George T. Howell was convicted in the district court of three counts of being a felon in possession of firearms in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). His wife, Shanta Howell, was convicted of making a false statement on ATF Form 4473, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(a)(1)(A). It was the government’s theory of the case that Mr. Howell was the true purchaser of the firearms and that Mrs. Howell acted as the “straw purchaser” for her husband, who, as a convicted felon, could *1199 not legally purchase a firearm. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
I
A. Background
On March 22, 1992, Mr. And Mrs. Howell were in Bob’s Sport Shop (“Bob’s”) in Justice, Illinois. Mr. Howell selected as purchases a Colt .44 magnum Anaconda revolver and a Colt .357 caliber King Cobra revolver. However, at the time of the transaction, it was Mrs. Howell who displayed her Firearm Owners Identification (“FOID”) card 1 and signed the invoices as the apparent buyer— in spite of the fact that, throughout the selection process, she had shown no interest in the guns. Mrs., Howell used the name “Shanta Armand” on the invoices at Bob’s.
In completing the sale, Bob Tabordon, the owner of Bob’s Sport Shop and a federal firearms licensee, had asked Mr. Howell for his FOID card. According to Tabordon, Mr. Howell replied that they would use his wife’s card, and Tabordon accepted her FOID identification for the purchase. At one point Tabordon asked Mr. Howell if he had a FOID card, and Mr. Howell answered that he did. Tabordon testified that he had no knowledge that George Howell was a convicted felon. 2 Id. The Howells made a deposit and put the guns on layaway in Mrs. Howell’s name. On subsequent occasions, additional payments were made. Sometimes Mr. Howell came to the store alone to make these payments; at other times both Howells returned to Bob’s together for this purpose.
On May 2,1992, the Howells went to Bob’s to pick up the King Cobra. Mrs. Howell completed the customer information portion of Form 4473, the form that the United States Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (“ATF”) requires to be filled out before a gun can be purchased. By signing the form, Mrs. Howell certified that she was the actual “transferee (buyer)” of the King Cobra. 3 She also presented her FOID card. On June 12, 1992, the Howells once again returned to Bob’s. On that occasion, Mr. Howell had in his possession a Smith & Wesson Model 4006. He explained to Tabor-don that he was unhappy with the feel and general performance of the weapon and wanted Tabordon to sell it on consignment. Mrs. Howell’s name was written on the consignment invoice.
On June 26, 1992, while Mr. Howell was driving on the Dan Ryan Expressway, he narrowly missed hitting, the cars of an off-duty police officer and, later, of an Immigration and Naturalization Service (“INS”) officer. The INS officer activated his flashing lights and began pursuing Mr. Howell. After a several-mile chase at fast speeds, Mr. Howell was stopped. The police officer later assisted the INS officer by searching Mr. HoweU’s car. On the back seat in a gym bag was the King Cobra revolver. An Illinois state trooper then arrived, arrested Mr. Howell, and took possession of the gun.
The next day the state trooper asked an ATF agent to trace the King Cobra. The ATF agent traced the weapon to Bob’s, learned that it had been purchased in the name of Mrs. Howell, and questioned Tabor-don about the Howells’ other purchases. When the agent found out that the Anaconda was still on layaway and that the Smith & Wesson was still on consignment, he asked Tabordon for permission to install audio and video equipment to record an undercover firearm transaction with the Howells. ATF Agent Reichert, posing undercover as a newly-hired sales clerk, called Mr. Howell and negotiated the purchase of the Smith & Wesson. When the Howells came into Bob’s on July 13, 1992, to complete the gun sale, the transaction was videotaped. Mr. Howell discussed with the “salesman” Agent Reichert *1200 his preference for Glock handguns, because they had less “kickback,” and mentioned that he had two Glocks and intended to get two more. He and Agent Reichert then agreed on a price of $400 for the Smith & Wesson, the proceeds of which would pay off the balance on the Anaconda in layaway. While Mr. Howell was holding and sighting the Anaconda, the agent commented that the Anaconda would never fit into Mrs. Howell’s hand. Mr. Howell agreed by replying “no.” Tr. 298; O.R. videotape at 10. The agent further observed that Mrs. Howell “ain’t even got any interest in these things,” and Mr. Howell replied, “Right.” Id. Mrs. Howell, standing beside her husband, said nothing. Tr. 303. When completing the transaction, the agent asked Mr. Howell for his FOID card, and then stated, in feigned realization of Mrs. Howell’s presence, “Ah, OK, that’s why she’s here.” Mr. Howell agreed, repeating “That’s why she’s here.” O.R. videotape at 12.
