ORDER AND AMENDED OPINION
ORDER
The mandate issued November 7, 2001, is hereby recalled for the purpose of amending the opinion.
The slip opinion filed September 4, 2001 is hereby amended as follows:
On page 12136, first paragraph, line six, delete “conviction and sentence” and replace it with “district court’s denial of Lynch’s Rule 29 motion.... ”
Page 12136, second paragraph, line three, delete “It is still unknown who pulled the trigger but it is clear that Lynch, with the aid of co-defendant Pizzi-chiello,” and replace it with “Pizzichiello testified that Lynch killed Carreiro and that he and Lynch.... ”
Page 12144, second full paragraph, line seven, delete “Because we here adopt a new jurisdictional test for alleged Hobbs Act violations, there has been no opportunity for the parties to present evidence on this critical issue. We believe the district court should have the first opportunity to apply the new test and take such evidence it deems appropriate.”
Page 12144, third full paragraph, line one, delete “We therefore vacate Lynch’s conviction and sentence under the Hobbs Act and remand for a determination whether he ... ” and replace it with “We therefore vacate the district court’s denial of Lynch’s Rule 29 motion and remand for a determination whether the evidence presented at trial supports the conclusion that Lynch.... ”
Page 12144, third full paragraph, line ten, delete “reinstitute the conviction and sentence; if not, it should dismiss the indictment with prejudice.” and replace it with “again deny Lynch’s Rule 29 motion; if not, it should grant the motion and dismiss his indictment with prejudice.”
Page 12145, line seven, delete “Lynch’s conviction and sentence for carrying or using a firearm in relation to a crime of violence ...” and replace it with “the district court’s denial of this portion of Lynch’s Rule 29 motion pending the outcome of the Hobbs Act ruling.”
The mandate shall issue forthwith.
OPINION
Lynch appeals from his conviction and sentence for violation of the Hobbs Act (robbery), 18 U.S.C. §§ 1951(a) and (b), and using or carrying a firearm during a crime of violence, 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1). We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291. The critical issue before us is whether Lynch’s robbery “affects commerce.” We vacate the district court’s denial of Lynch’s Rule 29 motion and remand to the district court to determine if it lacks jurisdiction because of an insufficient nexus between Lynch’s actions and interstate commerce.
*1051 I
On August 11, 1995, Brian Carreiro, a Nevada resident, was shot and killed in Montana near property owned by Lynch’s father. Pizzichiello testified that Lynch killed Carreiro and that he and Lynch dismembered Carreiro’s body, burned it in a barrel, and then pulverized the charred bones with rocks. Lynch and Pizzichiello then took Carreiro’s ATM card and his truck and returned to Nevada. Lynch and Pizzichiello used the ATM card in Montana and Utah to take roughly $5000 from Car-reiro’s Nevada bank account.
Authorities in Las Vegas, Nevada, began investigating Carreiro’s disappearance and eventually obtained authorization to place wiretaps on the telephones of Lynch and Pizzichiello. From evidence obtained from the wiretaps, the Las Vegas police realized that Carreiro had probably been killed in Montana, not Nevada. The case was turned over to Montana authorities, and Lynch and Pizzichiello were each tried separately in that state. Over Lynch’s objections, the Nevada wiretap evidence was admitted at his state trial. Lynch was convicted of deliberate homicide, tampering with physical evidence, and two counts of robbery and was sentenced to life imprisonment.
The Supreme Court of Montana reversed Lynch’s convictions, holding that the use of the Nevada wiretap information violated Montana law.
Montana v. Lynch,
II
Lynch contends that his conviction under the Hobbs Act must be overturned because the federal government failed to establish that it had jurisdiction to prosecute the robbery of Carreiro, a private individual. The Hobbs Act makes it a crime to “obstruct! ], delay[ ], or affeet[ ] commerce or the movement of any article or commodity in commerce, by robbery-” 18 U.S.C. § 1951(a). We have held that the government “need prove that a defendant’s acts had only a
de minimis
effect on interstate commerce” to satisfy this jurisdictional element of the Hobbs Act.
United States v. Atcheson,
A.
The issue before us is not a simple one. We do not deal here with the guilt or innocence of Lynch; rather, we examine whether this conviction is based upon jurisdiction allowable under the foundation of our governance structure. Con
*1052
gress meant for the Hobbs Act to reach as far as the Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution would allow.
U.S. v. Pascucci,
The Constitution established a limited central government with all remaining power to be left to the individual states.
See United States v. Lopez,
the scope of the interstate commerce power must be considered in the light of our dual system of government and may not be extended so as to embrace effects upon interstate commerce so indirect and remote that to embrace them, in view of our complex society, would effectually obliterate the distinction between what is national and what is local and create a completely centralized government.
