                  Case: 17-10172        Date Filed: 10/04/2018       Page: 1 of 153


                                                                                       [PUBLISH]

                     IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

                               FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
                                 ________________________

                                        No. 17-10172
                                  ________________________

          D.C. Docket Nos. 1:16-cv-02392-TWT; 1:10-cr-00305-TWT-RVG-1



IRMA OVALLES,

                                                                        Petitioner - Appellant,

                                                versus

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

                                                                        Respondent - Appellee.

                                  ________________________

                         Appeal from the United States District Court
                            for the Northern District of Georgia
                               ________________________

                                         (October 4, 2018)

Before ED CARNES, Chief Judge, TJOFLAT, MARCUS, WILSON, WILLIAM
PRYOR, MARTIN, JORDAN, ROSENBAUM, JILL PRYOR, NEWSOM,
BRANCH, and HULL, * Circuit Judges.

NEWSOM, Circuit Judge:

*
    Senior Circuit Judge Hull elected to participate in this decision, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 46(c).
             Case: 17-10172     Date Filed: 10/04/2018   Page: 2 of 153


      The question before us is whether one of the key provisions of an important

federal criminal statute, 18 U.S.C. § 924(c), is unconstitutionally vague. As

relevant to our purposes, § 924(c) makes it a federal offense—punishable by a term

of imprisonment ranging from five years to life—for any person to use, carry, or

possess a firearm in connection with a “crime of violence.” 18 U.S.C.

§ 924(c)(1)(A). The provision challenged here—§ 924(c)(3)’s “residual clause”—

defines the term “crime of violence” to mean a felony “that by its nature, involves

a substantial risk that physical force against the person or property of another may

be used in the course of committing the offense.” Id. § 924(c)(3)(B).

      This case is in some respects a successor to Johnson v. United States, 135 S.

Ct. 2551 (2015), and Sessions v. Dimaya, 138 S. Ct. 1204 (2018), in which the

Supreme Court invalidated similarly-worded residual clauses on vagueness

grounds. In the wake of those decisions, all here seem to agree that if § 924(c)(3)’s

residual clause is interpreted to require determination of the crime-of-violence

issue using what (in court-speak) has come be called the “categorical approach,”

the clause is doomed. As the Supreme Court has explained and applied it, this

categorical approach—which the provisions at issue in both Johnson and Dimaya

were deemed to embody—does not permit consideration of a defendant’s specific

conduct or how she “might have committed [her crime] on a particular occasion,”

but rather focuses exclusively on “how the law defines the offense” as a formal


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matter and whether, in the abstract, “the kind of conduct that the crime involves in

the ordinary case” meets the statutory standard. Johnson, 135 S. Ct. at 2557

(internal quotation marks and citation omitted). In both Johnson and Dimaya, the

Court concluded that application of a standard that requires a reviewing court “to

‘imagine’ an ‘idealized ordinary case of the crime’” rendered the challenged

clauses impermissibly vague. Dimaya, 138 S. Ct. at 1214 (quoting Johnson, 135 S.

Ct. at 2557–58).

      On the flip side, Johnson and Dimaya also make clear—and it is common

ground here—that if § 924(c)(3)’s residual clause is instead interpreted to

incorporate what we’ll call a “conduct-based approach” to the crime-of-violence

determination, then the provision is not unconstitutionally vague. As its name

suggests, the conduct-based approach, in stark contrast to the categorical, focuses

not on formal legal definitions and hypothetical “ordinary case[s],” but rather on

the real-world facts of the defendant’s offense—i.e., how the defendant actually

went about committing the crime in question. And as the Supreme Court

emphasized in Johnson—and then reiterated in Dimaya—there is no reason to

“doubt the constitutionality of laws that call for the application of a qualitative

standard such as ‘substantial risk’ to real-world conduct.” Johnson, 135 S. Ct. at

2561 (quoted in Dimaya, 138 S. Ct. at 1214).

      The obvious (and decisive) question, then: Which is it here—categorical or


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conduct-based? Because we find ourselves at this fork in the interpretive road—

the categorical approach imperiling § 924(c)(3)’s residual clause, a conduct-based

reading saving it—we invoke the canon of “constitutional doubt.” Pursuant to that

“elementary rule,” the Supreme Court has long held, “every reasonable

construction must be resorted to in order to save a statute from

unconstitutionality.” Hooper v. California, 155 U.S. 648, 657 (1895). The pivotal

issue, therefore, is not whether § 924(c)(3)’s residual clause is necessarily, or even

best, read to incorporate a conduct-based interpretation—but simply whether it can

“reasonabl[y],” see id., “plausibl[y],” Clark v. Martinez, 543 U.S. 371, 381 (2005),

or “fairly possibl[y],” I.N.S. v. St. Cyr, 533 U.S. 289, 300 (2001), be so understood.

Joining the Second Circuit, which recently came to the same conclusion, see

United States v. Barrett, __ F.3d ___, 2018 WL 4288566 (2d Cir. Sept. 10, 2018),

we find that § 924(c)(3)(B) can be read to embody the conduct-based approach—

and therefore, under the constitutional-doubt canon, that it must be.

      Accordingly, we hold that § 924(c)(3)(B) prescribes a conduct-based

approach, pursuant to which the crime-of-violence determination should be made

by reference to the actual facts and circumstances underlying a defendant’s

offense. To the extent that our earlier decision in United States v. McGuire, 706

F.3d 1333 (11th Cir. 2013), holds otherwise, it is overruled.




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                                               I

                                              A

       Under 18 U.S.C. § 924(c), “any person who, during and in relation to any

crime of violence . . . uses or carries a firearm, or who, in furtherance of any such

crime, possesses a firearm” is guilty of a federal offense and subject to a prison

term ranging between five years and life. 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(A). Section

924(c) defines the term “crime of violence” as “an offense that is a felony” and—

       (A) has as an element the use, attempted use, or threatened use of
       physical force against the person or property of another, or
       (B) that by its nature, involves a substantial risk that physical force
       against the person or property of another may be used in the course of
       committing the offense.

Id. § 924(c)(3). For ease of reference—and as a way of facilitating comparisons

with other similar statutes—we’ll call Subsection (3)(A) the “elements clause” and

Subsection (3)(B) the “residual clause.”1

       Importantly here, this Court held in United States v. McGuire that the

question whether a predicate offense qualifies as a “crime of violence” under either

subsection is one that a court “must answer ‘categorically’—that is, by reference to

the elements of the offense, and not the actual facts of [the defendant’s] conduct.”

1
  We have at times referred to these as the “use-of-force” and “risk-of-force” clauses,
respectively. See Ovalles v. United States, 861 F.3d 1257, 1263 (11th Cir. 2017), reh’g en banc
granted, opinion vacated, 889 F.3d 1259 (11th Cir. 2018). The terminological distinction makes
no substantive difference.


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706 F.3d 1333, 1336 (11th Cir. 2013) (citation omitted).

                                          B

      In 2010, Irma Ovalles was charged by information with six robbery- and

carjacking-related offenses, all of which arose out of what can only be described as

a three-day crime binge. As particularly relevant here, Ovalles was charged with

(1) attempted carjacking in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2119 and (2) using and

carrying a firearm during a “crime of violence”—the attempted carjacking—in

violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(A). Ovalles entered into a written plea

agreement in which she admitted that “she [was] in fact guilty” on all six counts.

At her plea hearing, the government outlined the elements of each crime, and

Ovalles explained that she understood what the government would have to prove

should she opt to go to trial.

      The government then made a comprehensive factual proffer detailing

Ovalles’s involvement in the crimes. In general, the proffer summarized the

evidence demonstrating that Ovalles and her co-conspirators (1) robbed a grocery

store while armed with baseball bats, then (2) still wielding the bats, carjacked a

Dodge Ram, then (3) carjacked a Toyota 4-Runner, pistol-whipping its owner, then

(4) attempted to carjack a Chevy Venture—more on this one below—and finally

(5) carjacked a Ford F-150 at gunpoint. More specifically, concerning the

attempted carjacking of the Chevy Venture—during which one of Ovalles’s


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accomplices fired an AK-47, and which therefore serves as the predicate offense

for Ovalles’s § 924(c) conviction—the government’s proffer explained as follows:

            They see a family getting out of a Chevy Venture in Clayton
      County, Georgia, and as the family is getting out of their car, these
      two defendants along with their co-conspirators go up to the family
      and demand the keys to the car and demand the car. Now, they have a
      baseball bat and guns with them. There’s a juvenile, a 13-year-old
      female, who is part of that family group of victims. They hit that
      juvenile in the mouth with a baseball bat. The damage to her I am
      sure will be addressed at sentencing. It was not—she did not go to the
      hospital. Let me say that.

            They are demanding the keys. Somebody comes out of the
      apartment complex where this is happening and that person has a gun.
      He then confronts the assailants …. They flee, not taking the Chevy
      Venture, which is why it is an attempted carjacking.

             The government would show that the Chevy Venture traveled
      in interstate commerce, that it was not made in the State of Georgia.
      The government would prove it was these defendants not only through
      their confessions as to this event, also through the victims’ testimony.
      They do I.D. the defendants in this particular case.

             On the way out of the apartment complex … co-conspirator …
      Jerry Arriaga … has an AK-47 style assault rifle and he then
      discharges that gun several times towards the victim family, the guy
      who came to rescue them, who was armed, and the car, and that is the
      basis of Count Five, the use of a firearm during and in relation to a
      crime of violence.

      With respect to each of the charges—including, as relevant here, the

attempted-carjacking and § 924(c) counts—Ovalles stated that she had no

“material disagreement with what the government sa[id] it could prove . . . .”

Having heard the government’s summary of the evidence against her, Ovalles


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pleaded guilty to each of the charged offenses, acknowledged that her pleas were

voluntary, and explained that she was so pleading because she was “in fact guilty

as charged in the criminal information.”

      The district court thereafter sentenced Ovalles to serve 120 months in prison

on the § 924(c) count—which, per the statute, the court imposed to run

consecutively to the concurrent 108-month terms on the remaining charges.

Ovalles did not object to her sentences, nor did she file a direct appeal.

                                           C

      Several years later, Ovalles filed a motion for relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2255

contending that her § 924(c) conviction and sentence were unconstitutional in light

of the Supreme Court’s intervening decision in Johnson v. United States, 135 S. Ct.

2551 (2015). In short, the Court in Johnson invalidated as unconstitutionally

vague the Armed Career Criminal Act’s residual clause—which, for purposes of

applying that statute’s recidivism-based sentence enhancement, defines the term

“violent felony” to include any crime that is punishable by a year in prison and that

“involves conduct that presents a serious potential risk of physical injury to

another.” 18 U.S.C. § 924(e)(2)(B)(ii). The Court voided the ACCA’s residual

clause principally based on its conclusion that the provision necessitated the

categorical approach to determining whether an underlying conviction constitutes a

“violent felony.” See Johnson, 135 S. Ct. at 2557–58, 2561–63. Ovalles asserted


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that because § 924(c)(3)’s residual clause is “nearly identical to” the ACCA’s,

Johnson’s reasoning rendered it unconstitutional, as well. Accordingly, she

argued, she was “no longer guilty of violating” § 924(c) because her predicate

attempted-carjacking offense “no longer qualifie[d] as a crime of violence under §

924(c)(3)(B).”

      The district court denied Ovalles’s § 2255 motion, reasoning that

§ 924(c)(3)’s residual clause did “not suffer from the same unpredictability” as the

ACCA’s. The court subsequently granted Ovalles a certificate of appealability on

the question whether § 924(c)(3)(B) is unconstitutionally vague under Johnson.

      A panel of this Court affirmed the district court’s decision. For our

purposes, the panel’s opinion did two significant things. First, in accordance with

(and citing to) our earlier decision in McGuire, it held that the question whether

Ovalles’s attempting-carjacking offense constitutes a “crime of violence” within

the meaning of § 924(c)(3) had to be answered using the categorical approach. See

Ovalles v. United States, 861 F.3d 1257, 1268–69 (11th Cir. 2017), reh’g en banc

granted, opinion vacated, 889 F.3d 1259 (11th Cir. 2018). Second, though—and

notwithstanding its application of the categorical approach—the panel held that

Johnson did not invalidate § 924(c)(3)’s residual clause because, it said, the

definition of “crime of violence” in § 924(c)(3)(B) is clearer than the definition of

“violent felony” in the ACCA. Id. at 1265–66. In particular, the panel emphasized


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(1) that § 924(c)(3)’s residual clause refers not (as does the ACCA’s) to the risk of

“physical injury,” but rather to the risk of “physical force,” which it thought was

more precise; (2) that § 924(c)(3)(B)’s inclusion of the qualifying phrase “in the

course of committing the offense”—which is absent from the ACCA—narrows the

statute’s reach; and (3) that § 924(c)(3)’s residual clause isn’t plagued (and

confused, as is the ACCA’s) by linkage to a disjointed hodgepodge of enumerated

offenses. Id. at 1266.2

       Not long after the panel issued its opinion, the Supreme Court decided

Sessions v. Dimaya, 138 S. Ct. 1204 (2018). There, following Johnson, the Court

struck down 18 U.S.C. § 16’s residual clause (at least as that clause is incorporated

by a provision of the Immigration and Nationality Act prescribing the bases on

which aliens may be rendered removable). Section 16’s residual clause is similar

to the clause invalided in Johnson and essentially identical to § 924(c)(3)’s residual

clause at issue here. Once again applying the categorical approach―there, to

determining whether an alien’s prior conviction qualified as a “crime of

violence”—the Court concluded that § 16’s residual clause is unconstitutionally

vague under the reasoning of Johnson. Dimaya, 138 S. Ct. at 1214–15. Notably,

in the course of its opinion, the Dimaya Court rejected, with respect to § 16(b),

2
 The panel separately held that Ovalles’s attempted-carjacking offense qualifies as a “crime of
violence” under the elements clause, see 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(3)(A). Ovalles, 861 F.3d at 1267–
69. That holding is not before the en banc Court.


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many of the same textual arguments that the panel decision in this case had

embraced as bases for distinguishing § 924(c)(3)’s residual clause from the

ACCA’s. See id. at 1218–21.

       In light of the Supreme Court’s decision in Dimaya, we vacated the panel’s

opinion and took this case en banc to determine (1) whether 18 U.S.C.

§ 924(c)(3)’s residual clause is unconstitutionally vague under Dimaya and (2)

whether we should overrule McGuire to the extent that it requires a categorical

approach to determining whether an offense constitutes a “crime of violence”

within the meaning of § 924(c)(3)(B).3

                                              II

       At the outset, some table-setting is in order. How exactly did we get here?

Why did the Supreme Court conclude in both Johnson and Dimaya that the

residual clauses before it were unconstitutionally vague, and what do the decisions

in those cases tell us about § 924(c)(3)’s own residual clause? Here’s how—and

why, and what.

                                              A

       We begin with a deeper dive into Johnson. As already explained briefly,

Johnson involved the ACCA, which prescribes a mandatory minimum 15-year


3
 In a 28 U.S.C. § 2255 proceeding—as always—we review questions of law, like those
presented here, de novo. Devine v. United States, 520 F.3d 1286, 1287 (11th Cir. 2008).


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sentence for any person who already “has three previous convictions . . . for a

violent felony . . . committed on occasions different from one another.” 18 U.S.C.

§ 924(e)(1). The ACCA goes on to define the term “violent felony” to mean any

crime punishable by a term of imprisonment exceeding one year that—

      (i) has as an element the use, attempted use, or threatened use of
      physical force against the person of another; or
      (ii) is burglary, arson, or extortion, involves use of explosives, or
      otherwise involves conduct that presents a serious potential risk of
      physical injury to another[.]


18 U.S.C. § 924(e)(2)(B). Subsection (B)(i) of the ACCA’s definitional provision

is called (as we have called § 924(c)’s parallel provision) the “elements clause,”

while Subsection (B)(ii) contains both the “enumerated-offenses clause” and

separately (and again like § 924(c)’s catch-all) the “residual clause.” Beeman v.

United States, 871 F.3d 1215, 1218 (11th Cir. 2017).

      In striking down the ACCA’s residual clause as unconstitutionally vague,

the Supreme Court in Johnson emphasized “[t]wo features.” 135 S. Ct. at 2557.

For one thing, the Court pointed to the statute’s hazy “serious potential risk”

standard, which it said “leaves uncertainty about how much risk it takes for a crime

to qualify as a violent felony.” Id. at 2558. Far more problematic, the Court

explained, was the fact that the ACCA’s residual clause had long been construed to

incorporate the categorical approach—which, the Court observed, entails a

“speculative,” “idealized” analysis that “ties the judicial assessment of risk to a
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judicially imagined ‘ordinary case’ of a crime, not to real-world facts or statutory

elements,” and thus “leaves grave uncertainty about how to estimate the risk posed

by a crime.” Id. at 2557–58. Indeed, the Court made clear that application of the

categorical approach was the hinge on which its vagueness determination turned:

“It is one thing,” the Court stressed, “to apply an imprecise ‘serious potential risk’

standard to real-world facts; it is quite another to apply it to a judge-imagined

abstraction” of the sort required by the categorical approach. Id. at 2558.

Continuing in the same vein, the Court reiterated that “[a]s a general matter, we do

not doubt the constitutionality of laws that call for the application of a qualitative

standard such as ‘substantial risk’ to real-world conduct.” Id. at 2561. But, the

Court held, the categorical approach’s focus on the “idealized ordinary case”

requires an “abstract inquiry” that “offers significantly less predictability than one

that deals with” actual facts. Id. (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).

                                           B

      Next, Dimaya. There, the Court considered a provision of the INA that

renders an alien removable if he is “convicted of an aggravated felony at any time

after admission.” 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(2)(A)(iii). The INA goes on to define the

term “aggravated felony” to include, by statutory cross-reference, “a crime of

violence (as defined in section 16 of Title 18[)].” Id. § 1101(a)(43)(F). Section

16’s definition of “crime of violence,” in turn, reads a lot like the ACCA’s


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definition of “violent felony” at issue in Johnson:

      (a) an offense that has as an element the use, attempted use, or
      threatened use of physical force against the person or property of
      another, or
      (b) any other offense that is a felony and that, by its nature, involves a
      substantial risk that physical force against the person or property of
      another may be used in the course of committing the offense.

18 U.S.C. § 16. Subsection (a) is commonly called (you guessed it) the “elements

clause” and Subsection (b) the “residual clause.” Dimaya, 138 S. Ct. at 1211.

      In Dimaya, the Supreme Court voided § 16’s residual clause (again, as

incorporated in the INA) as unconstitutionally vague, concluding that it shared the

two features that had doomed the ACCA’s residual clause in Johnson―namely,

(1) a fuzzy “substantial risk” standard and (2) incorporation of the categorical

approach to determining the violence of the underlying crime. Id. at 1213–14.

Significantly, though, just as in Johnson, the Dimaya Court stressed that § 16(b)’s

vagueness problem resulted principally from the categorical approach: “The

[Johnson] Court emphasized that [the ‘serious potential risk’ standard] alone

would not have violated the void-for-vagueness doctrine: Many perfectly

constitutional statutes use imprecise terms like ‘serious potential risk’ (as in

ACCA’s residual clause) or ‘substantial risk’ (as in § 16’s). The problem came

from layering such a standard on top of the requisite ‘ordinary case’ inquiry”

required by the categorical approach. Id. at 1214 (citing Johnson, 135 S. Ct. at


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2561). As Justice Thomas summarized in his dissent—without pushback—“[t]he

sole reason that the Court deem[ed] § 16(b) unconstitutionally vague is because it

read[] the statute as incorporating the categorical approach,” without which “the

Court ‘d[id] not doubt’ the constitutionality of § 16(b).” Id. at 1252 (Thomas, J.,

dissenting).

      An important caveat about Dimaya’s application of the categorical approach

to invalidate § 16’s residual clause: Only a plurality of the Court concluded that the

statute actually requires the categorical approach. Justice Gorsuch, who provided

the decisive fifth vote, concurred separately on the assumption—but not a

determination—that § 16(b) incorporates the categorical approach. Id. at 1232

(Gorsuch, J., concurring in part and concurring in the judgment) (stating that he

was “proceed[ing] on the premise” that the categorical approach applied). Justice

Gorsuch emphasized that he “remain[s] open to different arguments about

[Supreme Court] precedent and the proper reading of language like” that found in

§ 16(b), and that he “would address them in another case, whether involving the

INA or a different statute, where the parties have a chance to be heard and we

might benefit from their learning.” Id. at 1233.

                                          C

      So what do Johnson and Dimaya portend for § 924(c), which again, as

relevant here, makes it a federal offense to use, carry, or possess a firearm in


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connection with a “crime of violence”―which again, as relevant here, means a

felony offense that “by its nature, involves a substantial risk that physical force …

may be used in the course of committing the offense,” 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(3)(B)?

      Allow us first to state the obvious: Section 924(c)(3)’s residual clause is

identical—in every jot and tittle—to § 16’s, which the Supreme Court struck down

in Dimaya. Next, the less obvious but no less true: While the panel decision in this

case offered several distinctions between § 924(c)(3)’s residual clause and the

ACCA’s—which at the time had recently been invalidated in Johnson—the

Supreme Court’s intervening decision in Dimaya (in a portion of the opinion

joined by a majority of the justices) demolished all of them. As already noted, the

panel first emphasized that § 924(c)(3)’s residual clause refers not to the risk of

“physical injury” but to the risk of “physical force,” which it said was “much more

definite.” 861 F.3d at 1263. When the government asserted the same injury-force

distinction in seeking to save § 16(b) in Dimaya, the Court flatly rejected it,

holding that “this variance in wording cannot make ACCA’s residual clause vague

and § 16(b) not.” 138 S. Ct. at 1221. Second, the panel thought that

§ 924(c)(3)(B)’s inclusion of the qualifying phrase “in the course of committing

the offense”—which is missing from the ACCA—narrowed the statute’s reach.

861 F.3d at 1266. Wrong, said the Dimaya Court in addressing the identical

argument aimed at § 16’s residual clause: “Th[at] phrase . . . cannot cure the


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statutory indeterminacy Johnson described.” 138 S. Ct. at 1220. Finally, the panel

reasoned that § 924(c)(3)’s residual clause was clearer, in a constitutional sense,

because it wasn’t linked, as was the ACCA’s, to a “confusing list” of enumerated

offenses. 861 F.3d at 1266. Wrong again, Dimaya held with respect to § 16,

which likewise lacks an enumerated-offenses clause: Even if one “[s]trip[s] away

the enumerated crimes,” the Court said, “textual indeterminacy” remains. 138 S.

Ct. at 1221. In short, in the course of rebuffing the government’s attempts to

distinguish § 16’s residual clause from the ACCA’s, the Dimaya Court explicitly

rejected the very same arguments that the panel in this case had adopted as a means

of distinguishing § 924(c)(3)’s residual clause—calling them “minor linguistic

disparities” that didn’t “make[] any real difference.” Id. at 1223.

