This case involves multiple convictions for assisting Mexican aliens in illegally entering the United States. The most serious question is whether the convictions should be reversed because the Government deported potential witnesses before defendants’ counsel could interview them. Acknowledging that the Government violated defendants’ constitutional rights, we nevertheless affirm the convictions, partly because the case has an element of waiver of those rights, but more importantly because no suggestion has been made to this Court or the district court as to how the witnesses might have, in the slightest way, helped defendants in the defense of this case.
The facts on this controlling issue are undisputed. Acting on an informant’s tip and surveillance, an Immigration and-Naturalization Service (INS) agent stopped a pickup truck driven by defendant Perez and placed him under arrest. Perez opened the *1268 truck’s camper shell at the agent’s request, and twenty-two illegal aliens were discovered within. In the meantime, another INS agent arrested defendants Avila, Salazar and Sanchez in the nearby parking lot from which the truck had departed.
The twenty-two illegal aliens were taken into the custody of the INS and each was interviewed by an INS agent. The United States Attorney determined that eight of them would be detained as material witnesses, and a written statement was taken from each of those eight. The sole woman alien in custody and the two children accompanying her were granted voluntary return to Mexico on the day of defendants’ arrests because of the inadequacy of detention facilities. Deportation proceedings were begun against the other eleven aliens and they were deported to Mexico ten days later. The dates are significant. The arrests occurred on April 22, 1978. Initial appearances were made and bonds were set on April 24. Defendants then had an attorney. The eleven aliens in question were deported on May 2.
At the preliminary hearing on May 3, an INS agent unintentionally misinformed defendants’ counsel that nineteen aliens remained in custody, including the eleven who had actually been deported the previous day. On June 16, defendants moved for dismissal because of the Government’s failure to provide the names of the deported aliens and make them available for interviews. The district court denied the motion to dismiss, but ordered the Government to furnish the names and addresses of the witnesses. The aliens resided in Mexico, however, and were not available to be interviewed or deposed by defendants’ counsel.
Defendants Avila, Perez, Salazar and Sanchez were convicted of conspiracy, 18 U.S.C.A. § 371, to encourage or induce the entry of illegal aliens into the United States in violation of 8 U.S.C.A. § 1324(a)(4), and to transport those aliens within the United States in violation of 8 U.S.C.A. § 1324(a)(2). Avila was also convicted on six counts for violating 8 U.S.C.A. § 1324(a)(4), and Perez was convicted on eight counts for violating 8 U.S.C.A. § 1324(a)(2).
Deportation of Witnesses
Relying on
United States v. Mendez-Rodriguez,
The Seventh Circuit adopted the rule of
Mendez-Rodriguez
in
United States v. Calzada,
The effect of Government conduct such as this has not heretofore been addressed by our Court. The opinion in
Uribe v. United States,
*1269 Because of our resolution of this question, we need not decide whether we agree with the Ninth Circuit that due process is denied when the Government deports potential witnesses before the defendant has an opportunity to interview them. United States v. Mendez-Rodriguez, 9 Cir. 1971,450 F.2d 1 .
We agree with the Ninth and Seventh Circuits that a criminal defendant’s constitutional rights are violated if an alien witness is deported before the defendant is given an opportunity to interview the witness. The reasoning of those cases appears sound and we adopt it as our own, without repetition here. We disagree, however, with the automatic reversals and indictment dismissals which occurred in those cases.
We base the affirmance of these convictions on two rationales. First, defendants’ interest in the deported aliens heightened once they were unavailable, and the case is flavored with an element of waiver, even though defendants’ conduct is not clothed with a full-dress waiver of a constitutional right.
Cf. United States v. Lujan-Castro,
Defendants were arrested and the illegal aliens taken into custody on April 22, 1978. Complaints issued against defendants on April 24, notifying them of the crimes with which they were charged. That same day defendants were represented by counsel at initial appearances before the court. More than a week after the initial appearances, on the tenth day after defendants’ arrests, the eleven aliens were ordered deported to Mexico by a special inquiry officer of the INS.
Although defense counsel asserted that he had inquired about the names and location of the aliens on or about April 24, the district judge noted that defense counsel failed to show that he had made any efforts to follow up that informal inquiry.
A requirement that defendants act diligently to preserve the testimony of illegal aliens must be imposed in the circumstances of these cases. Otherwise, the great burden and expense of detaining and housing alien witnesses is borne by the Government, while defendants delay the simple efforts involved in locating and interviewing them. Although detention methods involving parole or work programs rather than incarceration would be less burdensome to the Government, these entail the risk of escape by the alien, defeating the purposes of both detention for trial and deportation.
See United States v. Verduzco-Macias,
Defendants could have preserved the testimony of the eleven deported aliens by making a prompt formal request for their names and whereabouts. If there had been insufficient time to interview all the witnesses, a postponement of their deportation could have been sought. Any alien believed by defendants to be able to give exculpatory testimony could have been detained in this country until trial.
Since we believe, however, that the better procedure for protecting the constitutional rights here involved would be for the Government to give notice of prospective deportation and a reasonable opportunity for defense counsel to interview the witnesses, we are not comfortable with resting an affirmance on the ground of waiver alone.
