United States v. Juvenile ( 2006 )


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  •                     FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,                      No. 05-50597
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.                               D.C. No.
    CR-05-00814-MLH
    JOSE D.L. (JUVENILE),
    OPINION
    Defendant-Appellant.
    
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of California
    Marilyn L. Huff, District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted
    April 5, 2006—Pasadena, California
    Filed June 30, 2006
    Before: Myron H. Bright,* Harry Pregerson, and
    Arthur L. Alarcón, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion by Judge Pregerson;
    Partial Concurrence and Partial Dissent by Judge Alarcón
    *The Honorable Myron H. Bright, Senior United States Circuit Judge
    for the Eighth Circuit, sitting by designation.
    7193
    UNITED STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)          7197
    COUNSEL
    Michelle Betancourt, Federal Defenders of San Diego, San
    Diego, California, for the defendant-appellant.
    Randy K. Jones, Assistant United States Attorney, San Diego,
    California, for the plaintiff-appellee.
    OPINION
    PREGERSON, Circuit Judge:
    Defendant Jose A. appeals the district court’s finding that
    he is a juvenile delinquent under 18 U.S.C. § 5032. On May
    10, 2005, fifteen-year-old Jose was arrested after government
    agents found cocaine hidden in the vehicle he was driving
    from Mexico into the United States. Because Jose was a
    minor, the provisions of the Juvenile Delinquency Act,
    (“JDA”) 18 U.S.C. § 5031 et seq. apply. We have jurisdiction
    under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We reverse in part and remand for
    further proceedings.
    7198             UNITED STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)
    I.    Factual Background
    A.   Arrest and Detention
    On May 10, 2005, at approximately 4:15 p.m., fifteen-year-
    old Jose attempted to cross the United States—Mexico border
    at the San Ysidro, California, Port of Entry. Jose was driving
    a gray Toyota 4-Runner with a Mexican license plate. When
    Border Patrol Officer Mark Hill questioned him, Jose stated
    that the vehicle was his, then changed his answer to say that
    it belonged to his uncle. Officer Hill asked Jose about the pur-
    pose of his visit to the United States, to which Jose responded
    that he intended to go shopping for his mother.
    Officer Hill conducted a preliminary search of the vehicle,
    tapping the driver’s rear quarter panel. According to Officer
    Hill, the panel seemed “solid,” so he tapped the vehicle’s
    other quarter panel and then opened the passenger door and
    searched the inside of the quarter panel. That search uncov-
    ered several packages wrapped in electrical tape.
    After Officer Hill found the packages in the vehicle’s quar-
    ter panels, he placed Jose in handcuffs. Officer Hill then pat-
    ted Jose down, and escorted Jose to a security office. The 4-
    Runner was taken for a secondary inspection, where agents
    found that the vehicle contained twenty-five packages that
    contained 29.68 kilograms (or 65.43 pounds) of cocaine.
    Approximately one hour after agents stopped Jose at the
    border, United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement
    (“ICE”) Agent Eveleen Cabrera questioned Jose. When Agent
    Cabrera asked Jose if he knew why he was being detained,
    Jose replied that the agents had told him that he was being
    detained because they found drugs in the car he brought
    across the border. Agent Cabrera informed Jose that the
    agents needed to contact his parents, because he was a minor.
    Jose responded that his family did not have a telephone, but
    he gave Agent Cabrera the telephone number of relatives who
    UNITED STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)                   7199
    lived next door to Jose’s family in Mexico. At no time did
    Agent Cabrera advise Jose of his Miranda rights.
    Agent Cabrera called the number provided by Jose, and
    reached his aunt, Maria Del Rosario Llanes-Angulo. Agent
    Cabrera told Llanes-Angulo that Jose had been detained at the
    border and that he had been caught trying to smuggle drugs
    into the United States. She asked if Llanes-Angulo could con-
    tact Jose’s parents. Llanes-Angulo told Agent Cabrera that
    Jose’s mother was at work and that she did not have access
    to a phone at her workplace. Llanes-Angulo offered to physi-
    cally locate Jose’s mother. She also said that she did not have
    a telephone number for Jose’s father, who was separated from
    Jose’s mother, but offered to try to track him down as well.
    She later testified that Jose’s father lived about fifteen min-
    utes from her house. Agent Cabrera did not give Llanes-
    Angulo a callback number to the Port of Entry that might
    have permitted Jose’s parents to reach the agents by phone.
    Agent Cabrera asked Llanes-Angulo if she could come to
    the Port of Entry, to which Llanes-Angulo responded that it
    would take her an hour and a half to do so.1 Agent Cabrera
    also asked Llanes-Angulo if the agents could question Jose
    and Llanes-Angulo assented.2 Nonetheless, Agent Cabrera did
    not inform Llanes-Angulo of Jose’s constitutional rights and
    did not permit Jose to speak to his aunt.
    Approximately nine minutes after Agent Cabrera attempted
    to contact Jose’s parents, Special Agent Moises Martinez first
    1
    Llanes-Angulo testified that she spontaneously volunteered to come to
    the Port of Entry if she was needed, and she told Cabrera that it would take
    her an hour and a half to do so. The judge credited the agent’s testimony
    over Llanes-Angulo’s.
    2
    Llanes-Angulo testified that Agent Cabrera never asked her for permis-
    sion to question Jose and that Llanes-Angulo did not give such permission.
    The court found Agent Cabrera’s testimony more credible, and concluded
    that Cabrera had asked for and received Llanes-Angulo’s permission to
    question Jose.
    7200           UNITED STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)
    notified Jose of his Miranda rights. Agent Martinez gave Jose
    the Miranda warning in Spanish using an ICE Advice of
    Rights form, which Martinez had Jose read aloud. Jose indi-
    cated that he understood each right by signing a statement to
    that effect. Jose was also informed that, because he was not
    a United States citizen, he had a right to have the officers
    notify the Mexican consulate of his arrest and detention. Jose
    orally waived this right and signed a waiver of the right to
    consular notification.
    After Jose waived his Miranda and consular notification
    rights, Agents Martinez and Edward Zuchelli questioned Jose.
    According to the agents, they did not wait for Jose’s parents
    to arrive because Jose was a minor and they knew they
    needed to act quickly in the case of a minor’s arrest, and
    because Jose had been caught with a large quantity of
    cocaine. The interview lasted thirty to forty-five minutes.
    Approximately forty-five minutes after the agents finished
    interrogating Jose, Agent Zuchelli — at the urging of the
    United States Attorney — notified the Mexican consulate of
    Jose’s arrest and detention. At about this same time, Jose’s
    father arrived at the Port of Entry. The agents informed Jose’s
    father of the charges against his son, and gave Jose’s father
    a brief opportunity to speak with Jose. They also informed
    him that Jose was going to be held at the San Diego Juvenile
    Hall facility. Nothing in the record indicates that the agents
    informed Jose’s father of his son’s Miranda rights.
    B.   Arraignment
    Jose was transported to Juvenile Hall at 9:30 p.m. on May
    10, 2005. The following morning at 8:00 a.m., Jose was taken
    to the courthouse in San Diego and turned over to the United
    States Marshal Service. The assigned magistrate began
    arraignments at 10:30 a.m. The Federal Defender, Michelle
    Villasenor-Grant, met with Jose at 12:55 p.m. Although the
    magistrate’s afternoon session began at 2:00 p.m., Jose was
    UNITED STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)            7201
    not brought before the magistrate for arraignment until 3:30
    p.m., after all the adults had been arraigned for the day and
    nearly twenty-four hours after his arrest.
    At the arraignment, the government filed a juvenile infor-
    mation charging Jose with being a juvenile delinquent for one
    count of importation of a controlled substance in violation of
    21 U.S.C. §§ 952 and 960. Jose moved to dismiss the infor-
    mation on the ground that his arrest and detention violated the
    JDA. The court dismissed the motion without prejudice.
    C.   Pre-Trial Motions
    On May 23, 2003, Jose filed two motions to dismiss the
    information based on violations of the JDA. In these motions,
    Jose argued that the information was deficiently certified by
    the Attorney General, and that the government did not present
    Jose to a magistrate for arraignment “forthwith.” After argu-
    ment, the court denied both motions.
    In two additional pretrial motions, Jose moved to suppress
    his custodial statements on the following grounds: (1) that the
    arresting officers failed to advise his parents of the charges
    against him or of his constitutional rights as required by the
    JDA, and that this deprived him of the right to counsel and the
    protection of his parents; (2) that the officers failed to notify
    the Mexican consulate of Jose’s arrest and detention as
    required by the JDA; (3) that Jose did not voluntarily, know-
    ingly, or intelligently waive his Miranda rights; and (4) that
    Jose was not taken to a magistrate forthwith in violation of the
    JDA.