      Accordingly, it seems clear that if we are required to apply the categorical

approach in interpreting § 924(c)(3)’s residual clause—as the panel did, per our

earlier decision in McGuire, and as the Supreme Court did in voiding the residual

clauses before it in Johnson and Dimaya—then the provision is done for. If, by

contrast, we are not required to apply the categorical approach in interpreting

§ 924(c)(3)(B), then there is every reason to believe that the provision will survive,

notwithstanding its incorporation of a “substantial risk” term—because, as the

Supreme Court said in Johnson and then reiterated in Dimaya, there is no reason to

“doubt the constitutionality of laws that call for the application of a qualitative


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standard such as ‘substantial risk’ to real-world conduct.” Johnson, 135 S. Ct. at

2561 (quoted in Dimaya, 138 S. Ct. at 1214).

                                          III

      That stark divergence—in which the categorical approach dooms

§ 924(c)(3)’s residual clause, while a conduct-based interpretation salvages it—

tees up the rule of “constitutional doubt.” Simply stated, that canon of construction

provides that “[a] statute should be interpreted in a way that avoids placing its

constitutionality in doubt.” Antonin Scalia & Bryan A. Garner, Reading Law: The

Interpretation of Legal Texts 247 (2012).

      As the Supreme Court has explained it, the constitutional-doubt canon “is a

tool for choosing between competing plausible interpretations of a statutory text,

resting on the reasonable presumption that Congress did not intend the alternative

which raises serious constitutional doubts.” Clark v. Martinez, 543 U.S. 371, 381

(2005). Under the canon, “when statutory language is susceptible of multiple

interpretations, a court may shun an interpretation that raises serious constitutional

doubts and instead may adopt an alternative that avoids those problems.” Jennings

v. Rodriguez, 138 S. Ct. 830, 836 (2018). Indeed, the Supreme Court has held that

courts are “obligated to construe [a] statute to avoid [constitutional] problems” if it

is “fairly possible” to do so. I.N.S. v. St. Cyr, 533 U.S. 289, 300 (2001) (citations

omitted) (emphasis added). That is particularly true where (as here) absent a


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reasonable saving construction, a statute might be unconstitutionally vague. See

United States ex rel. Att’y Gen. v. Delaware & Hudson Co., 213 U.S. 366, 407

(1909) (noting that courts have a “plain duty” to adopt any “reasonabl[e]”

interpretation of a statute that avoids vagueness concerns).

      The question here, therefore, is whether § 924(c)(3)’s residual clause is in

fact “susceptible of multiple interpretations,” Jennings, 138 S. Ct. at 836—and

more particularly, whether it is “plausible,” Clark, 543 U.S. at 381, or “fairly

possible,” St. Cyr, 533 U.S. at 300, to interpret the clause to incorporate the

(statute-preserving) conduct-based approach. Ovalles contends that the

constitutional-doubt canon doesn’t apply here because, she says, “the text of

§ 924(c)(3)(B) is not open to competing, plausible interpretations”—it can be

understood only, she insists, to require the categorical approach. Appellant’s En

Banc Br. at 23; accord Dissenting Op. of J. Pryor at 140 (asserting that a conduct-

based reading “does not … even approach plausible”). For the reasons explained

below, we disagree.

                                          A

      In assessing whether § 924(c)(3)’s residual clause truly compels the

categorical approach, we begin at the beginning: Where did this “categorical

approach” come from? It’s certainly not, it seems to us, the most intuitive way of

thinking about a particular crime’s risk of violence. Surely the usual means of

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considering that issue would be to account for all of the specific circumstances

surrounding the offense’s commission—i.e., the actual facts. If you were to ask

John Q. Public whether a particular crime posed a substantial risk of violence,

surely he would respond, “Well, tell me how it went down—what happened?”

How, then, did we get to the point where, in certain circumstances, reviewing

courts are required to ignore the real-world facts in favor of a sterile academic

inquiry into what the Johnson Court called “speculative,” “idealized,” “judge-

imagined abstraction[s]”? 135 S. Ct. at 2557–58. And what are the considerations

that have impelled the Supreme Court to conclude that certain statutes require

application of the categorical approach?

      That story follows.

                                           1

      The Supreme Court initially conceived the categorical approach in Taylor v.

United States, 495 U.S. 575 (1990). The question there was whether the reference

to “burglary” in the ACCA’s enumerated-offenses clause meant burglary as

defined by each of the 50 states’ separate laws or, instead, burglary in some

“generic” sense. Id. at 579–80. In concluding that the ACCA referred to “generic”

burglary, the Court rejected not only the idea that the definition of “violent felony”

should vary from state to state, but also the notion that the government, in seeking

to prove the violence of the underlying crime, could introduce evidence about the


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“particular facts” of the defendant’s conduct, and instead adopted what the Court

dubbed—and we still call—a “categorical approach.” Id. at 598–602. In

explaining why the ACCA’s enumerated-offenses clause requires the categorical

approach, the Taylor Court emphasized two factors—one textual, the other

practical.

      First, the Court concluded that when read in context, § 924(e)(2)(B)(ii)

“most likely refers to the elements of the statute of conviction, not to the facts of

each defendant’s conduct.” Id. at 600–01. The reason, the Court explained, is that

the language of the ACCA’s operative provision, § 924(e)(1), “refers to ‘a person

who ... has three previous convictions’ for—not a person who has committed—

three previous violent felonies or drug offenses.” Id. at 600. Congress’s targeted

focus on “convictions” rather than conduct, the Court reasoned, indicated that it

“intended the sentencing court to look only to the fact that the defendant had been

convicted of crimes falling within certain categories, and not to the facts

underlying the prior convictions.” Id.

      Second, the Taylor Court stressed that in the ACCA context, “the practical

difficulties and potential unfairness of a factual approach [would be] daunting.”

Id. at 601. In particular, the Court worried about the amount of evidence that

might need to be introduced at a sentencing hearing in order to reconstruct the

circumstances underlying a defendant’s prior (and often long-since-passed)


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convictions. Id. Relatedly, the Court anticipated a Sixth Amendment problem that

later decisions would amplify―namely, that judicial factfinding at sentencing

about the real-world facts of crimes that led to prior convictions could “abridg[e a

defendant’s] right to a jury trial[.]” Id.; see also Apprendi v. New Jersey, 530 U.S.

466, 490 (2000) (“Other than the fact of a prior conviction, any fact that increases

the penalty for a crime beyond the prescribed statutory maximum must be

submitted to a jury, and proved beyond a reasonable doubt.”). In short, the Taylor

Court feared that if the parties could introduce evidence bearing on the violence of

the defendant’s past crimes, then sentencing proceedings might devolve into full-

blown mini-trials (hence the impracticability) in which judges, rather than juries,

were doing the factfinding (hence the Sixth Amendment concern). See 495 U.S. at

601–02.

      For these reasons—the text’s focus on “convictions” and the impracticability

(and unfairness) of effectively re-litigating the seriousness of stale crimes long

after the fact—the Taylor Court concluded that for purposes of deciding whether a

prior conviction constitutes a “violent felony,” the “only plausible interpretation”

of § 924(e)(2)(B)(ii) is that it “generally requires the trial court to look only to the

fact of conviction and the statutory definition of the prior offense,” and not to the




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actual circumstances of the defendant’s crime. Id. at 602.4

                                               2

       The Supreme Court next applied the categorical approach in Leocal v.

Ashcroft, 543 U.S. 1 (2004), which held that a DUI conviction under Florida state

law did not constitute a “crime of violence” within the meaning of 18 U.S.C. § 16,

as that statute’s definition applies in the INA. The Court there concluded that

§ 16’s language, like the ACCA’s, “requires us to look to the elements and the

nature of the offense of conviction, rather than to the particular facts relating to

[the defendant’s] crime.” 543 U.S. at 7. In so doing, the Leocal Court didn’t

provide a detailed explanation. It simply stated that in both § 16’s elements and

residual clauses, “the statute directs our focus to the ‘offense’ of conviction”—and

with respect to the residual clause in particular, noted its use of the phrase “by its

nature.” Id.at 7–8. See 18 U.S.C. § 16(b) (defining “crime of violence” to mean

an “offense that is a felony and that, by its nature, involves a substantial risk” of

physical force); 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(2)(A)(iii) (rendering deportable an alien

“convicted of” an aggravated felony, which under 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(43)(F)

includes a “crime of violence” as defined in 18 U.S.C. § 16).



4
 Although Taylor involved the ACCA’s enumerated-offenses clause, the Supreme Court later
extended the categorical approach (albeit without explanation) to the ACCA’s residual clause.
See James v. United States, 550 U.S. 192 (2007), overruled by Johnson, 135 S. Ct. at 2563.


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                                          3

      That, for present purposes, brings us (back) to Johnson, in which, as already

explained, the Supreme Court applied the categorical approach in the course of

invalidating the ACCA’s residual clause. See 135 S. Ct. at 2557–61. The Johnson

Court insisted on the categorical approach—and refused a dissenting justice’s

suggestion that it consider the actual facts of the defendant’s underlying crimes—

for three reasons. Id. at 2561–62. First, the Court noted that “the Government

ha[d] not asked [it] to abandon the categorical approach in residual-clause cases”

in favor of a conduct-based approach. Id. at 2562. Second, relying on and quoting

its earlier decision in Taylor, the Court highlighted the ACCA’s operative clause’s

focus on “convictions”: “Taylor explained that the relevant part of the [ACCA]

refers to a ‘person who … has three previous convictions’ for—not a person who

has committed—three previous violent felonies or drug offenses.” Id. (internal

quotation marks and citation omitted). “This emphasis on convictions,” the

Johnson Court reiterated—again echoing Taylor—“indicates that Congress

intended the sentencing court to look only to the fact that the defendant had been

convicted of crimes falling within certain categories, and not to the facts

underlying the prior convictions.” Id. (internal quotation marks and citation

omitted). Third, and yet again channeling Taylor, the Johnson Court

underscored—at least in the context of a statute, like the ACCA, that predicates a


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sentence enhancement on prior crimes—the “utter impracticability” of requiring a

court “to reconstruct, long after the original conviction, the conduct underlying that

conviction.” Id.

                                          4

      Last came Dimaya, in which the Court applied the categorical approach in

striking down § 16’s residual clause—again, at least as that provision is

incorporated by the INA. A four-justice plurality concluded that § 16(b)

incorporates the categorical approach for a handful of (now increasingly familiar)

reasons. First, as in Johnson, the plurality noted that the government hadn’t

advocated a conduct-based approach: “To begin where Johnson did, the

Government once again ‘has not asked us to abandon the categorical approach in

residual-clause cases.’” Dimaya, 138 S. Ct. at 1217 (quoting Johnson, 135 S. Ct.

at 2562). Second, the plurality emphasized that the categorical approach was

adopted “in part to avoid the Sixth Amendment concerns that would arise from

sentencing courts’ making findings of fact that properly belong to juries.” Id.

(internal quotation marks and citation omitted).

      Third, the plurality explained that “[b]est read,” the text of § 16’s residual

clause incorporates the categorical approach. Id. Quoting the Court’s earlier

decision in Nijhawan v. Holder, 557 U.S. 29, 34 (2009), the plurality stated:

      Simple references to a ‘conviction,’ ‘felony,’ or ‘offense,’ . . . are
      ‘read naturally’ to denote the ‘crime as generally committed.’ And
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      the words ‘by its nature’ in § 16(b) make that meaning all the clearer.
      The statute, recall, directs courts to consider whether an offense, by its
      nature, poses the requisite risk of force. An offense’s ‘nature’ means
      its ‘normal and characteristic quality.’

Dimaya, 138 S. Ct. at 1217 (internal citations omitted). Fourth, and relatedly, the

plurality said that “the same conclusion follows if we pay attention to language that

is missing from § 16(b).” Id. at 1218. In particular, the plurality reasoned, “the

absence of terms alluding to a crime’s circumstances, or its commission, makes a

[conduct]-based interpretation an uncomfortable fit.” Id.

      Finally, following Taylor and Johnson, the plurality stressed the “utter

impracticability” of applying a conduct-based approach to a statute, like § 16(b),

that requires consideration of prior convictions―in particular, the “daunting

difficulties of accurately reconstructing, often many years later, the conduct

underlying a conviction.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).

      As already noted, Justice Gorsuch concurred separately in Dimaya,

explaining that he was “proceed[ing] on the premise”—without definitively

concluding—that as used in the INA, § 16(b) incorporates the categorical

approach. Id. at 1232 (Gorsuch, J., concurring in part and concurring in the

judgment). He gave several reasons for his circumspection: (1) “because no party

[had] argued for a different way to read” the provision at issue; (2) because

Supreme Court precedent (by which he presumably meant Leocal) “seemingly

require[d]” application of the categorical approach to § 16(b); and (3) “because the
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government itself ha[d] conceded (repeatedly) that the law compels” the

categorical approach in immigration-related § 16(b) cases. Id. He emphasized,

though, that he would “remain open” in future cases “to different arguments about

our precedent and the proper reading of language like” that found in § 16(b). Id. at

1233.

                                      * * *

        So . . . what are the takeaways? What factors have led the Supreme Court to

conclude that a statute requires the categorical approach? The decisions

interpreting the ACCA and § 16 reveal that the Court has historically applied the

categorical approach to those statutes’ residual clauses for the following reasons:

   1. because the government never asked the Court to consider a conduct-based
      approach (Johnson, Dimaya);

   2. because the text of those statutes’ operative provisions focused not on
      conduct, but rather on “convictions”—and thus, the Court reasoned, solely
      on formal legal elements (Taylor, Johnson);

   3. because those statutes’ definitional provisions used terms and phrases like
      “offense,” “felony,” and “by its nature,” which the Court concluded pointed
      toward a categorical (rather than conduct-based) inquiry (Leocal, Dimaya);

   4. because those statutes lacked any reference to the underlying crime’s
      commission or circumstances (Dimaya);

   5. because applying the categorical approach would avoid the impracticability
      of requiring sentencing courts to engage in after-the-fact reconstructions of
      the circumstances underlying prior convictions (Taylor, Johnson, Dimaya);
      and

   6. because applying the categorical approach would avoid the Sixth
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      Amendment issues that could arise from sentencing courts making findings
      of fact that properly belong to juries (Taylor, Johnson, Dimaya).


      The decisive question, it seems to us, is whether those considerations require

us to interpret § 924(c)(3)’s own residual clause to incorporate the categorical

approach—or whether, instead, the clause can “plausibly” be read to incorporate

the conduct-based approach. For reasons explained below, we conclude that

§ 924(c)(3)(B) can at the very least plausibly be read to bear a conduct-based

interpretation, and we therefore hold, pursuant to the canon of constitutional doubt,

that because the conduct-based reading spares the residual clause from the near-

certain death to which the categorical approach would condemn it, the conduct-

based approach must prevail. In so doing, we join the Second Circuit, which also

recently concluded—likewise applying the constitutional-doubt canon—that

§ 924(c)(3)(B) should be interpreted to embody the conduct-based approach. See

United States v. Barrett, __ F.3d ___, 2018 WL 4288566, at *9–14 (2d Cir. Sept.

10, 2018).

                                          B

      Although it’s not particularly elegant—in fact, it’s downright clunky and

more than a little repetitive—there’s really not a better way to assess whether the

Supreme Court’s own stated reasons for adopting the categorical approach in the

ACCA and immigration-related § 16 contexts likewise compel a categorical


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interpretation of § 924(c)(3)(B) than simply to march through them, one by one.

                                           1

      In applying the categorical approach in both Johnson and Dimaya, the

Supreme Court “first” and most prominently noted that the government hadn’t

advocated a conduct-based interpretation. See Johnson, 135 S. Ct. at 2562;

Dimaya, 138 S. Ct. at 1217 (plurality opinion); id. at 1232 (Gorsuch, J., concurring

in part and concurring in the judgment). Frankly, this seems like an odd place to

start in interpreting a statute—it’s not particularly, well, interpretive—but be that

as it may, the Supreme Court has “beg[u]n” with it, see id. at 1217 (plurality

opinion), so we will too.

      Suffice it to say that things are very different here. In the wake of Johnson

and Dimaya—and the ensuing drumbeat suggesting that application of the

categorical approach likewise imperils § 924(c)(3)’s residual clause―the

government has expressly (and at length) urged us to abandon the categorical

approach to § 924(c)(3)(B) in favor of a conduct-based interpretation. See

Appellee’s En Banc Br. at 12–43. We have here, therefore, what the Supreme

Court lacked in both Johnson and Dimaya, and what the panel lacked in

McGuire—namely, the benefit of the full “adversarial testing” that is so “crucial to

sound judicial decisionmaking,” Dimaya, 138 S. Ct. at 1232 (Gorsuch, J.,




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concurring in part and concurring in the judgment).5

                                              2

       A second basis that the Supreme Court has highlighted in applying the

categorical approach—derived from the text of the ACCA’s operative provision,

and specifically its reference to “convictions”―is likewise inapplicable here. As

already noted, the Court in Johnson (relying on and quoting its earlier decision in

Taylor) emphasized that the ACCA’s operative clause “refers to a person who …

has three previous convictions for—not a person who has committed—three

previous violent felonies or drug offenses.” 135 S. Ct. at 2562 (internal quotation

marks and citation omitted). The statute’s focus on “convictions,” the Court said,

demonstrates that “Congress intended the sentencing court to look only to the fact

that the defendant had been convicted of crimes falling within certain categories,

and not to the facts underlying the prior convictions.” Id. (internal quotation marks

omitted); see also Barrett, __ F.3d ___, 2018 WL 4288566, at *10 (emphasizing

that, “[i]n rejecting a conduct-specific approach, the [Taylor] Court cited the

statutory text, which specifically referred to ‘convictions’ rather than conduct”).

       Section 924(c)’s operative provision nowhere refers to “convictions.” See


5
 Although the parties in McGuire dickered over whether a pure categorical approach or a
“modified” categorical approach should govern § 924(c)(3)(B), they agreed that some form of
categorical approach applied. No one urged the Court to apply a conduct-based approach. See
McGuire Appellant’s Br. at 17–19; McGuire Appellee’s Br. at 17–18.


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18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(A). Quite the opposite, in fact—it refers to conduct: It

prescribes an increased term of imprisonment for “any person who, during and in

relation to any crime of violence . . . uses or carries a firearm, or who, in

furtherance of any such crime, possesses a firearm.” Id. That’s not dispositive, of

course—§ 924(c)’s operative provision also applies to the statute’s elements

clause, which all seem to agree incorporates the categorical approach. But it does

demonstrate that § 924(c) lacks one of the key textual hooks that has traditionally

buttressed the Supreme Court’s application of the categorical approach to statutory

residual clauses.

                                            3

      Now, in fairness, there is some textual evidence that, on balance, might be

thought to favor interpreting § 924(c)(3)(B) to incorporate the categorical

approach. But it does not, we conclude, truly compel a categorical interpretation,

especially when weighed against other textual and practical considerations.

      In McGuire, we applied the categorical approach to § 924(c)(3)’s residual

clause because, we said, “of the statute’s terms.” 706 F.3d at 1336. In particular,

we noted that the residual clause’s text “asks whether [the defendant] committed

‘an offense’ . . . that ‘by its nature, involves a substantial risk that physical force

against the person or property of another may be used.’” Id. at 1336–37 (quoting

18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(3)(B)). We now re-examine whether that language—and in


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particular, the statute’s use of the term “offense” and the phrase “by its nature”—

mandates the categorical approach. We conclude that it does not.

                                           a

      In support of its determination that § 16’s residual clause requires the

categorical approach, the Dimaya plurality relied on the Court’s earlier observation

in Leocal that § 16(b) “directs our focus to the ‘offense’ of conviction . . . rather

than to the particular facts.” Dimaya, 138 S. Ct. at 1217 (quoting Leocal, 543 U.S.

at 7). “Simple references to a ‘conviction,’ ‘felony,’ or ‘offense,’” the plurality

observed, “are ‘read naturally’ to denote the ‘crime as generally committed.’” Id.

(quoting Nijhawan, 557 U.S. at 34).

      Ovalles’s position finds some support in § 924(c)(3)’s definition of “crime

of violence,” which incorporates two of the three terms—“offense” and “felony”—

that the Dimaya plurality highlighted: “[T]he term ‘crime of violence’ means an

offense that is a felony . . . .” 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(3). There are important

counterweights, though. First, as already explained, § 924(c) nowhere uses the

word “conviction,” the term that the Supreme Court has historically (going all the

way back to Taylor) emphasized as a key textual driver of the categorical

approach. Second, even as to “offense” and “felony,” all the plurality said in

Dimaya—echoing the Court’s earlier decision in Nijhawan—was that those terms

are “naturally” read to refer to generic crimes, not that they are necessarily so read.


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And indeed, on the very same page from which the Dimaya plurality took its “read

naturally” quote, Nijhawan explains “the linguistic fact” that “in ordinary speech

words such as ‘crime,’ ‘felony,’ ‘offense,’ and the like” can go either way—

“sometimes [they] refer to a generic crime . . . and sometimes [they] refer to the

specific acts in which an offender engaged on a specific occasion.” 557 U.S. at

33–34; see also id. at 32 (holding that statutory provision using the term “offense”

called for application of a conduct-based, rather than categorical, approach);

United States v. Hayes, 555 U.S. 415, 426 (2009) (same); Barrett, __ F.3d ___,

2018 WL 4288566, at *13 (emphasizing Nijhawan’s conclusion that “words such

as ‘crime,’ ‘felony,’ and ‘offense’ can be used in both respects”). 6



6
  The dissent thinks it inconceivable that that the word “offense” could require the categorical
approach for cases arising under § 924(c)(3)’s elements clause and yet, at the same time, permit a
conduct-based approach for cases arising under the residual clause. See Dissenting Op. of J.
Pryor at 127, 134–35. It cites Nijhawan for the proposition that “where . . . Congress uses
similar statutory language and similar statutory structure in two adjoining provisions, it normally
intends similar interpretations”—and from that premise reasons that because the term “offense”
supports application of the categorical approach to the elements clause, it “must” do so with
respect to the residual clause, as well. Id. at 26 (quoting Nijhawan, 557 U.S. at 39). But
Nijhawan itself refutes the dissent’s position. First, and most obviously, the dissent says almost
nothing in response to the Nijhawan Court’s explanation of “the linguistic fact”—quoted in text
above—that “in ordinary speech words such as ‘crime,’ ‘felony,’ ‘offense,’ and the like
sometimes refer to a generic crime . . . and sometimes refer to the specific acts in which an
offender engaged on a specific occasion.” 557 U.S. at 33–34. Second, and more deeply, the
dissent ignores the fact that in his opinion for the Court, Justice Breyer marched methodically
through a number of adjacent statutory provisions that use the word “offense” to describe the
underlying crimes and concluded that in some of them the “offense” should be established
categorically, see Nijhawan, 557 U.S. at 37 (citing, e.g., 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(43)(E), (H), (I), and
(J)), while in others the “offense” could be demonstrated through attention to the underlying
conduct and circumstances, see id. at 37–38 (citing, e.g., 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(43)(K)(ii), (M)(ii),
(N), and (P)). “The upshot” here is the same as in Nijhawan: The terms “offense” and “felony”


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       All things considered, therefore, § 924(c)(3)’s use of the terms “offense” and

“felony”―particularly when combined with the absence of the word

“conviction”―would be a pretty thin reed on which to base a conclusion that the

residual clause requires the categorical approach.