The second and more compelling rationale for this decision is that not the slightest suggestion has been made as to what testimony helpful to defendants these witnesses could offer. We are in general accord with the proposition set forth in
Mendez-Rodriguez
and
Calzada
that to obtain relief in a case of this kind, the defendant need not show prejudice arising from the violation with “any degree of assuredness.”
Nothing in the record permits an inference that defendants were prejudiced by the unavailability of the alien witnesses. An INS agent testified that each of the aliens related basically the same story, and that the decision as to deportation turned on the superior health and fitness of the aliens chosen for detention. Proof of conspiracy focused on transactions between various defendants and the aliens who testified at trial, not those who were deported. Prosecution of the substantive counts was based on the illegal entry and transportation of the aliens who testified at trial, not those who were deported.
Thus, while adhering to the principles set forth in the Ninth and Seventh Circuit cases, we refuse to blindly apply those principles where there is no suggested suspicion that the deported witnesses could give testimony which would affect the trial in any way at all. We need not here decide with what strength any such theory of helpfulness would need to be advanced by counsel to justify relief. All we do is hold that where there is nothing, reversal is not required.
We especially note that the Government neither acted' in bad faith nor purposefully deprived defendants of their rights. Now that the Government knows we subscribe to the rule that defendants have a constitutional right to interview such witnesses, and must be given reasonable notice before their deportation, this decision will not necessarily immunize subsequent similar conduct. Likewise, our comments here about the need for counsel to act promptly should suggest that purposeful delay which imposes on the Government the hardship of retaining witnesses not needed in good faith by the defense will be of little avail.
Duplicity
Defendants sought dismissal of Count One of the indictment for duplicity because it alleged conspiracy to commit two distinct substantive offenses, the inducement of illegal alien entry and the transport of illegal aliens. “The fact that the alleged conspiracy includes the violation of more than one federal statute does not make [the indictment] duplicitous.”
Overstreet v. United States,
The failure of the guilty verdict to specify which substantive crime was determined to be the object of the conspiracy is not prejudicial. Once a defendant is found guilty of participating in a conspiracy, it is “unnecessary that the verdict specify the particular statutory provision which an individual defendant conspired to violate.”
United States v. Bolts,
Search and Seizure
The district court refused to suppress three types of evidence: Salazar’s statements at the time of her arrest, the testimony of the detained alien witnesses, and certain sums of money taken from the defendants upon arrest. Defendants argue this evidence was obtained as the result of illegal arrests and should have been suppressed.
United States v. Cruz,
The Constitution does not require that a warrant issue prior to an arrest based on probable cause, even if no exigent
*1271
circumstances prevented the obtainment of a warrant.
United States v. Watson,
Probable cause exists when the facts and circumstances within the arresting officer’s knowledge and of which he had reasonably trustworthy information are sufficient in themselves to warrant a man of reasonable caution to believe that an offense has been or is being committed.
United
States v.
Lowery,
The INS agents clearly had probable cause to arrest defendants. An agent testified he had dealt with the informant on twenty prior occasions and was convinced of his reliability. Moreover, the informant’s detailed information about the aliens’ whereabouts, Salazar’s appearance, and the presence of a woman alien accompanied by two children was corroborated by the agents’ personal observations soon after surveillance began.
See United States v. Tuley,
The searches of defendants incident to their lawful arrests were clearly proper,
United States v. Robinson,
Sufficiency of the Evidence
Defendants challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support the convictions. The essential elements of criminal conspiracy are an agreement between two or more persons to commit a crime and an overt act in furtherance of the agreement by one of the conspirators.
United States v. White,
The evidence is viewed in the light most favorable to the Government.
Glasser v. United States,
Avila and several unknown persons escorted the aliens to the border, where Avila *1272 crossed first, ascertained that no INS patrols were present, and signalled the aliens to follow. He then walked the aliens to a pickup point, from which they were driven into El Paso. Sanchez and Avila collected fees from the aliens for the conspirators’ assistance in bringing them into the United States. Additional payments were to be made after the aliens secured employment in Chicago and Denver.
As thus described by the testimony of the eight alien witnesses, the activities engaged in by defendants were not “random” or “separate,” but rather evinced “continuous planning and cooperation [among] the persons involved.”
United States v. Michel,
Avila also challenges the sufficiency of the evidence by which he was convicted on six counts of encouraging and inducing the aliens’ entry into the United States, in violation of 8 U.S.C.A. § 1324(a)(4). The testimony of the alien witnesses fairly established that Avila met them across the border, assisted their transportation to the river, told them he would signal from the other side when it was safe to cross, scouted the vicinity for law enforcement officers, then called, whistled and waved to the aliens to indicate the right time for crossing. The surreptitious manner in which Avila led the aliens across the border and his subsequent acceptance of cash payments in exchange for that guidance amply support an inference of his knowledge that they were not lawfully entitled to enter the United States, and of the willfulness of his activity.
See United States v. Boerner,
Perez met the aliens in Mexico, coordinated their illegal entry into the United States, and was apprehended in El Paso while driving a truck in which they were passengers. The evidence is sufficient to establish his violations of 8 U.S.C.A. § 1324(a)(2), the transportation of illegal aliens within the United States.
AFFIRMED.