    On June 1, 2005, the court considered Jose’s pre-trial
    motion to suppress his statements. The court concluded that
    Jose had voluntarily waived his Miranda rights, but that the
    government violated the JDA’s notification provisions by fail-
    ing to notify Jose’s parents before questioning him. This
    “technical violation,” the court concluded, did not violate
    7202           UNITED STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)
    Jose’s right to due process. 
    Id. The court
    found, however, that
    the statements were prejudicial, and therefore excluded Jose’s
    statements from the government’s case-in-chief.
    D.   Trial, Conviction, and Sentencing
    After a brief bench trial, the district court adjudged Jose a
    juvenile delinquent on June 2, 2005. Sentencing was set for
    July 11, 2005.
    A Presentence Report (“PSR”) was filed on June 17, 2005.
    According to the PSR, Jose did well in school, never used
    drugs, and worked on occasion for his father. He had no prior
    criminal or juvenile convictions. Jose told the probation offi-
    cer that, while he knew he was involved in some illegal activ-
    ity, he believed that he was picking up illegal visas in San
    Ysidro. He stressed that he did not know that the 4-Runner
    contained illegal drugs, and expressed remorse for getting
    involved in illegal activity. The PSR concluded that a custo-
    dial sentence was not needed to protect the community or to
    promote a respect for the law. Instead, the Probation Office
    believed that Jose was “capable of rehabilitation without a
    custodial sanction,” and recommended that Jose be sentenced
    to five years probation. 
    Id. The Probation
    Office assured the
    court that such a sentence “[would] not diminish the serious-
    ness of the offense. The juvenile understands the seriousness
    of his actions and has learned from this experience.” 
    Id. Despite the
    PSR’s recommendation, the court sentenced
    Jose to serve an additional ten months custody in a juvenile
    detention facility. Given the substantial quantity of drugs
    involved, the court found that probation was not a deterrent
    and that the rehabilitative aims of the JDA would best be
    served by imposing ten months of detention.
    Jose filed a timely notice of appeal.
    UNITED STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)               7203
    II.   Discussion
    We review compliance with the JDA, a question of statu-
    tory interpretation, de novo. See United States v. Male Juve-
    nile (Pierre Y.), 
    280 F.3d 1008
    , 1014 (9th Cir. 2002). We also
    review de novo “whether the juvenile [was] advised of his
    rights ‘immediately’ or whether the juvenile’s parents were
    notified ‘immediately’ ” because such questions “turn on the
    legal interpretation of ‘immediate.’ ” United States v. Doe
    (Doe III), 
    219 F.3d 1009
    , 1014 (9th Cir. 2000) (citing United
    States v. Frega, 
    179 F.3d 793
    , 802 n.6 (9th Cir. 1999)).
    Whether a juvenile’s parents have been properly notified pur-
    suant to 18 U.S.C. § 5033 is a predominately factual question
    that is reviewed for clear error. See United States v. Juvenile
    (RRA-A), 
    229 F.3d 737
    , 742 (9th Cir. 2000). Whether a juve-
    nile has been arraigned without unreasonable delay is a mixed
    question of law and fact reviewed de novo. See Doe 
    III, 219 F.3d at 1014
    .
    Section 5033 of the Juvenile Delinquency Act (“JDA”) pro-
    vides:
    Whenever a juvenile is taken into custody for an
    alleged act of juvenile delinquency, the arresting
    officer shall immediately advise such juvenile of his
    legal rights, in language comprehensive to a juve-
    nile, and shall immediately notify the Attorney Gen-
    eral and the juvenile’s parents, guardian, or
    custodian of such custody. The arresting officer shall
    also notify the parents, guardian, or custodian of the
    rights of the juvenile and of the nature of the alleged
    offense.
    18 U.S.C. § 5033. In reviewing Jose’s claim, the panel must
    first “address whether the government violated the require-
    ments of the Juvenile Delinquency Act.” United States v. Doe
    (Doe II), 
    862 F.2d 776
    , 779 (9th Cir. 1988). If the government
    violated the JDA, then the panel should consider “whether the
    7204            UNITED STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)
    government’s conduct was so egregious as to deprive [Jose]
    of his right to due process of law.” 
    Id. If it
    was not, the panel
    then considers whether “the violation [was] harmless to the
    juvenile beyond a reasonable doubt.” 
    Id. A. Was
    the JDA violated?
    Jose contends that the Border Patrol agents and officers
    failed to comply with the JDA because (1) the agents did not
    immediately advise him of his constitutional rights; (2) the
    arresting officer improperly delegated the duty to notify
    Jose’s parents of his arrest, detention, and constitutional
    rights; (3) the agents did not immediately notify Jose’s par-
    ents that he was in custody and never advised Jose’s parents
    of Jose’s constitutional rights; (4) the agents did not notify the
    Mexican consulate before Jose was interrogated; and (5) the
    government did not present him before a magistrate “forth-
    with.” The government bears the burden of showing compli-
    ance with the JDA. See 
    id. at 779.
    1.    Was Jose immediately advised of his rights?
    Jose was considered “in custody” from the moment Officer
    Hill handcuffed him at approximately 4:15 p.m. See 
    RRA-A, 229 F.3d at 744
    (finding juvenile “in custody” from the
    moment he was handcuffed). Jose was not informed of his
    Miranda rights until 5:24 p.m, when Agent Martinez began to
    interrogate him. In this appeal, Jose argues that the arresting
    officers violated the JDA because he was not immediately
    notified of his Miranda rights.
    [1] “[T]here is a dearth of case law interpreting ‘immedi-
    ately’ in the context of 18 U.S.C. § 5033.” Doe 
    III, 219 F.3d at 1014
    . In Doe III, this court found that a delay of three and
    a half hours was untimely because the plain meaning of the
    term “immediately” does not countenance a three and a half
    hour delay, and because there was no showing “that exigent
    circumstances or other valid reasons caused the delay.” 
    Id. In UNITED
    STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)           7205
    another juvenile case, RRA-A, we found that a delay of four
    hours was not “immediate.” 
    RRA-A, 229 F.3d at 744
    .
    [2] The delay at issue here is less than the delay in either
    of our previous cases on this question. And yet the notifica-
    tion here was certainly not “immediate.” Officer Hill did not
    advise Jose of his rights when Jose stood handcuffed at the
    border or when Jose was transported to the security office.
    Agent Cabrera did not advise Jose of his rights before she
    asked Jose why he thought he was in custody or before she
    solicited contact information. It appears that both agents
    spoke Spanish, and there was no valid reason presented why
    either of these two agents could not have informed Jose that
    he did not have to speak to the agents, or that he would be
    permitted the aid of counsel. Legal warnings need not be
    given instantaneously, especially where “exigent circum-
    stances or other valid reasons” cause a short period of delay.
    Doe 
    II, 219 F.3d at 1014
    . But it stretches the language of the
    statute too far to say that “immediately” means “just before
    you wish to seek a confession.” Miranda itself provides the
    right to receive such warnings before being interrogated, see
    Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
    , 444-45 (1966), and to find
    otherwise would render the JDA’s protection for juveniles
    superfluous. We believe that Congress intended juveniles to
    be advised of their Miranda rights as soon as practicable after
    the juvenile was “in custody.”
    [3] Under this rubric, Jose was not advised of his Miranda
    rights “immediately.” At the very least, Agent Cabrera should
    have read Jose his rights before she asked Jose if he knew
    why he was being detained, and before she began the other
    tasks assigned to her by the JDA. See 
    RRA-A, 229 F.3d at 746
    (noting that arresting officer should read the juvenile his
    Miranda rights but delay interrogation of the juvenile until the
    consulate can be notified). Accordingly, we find that the gov-
    ernment violated the JDA by failing to “immediately” notify
    Jose of his legal rights.
    7206            UNITED STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)
    2.   Did the arresting officer improperly delegate the
    notification of duties?
    [4] Jose contends that the Border Patrol agents violated the
    JDA when Agent Hill, as the arresting officer, “delegated” the
    notification duty to Agents Cabrera and Zuchelli. In support
    of this argument, Jose cites RRA-A, in which we found a JDA
    violation where the arresting officer delegated the notification
    requirement to the United States Attorney’s Office. 
    RRA-A, 229 F.3d at 745
    . We find that Agent Hill did not improperly
    delegate the notification duty.
    In RRA-A, the officer delegated the task of parental notifi-
    cation to the prosecutor, who subsequently delegated the task
    to the prosecutor’s secretary. See 
    id. at 745.
