Order; Opinion by Judge OWENS.
ORDER
The opinion filed on July 20, 2015 [
The panel voted to deny the petition for panel rehearing. Chief Judge Thomas and Judge Owens voted to deny the petition for rehearing en bane, and Judge Bena-vides so recommends.
The full court has been advised .of the suggestion for rehearing en banc, and no active judge has requested a vote on whether to rehear the matter en banc. Fed. R.App. P. 35.
The panel voted to deny the motion to stay.
The motion to stay, the petition for rehearing, and the petition for rehearing en banc are DENIED. No further petitions shall be entertained.
Dennis Mahon appeals his convictions under 18 U.S.C. §§ 844(i) and (n) for the pipe bomb explosion at the City of Scottsdale Office of Diversity and Dialogue (“Diversity Office”), which injured three people and damaged property. Section 844(i) makes it a crime to damage or destroy, by means of an explosive, property that is “used in” interstate commerce or in “activity affecting” interstate commerce. Ma-hon contends his convictions are invalid because the Diversity Office’s activities did not satisfy the statute’s interstate commerce requirement. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, and we affirm. The Diversity Office was property “used in” commerce or in “activity affecting” commerce.
A concurrently filed memorandum disposition addresses Mahon’s other claims.
I. FACTS
A. The Diversity Office
v Scottsdale created the Diversity Office to, among other things, promote the city as a “tourist destination.” One of the first of its kind in the country, it engaged in community outreach with businesses and cultivated relationships with local and national organizations.
Housed in the city’s Human Resources building, the Diversity Office worked with chambers of commerce and partnered with corporations to sponsor and host cultural events in Scottsdale. Venues included public parks with free admission and resort hotels with tickets costing $60 each. These functions featured crowds ranging from the hundreds to the thousands, and national speakers who received appearance fees of up to $15,000. Corporations collectively donated tens of thousands of dollars annually for some of these events, and food and entertainment vendors applied and paid fees to the Diversity Office to participate.
The Diversity Office promoted these functions through direct mailings, media outlets, and dedicated phone lines. It also worked with out-of-state organizations (including the American Speakers Bureau) to identify speakers, prepare contracts, arrange transportation, and ensure payment. Several speakers were paid to travel from out of state to address audiences in Scottsdale.
B. The Bombing
On February 21, 2004, a Scottsdale employee found a box, addressed to the director of the Diversity Office, in a library carrel. After sitting behind the library circulation counter for a few days, the box made its way to the Diversity Office. On February 26, 2004, the director opened the box, which triggered a massive pipe bomb explosion. He suffered severe trauma, requiring multiple surgeries and skin grafts, and nearly lost a finger. Two other employees endured injuries, including shrapnel in an eye. The powerful blast shattered windows, blew a hole in the counter upon which the box rested, and caused a wall and the ceiling to collapse.
A few months earlier, Mahon left a voi-cemail message with the Diversity Office. He identified himself as “Dennis Mahon of the White Aryan Resistance of Arizona,” used racial epithets, and complained about the Diversity Office’s outreach efforts. He concluded his call by stating: “The White Aryan Resistance is growing in Scottsdale. There’s a few white people who are standing up. Take care.” Based in part on that voicemail, law enforcement initiated a multi-year undercover investigation, which provided overwhelming audio, video, forensic, and circumstantial evidence that Ma-
After a multi-week trial, Mahon was convicted of conspiracy to damage buildings and other real property by means of explosive in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 844(i), (n) (Count 1)
II. ANALYSIS
A. Standard of Review
We review de novo if there is sufficient evidence of the interstate commerce element of an offense. United States v. Garcia,
We review de novo a constitutional challenge to a statute. Garcia,
B. The Diversity Office’s Nexus to Interstate Commerce
Mahon first argues that there was insufficient evidence that the Diversity Office satisfied § 844(i)’s interstate commerce requirement. A defendant is guilty of violating § 844(i) if he
maliciously damages or destroys, or attempts to damage or destroy, by means of fire or an explosive, any building, vehicle, or other real or personal property used in interstate or foreign commerce or in any activity affecting interstate or foreign commerce[.]3
According to Mahon, the Diversity Office “was a municipal government entity engaged in classic governmental functions,” and thus could not possess the requisite interstate commerce nexus under § 844(i). In so arguing, Mahon relies, in part, on two cases: Jones v. United States,
Jones addressed if and when § 844(i) applied to a private residence that did not actively engage in interstate commerce— “a dwelling place used for everyday family living,” and not a rental, “a home office or the locus of any commercial undertaking.” Jones,
Jones held that § 844(i) did not apply to the traditional private home. The residence in Jones had only passive links to interstate commerce: a mortgage, an insurance policy, and the receipt of natural gas from sources outside Indiana. Id. at 855-56,
Lamont addressed § 844(i)’s application to an “ordinary church building” that was “used for religious purposes, and not for other activities of a commercial or economic character.”