                                             b

       The strongest piece of evidence in favor of applying the categorical

approach to § 924(c)(3)’s residual clause, it seems to us, is the provision’s use of

the phrase “by its nature”: “[T]he term ‘crime of violence’ means an offense that is

a felony and . . . that by its nature, involves a substantial risk that physical force

against the person or property of another may be used in the course of committing

the offense.” 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(3)(B) (emphasis added).

       In Leocal, the Court relied in part on § 16(b)’s use of the same “by its

nature” phrase to conclude that the statute “requires us to look to the elements and

the nature of the offense of conviction, rather than to the particular facts relating to

petitioner’s crime.” 543 U.S. at 7. The plurality in Dimaya likewise pointed to the

“by its nature” language—at least as a secondary consideration, saying that it made

the case for applying the categorical approach to § 16’s residual clause “all the

clearer.” 138 S. Ct. at 1217. Quoting Webster’s Third New International


do not have invariable meanings that—all other considerations notwithstanding—always and
everywhere require the categorical approach. 557 U.S. at 38.


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Dictionary for the proposition that “[a]n offense’s ‘nature’ means its ‘normal and

characteristic quality,’” the Dimaya plurality reasoned that “§ 16(b) tells courts to

figure out what an offense normally—or, as we have repeatedly said,

‘ordinarily’—entails, not what happened to occur on one occasion.” Id. at 1217–

18 (internal citation omitted).

      That is undoubtedly a reasonable interpretation of § 16(b)’s language—

which, again, § 924(c)(3)’s residual clause mirrors. But importantly here—where

the constitutional-doubt canon is in play—it is not a necessary interpretation.

There are other reasonable understandings—especially of § 924(c)(3)(B), with

respect to which other interpretive considerations point in the other direction.

Webster’s Third, for instance—the same dictionary that the Dimaya plurality cited

in support of its categorical-approach interpretation of the “by its nature” language,

alternatively defines the word “nature” to mean “the essential character or

constitution of something.” Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 1507

(2002). The Oxford Dictionary of English similarly defines “nature” as “the basic

or inherent features, character, or qualities of something.” Oxford Dictionary of

English 1183 (3d ed. 2010). It seems to us at the very least plausible that the

“something[s]” to which the term “nature” alludes could be particular acts rather

than (or in addition to) the “judge-imagined abstraction[s],” Johnson, 135 S. Ct. at

2558, that underlie the categorical approach. See Barrett, __ F.3d ___, 2018 WL


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4288566, at *13 (“[N]othing in these definitions indicates whether the offense

whose inherent characteristics are to be considered is the generic crime or the

particular one charged.”).

       So, as Justice Thomas noted in Dimaya, “[o]n the one hand, the statute

might refer to the metaphysical ‘nature’ of the offense and ask whether it ordinarily

involves a substantial risk of physical force.” Dimaya, 138 S. Ct. at 1254

(Thomas, J., dissenting). So too, though, “[o]n the other hand, the statute might

refer to the underlying facts of the offense that the offender committed; the words

‘by its nature,’ ‘substantial risk,’ and ‘may’ would mean only that an offender who

engages in risky conduct cannot benefit from the fortuitous fact that physical force

was not actually used during his offense.” Id. “The text can bear either

interpretation,” and “[i]t is entirely natural to use words like ‘nature’ . . . to refer to

an offender’s actual underlying conduct.” Id.

       To be clear, it’s no answer to say, “Sure, but Justice Thomas lost in

Dimaya.” As an initial matter, he was objecting there to a plurality’s (not a

majority’s) interpretation—and in particular its interpretation of a different statute,

§ 16(b), that lacks many of the textual, contextual, and practical features that we

conclude permit a conduct-based interpretation of § 924(c)(3)’s residual clause.

Moreover, and in any event, Justice Thomas’s linguistic observation about the

alternative meanings of the word “nature” remains—and indeed, finds support in


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dueling dictionary definitions. Especially in light of the inapplicability of other

reasons for applying the categorical approach to § 924(c)(3)(B), we simply aren’t

convinced that the phrase “by its nature” requires application of the categorical

approach here.

                                           4

      In addition to focusing on what the controlling statutes say in assessing the

categorical-approach issue, the Supreme Court has emphasized what they don’t

say. In Dimaya, for instance, the plurality reasoned that “the absence” from § 16

“of terms alluding to a crime’s circumstances, or its commission, makes a

[conduct]-based interpretation an uncomfortable fit.” 138 S. Ct. at 1218.

      But again, § 924(c) is different. Not only (as already explained) does the

statute’s operative provision refer exclusively to conduct, but its definitional

provision (i.e., the residual clause itself) also contains conduct-based

language―namely, its requirement that the risk of force arise “in the course of

committing the offense.” 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(3)(B).

                                           5

      Textual indicia aside, the Supreme Court has also emphasized practical

considerations in deciding between categorical and conduct-based interpretations.

As already explained, in initially devising the categorical approach in Taylor—and

thereafter applying it in Johnson and Dimaya—the Supreme Court underscored the


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“utter impracticability” of applying a conduct-based approach retrospectively to

determining the violence of prior crimes. E.g., Johnson, 135 S. Ct. at 2562. In

particular, the Court in Taylor fretted about the prospect that mounds of evidence

would need to be introduced at sentencing in order to reconstruct the circumstances

underlying long-since-passed convictions—potentially turning sentencing

proceedings into de facto mini-trials. See 495 U.S. at 601–02. That “look-back”

concern (our term, not the Supreme Court’s) has continued to animate the Court’s

application of a categorical approach in the ACCA and § 16 contexts. As the

plurality summarized in Dimaya: “This Court has often described the daunting

difficulties of accurately ‘reconstruct[ing],’ often many years later, ‘the conduct

underlying [a] conviction.’” 138 S. Ct. at 1218 (quoting Johnson, 135 S. Ct. at

2562, and citing Taylor, 495 U.S. at 601–02); see also Barrett, __ F.3d ___, 2018

WL 4288566, at *12 (“[T]he mandate for a categorical approach to residual

definitions of violent crimes has developed in a singular context: judicial

identifications of what crimes (most often, state crimes) of prior conviction fit

federal definitions of violent crimes so as to expose a defendant to enhanced

penalties or other adverse consequences in subsequent federal proceedings.”).

      Importantly, the look-back problem doesn’t arise with respect to § 924(c),

which serves an altogether different function from the statutes at issue in Johnson

and Dimaya and operates differently in order to achieve that function. The ACCA


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identifies “previous convictions” for the purpose of applying a recidivism-based

sentencing enhancement to three-time felons who later possess firearms in

violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g). See 18 U.S.C. § 924(e)(1) (emphasis added).

Similarly, § 16(b)―as incorporated by the INA―classifies certain prior

convictions as “crime[s] of violence” for the purpose of rendering aliens

removable. See 18 U.S.C. § 16; 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(43)(F); 8 U.S.C.

§ 1227(a)(2)(A)(iii). 7 Section 924(c), by contrast, operates entirely in the

present—it creates a new and distinct offense for any person who “during and in

relation to any crime of violence ... uses or carries a firearm, or who, in furtherance

of any such crime, possesses a firearm.” 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(A). So, unlike in

the ACCA and § 16 contexts—where courts have to look backwards in time to

consider past crimes remote from (and wholly unconnected to) the charged

7
  A point of clarification: The dissent charges—as if it were a bad thing—that our opinion
“focuses solely on § 16’s incorporation into the INA.” Dissenting Op. of J. Pryor at 110; see
also id. at 123 n.8. But of course it does—by design and with good reason. We have so
“qualif[ied our] references to § 16(b),” id. at 110, because Dimaya’s holding is likewise limited.
See 138 S. Ct. at 1210–12, 1213–16, 1223. Dimaya’s reasoning only covers—and, frankly, only
makes sense in the context of—§16(b)’s incorporation into the INA. Think about it: If the Court
had meant to impose the categorical approach on all of § 16(b)’s applications—even those in
which the incorporating statutes address contemporaneous crimes—then why would the plurality
have so heavily emphasized the look-back problem and the “daunting difficulties of
‘reconstructing’” prior convictions? 138 S. Ct. at 1218. Perhaps even clearer is crucial-fifth-
vote-caster Justice Gorsuch’s insistence that he certainly wasn’t prepared to venture beyond §
16(b)’s incorporation into the INA. See id. at 1232–33 (Gorsuch, J., concurring in part and
concurring in the judgment) (emphasizing that he “remain[s] open to different arguments about
[Supreme Court] precedent and the proper reading of language like” that found in § 16(b), and
that he “would address them in another case, whether involving the INA or a different statute”).
So yes, our focus is trained on § 16(b) as incorporated into the INA—just as the Dimaya
plurality’s and Justice Gorsuch’s were.


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offense, § 924(c)(3)’s definition of a “crime of violence” is never applied to an

unrelated prior crime or conviction. Instead, in § 924(c) cases, the firearms offense

and the predicate “crime of violence” go hand-in-hand; they inherently arise out of

the same event. By dint of the statute’s plain language, the gun-related conduct

must occur “during,” “in relation to,” or “in furtherance of” the crime of violence,

and with respect to that underlying offense the actionable risk of force must occur

specifically “in the course of committing” it. In short, it’s all one big ball of

wax—the crimes are typically (as here) charged in the same indictment, and if they

are tried, they are considered by the same jury. The “utter impracticability” that

Taylor, Johnson, and Dimaya identified—what we have called the look-back

problem—simply isn’t an issue. See Barrett, __ F.3d ___, 2018 WL 4288566, at

*12 (“Section 924(c)(3) . . . is not concerned with prior convictions. It pertains

only to § 924(c)(1) crimes of pending prosecution.”).

                                           6

      Relatedly, echoing the earlier decision in Taylor, the Dimaya plurality

acknowledged that the Court “adopted the categorical approach in part to avoid the

Sixth Amendment concerns that would arise from sentencing courts’ making

findings of fact that properly belong to juries.” 138 S. Ct. at 1217 (internal

quotation marks and citation omitted). Its point was that in reconstructing the

circumstances underlying a prior crime in order to assess its risk of violence, a


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reviewing court could well run afoul of the rule that “[o]ther than the fact of a prior

conviction, any fact that increases the penalty for a crime beyond the prescribed

statutory maximum must be submitted to a jury, and proved beyond a reasonable

doubt,” Apprendi, 530 U.S. at 490. See Taylor, 495 U.S. at 601 (expressing

concern that judicial factfinding during a sentencing hearing about the real-world

facts of crimes that led to prior convictions could “abridg[e a defendant’s] right to

a jury trial”).

       Yet again, that isn’t a concern here. For starters, because the jury in a §

924(c) case—unlike in, say, an ACCA case—is considering contemporaneous gun-

related and predicate offenses, its role already necessarily entails consideration of

the entire course of conduct charged as the underlying “crime of violence.”

Moreover, and significantly, the government here has conceded that whether the

defendant’s predicate offense constitutes a “crime of violence” within the meaning

of § 924(c)(3)’s residual clause should be treated as a mixed question of fact and

law to be resolved by a jury. See Appellee’s En Banc Br. at 33–34 (citing United

States v. Gaudin, 515 U.S. 506, 509–10, 522–23 (1995)). In particular, the

government admits that under a conduct-based approach, a § 924(c)(3)(B)

conviction requires a jury separately to find (or the defendant to admit through a

plea) not only (1) that the defendant committed the underlying federal offense, (2)

that the defendant used, carried, or possessed a firearm, and (3) that any use,


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carriage, or possession of the firearm occurred during and in relation to (or in

furtherance of) the federal offense, but also—and importantly—(4) that the federal

offense was in fact a “crime of violence.” As has the Supreme Court in similar

circumstances, we conclude that the government’s concession that, absent a plea, it

must prove and a jury must find all four elements―including that the underlying

offense qualifies as a “crime of violence”―“eliminat[es] any constitutional

concern.” Nijhawan, 557 U.S. at 40; see also Barrett, __ F.3d ___, 2018 WL

4288566, at *12 (“The Sixth Amendment concern is avoided because the trial jury,

in deciding whether a defendant is guilty of using a firearm ‘during and in relation

to any crime of violence,’ 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(A), can decide whether the

charged predicate offense is a crime of violence as defined in § 924(c)(3)(B), i.e.,

whether the felony offense ‘by its nature, involves a substantial risk that physical

force against the person or property of another may be used in the course of

committing the offense,’ 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(3)(B).”).8


8
  We are unpersuaded by Ovalles’s assertion (which the dissent echoes, see Dissenting Op. of J.
Pryor at 148–49) that a conduct-based approach would require hopelessly complex and
ineffective jury instructions about the crime-of-violence element. The district court can simply
instruct jurors that they must find beyond a reasonable doubt that the underlying offense―the
defendant’s commission of which they must already have found in order to satisfy the first
element―“involve[d] a substantial risk that physical force against the person or property of
another may [have] be[en] used in the course of committing the offense.” 18 U.S.C. §
924(c)(3)(B). There is nothing remarkable about asking jurors to make that sort of risk
determination—and, if necessary, requiring judges to instruct jurors on the meaning of terms like
“substantial” and “physical force.” That’s exactly how similar questions have been resolved for
centuries and are resolved every day in courts throughout the country. See Gaudin, 515 U.S. at
511–15; see also, e.g., Ala. Code § 13A-6-2(a)(2) (“A person commits the crime of murder if he

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                                              * * *

       So where does all of this leave us? With something of a mixed bag, frankly.

While some of the factors to which the Supreme Court has pointed in adopting and

applying the categorical approach might be thought (on balance) to favor a similar

interpretation of § 924(c)(3)(B), others cut pretty decisively in the opposite

direction, toward a conduct-based approach. And in constitutional-doubt land, the

tie (or the toss-up, or even the shoulder-shrug) goes to the statute-saving option—

which, here, is the conduct-based interpretation. So to be clear, we needn’t—and

don’t—conclude that textual, contextual, and practical considerations compel a

conduct-based reading of § 924(c)(3)’s residual clause. Nor, for that matter, do we

even need to find that § 924(c)(3)(B) is best read to incorporate a conduct-based

approach. Reasonable minds—say, for instance, the minds of the (putatively)


or she . . . recklessly engages in conduct which creates a grave risk of death to a person other
than himself or herself, and thereby causes the death of another person.”); Conn. Gen. Stat. §
53a-112(a)(1)(A) (“A person is guilty of arson in the second degree when, with intent to destroy
or damage a building . . . he starts a fire or causes an explosion and . . . such act subjects another
person to a substantial risk of bodily injury . . . .”); Mo. Stat. § 565.120(1) (“A person commits
the offense of kidnapping in the second degree if he or she knowingly restrains another
unlawfully and without consent so as to interfere substantially with his or her liberty and exposes
him or her to a substantial risk of serious physical injury.”).
        Nor are we particularly troubled by Ovalles’s argument that allowing jurors to consider a
defendant’s use or possession of a firearm will inevitably transform every underlying offense
into a “crime of violence” within the meaning of § 924(c)(3). The government concedes that it
must separately prove—and that jurors should be charged that they must separately find—(1)
that the federal offense was “a crime of violence” and (2) that the defendant used, carried, or
possessed a firearm in the course of committing the underlying offense. District courts should
caution jurors that they may not find that the underlying offense involved a substantial risk of
physical force solely because the defendant possessed a gun.


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reasonable judges who join this opinion—can and will disagree about that. It is

enough for us to conclude—as we think is indisputable—that § 924(c)(3)(B) is at

least “plausibl[y]” (or “fairly possibl[y]”) understood to embody the conduct-based

approach. See Clark, 543 U.S. at 381; St. Cyr, 533 U.S. at 300.9 Accordingly, it is

our “plain duty” to adopt the conduct-based approach as the proper interpretation

of § 924(c)(3)’s residual clause. See Delaware & Hudson Co., 213 U.S. at 407. 10

       We therefore overrule McGuire to the extent that it requires application of

the categorical approach to determine whether an offense constitutes a “crime of

violence” within the meaning of § 924(c)(3)(B) and hold that the crime-of-violence

determination should be made, instead, using a conduct-based approach.


9
  Needless to say, we reject the dissent’s charge that we have “reach[ed]” out to “effectively
rewrite[]” § 924(c)(3)’s residual clause in order “to avoid having to strike it down.” Dissenting
Op. of J. Pryor at 124, 137. To the contrary, we have simply acknowledged that the interpretive
question is a close one and, accordingly—and pursuant to time-honored canons of
construction—saved it from the trash heap. It is the dissent, by contrast, that doggedly insists on
the one and only reading of § 924(c)(3)(B) that guarantees its invalidation.
10
  One brief word in conclusion: The dissent repeatedly criticizes our reliance on what it calls
“extra-textual factors” in determining whether § 924(c)(3)(B) can plausibly be read to bear a
conduct-based interpretation. In particular, the dissent objects to the first, fifth, and sixth factors
examined above. See Dissenting Op. of J. Pryor at 103, 119–20, 124, 139–40, 143–44. The
reason, the dissent says, is that under the Supreme Court’s recent decision in Jennings v.
Rodriguez, 138 S. Ct. 830 (2018), practical considerations are categorically (pun intended) off-
limits in determining whether a statute can reasonably be interpreted in a particular manner. The
argument is difficult to discern, frankly, given that Dimaya—in which the plurality emphasized
the very same considerations—post-dates Jennings by almost two months. In any event, for
better or worse, these are the considerations that the Supreme Court has highlighted, and as the
dissent says, “[w]e are not free to ignore the Supreme Court’s decisions.” Dissenting Op. of J.
Pryor at 126 n.9. See also, e.g., Barrett, __ F.3d ___, 2018 WL 4288566, at *9–14 (evaluating
the same factors in holding that § 924(c)(3)’s residual clause should be interpreted to incorporate
the conduct-based approach).


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                                          IV

      Having jettisoned the categorical interpretation in favor of the conduct-based

approach for cases arising under § 924(c)(3)’s residual clause, we can make quick

work of the contention that the clause is unconstitutionally vague in the light of

Dimaya. It is not. The Supreme Court has repeatedly explained—and again all

here agree—that the vagueness problem that plagued the ACCA and § 16, and that

is asserted here, is a function of the “speculative,” “idealized,” “abstract” inquiries

required by the categorical approach. Johnson, 135 S. Ct. at 2557–58, 2561.

Accordingly, if § 924(c)(3)(B) is interpreted to embody a conduct-based

approach—as we have held it should be—there is no reason whatsoever to “‘doubt

[its] constitutionality.’” Dimaya, 138 S. Ct. at 1214 (quoting Johnson, 135 S. Ct.

at 2561); see also Barrett, __ F.3d ___, 2018 WL 4288566, at *10 (emphasizing

that under Johnson and Dimaya, “no constitutional vagueness inheres in a

substantial-risk definition of a crime of violence when applied to case-specific

conduct”).

                                           V

      That leaves us only to apply § 924(c)(3)(B)’s conduct-based approach to

Ovalles’s case. Given the stipulated facts before us—embodied in a written plea

agreement and a detailed colloquy—doing so is remarkably straightforward.

      It is common ground here that in order to convict Ovalles on the § 924(c)


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charge, the government would need to prove (or Ovalles would need to plead to)

four distinct elements: (1) that Ovalles actually committed the underlying federal

offense—here, the attempted carjacking; (2) that the attempted-carjacking offense

constitutes a “crime of violence” within the meaning of § 924(c)(3); (3) that

Ovalles knowingly used, carried, or possessed a firearm; and (4) that any use or

carriage of the firearm occurred during and in relation to, or that any possession of

the firearm was in furtherance of, the attempted carjacking. See 18 U.S.C.

§ 924(c)(1)(A). The only element in dispute here is the second: Did Ovalles’s

attempted-carjacking offense, as she has admitted it actually occurred, constitute a

“crime of violence”—i.e., did her own acknowledged conduct “involve[] a

substantial risk that physical force against the person or property of another may be

used in the course of committing the offense”? Easy. Of course it did.

      As it pertained to the attempted-carjacking count, the information charged

Ovalles with “attempt[ing] to take a motor vehicle . . . from the person and

presence of another, by force, violence and intimidation” with “the intent to cause

death and serious bodily harm.” Ovalles then executed a written plea agreement

acknowledging that she understood each charge in the information—including the

attempted-carjacking charge—and that “she [was] pleading guilty because she is in

fact guilty of the crimes [as] charged.” If attempting to steal a car “by force,

violence and intimidation” and with “the intent to cause death and serious bodily


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harm” (as Ovalles has admitted she did) doesn’t involve a “substantial risk” that

physical force may be used, then it’s hard to imagine what does.

      Here, though, there’s no need for imagination—the real-life details of

Ovalles’s crime, all of which she has admitted, confirm it. We won’t restate in full

the government’s factual proffer recounting Ovalles’s involvement in the three-day

carjacking spree. Suffice it to say that, in general, the proffer demonstrated that

Ovalles and her co-conspirators robbed a grocery store, successfully carjacked

three automobiles by force, and attempted to carjack a fourth. With respect to the

attempted carjacking, in particular—which, again, serves as the predicate offense

for Ovalles’s § 924(c) conviction—the proffer detailed that Ovalles and her co-

conspirators approached a family getting out of their minivan, demanded the keys,

hit the family’s 13-year-old child in the face with a baseball bat, and then, in

making their escape, fired an AK-47 assault rifle at the family and a Good

Samaritan who had come to their aid. See supra at 6–7.

      Especially when layered on top of Ovalles’s admission to the overtly violent

charge in the information, the government’s detailed factual proffer―with which

Ovalles repeatedly said she had no “material disagreement”—leads inexorably to

the conclusion that the attempted carjacking at issue here constitutes a “crime of

violence” within the meaning of § 924(c)(3)(B). Based on the facts to which she

has expressly stipulated, there simply can be no serious dispute that Ovalles


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recognized that her conduct posed a very real “risk” that physical force “may” be

used―just, as it turns out, it was.

                                         VI

      Accordingly, we hold as follows:

      1.     The question whether a predicate offense constitutes a “crime of

violence” within the meaning of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(3)(B) should be determined

using a conduct-based approach that accounts for the actual, real-world facts of the

crime’s commission, rather than a categorical approach.

      2.     To the extent that our decision in United States v. McGuire, 706 F.3d

1333 (11th Cir. 2013), required use of the categorical approach in making the

crime-of-violence determination under § 924(c)(3)(B), it is overruled.

      3.     As interpreted to embody a conduct-based approach, § 924(c)(3)(B) is

not unconstitutionally vague.

