Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge WILLIAMS.
On April 8, 1989 Raymond Powell approached an undercover police officer in the 3600 block of 6th Street in Southeast Washington and offered him “a 20 rock” (i.e., a $20 rock of cocaine base). The officer said that he wanted “a 50”, and Powell responded that he could “get the 50 from *725 my man downstairs.” After giving a prearranged signal to his back-up team, the officer followed Powell down a flight of stairs into the basement of an apartment building. There he found three men awaiting him. One, Billy Williams, was holding a gun, though not pointing it at anyone in particular. The officer grabbed Powell and used him as a human shield until the backup team arrived. A sweep through the apartment revealed 13 rocks of cocaine base in concentrations averaging about 95%; an expert testified that the supply was consistent with street distribution rather than personal use.
Powell was convicted of possessing cocaine with intent to distribute in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a), (b)(1)(C) and of using or carrying a firearm in the commission of a drug offense in violation of 18 U.S.C. §• 924(c)(1), 1 or (as to each) aiding and abetting the crime, see 18 U.S.C. § 2(a). 2 For the firearms charge, the trial judge added five years to Powell’s sentence, as § 924(c) requires. While Powell’s attacks on the possession conviction are too weak to require discussion, we find the evidence insufficient to support the firearms charge and accordingly reverse that conviction.
Our standard of review is limited. We may reverse the jury’s verdict for insufficient evidence only if, allowing the government all reasonable inferences from the evidence, a reasonable mind could not conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that Powell was guilty. See
United States v. Joseph,
Our cases rule out liability as a principal. Though we have construed § 924(c) broadly to include both actual and constructive
3
“use” of a firearm in the commission of a felony, see, e.g.,
United States v. Anderson,
The government has failed to establish any of those links here, or any that could reasonably be said to share a common theme with them. At oral argument it relied almost exclusively on
Joseph, supra.
In that case, however, the defendant’s sidekick (his younger brother) was carrying the gun in a bag as the two travelled together, so the jury could well have found that the defendant himself exercised dominion and control over the bag.
It is common to state that liability as an accomplice encompasses acts of the principal that are a “ ‘natural and probable consequence’ of the criminal scheme the accomplice encouraged or aided.” W. La-Fave & A. Scott, Criminal Law § 6.8, at 590 (2d ed. 1986). Compare
Pinkerton v. United States,
For provisions such as the current version of § 924(c), enhancing a sentence simply because a defendant had a firearm
with
him for possible use in an independent crime, the courts appear generally to have drawn the line at the upper end of the spectrum, insisting that the accomplice “knew” (or, perhaps, should have known)
4
that the principal would carry a gun. Thus in
United States v. Hamblin,
We have found two cases involving the scope of knowledge required for accomplice liability under § 924(c) where the main crime was a drug violation; they split. In
United States v. Morrow,
A number of cases in our circuit — none of them involving the issue of ancillary gun possession — appear to employ a rather sweeping use of the “natural and probable consequences” tag. Thus, in
United States v. Sampol,
United States v. Jones,
In
Sampol, Jones
and
Clayborne
each accomplice crossed a moral divide by setting out on a project involving either the certain or contingent use of deadly force. Once he had done so, the important probabilities involved not degrees of moral blameworthiness but mainly the resistance the venture might encounter (though, to be sure, there might also be variations in the principal’s ruthlessness). Though the accomplice would go free if by good fortune everyone were spared, it is hardly surprising that a court would hold him liable either for accidental variations in the identity of the victim or for a death or assault that follows readily when the feared contingency arises. But the courts’ references to “natural and probable consequences” in those contexts hardly mean that the phrase should entail the same degree of probability whenever an accomplice helps in the commission of one crime and the principal commits another. We find the standard of our fellow circuits more suitable, insisting that an accomplice at least know that a gun would be carried (or “used”, in the broad sense of § 924(c)) before he can be said to aid and abet that crime. This standard puts the accomplice on a level with the principal, requiring the same knowledge for both. See LaFave & Scott § 6.8, at 590-91; Model Penal Code § 2.06, Comment at 312 (1985); see also
United States v. Greer,
We pause to note an intermediate class of cases, where the extra charge is not the carrying of a gun in the course of a bank robbery, but its active use — to put another’s life in jeopardy. See 18 U.S.C. § 2113(d). If we correctly discerned the relation between the
gun-carrying
cases and the
Sampol/Jones
group, we would expect the courts to insist on knowledge that someone would
bring
a gun, but not that the holder would use it actively — a matter likely to depend on how the scene unfolded. In fact, the cases present a mixed picture. In
United States v. Sanborn,
The record here fails to show that knowledge. The government points to the testimony of its expert witness, who said that he (personally) had “frequently” “come across” the use of guns in connection with drug distribution. Tr. 128. This, coupled with his explanation of a drug dealer’s purpose in wielding a gun, was useful to erase any doubts jurors may have had that Williams possessed and flourished the gun in order to advance his drug trafficking. (It also helped prove that the drugs were possessed for distribution purposes.) But it falls considerably short of showing that someone in Powell’s position would know that Williams would be carrying a gun.
The government invokes several cases,
United States v. Bonner,
Moreover, even if guns were shown to be a part of an overwhelming majority of drug operations, not all drug traffickers — or drug trafficking contexts — are alike. We suspect, for example, that many a college dealer gets along without firearms. Without evidence of the prevalence of guns in a particular context, no jury can reasonably infer that someone operating in that context knows that his associates will carry a gun.
The government suggests that Powell and Williams had established such a close criminal relationship that, given Williams’s use of the gun at the arrest, a jury could have inferred that Powell must have known of its use in the time period charged. Cf.
Joseph,
In sum, the government has failed to offer specific evidence that this defendant knew to a practical certainty that his drug-peddling associates would be carrying a gun in connection with their joint venture.
The parties have addressed only the sentence enhancement that Congress explicitly provided in § 924(c). The sentencing guidelines supply an alternative route to enhancement, directing the judge to add two levels toward the sentence for a drug charge when the government shows that the use of firearms was “reasonably foreseeable”. See Sentencing Guidelines §§ 2Dl.l(b), lB1.3(a) and comment; and see, e.g.,
United States v. Burke,
We affirm Powell’s conviction for possession with intent to distribute and reverse his conviction for using or carrying a firearm in the drug venture.
So ordered.
Notes
. "Whoever, during and in relation to any crime of violence or drug trafficking crime ... uses or carries a firearm, shall, in addition to the punishment provided for such crime of violence or drug trafficking crime, be sentenced to imprisonment for five years_” Id.
. "Whoever commits an offense against the United States or aids, abets, counsels, commands, induces or procures its commission, is punishable as a principal.” Id.
.Cf. Jesse Dukeminier & James E. Krier, Property 19 n. 6 (1981):
It may not be too cynical to say that the word ["constructive”] is a way of pretending that whatever word it modifies depicts a state of affairs that actually exists when actually it does not. The pretense is made whenever judges wish, usually for good but often undisclosed reasons, a slightly different reality than that confronting them.
. Our case does not appear to raise any question of knowledge of facts that would lead a reasonable person to conclude that, as a matter of practical certainty, the principal would be carrying a gun. See generally LaFave & Scott § 3.5(b).