United States v. Morrison,
In
Atcheson,
we held that jurisdiction over a violation of the Hobbs Act could be supported by only a de minimis effect on interstate commerce, including a de minimis effect that was probable rather than actual.
The Hobbs Act presents us, however, with the difficulty of analyzing activities that always carry with them an economic component. By definition, robbery and extortion involve the forced transfer of currency or of goods that can be ex
*1053
changed for currency. Yet, robbery and extortion, particularly of individuals, have traditionally been the province of the states. In addition, the taking of small sums of money from an individual has its primary and direct impact only on that individual and not on the national economy. Several of our sister circuits have identified the difficulty inherent in respecting the line between state and federal jurisdiction when applying the Hobbs Act to defendants charged with the robbery or extortion of private individuals.
See United States v. Diaz,
In
United States v. Collins,
the Fifth Circuit formulated a test for determining when the robbery or extortion of an individual would have the requisite de minimis effect.
(1) the acts deplete the assets of an individual who is directly and customarily engaged in interstate commerce; (2) if the acts cause or create the likelihood that the individual will deplete the assets of an entity engaged in interstate commerce; or (3) if the number of individuals victimized or the sum at stake is so large that there will be some cumulative effect on interstate commerce.
Id. (internal footnotes and quotation omitted). This test respects the principles that “we are still a federal, not a unitary government and neither the constitutional limits on the power of the national government, nor the jurisdictional requirement of some connection with interstate commerce may be ignored.” Id. This test also reserves to the States the prosecution of robberies and extortionate acts that have only a speculative, indirect effect on interstate commerce.
Based on these same principles of federalism, the Eighth and Eleventh Circuits have expressly adopted the
Collins
test.
Diaz,
We have also, in a different context, relied upon the distinction between a business and a private individual when analyzing the reach of the Commerce Clause.
See United States v. Pappadopoulos,
The government argues that our holding in
Ateheson
precludes us from adopting the Fifth Circuit’s test in
Collins.
However, that case did not address the specific question raised here by Lynch: whether we should distinguish between the robbery of a business and the robbery of an individual in defining what constitutes a de minimis effect on interstate commerce. Further, had the
Collins
test been applied, the result would have been the same. In
Ateheson,
the defendant specifically targeted
“business men
and women” in order to deplete their assets,
Similarly, the government is not aided by
United States v. Pascucci,
This leads us to the question raised by Lynch in this appeal: whether we should adopt the test employed by the Fifth, Eighth, and Eleventh Circuits, which is consistent with the similar business/individual distinction drawn by the Fourth, Sixth, and Seventh Circuits. We have canvassed the appellate decisions in this area and have found no opinion in which a court has rejected the distinction between individuals and businesses after having expressly considered the issue. Our stated position is not to create a circuit division of authority unless there is good reason to do so; that is, there is a presumption that we should not create an intercircuit conflict.
See United States v. Chavez-Vernaza,
Here, there are additional reasons for following the course laid out by our sister circuits. First, the Hobbs Act has nationwide criminal application; as a matter of fairness, defendants should be treated equally throughout the nation. A commonly used jurisdictional test would advance that goal. Second, the proposed test provides defendants with “some means of knowing which of the two governments” will have oversight over their actions.
See Lopez,
We realize there is some language in some of our cases that gives us pause, but we conclude that the case holdings do not prevent us from joining the other circuits. We therefore adopt the test enumerated by the Fifth Circuit in Collins.
B.
Our task is now to determine how to apply the Collins test to the case before us. Lynch was charged with the commission of terrible acts that were in violation of state law. But the only connection of those actions to interstate commerce was the robbery of Carreiro’s truck and ATM card, which was used to take roughly $5000 from a private bank account.
We therefore vacate the district court’s denial of Lynch’s Rule 29 motion and remand for a determination whether the evidence presented at trial supports the conclusion that Lynch (1) stole from a person “directly and customarily engaged in interstate commerce;” (2) created a likelihood that the assets of an entity engaged in interstate commerce would be depleted; or (3) victimized a large number of individuals or took a sum so large that there was “some cumulative effect on interstate commerce.”
Ill
18 U.S.C. § 924(c) imposes additional penalties for “whoever, during and in relation to any crime of violence ...
for which he may be prosecuted in a court of the United States
” uses or carries a firearm. (Emphasis added). Federal jurisdiction over Lynch’s conviction pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 924(c) is thus dependant on the court having jurisdiction over the robbery under the Hobbs Act.
See United States v. Staples,
VACATED AND REMANDED.