    We concluded
    that delegation to a prosecutor strayed too far from the textual
    strictures of the JDA, which requires that the “arresting offi-
    cer” notify the parents. See 
    id. at 744-45;
    see also United
    States v. Doe (Doe IV), 
    170 F.3d 1162
    , 1167 (9th Cir. 1999)
    (finding that the text of the JDA does not allow for delegation
    to a “subsequent official who might handle the judicial phases
    of the matter”).
    [5] Nonetheless, it seems an overly narrow reading of “ar-
    resting officer” to exclude fellow officers and agents involved
    in the actual arrest and investigation at the scene of the arrest.
    In this case, Agent Hill was working at the border and con-
    ducted the initial investigation, after which he walked Jose
    back to the office so that a fellow agent could conduct initial
    processing. We believe that the purpose of the JDA was not
    thwarted by allowing an intake officer on the scene of the
    arrest to call the juvenile’s parents instead of the officer who
    made the initial arrest. Accordingly, we conclude that Agent
    Hill did not improperly delegate his notification duties in vio-
    lation of the JDA.
    UNITED STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)            7207
    3.   Were Jose’s parents immediately notified that he was
    in custody and notified of his rights?
    [6] Section 5033 requires that federal law enforcement
    agents notify parents of a juvenile’s arrest “immediately” after
    the juvenile is taken into custody. See United States v. Female
    Juvenile (Wendy G.), 
    255 F.3d 761
    , 765 (9th Cir. 2001). In
    addition, a juvenile’s parents must also be notified of the
    minor’s Miranda rights, “to ensure that § 5033 provides juve-
    niles with ‘meaningful protection.’ ” RRA-A, 
    229 F.3d 745
    .
    Because this protection is useless unless the parent has the
    right to consult with the juvenile before interrogation, the
    arresting officer must affirmatively inform the parents that
    they will have the opportunity to confer with and to advise
    their child before the child is interrogated. See Wendy 
    G., 255 F.3d at 767
    . If notification is not immediately possible, the
    officers must delay interrogation for a reasonable time to
    allow parental notification and response. See 
    RRA-A, 229 F.3d at 746
    . These steps ensure that a juvenile in custody receives
    “the aid of more mature judgment as to the steps he should
    take in [his] predicament,” that is, an adult who can provide
    the juvenile “the protection which his own immaturity could
    not.” United States v. Male Juvenile, 
    121 F.3d 34
    , 43 (2d Cir.
    1997) (quoting Gallegos v. Colorado, 
    370 U.S. 49
    , 54
    (1962)).
    [7] When the juvenile’s parents live outside the United
    States, the government must make “reasonable” efforts to
    contact the parents so that the juvenile can receive such pro-
    tection. See Doe 
    II, 862 F.2d at 779
    . “These reasonable efforts
    may consist of either (a) actual notification or (b) sufficient
    inquiry or effort to make the reasonable determination that
    actual notification is not feasible” 
    Id. Only if
    actual notifica-
    tion is not feasible may the government notify a foreign con-
    sulate in this country in lieu of parental notification. See 
    id. Consular notification
    facilitates parental notification, allowing
    an “in-country mechanism” to assist the government in locat-
    ing the parent. 
    RRA-A, 229 F.3d at 746
    . It also allows a coun-
    7208               UNITED STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)
    try’s diplomatic officers to become involved as surrogates for
    the parents. See 
    id. [8] The
    government contends that it made “every effort” to
    comply with these notification provisions. We disagree. Gov-
    ernment agents notified Llanes-Angulo that Jose had been
    detained at the border, but that was the extent of their compli-
    ance with the JDA. Llanes-Angulo offered the agents a num-
    ber of options, any of which probably would have complied
    with the JDA: The agents could have asked Llanes-Angulo to
    locate the mother or father and could have left a callback
    number so either parent could call and talk to their son. The
    agents could have clarified whether Llanes-Angulo intended
    to come to the border, and could have waited an hour and a
    half to allow Llanes-Angulo to travel to the border and to con-
    sult with her nephew.3 The agents also could have informed
    Llanes-Angulo that Jose had been caught at the border with
    cocaine, informed her of Jose’s Miranda rights, and offered
    her an opportunity to talk with her nephew.4 Arguably, any of
    3
    Llanes-Angulo stated that she told officers she would come to the bor-
    der, whereas the agents stated that Llanes-Angulo stated that she could
    come to the border within an hour and a half, but did not make clear
    whether she intended to do so or not. For purposes of analysis, this matters
    little. The government bears the burden of showing compliance with the
    JDA and must show that it made reasonable efforts to contact the foreign
    juvenile’s parents and that parental notification was not feasible. See Doe
    
    II, 862 F.2d at 780
    . Therefore, the government agents should have affir-
    matively clarified whether Llanes-Angulo would notify the mother or
    father, or whether Llames-Angulo would come to the border.
    4
    This presumes that Llanes-Angulo was a responsible adult who the
    officers reasonably believed could act in loco parenti. The JDA requires
    that either a “parent, guardian or custodian” be notified. 18 U.S.C. § 5033.
    We have said that notification of a juvenile’s sister, where the sister spoke
    English and apparently translated for the non-English speaking parents,
    might substitute for parental notification. See Doe 
    III, 219 F.3d at 1012
    ,
    1014-15. While we presume, for purposes of analysis, that the aunt was
    competent to act in lieu of Jose’s parents, we note that this requirement
    must also be read in light of the purposes of the JDA: to ensure that the
    juvenile is not left alone in a strange environment without advice and com-
    UNITED STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)                   7209
    these options would have fulfilled the JDA’s requirement that
    a parent, or person who could reasonably be deemed to act in
    loco parenti, be notified of the juvenile’s situation, be
    informed of the juvenile’s Miranda rights, and be affirma-
    tively offered the opportunity to consult with the juvenile.
    Instead, agents waited nine minutes — hardly a “reasonable
    time” to allow parental notification — and then began interro-
    gating Jose.5 We believe the government spurned obvious
    alternatives that would have permitted Jose to consult with his
    mother or father, or at least with his aunt. As such, the gov-
    ernment has not borne its burden to show that actual parental
    notification was not feasible. We therefore find a violation of
    the JDA.
    The government claims that this failure to notify Jose’s par-
    ents was somehow remedied by the fact that Jose waived his
    right to consular notification. Given that the government has
    not shown that parental notification was not feasible, consular
    notification is irrelevant. Consular notification is undertaken
    in lieu of parental notification, but it can never fully supplant
    parental notification. Consular notification should not be used
    simply because parental notification is inconvenient.6
    fort of a responsible adult who can provide guidance. Giving the Miranda
    warning to a family member or friend who cannot provide the necessary
    assistance thwarts the purpose of the act. Indeed, in this case, the aunt
    declared under oath that she would not have felt comfortable making any
    decision about whether Jose could be interrogated because she was not his
    parent. Because the government violated the JDA by failing to provide
    Llanes-Angulo with the Miranda warning, we need not decide whether
    Llanes-Angulo was competent to act in lieu of Jose’s parents.
    5
    The Government claimed that it had to proceed expeditiously and
    could not wait before interrogating the minor because of the quantity of
    cocaine that was involved. This assertion is undercut somewhat by the
    officer’s statement that he handled this case the same way that he had han-
    dled ten to fifteen other juvenile cases.
    6
    We further note, because this situation is likely to recur, that it is
    highly doubtful that a juvenile can waive consular notification. This court
    7210               UNITED STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)
    4.    Was Jose taken to a magistrate forthwith?
    [9] Jose next contends that the twenty-three hour delay
    between his arrest and his arraignment violates the JDA’s
    requirement that a juvenile be presented to a magistrate
    “forthwith.” As stated above, Jose was taken into custody at
    approximately 4:15 p.m. on May 10, 2005. He was interro-
    gated from approximately 5:24 p.m. to 6:10 p.m. He was then
    transported to Juvenile Hall at 9:30 p.m. The following morn-
    ing, at 8:00 a.m., Jose was taken to the courthouse in San
    Diego and turned over to the United States Marshal Service.
    Michelle Villasenor-Grant, the Federal Defender and the
    assigned “duty attorney” on May 11, was present at the court-
    house from 9:00 a.m. The assigned magistrate began arraign-
    ments at 10:30 a.m. When Villasenor-Grant overheard the
    Assistant United States Attorney speaking about a juvenile
    who had been detained, Villasenor-Grant took affirmative
    steps to find Jose. She met with Jose at 12:55 p.m., and was
    ready to proceed at 1:10 p.m. The magistrate’s afternoon ses-
    sion began at 2:00 p.m., and still, Jose was not arraigned. At
    3:30 p.m., after the entire adult calendar was finished, Jose
    was finally brought before the magistrate for arraignment —
    nearly twenty-four hours after his arrest.
    has held that a juvenile cannot waive the right to parental notification. See
    United States v. L.M.K., 
    149 F.3d 1033
    , 1035 (9th Cir. 1998) (concluding
    that § 5033 “does not permit the juvenile to waive notification of the par-
    ents”). The role of consular notification is to permit “diplomatic officials
    to become involved as surrogates for parents who are not in the country.”
