Appellant Henderson was convicted of knowingly transporting in interstate commerce a firearm that had had its manufacturer’s serial number removed, obliterated or altered. This is a violation of the Crimes and Criminal Procedure Act, 18 U.S.C. § 922(k) (1970). An essential element of the crime, interstate transportation, was established only by defendant’s uncorroborated extra-judicial statements, and accordingly we reverse.
Police in Tulsa, Oklahoma, arrested Henderson while he was riding as a passenger in an automobile bearing Colorado license plates. A search of the automobile produced a hand gun from which the serial number had been removed. While being interrogated by a special investigator of the United States Treasury Department after his arrest, Henderson admitted that he owned the gun, that he knew the gun’s serial number had been removed, and that he transported the gun from Colorado to Oklahoma. To prove the interstate transportation element of the crime, the Government relied only on the investigator’s testimony concerning Henderson’s admissions and his presence in an automobile licensed in Colorado. At the close of the Government’s case the trial court denied Henderson’s motion for a judgment of acquittal, which was based on the ground that his extra-judicial statement was not sufficiently corroborated.
*906
A criminal conviction cannot be sustained when the offense is proven solely by the uncorroborated extra-judicial confession or admissions of the accused. Smith v. United States,
The Government argues that the mere presence of Henderson in a car bearing out-of-state license plates is enough evidence to corroborate his admission that he transported the gun in interstate commerce. Under similar facts this court has heretofore held to the contrary. In Yarbrough v. United States,
The judgment is reversed and the case remanded with instructions to enter a judgment of acquittal.
