Robert Harvey Washburn appeals Count I of his conviction for three counts of bank robbery, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2113(a). He contends that insufficient evidence supports the finding that The Oregon Bank, Tigard Branch, was insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) when he robbed it in 1983.
The government introduced a copy of The Oregon Bank’s original 1976 FDIC certificate of insurance. Although the manager of the Tigard Branch admitted that she did not personally update FDIC insurance, she testified that the branch currently displays copies of the FDIC certificate, that it displayed such copies on the date of the robbery, that the branch could not display the certificate if it were not current and that in the regular course of business, personnel from the bank’s main office checked to see that the insurance was current.
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No Ninth Circuit case is directly on point.
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The Fifth Circuit, however, has held that an FDIC certificate showing the bank was insured five years before the robbery, coupled with the testimony of bank officials that they had seen a fifteen year old original certificate in the bank’s vault, that the certificate was maintained in the regular course of business, and that the copies of the certificate were posted in the bank at the time of the robbery, was sufficient to permit a jury rationally to infer that the bank was insured at the time of the robbery.
United States v. Maner,
Accordingly, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict, the jury rationally could have found that The Oregon Bank, Tigard Branch, was federally insured at the time Washburn robbed it.
See Jackson v. Virginia,
Affirmed.
Notes
. In
United States v. Campbell,