      4.     In light of the particular circumstances of its commission, all of which

Ovalles has expressly admitted, her attempted-carjacking offense was a “crime of

violence” within the meaning of § 924(c)(3)(B).

      The case is REMANDED to the panel for proceedings consistent with this

opinion.




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WILLIAM PRYOR, Circuit Judge, joined by ED CARNES, Chief Judge, and
TJOFLAT, NEWSOM, and BRANCH, Circuit Judges, concurring:

         How did we ever reach the point where this Court, sitting en banc, must

debate whether a carjacking in which an assailant struck a 13-year-old girl in the

mouth with a baseball bat and a cohort fired an AK-47 at her family is a crime of

violence? It’s nuts. And Congress needs to act to end this ongoing judicial charade.

         I join the majority opinion in full, but I write separately to explain why our

resolution of this appeal forecasts how Congress should address the vexing issue of

how to punish violent recidivists under laws like the Armed Career Criminal Act 1:

by restoring the traditional role of the jury. The caselaw about how to punish

recidivists has confounded the federal courts for decades and has made the

resolution of this appeal tricky, but our decision also suggests a way out of the

mess. Although our decision involves a contemporaneous crime and not a prior

conviction, our conclusion that a jury may make findings about a defendant’s

violent conduct applies with equal force to recidivist statutes. Indeed, the modern

abandonment of the jury’s traditional role of making findings about prior

convictions has created more problems than it has solved.




1
    18 U.S.C. § 924(e).


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                                 A.    Recidivist Wars

      Empirical research proves that Congress has good reason to punish

recidivists with long sentences of imprisonment. A recent study by the United

States Sentencing Commission found that “[c]areer offenders, as a group, tend to

recidivate at a higher rate than non-career offenders.”2 More specifically, “almost

two-thirds . . . of career offenders released between 2004 and 2006 were

rearrested” in the eight-year period after their release, while just under “one-

half . . . of non-career offenders released in 2005 were rearrested” in the same

period.3 And a defendant’s criminal history as calculated under the Sentencing

Guidelines is a strong predictor of future encounters with the justice system. 4

Offenders without any criminal history points are rearrested at a rate of 30.2

percent. 5 This rate jumps to 63.3 percent for offenders with five criminal history

points and catapults to 81.5 percent for offenders with more than 10 criminal

history points.6 Relatedly, offenders with the lowest criminal history category are




2
  U.S. Sentencing Comm’n, Report to the Congress: Career Offender Sentencing Enhancements
39 (2016).
3
  Id.
4
  See U.S. Sentencing Comm’n, Recidivism Among Federal Offenders: A Comprehensive
Overview 5, 18–19, 27 (2016).
5
  Id. at 18.
6
  Id.


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rearrested at a rate of 33.8 percent, while offenders with the highest criminal

history category are rearrested at a rate of 80.1 percent.7

       Among career offenders, violent offenders, not surprisingly, pose the

greatest risk to the public. For example, “drug trafficking only” career offenders

recidivate at a rate of 54.4 percent, while “violent [crime] only” career offenders

recidivate at a rate of 69 percent. 8 The median drug trafficker recidivates after 26

months, while the median violent offender recidivates after only 14 months. 9 The

median drug trafficker commits two “[r]ecidivism [e]vents,” while the median

violent offender commits three. 10 And when a drug trafficker reoffends, he is most

likely to commit another drug trafficking offense, while a violent offender is most

likely to commit robbery. 11 Indeed, even “mixed” career offenders who have at

least one violent offense12 recidivate at a rate of 69.4 percent and are most likely to

commit assault when they recidivate.13

       Past offenses involving a firearm are also a strong predictor of future

crimes. 14 For example, “[o]ffenders whose federal offense involved firearms [are]

7
  Id. at 19.
8
  U.S. Sentencing Comm’n, Report to the Congress, supra note 2, at 42.
9
  Id.
10
   Id.
11
   Id.
12
   See id. at 38.
13
   Id. at 42.
14
   See U.S. Sentencing Comm’n, Recidivism Among Federal Offenders, supra note 4, at 20.


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most likely to be rearrested” at a rate of 68.3 percent, and “[o]ffenders who

received an enhanced sentence for a weapon . . . ha[ve] higher recidivism rates

than other offenders.”15 In short, criminals with an affinity for guns and violence

are the least likely to change their ways. 16

       That recidivists merit longer sentences is hardly a new discovery. Over a

century ago, the Supreme Court explained that “[t]he propriety of inflicting severer

punishment upon old offenders has long been recognized in this country and in

England.”17 Accordingly, “[s]tatutes providing for such increased punishment were

enacted in Virginia and New York as early as 1796, and in Massachusetts in 1804;

and there have been numerous acts of similar import in many states.”18

       In more recent years, Congress has moved to protect public safety by

enacting federal crimes that provide lengthy terms of imprisonment for




15
    Id.
16
    Id.; see also U.S. Sentencing Comm’n, The Past Predicts the Future: Criminal History and
Recidivism of Federal Offenders 12 (2017) (“Offenders convicted of a firearms offense had the
highest rearrest rate (68.4%]), followed by offenders convicted of a violent offense (64.1%)
. . . .”).
17
    Graham v. West Virginia, 224 U.S. 616, 623 (1912).
18
    Id. (collecting cases); see also Spencer v. Texas, 385 U.S. 554, 566 n.9 (1967) (citing data
“that 62% of prisoners committed to federal prisons in the year ending June 30, 1965, had been
previously committed”); People v. Gowasky, 155 N.E. 737, 739 (N.Y. 1927) (reviewing the
history of recidivism statutes); Nancy J. King, Sentencing and Prior Convictions: The Past, the
Future, and the End of the Prior-Conviction Exception to Apprendi, 97 Marq. L. Rev. 523, 533–
34 & nn.52–62 (2014).


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recidivists.19 The Armed Career Criminal Act, for example, provides a 15-year

mandatory minimum sentence for a criminal convicted of unlawfully possessing a

firearm or ammunition who has “three previous convictions . . . for a violent felony

or serious drug offense.” 20 The Act defines a “serious drug offense” in terms of

convictions under certain federal and state laws that provide a maximum sentence

of 10 or more years of imprisonment. 21 And it defines a “violent felony” to include

crimes that (1) have “the use, attempted use, or threatened use of physical force” as

an “element”22—the so-called “elements clause”; (2) are “burglary, arson, or

extortion, [or] involve[] use of explosives”23—the “enumerated offenses clause”;

or (3) “otherwise . . . present[] a serious potential risk of physical injury to

another” 24—the “residual clause.”

                               B.   The Residual Clause Strikes Back

          As thoroughly chronicled in the majority opinion, years of litigation about

federal recidivist statutes have weakened the penalties created by Congress. But


19
   See, e.g., H.R. Rep. No. 98-1073, at 2 (1984) (relying on “extensive studies on recidivism” to
justify an earlier version of the Armed Career Criminal Act). See generally U.S. Sentencing
Comm’n, Mandatory Minimum Penalties for Firearms Offenses in the Federal Criminal Justice
System (2018).
20
   18 U.S.C. § 924(e)(1).
21
   Id. § 924(e)(2)(A).
22
     Id. § 924(e)(2)(B)(i).
23
     Id. § 924(e)(2)(B)(ii).
24
     Id., invalidated by Johnson v. United States, 135 S. Ct. 2551 (2015).


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these developments have not benefited all offenders. Recidivist drug traffickers

who possess a firearm are still subject to the 15-year mandatory minimum under

the Armed Career Criminal Act. But after the demise of the residual clause in

Johnson v. United States,25 violent recidivists who possess a firearm—the ones

akin to the violent career offenders who recidivate at a rate nearly 15 percentage

points higher than recidivist drug traffickers and who tend to commit violent

crimes when they do so—sometimes escape the mandatory minimum if their

earlier offenses lacked a legal “element” that involves physical force, regardless of

how the offender actually committed the offense. For example, an offender may

have been convicted of “sexual abuse in the first degree . . . by forcible

compulsion” under Alabama law for a crime that was actually violent.26 But

because the Supreme Court of Alabama has adopted a “water[ed] . . . down”

interpretation of the statute that “means that [the statute] does not categorically

include as an element the use, attempted use, or threatened use of physical force,”

the conviction will not count as a crime of violence because “the true facts matter

little, if at all, in this odd area of the law.”27

          The same problem may exist for other offenses that can technically be

committed in nonviolent ways—but rarely, if ever, are—such as kidnapping, arson,
25
     135 S. Ct. 2551 (2015).
26
     Ala. Code § 13A-6-66(a)(1).
27
     United States v. Davis, 875 F.3d 592, 600, 604 (11th Cir. 2017).


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and other sex crimes. Criminals who have committed violent crimes may escape

the mandatory minimum sentence of the Armed Career Criminal Act because

sentencing judges must “close [their] eyes” to everything but the legal definitions

of prior convictions. 28 In essence, the so-called categorical approach “divorces

what a habitual offender actually did from the punishment they are meant to

receive.”29 “The bizarre results” occasioned by this approach “are hard to grasp”

because “the doctrine is not based in reality, but rather relies on the legal fiction

that crimes are [merely] comprised of a set of elements, as opposed to the

underlying criminal conduct.”30

       I do not mean to suggest that the residual clauses of the Armed Career

Criminal Act or of the federal definition of a crime of violence in recidivist

statutes 31 should have survived—at least not in their original forms that required

the sentencing judge to decide whether the offender’s criminal history qualified

him for an increased punishment. Judges have rightfully complained that the

categorical approach has taxed judicial economy. “The dockets of . . . all federal




28
   Id. at 595.
29
   Sheldon A. Evans, Punishing Criminals for Their Conduct: A Return to Reason for the Armed
Career Criminal Act, 70 Okla. L. Rev. 623, 626 (2018).
30
   Id. at 645
31
   See Sessions v. Dimaya, 138 S. Ct. 1204 (2018) (invalidating 18 U.S.C. § 16(b) as
incorporated into the Immigration and Nationality Act for purposes of determining if an alien
was previously convicted of an aggravated felony).


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courts are now clogged with [ACCA] cases,” 32 and perhaps “no other area of law

has demanded more of [the courts’] resources.”33 And as the Supreme Court

explained in Johnson, the two-step process demanded by the categorical approach,

in which the sentencing judge imagined the “ordinary case” of a crime and then

decided “whether that abstraction present[ed] a serious potential risk of physical

injury,” was vague and confusing.34 The residual clause produced several circuit

splits over whether certain crimes were sufficiently violent. 35 Indeed, the justices

could not agree whether fleeing in a vehicle from law enforcement or drunk

driving qualified as violent crimes, 36 eventually leading the Supreme Court to

conclude that “trying to derive meaning from the residual clause . . . [was] a failed

enterprise.”37 And even the elements clause has created confusion, with members

of this Court disagreeing about whether crimes like attempted murder, attempted

armed robbery, robbery, aggravated assault, and felony battery are violent

crimes. 38


32
   United States v. Vann, 660 F.3d 771, 787 (4th Cir. 2011) (Agee, J., concurring).
33
   United States v. Aguila-Montes de Oca, 655 F.3d 915, 917 (9th Cir. 2011), abrogated by
Descamps v. United States, 570 U.S. 254 (2013).
34
   135 S. Ct. at 2557.
35
   See id. at 2560 (collecting cases).
36
   See Sykes v. United States, 564 U.S. 1, 36 (2011) (Kagan, J., dissenting) (opining that fleeing
in a vehicle is not a violent felony); Begay v. United States, 553 U.S. 137, 156 (2008) (Alito, J.,
dissenting) (opining that drunk driving is a violent felony).
37
   Johnson, 135 S. Ct. at 2560.
38
   See, e.g., Hylor v. United States, ___ F.3d ____, No. 17-10856, slip op. at 10–13 (11th Cir.
July 18, 2018) (Jill Pryor, J., concurring) (opining that attempted murder and attempted armed


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       The problems with the categorical approach also cannot necessarily be

remedied by having the sentencing judge make findings about the underlying facts

of prior convictions. The Sixth Amendment requires that, “[o]ther than the fact of a

prior conviction, any fact that increases the penalty for a crime beyond the

prescribed statutory maximum must be submitted to a jury.” 39 And the specific

details of a recidivist’s past crimes go beyond the simple “fact of [his] prior

conviction.” 40 Indeed, some members of the Supreme Court have opined that,

under the Sixth Amendment, even the bare fact of a prior conviction should be

proved to a jury. 41

                                    C.      Return of the Jury

robbery are not violent felonies); United States v. Lee, 886 F.3d 1161, 1165–71 (11th Cir. 2018)
(Jordan, J., concurring) (opining that prior Eleventh Circuit decisions holding that robbery is a
violent felony were wrongly decided);United States v. Vail-Bailon, 868 F.3d 1293, 1308 (11th
Cir. 2017) (en banc) (Wilson, J., dissenting) (opining that battery is not a violent felony); Vail-
Bailon, 868 F.3d at 1315 (Rosenbaum, J., dissenting) (same); United States v. Golden, 854 F.3d
1256, 1257–60 (11th Cir. 2017) (Jill Pryor, J., concurring) (opining that a prior Eleventh Circuit
decision holding that aggravated assault is a violent felony was incorrect); In re Colon, 826 F.3d
1301, 1306–08 (11th Cir. 2016) (Martin, J., dissenting) (opining that aiding and abetting a Hobbs
Act robbery is not a crime of violence).
39
   Apprendi v. New Jersey, 530 U.S. 466, 490 (2000).
40
   Id.; see also Mathis v. United States, 136 S. Ct. 2243, 2252 (2016) (citing “serious Sixth
Amendment concerns” about judicial factfinding); Taylor v. United States, 495 U.S. 575, 601
(1990) (expressing concern that judicial factfinding about earlier offenses would “abridg[e a
defendant’s] right to a jury trial”); King, Sentencing and Prior Convictions, supra note 18, at
550–58, 562–63 (explaining constitutional concerns about the role of judges).
41
   See, e.g., Dimaya, 138 S. Ct. at 1254 (Thomas, J., dissenting) (“In my view, if the
[g]overnment wants to enhance a defendant’s sentence based on his prior convictions, it must put
those convictions in the indictment and prove them to a jury beyond a reasonable doubt.”);
Almendarez-Torres v. United States, 523 U.S. 224, 267 (1998) (Scalia, J., dissenting) (“[I]t is . . .
‘unfair,’ of course, to deprive [a] defendant of a jury determination . . . on the critical question of
[a] prior conviction.”).


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          The combination of the need to punish violent recidivists and the problem of

judicial factfinding about prior convictions yields an obvious solution for

Congress: rewrite the Armed Career Criminal Act and other recidivist statutes to

require that the government must prove to a jury beyond a reasonable doubt that

the defendant has previously been convicted of a felony the actual commission of

which involved the use, attempted use, or threatened use of physical force against

another person. For example, in the case of a defendant with a prior conviction

under Alabama law for first-degree sexual abuse by forcible compulsion, the

prosecution could introduce evidence that the defendant in fact used violent force

to subdue his victim. This evidence might include certified charging documents,

stipulations, plea agreements, factual proffers, and verdict forms from the past

prosecution, as well as traditional evidence such as witness testimony and physical

evidence.

          Tasking the jury with determining recidivism is consistent with the common

law. “Habitual offender laws like the ACCA enjoy a long tradition in this country

that dates back to colonial times.” 42 And“[a]t common law, the fact of prior

convictions had to be charged in the same indictment charging the underlying

crime . . . and submitted to the jury for determination along with that crime.” 43 In


42
     Evans, Punishing Criminals for Their Conduct, supra note 29, at 628.
43
     Almendarez-Torres, 523 U.S. at 261 (Scalia, J., dissenting) (collecting authorities).


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1967, the Supreme Court acknowledged that “[t]he common-law procedure for

applying recidivist statutes . . . , which requires allegations and proof of past

convictions in the current trial, is, of course, the simplest and best known

procedure.” 44 And earlier decisions of state courts left little doubt that “a verdict of

the jury finding the prior conviction . . . [was] essential to the power of the court to

impose the increased punishment” absent a statute that displaced the common

law. 45

          “[T]he right to have a jury decide prior-offense status . . . was the law in

virtually every federal and state jurisdiction, from the Founding past World War

II.” 46 For example, a former Texas recidivism statute provided enhanced penalties

when the prosecutor proved to the jury that the offender “ha[d] been before

convicted of the same [felony] offense . . . or one of the same nature.” 47 And a jury

finding was more than a formality. Under a former Indiana statute, “the previous

convictions, sentences, and imprisonments [had to] be described specifically, and

the jury [had to] find that the defendant was convicted, sentenced, and imprisoned
44
   Spencer, 385 U.S. at 566.
45
   State v. Findling, 144 N.W. 142, 143 (Minn. 1913) (collecting cases); see also King,
Sentencing and Prior Convictions, supra note 18, at 566–98 (collecting extensive data on
historic state practices); Anthony M. Radice, Recidivist Procedures: Prejudice and Due Process,
53 Cornell L. Rev. 337, 341 n.19 (1968); Harold Dubroff, Note, Recidivist Procedures, 40
N.Y.U. L. Rev. 332, 333 (1965).
46
   King, Sentencing and Prior Convictions, supra note 18, at 553.
47
   1925 Tex. Crim. Stat. art. 62; see also Spencer, 385 U.S. at 556 n.1 (citing Tex. Penal Code
Ann. art. 62 (West 1952)); King, Sentencing and Prior Convictions, supra note 18, at 566–98
(collecting state laws).


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in the instances described, and not otherwise.” 48 Indeed, in Kelley v. State,49 the

Supreme Court of Indiana held that the prosecution could not rely on “a certified

transcript of a judgment . . . [that did] not describe the crime for which [the

defendant] was convicted, but merely recite[d]” that the defendant was sentenced

to between one and seven years of imprisonment. 50

       The common-law method for proving prior convictions ordinarily permitted

the prosecutor to rely on a broad array of evidence if the defendant refused “to

stipulate as to the prior conviction[] and thereby relieve the State of the necessity

of . . . adducing proof before the jury of such prior convictions.”51 For example, in

Crocker v. State,52 after a defendant accused of “robbery with a prior conviction

for robbery” contested the fact of his first conviction, the prosecutor introduced

“records from the penitentiary,” “testimony of one of the officers involved in the

prior case,” and a “comparison of finger prints of the [defendant] with the finger

prints taken in connection with the prior offense.” 53 And in Dozier v. State,54 the


48
   Kelley v. State, 185 N.E. 453, 455 (Ind. 1933) (quoting Burns’ Ann. Ind. Stat. § 2340 (1926)).
49
   185 N.E. 453 (Ind. 1933).
50
   Id. at 455; cf. Carter v. Commonwealth, 11 Ky. Op. 92, 93 (Ky. 1881) (“The fact that the
accused had been previously indicted for a felony, describing the nature of the offense, in a court
having jurisdiction, that he was assigned and pled to the indictment . . . , etc., are facts necessary
to be alleged.”).
51
   Crocker v. State, 385 S.W.2d 392, 394 (Tex. Crim. App. 1964).
52
   385 S.W.2d 392 (Tex. Crim. App. 1964).
53
   Id. at 393.
54
   318 S.W.2d 80 (Tex. Crim. App. 1958).


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jury was tasked with weighing “certified copies of the judgment and sentence,”

“records of the Texas Department of Correction, including fingerprints,” and

“expert testimony identifying [the fingerprints] as identical with those of the

[defendant].” 55 Factfinding by juries was considered essential to recidivism

statutes.

       And still today, there are states that require factfinding by juries to sentence

an offender under their own recidivist statutes. Under Indiana’s current habitual

offender statute, 56 “habitual offender proceedings are treated as substantive

criminal trials. The State must prove the allegations beyond a reasonable doubt” to

a jury. 57 The test for determining whether a prior conviction from another

jurisdiction qualifies as a predicate offense under Indiana’s statute does not turn on

the elements of the offense, but on whether the acts that resulted in the out-of-state

conviction would have constituted a predicate offense “if they had been committed

in Indiana.”58

       California also uses a conduct-based approach in cases in which it is not

possible to determine whether an offense committed in another jurisdiction would

qualify as a predicate felony through an inspection of the elements of the offense
55
   Id. at 82.
56
   Ind. Code § 35-50-2–8.
57
   Moore v. State, 769 N.E.2d 1141, 1146 (Ind. Ct. App. 2002); see also Seay v. State, 698
N.E.2d 732, 733–34 (Ind. 1998) (describing the role of the jury in Indiana habitual-offender
proceedings).
58
   Weiss v. State, 903 N.E.2d 557, 561 (Ind. Ct. App. 2009).


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alone.59 Although California law permits judges to make the factual findings

required to determine that the conduct that resulted in an out-of-state conviction

would have been a predicate offense if committed in the state, a California court

“may not rely on its own independent review of record evidence to determine what

conduct ‘realistically’ led to the defendant's conviction,” but must instead rely on

“those facts that were already necessarily found by a prior jury in rendering a

guilty verdict or admitted by the defendant in entering a guilty plea.” 60

       Within our own Circuit, Alabama 61 and Georgia62 likewise require the state

to prove that the conduct underlying an offender’s prior out-of-state conviction

would have been a predicate offense under the state’s recidivist statute if

committed in the state, although both Alabama 63 and Georgia64 permit judges to

make the requisite factual findings. So in advocating a return to the jury’s

traditional role in determining recidivism at the federal level, I am not advancing a


59
   See People v. Gallardo, 407 P.3d 55, 57 (Cal. 2017).
60
   Id.
61
   See Skinner v. State, 987 So. 2d 1172, 1175 (Ala. Crim. App. 2006) (“In determining whether
an out-of-state conviction will be used to enhance punishment pursuant to the [Alabama
habitual-offender statute], the conduct upon which the foreign conviction is based must be
considered and not the foreign jurisdiction’s treatment of that conduct.”).
62
   See Walker v. Hale, 657 S.E.2d 227, 230 (Ga. 2008) (holding that an out-of-state crime
qualifies as a predicate offense under Georgia’s recidivist statute if “the same offense, if
committed in this State, would constitute a serious violent felony” as defined under the statute).
63
   See Ala. R. Crim. P. 26.6(a) (“Except in death penalty cases and in cases involving offenses
committed prior to January 1, 1980, the judge shall impose the sentence in all cases.”).
64
   See Brown v. State, 670 S.E.2d 400, 402 (Ga. 2008) (holding that the right to trial by jury is
not violated by the Georgia repeat-offender statute’s requirement that the judge make findings of
prior convictions).


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proposal untested by contemporary experience. I am instead proposing a solution

that has proved workable in practice in several states.

