These three defendants were convicted of robbing an armored car outside a Chicago bank. They shot a guard three times at point-blank range (thankfully, he survived) and made off with $400,000 in cash. One of them, Willie Watson, pleaded guilty to aiding and abetting Hobbs Act robbery, 18 U.S.C. §§ 1951, 1952; the other two, brothers Anthony and Tracy Redmond, went to trial and were found guilty of Hobbs Act robbery, conspiracy to commit the same, and using a firearm during and in relation to the robbery, id. § 924(c). On appeal Tracy Redmond argues that evidence was improperly admitted in violation of Federal Rule of Evidence 804(d)(3) and the Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment, and Anthony Redmond argues that the indictment listed an impermissible theory of federal jurisdiction, tainting the jury’s verdict. The district court did not abuse its discretion in admitting the evidence, and even if it did, any error is harmless; and the chances of the indictment influencing the jury are negligible. We therefore affirm the judgment of the district court.
I. Background
According to the government’s evidence at trial, Tracy Redmond actually committed the robbery and shot the guard, while Watson was the driver and Anthony rode along. After the robbery, the three drove away in their stolen van and switched to a different car to avoid detection; Anthony drove that car. But they weren’t as smooth in their post-robbery execution as they were in their pre-robbery planning. Anthony left a cigarette butt in the van as well as a soda can containing his saliva. Police later used these to link him to the robbery. Moreover, in the days following the heist, the defendants splurged. Tracy bought himself two cars and made $9000 in improvements to them, and Anthony bought a car of his own.
A fourth person — an insider — facilitated the robbery, and her apprehension by police officers led to the gang’s downfall. Estella Suttle, who is not a party to this appeal, was a teller at the bank that had hired the armored car. Among other things, she told the defendants about the bank’s security camera system. But after the robbery, she boasted to the wrong guy — an FBI informant. Suttle was arrested and agreed to cooperate with the authorities; she ultimately pled guilty herself. Officers concocted a ruse, directing Suttle to call Anthony (whom she was dating) and tell him, falsely, that she had seen a news report that “they identified the shooter.” Anthony did not express surprise or ask which crime she was referring to, and after their brief call he called Tracy. That call was not recorded. Later that night, Anthony visited Suttle and, as the FBI recorders rolled, the two had a wide-ranging conversation. Anthony said that he had spoken to Tracy, and that the *586 two believed the news report to be a plant by the bank in order to fluster the culprits. Anthony said that Tracy’s face had been too well concealed for an identification: “I think it was just kinda a bit impossible for them to, like identify him ... because ... the whole face was covered ... his hair was up in his hat, he had his hat up over his face.” Anthony then made a statement that was eventually used as evidence of Tracy’s involvement:
I don’t know what’s going on but I mean, you know like when I told Dough [Tracy] he was like no they can’t identify me. Period. You know, so I don’t know. You know but I told him, I said look, I don’t know, I’m telling you what she told me, so be careful, be alert, watch your back, you know all that, you know cause you just never know.... I mean, a bank robber, come on man.... They identify you? They’re gonna come get you, period.
At trial, both Suttle and Watson testified for the government. The Redmond brothers were found guilty and sentenced to 256 months’ imprisonment (Tracy) and 190 months’ imprisonment (Anthony). Watson and the Redmonds then appealed.
II. Analysis
We address Tracy Redmond’s arguments first, and then turn to those raised by the other defendants.
A. Tracy Redmond
The principal argument on appeal is Tracy Redmond’s challenge to the admission of Anthony Redmond’s statement discussed above. When Anthony went to visit co-schemer Suttle in response to her (false) assertion that she had seen a news report in which police boasted they had identified the gunman, Anthony said some things that were ultimately used to tie Tracy to the robbery. Anthony told Suttle that Tracy said that he (Tracy) could not possibly have been identified because he had worn a mask during the robbery. Tracy challenges the admission of this evidence under both Federal Rule of Evidence 804(b)(3) and the Confrontation Clause. We review the former argument for an abuse of discretion,
United States v. hoggins,
1. Admission of the evidence did not violate Rule 804(b)(3)
Hearsay evidence like Anthony’s surreptitiously recorded, out-of-court statement is generally inadmissible because it is not sworn testimony, its admission prevents juries from evaluating the speaker’s credibility, and the opposing party cannot cross-examine the speaker.
See
Fed.R.Evid. 802;
Williamson v. United States,
A statement which was at the time of its making so far contrary to the declarant’s pecuniary or proprietary interest, or so far tended to subject the declarant to civil or cñminal liability, or to render invalid a claim by the declarant against another, that a reasonable person in the *587 declarant’s position would not have made the statement unless believing it to be true.
(Emphasis added). In evaluating a district court’s decision to admit evidence under this rule, courts look at three factors: whether (1) the declarant is unavailable to testify at trial; (2) the statement was against the declarant’s penal interest; and (3) the circumstances suggest that the statement is trustworthy.
United States v. Leahy,
Tracy concedes that Anthony was “unavailable” under factor one because Anthony chose not to take the stand. But Tracy argues under factor two that Anthony’s statement — while concededly bad for Tracy — was not against
Anthony’s
interest when made. Tracy points out that under
Williamson,
our inquiry must be confined to the admissibility of a particular statement; we cannot simply admit all neutral statements that precede or follow a statement that is truly against the declarant’s interest.