Agent Reichert began to show Mrs. Howell how to fill out the ATF form. But Mrs. Howell interrupted him and explained that she knew the form, that she had done it before. Mr. Howell then stated that she had done it “lots of times.... In fact, this is number four.” O.R. videotape at 12. Mrs. Howell presented her FOID card and signed at the bottom of the ATF form, certifying that she was the “transferee (buyer)” of the Anaconda. Tr. 302. Mr. Howell took physical possession of the Anaconda; he accepted the $400 in payment for the Smith & Wesson on consignment, and paid the $360 plus tax still owed on the Anaconda. O.R. videotape at 12. Mrs. Howell left Bob’s, without the Anaconda, to go shopping; Mr. Howell left several minutes later with the gun. They met at their van and drove off. ATF agents later stopped and arrested Mr. Howell.
State Trooper Hunt also participated in this arrest. He spoke with Mrs. Howell, who had not been placed under arrest at that time. When asked where she lived, Mrs. Howell gave the state trooper first one address, then another. She also stated that she had never been to Bob’s before, and that she did not think her husband had. Mrs. Howell stated that she had purchased only one gun in the past, a Taurus pistol. She invited Trooper Hunt to look in her purse for the Taurus receipt. He found in her purse four different gun receipts. The trooper then told Mrs. Howell that he did not believe she was telling him the truth, and read her constitutional rights to her. A few minutes later, at the police station, Mr. Howell shouted to Mrs. Howell, “Heroes are zeroes. Don’t tell them anything, zero. I love you, baby. You’re the only woman for me.” Tr. 206. Mr. Howell then asked Trooper Hunt what kind of gun he carried. When Trooper Hunt told him, Mr. Howell replied that his next gun was going to be one by the same manufacturer. Trooper Hunt responded that he did not think Mr. Howell would be buying any more guns. Mr. Howell rejoined that he loved guns and would always have them.
B. Procedural History
On November 16, 1992, the Howells were tried before a jury on a four-count indictment. In three counts George Howell was charged with being a felon in possession of firearms, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). Shanta Howell was charged in the fourth count with misrepresenting herself as the true buyer of those guns, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(a)(1)(A). 4
On November 19,1992, the jury returned a verdict of guilty against both defendants on all counts. Mr. Howell was sentenced as an armed career criminal to 210 months of imprisonment, to be followed by two years of supervised release. Mrs. Howell was sentenced to four years of probation, which included the first six months served in home detention.
*1201 Both Howells have appealed. Mrs. Howell submits that the evidence was insufficient for the jury to conclude that she misrepresented herself as the “consignee (buyer)” of the Anaconda. Both Howells challenge the district court’s refusal to instruct the jury concerning their entrapment by estoppel defense. Mr. Howell also contends that he was improperly sentenced as an armed career criminal. We consider each issue below.
II
ANALYSIS
A. Sufficiency of the Evidence Against Mrs. Howell
Mrs. Howell claims that there was insufficient evidence to support her conviction for making a false statement on ATF Form 4473, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(a)(1)(A). We review a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence under the standard enunciated in
Jackson v. Virginia,
Mrs. Howell submits that the government was required to prove that she made a false statement on ATF Form 4473 and that she knew it was false. However, Mrs. Howell claims, the answers she gave in Section A were true and correct: The general identification questions (name, sex, height, weight, race, address, date and place of birth) and questions about her legal status were not challenged by the government. 5 Her signature certified truthful answers; her conviction must therefore be reversed, she contends.