    
    RRA-A, 229 F.3d at 746
    (emphasis added). It stands to reason that if a
    juvenile cannot waive the right to parental notification, the juvenile cannot
    validly waive the right to consular notification. Indeed, there is even a
    greater reason not to allow a waiver of consular notification. A juvenile
    will intuitively grasp the significance of parental notification, but a juve-
    nile is less likely to understand the important role of the consulate as sur-
    rogate. Where the statute does not permit waiver of the right to parental
    notification, we see no reason that a measure intended to supplant parental
    notification could be waived.
    UNITED STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)           7211
    The government admits, as it must, that the delay was
    caused by its own processing. The magistrate began arraign-
    ments at 10:30 a.m. The public defender was present all day
    and could have met with Jose that morning if she had been
    informed that Jose was in custody. Thus, the government
    proffered only three reasons why Jose could not be arraigned
    in the morning: because of the large quantity of the drugs
    found in Jose’s vehicle, because the paperwork involved in
    preparing the information was “tedious,” and “because this
    case was urgent requiring a thorough, cautious approach.”
    [10] We have held that, in general, juveniles in custody
    should be given priority in the arraignment schedule. See
    United States v. Doe I, 
    701 F.2d 819
    , 824 (9th Cir. 1983). In
    Doe I, we upheld a thirty-six hour delay where the magistrate
    was unavailable and where agents had to give priority to other
    cases, including the arraignment of a pregnant woman and
    women with small children. See 
    id. We held
    that “only
    because of these exigencies” was the delay in arraignment
    permissible. 
    Id. (emphasis added);
    see also Doe 
    III, 219 F.3d at 1015
    (finding that thirty-one and a half hours is not “forth-
    with”). In contrast to the specific reasons offered for delay in
    Doe I, here we have only the government’s assertion that they
    were proceeding “with caution” and that the paperwork pro-
    cess was “tedious.” We refuse to accept the government’s
    bald assertion that caution was required to justify detaining
    Jose in the holding cell for almost seven and a half hours after
    he arrived at court.
    The Government also argues that Jose’s waiver of his
    Miranda rights necessarily permits a delay for the time of
    interrogation, relying on United States v. Indian Boy X, 
    565 F.2d 585
    (9th Cir. 1977). Even if we were to permit a reason-
    able period of delay for purposes of interrogation, it would
    not excuse the additional twenty-one hour delay after interro-
    gation was completed before Jose was presented to the magis-
    trate.
    7212           UNITED STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)
    [11] Rather than being treated with priority, Jose was
    arraigned after the magistrate judge had finished his entire
    calendar of adult arraignments. We find no reasonable cause
    for the twenty-three hour delay in proceedings before a mag-
    istrate, and therefore that the government violated the JDA
    when it failed to present Jose to a magistrate forthwith.
    B.   Due Process Violation
    [12] Because we find that government officials committed
    multiple violations of the JDA, we must consider whether
    these violations were “so egregious as to deprive [the juve-
    nile] of his rights to due process.” Doe 
    II, 862 F.2d at 779
    .
    We conclude that, under our case law, those multiple viola-
    tions of the JDA did not amount to a violation of due process.
    The delay in reading Jose his Miranda rights did not effect a
    violation of due process, because Jose was read his rights
    before interrogation, and thus the “primary purpose” of
    Miranda — to protect against self-incrimination — was
    secured. See 
    RRA-A, 229 F.3d at 746
    . This court has also held
    that the failure to properly notify a juvenile’s parents or the
    failure to notify a foreign minor’s consulate does not, in and
    of itself, require suppression of the juvenile’s statement on
    due process grounds. See 
    RRA-A, 229 F.3d at 746
    ; Doe 
    IV, 170 F.3d at 1168
    .
    [13] Similarly, this court has found that delay in bringing
    a juvenile before a magistrate does not violate due process
    where the government made no attempt to interrogate the
    juvenile during the delay and where there was no evidence
    that the delay was a deliberate attempt to gain undue advan-
    tage or influence the juvenile. See Doe 
    III, 219 F.3d at 1016
    .
    In this case, although the delay was significant, there is no
    evidence that the government tried to use the delay to its
    advantage or that the delay was undertaken in bad faith. Thus,
    we find, as did the district court, that the delay in bringing
    Jose before the magistrate for arraignment did not, in the cir-
    UNITED STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)            7213
    cumstances presented, affect the fundamental fairness of the
    proceeding.
    C.   Harmless Error
    While “[t]he [JDA] was enacted to protect juveniles’ due
    process rights, [it] is not coextensive with constitutional guar-
    antees.” Doe 
    II, 862 F.2d at 781
    . Thus, even if the govern-
    ment’s violations of the JDA did not violate Jose’s right to
    due process, we must next consider whether Jose was preju-
    diced by the JDA violations and whether the court should
    exercise its discretion and dismiss the information to “ensure
    that the ‘prophylactic safeguard for juveniles [is not] eroded
    or neglected.’ ” 
    RRA-A, 229 F.3d at 744
    ; see also Doe 
    II, 862 F.2d at 781
    .
    The government law enforcement agents flagrantly violated
    the JDA in this case. Congress enacted the JDA to protect the
    rights of juveniles: to ensure that juveniles can consult with
    their parents before being interrogated so that they do not
    “ ‘become the victim[s] of fear, then of panic.’ ” Doe 
    IV, 170 F.3d at 1167
    (citations omitted). We have noted that, particu-
    larly in the case of foreign juveniles, “the potential discombo-
    bulation may be even more resonant due to language
    differences and an exacerbated sense of isolation and help-
    lessness.” 
    Id. And yet,
    over thirty years after the JDA was
    enacted, government law enforcement agents trample even the
    most basic requirements of the JDA. Indeed, the government
    attorney claimed, at trial, that the agents went “above and
    beyond the call of duty” in their attempts to notify Jose’s par-
    ents. We do not believe that it furthers Congress’s intent to
    allow the government, in case after case, to ignore with impu-
    nity the protective requirements of the JDA. See, e.g., United
    States v. Doe, 
    366 F.3d 1069
    (9th Cir. 2004) (finding a viola-
    tion of JDA, but excusing the error as harmless); Pierre Y.,
    
    280 F.3d 1008
    (same); L.M.K., 
    149 F.3d 1033
    (same); United
    States v. Doe, 
    149 F.3d 945
    (9th Cir. 1998) (same); United
    States v. Lyndell N., 
    124 F.3d 1170
    (9th Cir. 1997) (same);
    7214               UNITED STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)
    Doe I, 
    701 F.2d 819
    (same). Courts should not close their
    eyes to these continuing violations by mindlessly reciting the
    rubric of harmless error as an overarching excuse for ignoring
    what Congress has clearly ordained; instead we must carefully
    examine the possible prejudicial effect of each violation with
    an eye toward the prophylactic purposes of the JDA.
    [14] We appreciate thus the district court’s careful analysis
    of the prejudice question. The district court was correct that
    the delay in bringing Jose before the magistrate did not effect
    any prejudice. The court also properly suppressed, at trial,
    Jose’s statement, because it found that the failure to properly
    notify Jose’s parents was prejudicial, in that it “caused” him
    to make his statement. The district court failed to consider,
    however, whether the indictment itself might not have been
    filed but for Jose’s statement. We must determine whether
    that error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. See Doe
    
    II, 862 F.2d at 781
    . We have held that a violation of the JDA
    may not be harmless (a) where the isolation stemming from
    a violation of the JDA led a juvenile to confess, and (b) where
    criminal proceedings were initiated on the basis of the juve-
    nile’s confession. See 
    id. If a
    violation of the JDA was preju-
    dicial because it led the Government to initiate prosecution of
    the juvenile, the remedy is for the charges against the juvenile
    to be dismissed. See id.7
    7
    Although our dissenting colleague disputes the Doe II court’s holding
    on these points, Doe II is, nonetheless, this circuit’s law. Indeed, the Gov-
    ernment itself argued that the standard for prejudice was “beyond a rea-
    sonable doubt.” Appellee Reply Br. at 25 (“This Court must address the
    third prong of the Doe II analysis: Were the statutory violations harmless
    to Jose A. beyond a reasonable doubt?”). Hulteen v. AT&T Corp., 
    441 F.3d 653
    , 658 (9th Cir. 2006), dealt with whether a panel could disregard
    prior precedent based on a so-called “sea change” in the law that occurred
    after that prior precedent was handed down. No such intervening Supreme
    Court decision or statute has called Doe II into question — certainly not
    United States v. Morrison, 
    449 U.S. 361
    (1981), decided seven years
    before Doe II. We are therefore bound to apply Doe II as the law of the
    circuit.
