A jury convicted Ricky Jester of violating 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1), which prohibits a convicted felon from possessing a firearm. Jester makes two constitutional arguments in an attempt to invalidate this conviction. First, he argues that § 922(g)(1) authorizes a cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the Eighth Amendment by imposing a criminal sanction based on his status as a convicted felon. Second, he contends that Congress contravened the equal protection component of the Fifth Amendment’s Due Process Clause by exempting certain non-violent felons from the restrictions of § 922(g)(1). We reject both of Jester’s constitutional challenges.
Jester first questions Congress’s authority to criminalize possession of firearms by convicted felons. He notes that “status” as a convicted felon is a necessary element of a § 922(g)(1) violation. In this way, he argues, the statute is similar to a law criminalizing the status of narcotics addiction, which the Supreme Court struck down as unconstitutional in
Robinson v. California,
We decline Jester’s invitation to extend
Robinson
in this fashion. The Supreme Court in
Robinson
deemed it significant that the relevant California statute criminalized status unconnected to an act of any sort.
See
[Ajppellant was convicted, not for being a chrome alcoholic, but for being in public while drunk on a particular occasion. The State of Texas thus has not sought to punish mere status, as California did in Robinson', nor has it attempted to regulate appellant’s behavior in the privacy of his own home. Rather, it has imposed upon appellant a criminal sanction for public behavior which may create substantial health and safety hazards, both for appellant and for members of the general public, and which offends the moral and esthetic sensibilities of a large segment of the community.
Id.; see also United States v. Black,
Jester’s reliance on
Robinson
is unpersuasive in this ease. Section 922(g)(1) does not punish a person solely for his or her status as a convicted felon; the statute does not empower federal law enforcement officials to arrest a person merely because that person was once convicted of a felony. Rather, the statute is triggered only when the felon commits the volitional act of possessing a firearm that has traveled in interstate commerce.
*1171
See United States v. Ocegueda,
The entire thrust of Robinson’s interpretation of the Cruel and Unusual Punishment Clause is that criminal penalties may be inflicted only if the accused has committed some act, has engaged in some behavior, which society has an interest in preventing, or perhaps in historical common law terms, has committed some actus reus.
Jester’s challenge to § 922(g)(1) on equal protection grounds is equally unavailing. He argues that Congress unconstitutionally narrowed the class of felons to which § 922(g)(1) applies by enacting 18 U.S.C. § 921(a)(20)(A), which permits a felon to possess a firearm if his only predicate offenses were “any Federal or State offenses pertaining to antitrust violations, unfair trade practices, restraints of trade, or other similar offenses relating to the regulation of business practices”. Jester contends that the selective exemption of some felonies from § 922(g)(l)’s scope violates his rights under the equal protection component of the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment.
We apply a highly deferential standard of review to equal protection claims of this nature. Felons are not a protected class,
see, e.g., United States v. Wicks,
The distinction challenged by Jester does not approach this requisite level of irrationality. He first argues that Congress had no rational justification for allowing some nonviolent offenders to possess firearms while subjecting all other felons to the prohibition of § 922(g)(1). This argument, however, has no merit. Congress enacted § 922(g)(1) in order to keep firearms out of the hands of those persons whose prior conduct indicated a heightened proclivity for using firearms to threaten community peace and the “continued and effective operation of the Government of the United States.”
Lewis v. United States,
Jester wrongly claims support for his position from our decision in
Miller v. Carter,
Jester seems to recognize the difficulty of proving the unconstitutionality of a distinction between violent and non-violent felons. He transforms his equal protection claim midstream by making a second, distinct argument that § 921(a)(20)(A) is irrationally underinclusive because it fails to exempt every felony that arguably might not indicate a predisposition towards misusing firearms. To the extent that his equal protection claim rests on this argument, however, Jester lacks standing because his own prior felony convictions do not fall into this “innocuous” class of crimes. Jester has twice been convicted of felony offenses in Indiana: a theft of a snowmobile in 1990 and a robbery in 1984 in which he used a pistol to rob a drug store. The robbery was a violent felony and would still subject Jester to the requirements of § 922(g)(1) even if we accepted his contention that § 921(a)(20)(A)’s exemptions should include many more non-violent felonies. Thus, Jester lacks standing to raise a claim that Congress violated his equal protection rights by irrationally excluding some nonviolent felonies from the class of exempted crimes listed in § 921(a)(20)(A).
See Baer v. Wauwatosa,
Even without the standing problems, Jester’s second claim flies in the face of precedent. This Court has once before rejected a similar challenge that the exemptions to § 922(g)(1) violated the Fifth Amendment by “too narrowly defining the class of application”.
United States v. Weatherford,
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the decision of the district court.