Mrs. Howell is correct that the government does not challenge any specific answer she provided on the form. The government’s position is that Mrs. Howell was not the “transferee (buyer)” of the firearm, but rather a “straw purchaser” for her husband, and thus that her signature on the ATF form certifying that she was the Anaconda’s true purchaser was false. Mrs. Howell’s reply is twofold. First, she states that she eonsid- *1202 ered herself the buyer even though she was not necessarily the ultimate user of the firearm. Second, she asserts that, because firearms licensee Tabordon had signed part B of Form 4473, certifying that it was legal to sell the firearm to her even though he knew the guns were for her husband, she could reasonably rely on his “validation” of her transferee status when she signed the form on July 13, 1992. According to Mrs. Howell, therefore, her signature on ATF Form 4473 was not false, and the evidence failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Mrs. Howell knew her statement (that she was a transferee) was false.
To establish a violation of § 924(a)(1)(A), the government must prove that the defendant knowingly made a false statement with respect to information that the law requires a federally licensed firearms dealer to keep. 6 On the videotape, the jury saw and heard a conversation between Mr. Howell and ATF agent Reichert in which they agreed that the Anaconda revolver would not fit in Mrs. Howell’s hand, that she had no interest in guns, and that she was there to present her FOID card. When the agent commented that he did not think Mrs. Howell was picking up the Anaconda for herself, neither defendant objected. The jury also heard on the tape Mrs. Howell’s explanation that she knew how to fill out an ATF form, and Mr. Howell’s statement that she had done it four times. 7 The ATF form which she signed gave an explicit warning against “straw purchases” on the back of the form. On the back side of Form 4473 are two significant notices to the transferor (seller) and transferee (buyer). The first warns that the “sale or delivery of a firearm by a licensee to an eligible purchaser who is acting as an agent, intermediary or ‘straw purchaser’ for someone whom the licensee knows or has reasonable cause to believe is ineligible to purchase a firearm directly, may result in violation of the Federal firearms laws.” The second advises the transferee (buyer) to “be familiar with the provisions of law.”
The jury also had before it other evidence: Mrs. Howell’s signature on the invoices for the Anaconda and King Cobra that Mr. Howell had selected on March 22, 1992; her completed ATF form as purchaser of the King Cobra on May 2, 1992; and her name on the consignment invoice for sale of the Smith & Wesson. A jury could reasonably conclude from the evidence that Mr. Howell did all the decision-making when selecting the revolvers and handled all the negotiating when selling the Smith & Wesson to the undercover agent, and that Mrs. Howell did all the paperwork with her valid FOID card. In addition, State Trooper Hunt testified that Mrs. Howell had lied about her address, the number of times she had gone to Bob’s Sport Shop, and the number of gun receipts in her purse.
The essence of this case is that Mr. Howell could not have purchased firearms lawfully because he was a felon. Yet the evidence clearly showed that Mr. Howell had a keen interest in firearms, knew all about firearms, owned firearms (six, he told agent Reichert on the video), and that Mrs. Howell exhibited no interest in them. The jury was entitled to conclude, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Mrs. Howell was no more than a straw purchaser, “an eligible purchaser who is acting as an agent, intermediary, or ‘straw purchaser’ for someone” who is ineligible to purchase the firearm directly.
See United States v. Ortiz-Loya,
In sum, the evidence of record shows that Mrs. Howell was not involved in the selection of the revolver, could not have held the weapon she “purchased” in her hand because it was too large, was present to complete the paperwork after the decision of purchase was made, and did not take possession of the gun after the purchase. In addition, although Mrs. Howell had a valid FOID card, her husband, a felon who made it clear that the weapon was for his use, did not possess the needed card. A jury reasonably could find that the evidence proved that Mrs. Howell was the straw purchaser for her husband and that she lied by signing her name on the ATF Form as the “buyer” of the revolver.