       Some may object that jurors’ knowledge of past convictions will lead them

to engage in propensity reasoning,65 but the Supreme Court long ago held that the

“use of prior convictions in [a] . . . criminal trial . . . [is not] so egregiously unfair

upon the issue of guilt or innocence as to offend” the guarantee of due process of

law.66 In any event, the details of past convictions are unlikely to reach the jury. 67

To begin, about 97 percent of federal prosecutions end in guilty pleas.68 And those

few defendants who go to trial can stipulate to their past convictions and limit any

proceedings to the charged offenses.69


65
   See, e.g., Dubroff, supra note 45, at 337 (citing the “prejudice engendered by proving guilt for
the present offense simultaneously with the issue of recidivism” under the common-law method).
66
   Spencer, 385 U.S. at 559; see also id. at 560 (“Such statutes . . . have been sustained in this
Court on several occasions against contentions that they violate constitutional strictures dealing
with double jeopardy, ex post facto laws, cruel and unusual punishment, due process, equal
protection, and privileges and immunities.”).
67
   See generally Nancy J. King, Juries and Prior Convictions: Managing the Demise of the Prior
Conviction Exception to Apprendi, 67 SMU L. Rev. 577 (2014) (outlining procedures that
preserve the right to a jury trial in recidivism proceedings while limiting prejudice to
defendants).
68
   See U.S. Sentencing Comm’n, 2017 Sourcebook of Federal Sentencing Statistics fig. C,
https://www.ussc.gov/research/sourcebook-2017.
69
   See Pitcock v. State, 367 S.W.2d 864, 865 (Tex. Crim. App. 1963) (explaining that under a
recidivism statute, “should the appellant again offer to fully stipulate as to the prior conviction,
the state should not be allowed to introduce evidence on this point”), overruled on other grounds
by Lehman v. State, 792 S.W.2d 82 (Tex. Crim. App. 1990) (en banc); cf. Old Chief v. United
States, 519 U.S. 172, 174 (1997) (explaining that in a federal prosecution of a felon for
possession of a firearm, 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1), a district court abuses its discretion if it allows
the government to “prove the element of prior conviction” when a defendant “offer[s] to concede
th[at] fact”).


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       The supposed unfairness to defendants of admitting proof of prior

convictions is the same concern that motivated the failed experiment of allowing

judges to assess recidivism. When the Supreme Court decided Spencer v. Texas 70

in 1967 and upheld the common-law jury method against a challenge under the

Fourteenth Amendment,71 the majority opined that it “might well agree” that other

methods of assessing recidivism, such as “leaving that question to the court,”

would be “faire[r]” than placing a defendant’s criminal history before the jury. 72

Justice Stewart also wrote in his concurring opinion that, “[i]f the Constitution

gave [him] a roving commission to impose upon the criminal courts of [the states

his] own notions of enlightened policy, [he] would not join the [majority] opinion”

because other “recidivist procedures . . . are far superior to those utilized [under the

common law].” 73 And then-contemporary academic commentators critiqued the

common-law method and identified alternatives, including “determination of

[recidivist] status by the judge.” 74 But here we are. The cure of judicial factfinding

has proved worse than the disease it was supposed to treat.

70
   385 U.S. 554 (1967).
71
   Id. at 559.
72
   Id. at 566–67.
73
   Id. at 569 (Stewart, J., concurring); see also id. (observing that many states had recently
modified or abandoned the common-law method).
74
   David S. Sidikman, Note, The Pleading and Proof of Prior Convictions in Habitual Criminal
Prosecutions, 33 N.Y.U. L. Rev. 210, 215–16 (1958) (capitalization omitted) (explaining that
judicial assessment “should be preferred over the common-law” method and that “a jury trial
should not be considered essential where the issue is conviction of prior offenses”); cf. Radice,


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       Another objection might be that compiling evidence of prior convictions will

be burdensome. But with the advent of electronic records and other advantages of

modern technology, the task of reconstructing the details of prior convictions will

today be far easier than it was under the original common-law procedure and, over

time, will become easier still. 75 Because most state and federal prosecutions end in

guilty pleas, the relevant details of prior convictions ordinarily will be preserved in

factual proffers and other plea records. 76 And in the light of the rapid rate at which

many violent offenders recidivate, other relevant evidence likely will be fresh.77

       In any event, Congress has some options for ensuring that all violent

recidivists remain subject to the mandatory minimum penalty. As explained above,

the elements clause may fail to capture offenders who commit broadly defined

crimes in violent ways. But the facts of their prior crimes, when ascertainable,

should not be immune from consideration when they commit new crimes.




supra note 45, at 340–41 & n.21 (critiquing the common-law method, but also acknowledging
that judicial factfinding “deprives the defendant of a jury trial on the issue”).
75
   Cf. Crocker, 385 S.W.2d at 393 (explaining that the prosecution introduced “records from the
penitentiary,” “testimony of one of the officers involved in the prior case,” and fingerprint
evidence); King, Sentencing and Prior Convictions, supra note 18, at 561 (discussing how
technology has improved the identification of repeat offenders).
76
   See Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Plea and Charge Bargaining 1 (2011)
(“[A]bout 90 to 95 percent of both federal and state court cases are resolved through [plea
bargaining].”).
77
   See U.S. Sentencing Comm’n, Report to the Congress, supra note 2, at 42 (finding a
“[m]edian [t]ime to [r]ecidivism” of 14 months).


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       That this country comprises 50 states with different criminal codes all but

ensures that a formalist approach to defining a crime of violence—administered

only by judges—will be either over- or underinclusive and almost certainly will be

vulnerable to persistent litigation like that which felled the residual clause. For

example, a recent bill introduced in the United States Senate proposes to apply the

mandatory minimum to defendants with “[three] or more previous serious felony

convictions,” namely “any conviction . . . for an offense . . . punishable by

imprisonment for a statutory maximum term of not less than 10 years.” 78 But this

definition is both too narrow and too broad. It would exclude the offense of “felony

battery” under Florida law, 79 a third-degree felony with a maximum term of

imprisonment of five years, 80 even though this crime requires the infliction of

“great bodily harm, permanent disability, or permanent disfigurement.” 81 It also

would exclude convictions for “domestic battery by strangulation” under Florida

law82 and for “assault[ing] another and inflict[ing] substantial bodily harm” under

Minnesota law. 83 But it would include the Florida offense of “[u]nlawful




78
   Restoring the Armed Career Criminal Act, S. 3335, 115th Cong. § 2 (2018).
79
   Fla. Stat. § 784.041(1).
80
   Id. § 775.082(3)(e).
81
   Id. § 784.041(1)(b).
82
   Id. § 784.041(2)(a).
83
   Minn. Stat. § 609.223 subd. 1.


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possession or use of a fifth wheel,”84 a second-degree felony with a maximum term

of imprisonment of 15 years. 85 It would include a conviction under Utah law for

“the intentional sale of five or more unlawful telecommunication devices within a

six-month period,” 86 also a second-degree felony with a maximum term of

imprisonment of 15 years.87 And it would include the Massachusetts offense of

knowing possession of “ten or more pieces of false money . . . with intent to utter

or pass the same as true,” a crime punishable by a life sentence. 88 In the light of the

substantial recidivism differences between violent and nonviolent offenders,

Congress should ensure that their punishments are based on the nature of their past

convictions and not the potential sentences for those convictions.

       Make no mistake—Congress must eventually do something. The need to

punish violent recidivists is just as strong today as it was when the Supreme Court

decided Spencer over 50 years ago.89 The only question is what Congress should

do. Restoring the common-law role of the jury is the right place to start.




84
   Fla. Stat. § 812.0147.
85
   See id. § 775.082(3)(d).
86
   Utah Code § 76-6-409.8(2).
87
   Id. § 76-3-203(2).
88
   Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 267, § 17.
89
   See Spencer, 385 U.S. at 566 n.9 (reporting “62% of prisoners committed to federal prisons in
the year ending June 30, 1965, had been previously committed.”).


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MARTIN, Circuit Judge, dissenting:

      As United States Circuit Judges, we have been given great power and

privilege. And our positions call upon us to decide the fate of many people who

have neither. In a nation that incarcerates a larger percentage of its population than

almost all others, federal judges devote much time to examining (and reexamining)

the sentences imposed on people serving time in our federal and state prisons. The

interpretation the majority of this en banc Court gives to the sentencing statute at

issue here, which gives no relief for Irma Ovalles, presents the opportunity to

review the development of this Circuit’s sentencing jurisprudence in recent years.

My review reveals a body of law that has relentlessly limited the ability of the

incarcerated to have their sentences reviewed. Decisions of this Court have left

only a narrow path to relief for those serving sentences longer than the law now

allows. Yet this narrow path is not mandated by decisions of the Supreme Court or

by Acts of Congress. Indeed, this Court has withheld relief from prisoners even

when precedent counsels otherwise.

      As did my colleagues in the majority, I begin with the landmark Supreme

Court decision in Johnson v. United States, 576 U.S. ___, 135 S. Ct. 2551 (2015).

Having read the majority opinion, the reader is surely aware that in Johnson, the

United States Supreme Court invalidated part of the Armed Career Criminal Act

(ACCA), a sentencing statute designed to punish violent repeat offenders more


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harshly. Id. at 2557. The question before the Court in Johnson was not whether

violent repeat offenders should be punished more harshly. Rather, the question

was how to decide who is a violent repeat offender. Id. at 2555. In Johnson, the

Court held that one definition the statute used to identify violent repeat offenders

was so vague, and so susceptible to divergent meanings, that relying on it to

lengthen people’s prison sentences violated the protections guaranteed by the U.S.

Constitution. Id. at 2557. As a result, the Supreme Court struck down the part of

ACCA known as the residual clause. This ruling called into question the sentences

of thousands of federal prisoners sentenced under ACCA and other, similarly

worded statutes—including the one that was the basis for Irma Ovalles’s sentence.

After Johnson, it was the job of the Eleventh Circuit, and all inferior federal courts,

to review the lawfulness of these sentences.

      Yet at every turn, this Court erred in ways that stopped prisoners from

getting their sentences reviewed and prevented people who had meritorious claims

from getting relief. Ms. Ovalles’s case is a “successor” to Johnson, Maj. Op. at 2,

and it is the latest in this line of decisions. Judge Jill Pryor’s dissent shows how

the majority strays from the plain text of the statute and from Supreme Court

precedent. I fully join her opinion. I write separately to provide the context of the

Eleventh Circuit’s response to Johnson. This is not the first time this Court has

mistakenly applied Johnson, nor the first time our mistake will leave an unlawful


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sentence intact. Indeed, today’s en banc decision, like others before it, promises to

have lasting effects for many prisoners.

                           I.     JOHNSON AFTERMATH

      When the Supreme Court invalidates a statute that was the basis for

sentences being served by thousands of federal prisoners, the first question

becomes, who benefits? Do we simply quit relying on this unconstitutional statute

for those who will be sentenced in the future, or do we go back and give relief to

those who were sentenced under the flawed statute in the past? There are rules

governing who gets relief. See generally Teague v. Lane, 489 U.S. 288, 109 S. Ct.

1060 (1989). Generally, people sentenced under a flawed statute more than a year

before the Supreme Court announces a new rule like the one in Johnson get relief

based on the new rule (retroactive relief) if the Supreme Court has told us they can.

See 28 U.S.C. § 2255(f)(3), (h); In re Henry, 757 F.3d 1151, 1157–60 (11th Cir.

2014).

      One statutory tool for a person seeking relief from an unlawful federal

prison sentence is found in 28 U.S.C. § 2255. Provisions of this statute were

intended to (and do) limit opportunities for prisoners to get courts to review

problems with their sentences. Prisoners may contest their sentences once as a

matter of right under § 2255, but they must do it within one year of their sentences

becoming final. Id. § 2255(f). This one-year statute of limitations goes by quickly


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indeed for most federal prisoners, who are routinely sentenced to serve decades-

long prison terms. Section 2255 does allow prisoners to bring a second or

successive challenge to their sentences after that first year, but it is much harder.

For starters, prisoners seeking relief when they are years into serving their sentence

must first come to a court of appeals to get permission. Id. §§ 2244(b)(3)(A),

2255(h). There are other barriers to getting a second chance at relief in federal

court, but for purposes of this discussion, perhaps the most important is that the

statute gives inmates no ability to contest a decision from a panel of this Court

telling them they cannot file a second or successive petition. Id. § 2244(b)(3)(E)

(“The grant or denial of an authorization by a court of appeals to file a second or

successive application shall not be appealable and shall not be the subject of a

petition for rehearing or for a writ of certiorari.”). For this “seeking permission”

process, prisoners are stuck with the answer we give them, whether our answer is

right or wrong.

      As one would expect, after the Supreme Court decided Johnson, thousands

of prisoners tried to get permission from our Court (and others) to challenge their

sentences. This is understandable because many of them had been sentenced under

a statute they now knew was, in part, unconstitutional. To the best of my

knowledge, our Court applied Johnson to give relief to inmates exercising their

direct appeal rights, and to those who were within the one-year time limit for


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bringing their first collateral attack. E.g., Mays v. United States, 817 F.3d 728,

736–37 (11th Cir. 2016) (applying Johnson to a first § 2255 motion); United States

v. Braun, 801 F.3d 1301, 1307–08 (11th Cir. 2015) (applying Johnson on direct

appeal).

      However, prisoners who were already more than a year into serving

sentences impacted by Johnson have had a hard time getting their cases considered

in the Eleventh Circuit. Shortly after Johnson was decided, this Circuit declined to

allow the Supreme Court’s new rule in Johnson to serve as the basis for a second

or successive motion under § 2255. In re Franks, 815 F.3d 1281, 1283 (11th Cir.

2016), abrogated by Welch v. United States, 578 U.S. __, 136 S. Ct. 1257 (2016);

In re Rivero, 797 F.3d 986, 989 (11th Cir. 2015), abrogated in part by Welch, 136

S. Ct. 1257 (2016); see 28 U.S.C. §§ 2244(b)(2)(A), 2255(h). Our Court denied

permission for § 2255 filings by long-ago sentenced inmates because the Supreme

Court did not say Johnson applied retroactively to them. As a member of this

Court who believed Supreme Court precedent required broader review of sentences

imposed under ACCA, this Court’s decision to the contrary was especially

dismaying because the government urged us to give retroactive relief to these

inmates. The government filed a statement in these cases saying: “[T]he Court

should grant authorization to file second or successive § 2255 motions where a

defendant makes a prima facie showing that, in light of Johnson, he was


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erroneously sentenced under the Armed Career Criminal Act.” Franks, 815 F.3d at

1289 (Martin, J., dissenting) (quotation marks omitted and alteration adopted).

      As I discussed in my dissent in Franks, the Supreme Court’s decisions in

Schriro v. Summerlin, 542 U.S. 348, 351, 124 S. Ct. 2519, 2522 (2004) (holding

“[n]ew substantive rules generally apply retroactively”), and Bousley v. United

States, 523 U.S. 614, 620–21, 118 S. Ct. 1604, 1610 (1998) (determining a rule

that narrowed the scope of a criminal statute by interpreting its terms is substantive

and applied retroactively), “logically dictate the retroactivity of Johnson.” Franks,

815 F.3d at 1288 (Martin, J., dissenting) (quotation marks omitted). When the

Supreme Court struck down ACCA’s residual clause as unconstitutionally vague in

Johnson, it narrowed the scope of that statute’s reach. Id. Thus, the rule it

announced “necessarily carr[ied] a significant risk that a defendant . . . faces a

punishment that the law cannot impose upon him” and as such, should have been

applied retroactively. Summerlin, 542 U.S. at 352, 124 S. Ct. at 2522–23

(quotation marks omitted). Nevertheless, this Circuit ruled in In re Rivero that no

cases logically dictated Johnson’s retroactivity. Rivero, 797 F.3d at 989.

      In Rivero, this Circuit held that no cases dictated Johnson’s retroactivity in

part because “Johnson did not hold that Congress could not impose a punishment

for the same prior conviction in a statute with less vague language.” Id. Our Court




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distinguished Bousley as involving a rule that was “the product of statutory

interpretation,” and not “a new rule of constitutional law.” Id. at 991.

      Turns out we were wrong. Just shy of a year after Johnson issued, the

Supreme Court decided Welch v. United States, 578 U.S. ___, 136 S. Ct. 1257

(2016), commanding that inmates be given Johnson relief retroactively—and

rejecting this Court’s reasons for concluding Johnson did not apply retroactively.

In holding Johnson was retroactive, the Supreme Court pointed to Bousley, where

it concluded an interpretation narrowing the sweep of a criminal statute applies

retroactively, “even though Congress could (and later did) . . . amend[] the statute.”

Welch, 136 S. Ct. at 1267. By that same logic, the Welch Court held, Johnson

announced a retroactively applicable substantive rule. The Court also observed,

quite rightly, that “[t]reating decisions as substantive if they involve statutory

interpretation, but not if they involve statutory invalidation, would produce unusual

outcomes” and is an “arbitrary distinction [that] has no place in the Teague

framework.” Welch, 136 S. Ct. at 1268. In short, the Supreme Court rejected this

Court’s attempt to distinguish Bousley.

      Fortunately, the Supreme Court was quick to correct this Court’s erroneous

decision on retroactivity—Welch issued just over eight months after Rivero and

three months after Franks. But in the meantime our Court had turned away dozens

of prisoners seeking authorization to file second or successive § 2255 motions


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based on Johnson. See In re Robinson, 822 F.3d 1196, 1198–1201 (11th Cir.

2016) (Martin, J., concurring in judgment). And because such applications must

be filed within one year of when the Supreme Court announced the new rule in

Johnson, see Dodd v. United States, 545 U.S. 353, 359, 125 S. Ct. 2478, 2482–83

(2005), all prisoners seeking the retroactive benefit of Johnson in their case had

only about two months to file an (or another) application.

      Thus, in a compressed timeframe, the Court began reviewing thousands of

applications from inmates seeking to file a second or successive § 2255 petition

based on Johnson’s retroactivity. The statute requires these applications to make a

“prima facie” showing that they are entitled to relief. 28 U.S.C. §§ 2244(b)(3)(C),

2255(h). I will now review how this Circuit has implemented this statutory

requirement for Johnson applications.

     II.    INSTITUTING MERITS REVIEW OF APPLICATIONS SEEKING
             AUTHORIZATION TO FILE SECOND OR SUCCESSIVE § 2255
                     MOTIONS RAISING JOHNSON CLAIMS

      Again, when prisoners apply to circuit courts for authorization to file a

second or successive habeas motion, the governing statute limits our review of the

application to determining only whether the prisoner has made a “prima facie

showing” that his proposed motion “contain[s] . . . a new rule of constitutional law,

made retroactive to cases on collateral review by the Supreme Court, that was

previously unavailable.” 28 U.S.C. §§ 2244(b)(3)(C), 2255(h). I had occasion to


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discuss more fully in my concurrence in In re Williams, 898 F.3d 1098, 1107 (11th

Cir. 2018) (Martin, J., specially concurring), why a prima facie showing is “a less

demanding standard” than what is required to appeal from a District Court’s ruling

on a habeas petition. And the standard for appealing a District Court’s habeas

ruling “does not require a showing that the appeal will succeed.” Welch, 136 S.

Ct. at 1263 (quotation marks omitted).

      Up until the rush of Johnson filings, this Court only reviewed filings from

prisoners asking for permission to bring a second or successive petition to see

whether the prisoner had made a prima facie case. We did this because, again, this

is the task the statute assigns us. See, e.g., In re Moss, 703 F.3d 1301, 1303 (11th

Cir. 2013) (explaining that the panel’s conclusion that the prisoner had made a

prima facie showing was “a limited determination” and the District Court would

need to do a de novo review); see also Jordan v. Sec’y, Dep’t of Corr., 485 F.3d

1351, 1357–58 (11th Cir. 2007) (holding that District Courts must review de novo

whether a petitioner has actually satisfied the requirements to file a second or

successive application because the statute “restricts us to deciding whether the

petitioner has made out a prima facie case of compliance with the § 2244(b)

requirements”); In re Joshua, 224 F.3d 1281, 1282 n.2 (11th Cir. 2000) (stating the

merits of a prisoner’s claim are “not relevant to whether [he] can obtain permission

to bring a second or successive § 2255 motion to vacate”).


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      Before the rush of Johnson filings, we also recognized the practical

challenges of conducting a merits review by looking only at the filings asking for

permission to bring the action:

              When we make that prima facie decision we do so based only
      on the petitioner’s submission. We do not hear from the government.
      We usually do not have access to the whole record. And we often do
      not have the time necessary to decide anything beyond the prima facie
      question because we must comply with the statutory deadline. See
      § 2244(b)(3)(D) (requiring a decision within 30 days after the motion
      is filed).

Jordan, 485 F.3d at 1357–58. Beyond the limitations mentioned in Jordan, our

Court also requires prisoners to use a form designed for prisoners seeking to file a

second or successive petition. In re Saint Fleur, 824 F.3d 1337, 1342 & n.1 (11th

Cir. 2016) (Martin, J., concurring). This “form gives prisoners very little space to

explain their claims.” Id. at 1342 n.1; see Williams, 898 F.3d at 1101–02 (Wilson,

J., specially concurring). The mandatory form also prohibits prisoners from

attaching any “separate petitions, motions, briefs, arguments, etc.” Saint Fleur,

824 F.3d at 1342 n.1 (Martin, J., concurring) (quotation marks omitted); see

Williams, 898 F.3d at 1101–02 (Wilson, J., specially concurring).

      Yet after Johnson, this Court began doing exactly what we had previously

explained the constraints on our prima facie review would not permit: deciding the

merits of a prisoner’s Johnson claim. See, e.g., In re Thomas, 823 F.3d 1345, 1349

(11th Cir. 2016). And the Court did this based on the limited filings, which the


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prisoner understood was just a permission-seeking document intended to allow him

to present the merits of his claims in District Court.

      The questions that come up about sentences after Johnson are complicated.

Every ACCA sentence is based on the individual criminal history of the people

serving them. Under ACCA, a prisoner who had in the past committed three or

more crimes that qualified as either a “serious drug crime” or a “violent felony”

got a sentence that had to be at least fifteen years long. 18 U.S.C. § 924(e). Most

are longer. Yet ACCA allows no more than a ten-year sentence for a prisoner who

had fewer than three such earlier criminal convictions. Id. § 924(a)(2). Thus, the

devil is in the details. Johnson required the federal courts to do the tedious work of

examining the criminal histories of people who have been convicted of violating a

seemingly endless list of state crimes, defined by many different states in many

different ways. In many cases, this Court undertook this complicated review based

merely on the prisoner’s application to file a second or successive § 2255 motion.

      In so doing, this Court effectively reimposed sentences on these inmates

here at the court of appeals level, without ever allowing more thorough District

Court review. We turned away prisoners seeking District Court review by ruling

that their criminal history that had qualified for a fifteen-year plus sentence still

qualified them for the longer sentence under a part of ACCA that survived

Johnson. See, e.g., In re Hires, 825 F.3d 1297, 1301–02 (holding Florida robbery


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and Florida aggravated assault qualify as ACCA predicates under the elements

clause).

       As it turned out, the language the Supreme Court invalidated in Johnson also

appeared in other federal sentencing statutes, so our Court began to get filings from

prisoners sentenced under those statutes as well. For example, prisoners like Ms.

