These companion cases were tried ten days apart by the same District Judge, with the same counsel representing the three defendants. Both cases involve the construction of 18 U.S.C. § 1952, which was added to the Criminal Code in 1961 as a part of the Attorney General’s program to combat gambling, narcotics, prostitution, liquor and other offenses.
The common question in these cases is whether Section 1952 requires an intent to violate federal law by using any facility in interstate commerce. The District Court held that no such intent was required, and we agree.
In the first of the two cases, Richard Miller operated the Miller Recreation Parlor in Gary, Indiana. His premises consisted of a poolroom, barber and tobacco shop. Miller operated a baseball gambling pool there. The pool was con-cededly illegal under Indiana law. His patrons purchased baseball tickets. Game scores were obtained from a Western Union tickertape and posted on a blackboard. Miller would use the ticker-tape to determine baseball pool winners on days when the games were all completed in the afternoon. As part of his duties, Miller’s porter would post scores from the tickertape on the blackboard. The baseball information contained on the Western Union tickertape was transmitted from Chicago to Gary, Indiana. Miller paid federal wagering taxes. Because of his admissions that the ticker-tape was used on occasion to determine payoffs, he does not question the sufficiency of the evidence to show his guilt.
In the second case, defendants Fenton Bash and Samuel Woods contend that there was no substantial evidence to show their guilt. This point was raised by their motion for a new trial. In denying that motion, the District Court ruled that there was “ample evidence * * * before the jury concerning defendants’ carrying on of an unlawful gambling enterprise and the use of the wire tickertape facility which defendants had installed to promote and facilitate the carrying on of gambling activity they knew to be unlawful by the posting of scores from the machine to a blackboard on the premises’’ (258 F.Supp. at pp. 812-813).
*485 In the case involving Bash and Woods, the evidence showed that Bash owned and Woods operated the Club Poolroom (also known as the Club Lunch) in Gary, Indiana. As in the Miller case, a baseball pool was operated on the premises in known violation of Indiana law. The customers used the Western Union ticker-tape there to post baseball scores on blackboards. Ralph (“Rum”) Weinert also posted the tiekertape results on the blackboards. Defendants’ clerk Joseph Ortman slipped Weinert money “to get something to eat” in return for Weinert’s casual work behind the cigar counter. As in the Miller case, the information transmitted by the Western Union tiekertape originated in Chicago, and the federal wagering taxes were paid. Bash told an FBI agent that he used this machine “as a convenience in computing the end-of-game scores”. Woods made similar admissions.
Although there was no evidence that Miller or Bash personally posted scores obtained from the tiekertape, the machine was used in their establishment to tabulate baseball scores to compute winning tickets. The applicability of the statute does not depend on whether a defendant personally operates the tickertape in conjunction with an illegal baseball pool. The key word of the statute is “uses”, one of the most comprehensive words in our language. 91 C.J.S. 513, 518-519. This verb is defined in Webster’s Third New International Dictionary as “to carry out a purpose or action by means of: make instrumental to an end or process: apply to advantage: turn to account * * * ”. Synonyms are “employ, utilize, apply, avail”. (Idem p. 2524.) This word is to be given its ordinary meaning (Swalley v. Addresso-graph-Multigraph Corporation,
Even if the terms “use” were not sufficiently broad to include Bash’s and Woods’ activities, Section 2(b) of the Criminal Code,
1
which was included in the indictment, makes them liable as principals. Defendants Bash and Woods knew that their patrons were posting scores on the blackboards from information supplied by the tiekertape. Thus through the use of an interstate facility the customers facilitated the carrying on of this business enterprise involving gambling violative of Indiana law. Because Woods and Bash consented to and condoned these illegal activities, they are punishable as principals. United States v. Leggett,
Defendants in the second case also apparently argue that the ticker did
*486
not facilitate gambling. Bash and Woods told FBI Agent Cox that the results of the tickertape machine were used to tabulate end-of-game scores, and for the purpose of paying off the baseball bets. It is true that the baseball pool could have been operated without the ticker, but nevertheless the ticker was maintained to obtain results as quickly as possible for the gambling customers. Section 1952 does not require that the ticker be essential to the gambling operation; it need only “facilitate” the carrying on of the illegal gambling. As used in this statute, “facilitate” means “to make easy or less difficult”. United States v. Barrow,
We next come to the question common to both cases, namely, whether the use of an interstate facility must be with intent to violate the Federal law and, concomitantly, whether ignorance of the Federal law should be considered by the jury in determining defendants’ intent. Specifically, defendants argue that under Section 1952 an interstate facility must be used knowingly, willfully or intentionally. In resolving this question, reference of course must first be made to the statute itself. In pertinent part, Section 1952 of the Criminal Code (18 U.S.C. § 1952) provides as follows:
(a) Whoever * * * uses any facility in interstate or foreign commerce, including the mail, with intent to—
* * * * * *
(3) * * * promote, manage, establish, carry on, or facilitate the promotion, management, establishment, or carrying on, of any unlawful activity,
* * * shall be fined not more than $10,000 or imprisoned for not more than five years, or both.