See Lawrence,
B. Jury Instruction on the Howells’ Theory of Defense
At the jury instruction conference, Mr. and Mrs. Howell tendered several proposed instructions designed to present an “entrapment by estoppel” theory of defense. For example, the Howells’ proposed Instruction 8A stated: “Bob Tabordon’s acts and statements induced them to believe that they were authorized to purchase and possess guns on the basis of Mrs. Howell’s FOID card and her signature on the ATF 4473 form.” The defendants’ basic position was that Tabordon was an agent of the federal government by virtue of his federal firearms license.
The district court refused to give any of the instructions on this theory. The court was of the view that the defense was not warranted by the law or the facts of the case. Instead, the court instructed the jury that the defendants’ theory of the case was that they did not knowingly possess guns or falsify the ATF form: “It is George and Shanta’s theory in this case that the prosecution has failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt as to either defendant that they acted knowingly.” Tr. 527.
On appeal, the Howells claim that the court’s refusal to instruct the jury on this defense denied them the right to present a defense and to receive a fair trial. They point out that ATF Form 4473 states that the “transferor (seller) of a firearm is responsible for determining the lawfulness of the transfer and for keeping proper records of the transaction,” and argue that, under such a delegation of responsibility, a federal firearms licensee becomes an agent of the federal government authorized to determine the legality of a gun transfer. Because Ta-bordon often let George Howell handle the guns and never believed the guns were intended for Shanta Howell’s personal use, his certification of the purchases negated the alleged crimes themselves, claim the Howells. The defendants rely on two cases in which the defense of entrapment by estoppel was successful and the defendants’ firearms convictions reversed.
See United States v. Tallmadge,
The defendants are entitled to a theory of defense instruction if (1) they propose a correct statement of the law; (2) then-theory is supported by the evidence; (3) their theory is not part of the charge; and (4) the failure to include an instruction on defendants’ theory of defense would deny defendants a fair trial.
United States v. Elder,
In this case the one “entrapment by estop-pel” defense instruction that set forth the elements of that defense, Instruction 8A, stated that Tabordon was a federal official by virtue of his federal firearms license. The government submits that the instruction was an incorrect statement of the law because Tabordon was not a federal official.
Entrapment by estoppel, grounded in the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment, is a defense that is rarely available. In essence, it applies when, acting with actual or apparent authority, a government official affirmatively assures the defendant that certain conduct is legal and the defendant reasonably believes that official.
United States v. Austin,
The cases in the courts of appeals follow the approach of the Supreme Court. They require, in general terms, that the one misleading the defendant be an official of the state; that he actively mislead the defendant; and that the defendant’s reliance be actual and reasonable in light of the identity of the agent, the point of law represented, and the substance of the misrepresentation. 9
*1205
In
United States v. Tallmadge,
Clearly, the United States Government has made • licensed firearms dealers federal agents in connection with the gathering and dispensing of information on the purchase of firearms. Under these circumstances, we believe that a buyer has the right to rely on the representations of a licensed firearms dealer, who has been made aware of all the relevant historical facts, that a person may receive and possess a weapon if his felony conviction has been reduced to a misdemeanor.
Tallmadge,
a number of circuits have followed the dissent in Tallmadge,
10
These eases maintain that a licensed firearms dealer is not a government official for purposes of the entrapment by estoppel defense.
See, e.g., United States v. Billue,
We now turn to the ease before us'. As a threshold mátter, we conclude that Mr. and Mrs. Howell fail to demonstrate that there is a factual basis for the defense. The defendants never claimed that they received affirmative advice or information from Bob Ta-bordon that George Howell was legally permitted to possess a firearm. Indeed, they can point to no specific misleading statement on which they relied. The firearms dealer’s signature on part B of the ATF form, after Mrs. Howell had completed part A, does not constitute active misleading. Tabordon stated that he never gave any advice, and, in fact, never knew about George Howell’s prior felony conviction; it was Mr. Howell who misrepresented to Tabordon that he had a FOID card. Because Tabordon did not mis
*1206
lead the Howells concerning the legality of their conduct, they cannot claim that active misrepresentation lured them into buying the guns.