Ovalles also sought to challenge sentences imposed under 18 U.S.C. § 924(c), the

statute at issue in this case. Section 924(c) contains language very similar to that

declared unconstitutional in Johnson and “identical” to that declared

unconstitutional in Sessions v. Dimaya, 138 S. Ct. 1204 (2018). Maj. Op. at 16.

In some § 924(c) cases where the prisoner merely sought leave to present claims in

District Court, this Court decided on the merits—sometimes as a matter of first

impression—that a particular state crime still qualified as a “crime of violence”

under 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(3)(A), which does not contain the language found

unconstitutional in Johnson. See, e.g., In re Saint Fleur, 824 F.3d 1337, 1340–41

(holding, for the first time, that substantive Hobbs Act robbery is a crime of

violence under 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(3)(A)). 1


1
  In Saint Fleur, I agreed with the panel opinion that Mr. Saint Fleur’s § 924(c) conviction
“look[ed] to be valid despite Johnson.” Saint Fleur, 824 F.3d at 1341 (Martin, J., concurring). In
hindsight I regret participating in merits reviews of sentences like Mr. Saint Fleur’s at this stage.
But even facing the flood of requests to file second or successive petitions, I realized at the time I
was “increasingly wary of deciding whether to grant leave to file a second or successive § 2255
petition based on a conclusion that the applicant’s proposed claim will fail on the merits.” Id.
By the time Saint Fleur was decided, I had come to realize that making these merits rulings on


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       Also as a result of Johnson’s holding that the language of ACCA was

unconstitutional, it should have surprised no one that our Court would begin to see

challenges to sentences imposed under identical language in the U.S. Sentencing

Guidelines. USSG § 4B1.2(a). Yet here again, where prisoners sought to challenge

their sentences under this guideline, our Court denied them the chance to present

their claims in District Court. In a direct appeal from a sentencing, with full

adversarial testing, this Court said Johnson did not apply because the sentences

were imposed under a Guideline system that was advisory. United States v.

Matchett, 802 F.3d 1185, 1193–96 (11th Cir. 2015) (“The vagueness doctrine,

which ‘rest[s] on [a] lack of notice’ . . . does not apply to advisory guidelines.”).2

This is how the process should work. But then another panel of this Court, faced

with a prisoner’s application to file a second or successive petition, denied Johnson

relief even to those who had been sentenced under the mandatory Guidelines. See

In re Griffin, 823 F.3d 1350, 1353–56 (11th Cir. 2016) (extending Matchett, 802

F.3d at 1193–96 (11th Cir. 2015) to sentences imposed under the mandatory

Guidelines).

such thin pleadings, and with no adversarial testing was the wrong approach. I was also coming
to understand that some of our merits rulings were wrong, and there was little to no recourse for
inmates who got bum rulings.
2
 Though I advocated that Johnson applied to the advisory guidelines, see In re Clayton, 829 F.3d
1254, 1256 (Martin J., concurring in the result), our Court’s holding to the contrary carried the
day. See Beckles v. United States, 580 U.S. __, 137 S. Ct. 886 (2017).



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       During this time, many panels, including some I served on, chose to publish

our rulings on these applications. See, e.g., In re Smith, 829 F.3d 1276 (11th Cir.

2016); In re Colon, 826 F.3d 1301 (11th Cir. 2016); Hires, 825 F.3d at 1297; Saint

Fleur, 824 F.3d at 1337; In re Hines, 824 F.3d 1334 (11th Cir. 2016). Under

Eleventh Circuit precedent, published rulings are binding on all future panels

facing the same issue. United States v. St. Hubert, 883 F.3d 1319, 1328–29 (11th

Cir. 2018) (holding published orders on applications to file second or successive

habeas motions are binding on all future appellate panels).3 Some of these panel

opinions were decided over dissent, “which would ordinarily require oral argument

under this circuit’s rules.” Williams, 898 F.3d at 1109 n.4 (citing 11th Cir. R. 34-

3(b)(3)) (Martin, J., specially concurring).

         In a short time span, our Court got thousands of authorization applications

raising Johnson claims. But once any panel published a decision holding an

inmate’s past conviction still counts as a predicate conviction under the ACCA, it

became easier to dispose of new filings. A panel receiving a new application to

file a second or successive petition could quickly cite to a published decision

rejecting someone else’s application based on its declaration that the two had

identical predicate convictions that had been ruled a “violent felony” even after


3
 Judge Wilson and I discussed this issue in greater depth in our concurring opinions in Williams,
898 F.3d at 1100 (Wilson, J., specially concurring); id. at 1105 (Martin, J., specially concurring).


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Johnson. Unfortunately, several of these published merits decisions were just plain

wrong. That means not only did the mistaken decision deny relief for the inmate

who brought the case, but it will continue to require denial of relief for others who

would rightly be entitled to it.

             III.   EXAMPLES OF INCORRECT MERITS DECISIONS
                     ON SECOND OR SUCCESSIVE APPLICATIONS

      In the rush to conduct these merits reviews of applications to file a second or

successive habeas petition within the 30-day statutory time frame, based only on a

form filed by a usually uncounseled prisoner, it should come as no surprise that our

Court made some mistaken rulings. I think it worthwhile to discuss three examples

of such mistakes in more detail here, to aid in understanding the impact of this

Court’s chosen method for responding to prisoners seeking relief after Johnson.

Unless we overrule them en banc or the Supreme Court corrects our errors, the

merits decisions we made under the constraints I have discussed will continue to

bar relief for prisoners with meritorious claims.

                        A. Florida Robbery and Aggravated Assault

      In In re Hires, a panel denied Mr. Hires authorization to file a second or

successive habeas motion based on an earlier conviction imposed on him in

Florida. 825 F.3d at 1297. In reviewing Mr. Hires’s application, the panel first

looked to Turner v. Warden Coleman FCI, 709 F.3d 1328 (11th Cir. 2013),

abrogated on other grounds by Johnson, 135 S. Ct. 2551, to rule that a conviction
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for Florida aggravated assault qualified as a “violent felony” under ACCA’s

elements clause. Hires, 825 F.3d at 1301. Second, it relied on United States v.

Dowd, 451 F.3d 1244 (11th Cir. 2006), to say that Florida armed robbery also

qualified as a violent felony under the elements clause. Hires, 825 F.3d at 1301–

02. Pointing to Turner and Dowd, the panel held Mr. Hires had three prior

convictions that still qualified as violent felonies “without regard to the ACCA’s

residual clause” and denied his application. Id. at 1301–02, 1303–04. But the

panel need not have followed Dowd, which failed to apply the categorical

approach, as Supreme Court precedent requires. Smith v. GTE Corp., 236 F.3d

1292, 1300 n.8 (11th Cir. 2001) (“Under the well-established prior panel precedent

rule of this Circuit, the holding of the first panel to address an issue is the law of

this Circuit, thereby binding all subsequent panels unless and until the first panel’s

holding is overruled by the Court sitting en banc or by the Supreme Court.”).

      To be clear, Turner was also wrongly decided. In United States v. Golden,

854 F.3d 1256 (11th Cir. 2017), Judge Jill Pryor concurred separately to explain

why Turner’s holding about Florida aggravated assault was wrong. Golden, 854

F.3d at 1258 (Jill Pryor, J., concurring). To summarize, Turner incorrectly applied

our precedent in United States v. Palomino Garcia, 606 F.3d 1317 (11th Cir. 2010),

and overlooked our precedent in United States v. Rosales-Bruno, 676 F.3d 1017

(11th Cir. 2012). Golden, 854 F.3d at 1258. Although Judge Jill Pryor called for


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the Court, sitting en banc, to reconsider Turner, see Golden, 854 F.3d at 1258–59,

we have not yet done so and I’ve seen no indication we will anytime soon.

Instead, we continue to apply Turner to deny prisoners relief. See, e.g., Hylor v.

United States, 896 F.3d 1219, 1223 (11th Cir. 2018). But Turner at least was

binding on the Hires panel. See Golden, 854 F.3d at 1257 (panel opinion)

(concluding Turner is binding even if flawed).

       As for Florida armed robbery, in Dowd, this Court summarily stated in one

sentence that Florida armed robbery “is undeniably” a violent felony and cited to

ACCA’s elements clause. 451 F.3d at 1255. I had an opportunity in United States

v. Seabrooks, 839 F.3d 1326 (11th Cir. 2016), to point out that Dowd’s one-

sentence reasoning was not adequate, let alone a proper application of Supreme

Court precedent, in light of the Supreme Court’s more recent decisions explaining

how to apply the categorical approach. Seabrooks, 839 F.3d at 1348–49 (Martin,

J., concurring in the judgment). 4 Yet, only three weeks after the panel’s fractured


4
 I did understand at the time, however, that this Court’s decision in United States v. Lockley,
632 F.3d 1238 (11th Cir. 2011), controlled the outcome of Mr. Seabrooks’s case. Seabrooks,
839 F.3d at 1350–52. In holding that Florida attempted robbery qualified as a “crime of
violence” under the elements clause of Guideline § 4B1.2(a), Lockley determined that the “least
culpable conduct sufficient to support a robbery conviction” under Florida law was “taking by
putting the victim in fear.” Seabrooks, 839 F.3d at 1350 (citing Lockley, 632 F.3d at 1244). The
Lockley panel decided that “‘[p]utting in fear,’ per Florida law, involves an act causing the
victim to fear death or great bodily harm.” 632 F.3d at 1244. Mr. Seabrooks sought to
distinguish Lockely by arguing that “sudden snatching,” not “putting in fear,” was the least
culpable conduct under Florida law. Seabrooks, 839 F.3d at 1350–51. My review of Florida
Supreme Court decisions made me believe that, at the time of Mr. Seabrooks’s conviction,
sudden snatching would not have been a sufficient basis for an attempted robbery conviction.


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decision in Seabrooks, another panel applied Dowd as binding precedent and ruled

that all Florida armed robbery convictions are categorically violent felonies for

ACCA purposes. See United States v. Fritts, 841 F.3d 937, 940, 943–44 (11th Cir.

2016). Fritts also cited Hires and other published cases dealing with second or

successive petitions to support its conclusion that Florida armed robbery qualifies

as a violent felony under the elements clause. Id. at 940 (citing Hires, 825 F.3d

1297, In re Thomas, 823 F.3d 1345, 1349 (11th Cir. 2016), and In re Moore, 830

F.3d 1268, 1271 (11th Cir. 2016)). Fritts is wrongly decided, and the Supreme

Court is now set to review our holding in that case. See United States v. Stokeling,

684 F. App’x 870, 872–76 (11th Cir. 2017) (Martin, J., concurring) (unpublished),

cert. granted 138 S. Ct. 1438 (2018); see also United States v. Lee, 886 F.3d 1161,

1166–69 (11th Cir. 2018) (Jordan, J., concurring); United States v. Geozos, 870

F.3d 890, 901 (9th Cir. 2017) (holding Florida robbery and Florida armed robbery

are not categorically violent felonies for ACCA purposes and ordering release of

prisoner). In the meantime, however, this Court continues to rely on Fritts to bar

inmates’ claims for relief. See, e.g., Hylor, 896 F.3d at 1223.

                    B. Johnson’s Applicability to the Mandatory Guidelines


See id. at 1351–52. (discussing change in Florida law in 1997). In another case, Judge Jordan
showed that intermediate Florida courts were affirming robbery convictions despite conduct that
did not involve an act causing the victim to fear death or great bodily harm, calling into question
Lockley’s soundness. See United States v. Lee, 886 F.3d 1161, 1166–69 (11th Cir. 2018)
(Jordan, J., concurring).


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      As I’ve mentioned, the United States Sentencing Guidelines contained

language identical to what the Supreme Court ruled unconstitutionally vague in the

ACCA statute. This Court upheld guideline sentences imposed in reliance on this

language under the advisory guideline regime. Matchett, 802 F.3d at 1196; see

Beckles v. United States, 580 U.S. __, 137 S. Ct. 886, 890 (2017) (holding “the

advisory Guidelines are not subject to vagueness challenges under the Due Process

Clause”). But I think this Court got it wrong in In re Griffin when it extended

Matchett’s ruling that there was no constitutional vagueness problem with advisory

guidelines to hold sentences under the mandatory Guidelines were not

unconstitutionally vague. See In re Griffin, 823 F.3d 1350, 1354–56. Cf. Cross v.

United States, 892 F.3d 288, 299–302, 307 (7th Cir. 2018) (holding Johnson

invalidated the residual clause of the mandatory career-offender Guideline and

ordering resentencing). The Griffin panel’s first mistake was concluding it was

bound by Matchett, when in fact Matchett addressed a different question. See

Griffin, 823 F.3d at 1354. Matchett was concerned solely with the advisory

Guidelines. Nonetheless, citing Matchett, Griffin reasoned that “[t]he

Guidelines—whether mandatory or advisory—cannot be unconstitutionally vague

because they do not establish the illegality of any conduct and are designed to

assist and limit the discretion of the sentencing judge.” Id. But this is not what

Matchett said. Matchett recognized that the vagueness doctrine, and thus Johnson,


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applied to “criminal statutes that define elements of a crime or fix punishments.”

Matchett, 802 F.3d at 1194 (emphasis added) (citing Johnson, 135 S. Ct. at 2557).

The Griffin panel failed to consider that the Supreme Court has equated the

mandatory Guidelines with laws that fix sentences. See, e.g., United States v.

Booker, 543 U.S. 220, 234, 125 S. Ct. 738, 750 (2005) (“Because [the Guidelines]

are binding on judges, [the Court] ha[s] consistently held that the Guidelines have

the force and effect of laws.” (emphasis added)). Booker also rejected the idea that

“[t]he availability of a departure in specified circumstances” was enough to make a

mandatory Guideline range advisory. See 543 U.S. at 234, 125 S. Ct. at 750.

      The Griffin panel also said, “Due process does not mandate notice of where,

within the statutory range, the guidelines sentence will fall.” 823 F.3d at 1354.

But this too is wrong. In Beckles v. United States, 580 U.S. ___, 137 S. Ct. 886

(2017), the Supreme Court told us that the vagueness doctrine did not apply to the

post-Booker advisory Guidelines precisely because “‘the due process concerns that

require[d] notice in a world of mandatory Guidelines no longer’ apply.” Id. at 894

(quoting Irizarry v. United States, 553 U.S. 708, 714, 128 S. Ct. 2198, 2202 (2008)

(alterations adopted and emphasis added)).

      This Court alternatively held in Griffin that Welch did not make Johnson

retroactive on all collateral challenges. The Griffin panel said Johnson was

retroactive only where it applied to result in “a substantive change of law [by]


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alter[ing] the statutory range of permissible sentences.” Griffin, 823 F.3d at 1355.

The panel noted that application of Johnson to the Sentencing Guidelines would

result only in “changes in how the sentencing procedural process is to be

conducted.” Id. In short, the Griffin panel accepted Johnson as a substantive rule

in the ACCA context, but characterized it as a procedural rule in the Sentencing

Guideline context. This cannot be right.

      Welch explained that a new rule “has a procedural function” if it “alters only

the procedures used to obtain the conviction.” 136 S. Ct. at 1266. A new rule has

a “substantive function” if it “alters instead the range of conduct or class of persons

that the law punishes.” Id. Johnson is clearly a substantive rule as applied to the

mandatory Guidelines because if the residual clause in the career-offender

Guideline is void for vagueness, then the range of conduct that Guideline reaches

is necessarily narrowed. See id. To the extent Griffin relied on a distinction

between statutes promulgated by Congress and Guidelines issued by the

Sentencing Commission, that is a distinction without a difference for the time

when the Guidelines were mandatory. See United States v. R.L.C., 503 U.S. 291,

297, 112 S. Ct. 1329, 1334 (1992) (rejecting the idea that “the statutory character

of a specific penalty provision gives it primacy over administrative sentencing

guidelines,” noting “the mandate to apply the Guidelines is itself statutory” (citing

18 U.S.C. § 3553(b)).


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      Even with these flaws in Griffin, it is binding precedent in our Circuit, and

we are required to deny leave to file a second or successive petition to any prisoner

seeking relief from a sentence imposed under the mandatory guideline system.

                                 C. Florida Manslaughter

      My third example of a merits decision that missed the mark came in In re

Burgest, 829 F.3d 1285 (11th Cir. 2016). Here, the panel denied Mr. Burgest

permission to file a second or successive motion based on Griffin. Id. at 1287.

The panel then went on to consider—even though the case had already been

decided against Mr. Burgest—whether a conviction for Florida manslaughter

qualified as a “crime of violence” under the career-offender Guideline. Id. The

commentary to the career-offender Guideline defined “crime of violence,” in part,

by listing several included offenses, which list included “manslaughter.” See

USSG § 4B1.2 cmt. n.1. On this basis alone, the Burgest panel held that Florida

manslaughter was a crime of violence. See 829 F.3d at 1287.

      But Burgest’s reasoning ignored Eleventh Circuit precedent that requires us

to apply the categorical approach when deciding whether a prior conviction is a

qualifying offense for sentencing enhancement purposes. See Lockley, 632 F.3d at

1241–42 (noting “robbery” is enumerated as a “crime of violence” in the Guideline

commentary to § 4B1.2 and stating “[w]here, as here, the Guidelines specifically

designate a certain offense as a ‘crime of violence,’ we compare the elements of


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the crime of conviction to the generic form of the offense as defined by the States,

learned treatises, and the Model Penal Code”). When it failed to use the

categorical approach, the panel merely relied on the label Florida uses. This

practice was explicitly rejected by this Court in Palomino Garcia. See 606 F.3d at

1327–29 (rejecting the government’s argument that a 16-level enhancement under

Guideline § 2L1.2 should be affirmed merely because the State called the offense

“aggravated assault” and the Guideline definition enumerated “aggravated assault”

as a “crime of violence”). A blind reliance on how any given state law labels a

crime leads to prisoners who engaged in similar conduct being sentenced

differently. That is because conduct criminalized in one state may not be in

another. For example, if Florida labeled the act of crossing the street outside of the

crosswalk “manslaughter,” that would be enough for the Burgest panel to conclude

jaywalking was a “crime of violence.” Our precedent should have stood to defeat

this result.

       Where other circuits used the categorical approach, they found that Florida’s

manslaughter statute encompasses more acts than those captured in the generic

definition. See United States v. Mendoza-Padilla, 833 F.3d 1156, 1159–60 (9th

Cir. 2016) (relying on the federal generic definition of manslaughter as well as the

Fifth Circuit’s survey of all 50 states in United States v. Dominguez-Ochoa, 386

F.3d 639, 645–46 (5th Cir. 2004)); United States v. Garcia-Perez, 779 F.3d 278,


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284 & nn. 23–24, 289 (5th Cir. 2015) (relying on the generic definition developed

in Dominguez-Ochoa and United States v. Bonilla, 524 F.3d 647 (5th Cir. 2008),

which also included discussions of treatises and the Model Penal Code). The Fifth

Circuit decided that Florida manslaughter can be committed “by act, by

procurement, or by culpable negligence.” Garcia-Perez, 779 F.3d at 284; see Fla.

Stat. § 782.07(1). That court then examined Florida case law to find that a long

line of cases, left unaddressed by more recent ones, “establishes that something

less than recklessness as to death is required to prove act manslaughter.” Garcia-

Perez, 779 F.3d at 287. Through this process, the Fifth Circuit concluded that

Florida manslaughter “falls outside the definition of generic contemporary

manslaughter,” which requires “either intent to kill or recklessness.” Id. at 284,

289. Thus, for inmates seeking sentencing relief in the Fifth Circuit, a past

conviction for manslaughter from Florida does not defeat their claim. This is true

in the Ninth Circuit as well. Mendoza-Padilla, 833 F.3d at 1159–62.

      Hires, Griffin, and Burgest are examples of how this Court’s approach to

second or successive applications has harmed prisoners serving long sentences

imposed under ACCA or the Sentencing Guidelines. The Court’s approach in

these cases disregarded our own precedent and rules in search of a quick end to the

flood of applications filed by prisoners raising Johnson claims. How did this

happen? For one thing, I believe the Court tried to get to the merits of these cases


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too fast. The statute for reviewing these applications sets a 30-day limit for ruling

on them. 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)(3)(D). Once our Court decided to get to the merits

at the mere “seeking permission” stage, we should have joined seven of our sister

circuits and held that the 30-day timeframe was not mandatory. See In re Johnson,

814 F.3d 1259, 1262 n.1 (11th Cir. 2016) (listing cases). I was on a panel that did

just that, id. at 1262, but our panel opinion was vacated by the Court in an en banc

order without opinion. 815 F.3d 733 (vacating the panel opinion and taking the

case en banc); see also No. 16-10011, slip op. (11th Cir. April 21, 2016) (granting

the request to file a second or successive petition but leaving the panel opinion

vacated).

       Our nation has experienced an explosion in its prison population over the

last twenty years or so. 5 The Supreme Court’s decision in Johnson required federal

judges to take a close look at the sentences of thousands of people incarcerated in

federal prison. For many inmates, we did not. In our haste, this Court made

mistakes (myself included) that always seemed to work against the prisoner. Yet

this Court has not just failed to correct its mistakes. It has also acted to set these

incorrect decisions in stone.

    IV.     BARRING MULTIPLE APPLICATIONS TO FILE § 2255 MOTIONS


5
 See E. Anne Carson, Bureau of Justice Statistics, Prisoners in 2016 1 (Aug. 7, 2018),
https://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/p16.pdf.


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         During the two or so months after the Supreme Court decided Welch, some

prisoners were savvy enough to apply to seek relief more than once. This Court

then undertook to put an end to this practice, and in doing so, adopted an

interpretation of AEDPA that is far removed from the text of the statute. And

beyond our Court’s departure from what the statute requires, it also overlooked

Supreme Court precedent counseling a path quite different from what this Court

chose.

         Until recently, federal prisoners at least had the comfort of knowing that

when they were denied leave to file second or successive habeas motions, that

denial was without prejudice and “there [was] no rule against filing multiple

applications for leave to file a successive § 2255 petition.” See In re Anderson,

829 F.3d 1290, 1296 (11th Cir. 2016) (Martin, J., dissenting) (quoting In re Barber,

No. 16-10107, slip. op. at 32 (11th Cir. Feb. 10, 2016) (Marcus, J., dissenting)).

However, in the course of deciding the rush of filings after Johnson, a panel of this

Court held that AEDPA requires courts of appeals to deny with prejudice

“applications for leave to file a second or successive § 2255 motion presenting the

same claims we have already rejected on their merits in a previous application.” In

re Baptiste, 828 F.3d 1337, 1340 (11th Cir. 2016) (construing 28 U.S.C. §

2244(b)(1)).




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      In order to reach this result, the Baptiste panel first determined § 2244(b)(1)

applies to § 2255 motions, even though § 2244(b)(1) only expressly refers to

petitions for habeas corpus relief filed by state prisoners under 28 U.S.C. § 2254.

