We decide two questions. First, for a defendant convicted of being a previously removed alien found in the United States, in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1326, we must resolve whether the dates of a previous felony conviction and of a previous removal *750 from the United States, subsequent to that conviction, must be alleged in the indictment and proved to a jury for the defendant to be subjeсt to an increased sentence under 8 U.S.C. § 1326(b). We answer that question in the affirmative. Second, we consider whether such an error, in a context that affects only sentencing, is subject to harmless error analysis. We answer that question in the affirmative, as well. Since we hold that the error here was harmless, we affirm the sentence imposed by the district court on this defendant. 1
I. Background
Aftеr being apprehended by the Border Patrol about two miles north of the U.S.Mexico border on September 13, 2005, Manuel Salazar-Lopez was charged with one count of being a previously removed alien “found in” the United States in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1326. The indictment did not allege that Salazar-Lopez had been previously removed subsequent to a felony conviction, nor did it allege a specific date for Salazar-Lopez’s prior removal.
At trial, the Government introduced four pieces of evidence to prove that Salazar-Lopez had been removed prior to this arrest: (1) an order of an immigration judge from 2002, ordering that Salazar-Lopez be removed from the United States; (2) a warrant of removal from 2002, bearing Salazar-Lopez’s photograph, signature, and fingerprint; (3) a notice of reinstatement of the 2002 order; and (4) a warrant of removal dated December 8, 2004, also bearing Salazar-Lopez’s picture, fingerprint, and signature. In addition, the signature of Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agent Lucas Leal was also on the 2004 warrant, which, according to Leal’s testimony, indicаted that Leal had witnessed Salazar-Lopez’s departure back to Mexico on May 31, 2005.
After Salazar-Lopez was convicted, the probation officer filed a pre-sentence report recommending that Salazar-Lopez be sentenced under 8 U.S.C. § 1326(b)(1), because the 2005 removal was subsequent to a 2003 felony conviction. Salazar-Lopez оbjected, arguing that only the two-year maximum under § 1326(a), and not the ten-year maximum provided for in § 1326(b)(1), 2 was applicable to his case, because the facts necessary to sustain § 1326(b)(1)’s sentencing enhancement had not been charged in the indictment and proved beyond a reasonable doubt to a jury. The district court rejected Salazar-Lopez’s argument and largely adopted the pre-sentence report’s sentencing calculations, with the exception that the court decreased Salazar-Lopez’s offense level by two for acceptance of responsibility. Salazar-Lopez was sentenced to 21 months of imprisonment and three years of supervised release.
II. Analysis
Because Salazar-Lopez made a timely challenge to his sentence below, he has properly preserved his claim of error. “Preserved
Apprendi
challenges are reviewed de novo.”
United States v. Hollis,
A. The Sixth Amendment Violation
An alien found in the United States after having previously been removed violates 8 U.S.C. § 1326. The maximum statutory penalty under § 1326 is two years of imprisonment and one year of supervised release, unless the previous removal was subsequent to сertain types of convictions.
See
8 U.S.C. § 1326(a),(b); 18 U.S.C. §§ 3583(b), 3559(a). In this case, the district court found that Salazar-Lopez had been removed after such a felony conviction, and so it determined that the applicable statutory maximum was ten years of imprisonment and three years of supervised release. 8 U.S.C. § 1326(b)(1), 18 U.S.C. §§ 3583(b), 3559(a). On appeal, Salazar-Lopez renews his contention that his exposure to § 1326(b)’s higher statutory maximum violated
Apprendi v. New Jersey,
In
United States v. Covian-Sandoval,
*752
Such an allegation was required.
See United States v. Cotton,
B. Harmless EoTor
Having found such an error, we are faced with the question of whether this error is amenable to harmless error review or is instead a “structural error” automatically entitling Salazar-Lopez to a resentencing. Salazar-Lopez contends that it is a structural error, while the Government asserts that harmless error analysis is appropriаte and, furthermore, that the error here was indeed harmless.
The Supreme Court has not squarely resolved this question. Although it identified the question in
Cotton,
the fact that the Court was reviewing for plain error in that case meant that it did not have to decide whether this type of flaw in the indictment is a structural error.
Id.
at 632-33,
The Court’s more recent decision in
Washington v. Recuenco,
Salazar-Lopez argues that our decision in
United States v. Du Bo,
We have a precedent more analogous to the current case than
Du Bo,
however, and that is
Jordan,
We conclude that
Jordan
controls, and thus that harmless error analysis does apply. First and foremost, the procedural history of this case, the nаture of Salazar-Lopez’s challenge, and the nature of the relief he requests mirror
Jordan
much more closely than
Du Bo.
