Responding to a two-car traffic accident in West Allis, Wisconsin (a suburb of Milwaukee) in the early morning hours of February 24, 2001, police were told that Lester Lemons, a passenger in one of the involved automobiles, had flashed a gun in the immediate aftermath of the accident. Upon questioning,* Lemons denied possessing a gun but consented to a pat-down of his person. Pursuant to that frisk, police discovered a sweat sock in his pocket containing twelve bullets. Separately, another officer observed a 9 mm bullet on the rear seat of the vehicle in which Lemons had been a passenger. A further search of the vehicle produced a Sig Sauer 9 mm P228 pistol wrapped in a red knit cap and stuffed between the driver and passenger seats of the vehicle.
A grand jury subsequently indicted Lemons, who had a prior felony conviction (battery to a law enforcement officer), for two violations of the felon-in-possession statute, 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1): possession of the gun (Count One) and the ammunition (Count Two), both of which had previously traveled in interstate commerce. R. 1. Lemons moved to dismiss the indictment (R. 17, 19), arguing that application of the felon-in-possession statute to his intrastate possession of a weapon and ammunition that, at some previous time, had crossed state lines was beyond the limited authority bestowed on Congress by the Commerce Clause of the Constitution. U.S. Const, art. I, § 8, cl. 3. Magistrate Judge Goodstein and Judge Adelman rejected Lemons’ argument. R. 38, 52. Ultimately, Lemons entered into a Rule 11(a)(2) plea agreement pursuant to which he conditionally pleaded guilty to Count One while reserving the right to challenge the validity of his conviction under the Commerce Clause. R. 77. The district court sentenced him to a term of seventy-seven months in prison. R. 71.
The Sig Sauer pistol discovered in Lemons’ possession was not manufactured in Wisconsin. Consequently, there is no dispute that, at some previous point in time, the pistol crossed state lines. However, the record does not reveal when that occurred. In a thorough and well-written set of briefs, Lemons contends that the Sig Sauer’s crossing of state lines at some unknown time prior to his purely local possession of the gun on the occasion of his arrest is not enough of a nexus to interstate commerce to bring it within the Commerce Clause authority of Congress.
As Lemons acknowledges, in
United States v. Bass,
Subsequently, however, in
Scarborough v. United States,
Lemons correctly points out that in both
Bass
and
Scarborough,
the Supreme Court was principally concerned with construing congressional intent vis á vis the required nexus; the Court did not explicitly consider whether the nexus it found the statute to require would suffice to bring the criminalized activity within the reach of congressional Commerce Clause authority. Yet, the constitutional question was not far from the Court’s mind in either case. As is evident from
Bass,
the Court plainly wanted to avoid a construction of the statute that would work a dramatic alteration of the federal-state balance in the field of criminal law.
*772
Still, Lemons argues that the Court’s more recent opinion in
Lopez,
which struck down the Gun-Free School Zones Act, 18 U.S.C. § 922(q), requires proof that one’s possession of a gun is commercial activity which has a substantial impact on interstate commerce before Congress may criminalize it pursuant to the Commerce Clause. This point is driven home further, he suggests, by the Court’s opinions in
United States v. Morrison,
Yet, in the course of finding the Gun-Free School Zones Act unconstitutional,
Lopez
noted,
inter alia,
that the statute lacked a jurisdictional element “which would ensure, though case-by-case inquiry, that the firearm possession in question affects interstate commerce.”
Lemons argues that
Lopez
effected far more of a sea change in the Supreme Court’s Commerce Clause jurisprudence than we have been willing to acknowledge. Within the
Lopez
framework, he reasons, Congress might be able to reach intrastate firearms possession when that possession has a commercial character and also has an explicit connection with or effect on interstate commerce. But section 922(g)(1), to the extent it merely requires a showing that the firearm moved across state lines at one point in time, is insufficient in Lemons’ view to ensure such a meaningful nexus to interstate commerce. And the undisputed facts in this case, he points out, establish only that the Sig Sauer pistol he possessed crossed into Wisconsin after its manufacture at some indeterminate moment in time — possibly years before it was discovered in his possession. That showing is insufficient, in Lemons’ view, to establish a genuine connection with or effect upon interstate commerce.
See United States v. Kuban,
This court, and for that matter its sister circuits, have already rejected Lemons’ *773 construction of Lopez and its progeny vis á vis the felon-in-possession statute. We are bound by the ample Seventh Circuit precedent on this point. If, indeed, Lopez’s rationale calls into doubt our construction and application of section 922(g)(1), it is for the Supreme Court to so hold.
AFFIRMED.
