MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Defendant Elbin Flores is charged in a two-count indictment with interfering with interstate commerce by robbing a flower shop owner of a portion of the proceeds of her business, in violation of the Hobbs Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1951(b)(1), and with using a firearm in relation to a crime of violence in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c). Defendant moves to dismiss the indictment in its entirety for lack of federal jurisdiction. For the reasons stated below, defendant’s motion is denied. 1
*640 Background
The government alleges that the victims, the owner of a flower shop and her son, were entering their apartment with a bag containing approximately $4,000 in proceeds from the flower shop when they were attacked by defendant. According to the government, defendant and two other assailants tied up both victims and took the $4,000; defendant and the other male assailant then sexually assaulted and raped the owner of the flower shop. The assailants allegedly ransacked the apartment and took an unknown amount of jewelry, in addition to the $4,000. The government rests jurisdiction upon its allegation that the flower shop sells flowers and other items that move in interstate commerce.
Analysis
The Hobbs Act provides, in relevant part:
Whoever in any way or degree obstructs, delays, or affects commerce or the movement of any article or commodity in commerce, by robbery or extortion or attempts or conspires to do so ... shall be fined not more than $10,000 or imprisoned not more than twenty years, or both.
18 U.S.C. § 1951(a).
As defendant acknowledges, both the United States Supreme Court and the Second Circuit Court of Appeals have taken an expansive view of federal jurisdiction under the Hobbs Act. The Supreme Court has stated,
the statutory language sweeps within it all persons who have “in any way or degree ... affect[ed] commerce ... by robbery or extortion.” These words do not lend themselves to a restrictive interpretation; as we have recognized, they “manifest ... a purpose to use all the constitutional power Congress has to punish interference with interstate commerce by extortion, robbery, or physical violence.”
United States v. Culbert,
Defendant concedes the broad reach of the Hobbs Act and the adoption in the Second Circuit of the “depletion of assets theory” of Hobbs Act jurisdiction. Def.’s Mem. at 4-5. However, defendant contends that the ease at bar is distinguishable from other Second Circuit decisions applying the depletion of assets theory in two crucial respects. First, defendant claims that none of the depletion of assets decisions has involved precisely the combination of facts present in the case at bar. According to defendant, the depletion of assets decisions involve either racketeering, union-related activity, extortion under color of official right, or straightforward extortion from a business. The offenses are on-going schemes of extortion rather than one-time events, and take place at the business the assets of which are depleted, rather than at the owner’s home. Here, in contrast, the crime at issue is a “garden variety ... rape and armed robbery” that took place at a residence—a single act rather than an ongoing scheme. Def.’s Mem. at 4. 2 Second, *641 defendant argues that the fact that the victims brought the allegedly stolen funds home gives rise to an inference that the funds were intended for personal use, and were not assets of the flower shop. If the funds in question were not business assets, defendant contends, the court may not apply the depletion of assets theory at all. I agree with defendant that this case is a close one that appears to lie near the outer limits of Hobbs Act jurisdiction. Nevertheless, I conclude, in light of the language of the statute, the decisional law, and the statute’s legislative history, that the case falls within those limits, and that defendant’s motion to dismiss the indictment for lack of jurisdiction must be denied.
Defendant is correct that almost no decisional law extending federal jurisdiction to precisely the circumstances at issue here exists in this circuit.
But see United States v. Fernandez,
Defendant’s argument that ongoing criminal activity is a necessary element of a Hobbs Act violation is similarly unpersuasive. Although extortion may frequently involve an ongoing scheme, robbery is more commonly a single event, and the statute’s definition of robbery bears no trace of an ongoing activity *642 requirement. 4 The court notes that when Congress wishes to make ongoing criminal activity an element of a federal offense, it knows how to do so. See, e.g., 18 U.S.C. §§ 1961(5), 1962 (making unlawful various actions in connection with a “pattern of racketeering activity”). Defendant’s argument is not supported by the language of the statute.
Defendant’s argument also finds no support in the decisional law. It is true that courts have cited
United States v. Merolla,
As for the depletion of assets theory, we have no difficulty with the general premise. Where the victim of an extortion scheme customarily obtains supplies through interstate commerce, the diminution of the victim’s resources impairs his purchasing power and may therefore be found to affect interstate commerce for the purpose of the Hobbs Act.
