Arceny Gomez appeals from his conviction by a jury after a trial before Judge McKenna. He, along with Danny Reyes, who did not appeal but whose sentence is a subject of the government’s cross-appeal, 1 was convicted of: (i) conspiring to commit a Hobbs Act robbery in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1951(a); (ii) committing a Hobbs Act robbery (or aiding and abetting thereof) in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1951(a) and 18 U.S.C. § 2; (iii) conspiring to possess with intent to distribute one kilogram of cocaine in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) and (b)(1)(B); and (iv) using and carrying (or the aiding and abetting thereof) a firearm during and in relation to a crime of violence and a drug trаfficking crime in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c) and 18 U.S.C. § 2.
After the verdict, the district court vacated both Hobbs Act convictions on the *97 ground that the evidence of an effect on interstate commerce was insufficient as a matter of law. Gomez appeals from his conviction and sentence on the Section 924(c) charge. The government cross-appeals from the district court’s vacating of the Hobbs Act convictions and failure to impose a ten year mandatory minimum sentence on the Section 924(c) count. We affirm on Gomez’s appeal and reverse on the government’s cross-appeal.
BACKGROUND
a) The Evidence
Because the jury convicted Gomez and Reyes on all counts, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the government.
See United States v. Chavez,
Gomez and Reyes, along with two individuals named Ray Solis and Alfredo DeJesus, engaged in a botched robbery of a drug dealer named Rogelio Rivera, during which Rivera was shot and killed. The government’s case consisted principally of testimony from DeJesus, post-arrest statements made by Gomez and Reyes, and telephone records and documents linking the conspirators around the time of the robbery and murder.
DeJesus testified that he discussed with Gomez the plan for the robbery, which they intended would net three kilos of cocaine. Solis was to pose as a drug buyer, using Gomez’s black Acura because they believed that it was the kind of car a drug dealer would use. The plan was to offer Rivera fake money for the drugs, and, while Rivera inspected the money, draw their guns and rob him of the cocaine.
Reyes, who lived both in Connecticut and the Bronx, was the defendants’ connection with Rivera. He had sufficient prior contact with Rivera that he could set up the proposed deal to acquire cocaine and that Rivera trusted him to brоker the deal with Solis, a person Rivera had not previously met. While the four were on their way to a restaurant in the Bronx where they were to meet with Rivera, they stopped their cars and got out. According to DeJesus, Solis and Reyes adjusted their waistbands in a manner that suggested that each had a gun. Thereafter, Solis and Reyes got into the Acura and continued driving while Gomez and DeJesus followed in a white van. Solis and Reyes picked up Rivera near the restaurant. Those three then traveled together in the Acura to the site of the intended robbery. DeJesus and Gomez followed in the white van. Reyes and Solis entered a building with Rivera, while DeJesus and Gomez stayed outside to serve as lookouts during the intended robbery. After a short time, a shot rang out. Solis and Reyes ran out of the building and drove away in the Acura, while DeJesus and Gomez followed in the van. When they stopped to switch cars, Reyes indicated that Solis had shot Rivera. Solis said that the robbery had netted only one kilogram of cocaine.
When Reyes and Gomez were interviewed after their arrests, each substantially corroborated Dejesus’s account of the robbery. Reyes’s statement indicated that the plan had been fоr all the perpetrators to use firearms in the robbery.
In order to show Gomez’s intent in anticipation of his testimony outlined below, DeJesus testified as to several other drug robberies committed by Gomez, including one in which he and Gomez had netted 1.5 kilograms of heroin in or around February 1998, and another in the spring of 1998 involving one kilogram of cocaine. Finally, DeJesus described a third robbery that was planned to net fifty kilograms of cocaine. DeJesus discussed this robbery with Gomez and the other perpetrators, hoped to be taken along, but ultimately he did not go. DeJesus testified that Gomez *98 told him that the robbery was “triumphant” and that he and Gomez celebrated its success. Gomez then gave DeJesus four kilograms of cocaine that DeJesus sold to a friend of his.
Gomez testified in his own defense and stated that while he did participate in the robbery of Rivera, he did so only as a paid informant for the Drug Enforcement Administration (“DEA”). Gomez had indeed been acting as an informant for the DEA in some matters but for several days did not inform his handlers about the robbery in question. He sought to explain this delay by stating that his DEA handler did not speak Spanish well and that an officer he worked with in the New York Police Department (“NYPD”) had given Gomez a disconnected pager number. In response, the government presented testimony from Gomez’s NYPD handler indicating that the officer’s pager number had not changed or been disconnected and that Gomez could have informed him of the robbery at a debriefing session a few days after the robbery. Instead, Gomez did not mention the robbery until he had been arrested for it.
b) Jury Instructions, Post-Trial Proceedings, and Sentencing
The judge gave several jury instructions pertinent to this appeal.