    UNITED STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)                7215
    [15] The first question — whether violations of the JDA
    led, in part, to Jose’s confession — must be answered in the
    affirmative. The district court excluded Jose’s statement from
    evidence at trial, and thus, must have found that the violations
    “caused” the confession. We agree with the district court that
    in this case, as in Doe II, the failure to properly notify Jose’s
    parents likely caused his confession because it “needlessly
    isolated [Jose] in a strange environment and deprived him of
    support and counsel during the pre-arraignment period.” Doe
    
    II, 862 F.2d at 781
    . Jose was forced to make important deci-
    sions — whether to waive his right to counsel and whether to
    speak to the government agents — without the aid of “more
    mature judgment.” Male 
    Juvenile, 121 F.3d at 43
    . Thus, we
    believe the district court was correct to conclude that the vio-
    lations of the JDA caused, at least in part, Jose’s confession.
    [16] The second question — whether Jose’s prosecution
    resulted from his confession — is more difficult. While the
    district court believed that the statements were prejudicial and
    excluded them at trial, the court never considered whether
    Jose’s statements were the basis of the indictment itself.
    When the juvenile information was filed, Jose’s statements
    were the only evidence provided by the government to show
    that Jose “knowingly” committed a crime, as required under
    21 U.S.C. § 960(1). The record is silent as to what other evi-
    dence the government could have produced at the time the
    juvenile information was filed to prove up the essential ele-
    ment of knowledge. We have held that where the record does
    not satisfy us, beyond a reasonable doubt, that a violation of
    the JDA was harmless, a remand to the district court is appro-
    priate. See Doe 
    II, 862 F.2d at 781
    . We thus remand this case
    to the district court to determine whether it is clear beyond a
    reasonable doubt that, at the time the juvenile information was
    filed, the government’s use of Jose’s confession to prove up
    the indictment on the essential element of knowledge was harm-
    less.8
    8
    We acknowledge that the government went on to prove at trial — with-
    out the aid of Jose’s confession — that Jose knowingly committed the
    7216               UNITED STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)
    III.   Conclusion
    For the foregoing reasons, we REVERSE and REMAND
    for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    ALARCÓN, Circuit Judge, concurring and dissenting:
    I concur in the Majority’s holding that the Government did
    not egregiously deprive Jose of his right to due process in
    delaying to advise him of his Miranda rights and in failing to
    bring him before a magistrate judge “forthwith.” Majority Op.
    at 7212.
    I respectfully dissent from the Majority’s puzzling and con-
    tradictory determination that “[t]he government law enforce-
    ment agents flagrantly violated the JDA in this case,”
    Majority Op. at 7213, but that their conduct “did not, in the
    circumstances presented, affect the fundamental fairness of
    the proceedings.” Majority Op. at 7212-13.
    Respectfully, I cannot join the Majority’s number because
    (1) it has failed in its duty to view the evidence in the light
    most favorable to the prevailing party, and (2) it has ignored
    this Circuit’s harmless error standard of review for JDA viola-
    tions and instead, fashioned a prejudicial per se standard that
    is applicable even to a good faith and harmless failure to com-
    crime. The question here is different: whether, at the time the information
    was filed, the government could produce enough evidence to indict Jose
    for a crime that required knowledge. We are not, as the dissent charges,
    making our own factual and credibility findings. Even if we accept the
    evidence in the light most favorable to the judge’s findings at trial, there
    was simply no inquiry made on this critical issue during the district court’s
    hearing. Because we cannot conduct this inquiry with any certainty and
    because the district court never specifically considered whether the con-
    fession “caused” the government to initiate its prosecution, we remand.
    UNITED STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)           7217
    ply with the JDA. Under the law of this Circuit, violations of
    the JDA are reviewed under the harmless error standard. A
    three-judge panel cannot overturn the law of this Circuit. See
    Taylor v. Burlington Northern R.R. Co., 
    787 F.2d 1309
    , 1313
    (9th Cir. 1986) (explaining that a three-judge panel must fol-
    low Ninth Circuit precedent). I would affirm the District
    Court’s well-reasoned conclusion that the agents’ “technical
    violation” of the JDA was not egregious, and, therefore, the
    agents’ failure to comply with its requirements was not preju-
    dicial. I would not remand this matter for an evidentiary hear-
    ing to determine whether the information should be
    dismissed. In so holding, the Majority has violated the
    Supreme Court’s express holding in United States v. Morri-
    son, 
    449 U.S. 361
    , 365 (1981) that dismissal of an accusatory
    pleading is not a proper remedy where statements obtained
    from an accused must be excluded. The District Court did not
    consider any evidence obtained in violation of the JDA in
    finding that Jose was guilty of importing cocaine into the
    United States. The Majority has also erred in directing the
    District Court to apply a proof beyond a reasonable doubt
    standard upon remand in determining whether the alleged
    nonconstitutional error was harmless.
    I
    Because the Majority has, contrary to the law of this Cir-
    cuit, improperly insinuated its own factual and credibility
    findings in its summary of the evidence, I will set forth the
    evidence presented to the District Court in the light most
    favorable to the Government as the prevailing party. See
    United States v. Cluchette, 
    465 F.2d 749
    , 754 (9th Cir. 1972)
    (“It is not our function to re-weigh the evidence and pass on
    the credibility of the witnesses.”); see also Jackson v. Vir-
    ginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 319 (1979) (“Once a defendant has been
    found guilty of the crime charged, the factfinder’s role as
    weigher of the evidence is preserved through a legal conclu-
    sion that upon judicial review all of the evidence is to be con-
    sidered in the light most favorable to the prosecution.”);
    7218            UNITED STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)
    Minidoka Irrigation Dist. v. Dep’t of Interior, 
    406 F.3d 567
    ,
    572 (9th Circuit 2005) (stating that “in reviewing [a] district
    court’[s] findings of fact for clear error, we must view the evi-
    dence in the light most favorable to the prevailing party”)
    (internal quotations and citation omitted).
    Mark Hill testified that he was a primary inspector with the
    United States Customs and Border Protection (“CBP”). At
    4:16 p.m. on May 10, 2005, Officer Hill was on duty at the
    San Ysidro, California Port of Entry inspecting vehicles enter-
    ing the United States. At that time, a gray Toyota 4-Runner
    with Mexican license plates approached Officer Hill’s lane for
    inspection. The vehicle was driven by Jose, a fifteen-year-old
    juvenile. Jose immediately handed Officer Hill a Mexican
    border crossing card before he was asked for identification.
    Officer Hill asked Jose who owned the vehicle. Jose first
    responded that he was the owner. A couple of seconds later,
    he stated that the vehicle belonged to his uncle. Because of his
    contradictory statements, Officer Hill asked Jose for the vehi-
    cle registration. Jose reached into the glove compartment and
    extracted what appeared to be a vehicle registration. Before
    the document was handed to Officer Hill, Jose was asked to
    disclose his uncle’s name. Jose looked at the vehicle registra-
    tion and replied: “Daniel.”
    Officer Hill asked Jose why he was entering the United
    States. He replied that he was going shopping for his mother.
    When asked whether he was transporting anything into the
    United States, Jose replied: “Nothing.”
    Officer Hill testified that during this conversation, Jose’s
    “mouth appeared to get dry and he moved his eyes around a
    lot.” Based on Jose’s responses and his demeanor, Officer
    Hill decided to inspect the vehicle. After obtaining the keys
    to the vehicle from Jose, Officer Hill tapped on the rear quar-
    ter panel on the driver’s side. It emitted an extremely solid
    sound. Based on his law enforcement experience, the door
    UNITED STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)             7219
    panel’s condition indicated to him that there was something
    hidden inside the quarter panel. Officer Hill next tapped the
    quarter panel on the passenger’s side. It also felt solid.
    Officer Hill removed one of the panels with a screw driver
    and discovered square or rectangular packages inside. He then
    placed handcuffs on Jose. Officer Hill patted down Jose. Offi-
    cer Hill did not find any money, an ATM card, or credit cards
    in Jose’s possession. This was significant to Officer Hill
    because Jose had stated that he had entered the United States
    to go shopping for his mother. Officer Hill escorted Jose to
    the security office and turned the vehicle over to Officer
    Rodrigo Lopez. As Jose walked to the security office, he
    appeared “somber.” He was not interrogated further by Offi-
    cer Hill.