828 F.3d at 1339. For justification, the Baptiste panel said simply that “it would be

odd indeed if Congress had intended to allow federal prisoners to refile precisely

the same non-meritorious motions over and over again while denying that right to

state prisoners.” Id. But courts have no power to rewrite Acts of Congress

because we think them “odd.” Second, Baptiste determined “§ 2244(b)(1) applies

with equal force” to authorization applications pending before courts of appeal. Id.

The panel reasoned that reading the statute to prohibit only claims raised in earlier

habeas petitions filed in District Court—what the Seventh Circuit said was the

“natural reading” of the statute, Bennett v. United States, 119 F.3d 470, 471 (7th

Cir. 1997)—“would treat frivolous applications more favorably than those that

presented some arguable merit.” Baptiste, 828 F.3d at 1340 (citing Bennett).

      Two of my colleagues have explained at length the problems with Baptiste,

and I will not revisit them all here. See In re Jones, 830 F.3d 1295, 1297–1305

(11th Cir. 2016) (Rosenbaum and Jill Pryor, JJ., concurring in result). I add only

that my best understanding is that Baptiste’s interpretation is contrary to Supreme

Court precedent. In Magwood v. Patterson, 561 U.S. 320, 130 S. Ct. 2788 (2010),

the Court interpreted § 2244(b)(1) and (b)(2) in the course of deciding what


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“second or successive” meant as that phrase is used in those provisions. 561 U.S.

at 330–31, 130 S. Ct. at 2796. Magwood held those provisions “apply only to a

‘habeas corpus application under § 2254,’ that is, ‘an application for a writ of

habeas corpus on behalf of a person in custody pursuant to the judgment of a State

court.’” 561 U.S. at 332, 130 S. Ct. at 2797 (emphasis omitted) (quoting 28 U.S.C.

§ 2254(b)(1)). The Supreme Court thus interpreted “application,” as that word is

used in §§ 2244(b)(1) and (b)(2) not to refer to a filing seeking authorization to file

a second or successive habeas motion, but instead to refer to the actual habeas

petition filed in the District Court.

      The Supreme Court also explained in Magwood that § 2254’s “requirement

of custody pursuant to a state-court judgment distinguishes § 2254 from other

statutory provisions authorizing relief from constitutional violations—such as

§ 2255, which allows challenges to the judgments of federal courts.” 561 U.S. at

333, 130 S. Ct. at 2797. And the Supreme Court has many times noted that

Congress intended provisions of § 2254 to promote comity and federalism

principles. E.g., Cullen v. Pinholster, 563 U.S. 170, 185, 131 S. Ct. 1388, 1401

(2011). There does indeed seem to be a reason for treating § 2254 and § 2255

prisoners differently beyond just the textual limitations. That reason is federalism.

Baptiste’s application of § 2244(b)(1) to § 2255 motions based on its “it would be

odd” rule makes no mention of this difference.


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      Nonetheless, the judges of this Court are bound to apply Baptiste. The harm

it does is not hard to see. For example, I will return briefly to Mr. Hires’s case. In

re Hires, 825 F.3d at 1297. After Welch, Mr. Hires filed an application seeking

authorization to file a second or successive § 2255 motion. Id. at 1298. He wanted

to raise the single claim that his ACCA sentence was invalid because it relied on

the residual clause. See id. at 1298. The panel denied the application because it

concluded Mr. Hires still had three qualifying predicate convictions, including

Florida aggravated assault and Florida armed robbery. See id. at 1301–02. Yet as

set out above, Hires applied erroneous precedent, which was not binding on the

panel because of intervening Supreme Court decisions. Yet even if this Court or

the Supreme Court had corrected our mistake in the short time between Welch and

the one-year anniversary of Johnson, Mr. Hires would be barred by Baptiste from

raising this Johnson claim in a new application. In fact, Mr. Hires did file another

application for leave to file a second or successive petition after Welch. This Court

denied it, citing Baptiste. In re Hires, No. 16-13813-J, slip op. at 2 (11th Cir. July

19, 2016). Thus, Baptiste ensures that Mr. Hires got one chance, and only one. He

does not get another, even though this Court muffed his single opportunity by

wrongly deciding his claim.




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      In this way, Baptiste requires a prisoner to bear all consequences of any

mistake this Court makes in his case. It would be one thing if this were what

AEDPA required of us. But it is not. Baptiste itself was wrongly decided.

      To the extent that Baptiste was issued as a work-load management tool for

the courts, it is not necessary. As discussed, AEDPA already allows a very narrow

path for courts to revisit decisions on authorization applications. See 28 U.S.C. §

2244(b)(3)(E) (barring appeals, petitions for rehearing, and petitions for a writ of

certiorari from the grant or denial of authorization to file a second or successive

petition). In fact, the only approach this Court has identified is a decision to rehear

the case nosta sponte by an en banc court. See In re Lambrix, 776 F.3d 789, 794

(11th Cir. 2015). And in any event, at some point all prisoners will encounter

AEDPA’s one-year deadline. See Dodd, 545 U.S. at 359, 125 S. Ct. at 2482–83.

Thus, Baptiste effectively locks in erroneous holdings to the detriment of prisoners

for the foreseeable future.

                     V.       A FINAL ROADBLOCK TO RELIEF

      I end with the Court’s recent refusal to reconsider United States v. Beeman,

871 F.3d 1215 (11th Cir. 2017), denying r’hrg en banc 899 F.3d 1218 (11th Cir.

2018). In Beeman, a panel of this Court held that to prove a Johnson claim, a

prisoner had to prove that “it was use of the residual clause that led to the

sentencing court’s enhancement of his sentence.” 871 F.3d at 1221–22. Beeman


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erred, in my view, when it limited the ways to prove this. Id. at 1224 n.5.

Beeman said this “historical fact” could be proved, among other ways, by pointing

to an express statement by the District Court at sentencing saying it was relying on

the residual clause or by pointing to precedent binding at the time of sentencing

showing that a crime qualified as an ACCA predicate only under the residual

clause. Id. at 1224 & nn.4-5.

      Of course, before Johnson District Courts did not say at sentencing which

ACCA clause they relied on because nothing in the law required them to. See

Beeman, 899 F.3d at 1228 (Martin, J., dissenting from denial of rehearing en

banc). There is no exhaustive body of law from this Circuit before Johnson

specifying which among countless offenses from fifty states qualified as violent

crimes only under the residual clause. Also, up until Johnson was decided, few

defendants had reason to suspect the unconstitutionality of the residual clause, so

they had no reason to ask about the source of their enhanced sentence. After all,

the Supreme Court twice “rejected suggestions by dissenting Justices that the

residual clause violates the Constitution’s prohibition of vague criminal laws,”

most recently in 2011. Johnson, 135 S. Ct. at 2556 (citing Sykes v. United States,

564 U.S. 1, 131 S. Ct. 2267 (2011) and James v. United States, 550 U.S. 192, 127

S. Ct. 1586 (2007)).




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      Beeman said its historical-fact test was necessary to preserve the “burden of

proof.” 871 F.3d at 1221–24. Not so. Other courts require prisoners to prove their

claims by demonstrating that their prior conviction could not qualify as an ACCA

predicate under the enumerated offenses and elements clauses. See United States

v. Geozos, 870 F.3d 890, 896 (9th Cir. 2017); United States v. Winston, 850 F.3d

677, 682 (4th Cir. 2017). This alternative method for carrying the burden of proof

in these cases does not lessen the burden in any way. See Beeman, 899 F.3d at

1226-29 (Martin, J., dissenting from denial of rehearing en banc). And we can

determine whether a prior conviction counted as an ACCA predicate under the

enumerated offenses and elements clauses. As the Supreme Court told us in

Descamps v. United States, 570 U.S. 254, 260, 263, 133 S. Ct. 2276, 2283, 2285

(2013), the rules for evaluating predicate offenses under the enumerated offenses

and elements clauses are “the same today as they have always been.” Id. If the

prior conviction could not qualify under these clauses, then of course the District

Court must have relied on the residual clause at the prisoner’s sentencing.

      For those rare prisoners who somehow made it past this Court’s review of

their authorization applications and through the District Court’s front doors, they

will face one last, likely fatal, roadblock. District Courts will now decide whether

prisoners should get the benefit of Johnson without being able to consider

developments in that law intended to help them evaluate who qualifies as a violent


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repeat offender. In the end, of the thousands of inmates who filed authorization

applications raising potentially meritorious Johnson claims, very few will ever get

a full review of the merits of their claims and even fewer will get relief. See

Williams, 898 F.3d at 1107-08 (Martin, J., specially concurring).

                     VI.      TODAY’S DECISION IN CONTEXT

      As this review shows, our Court has made many missteps after Johnson. It

all began, in my view, when we started conducting merits review of prisoners’

cases when all they wanted was permission to file a second or successive § 2255

motion in District Court. We compounded that error when we started publishing

those decisions, establishing them as precedent. Then we locked in our mistakes

by adopting an interpretation of § 2255, not in keeping with the text of the statute,

to prevent prisoners from filing more than one application to file a second or

successive petition, even where we wrongly denied their first. And then we denied

those prisoners who managed to get full District Court review of their sentences

the ability to use current Supreme Court precedent to show they had been

sentenced under the ACCA residual clause. At every turn, our rulings put

obstacles in the paths of prisoners trying to have their sentences reviewed. These

roadblocks mean some prisoners in our Circuit will serve unconstitutional

sentences.




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      Today’s majority en banc opinion decides that the Supreme Court’s

decisions in Johnson and Dimaya did not invalidate § 924(c)’s residual clause.

Again, I fully join Judge Jill Pryor’s dissent explaining why this is wrong. I note

with regret that today’s decision is but a piece of the precedent I reviewed here.

This Court has mishandled the application of Johnson to many people who should

have benefitted from it, and we do so again today.

      My final observation about the majority’s en banc ruling against Ms. Ovalles

is to note that the majority opinion makes much of the fact that the government has

asked us to abandon the categorical approach in interpreting § 924(c)(3)(B). See

Maj. Op. at 29–30. Judge Jill Pryor’s dissent explains why this consideration

should not factor into our analysis of the statute at issue. Jill Pryor Dissent at 144–

45. I would add that, when deciding whether Johnson was retroactive, we paid no

heed to the government’s concession that it was. See supra at 1–2. If we are going

to defer to the government’s view, we should do so whether it advocates for or

against relief for the prisoner.

      I respectfully dissent from the majority opinion, particularly as it evidences

this Court’s failure to properly review and correct unlawful sentences in the wake

of Johnson.




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JILL PRYOR, Circuit Judge, with whom WILSON, MARTIN, and JORDAN,
Circuit Judges, join, dissenting:

      This case is about 18 U.S.C. § 924(c), a frequently charged federal criminal

statute, and how one recent Supreme Court case in particular, Sessions v. Dimaya,

138 S. Ct. 1204 (2018), bears on our interpretation of this law. In Dimaya, the

Supreme Court struck down as unconstitutional a statute, 18 U.S.C. § 16(b),

containing the exact same clause as the one in § 924(c) that we must interpret in

this case. The words in this clause were not incidental to the Supreme Court’s

decision; the decision was based on the Court’s interpretation of the text. In my

view, this should be the end of it. If § 16(b) is void for vagueness under the Due

Process Clause, then so is the part of § 924(c) we analyze here. The majority

agrees that if the method of statutory interpretation the Supreme Court used in

Dimaya must be used in this case, then the part of § 924(c) under which appellant

Irma Ovalles was convicted and sentenced must be stricken as unconstitutional.

But the majority denies that we must use this method of statutory interpretation,

even though the Supreme Court has told us that the language of § 16—and, by

extension, the language of § 924(c)—“requires” it. Leocal v. Ashcroft, 543 U.S. 1,

7 (2004).

       Before I get to why I think the majority is wrong, let me point out where

we agree. We courts are loath to strike down acts of Congress—and appropriately

so. When a law passed by Congress may be read to have more than one plausible
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or “fairly possible” meaning, and one interpretation would cause the law to be

upheld as constitutional while another would require it to be struck down, we are

“obligated to construe the statute” so as to uphold it. I.N.S. v. St. Cyr., 533 U.S.

289, 300 (2001). This is the canon of constitutional avoidance, or constitutional

doubt, as the majority calls it. The Supreme Court recently clarified a significant

limitation on the use of this rule of statutory construction, however: “In the

absence of more than one plausible construction, the canon simply has no

application.” Jennings v. Rodriguez, 138 S. Ct. 830, 842 (2018) (internal quotation

marks omitted). Put differently, what courts may not do is assign a law a strained

or unreasonable reading to save it from being declared unconstitutional. I disagree

with the majority that the text of § 924(c) plausibly can be interpreted in a way

other than how the Supreme Court interpreted the same language in Dimaya and

Leocal. In making the case that it can, the majority is forced to rely on factors

outside of the text—which Supreme Court precedent clearly says we may not do.

See Rodriguez, 138 S. Ct. at 842-43; see also Pereira v. Sessions, 138 S. Ct. 2105,

2118 (2018) (explaining that practical considerations “do not justify departing

from [a] statute’s clear text”).

      This case—with all its textual analysis, discussion of canons of statutory

construction, and parsing of precedent—may come across like a purely academic

exercise. In reality, it is anything but. People who are serving sentences of five

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years to life under § 924(c) will get no relief from this Court even though the

Supreme Court held that an identically-worded statute was so vague that its

enforcement violated the right to due process under law. For the reasons I explain

in more detail below, I respectfully dissent.1

                                             ***

       Section 924(c) makes it a federal crime to use or carry a firearm “during and

in relation to any crime of violence or drug trafficking crime” or to possess a

firearm in furtherance of such a crime. 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(A). A “crime of

violence,” under the provision at issue in this case, is one that “by its nature,

involves a substantial risk that physical force against the person or property of

another may be used in the course of committing the offense.” Id. § 924(c)(3)(B).

The punishment for violating § 924(c) is from five years to life in prison,

depending on the nature of the firearm and how it is used, carried, or possessed.

When reviewing this same crime of violence definition in another federal statute,

18 U.S.C. § 16(b), in the face of a challenge that it was unconstitutionally vague,

the Supreme Court in Dimaya applied the “categorical approach” to interpreting

the statute. See Dimaya, 138 S. Ct. at 1211 (citing Leocal, 543 U.S. at 7). Relying

1
  After Johnson was decided but before the Supreme Court issued its decision in Dimaya, a panel
of this court rejected Ms. Ovalles’s constitutional vagueness challenge to the residual clause of
§ 924(c). See Ovalles v. United States, 861 F.3d 1257 (11th Cir. 2017), vacated, reh’g en banc
granted, 889 F.3d 1259 (11th Cir. 2018). I held the mandate because I believed that Johnson’s
reasoning applied with equal force to § 924(c)(3)(B). After Dimaya was decided, our court sua
sponte decided to rehear this case en banc.

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on its precedent, including Johnson v. United States, 135 S. Ct. 2551 (2015), which

interpreted similar language in another statute, the Armed Career Criminal Act

(“ACCA”), the Court said that to qualify as a crime of violence, the crime must be

one that categorically—that is, in the “ordinary case” rather than in the particular

way that the defendant committed it—meets the statutory definition. When the

court applied the categorical approach to § 16, it struck subsection (b) of the statute

as void for vagueness. Dimaya, 138 S. Ct. at 1215-16.

       No one disputes that if we must use the categorical approach to interpret

§ 924(c)(3)(B), the statute is unconstitutional. See Maj. Op. at 2. The majority

argues that we should employ the canon of constitutional avoidance to save

§ 924(c)(3)(B) because the statute can plausibly be interpreted to incorporate a

“conduct-based approach”—one that looks to the “real-world facts of the

defendant’s offense” instead of how the law defines the crime or what conduct is

entailed in the ordinary case. Maj. Op. at 3. The problem with the majority’s

approach is that its alternative way of reading § 924(c)(3)(B) to permit a conduct-

based approach is simply not plausible when we remain faithful to the text of the

statute.

       So how does the majority get there? Sifting through Supreme Court cases

applying the categorical approach to ACCA and § 16, the majority identifies six

factors that led the Supreme Court to apply the categorical approach in those

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instances. It then applies those factors to § 924(c)(3)(B) and—finding many of

them missing or inapplicable—determines that this statute plausibly could be read

differently. But only three of the majority’s factors concern the text. And the

majority’s analysis of its factors, both textual and extra-textual, is in my view

deeply flawed. If we follow what the Supreme Court said about the text of the

other two statutes and apply it to § 924(c) as a whole and in context, we find that

§ 924(c)(3)(B) presents an even stronger case for applying the categorical approach

than the other statutes—so strong that no other reading is plausible.

                                           I.

      To understand why the approach the Supreme Court used in Dimaya,

Johnson, and other precedent interpreting similarly-worded legislation controls the

outcome of this case, some background on that precedent and the other legislation

is unavoidable. In this section I first discuss three statutes, all of which Congress

enacted or revised as part of an overhaul of the criminal code in the mid-1980s:

the statute at issue here, 18 U.S.C. § 924(c), particularly its definition of “crime of

violence”; a definition of “crime of violence” found in 18 U.S.C. § 16 that is

applied in numerous criminal and noncriminal contexts; and ACCA, 18 U.S.C.

§ 924(e). Next I review a line of Supreme Court and circuit decisions that have

explained the necessity of construing these statutes using the categorical approach.

Finally, I discuss the decisions striking as unconstitutionally vague similar

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language in ACCA and identical language in § 16, as well as decisions framing the

limits of the canon of constitutional avoidance. These decisions bear directly on

whether § 924(c)(3)(B) is unconstitutionally vague.

A.    The Statutes

      In the mid-1980s, Congress, as part of a movement to get tougher on crime,

passed the Comprehensive Crime Control Act of 1984 (the “CCCA”), which

overhauled the federal criminal code for the first time in over half a century. Pub.

L. No. 98-473, 98 Stat. 1976 (1984); see also S. Rep. No. 98-225, at 2 (1983)

(discussing the CCCA’s purpose of “restor[ing] a proper balance between the

forces of law and the forces of lawlessness”). The CCCA “broadly reformed the

federal criminal code in such areas as sentencing, bail, and drug enforcement, and

. . . added a variety of new violent and nonviolent offenses.” Leocal, 543 U.S. at 6.

The CCCA either enacted or revised all three of the statutes that are relevant to this

case: § 924(c), § 16, and ACCA. See Pub. L. No. 98-473, 98 Stat. 2136, 2138,

2185 (1984); Leocal, 543 U.S. at 6 (explaining § 16’s enactment as part of the

CCCA); United States v. Hill, 863 F.2d 1575, 1579 (11th Cir. 1989) (“The

genealogy of [§] 924 traces back to the Armed Career Criminal Act of 1984, which

was enacted as a part of the Comprehensive Crime Control Act of 1984.”),

abrogated on other grounds by Taylor v. United States, 495 U.S. 575 (1990); infra

note 2 (describing § 924(c)’s revision as part of the CCCA).

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       The statute at issue here, 18 U.S.C. § 924(c), revised in the CCCA, 2

criminalizes and imposes mandatory enhanced sentences for using or carrying a

firearm “during and in relation to any crime of violence or drug trafficking crime”

or possessing a firearm in furtherance of such a crime. 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(A).

The “crime of violence or drug trafficking crime” must be committed “during”—

that is, at the same time as—the firearm use or possession. “[D]rug trafficking

crime” is defined in § 924(c) as “any felony punishable under the Controlled

Substances Act” and a couple of other federal drug laws. Id. § 924(c)(2).

“[C]rime of violence”—the focus of our inquiry—has a two part definition:

       For purposes of this subsection the term “crime of violence” means an
       offense that is a felony and—

       (A)    has as an element the use, attempted use, or threatened use of
              physical force against the person or property of another, or

       (B)    that by its nature, involves a substantial risk that physical force
              against the person or property of another may be used in the
              course of committing the offense.

Id. § 924(c)(3). Subsection (c)(3)(A) of this definition is known as the “elements

clause,” and subsection (c)(3)(B) is known as the “residual clause.” This case is

about the residual clause. The residual clause acts as a catchall for violent crimes

2
  “Prior to 1984, § 924(c) provided for the imprisonment of one who uses a firearm to commit
any felony. In 1984, as part of the [CCCA], Congress revised that rule and provided that the
firearm penalty should apply only to those who engaged in a crime of violence.” United States v.
Cruz, 805 F.2d 1464, 1470 (11th Cir. 1986) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted). By
revising § 924(c), Congress narrowed the text to fit the manner in which prosecutors typically
had employed the statute since its enactment. Id. at 1471.

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that do not meet the elements clause definition, so long as those crimes satisfy the

residual clause’s criteria.

      Section 924(c) is one of several CCCA statutes to address crimes of

violence. Another is 18 U.S.C. § 16, which “provide[s] . . . a general definition of

the term ‘crime of violence’ to be used throughout the [CCCA],” including “for

defining the elements of particular [criminal] offenses.” Leocal, 543 U.S. at 6.

Like § 924(c), until recently §16 defined “crime of violence” using both an

elements clause and a residual clause:

      The term “crime of violence” means—

(a)   an offense that has as an element the use, attempted use, or threatened
      use of physical force against the person or property of another, or

(b)   any other offense that is a felony and that, by its nature, involves a
      substantial risk that physical force against the person or property of
      another may be used in the course of committing the offense.

18 U.S.C. § 16. Section 16’s residual clause, § 16(b), which is “essentially

identical to § 924(c)(3)’s residual clause at issue here,” Maj. Op. at 10, was struck

down as unconstitutional in Dimaya.

      Since passage of the CCCA, § 16’s general “crime of violence” definition

“has . . . been incorporated into a variety of statutory provisions, both criminal and

noncriminal.” Leocal, 543 U.S. at 7. Section 16’s definition also was incorporated

into provisions of the Immigration and Nationality Act (“INA”), including a

provision that permits deportation of a noncitizen convicted of an “aggravated
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felony,” which includes any “crime of violence” as defined in § 16. 8 U.S.C.

§ 1227(a)(2)(A)(iii); see id. § 1101(a)(43)(F). I discuss this provision, which was

the subject of the Supreme Court’s decision in Leocal, in more detail later. But I

pause briefly to note that the majority focuses solely on § 16’s incorporation into

the INA, qualifying as such its references to § 16(b) at least half a dozen times, and

omitting reference to all of the other ways in which § 16 is incorporated into the

federal code. The effect of this narrowing is that the majority focuses myopically

on § 16 as applied to prior crimes, rather than as it is incorporated into offenses

with other contemporaneously occurring elements. The majority’s distinction is an

artificial one because we are required to “interpret the statute consistently, whether

we encounter its application in a criminal or noncriminal context.” Leocal, 543

U.S. at 11 n.8.

