Pedro Sandoval and George Peterson directly appeal their convictions for robbery and attempted robbery affecting interstate commerce and carrying a firearm during the commission of these crimes. We reverse these convictions.
BACKGROUND
Members of the Latin Kings gang learned that James Estep, a man in his mid-sixties, sold marijuana from his Hammond, Indiana home. In January 1997, *851 armed with this information and weapons, Pedro Sandoval, George Peterson, and four others, all gang members, robbed Es-tep in his home. The robbers successfully carried away thirty pounds of bricked marijuana, about $18,000 cash, and three guns. Estep, an avid gun collector, housed well over thirty guns in a gun case he built. Worried about the discovery of his drug business, Estep did not report the robbery to the police. He did, however, report that two guns had been stolen from his van.
The gang members divided the booty among them. Basking in their first success, Peterson, Sandoval, and another gang member returned to Estep’s in February. This time they were thwarted by Estep’s daughter, Katherine Bohlke, who met them at the door with a gun. Peterson fired his gun, hitting Bohlke in the shoulder. As the gang members fled, Peterson tripped, causing his gun to discharge again. The bullet pierced a neighbor’s wall, killing Steven Bodoki, a visitor to that home. This time Estep could not avoid the police. In fact, the FBI soon got involved because the Hammond police needed high-tech recording equipment in order to surveil the gang members. Soon thereafter, the federal government obtained arrest warrants for the gang members.
Sandoval and Peterson were indicted for the following violations under 18 U.S.C § 1951 and 18 U.S.C. § 924(c): Count 1— robbery of an enterprise affecting interstate commerce, January 1997; Count 2 — • carrying a firearm during the commission of this crime, January 1997; Count 3 — ■ attempted robbery of an enterprise affecting interstate commerce, February 1997; and Count 4 — carrying a firearm during the commission of this crime, February 1997. The jury found Sandoval guilty on Counts 1, 8, and 4, and Peterson guilty on Counts 1 and 3. The judge sentenced Peterson to forty-five years, and Sandoval to forty yeai’s.
DISCUSSION
Defendants attack their conviction on two fronts. First, they posit that a recent Supreme Court decision requires the government to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that these robberies had a substantial effect on interstate commerce, rather than merely a de minimis effect. Second, they contend that even if the de minimis standard remains, the evidence presented to the jury was insufficient to meet that . standard.
I. Hobbs Act Jurisdictional Element
To uphold the tenets of federalism, in order to prosecute an individual under the Hobbs Act, the federal government bears the onus of proving that the accused’s conduct affected interstate commerce. This proof differentiates Hobbs Act violations from common law robbery. How strong an affect on interstate commerce the Constitution demands is a question raised by defendants. The Hobbs Act provides, in part:
Whoever in any way or degree obstructs, delays, or affects commérce or the movement of any article or commodity in commerce, by robbery or extortion or attempts or conspires so to do, or commits or threatens physical violence to any person or property in furtherance of a plan or purpose to do anything in violation of this section shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than twenty years, or both.
18 U.S.C. § 1951(a). Thus, two elements must be proven: robbery and an effect on interstate commerce. The Supreme Court has interpreted the statutory language of “in any way or degree” as “manifesting a purpose to use all the constitutional power Congress has to punish interference with interstate commerce by extortion, robbery or physical violence.”
Stirone v. United States,
In this case, the defendants surmise that
United States v. Morrison,
The Court in
Morrison
struck down 42 U.S.C. § 13981, which created a federal civil remedy for victims of gender-motivated violence. The Court likened § 13981 to the Gun-Free School Zones Act of 1990, struck down in
Lopez,
because there was no jurisdictional element establishing that “the federal cause of action is in pursuance of Congress’ power to regulate interstate commerce.” 529 U.S. at -,
Defendants argue that like gender-motivated violence in
Morrison,
robbery is not an economic activity, and thus aggregation cannot be employed. Defendants quote
Lopez,
As our brethren in the Tenth Circuit have recently reasoned in
United States v. Malone,
we do not believe
Morrison
undermines our prior holdings that a showing of a
de minimis
effect is constitutionally satisfactory.
