Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge STEPHEN F. WILLIAMS.
On April 24, 1991 Jeffery Rawlings was convicted of possession with intent to distribute more than five grams of cocaine base in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 841(b)(1), and of using and carrying a firearm during and in relation to a drug trafficking crime in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1).
Rawlings challenges these convictions on three grounds. Two are addressed and rejected in an accompanying unpublished memorandum. This opinion addresses the third — whether the trial judge, in charging the jury on the intent element of the crime of possession with intent to distribute narcotics, erroneously omitted language requiring a “bad purpose to disobey or disregard the law”. We hold that the omission was proper and accordingly affirm.
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Appellant was stopped by two District of Columbia police officers at approximately 2:00 a.m. on January 12, 1991, after he ran a stop light and two stop signs. When the officers approached his car, they saw the butt of a .38 Browning semiautomatic handgun lying on the passenger seat, partially hidden under a cap. Appellant tried to flee on foot; one of the officers tackled him and the two arrested him. The officers searched appellant and found 29 zip-lock bags (17.52 grams) of 90% pure cocaine base in his coat pocket.
The government took a conventional view of this evidence, arguing that it proved Rawlings was an armed narcotics dealer apprehended while transporting his goods. Appellant offered a very different interpretation. He explained on the stand that he had the drugs and gun only because he was returning them on behalf of a misguided cousin to a drug dealer named “New York”, who had enticed the cousin into becoming a subordinate.
According to Rawlings’s explanation, he noticed in the weeks leading up to January 12 that his cousin, who was unemployed, had a lot of money on hand. In the same general time period someone fired a shot through the bedroom window of his grandmother’s house. That incident, along with the cousin’s uncharacteristically nervous behavior, prompted a discussion between Rawlings and the cousin during the afternoon of January 11.
The cousin admitted that he had become a narcotics dealer for “New York” and told Rawlings that he wanted to quit his criminal activity. The two men decided that the only way for the cousin to end his involvement was to get the drugs and gun back to “New York.” They agreed that if they threw the contraband away or turned “New York” in to the police, “New York” or his confederates might exact revenge, *592 possibly even against Rawlings’s grandmother. They decided that Rawlings, rather than the cousin, would return the gun and drugs, because Rawlings “was the oldest" and therefore “could appeal to the guy.”
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On the § 841(a)(1) violation, the trial judge charged the jury on the issue of intent in the following terms (so far as relevant to appellant’s current claim):
Now the second element of the offense: The government must prove beyond a reasonable doubt the defendant possessed the cocaine base knowingly and intentionally. You may find the defendant knowingly and intentionally possessed the cocaine base if he did so consciously, voluntarily, and purposely, and not because of mistake, inattention, or accident.
... To establish the third essential element of this offense, the government must prove beyond a reasonable doubt [that] the defendant possessed the cocaine base with the specific intent to distribute the cocaine base. The term “distribute” means the actual, constructive, or attempted transfer of a controlled substance. It is not necessary that the government prove the defendant received or would receive money or property ' in return for the transfer or attempted transfer of a controlled substance.
You are instructed that the specific intent to distribute cocaine base may be inferred from the possession of a quantity of cocaine base larger than needed for personal use. However, you are not required to make this inference. It’s up to you to determine whether the facts and circumstances shown by the evidence as a whole justify this inference of specific intent to distribute from possession of a quantity of cocaine base larger than needed for personal use. 1
Though drawn from three District of Columbia “Red Book” instructions, see Criminal Jury Instructions for the District of Columbia, Nos. 3.01, 3.02, 4.32 (3d ed. 1978), the charge omitted language from Instruction 3.01 stating that a
person who knowingly does an act which the law forbids, intending with bad purpose either to disobey or disregard the law, may be found to act with specific intent.
Id.
(emphasis added). Appellant here argues that this omission — especially omission of the emphasized “bad purpose” phrase — was error. As appellant did not object at the time of the charge (or at the time the judge repeated the charge on intent in response to a question from the jury), we review only for “plain error” under Rule 52(b) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, see
United States v. Evans,
Appellant rightly concedes that there is no automatic entitlement to a “bad purpose” charge, either generally or for crimes requiring proof of a specific intent. See, e.g.,
United States v. Pomponio,
Rawlings invokes Justice Jackson’s observation in
Morissette v. United States,
Appellant also cites
Cheek v. United States,
Second, even if
Cheek
applied, it would not help Rawlings.
Cheek
allows a defense for a taxpayer who believes in good faith, even if unreasonably, that his treatment of some tax issue, say an item of income or a deduction, is lawful. See
We note that the trial judge considered whether the defendant was raising a defense of duress and concluded, without objection, that he was not. Rawlings’s failure to raise the defense is not surprising, for the defense was unavailable. The defense of duress requires a threat of more immediacy and certainty than Rawlings’s testimony suggested; a defendant cannot claim duress when he had, but passed up, an opportunity to seek the aid of law enforcement officials. See
United States v. Jenrette,
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*594 The judgment below is
Affirmed.
Notes
. The charge is framed throughout in terms of "specific intent”, which some courts have criticized as too general and potentially misleading to a jury. See, e.g.,
United States v. Arambasich,