    Officer Rodrigo Lopez testified that he was a customs offi-
    cer with the CBP. On May 10, 2005, Officer Lopez was
    assigned to the secondary inspection lot at the Port of Entry.
    Officer Lopez inspected the quarter panels of the vehicle
    driven by Jose. He observed packages wrapped in black elec-
    trical tape. He then drove the vehicle to an x-ray area to deter-
    mine whether there was contraband in any other part of the
    vehicle. Officer Lopez poked one of the packages and discov-
    ered that it contained white powder. He tested the powder. It
    tested positive for cocaine. Officer Lopez removed twenty-
    five packages from the vehicle. The total weight of the pack-
    ages was 29.68 kilograms, or 63.3 pounds.
    Maurice Wrighten testified that he was a Special Agent
    with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (“ICE”). He was
    assigned to investigate narcotics smuggling into the United
    States. Special Agent Wrighten was qualified as an expert
    regarding the retail or street value of cocaine. He testified that
    in San Diego, the retail value of the cocaine seized from the
    vehicle for personal use was $2,371,696.
    Agent Eveleen Cabrera testified that she is employed by
    ICE as a criminal investigator. At the time of the trial, she had
    7220           UNITED STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)
    served in that capacity for approximately a year and a half. On
    May 10, 2005, she was assigned to the Port of Entry. At 5:15
    p.m., she was requested to notify Jose’s parents, his guardian,
    or his custodian that he had been arrested as he entered the
    United States. When she met Jose, he was sitting in the secur-
    ity office. He was not in handcuffs.
    Agent Cabrera asked Jose if he knew why he was being
    detained. He replied that the inspectors told him that they had
    found drugs in the vehicle he was driving. Agent Cabrera then
    told Jose that because he was a minor, she was required to
    contact his parents. Agent Cabrera asked him for his parents’
    phone number. Jose replied that his family did not have a tele-
    phone. He gave Agent Cabrera his cousin’s telephone number
    in Mexico.
    When Agent Cabrera dialed that number, Maria Del Rosa-
    rio Llanes-Angulo (“Ms. Llanes-Angulo”) answered the call.
    She identified herself as Jose’s aunt. Agent Cabrera informed
    Ms. Llanes-Angulo that Jose was being detained for bringing
    drugs into the United States. Agent Cabrera asked Ms.
    Llanes-Angulo if she could contact Jose’s mother or father.
    Ms. Llanes-Angulo replied that Jose’s mother was at work
    and did not have access to a telephone. She told Agent Cab-
    rera that she would try to contact Jose’s mother at her work
    place. Ms. Llanes-Angulo told Agent Cabrera that she did not
    know how to contact Jose’s father because his parents had
    separated. She promised to try to track him down.
    Agent Cabrera asked Ms. Llanes-Angulo if she could come
    to the Port of Entry. Ms. Llanes-Angulo stated that she lived
    far away and “it would take her an hour and a half to even get
    there.” Agent Cabrera asked Ms. Llanes-Angulo if it would be
    okay for the agents to talk to Jose. She replied: “[Y]es.”
    Agent Cabrera asked Ms. Llanes-Angulo to come to the Port
    of Entry, if she failed to contact Jose’s parents.
    Agent Cabrera testified on cross-examination that she had
    handled ten to fifteen other investigations in which a juvenile
    UNITED STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)            7221
    was involved. In each of those cases, the procedure she fol-
    lowed was similar to the one she followed in this matter. That
    procedure consisted of determining whether it was necessary
    to notify the juvenile of the nature of the offense that resulted
    in his or her arrest, and to elicit the names of his or her par-
    ents, guardian or custodian in order to notify them of the
    arrest or detention of the minor. It was fully consistent with
    the requirements of § 5033 of the JDA.
    Agent Cabrera testified that the only involvement she had
    in this matter was to determine whether Jose was aware of the
    reason for his detention, and to make the telephone call to Ms.
    Llanes-Angulo. Her work in this matter was complete after
    she attempted to contact Jose’s parents. She did not partici-
    pate in the interrogation of Jose after he waived his Miranda
    rights or in transporting him to a magistrate judge for arraign-
    ment.
    Contrary to the Majority’s factual finding, Agent Cabrera
    did not interrogate Jose. She merely asked him if he knew
    why he was being detained. His response that the inspectors
    told him that they had found drugs in the vehicle he was driv-
    ing made it unnecessary to notify him why he was being
    detained. She did not inquire further about his alleged crimi-
    nal activity. Jose’s statement to her was not incriminating. It
    was based on hearsay. Its admissibility at trial on the issue of
    guilt would have been doubtful because it merely reflected
    what he had been told by the inspectors. It was not an admis-
    sion that he was aware that he was smuggling drugs into the
    United States. The Government did not file a cross-appeal
    challenging the District Court’s interpretation of § 5033 and
    the order suppressing Jose’s statements to the agents. Accord-
    ingly, this Court need not decide whether the suppression
    order was valid in light of Agent Cabrera’s unsuccessful
    attempt to notify Jose’s parents because they had no tele-
    phone.
    Edward Zuchelli testified that he was an ICE case agent
    assigned to investigate whether Jose should be charged with
    7222            UNITED STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)
    smuggling cocaine into the United States. Shortly after 5:00
    p.m., he spoke to Agent Cabrera. She told him Ms. Llanes-
    Angulo was not able to get to the Port of Entry for an hour
    and a half.
    Moises Martinez testified that he was a Special Agent
    assigned to the ICE. He testified that Jose read the Miranda
    rights aloud in Spanish at approximately 5:24 p.m. Special
    Agent Martinez asked Jose to initial the notification of rights
    form if he understood the constitutional rights set forth
    therein. Jose signed a waiver of his Miranda rights that was
    also in Spanish. Jose also signed a waiver of his right to
    require the agents to notify the Mexican consulate of his arrest
    or detention. Nevertheless, the agents notified the Mexican
    Consulate by facsimile at 7:06 p.m. that Jose had been
    detained at the Port of Entry. Nine minutes after Jose waived
    his Miranda rights, the agents interrogated Jose for twenty-
    five to thirty minutes. During this conversation, Jose’s right
    hand was free, but his left wrist was handcuffed to a metal
    pole on the table for the safety of the officers pursuant to the
    agency’s procedures. Jose’s father arrived at the security
    office at 7:26 p.m., after the agents had completed questioning
    Jose.
    Agent Zuchelli testified that they had not waited for Ms.
    Llanes-Angulo or Jose’s parents to arrive before questioning
    Jose because “[s]ince we’re dealing with a minor things had
    to be done expeditiously. Also the nature of the drugs —
    when I found out it was cocaine — it was a substantial
    amount of cocaine and I also had to proceed quickly.” During
    cross-examination, Agent Zuchelli also stated that he did not
    wait for an hour and a half before questioning Jose because
    it was necessary “to speed up the process being the juvenile
    has to be dealt with forthwith.”
    The record shows that Agent Zuchelli has handled approxi-
    mately four cases involving juveniles prior to questioning
    UNITED STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)            7223
    Jose. Agent Zuchelli was not asked to describe the procedure
    he had previously followed in cases involving juveniles.
    The Majority states that “the government law enforcement
    officers flagrantly violated the JDA in this case.” Majority
    Op. at 7213. The Majority has also found that “government
    law enforcement agents trample even the most basic require-
    ments of the JDA.” Majority Op. at 7213.
    In a later passage, the Majority states: “We do not believe
    that it furthers Congress’s intent to allow the government, in
    case after case, to ignore with impunity the protective require-
    ments of the JDA.” Majority Op. at 7213. My dictionary
    instructs me that “impunity” means: “Exemption from punish-
    ment or penalty.” Oxford English Dictionary (2d ed. 1989).
    The record shows that the District Court did not allow the
    failure of Agent Cabrera to notify Jose’s parents to go unpun-
    ished. Citing United States v. Doe, 
    862 F.2d 776
    (9th Cir.
    1998) (“Doe II”), the District Court suppressed each of Jose’s
    statements because of Agent Cabrera’s “technical violation of
    5033” in failing to notify his aunt of his constitutional rights.
    The Majority’s attempt to discredit Agent Zuchelli’s testi-
    mony by relying on the conduct of other officers in prior
    cases, who were not involved in the interrogation and process-
    ing of Jose through the Court system, violates the principle
    that appellate judges lack the power to weigh credibility or
    decide factual issues. 