Like
Jordan,
Salazar-Lopez raised his
Apprendi
claim post-trial in his objections to the presentence report,
see Jordan,
In addition, the logical underpinnings of
Du Bo
do not counsel for an extension of
Du Bo
to the sentencing context. The conclusion in
Du Bo
wаs compelled largely by two rationales: (1) that the question of whether a grand jury might have indicted on an additional element was not amenable to harmless error review; and (2) that subjecting timely objections to harmless error analysis would destroy any incentive on the part of a defendant to object, since objecting would indicate an awareness of
*754
the missing еlement and hence the harmlessness of the omission.
5
Du Bo,
As for the first rationale,
Jordan
recognized the difficulty of anticipating what a grand jury would have done if faced with a close factual allegation, and indeed that consideration was part of the reason that the
Jordan
court ultimately concluded that it could not hold the
Apprendi
error there, as to drug quantity, harmless.
6
See Jordan,
Du Bo’s second rationale, the encouragement of timely objections to indictment deficiencies, is also inapplicable here. In this case, Salazar-Lopez’s objections to the *755 indictment were timely for sentencing purposes (and hence preserved the sentencing claim for our review), but werе made only after the conclusion of his trial. To allow an omission in the indictment, raised only after the completion of the trial, to result in an automatic cap on the defendant’s sentence would encourage defendants to remain silent at the time when an indictment could reasonably be amended to present the necessary allegations — the exact opposite of the result Du Bo hoped to achieve.
In light of the Supreme Court’s discussions in Cotton and Recuenco, and the striking similarity of this case to Jordan, we view Du, Bo to be distinguishable. Du Bo addressed only timely challenges to the sufficiency of the indictment, not the instant Apprendi sentencing error that Salazar-Lopez raises. We hold that Jordan controls Salazar-Lopez’s case, and thus we must inquire as to whether the failure to allege and prove to the jury the temporal relationship between Salazar-Lopez’s prior conviction and his removal was harmless error.
On this recоrd, we hold that the error in the indictment was indeed harmless. The evidence supporting Salazar-Lopez’s later removal is “overwhelming and uncontroverted,”
Zepeda-Martinez,
Although we do not consider new admissions made at sentencing in our harmless error inquiry,
Jordan,
III. Conclusion
Although the temporal relationship between Salazar-Lopez’s removal and his prior conviction should have been alleged in the indictment and proved to the jury, we nevertheless affirm the sentence imposed because we find that this error was harmless in his case.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. In this opinion we address only Salazar-Lopez’s sentencing contentions. We resolve his challenge to his conviction in an accompanying memorandum disposition.
. This difference in statutory maximum sentences also results in a difference as to the maximum term of supervised release that can be imposed. Because § 1326(a) has a maximum sentence of two years, only one year of supervised release can follow the prison term, while the higher statutory maximum of § 1326(b)(1) means that the imposition of up to three years of supervised release is permitted. See 8 U.S.C. § 1326(a),(b); 18 U.S.C. §§ 3583(b), 3559(a).
. Salazar-Lopez's other sentencing contentions, that we ought to limit
Almendarez-Torres v. United States,
. The Government argues that we should not follow
Covian-Sandoval
because it conflicts with other Circuit precedent. We see no conflict with the first case the Government cites,
United States v. Castillo-Rivera,
. To the extent
Du Bo
was premised on indictment errors being jurisdictional,
see Du Bo,
. As we noted in Jordan, when the indictment fails to make the requisite allegation:
[W]e would first have to determine whether the grand jury would have indicted the defendant for over 50 grams.... Then, bеcause Jordan had no notice from the indictment that quantity would be an issue at trial, we would need to determine whether Jordan might have contested quantity and what evidence [he] might have presented. Finally, to affirm the sentence, we would need to be able to say beyond any reasonable doubt that a jury, considering the actual evidence at trial and pеrhaps other evidence that was never presented, would have convicted [him] of the higher-quantity offense.
Here, we cannot reasonably conclude that these issues can be answered fairly based on reason and the record presented. When quantity is neither alleged in the indictment nor proved to a jury beyond a reasonable doubt, there are too many unknowns to be able to say with any confidence, let alone beyond reasonable doubt, that the error was harmless.
. We do not suggest that evidence of such errors, attacking the accuracy or veracity of documents such as the warrant of removal, could never give rise to reasonable doubt concerning whether a removal had occurred. We hold only that Salazar-Lopez’s showing on this point, in his particular case, was so weak as to not disturb our conclusion of harmlessness.
