The defendants, “Little Bum” Marrero and “Fat Man” Hernandez, lured three drug dealers from Detroit to a rendezvous in Chicago on the pretext of selling them cocaine. When the dealers arrived, the defendants showed them what purported *654 to be cocaine but was actually flour with a thin coating of cocaine, then robbed them at gunpoint of the $25,000 that the dealers had brought with them to make the purchase. The defendants were convicted by a jury of violating the Hobbs Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1951, and of a firearm offense, and received very heavy sentences — 324 months for Marrero, 192 months for Hernandez.
The Hobbs Act criminalizes robberies that obstruct or otherwise affect interstate or foreign commerce, and the main issue raised by this appeal is whether the robbery of the drug dealers had the requisite effect on commerce. We set to one side the defendants’ arguments that the dealers may have been “from Detroit” only in the sense of having been born or raised there and that they may not have been dealers at all but merely purchasers for their own consumption. We are required to construe the facts as favorably to the government as the record permits, and that construal requires us to reject these anyway rather fanciful hypotheses about the robbery victims.
Of course, there is an element of paradox in a prosecution for obstructing
illegal
commerce (the government does not seek to defend the judgment on the ground that the defendants’ scheme affected the interstate trade in flour); one might as an original matter have thought that were it not for concerns about encouraging violent activities, such as armed robbery, the obstruction of Illicit commerce should be rewarded rather than punished. The less protection the law gives drug dealers, the higher the price of illegal drugs and so the smaller the quantity consumed — the very aim of the “war on drugs.” But, quite apart from the fact that the defendants were also drug dealers, whose theft from other dealers might aid the defendants’ drug dealings, any argument that the Hobbs Act, or Congress’s commerce power (exerted to the full in that Act,
Stirone v. United States,
This case would be a very easy one for the government if, as in
United States v. Thomas,
But the qualification is vital. Had the defendants not lured the Detroit dealers to Chicago, those dealers would
*655
have used their $25,000 to buy cocaine elsewhere, and that purchase, a transaction in commerce whether it would have been made in Detroit or elsewhere because, as we said, all cocaine originates overseas, thus was thwarted, and commerce therefore obstructed, by the robbery.
United States v. Thomas, supra,
The case might conceivably be different (we do not hold that it would be) if the Detroit dealers, being hopelessly impecunious, had brought with them only a few hundred dollars, hoping to persuade the defendants to sell them cocaine at a ridiculously low price and knowing that if they failed to persuade them they would have to abandon their quest altogether. Then it might be untenable to argue that, had they not been robbed, they would have bought cocaine elsewhere; it would be arguable instead that we should recognize a class of attempted drug transactions that, having no effect on commerce even in the aggregate, fell outside the jurisdictional scope of the Hobbs Act. But that is not our case.
We are troubled, however, by the inability of the government’s lawyer either in his brief or at argument to suggest a limiting principle in Hobbs Act prosecutions, despite the Supreme Court’s evident concern not to allow the concept of “commerce” (interstate or foreign) to expand to the point at which every transaction in the American economy would be within Congress’s reach.
United States v. Lopez,
Some cases indeed draw the line between a theft from the home and theft from a store (see
United States v. Lynch,
The only other issue presented by the appeal involves Marrero alone and is whether for sentencing purposes his two prior convictions for drug offenses were “related” to each other. They were (so far as bears on this case) if they “were part of a single common scheme or plan.” U.S.S.G. § 4A1.2, Application Note 3; see
United States v. Brown,
The sentencing enhancement was therefore proper. Cf.
United States v. Thomas,
AFFIRMED.
