a lawfully detained suspect a Miranda warning prior to inquiring about his immigration status does not require suppression of that status where fingerprint evidence subsequently confirms such status.
I.
The material facts as found by the district court and supported by the record are as follows. Officer Cal Miller of the Alpine, Utah police departmеnt stopped Defendant Oscar Lara-Garcia’s vehicle during daylight hours upon a report of reckless driving. Defendant could not produce a driver’s license or any other type of identification. Nor could Defendant remember his social security number. Defendant initially told Offiсer Miller his name was “Juan Garcia” and his birthday was February 2, 1972. Shortly thereafter, Defendant claimed his name was “Juan Fierro.” Defendant reported the vehicle belonged to his brother. When dispatch could not locate a valid driver’s license for either “Juan Garcia” or “Juan Fierro,” the officer began to prepare Defendant a citation for driving without a license.
While Officer Miller prepared the citation, dispatch informed him that a “Juan Garcia” “had a N.C.I.C. hit out of California” for a parole violation. Dispatch further informed the officer that California wanted to extradite him. The officer testified the parole violator’s physical description matched Defendant in certain respects, including weight, height, and eye color. Also, the “Juan Garcia” wanted in California had a birthday of February 2, 1973. Officer Miller estimated he called “back and forth” to dispatch between five and eight times, each time waiting between five and fifteen minutes for a response. Unable to determine after numerous inquiries whether Defendant was in fact the “Juan Garcia” named in the outstanding warrant, the officer handcuffed Dеfendant and transported him to the Alpine police station. This occurred around ninety minutes into the stop.
Still unable to identify Defendant, Officer Miller placed him, while handcuffed, in a conference room. Dispatch informed the officer that a federal agent from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) had phoned and offered to help identify Defendant. ICE agents had been monitoring the communications between the officer and dispatch, and became concerned Defendant might be an illegal immigrant. Officer Miller advised dispatch he would welcome assistance. ICE Agent Timothy Chard arrived at the station soon thereafter. Agent Chard stated he met with Officer Miller who told him “he was waiting for more information from California on an N.C.I.C. hit on the individual for like scars, marks, tattoos, and seeing if they could get a photo or fingerprints to be able to mаtch it up to the individual.” Once in the con *1233 ference room, Agent Chard asked Defendant his name, date of birth, place of birth, and immigration status. The agent did not provide Defendant a Miranda warning prior to questioning. Defendant stated his name was “Juan Garcia” and he was an illegal immigrant from Mexico. Following the interview, Agent Chard was in the hallway when Officer Miller returned and informed him that, based on “some scars or tattoos [which] did not match up,” Defendant did not appear to be the “Juan Garcia” wanted in California. At that point, Alpine police turned Defendant’s custody over to ICE.
Back at ICE headquarters, Agent Chard ran an identity check on Defendant’s “right and left index finger” to determine whether Defendant had prior “dealings with immigration.” The ICE database recognized Defendant’s fingerprints and reported Defendant’s name as Oscar Lara-Garcia, a previоusly deported alien. Defendant was charged with one count of illegal reentry into the United States in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1326. Following the district court’s denial of Defendant’s motion to suppress evidence of his identity, Defendant entered a conditional plea of guilty, reserving his right to apрeal.
See
Fed.R.Crim.P. 11(a)(2). The district court sentenced Defendant to 24 months imprisonment. Our jurisdiction arises under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. In reviewing the denial of a motion to suppress, we view the evidence in a light most favorable to the Government. We review the district court’s findings of fact for clear error and its determinаtions of law de novo.
See United States v. Gonzales,
II.
Defendant asserted in the district court, as he does on appeal, that Agent Chard “did not have a sufficient basis to detain him to investigate his immigration status and that all evidence obtained as a result of his detention, including evidence of his identity, should be suppressed.”
United States v. Lara-Garcia,
No. 2:05-CR-391-TC, memo. dec. at 8,
A.
Defendant first argues that at the time of questioning, Agent Chard lacked “reasonable suspicion” to believe Defendant was an illegal immigrant. According to Defеndant, ICE unlawfully interjected itself into the investigation to question Defendant about his identity. Defendant faults the district court for failing to “comment directly on whether federal agent Chard had reasonable suspicion to stop and question [Defendant].” Defendant asserts Officer Miller transportеd him to the police station for no other reason than to *1234 hand him over to ICE based on ICE’s “hunch” he might be an illegal immigrant. Defendant says “Agent Chard’s stop and questioning of [Defendant] should be deemed investigatory, not based upon reasonable suspicion, unparticularized, general in nature and an egregious Fourth Amendment violation.”
Defendant’s argument is long on rhetoric and short on law. A proper focus requires us first to ask whether Defendant was lawfully detained at the time of Agent Chard’s questioning. If so, Defendant was reasonably seized at the time of such questioning in compliаnce with the Fourth Amendment, and any argument Defendant might make to suppress his identity based on an unlawful detention must fail.
Compare United States v. Olivares-Rangel,
Unfortunately for Defendant, an officer’s “subjective motivation is irrelevant” to the question of whether a particular seizure was reasonable: “An action is ‘reasonable’ under the Fourth Amendment, regardless of the individual officer’s state of mind, as long as the circumstances, viewed
objectively,
justify the action.”
Brigham City v. Stuart,
— U.S. —,
In his reply brief, Defendant acknowledges the same by stating Officer Miller “had the authority under Utah law to arrest Mr. Lara-Garcia for a traffic violation *1235 outright, without a need to identify who he was.” Thus, at the time Agent Chard questioned Defendant about his immigration status, Defendant was detained at the police station based on an objectively reasonable belief he had violated the law. 2 That is all the Fourth Amendment requires to justify Defendant’s detention. Agent Chard did not need a second, independent basis to detain Defendant, and did not need probable cause to believe he was an illegal immigrant prior to questioning him.
B.
The more difficult query in this ease is whether the Fifth Amendment required Agent Chard to provide Defendant a
Miranda
warning before questioning him about his immigration status.
See Hiibel v. Sixth Judicial Dist. Court,
In
United States v. Patane,
III.
Accordingly, Defendant’s identity and status as an illegal immigrant as revealed by his fingerprints and immigration file is not suppressible. The judgment of the district court is—
AFFIRMED. 4
Notes
. Defendant's bald assertion that he was the subject of racial profiling is meritless. A defendant raising such claim
must present evidence from which a jury could reasonably infer that the law enforcement officials involved were motivated by a discriminatory purpose and their actions had a discriminatory effect. To satisfy the discriminatory-effect element, one who claims selective enforcement must make a credible showing that a similarly-situated individual of another race could have been, but was not, stopped or arrested for the offense for which the defendant was stopped or arrested. And the discriminatory-purpose element requires a showing that discriminatory intent wаs a motivating factor in the decision to enforce the criminal law against the defendant.
United States v. Alcaraz-Arellano,
. In
County of Riverside v. McLaughlin,
. Undoubtedly, where a suspect such as Defendant is detained based on probable cause that he may have committed a crime, a law enforcement official may ask the suspect to identify himself without providing a
Miranda
warning. “Questions about a person’s identity are not unconstitutional even if identification of the person may help lead to the prosecution of that person for a crime.”
United States v. Washington,
. As to his 24 month sentence, Defendant suggests the district court erred in declining to depart downward from the guideline range based on Agent Chard’s alleged
Miranda
violation. Because the district court recognized its authority to grant a downward departure at the sentencing hearing, we lack jurisdiction to review its decision to deny Defendant's motion for such departure.
See United States v. Fonseca,
