On June 13, 1980, defendant Mauricio del Rosal-Aguilar was arrested in Livingston County, Illinois, and charged with a violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1326 in that he was an alien found in the United States without permission of the Attorney General after a prior deportation. At trial, the Government established that defendant had been deported to Mexico as an illegal alien on March 20, 1979, under the name Pedro Car-rasco-Leal. Defendant made an offer of proof to show that the 1979 deportation was unlawful. The offer of proof consisted of his testimony, through an interpreter, that he was lawfully admitted to the United States in 1969 under the Cuban Refugee Program and the testimony of an officer of the Cuban Emergency Center in Miami, Florida, that an individual named Mauricio del Rosal-Aguilar had registered with the program on January 22, 1969.
Defendant further testified that at the time of the 1979 deportation proceedings he did not understand that he was free to present evidence, subpoena witnesses and cross-examine witnesses. He was not represented by counsel. Defendant admitted, however, that when he was arrested in 1978 he gave his name as Pedro Carrasco-Leal and his country of origin as Mexico and did not tell the authorities that he was a Cuban refugee.
The district court reviewed the record of the 1979 deportation proceedings to ascertain that they had been conducted in accordance with law, but refused to allow defendant’s proffered defense testimony into evidence. Defendant was convicted by jury verdict and sentenced to two years’ imprisonment. He appeals, contending that he was denied due process in that he was not permitted to relitigate the factual basis of the 1979 deportation. We affirm.
In
United States v. Heikkinen,
Defendant relies on
United States v. Gasca-Kraft,
Notes
. As noted, the district court did review the deportation proceedings to determine their legality. Defendant does not contend that he was denied procedural due process.
