Rigoberto Castellanos-Gareia was convicted of entering the United States after having been deported. 8 U.S.C. § 1326. He was given an enhanced sentence because he had committed an aggravated felony before his deportation. 8 U.S.C. § 1326(b). He appeals his conviction on the theory that the government did not prove that he was free from official restraint and, therefore, did not prove that he had entered the country. He appeals his sentence because the aggravated felony was not charged in the indictment. We affirm.
BACKGROUND
On April 30, 2000, Supervisory Border Patrol Agent Carl A. Weiland discovered Castellanos walking north at least 100 yards from the border. Weiland, who had not seen Castellanos before that, approached and questioned him. Castellanos ultimately admitted that he was not a United States citizen and that he had come over the border fence, although he did not say where or when he had done so. Wei-land did not see him do so, and did not see an indication that Castellanos had walked directly from the fence to the road on which he was found. As Weiland explained, he had just come upon Castella-nos, and he had not been alerted to Castel-lanos’s presence by anything or anyone else. He did not know where the other 15 (or more) border agents working that day were, and he was resistant to discussing the possible locations of any sensing devices on or about the border. When Wei-land was cross-examined, the district court did not require him to answer questions about sensor locaijon because it deemed that information to be irrelevant in light of the fact that there was no evidence that Weiland had obtained any information from those devices, if any there were at Castellanos’s point of entry.
No further evidence was submitted by either side about Castellanos’s exact point of entry, the placement of sensing devices, or whether Castellanos had been under observation from the moment of his entry *775 to the moment of his capture. Castellanos claimed, therefore, that he was entitled to an acquittal because the evidence was not sufficient to convict him. See Fed. R.Crim.P. 29. The district court rejected that claim, and Castellanos appealed. He raises a number of issues, which surround his claim regarding official observation, and one sentencing issue.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review the district court’s denial of the motion for acquittal under Rule 29 of the Fed.R.Crim.P. de novo.
United States v. Pacheco-Medina,
“ Whether a jury instruction misstates elements of a statutory crime is a question of law reviewed de novo.’”
United States v. Romo-Romo,
DISCUSSION
The essential thrust of Castellanos’s appeal is that, as a part of its case, the government always has the burden of submitting specific evidence to prove lack of official restraint, which would include constant observation. The other issues raised by Castellanos are subsidiary to that one. We will therefore take it up first.
A. Official Observation
Under settled law, a person cannot be said to have been found in the United States, if he was under constant observation by governmental authorities from the moment he set foot in this country until the moment of his arrest. As we explained in
Pacheco-Medina,
Castellanos argues that in light of the above the government’s evidence must show lack of official restraint. So much is true.
See United States v. Parga-Rosas,
But, says Castellanos, because he mentioned the possibility that one of the 15 (or perhaps more depending on where he entered) other agents in the general area might have seen him and had him under observation, the government had to put in evidence to negate that possibility. There was not a scintilla of evidence to support the theory; mere speculation by Castella-nos is not evidence.
See United States v. Andrews,
Where we have found evidence that a person was under official restraint, we have not hesitated to reverse § 1326 convictions.
See, e.g., Ruiz-Lopez,
A contrary rule would be unworkable, even absurd, as this very case demonstrates. In Castellanos’s view, the government must attempt to determine the route that Castellanos took, must then locate and disclose all sensors that might have detected him, and must bring in evidence that no government agent, who might have been somewhere in the area of that route, saw him and kept him under surveillance. It is possible that some or all of those detection and restraint actions occurred here, but that possibility is so speculative and unsubstantial as to be an eidolon. Castella-nos was required to submit or point to some evidence that something of the kind had happened before the government could be required to come forward with evidence on those issues. Absent that, *777 there was no lack of evidence that he was found in the country.
In fine, on this record the government met its burden and the evidence was sufficient to support Castellanos’s conviction.
B. Issues Related to Official Observation
Castellanos slightly shifts his focus when he claims that the district court did not permit him to put in evidence of detection and observation by others. We do not read the record quite the way he does. As we see it, all the district court precluded was cross-examination of the arresting agent, Weiland, on the issue of sensor location. In that respect, the district court did not abuse its discretion.
See Bensimon,
What was apparent was that the inquiry was beyond the scope of Weiland’s testimony on direct examination and was properly precluded on both foundational and relevance grounds. Weiland testified that he had not received any information from any possible sensors, and that he had not been contacted by any other agent on that subject or on the subject of Castellanos’s presence. As far as his testimony was concerned, the precise location of the sensors, if any there were at the point of entry, had no tendency to undermine his credibility, or to show bias, or the like.
See id.; United States v. Shabani,
Nor did the district court preclude Cas-tellanos from presenting evidence of observations by other agents. In fact, it suggested that Castellanos could “ask some other agent.” It is true that, while discussing the propriety of cross-examining Weiland, the district court expressed negative views about the relevance of the knowledge, if any, of other agents. But every trial and appellate lawyer knows that views can change when placed in their proper context. What, for example, would the district court have thought, if a number of other agents had actually seen Cas-tellanos cross the border, had observed him the whole time, and had been in the process of closing in on him when Weiland blundered onto the scene of action and captured their quarry? Well, one can speculate, but that is not our function. Nor need we decide what the law would require in that instance.
The fact is that no other evidence was placed before the district court, and once we refrain from flights of fancy, we look to what is really at issue: did the district court abuse its discretion when it precluded cross-examination of Weiland on the location of government sensors along the border? Again, the answer is no.
Relatedly, Castellanos claims that the district court erred because it did not give an instruction on his theory that he had to be free from official restraint in the sense that he must not have been under official observation the whole time. However, the district court did properly instruct on the elements of a violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1326. It was not required to give a more detailed instruction on Castellanos’s official restraint theory when there was no evidence to support that theory.
See United States v. Wofford,
C. Sentencing
Castellanos argues that the district court violated the strictures of
Apprendi v. New Jersey,
*778 CONCLUSION
We have previously held that a person under constant observation from the time he sets foot in this country is under official restraint and cannot be found here for purposes of 8 U.S.C. § 1326. We have also held that the burden of persuasion on the issue of lack of official restraint is upon the government when there is evidence of restraint in the record. Castellanos yeply pounces on those holdings, and asserts that when the record is devoid of specific evidence on the subject, the evidence is insufficient to convict a person beyond a reasonable doubt. We disagree. We now hold that in the absence of evidence to the contrary, the fact that a government official, with no prior knowledge of the alien’s presence, comes upon the alien some time after the alien has crossed the border is sufficient to allow a jury to infer that the alien was “found in” the United States, and to deliver a verdict of guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. We do not here decide whether and when, upon a proper showing, the government might have to rebut a claim that a person other than the capturing agent was observing him, but did not tell the agent about that.