See Corso,
[I]f [the defendant’s] estoppel defense were permitted, it would allow convicted felons to withhold material facts from a federally licensed firearms dealer, elicit an erroneous response based on such nondisclosure, and then plead entrapment.
Billue,
Nor was there a legal predicate for the defense of entrapment by estoppel. In considering whether Tabordon ought to be characterized as a federal official or private dealer, we are not persuaded by Tallmadge and believe that the position of the Eleventh and Eighth Circuits, which is in accord with the Tallmadge dissent, is the more reasoned one. We hold that the gun dealer Bob Ta-bordon is a private individual; his license to sell firearms does not transform him into a government official.
We conclude that the Howells have failed to make a prima facie showing of entrapment by estoppel. Because the defendants provided neither a basis in law nor factual predicates from the evidence presented at trial for entrapment by estoppel, they were not entitled to an instruction on it as their theory of defense. The district court committed no error in rejecting the instruction.
See Scott,
C. Mr. Howell’s Armed Career Criminal Enhancement
George Howell’s final contentions concern the enhancement of his sentence under the Armed Career Criminal Act, 18 U.S.C. § 924(e). In an April 1983 state court bench trial conducted on stipulated facts, Mr. Howell was convicted of two simple burglaries of dwellings. On December 6,1983, Mr. Howell also pled guilty to two residential burglaries.
Alleging procedural irregularities, Mr. Howell first challenges the constitutionality of his prior burglary convictions.
11
No claim is made that he was denied the right to counsel with respect to any of these convictions. These claims therefore are precluded by the recent decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in
Custis v. United States,
— U.S. -,
Finally, Mr. Howell submits that his convictions for simple burglary cannot serve as a sufficient predicate for the enhancement permitted by § 924(e). Before sentencing, the district court reviewed Mr. Howell’s previous convictions. It noted that the first two convictions were reported as
burglaries,
and therefore there was a question as to whether those crimes could be used to enhance the sentence.
See
Memorandum Opinion,
Accordingly, the district court ordered the parties to supplement the record before sentencing.
See
Memorandum Opinion,
In its Memorandum Opinion of April 26, 1993, the district court held that Mr. Howell had burglarized a building as required by Taylor. In that memorandum, the district court, noting that the defendant had agreed to a stipulated trial and received probation, 12 stated that “the only evidence at trial, which was stipulated, involved burglary in a building or structure.” Tr. 146 at 9. To the extent that the district court referred to material other than the information, the instructions, and the certificate of conviction (which is the only evidence we have of the “amended charge” of simple burglary) to make its determination, it exceeded the permissible bounds of Taylor. Nevertheless, when the documents to which the district court was permitted to refer under Taylor are read as a whole, it is clear that the burglarized structure was a building. The certificate of conviction, which memorializes the amendment of the original information, does not describe anew the structure that was the scene of the crime. Reference back to the original information, however, makes it clear that it was a building.
Mr. Howell also submits that, even if it is clear that the burglaries involved buddings, it is not clear that he actually entered them. Although there is certainly sufficient circumstantial evidence of his entry, we need not pursue this matter. Taylor makes it clear our inquiry is limited to an examination of the record of conviction. We need not inquire into the particulars of proof or the state’s theory of the case.
Conclusion
For the reasons discussed above, the judgments of the district court are affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Illinois residents may not purchase guns without a FOID card issued by the state. However, as this court has noted, a convicted felon like George Howell may not own a firearm and is not eligible for a FOID card.
See United States v. Haddad,
. The ATF form requires a gun purchaser to certify that he has not been convicted previously of an offense punishable by a term of imprisonment greater than one year. George Howell had been convicted of four burglaries. His FOID card had been revoked on August 4, 1983, four months after his conviction for the first two burglaries. Tr. 260; O.R. 146 at 2.