Regarding the interstate commerce element of the Hobbs Act 2 conspiracy count, the district court told the jury that:
[T]he government must prove ... that ... had the robbery been completed interstate commerce would have been or potentially would have beеn affected in some way[,] even if the effect is slight.... Such robbery need only affect interstate commerce in any way or degree, even if the effect is only minimal .... The government satisfies its burden of proving an effect ... if it proves beyond a reasonable doubt any effect, whether it was harmful or not.
The court also instructed that:
Congress has determined that all narcotics activity, even purely local narcotics activity, has a substantial effect on interstate commerce. Thus, if you find that the object of the robbery was to possess narcotics with the intent to distribute them, you may find this element satisfied.
With respect to the substantive Hobbs Act count, the judge referred the jury to the above-quoted instructions on the conspiracy count. The judge also noted that substantive Hobbs Act robbery requires a taking of property, “by means of actual or threatened force.... ”
With respect to the Section 924(c) 3 count, the district court charged the jury *99 that “[i]n order to convict the defendant you must find that the government has proven beyond a reasonable doubt his involvement in at least one of the underlying crimes of violence or the drug-trafficking crime.” The judge did not instruct the jury that it had to be unanimous as to which crime was the predicate for a Section 924(c) conviction.
The jury reached a guilty verdict on all counts. Gomez and Reyes moved to set aside their convictions under the Hobbs Act on the grounds that there was legally insufficient evidence of the requisite effect on interstate commerce. The district court agreed and vacated the verdict on both Hobbs Act counts.
Gomez alone argued that his Section 924(c) conviction should also be vacated because the jury was not instructed that it had to be unanimous on the selection of a specific predicate crime and because the vacating of the Hobbs Act counts had eliminated two of the three possible predicates, rendering it impossible to know which alleged predicate(s) the jury had found. Although the district court agreed that the jury should have been instructed that they had to be unanimous on a particular predicate, it found that there was no need to vacate the Section 924(c) conviction. It reasoned that had the jury been properly instructed, it would have selected the remaining drug distribution count as a predicate.
In sentencing Reyes, the district court calculated his base offense level using the three kilograms of cocaine that the robbers had planned to steal rather than the one kilogram actually obtained. This resulted in a base offense level of 28 for Reyes.
On Reyes’s Section 924(c) convictions, the district court imposed the five year minimum sentence for use of a gun rather than the ten year mandatory minimum sentence for discharging it. See 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(A); supra note 3. The district court noted that the jury had not been asked to specify which gun(s) was the basis for the Section 924(c) convictions. The court then reasoned that because there was some evidence that two guns were involved but only one was discharged, it was impossible to say whether the jury had convicted Reyes under Section 924(c) for the gun that was discharged. Accordingly, the five year sentence for mere use applied. The district court ultimately imposed a total sentence of 132 months — 72 months was based on the drug conspiracy count and a consecutive 60 months was based on the Section 924(c) count.
With respect to Gomez, the district court began by factoring in the three kilograms of cocaine contemplated in planning the robbery. The court, however, rejected the government’s argument that all of the drugs from Gomez’s alleged prior drug robberies should be used in calculating Gomez’s guidеlines sentence. The district court specifically rejected Dejesus’s testimony regarding the robbery involving one kilogram of cocaine and the robbery involving fifty kilograms of cocaine, finding that these events were “not described with adequate specificity.” The district court, however, did factor in the February 1998 robbery involving 1.5 kilograms of heroin. The district court also followed the logic it applied to Reyes to hold that only the five year minimum sentence under Section 924(c) should apply to Gomez. The district court ultimately sentenced Gomez to 162 months — 102 months was based on the drug conspiracy сount and a consecutive 60 months was on the Section 924(c) count.
DISCUSSION
a) The Hobbs Act Counts
The government’s cross-appeal seeks to reinstate Reyes’s and Gomez’s convictions on the conspiracy and substan
*100
tive Hobbs Act counts. To sustain a Hobbs Act conviction, there must be evidence that the underlying act affected interstate commerce.
See United States v. Parkes,
Because no objection was made at trial to the interstаte commerce instructions, plain error analysis applies.
See United States v. Kaplan,
We first identify any error in the jury instructions. The pertinent portion reads, “Congress has determined that all narcotics activity, even purely local narcоtics activity, has a substantial effect on interstate commerce. Thus, if you find that the object of the robbery was to possess narcotics with the intent to distribute them, you
may
find this element satisfied.” (emphasis added). The district court’s reference to a Congressional determination was to Section 801(3)-(6) of the Controlled Substances Act, which contains legislative findings that both intrastate and interstate drug trafficking affect interstate commerce.