See
II. Sufficiency of Evidence
Our next inquiry is whether sufficient evidence was presented for the jury
*853
to find defendants guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. We lend great credence to a jury’s verdict. Thus, a conviction will be overturned based on insufficient evidence only if the record reveals no evidence from which the rational jury could have found the defendants guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
See Bailey,
In its opening statement, the government told the jury:
[TJhere’s an element that we are required to prove, not just that the crime occurred, but that there’s a federal nexus or a federal involvement. And that, you will see from the instructions, is that interstate commerce was affected.
You will be hearing testimony from experts that this marijuana that was taken, and attempted to be taken, was grown outside of the State of Indiana. The weapons that were taken in the first robbery and attempted to be taken in the second, were manufactured outside of the State of Indiana. And, of course, United States currency, as I think most of you know, is not printed in the State of Indiana, but outside. Therefore, all three items that were taken in the first robbery and attempted to be taken in the second, had crossed state lines to be here in the State of Indiana.
Tr. at 202. During its case, the government presented three expert witnesses to help establish this jurisdictional theory.
The government called James Crane, a Special Agent with the United States Secret Service, as an expert in investigations involving United States currency. He testified, in part:
Q. Sir, are you familial’ with the production of the United States currency?
A. Yes, I am.
Q. And where is the United States currency actually produced?
A. U.S. currency is produced in two places in the United States, one in Washington, D.C. at the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, and there’s also another Bureau of Engraving and Printing in Fort Worth, Texas.
Q. Sir, with regards to United States currency which is found in the [Sjtate of Indiana, what are any possible places of origin for that United States currency?
A. To be produced?
Q. Correct.
A. Nowhere in Indiana.
Tr. at 876, 878-79.
Seemingly, the purpose of Crane’s testimony was to establish that the money taken and attempted to be taken by defendants from Estep was printed out-of-state, and thus was at one time in interstate commerce. To endorse this sort of showing would require an overly expansive interpretation of the Hobbs Act. As the Eleventh Circuit intimated, “[w]e acknowledge that cash may ‘travel’ in interstate commerce but .... [w]e do not rest our decision on this weak reed.”
United States v. Paredes,
•Another government witness was Eric Siweck, a DEA Special Agent and an expert in the enforcement of federal drug laws. Siweck, on direct examination, testified in part:
Q. If you were to recover brick marijuana, based on your investigations *854 in Indiana, based on your training and experience, would the origin be from Indiana?
A. Normally, no. It would be from an area, you know, that could grow on a regular basis, would be my experience.
Q. And some of these areas are?
A. South America, Mexico, Southern States. They do grow in Texas, Arizona, Nevada, places that have a lot more growing days than we do here.
H: * * * * *
Q. Sir, have you had an opportunity prior to this trial today to speak with Mr. Estep ... regarding some marijuana?
A. Yes, I have.
Q. And [was he] able to describe certain size of brick marijuana?
A. Yes, [he] did.
Q. And based on those conversations, your opinion would still be the same that marijuana of that size, which is brick, would be from another state?
A. Yes, in the content and the quality of the marijuana described, to me it’s for cultivation, it’s done by a grower for distribution. And the way it was described to me, it does not sound like it’s Indiana grown.
Tr. at 886-87. On cross examination, Si-weck testified:
Q. Mr. Siweck, you’re saying it’s still possible that the marijuana described by Louis Young and Mr. Estep could have been cultivated in Indiana?
A. It is possible, yes, sir.
Tr. at 887. On redirect, he responded:
Q. So when defense counsel asks you about a possibility, you indicate highly unlikely?
A. It is possible, highly unlikely, ... but it is possible.
Tr. at 890. Estep, who had been given immunity by the government, had previously testified that he had sold marijuana from his home for about two years and was planning to sell the marijuana taken by defendants in January. Thus, the jury could rationally find that Estep operated a drug business and that its assets were depleted by the robberies. The question is whether the evidence could allow the jury to find that Estep’s drug business was interstate in nature.
Traditionally, the government meets the de minimis standard under the “depletion of assets” theory. The government presents evidence that a business is either actively engaged in interstate commerce or customarily purchases items in interstate commerce, and had its assets depleted by the robbery, thereby curtailing the business’ potential as a purchaser of such goods.
