The defendant Maree Bell appeals from a judgment of conviction entered on May 19, 1975 in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York after a one-day non-jury trial before the Hon. Dudley B. Bonsai, United States District Judge. Bell was charged in a one count indictment with receiving, possessing and transporting in commerce or affecting commerce a firearm after having been convicted of a felony in violation of Title VII of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968, 18 U.S.C. App. § 1202(a). Upon his conviction he was sentenced to a term of two years’ imprisonment and is presently free on bail pending appeal.
I
On October 7, 1974 agents of the New York Drug Enforcement Task Force obtained a warrant to search Bell’s apartment in the Bronx. The affidavit in support of the warrant indicated that a reliable informant had observed 10 ounces of heroin at that location. Bell was also observed by the informant to be carrying a .38 caliber revolver. The Task Force set up a surveillance team at the Bell apartment house and observed him and a woman companion leave the building and approach his car which was parked across the street and which carried New Jersey license plates. While Bell was reaching into the trunk to change a flat tire he was approached by an agent who noticed a bulge in Bell’s waistband. The agent knew that Bell was reported to be armed and reached for the object which proved to be a loaded .38 caliber revolver. Bell was arrested and given the appropriate warnings. Bell’s motion to suppress the gun was denied below and no suppression issue has been raised on this appeal. Bell-was then taken to his apartment and the search warrant was executed. At that time Bell advised the agents that he had purchased the gun in Virginia several years before. He repeated this admission to an Assistant United States Attorney in an interview on October 8, 1974 just prior to his arraignment. The revolver bore the legend “I.N.A., Made in Brazil.” There was evidence below that I.N.A. was an abbreviation for “Industrial National Arms,” a Brazilian corporation now defunct and its records destroyed. It is not disputed that Bell had been previously convicted of manslaughter in the Supreme Court, New York County and was sentenced to imprisonment for a term of five to seven years.
Hence, the only issue on this appeal is whether Bell’s possession of a gun which was manufactured in Brazil and purchased in Virginia some years before constitutes a sufficient nexus with interstate commerce to come within the language of the statute, 18 U.S.C. App. § 1202(a).
II
The language of the statute which is pertinent to the inquiry provides:
Any person who—
(1) has been convicted by a court of the United States or of a State or any political subdivision thereof of a felony and who receives, possesses, or transports in commerce or affecting. *204 commerce . . . any firearm shall be fined not more than $10,000 or imprisoned for not more than two years, or both.
The court was first called upon to construe the statute in
United States v. Bass,
The holding of this court in
Bass
was affirmed on appeal in
United States v. Bass,
Mr. Justice Marshall then proceeded in Part III of the opinion by way of dicta to discuss what interstate nexus must be established with respect to the “possession” and “receipt” offenses. The discussion of the Court follows:
The Government can obviously meet its burden in a variety of ways. We note only some of these. For example, a person “possesses ... in commerce or affecting commerce” if at the time of the offense the gun was moving interstate or on an interstate facility, or if the possession affects commerce. Significantly broader in reach, however, is the offense of “receiv[ing] ... in commerce or affecting commerce,” for we conclude that the Government meets its burden here if it demonstrates that the firearm received has previously traveled in interstate commerce. This is not the narrowest possible reading of the statute, but canons of clear statement and strict construction do “not mean that every criminal statute must be given the narrowest possible meaning in complete disregard of the purpose of the legislature.” United States v. Bramblett,348 U.S. 503 , 510,75 S.Ct. 504 , 508,99 L.Ed. 594 (1955). We have resolved the basic uncertainty about the statute in favor of the narrow reading, concluding that “in commerce or affecting commerce” is part of the offense of possessing or receiving a firearm. But, given the evils that prompted the statute and the basic legislative purpose of restricting the firearm-related activity of convicted felons, the readings we give to the commerce requirement, although not all narrow, are appropriate. And consistent with our regard for the sensitive relation between federal and state criminal jurisdiction, our reading preserves as an element of all the offenses a requirement suited to federal criminal jurisdiction alone.
Mr. Justice Brennan disassociated himself from Part III of the opinion, noting *205 that no question of the quantum of evidence necessary to establish the Government’s prima facie case was before the Court. Mr. Justice Blaekmun in his dissenting opinion noted that five other circuits had disagreed with the Second Circuit on this point. 1 He argued that no interstate nexus at all was necessary for the possession and receipt offenses and therefore would have proceeded to the constitutional issue. Since Bass, this circuit has not been provided the pleasure of further opportunities to interpret § 1202(a).
The appellant places principal reliance upon the language of Part III of the Supreme Court’s majority opinion which draws a distinction between a felon’s
possession
of a gun in interstate commerce and his
receipt
of the weapon. Although it is conceded that the statute covers three separate offenses (possession, receipt and transportation), Judge Bonsai found Bell guilty only of “possession” which narrows the issue before us. In
Bass,
Mr. Justice Marshall stated that a felon
possesses
a firearm within the statute if at the time of the offense the gun was moving in interstate commerce or on an interstate facility.