.See infra note 5 (text of the ATF form certification provision).
. Although § 924(a)(1)(A) appears in a section of the Code entitled "Penalties,” there are numerous unpublished appellate decisions treating this section as establishing a substantive offense. Indeed, there are no decisions, published or unpublished, that squarely address the issue. As far as we can tell, no defendant, including the present one, has ever questioned directly the section's status as an offense independent from 18 U.S.C. § 922(a)(6).
Cf. United States v. Sherbondy,
. The Firearm Transaction Record, ATF Form 4473, requires the “transferee (buyer)” to certify the following questions with a "yes” or a “no" answer:
(a) Are you under indictment or information* in any court for a crime punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one year? *A formal accusation of a crime made by a prosecuting attorney, as distinguished from an indictment presented by a grand jury.
(b) Have you been convicted in any court of a crime punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one year? (NOTE: A “yes” answer is necessary if the judge could have given a sentence of more than one year. A “yes” answer is not required if you have been pardoned for the crime or the conviction has been expunged or set aside, or you have had your civil rights restored and, under the law where the conviction occurred, you are not prohibited from receiving or possessing any firearm.)
(c) Are you a fugitive from justice?
(d) Are you an unlawful user of, or addicted to, marijuana, or any depressant, stimulant, or narcotic drug, or any other controlled substance?
(e) Have you ever been adjudicated mentally defective or have you ever been committed to a mental institution?
(f) Have you been discharged from the Armed Forces under dishonorable conditions?
(g) Are you an alien illegally in the United States?
(h) Are you a person who, having been a citizen of the United States, has renounced his/her citizenship?
The form states that “[a]n untruthful answer may subject you to criminal prosecution.” At the end of the questions the form requires a signature of the transferee (buyer) below this statement:
I hereby certify that the answers to the above are true and correct. I understand that a person who answers "Yes” to any of the above questions is prohibited from purchasing and/or possessing a firearm, except as otherwise provided by Federal láw. I also understand that the making of any false oral or written statement or the exhibiting of any false or misrepresented identification with respect to this transaction is a. crime punishable as a felony.
Mrs. Howell signed the form “Shanta Armand” in the box labeled “Transferee's (Buyer’s) Signature-Execute at Time of Actual Transfer of Firearm(s)” and dated it 7-13-92.
Below her signature, in Section B, Robert Ta-bordon, "transferor (seller)” of the firearm, recorded the following information: Mrs. Howell’s FOID number, another identification number, a description of the Anaconda revolver purchased, Tabordon's coiporate name and Federal firearms license number, and his dated signature.
.
Cf. United States v. Petitjean,
.
Cf. United States v. Straach,
. Mrs. Howell also submits that the firearms dealer, Bob Tabordon, knew that the real buyer was her husband, and that his conduct therefore vitiates her own liability for misrepresenting herself as the true purchaser of the Anaconda. As we discuss at length in the following section of this opinion, the defense of estoppel is not available to Mrs. Howell.
.
See, e.g., United States v. Troncoso,
. Even in the Ninth Circuit, a different panel of the circuit court questioned the
Tallmadge
decision: "Whatever our disagreements may be with the court's ruling in
Tallmadge, see, e.g.,
at 775-82 (Kozinski, J., dissenting), it is the law of the Circuit and we are bound to follow it.”
United States
v.
Clegg,
. Mr. Howell asserted (1) that his decision to raise no defense at a bench trial was tantamount to a guilty plea, for which he was entitled to all the procedural protection afforded individuals who plead guilty; (2) that he was not informed of his privilege against self-incrimination or of the right to confront his accusers; (3) that, although the record reflects that Mr. Howell surrendered these privileges by stipulating to the evidence, he did not knowingly relinquish these rights; (4) that his guilty plea was not knowing and voluntary, for he was not mentally competent to enter the plea.
. In a memorandum submitted to the district court, the defendant acknowledged that the disposition of his case had been the subject of an agreement and that he was aware of the disposition before the proceeding.