(b) As used in this section “unlawful activity” means (1) any business enterprise involving gambling * * * offenses in violation of the laws of the State in which they are committed
* * #
From the wording of this statute, it is apparent that Congress did not require any mens rea with respect to the use of an interstate facility. In relevant part, Congress only required that there be intent to facilitate the carrying on of any business enterprise involving gambling in violation of state laws. If Congress had intended to require specific intent with respect to the use of the interstate facility, the phrase “with intent to” or its equivalent would have been juxtaposed to modify “uses” in Section 1952(a).
Even though “intent” as employed in Section 1952 here refers to a violation of State laws, all three defendants assert that the Government was also required to prove that the defendants intentionally, knowingly or willfully used an interstate facility. They insist that the jury should have been instructed that ignorance on their part that they were violating a Federal law was a relevant factor in determining whether they were guilty. In a well-reasoned opinion, the District Judge rejected this construction of Section 1952. We approve his conclusion that “the use of a facility in interstate commerce is a necessary jurisdictional element of an offense under Title 18 U.S.C. § 1952 but that no specific mental element or specific intent * * * need be shown with reference to such use” (
The judgment of the District Court is supported by analogous cases involving the receipt of stolen goods or automobiles that have been transported in interstate commerce. The decisions under the National Stolen Property Act
*487
(18 U.S.C. § 2314) and Dyer Act (18 U.S.C. § 2311) establish that convictions thereunder are justified even though defendants did not know of the interstate transportation. See, e. g., United States v. Kierschke,
As to defendants’ professed ignorance of this Federal law, it is noteworthy that the Model Penal Code provides that knowledge of illegality is not ordinarily an element of an offense except where the statute expressly so provides. See American Law Institute Model Penal Code, Tentative Draft No. 4 (1955) Section 2.02(9) and Comments, pp. 130-131; see also Lambert v. People of State of California,
In support of their position, defendants rely principally on Morissette v. United States,
Lambert v. People of State of California,
Defendants also rely upon Delaney v. United States,
In sentencing these defendants, the District Judge was sympathetic to federal jurisdiction to prosecute open and notorious gambling activities that the Indiana authorities had tolerated for too long. The legislative history of the statute shows,
inter alia,
that it was meant to condemn the use of an interstate facility
and
local gambling activities facilitated by the use of the interstate facility. See House Report No. 966, 2 U.S.Code, Congressional and Administrative News, 87th Cong., 1st Sess. (1961) at p. 2665. Congress fully intended this statute to apply to local gambling, for it “decided that the facilities of interstate commerce become tainted when they are used by persons with evil motives and who perform evil acts”. United States v. Barrow,
We are satisfied that there was sufficient evidence to sustain the Bash and Woods verdict and that the District Court construed the statute correctly. Therefore, the judgments are affirmed.
Notes
. That Section provides : “Whoever causes an act to be done, which if directly performed by him would be an offense against the United States, is also a principal and punishable as such” (18 U.S.C. § 2(b)).
. That provision of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939 provided fines and imprisonment for anyone “Who makes or signs any false entry in any book, or makes or signs any false certificate or return, in any case where he is by law or regulation required to make any entry, certificate or return”.