Ill
The Government’s first response is that Mr. Justice Marshall’s comments in Part III can be disregarded as “pure dicta.” We agree that they are dicta since the only question before the Court was whether or not any interstate nexus was necessary for a conviction of receipt and possession of a firearm. No evidence of any such nexus had been offered by the Government in Bass and therefore the question of the quantum of such nexus was not before the Court. 2 *206 Furthermore, the Government points out that in addition to the two dissenters, Mr. Justice Brennan expressly refrained from joining Part III of the opinion and Justices Rehnquist and Powell did not participate in the case. We thus have the added fillip that no majority of the present Court supports the Bass dictum. While we can agree that what Mr. Justice Marshall volunteered in Part III of his opinion is dictum, it does not at all follow that we can cavalierly disregard it. There is authority for the proposition that a distinction should be drawn between “obiter dictum,” which constitutes an aside or an unnecessary extension of comments, and considered or “judicial dictum” where the Court, as in this case, is providing a construction of a statute to guide the future conduct of inferior courts. 3 While such dictum is not binding upon us, 4 it must be given considerable weight and can not be ignored in the resolution of the close question we have to decide.
IV
The Government next urges that the great weight of circuit court authority following
Bass,
with the sole exception of
United States v. Cassity,
A case not cited by the Government is also persuasive. In
United States v. Pleasant,
The Government relies on
United States v.
Kenner,
We conclude that the weight of authority is not in favor of the Government’s position. 6 The Bass distinction *208 between receipt and possession has been observed and followed in square holdings. Where language in those cases we have reviewed fails to consider the two offenses individually, the discussion therein is dictum since the convictions involved the broader crime of receipt for which prior interstate travel has been held in numerous cases to satisfy the commerce requirement. Both Cassity and Pleasant indicate that where a possession conviction alone is involved, a contemporaneous interstate nexus is a necessary basis for an affirmance. 7
y
The Government also urges that even if the
Bass
dictum is followed and interpreted to require for possession a contemporaneous interstate traveling of the firearm in interstate commerce, the statute also proscribes possession which “affects” such commerce. The argument is made that even though Bell’s possession here had an imperceptible or minimal affect on commerce, the Congress may properly have considered that the “total incidence” of the transportation of guns in foreign and interstate commerce would justify legislation imposing criminal sanctions in individual cases.
Perez v. United States,
*209
The Government argues further that the
Bass
dictum is illogical and anomalous, since it punishes receipt of a gun with less proof than for possession although the latter involves a continuing custody. The Government also argues that the
Bass
dictum, to the extent it requires a nexus for possession different from that for receipt, is inconsistent with its holding that an interstate nexus is applicable to all three offenses. This argument was successfully advanced. in
United States v. Snell,
As we have indicated, the statute is not a model of clarity and its legislative history is murky at best. However we think that the
Bass
opinion itself indicates why the possession offense is more narrowly construed than the other offenses. The interpretation given to § 1202(a) in the
Bass
dictum is grounded in part upon the principles of federalism espoused in
Younger v. Harris,
We conclude therefore that the conviction below must be reversed.
Notes
.
United States v. Cabbler,
. In its petition for certiorari in Bass, the Government phrased the question presented as follows:
Should 18 U.S.C. App. (Supp. V.) § 1202(a) be construed to prohibit any possession of firearm by felon, or only possession that is specifically “in commerce or affecting commerce”?
. See
Gabbs Exploration Co. v. Udall,
. Even viewing it as well-considered or judicial dictum, we are not necessarily bound to follow it. Thus in
Perlman
v.
Timberlake, supra,
. In a very recent case,
United States v. Kelly,
In the present case the government proved that both weapons had at one time traveled in interstate commerce and the burden established in Bass for a receiving charge was clearly met. It could not, however, have sustained a possession charge by the proof offered.
(emphasis supplied).
It is also noteworthy that the
Bass
dictum, i. e., that past interstate travel of a firearm is sufficient to sustain a “receiving” conviction, has been followed in the face of challenges that it was mere dictum.
United States v. Walker,
. In a case not relied upon by the Government,
United States v. Calhoun,
As to this section [§ 1202(a)(1)], this circuit follows the majority rule that the required nexus with interstate commerce is satisfied by proof the received firearm was previously transported in interstate commerce.
(emphasis supplied). Although the court previously described the convictions on the two counts in question as being for “possession” of two weapons (id. at 864), a reading of the indictment on file reveals that the defendant was charged only with their receipt and not possession. (Counts V, VI, Ind. # 73, H., CR.,-129, U.S.Dist.Ct., Northern District of Indiana, Hammond Division).
The Government’s reliance on
United States v. Ransom,
[W]hen a jury returns a guilty verdict on an indictment charging several acts in the con *208 junctive, . . . the verdict stands if the evidence is sufficient with respect to any ■ one of the acts charged.
. The only circuit court opinion we have read which deliberately blurs the distinction between possession and receipt is
United States v. Brown,
. Bell’s mere possession of the weapon could only have a de minimis effect on interstate commerce. In
United States v. Marihart,