See
21 U.S.C. § 801(3)-(6). In fashioning these instructions, the district court may have reasoned that, given the Congressional findings, robberies involving drugs or their proceeds are
per se
within the affecting-commеrce requirement of the Hobbs Act, a conclusion we later adopted in
United States v. Fabian,
The district court’s instructions quoted above were consistent with Parkes in that they used the permissive “may” and therefore described only what the jury might find rather than taking the issue from it entirely. The error in the instruction lay in referencing Congressional findings. This reference may have misled the jury into believing that those findings were binding upon it as a trier of fact. This view is not consistent with Parkes. See id. Whether this error was “plain” is a close question, but one that we need not reach because it was harmless and for that reason did not impair the defendants’ substantial rights.
The error in the jury instruction was in its potential to mislead the jury into believing that it need not make an independent finding regarding the element of an effect on interstate сommerce. Such omitted element errors are subject to harmless error analysis.
See Neder v. United States,
The gоvernment’s evidence regarding interstate commerce was that the object of the robbery was three kilos of cocaine and that one kilo was seized. This evidence was not controverted; that is, no defendant challenged the object, fact, or result of the robbery. Also uncontroverted was the fact that Reyes, who occupied residences in both Connecticut and the Bronx, was known to Rivera and trusted to the point that Rivera was willing to deal with him and Solis — a person Rivera did not know — to sell three kilograms of cocaine. The defendants’ claim here is that the robbery’s оbject (the theft of multiple kilograms of cocaine from a drug dealer) and/or result are insufficient as a matter of law to constitute the requisite effect on interstate commerce. We disagree.
It hardly needs repeating that the reach of the Hobbs Act is coextensive with the full reach of Congressional power over commerce,
see Stirone v. United States,
The only evidence even arguably lacking was direct testimony of an expert nature that cocaine is imported into the United States
5
and/or that any robbery of cocaine, wherever the source, affects interstate commerce. Such expert testimony is unnecessary because a reasonable juror is surely capable of drawing the conclusion that a robbery undertaken with the object of stealing from a drug dealer three kilos of cocaine — and which successfully yielded one kilo (i.e., a thousand grams or multiple thousands of doses of cocaine) — would have had at least the required de
minimus
effect on interstate commerce.
See Wills v. Amerada Hess Corp.,
The analysis of proof of effect on interstate commerce is a case-by-case inquiry,
Parkes,
Finally, although for the reasons stated we find no plain error in the charge given, even if we were to determine that such error existed, we would be hard pressed to find that the error created an injustice. The lack of injustice is underlined by the fact that the instructions were not challenged and the issue of the suffiсiency was preserved only by a general motion at the close of the government’s case in which the words “interstate commerce” were conspicuous by their absence. The timing and general non-specific nature of the challenge is understandable. Before verdict, any issue could have been quickly and indisputably resolved,
see Parkes,
We therefore overturn the vacating of the Hobbs Act counts.
b) Sufficiency of the Evidence for the Section 92ffc) Count
There was no evidence that Gomez carried a weapon during the robbery. However, he was charged with, and con
*103
victed of, aiding and abetting a violation of Section 924(c), and, under 18 U.S.C. § 2, he is punishable as a principal. Relying on
United States v. Medina,
It is clear from the facts in Medina that the words “not present [at a robbery]” described a participant who was geographically distant from the crime and played no supportive role as the robbery took place. Here, by contrast, Gomez was “present” as a lookout at the scene and played a critical supportive role in the armed robbery. Accordingly, there was easily sufficient evidence to convict Gomez for aiding and abetting on the Section 924(c) count.
c) Jury Instructions on the Section 921(c) Count
A Section 924(c) conviction requires the trier of fact to find that the use of a gun was “during and in relation to any crime of violence or drug trafficking crime.” See 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(A); supra note 3. The predicate crimes alleged here are those alleged in the two Hobbs Act counts and the single cocaine trafficking count. Gomez argues that his Section 924(c) conviction must be vacated because the jury was not instructed to reach a unanimous agreement about which specific predicate crime or crimes were the basis for that conviction. This argument gained force when the convictions on two of the three predicate crimes were vacated.
The failure to instruct the jury that it had to agree on a specific predicate was likely error.
See Richardson v. United States,
*104 The answer is obviously yes. Whatever force Gomez’s argument may have had when the Hobbs Act convictions were vacated vanishes now that they have been reinstated. Because the jury validly reached a unanimous guilty verdict on every predicate crime alleged, the erroneous jury instruction was necessаrily harmless. Accordingly, the Section 924(c) conviction stands.
d) Element vs. Sentencing Factor for the Section 92Jp(c) Count
Title 18 U.S.C. § 924(c) provides a scale of differing mandatory minimum sentences depending on whether the gun in the crime was merely used, was brandished, or was actually discharged. See supra note 3. Gomez is exposed to this scale because of his conviction as an aider and abettor punishable as a principal under 18 U.S.C. § 2.