See United States v. Elders,
Contrary to the above cited examples, the Hobbs Act does not require that the commerce affected be legal commerce. However, since Estep’s illegal drug business was not a conventional commercial entity, it was especially important that the government prove the interstate nature of
*855
the business. The government needed to show the jury that Estep’s' marijuana source originated from out-of-state or that he sold drugs to out-of-state customers. For example, in
United States v. Thomas,
we upheld a Hobbs Act conviction for obstructing interstate commerce when a drug seller robbed a drug buyer of money that would have been used to buy his cocaine.
See
In this case, the government failed to adduce this benchmark form of proof, or any other satisfactory form. Siweck’s testimony offered the jury qualified inferences — namely that Estep housed cultivated marijuana, not “ditch weed,” that cultivated marijuana “normally” comes from outside of Indiana, and that even though it was “possible” for the marijuana to be Indiana grown, it was “highly unlikely.” Evidence on this element was not elicited from any other witness, including Estep, the witness with the most knowledge as to this matter. While cultivated marijuana may not “normally” be grown in Indiana, it is possible.
See, e.g., United States v. Myers,
The government postures that it need not specifically show that the drugs were grown outside Indiana because “drug dealing is an economic activity that affects interstate commerce.” (Citing
United States v. Westbrook,
We find this case puzzling, particularly because of the government’s trial theory.
Lopez
crafted three categories that Congress may regulate under its Commerce Clause power: (1) the use of the channels of interstate commerce; (2) the instrumen-talities of interstate commerce, or persons or things in interstate commerce; and (3) activities that substantially affect inter
*856
state commerce.
See
It appears that the government was attempting to prove that this Hobbs Act case fits into
Lopez
category two. Perhaps the government confused the Hobbs Act with statutes such as 18 U.S.C. § 2119, the federal carjacking statute, which states, in part: “Whoever, with the intent to cause death or serious bodily harm[,] takes a motor vehicle that has been transported, shipped or received in interstate commerce .... ” Under this statutory language, we have found it sufficient to show that the stolen car had at some time traveled in interstate commerce.
See United States v.
Taylor,
The Hobbs Act, however, falls within Lopez category three. The very language dictates that the government must show an effect on interstate commerce. Yet, the government argued to the jury that since the items taken — the money, drugs, and guns — had crossed state lines at some point, interstate commerce was affected. But, the language of the Hobbs Act, as distinct from the federal carjacking statute, does not envision this type of showing. The government’s proof should have focused on the nature of the business robbed and how the robbery affected its operation in interstate commerce; that is to say, that Estep sold drugs from an out-of-state source and that the robbery of the money and drugs depleted the assets of his business. On appeal, the government attempts to convert the case into one where the government proved that the robberies substantially affected interstate commerce because defendants robbed an interstate enterprise. Fatal to the government’s appeal is that this theory was not presented to the jury, and thus, cannot support its verdict.
Finally, Jeffrey Emmons, a Special Agent with the United States Treasury Department, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, an investigator of federal firearms violations, was called to testify as to the interstate nexus of the stolen firearms. Emmons testified that the guns taken and used in the robbery were not made in Indiana. The testimony concluded:
Q. Sir, the five weapons we have discussed today, you’ve indicated that none of those weapons were manufactured in Indiana, is that correct?
A. That’s correct.
Q. So, in fact, if those weapons were recovered in Indiana, they did cross state lines?
A. That’s correct.
Tr. at 682. The government abandons this approach on appeal. Instead, it argues that the guns were part of Estep’s drug business because guns are necessarily part of the drug trade. No evidence was presented to this effect; actually the evidence was to the contrary. Estep testified that the guns were his personal property, and *857 that the guns were “home when they c[a]me to my house.” Tr. at 844. According to the record, Estep was a gun collector, separate and apart from his drug business, and he was not a gun seller. Estep even testified that he had never used drug money to purchase guns. The government’s argument here is baseless, the evidence did not show that the guns were part of Estep’s business, and it did not show that Estep’s business was interstate.
In light of our analysis as to the money and drugs, we decline to further address the sufficiency of the gun proof because “[w]hen a verdict may have rested on any of several grounds, one of which was improper, the conviction cannot be upheld.”
United States v. Feldman,
CONCLUSION
We conclude that the Supreme Court’s decision in Momson did not alter the showing required to satisfy the jurisdictional element of the Hobbs Act. Since evidence beyond a reasonable doubt as to any impact on interstate commerce is lacking to sustain the Hobbs Act convictions, we hereby ReveRSe defendants’ convictions.