    Cluchette, 465 F.2d at 754
    . It also has
    ignored the rule that appellate judges must construe the record
    in the light most favorable to the party that prevailed in the
    trial court. Jackson, 443 at 319. Instead of construing the evi-
    dence and the District Court’s findings that the violation of
    the JDA by Agent Cabrera was “technical” and that Jose’s
    statement was voluntary, the Majority has found that the offi-
    cers’ conduct in this case was flagrant and trampled on his
    rights with impunity. The Majority has improperly acted as a
    trier of fact in reviewing the testimony of the witnesses in this
    7224            UNITED STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)
    matter and in going outside the record in considering the con-
    duct of other officers in unrelated cases to bolster its findings.
    II
    The District Court denied Jose’s motion to dismiss the
    information on the ground that Jose was not taken to a magis-
    trate judge “forthwith” as required by § 5033. I agree with the
    Majority’s conclusion that the delay in bringing Jose before
    a magistrate judge was not so egregious as to deprive Jose of
    his constitutional right to due process. Majority Op. at 7212.
    I also agree with the Majority that “there is no evidence that
    the government tried to use the delay to its advantage or that
    the delay was undertaken in bad faith.” Majority Op. at 7212.
    I strongly disagree with the Majority’s conclusion that the
    District Court held that the failure of Agent Cabrera to notify
    Jose’s parents of his arrest was prejudicial. In suppressing
    Jose’s statements, the District Court reasoned as follows:
    In this case, the Court concludes that there was a
    violation of 5033 by the testimony of both the aunt
    and Agent Cabrera. Nobody notified the custodian,
    the aunt or parents of the rights of the juvenile prior
    to questioning. They were notified of the circum-
    stances involving drugs, but it does require a notifi-
    cation of rights. Now the Court having concluded
    that there was a technical violation of §5033, the
    question then becomes what is the remedy?
    Tr. of Motion Hearing/Court Trial at I-83, June 1, 2005
    (emphasis added).
    The Majority has summarized the District Court’s rationale
    for suppressing Jose’s statements as follows: “The court also
    properly suppressed at trial, Jose’s statements, because it
    found the failure to properly notify Jose’s parents was preju-
    UNITED STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)             7225
    dicial, in that it ‘caused’ him to make his statement.” Majority
    Op. at 7214.
    The District Court did not find that the failure to notify
    Jose’s parents was prejudicial because it caused Jose to make
    a statement. In fact, the record shows that the District Court
    found that the violation was “technical” and that “the state-
    ment that the juvenile made was voluntary under the totality
    of the circumstances.” Tr. of Motion Hearing/Court Trial at I-
    85. The District Court also stated: “[I]f the juvenile elects to
    testify, then, because I don’t think it’s a due process violation,
    I think that the statement was voluntary. Then if the juvenile
    elects to testify, you may examine the juvenile about any
    statements made.” 
    Id. In support
    of its analysis of the impact of the officer’s tech-
    nical violation of Jose’s statutory rights, the Majority finds
    that “over thirty years afer the JDA was enacted, government
    law enforcement agents trample even the most basic require-
    ments of the JDA.” Majority Op. at 7213. In a later passage,
    the Majority states “[w]e do not believe that it furthers Con-
    gress’s intent to allow the government, in case after case, to
    ignore with impunity the protective requirements of the JDA.”
    
    Id. There is
    no evidence in the record that supports the Majori-
    ty’s factual finding that the officers acted in this matter with
    impunity or that they trampled on the protective requirements
    of the JDA for over thirty years. Instead of citing testimony
    in this case to support its factual findings, the Majority myste-
    riously relies on the testimony presented in five cases decided
    by this Circuit in which the record apparently showed JDA
    violations. It should be noted, however, that the failure of the
    officers to follow the JDA was found to be harmless in each
    of these cases. The conduct of the officers found to be harm-
    less in the cases cited by the Majority cannot logically be
    relied upon as proof that the agents in this case flagrantly
    7226            UNITED STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)
    trampled on Jose’s JDA rights without fear of being punished
    or sanctioned for their conduct.
    The most alarming aspect of the Majority’s opinion is its
    refusal to apply the law of this Circuit which clearly provides
    that we must affirm if a juvenile fails to demonstrate that he
    or she was prejudiced as a result of the failure of law enforce-
    ment officers to comply with the JDA. Instead, it has created
    a new rule that a violation of the requirements of § 5033 is
    prejudicial per se. The Majority has cited five decisions of
    this Court that provide that we must apply the harmless error
    standard of review when law enforcement officers fail to fol-
    low the requirements of the JDA. Majority Op. at 7213-14. It
    has defiantly declined, however, to follow the law of this Cir-
    cuit as set forth in the cited cases. The Majority excuses its
    recalcitrance by stating: “Courts should not close their eyes to
    these continuing violations by mindlessly reciting the rubric
    of harmless error as an overarching excuse for ignoring what
    Congress has clearly ordained.” Majority Op. at 7214. What
    the Majority airily dismisses as “rubric” is the law of this Cir-
    cuit. A three-judge panel of this Court is required to follow
    the law of the Circuit. 
    Taylor, 787 F.2d at 1313
    . The Majority
    has failed to demonstrate that the agents’ good faith attempt
    to comply with the JDA was egregious or prejudicial.
    III
    A
    Notwithstanding its determination that the officers did not
    act in bad faith in failing to comply with the JDA, nor was
    their conduct so egregious as to “affect the fundamental fair-
    ness of the proceeding,” Majority Op. at 7213, the Majority
    has surprisingly ordered a remand for a determination by the
    District Court “whether it is clear beyond a reasonable doubt
    that, at the time the juvenile information was filed, the gov-
    ernment’s use of Jose’s confession to prove up the indictment
    UNITED STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)              7227
    on the essential element of knowledge was harmless.” Major-
    ity Op. at 7215.
    The Majority apparently believes that the suppression of an
    accused’s statement, in which he or she admits knowledge of
    the commission of a crime, also compels the dismissal of an
    accusatory pleading. This conclusion is squarely contrary to
    the principle announced in the Supreme Court’s decision in
    
    Morrison, 449 U.S. at 365
    . In Morrison, the Court held that
    when the Government has improperly obtained incriminating
    information from an accused “the remedy characteristically
    imposed is not to dismiss the indictment but to suppress the
    evidence or to order a new trial if the evidence has been
    wrongfully admitted and the defendant convicted.” 
    Id. Here, the
    District Court dutifully complied with Morrison by
    excluding Jose’s statements. The Supreme Court instructed in
    Morrison that where evidence has been obtained in violation
    of the Fourth, Fifth, or Sixth Amendments, “[t]he remedy in
    the criminal proceeding is limited to denying the fruits of the
    transgression.” 
    Id. at 366.
    The Court also stated:
    Our numerous precedents ordering the exclusion of
    such illegally obtained evidence assume implicitly
    that the remedy does not extend to barring the prose-
    cution altogether. So drastic a step might advance
    marginally some of the ends served by exclusionary
    rules, but it would also increase to an intolerable
    degree interference with the public interest in having
    the guilty brought to book.
    
    Id. at 366
    n.3 (quoting United States v. Blue, 
    384 U.S. 251
    ,
    255 (1966)).
    In United States v. Winsett, 
    518 F.2d 51
    (9th Cir. 1976), we
    stated: “As it serves the purpose of deterring police miscon-
    duct, the exclusionary rule is a ‘needed but grudgingly taken,
    medicament; no more should be swallowed than is needed to
    combat the disease.’ ” 
    Id. at 54
    n.4 (quoting Anthony G.
    7228            UNITED STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)
    Amsterdam, Search, Seizure and Section 2255: A Comment,
    112 U.Pa.L.Rev. 378, 389 (1964)). The termination of this
    action by dismissing the information is a lethal remedy that
    would be summarily rejected by the Supreme Court as a vio-
    lation of the Morrison decision because the District Court
    suppressed each of Jose’s statements.
    The Majority has cited Doe 
    II, 862 F.2d at 776
    for the prop-
    osition that “[i]f a violation of the JDA was prejudicial
    because it led the Government to initiate prosecution of the
    juvenile, the remedy is for the charges against the juvenile to
    be dismissed.” Majority Op. at 7214, citing Doe 
    II, 862 F.2d at 781
    . In fashioning a remedy that would interfere with the
    public’s interest that the guilty should be prosecuted for their
    crimes, the three-judge panel that reviewed the Doe II case
    did not cite or discuss the Supreme Court’s decision in Morri-
    son that expressly bars the dismissal of an accusatory plead-
    ing even in the face of constitutional error. The Doe II case
    is also factually distinguishable. In Doe II, unlike the circum-
    stances in the matter sub judice, the juvenile’s statements
    were introduced into evidence. 