The victim’s purchase of interstate goods, however, must be of a continuing nature or the relationship between the extortion and any interstate commerce becomes merely conjectural.... [I]n the present ease, there is no evidence that [the victim] was involved in any on-going business, let alone an on-going business with recurring interstate purchases.
Defendant next argues that the court should decline to find federal jurisdiction here because the alleged crime took place at a residence, rather than at a business, unlike the vast bulk of the cases in which the depletion of assets theory has been applied. Defendant is correct that there exists almost no decisional law finding a violation of the Hobbs Act where the crime took place at a residence rather than at a business.
But see Fernandez,
Defendant’s final argument is that the allegedly stolen funds were not business assets at all, and that therefore the depletion of assets theory does not apply. Defendant contends that the fact that the victims brought the funds home gives rise to an inference that the funds were intended for personal use. In deciding a motion to dismiss an indictment, however, the question is not whether the government will be able to prove all elements of a Hobbs Act claim, but only whether it has sufficiently alleged those elements in the indictment.
United States v. Pisani,
Finally, defendant argues that the application of the depletion of assets theory to this case will virtually eliminate any jurisdictional requirement for Hobbs Act offenses, leaving only prosecutorial discretion to draw the line between federal and local crimes. The court disagrees that the application of the depletion of assets theory to this case appreciably expands the already sweeping expanse of federal criminal jurisdiction. Cases in which victims bring business assets to their homes are likely to be rare, and the government is still required to prove that the assets of an enterprise that conducts business in interstate commerce were depleted by the crime. Defendant is undoubtedly correct that the language of the Hobbs Act makes federal crimes of many traditionally local state offenses, and gives federal prosecutors the discretion to prosecute particular cases in federal court.
See Culbert,
Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, defendant’s motion to dismiss the indictment for lack of federal jurisdiction is denied.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Defendant also moved (1) to suppress identifications made from a photo array and a lineup, or, alternatively, for a hearing on identification procedures; and (2) for a Bill of Particulars. At a hearing before the court on May 19, 1994, I denied defendant’s motion for a Bill of Particulars and held, based on a review of the photo array and lineup, and as a matter of law, that neither the photo array nor the lineup was unduly suggestive. I also ruled that an in-court identification would have reliability independent of the challenged photo array and lineup, based on the factors enunciated in
Neil v. Biggers,
. Defendant also suggests that the amount taken here was so small that it did not deplete the assets of the flower shop so as to significantly affect its purchasing power in interstate commerce. As defendant himself concedes, however, courts applying the depletion of assets theory have generally made no distinction between large and small amounts of money. Def.’s Mem.
*641
at 9. Moreover, the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit has found a Hobbs Act violation even where the amount taken is as small as two hundred dollars.
Augello,
. In addition to Fernandez, the government cites an unpublished decision dated November 16, 1993, in which Judge McKenna denied a motion to overturn a Hobbs Act conviction in a case involving robbery of a store owner at a residence. United States v. Alverado, 93 Cr. 728 (S.D.N.Y.). In Alverado, the victim testified that he brought home each night cash and food stamps representing the proceeds from his stores. It was stipulated that the stores sold goods that traveled in interstate commerce. The government also calls the court’s attention to a contrary ruling by Judge Sprizzo in United States v. Garcia, 92 Cr. 791. Broderick Aff. Ex. I. At a hearing on March 26, 1993, Judge Sprizzo rejected the view that the robbery of a victim, at his residence, of the proceeds of his business, is a Hobbs Act offense. Id. at p. 19-23.
. The Hobbs Act defines "robbery” as
the unlawful taking or obtaining of personal property from the person or in the presence of another, against his will, by means of actual or threatened force, or violence, or fear of injury, immediate or future, to his person or property, or property in his custody or possession, or the person or property of a relative or member of his family' or of anyone in his company at the time of the taking or obtaining.
18 U.S.C. § 1951(b)(1).
. This language appears to have been decisive for Judge Sprizzo’s ruling in United States v. Garcia, 92 Cr. 791, Broderick Aff. Ex. I at 19.
. In
Jund,
.
United States v. Buffey,