Nor was there anything about the church’s activities in Lamont that would bring it within § 844(i)’s jurisdictional scope. Like the private residence in Jones, the church lacked active involvement in interstate commerce — all of its connections were passive: (1) it received gas from Canada, (2) an out-of-state company insured it, (3) it purchased goods from out of state, (4) it received funds from out-of-state members, and (5) it received and distributed publications that traveled interstate. Id. at 1250, 1253. These attenuated connections to interstate commerce, like those in Jones, were insufficient to satisfy § 844(i)’s requirement. Id. at 1255-56.
Jones and Lamont (as well as numerous other cases) teach us that a building may qualify per se under § 844(i)’s jurisdictional requirement if it is inherently commercial. A church and a private residence, without more, are not such buildings, but an apartment building used as rental property, Russell v. United States,
Jones and Lamont also teach us that an intrinsically noneconomic building can qualify under § 844(i) if the building actively engages in interstate commerce or activity that affects interstate commerce, as there is no categorical exclusion of any type of building. See Jones,
That an entity is not-for-profit or municipal in nature also does not foreclose a finding that it is actively engaged in interstate commerce. There is “[n]othing intrinsic to the nature of nonprofit entities [that] prevents them from engaging in interstate commerce.” Camps Newfound/Owatonna, Inc. v. Town of Harrison, Me.,
Although the reach of § 844(i) “is not coterminous with the outer limits of Congress’s Commerce Clause power,” see Lamont,
Here, we need not decide whether the Diversity Office is “inherently” a commercial enterprise (like a rental property or a restaurant). Rather, we need determine only if the Diversity Office actively engages in interstate commerce, or activity that affects interstate commerce. See, e.g., Renteria,
The record demonstrates that the Diversity Office regularly engaged in activities
Unlike the passive participation described in Jones and Lamont, the Diversity Office generated considerable activity that affected interstate commerce — indeed, more so than the activity described in numerous cases upholding a § 844(i) conviction. Compare United States v. Craft,
We have little concern-that our holding will convert the destruction of any “municipal building” in the Ninth Circuit into a federal crime. Any future § 844(i) prosecutions will be reviewed under the same case-by-case analysis that the Supreme Court and our precedent demand.
C. Facial and As-Applied Challenges to § 844b(i)’s Constitutionality
Mahon next cites United States v. Lopez,
Unlike the statutes in Morrison and Lopez, § 844(i) has the necessary jurisdictional element. It requires that the defendant damage or destroy property “used in interstate or foreign commerce or in any activity affecting interstate or foreign commerce ” (emphasis added). Thus, we reject Mahon’s facial challenge to the statute. See Garcia,
Mahon insists that even if the statute is facially constitutional, it is unconstitutional as applied here. He argues that the statute’s application encroaches into matters traditionally reserved for the states and that the federal commerce power cannot extend to the Diversity Office. This argument is equally unavailing — that the property or the crime might be traditionally local in nature does not foreclose § 844(i)’s application where the property possesses the requisite nexus to interstate commerce. See United States v. Gomez,
Here, despite being a local government entity, the Diversity Office possessed the requisite nexus to interstate commerce. Among many activities, it: (1) partnered with national organizations to facilitate planning, hosting, and organization of events that attracted thousands of visitors and tourists to the city, (2) actively participated in at least four different chambers of commerce to cultivate relationships outside the city, (3) contracted with and paid for keynote speakers (budgeting $15,000 for one speaker), (4) advertised upcoming functions through various forms of media, and (5) solicited and approved vendors who wanted to sell food or provide entertainment at events. Given these undisputed facts and the previous section’s analysis, Mahon’s as-applied constitutional challenge is denied.
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons discussed, Mahon’s challenges fail. The Diversity Office had a sufficient nexus to interstate commerce to support Mahon’s prosecution under § 844(i), and his facial and as-applied contentions lack merit.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Section 844(n) makes conspiring to violate § 844(i) a crime. We refer to § 844(i) when addressing Counts 1 and 2.
. Mahon also was convicted of 18 U.S.C. § 842(p)(2)(A), distribution of information related to explosives (Count 3), and received a concurrent sentence of 33 months on that count.
.18 U.S.C. § 841(b) defines “interstate commerce or foreign commerce,” in relevant part, as “commerce between any place in a State and any place outside of that State, or within any possession of the United States (not including the Canal Zone) or the District of Columbia, and commerce between places within the same State but through any place outside of that State.”
. The government contends that even if there were an insufficient interstate commerce nexus to the Diversity Office, Mahon's convictions could still stand. This opinion does not address those additional arguments.