    Doe, 862 F.2d at 778
    .
    The Majority also cites United States v. Juvenile (RRA-A),
    
    229 F.3d 737
    (9th Cir. 2000) as supporting authority for the
    notion that a federal court may “ensure that the ‘prophylactic
    safeguard for juveniles [is not] eroded or neglected.’ ” Major-
    ity Op. at 7213. The Majority’s reliance on RRA-A is mislead-
    ing. We did not hold in RRA-A that a district court may
    dismiss an information as a sanction for a violation of the
    JDA.
    We held in RRA-A that because, “RRA-A’s confession was
    the primary basis of evidence on which she was convicted[,]
    . . . RRA-A’s confession should, accordingly, have been sup-
    pressed.” 
    RRA-A, 229 F.3d at 747
    . We did not hold that dis-
    missal of the information was an appropriate remedy for a
    violation of the JDA. Instead, we reversed the conviction and
    remanded the matter to the district court. 
    Id. at 748.
    Contrary
    UNITED STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)           7229
    to Majority’s characterization of the holding in RRA-A, the
    remand was presumably for a determination by the Govern-
    ment if it could connect RRA-A to the alleged criminal offense
    in a re-trial, without the use of her confession. Thus, unlike
    Doe II, this Court’s opinion in RRA-A is quite faithful to the
    Supreme Court’s decision in Morrison. Because Doe II is
    inconsistent with Morrison, we cannot apply it in this matter.
    “Controlling law in this case, as in all cases governed by fed-
    eral law, is what Congress has enacted and what the Supreme
    Court has said regarding the key matters on which the case
    turns.” Hulteen v. AT&T Corporation, 
    441 F.3d 653
    , 657 (9th
    Cir. 2006). “Once we understand the terms of controlling law,
    we can then determine whether there is circuit precedent that
    is inconsistent. If so, we will have no choice but to ignore
    such precedent or, to put it more delicately, conclude that
    such precedent is not binding.” 
    Id. at 657-658.
    In Doe II, the majority decision ignored the controlling law
    set forth in Morrison, or simply failed to discover it in its
    research. In any case, it is not binding on this Court. Dis-
    missal of an information is not an available remedy even
    where the Government has obtained a statement from an
    accused in violation of the Constitution. In relying on Doe II,
    the Majority in this matter has apparently chosen to ignore or
    defy the principle announced in Morrison, nor has it even
    attempted to explain why Morrison is inapplicable if a state-
    ment is excluded because of nonconstitutional errors commit-
    ted by officers in violation of the JDA.
    B
    The Majority has also erred in instructing the District Court
    to apply the reasonable doubt standard in determining whether
    the statutory violations of the JDA were harmless. Majority
    Op. at 7215. The Majority cites Doe II for this standard.
    The Majority in Doe II stated that if a violation of the JDA
    did not amount to a due process violation, the question was
    7230            UNITED STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)
    whether the “violation [was] harmless to the juvenile beyond
    a reasonable doubt.” Doe 
    II, 862 F.2d at 779
    . The harmless
    beyond-a-reasonable-doubt test applies only to violations of
    the Constitution. See United States v. Lane, 
    474 U.S. 438
    , 446
    n.9 (1986); see also Chapman v. California, 
    386 U.S. 18
    , 24
    (1967) (devising beyond-a-reasonable-doubt standard for
    harmless error for constitutional violations). “Traditionally,
    the courts have viewed as constitutional errors those errors
    violating specific provisions of the Bill of Rights.” United
    States v. Valle-Valdez, 
    554 F.2d 911
    , 916 (9th Cir. 1977)
    (internal quotations and citation omitted). For nonconstitu-
    tional error, we apply a less stringent standard. Id.; see also
    
    Lane, 474 U.S. at 446
    n.9 (stating that the test for “constitu-
    tional errors is considerably more onerous than the standard
    for non-constitutional errors.”). In the case of nonconstitu-
    tional error, we ask whether the error was more probably than
    not harmless. 
    Valle-Valdez, 554 F.2d at 916
    ; Kotteakos v.
    United States, 
    328 U.S. 750
    , 758-59 (1946) (asking whether
    nonconstitutional error may have had a substantial influence
    on the outcome of the proceeding).
    The authority cited by this Court in Doe II supports this
    distinction. It does not support the premise for which it was
    cited in Doe II. In Bank of Nova Scotia v. United States, 
    487 U.S. 250
    (1988), the Supreme Court held that “[i]t would be
    inappropriate to devise a rule permitting federal courts to deal
    more sternly with nonconstitutional harmless errors than with
    constitutional errors that are likewise harmless.” 
    Id. at 256.
    In
    Bank of Nova Scotia, the Court applied a test for nonconstitu-
    tional error it had previously articulated in 
    Kotteakos, 328 U.S. at 758-59
    . 
    Id. Similarly, in
    United States v. Indian Boy X, 
    565 F.2d 585
    (9th Cir. 1977), we concluded that the appropriate standard
    for a violation of the JDA was whether the “error was more
    probably than not harmless.” 
    Id. at 592.
    Therefore, although
    in Doe II the Court misstated the appropriate standard to be
    applied by an appellate court in reviewing nonconstitutional
    UNITED STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)            7231
    error, it cited cases that applied the appropriate standard. Fur-
    thermore, the majority in Doe II did not instruct the district
    court to determine whether the error was harmless beyond a
    reasonable doubt. Instead, the majority in Doe II held that an
    appellate court’s duty in reviewing nonconstitutional error is
    to determine “was the violation harmless to the juvenile
    beyond a reasonable doubt?” Doe 
    II, 862 F.2d at 779
    . Con-
    trary to the Majority’s instruction to the district court in this
    matter, Doe II does not provide that a district court must
    determine whether there was nonconstitutional error beyond
    a reasonable doubt.
    In Doe II, this Court stated that dismissal was appropriate
    because it had the “discretion to reverse or to order more lim-
    ited remedies so as to ensure that Doe’s rights are safeguard-
    ed.” Doe 
    II, 862 F.2d at 780
    (emphasis added). We have the
    discretion to determine the appropriate remedy, consistent
    with binding legal authority, for violations of the JDA. It
    would be an abuse of discretion as a matter of law to dismiss
    an information in violation of the Supreme Court’s instruction
    in Morrison that dismissal of an accusatory pleading is not a
    proper remedy where evidence was excluded at trial.
    IV
    The Majority’s remand order will undoubtedly leave the
    District Court totally baffled in another respect. The District
    Court excluded all of Jose’s statements because Agent Cab-
    rera failed to notify Jose’s aunt or his parents of his constitu-
    tional rights. It found Jose guilty beyond a reasonable doubt,
    however, based on his false statements to the primary inspec-
    tion officer about his reason for entering the United States, his
    demeanor, and the huge quantity of cocaine he was smuggling
    into the United States. That evidence was obtained before
    Jose was arrested. Jose has not challenged the sufficiency of
    the evidence produced at his trial to establish his guilt beyond
    a reasonable doubt.
    7232            UNITED STATES v. JOSE (JUVENILE)
    The Majority states that “[t]he record is silent as to what
    other evidence the government could have produced at the
    time the juvenile information was filed to prove up the essen-
    tial element of knowledge.” Majority Op. at 7215. This state-
    ment ignores the evidence produced at trial and the law of this
    circuit that knowledge can be inferred from the mere posses-
    sion of a large amount of drugs. See United States v. Cervan-
    tes, 
    219 F.3d 882
    , 893 (9th Cir. 2000) (inferring knowledge
    from the possession of 30 pounds of methamphetamine); see
    also Gaylor v. United States, 
    426 F.2d 233
    , 235 (9th Cir.
    1970) (holding that testimony as to the value of cocaine was
    relevant to the issue of knowledge since it tended to refute
    “the possibility that a stranger could have placed such a valu-
    able cargo in a vehicle in the hope that the vehicle could be
    followed and the cocaine later recovered in the United
    States.”).
    Here, 63.3 pounds of cocaine, with a street value of more
    than two million dollars, were found hidden in the vehicle
    driven by Jose. This evidence was clearly sufficient under the
    law of this Circuit to demonstrate that he had knowledge that
    he was smuggling cocaine without reliance on his statements
    to the officers.
    I would affirm the District Court’s judgment in all respects.
    I would not require the District Court to determine whether
    the information should be dismissed because Agent Cabrera
    failed to notify his parents, before he was interrogated by
    other officers. The dismissal of the information would surely
    be summarily reversed in a subsequent appeal by the Govern-
    ment since it would be in violation of the rule announced by
    our nation’s highest court in Morrison.