See also United States v. Bonty,
The district court did not abuse its discretion in concluding that Anthony’s statement was against his penal interest. The paragraph that Tracy challenges does not make sense in a vacuum. Take, for instance, this phrase: “when I told Dough [Tracy] he was like no they can’t identify me.” Anthony had just (falsely) heard that the police claimed to have identified the shooter in the armored car robbery, and he immediately called Tracy to tell him the same. Thus, “when I told Dough” means, “when I told Tracy that a news report said that the police had identified the shooter in the armored car robbery.” While it may be technically possible that Tracy and Anthony just like to listen to the crime blotter and excitedly update each other about unsolved area robberies, in context, Anthony was indicating his inside awareness of the robbery and expressing concern that he and the crew might have reason to fear detection. Similarly, when Anthony said that he had told Tracy, “so be careful, be alert, watch your back, you know all that, you know cause you just never know,” in context, this can only mean, “be careful because the police may be on to you as a perpetrator of the robbery.” “Be careful” could theoretically be read as an innocent friend’s statement of concern for a guilty friend, but in context, Anthony was saying, “hey, don’t get caught because I don’t want to get caught.”
These statements do indeed expose Anthony to criminal liability as a member of the conspiracy. As we noted in
United States v. Westmoreland,
Tracy also argues that even if Anthony’s statement to Suttle was against Anthony’s penal interest, the circumstances render the statement untrustworthy. Anthony had gone to talk to Suttle about the news report, and, Tracy emphasizes, Anthony was downplaying to Suttle his own role in the robbery. Suttle was promised $20,000 for giving the crew inside information about the armored car, but instead she only got a few thousand. According to Tracy, Anthony was minimizing his own role in the crime so that he could avoid blame for giving Suttle such a meager cut — “it was Tracy’s show,” Anthony might have said to Suttle, “so Tracy stiffed you, not me.” This argument does give us some pause. After all, one of the key situations in which a co-defendant’s statement against interest is unreliable hearsay is when the co-defendant is shifting blame away from himself and onto another.
See Varela v. United States,
We need not pursue this issue further, for any error in admitting Anthony’s statement as evidence against Tracy was harmless.
See Westmoreland,
2. Admission of the evidence did not violate the Confrontation Clause
Notwithstanding Rule 804(b)(3), Tracy contends that admitting Anthony’s statement violated his Sixth Amendment right to confront an adverse witness. In
Crawford v. Washington,
Anthony’s private statement to a confederate, which was secretly recorded, does not fit into any of
Crawford’s
broad categories of testimonial evidence. It certainly was not made to the police in an interrogation, which is the classic type of testimonial evidence the Sixth Amendment seeks to limit.
Id.
at 68,
3. Tracy’s sentence was reasonable
Tracy also challenges his sentence, but his arguments are unpersuasive and do not require much analysis. He contends that the district court clearly erred in imposing a two-point enhancement for being an “organizer, leader, manager, or supervisor,” U.S.S.G. § 3B1.1(c), arguing that Suttle was actually in charge. But the district court permissibly credited testimony that Tracy planned the robbery and pressed Suttle for insider details about the bank; brought Watson into the conspiracy; took the largest chunk of the proceeds for himself and decided how the rest should be apportioned; and actually committed the robbery and shot the guard. All of these factors support the district court’s decision.
Id.
cmt. n. 4;
United States v. Johnson,
*590 B. Anthony Redmond
Anthony contends that the indictment offered two theories for satisfying the jurisdictional element of the Hobbs Act, and that one of those theories was legally invalid. The indictment first mentioned a “depletion of assets” theory of federal jurisdiction—that by stealing from the armored truck company, which customarily purchases items in interstate commerce, the defendants “limit[ed] the victim-enterprise’s potential as a purchaser of goods.”
See United States v. Re,
When an indictment offers two theories of liability and a jury returns a general verdict that does not say under which theory it convicted, the conviction can be imperiled. If the evidence would only support one theory or the other, the jury is presumed to have gone with the better-supported theory, and the conviction stands. But we cannot so credit the jury if one of the theories is
legally
insufficient—if, for instance, the behavior under that theory does not constitute a crime.
See Tenner v. Gilmore,
Here, the government’s second “theory” of jurisdiction—that the money the defendants stole traveled in interstate commerce—is indeed legally insufficient, for if cash could serve as the jurisdictional hook,
any
robbery would be a federal crime under the Hobbs Act.
See United States v. Peterson,
C. Watson’s and Anthony’s restitution argument
Finally, Anthony and Watson contend that the district court erred by neglecting to set out a schedule of restitution pay-
*591
merits. They concede that the district court properly ordered them to pay $400,000 in restitution, but argue that by simply saying that the payments must begin immediately, rather than giving a schedule of payments, the district court impermissibly delegated a core judicial duty. But they did not raise this contention below, and our decision in
United States v. Sawyer,
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we Affirm the defendants’ convictions and sentences.
Notes
. The government contends that in the district court, Tracy did not challenge tire admissibility of Anthony’s statement under Rule 804(b)(3), and that our review should be for plain error only. The government is incorrect: Tracy made this argument at record entry 104.
. Anthony Redmond does not directly challenge his sentence, but he contends that af
*590
fording a presumption of reasonableness to a sentence within the applicable Guidelines range is inconsistent with
United States v. Booker,
. Tracy and Anthony also contend that under the Constitution, Hobbs Act robbery must
*591
have a substantial impact on interstate commerce. Neither develops the argument, so it is waived; and in any event it is a perennial loser.
See United States v. Griffin,