Gomez argues that the application of a particular mandatory minimum based on the facts of the crime is an element of the crime that should therefore have been determined by the jury.
See United States v. Booker,
Gomez contends that
Harris
has been undermined by subsequent Supreme Court decisions such as
Booker,
e) Section 921(c): Use or Discharge
The government cross-appeals from the district court’s holding that Gomez and Reyes are subject only to the five-year minimum sentence for use of a firearm rather than the ten-year enhancement for discharge. See 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(A); supra note 3. The district court concluded that because there was evidence that only one gun was discharged but two guns may have been used in the crime, it was unclear which gun or guns the jury relied upon in convicting under Section 924(c). We disagree.
Although the jury was not asked to make a specific finding regarding which gun or guns it was relying upon, Solis’s discharge of a gun is undisputed. Apart from that murderous discharge — the effect *105 of which proved the use of a gun beyond any doubt — the evidence of the use of guns consisted of Dejesus’s testimony as to Solis and Reyes adjusting their waistbands, Reyes’s post-arrest statement, and the necessity of weapons in such a robbery. We believe it obvious that the undisputed evidence that Solis killed Rivera with a gun was a foundation for the jury’s Section 924(c) conviction. We see no possibility that the jury would have disregarded this undisputed fact to consider in its deliberations over the gun-use element whether Reyes had a gun. We therefore order resentencing of Gomez and Reyes.
f) Uncharged Robbery as Sentencing Enhancement
Gomez argues that the district court improperly enhanced his sentencing range by four levels based on his alleged robbery of 1.5 kilograms of heroin. Gomez makes several attacks against the procedure used by the district court, but each is meritless. In particular, Gomez argues that the district court should not have relied on Dejesus’s trial testimony. However, we have said, “The sentencing court’s discretion is largely unlimited either as to the kind of information it may consider, or the source from which it may come.... A sentencing court is free to consider hearsay evidence, evidence of unchаrged crimes, dropped counts of an indictment and criminal activity resulting in acquittal in determining sentence.”
United States v. Sisti
Gomez argues that he should have been given an opportunity to cross-examine Dejesus at sentencing. The district court did not abuse its discretion, however, given that Gomez’s trial counsel had an opportunity to cross-examine DeJesus at trial.
See United States v. Williams,
Gomez also argues that it was unfair to rely on Dejesus’s trial testimony as evidence at sentencing because the trial testimony had been admitted only for a limited purpose: namely proof of intent under Federal Rule of Evidence 404(b). The evidence admitted at trial for the purpose of demonstrating Gomez’s intent with respect to the robberies was relevant at trial only if the jury alsо found that the robberies had actually occurred. Likewise, the testimony regarding Gomez’s intent was relevant at sentencing only if the robberies had occurred. Therefore, the testimony was admitted at trial for the same purpose for which it was used at sentencing.
Gomez further argues that it is simply improper for a district court to find facts at sentencing. This argument is squarely contradicted by
Crosby. See United States v. Crosby,
CONCLUSION
We reverse on the government’s cross-appeal, reinstate the Hobbs Act convictions, and remand for resentencing in accord with this opinion. We affirm on Gomez’s appeal.
Notes
. For convenience, we refer to the government's appeal as to Reyes and cross-appeal as to Gomez collectively as a cross-appeal.
. The Hobbs Act provides that:
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 so to do, or commits or threatens physical violence to any person or property in furtherance of a plan or purрose 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).
. Title 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(A) states in pertinent part:
[A]ny person who, during and in relation to any crime of violence or drug trafficking crime ... for which the person may be prosecuted in a court of the United States, uses or carries a firearm ... shall, in addition to the punishment provided for such crime of violence or drug trafficking crime—
(i) be sentenced to a term of imprisonment of not less than 5 years;
(ii) if the firearm is brandished, be sentenced to a term of imprisonment of not less than 7 years; and
(iii) if the firearm is discharged, be sentenced to а term of imprisonment of not less than 10 years.
. If the evidence regarding an omitted element is overwhelming but controverted, we have ''conduct[ed] a two-part inquiry, searching the record in order to determine (a) whether there was sufficient evidence to permit a jury to find in favor of the defendant on the omitted element, and, if there was, (b) whether the jury would nonetheless have returned the same verdict of guilty.”
United States v. Guevara,
.
Parkes
involved marijuana,
. In
Santana-Madera,
this Court concluded that a
Richardson
error was not a “structural error,” i.e., a "defect affecting the framework within which the trial proceeds, rather than simply an error in the trial process itself.”