      In fact, for the vast majority of instances where § 16’s definition is

incorporated into the criminal code, the “crime of violence” element is committed

at the same time as the offense’s other elements. For example, 18 U.S.C. § 25

criminalizes and provides penalties for an adult “who intentionally uses a minor to

commit a crime of violence,” as that term is defined in § 16. A person who

violates § 25 commits the “crime of violence” element at the same time as the




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offense’s other elements. 3 And so many incorporations of § 16 function very

similarly to the incorporation of the “crime of violence” definition in § 924(c)(3)—

the elements and residual clauses—into § 924(c)(1)—which contains the offense’s

other elements: using, carrying, or possessing a firearm during (at the same time

as) and in relation to (to facilitate) the predicate crime of violence or drug

trafficking crime. 4


3
  Other incorporations of § 16 in this manner abound. See, e.g., 18 U.S.C. § 119(a)(1)
(criminalizing knowingly making public restricted personal information about certain persons
performing official duties “with the intent to threaten, intimidate, or incite the commission of a
crime of violence against that covered person” or a member of the person’s family); 18 U.S.C.
§ 842(p)(2)(A) (forbidding the teaching or demonstrating of how to make an explosive device
with the intent that the teaching “be used for, or in furtherance of, an activity that constitutes a
Federal crime of violence”); 18 U.S.C. § 1952(a)(2) (criminalizing interstate travel with intent to
“commit any crime of violence to further any unlawful activity”); 18 U.S.C. § 1956(a)(1),
(c)(7)(B)(ii) (incorporating § 16’s crime of violence definition into the money laundering
statute); 18 U.S.C. § 1959(a)(4) (enhancing penalties for violent crime in aid of racketeering
where a defendant threatens to commit a crime of violence); 18 U.S.C. § 2261(a)(1)
(criminalizing interstate travel to commit a crime of violence against a domestic partner); 18
U.S.C. § 3663A(c)(1)(A)(i) (incorporating § 16’s crime of violence definition into the
Mandatory Victims Restitution Act, which requires an award of restitution if the defendant is
convicted of a crime of violence). Section 16 also is incorporated into the definitions of other
noncriminal statutes. See, e.g., 34 U.S.C. § 30503(a)(1)(A) (providing, in the federal hate crimes
statute, federal assistance for the prosecution of any “crime of violence”); 34 U.S.C.
§ 12361(d)(2)(A) (incorporating § 16’s crime of violence definition into the definition of “crime
of violence motivated by gender” in the Violence Against Women Act).
4
  I use “elements” here to describe the set of facts and circumstances the government must prove
to obtain a conviction. I recognize that the Supreme Court has characterized § 924(c) as having
only two elements. See, e.g., Smith v. United States, 508 U.S. 223, 228 (1993) (“First, the
prosecution must demonstrate that the defendant ‘use[d] or carrie[d] a firearm.’ Second, it must
prove that the use or carrying was ‘during and in relation to’ a ‘crime of violence or drug
trafficking crime.’” (quoting 18 U.S.C. § 924(c))). But it is beyond dispute that, broken down,
§ 924(c) requires the government to prove five separate facts: the defendant’s (1) knowing (2)
use or carrying of a firearm, (3) during, (4) and in relation to (5) a crime of violence or drug
trafficking crime. See id. at 238 (explaining that the government must prove both that the
firearm was knowingly used or carried “during” and “in relation to” the predicate offense); 11th
Cir. Pattern Jury Instructions 35.2 (18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(A)).

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       Yet another (and for our purposes, the last) CCCA statute to address crimes

of violence is ACCA. ACCA, enacted as part of the CCCA, imposes a mandatory

15-year term of imprisonment on a person convicted of being a felon in possession

of a firearm who previously was convicted of three serious drug offenses, violent

felonies, or both. ACCA defines “violent felony” like this:

      [A]ny crime punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one
      year . . . that—

      (i)    has as an element the use, attempted use, or threatened use of
             physical force against the person of another; or

      (ii)   is burglary, arson, or extortion, involves use of explosives, or
             otherwise involves conduct that presents a serious potential risk
             of physical injury to another[.]

Id. § 924(e)(2)(B). Like § 924(c) and § 16, ACCA has an elements clause,

subsection (i), and it had—until the Supreme Court struck it down as

unconstitutionally vague—a residual clause, which in subsection (ii) began with

“or otherwise . . . .” The balance of subsection (ii) is known as the “enumerated

crimes clause.”

      Section 924(c), § 16, and ACCA, all either enacted or revised as part of one

comprehensive piece of legislation, are notably similar in their text. All three

statutes, until the majority’s decision today, have been analyzed using the same

“categorical approach.” I discuss this approach in the next subsection.




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B.     The Categorical Approach that Has Governed All Three Statutes

       When Congress passed the CCCA, in which it revised § 924(c) to include a

“crime of violence” definition and enacted § 16 and ACCA, it did so with the

expressed intention to capture certain crimes—not conduct—as crimes of violence.

See generally Taylor, 495 U.S. at 581-90, 601; see also infra at 40-41 (describing

Senate Report expressing Congress’s intent to capture certain “statutes,” such as

the federal bank robbery statute, in § 924(c)’s definition of “crime of violence”).

The Supreme Court gave effect to Congress’s expressed intent when the Court

interpreted ACCA, which, again, imposes enhanced sentences when a defendant

has been convicted of prior crimes that meet ACCA’s definition of “violent

felony.” The Court explained that ACCA “always has embodied a categorical

approach to the designation of predicate offenses.” Taylor, 495 U.S. 588

(emphasis added).5 To decide which prior crimes qualify as predicate offenses, the

Supreme Court said, courts must look not to whether the defendant’s actual

conduct in committing the crime was violent, but rather to whether the statute

creating the crime described a violent offense. See id. at 600.




5
 The majority therefore is incorrect when it says that the Supreme Court “conceived” the
categorical approach in Taylor, see Maj. Op. at 20, because in Taylor the Supreme Court
explained that the statute “always” has embodied the categorical approach. In other words, the
categorical approach is not a pure judicial creation; rather, it is a judicial explanation of
congressional intent.

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      When in Taylor the Supreme Court first described the categorical approach,

it did so in the context of ACCA’s enumerated crimes clause. The Court based its

holding—that a categorical, rather than a factual or conduct-based, approach must

be used—primarily on ACCA’s text as a whole, but also on ACCA’s legislative

history and because construing it with a conduct-based approach would lead to

practical problems in criminal proceedings. The Court first explained that

ACCA’s text “generally supports” a categorical approach because it refers to

“convictions,” not commissions of an offense, and because its elements clause

refers to a statute’s “element[s],” not to any particular facts or conduct. Id. “Read

in this context,” the Court said, the enumerated crimes clause should be read

categorically. Id. at 600-01. Second, the Court noted, “the legislative history of

[ACCA] shows that Congress generally took a categorical approach to predicate

offenses.” Id. at 601. Third, the Court observed that “the practical difficulties and

potential unfairness of a factual approach are daunting.” Id. Specifically, the

Court worried that a conduct-based approach would lead to mini-trials where the

government would seek to prove to a jury, and the defense would seek to rebut, the

circumstances of prior—maybe even long prior—offenses. Id. at 601-02. The

Court also doubted that a sentencing court, rather than a jury, would be able to

make these findings because doing so might draw a Sixth Amendment challenge.

Id. at 602.

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      After Taylor, the Supreme Court held that the categorical approach must be

applied to ACCA’s elements and residual clauses as well. See Curtis Johnson v.

United States, 559 U.S. 133, 137 (2010) (applying the categorical approach to

ACCA’s elements clause); James v. United States, 550 U.S. 192, 208 (2007),

overruled on other grounds by Johnson, 135 S. Ct. at 2551 (applying the

categorical approach to ACCA’s residual clause). As applied to a residual clause,

essentially a catchall provision, the Court said that the categorical approach

requires courts to decide “whether the conduct encompassed by the elements of the

offense, in the ordinary case, presents” a risk that satisfies the risk standard in the

statute—in ACCA, “serious potential risk.” James 550 U.S. at 208; see Dimaya,

138 S. Ct. at 1211 (explaining that the “ordinary case” analysis applies to § 16(b)

such that courts must decide whether the conduct encompassed by the elements of

the offense, in the ordinary case, presents a risk that satisfies the risk standard in

§ 16(b)—“a substantial risk that physical force . . . may be used”).

      In contrast to its multi-factored reasoning in Taylor, when the Supreme

Court first construed § 16, it applied the categorical approach based solely on the

text of the statute, without reference to legislative history or practical concerns.

And it said this construction was not merely optimal, but required. Specifically, in

Leocal, a unanimous Supreme Court explained that “[i]n determining whether the

petitioner’s conviction falls within the ambit of § 16, the statute directs our focus to

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the ‘offense’ of conviction.” Leocal, 543 U.S. at 7 (construing § 16 as

incorporated into the INA). The term “offense,” the Court noted, was present in

both § 16(a), the elements clause, and § 16(b), the residual clause. Additionally,

for the residual clause, the Court emphasized that the “offense” was one that “by its

nature” involved a substantial risk that physical force may be used. Id. (emphasis

in original). The Supreme Court said, in no uncertain terms, that “[t]his language

requires us to look to the elements and the nature of the offense of conviction,

rather than to the particular facts relating to [the] petitioner’s crime.” Id. (emphasis

added). This bears repeating: unanimously, and based on the statute’s text alone,

the Supreme Court said that the crime of violence definition in § 16 requires a

categorical approach. As I mentioned above, the Court also noted that “[a]lthough

[it was construing] § 16 in the deportation context, § 16 is a criminal statute, and it

has both criminal and noncriminal applications.” Id. at 11 n.8. The Court

explained that it was required to “interpret the statute consistently, whether [it]

encounter[ed] its application in a criminal or noncriminal context.” Id.

      When it came to construing § 924(c)(3), in United States v. McGuire this

Court used the same textual analysis to explain why the categorical approach must

be used. 706 F.3d 1333, 1336-37 (11th Cir. 2013). Justice O’Connor, sitting by

designation with our Court, explained:

      We employ this categorical approach because of the statute’s terms:
      It asks whether [the defendant] committed “an offense” that “has as
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       an element the use, attempted use, or threatened use of physical force
       against the person or property of another,” or that “by its nature,
       involves a substantial risk that physical force against the person or
       property of another may be used.”

Id. (emphasis in original) (quoting 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(3)). McGuire held that

§ 924(c), just like § 16, by its terms required a categorical approach. Since

McGuire, our Court has continued to apply the categorical approach to

§ 924(c)(3)(B) until today, and we have been in good company doing so. All but

two circuits apply the categorical approach to § 924(c). 6

C.     Johnson, Dimaya, and the Role of the Canon of Constitutional
       Avoidance

       The majority agrees that if the categorical approach must be used, then based

on Dimaya § 924(c)’s residual clause is unconstitutionally vague. The question is

whether the Supreme Court’s decisions—spanning from 1990 to 2018—that the

categorical approach must be applied to language like § 924(c)’s can be side-

stepped due to the canon of constitutional avoidance. In this section I discuss the

Supreme Court’s reasoning in these decisions. I also discuss the evolution of the


6
  See United States v. Taylor, 848 F.3d 476, 491 (1st Cir. 2017); United States v. Fuertes, 805 F.
3d 485, 498 (4th Cir. 2015); United States v. Buck, 847 F.3d 267, 274 (5th Cir. 2017); United
States v. Gooch, 850 F.3d 285, 290 (6th Cir. 2017); United States v. Cardena, 842 F.3d 959, 996
(7th Cir. 2016); United States v. Prickett, 839 F.3d 697, 698 (8th Cir. 2016); United States v.
Mendez, 992 F.2d 1488, 1490 (9th Cir. 1993); United States v. Salas, 889 F.3d 681, 686 (10th
Cir. 2018); United States v. Eshetu, 898 F.3d 36, 37 (D.C. Cir. 2018); but see United States v.
Barrett, __ F.3d ___, 2018 WL 4288566 (2d Cir. Sept. 10, 2018) (applying a conduct-based
reading of § 924(c)(3)(B) to uphold it); United States v. Robinson, 844 F.3d 137 (3d Cir. 2016)
(holding, prior to Dimaya that a categorical approach should not be applied to § 924(c)).

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canon of constitutional avoidance in this setting and how a minority of the Justices

have advocated unsuccessfully for its use to save ACCA’s and § 16(b)’s residual

clauses.

      After wrestling with ACCA’s residual clause on several occasions, the

Supreme Court in Johnson struck it as void for vagueness. 135 S. Ct. at 2557. The

Court’s majority explained that “[t]wo features of the residual clause conspire to

make it unconstitutionally vague.” Id. “In the first place, the residual clause

leaves grave uncertainty about how to estimate the risk posed by a crime. It ties

the judicial assessment of risk to a judicially imagined ‘ordinary case’ of a crime,

not to real-world facts or statutory elements.” Id. Second, “the residual clause

leaves uncertainty about how much risk it takes for a crime to qualify as a violent

felony. It is one thing to apply an imprecise ‘serious potential risk’ standard to

real-world facts; it is quite another to apply it to a judge-imagined abstraction.” Id.

at 2558. The Court concluded, “[b]y combining indeterminacy about how to

measure the risk posed by a crime with indeterminacy about how much risk it takes

for the crime to qualify as a violent felony, the residual clause produces more

unpredictability and arbitrariness than the Due Process Clause tolerates.” Id. It

was, therefore, the necessity of applying the categorical approach that rendered

ACCA’s residual clause unconstitutionally vague.




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      Justice Alito dissented in Johnson. He argued that the Court should have

employed the canon of constitutional avoidance to save ACCA’s residual clause by

adopting a conduct-based approach like the majority adopts here. Id. at 2578

(Alito, J., dissenting). Justice Alito noted that ACCA’s residual clause referred to

“conduct that presents a serious potential risk of physical injury to another” and

therefore plausibly could refer “to things done during the commission of an offense

that are not part of the elements needed for conviction.” Id. (emphasis added).

The majority rejected his approach, noting that the government had not urged the

Court to abandon the categorical approach and explaining that “Taylor had good

reasons to adopt” it, including the statute’s text and practical problems resulting

from a conduct-based approach. See id. at 2562 (majority opinion).

      When Johnson was decided, though, it was an open question whether extra-

textual factors—such as the government’s concessions and practical

considerations—could play a role in the decision whether to invoke the canon of

constitutional avoidance to save a statute. In Zadvydas v. Davis, the Supreme

Court construed an INA statute providing that a noncitizen under an order of

removal whom the government has not removed within the 90-day statutory

removal period “‘may be detained beyond the removal period.’” 533 U.S. 678,

682 (2001) (quoting 8 U.S.C. § 1231(a)(6)). The Court, concerned that indefinite

detention would raise serious due process concerns, read a limitation into the

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statute: the noncitizen could only be detained for a reasonable time. Id. at 682,

689-90. To define the reasonable time limitation on detention, a presumptive six

months, the Court looked to extra-textual factors including Congressional intent,

practical difficulties in obtaining removal in a shorter time, and the need to

promote uniform administration in the federal courts. Id. at 701. So, at the time

Johnson was decided, Zadvydas could have been read to permit considerations

outside the text to play a role in whether the court should invoke the canon of

constitutional avoidance. See, e.g., Rodriguez v. Robbins, 804 F.3d 1060 (9th Cir.

2015), reversed by Jennings v. Rodriguez, 138 S. Ct. 830, 852 (2018).

      This year, however, the Supreme Court put any lack of clarity in Zadvydas

to rest. In Rodriguez, the Court clarified that “[t]he canon of constitutional

avoidance comes into play only when, after the application of ordinary textual

analysis, the statute is found to be susceptible of more than one construction. In

the absence of more than one plausible construction, the canon simply has no

application.” Rodriguez, 138 S. Ct. at 842 (emphasis added) (internal quotation

marks and citation omitted). The Court characterized its prior holding in Zadvydas

as “a notably generous application of the constitutional-avoidance canon.” Id. at

843. In Zadvydas, the Rodriguez majority explained, the Court had “detected

ambiguity” in the statute’s use of “may be detained” and only then looked to extra-

textual considerations to determine a limitation on the length of detention that

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would avoid a potential due process problem. Id. at 834. After Rodriguez, there

can be no doubt that the only consideration relevant to the constitutional avoidance

question is the text. Only if the text is ambiguous can the canon of constitutional

avoidance be employed. And only if the canon of constitutional avoidance is

employed can we examine extra-textual considerations.

       Later in the term, the Supreme Court struck § 16’s residual clause as

unconstitutionally vague. See Dimaya, 138 S. Ct. at 1216 (majority opinion).7 The

Court reasoned that § 16(b), like ACCA’s residual clause, first “calls for a court to

identify a crime’s ‘ordinary case’ in order to measure the crime's risk.” Id. at 1215.

And “[n]othing in § 16(b) helps courts to perform that task, just as nothing in

ACCA did.” Id. Second, § 16(b) creates “uncertainty about the level of risk that

makes a crime ‘violent.’” Id. Section 16(b)’s “substantial risk” standard, the

Supreme Court explained, is no more determinate than ACCA’s “serious potential

risk” standard. Id. Combined, the categorical approach and uncertain risk standard

7
  Dimaya resulted in a somewhat fractured decision. Justice Kagan, writing for a majority of the
Court, struck § 16(b) as unconstitutionally vague. 138 S. Ct. at 1213-16, 1218-23 (majority
opinion). She also wrote for a plurality of the Court to explain why the categorical approach
must apply to that statute. See id. at 1216-18 (plurality opinion). Justice Gorsuch, who supplied
the fifth vote to Justice Kagan’s majority opinion, wrote separately to explain his view of the
vagueness doctrine and noted that that he “proceeded on the premise” that the categorical
approach applied to § 16(b) rather than “wip[ing] the precedential slate clean.” Id. at 1232-33
(Gorsuch, J., concurring in part and concurring in the judgment). Chief Justice Roberts, in a
dissent joined by Justices Kennedy, Thomas, and Alito, argued that § 16(b), read categorically,
“does not give rise to the concerns that drove the Court’s decision in Johnson” and therefore was
constitutional. Id. at 1234-41 (Roberts, C.J., dissenting). Justice Thomas, joined by Justices
Kennedy and Alito, argued in a separate dissent that the Court should have employed the canon
of constitutional avoidance to save the statute. Id. at 1254-59 (Thomas, J., dissenting).

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rendered § 16(b) more unpredictable and more arbitrary than due process can

tolerate. Id. at 1215-16.

      Again, as in Johnson, a dissent argued that the Court should have employed

the canon of constitutional avoidance to save the residual clause. Id. at 1254-59

(Thomas, J., dissenting). Justice Thomas, joined by Justices Kennedy and Alito,

announced that “[t]he text of § 16(b) does not require a categorical approach,” id.

at 1254, despite Leocal’s holding that the text of § 16(b) “requires” a categorical

approach. Leocal, 543 U.S. at 7. A majority of the Justices—the plurality of four

Justices plus Chief Justice Roberts in a separate dissent—rejected Justice

Thomas’s view that § 16(b) is amenable to more than one reading. The plurality,

now constrained by Rodriguez, explained why the text of § 16(b) required a

categorical approach: by referring to an “offense” that “by its nature” involves the

risk that force may be used, said the plurality, the statute’s text “demands” a

categorical approach. Id. at 1217 (plurality opinion). Noting Johnson’s additional

reasons for declining to adopt a conduct-based approach—including the

government’s concession that the categorical approach applied and potential

practical problems with a conduct-based approach—the plurality explained that

none of these things mattered because “§ 16(b)’s text creates no draw.” Id. (citing

Leocal, 543 U.S. at 7). The plurality concluded that “[t]he upshot of all of this

textual evidence is that § 16’s residual clause—like ACCA’s, except still more

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plainly—has no plausible fact-based reading.” 8 Id. at 1218 (emphasis added)

(internal quotation marks omitted); see id. at 1235-36 (Roberts, C.J., dissenting)

(reaffirming the validity of the Supreme Court’s unanimous holding in Leocal and

applying the categorical approach to § 16(b)).

                                              II.

       Section 924(c)’s residual clause is void for vagueness for precisely the same

reasons that its twin, § 16(b), is void for vagueness. First, the categorical

approach—which the Supreme Court said must be applied to text identical to

§ 924(c)(3)(B)—requires courts to imagine the ordinary case of an offense. And

“[n]othing [in the statute] helps courts to perform that task.” Dimaya, 138 S. Ct. at

1215 (majority opinion). Second, the “substantial risk” standard in § 924(c)(3)(B)

is indeterminate at best, creating “uncertainty about the level of risk that makes a

crime ‘violent.’” Id. Combined, these two features of § 924(c)(3)(B) create

“‘more unpredictability and arbitrariness than the Due Process Clause tolerates.’”

Id. at 1216 (quoting Johnson, 135 S. Ct. at 2561).

       The majority, in an attempt to salvage § 924(c)’s residual clause, tosses out

the categorical approach in the name of constitutional avoidance. The majority


8
  Although Dimaya interpreted § 16(b) as incorporated into the INA specifically, the plurality
expressly acknowledged that, “as we have said before, § 16(b) is a criminal statute with
applications outside the immigration context,” so there was “no ground for discovering a novel
interpretation of § 16(b),” as applied to the INA. 138 S. Ct. at 1218 (plurality opinion).

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acknowledges that the categorical approach must be applied to the definitions of

drug trafficking crime and of crime of violence in § 924(c)(3)’s elements clause,

but holds that a conduct-based approach at least plausibly applies to the definition

of crime of violence in § 924(c)(3)’s residual clause. In adopting a conduct-based

approach to § 924(c)(3)(B)—and thus overruling in part our decision in

McGuire—the majority contorts the plain text of the statute and reads similar

structure and language differently within the same statute. The majority does so in

disregard of the Supreme Court’s unequivocal statement in Leocal that language

identical to § 924(c)(3)(B) requires a categorical approach—that is, it cannot

plausibly be read another way. And the majority does so in disregard of the

Supreme Court’s admonition that in deciding whether to employ the canon of

constitutional avoidance we must look to a statute’s text alone. The majority

effectively rewrites the statute to avoid having to strike it down.

      To reach this result, the majority distills from Taylor and its progeny a

multi-factor test for deciding whether we should apply the categorical approach to

§ 924(c)(3)(B). Only three of the majority’s six factors are text-based, and they

appear seemingly on an even playing field with three other extra-textual

“considerations.” Maj. Op. at 27-28. Even if these extra-textual considerations

mattered before Rodriguez, they do not matter now. What we know now is that if

a purely textual analysis leads to only “one plausible construction, the canon [of

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constitutional avoidance] simply has no application.” Rodriguez, 138 S. Ct. at 842

(internal quotation marks omitted). Below I explain why the majority’s textual

analysis, contained in three of its six factors, is incorrect and clearly in

contravention of Supreme Court precedent. I then explain why the majority’s

explanation of its other extra-textual factors—which cannot be relevant factors at

all—is flawed as well.

A.    The Text of Section 924(c) Permits Only One Reading: that the
      Categorical Approach Is Required.

      The question we must ask in this case is whether the text of § 924(c)(3)(B)

plausibly can be read to support a conduct-based approach rather than a categorical

one. If not, the inquiry ends, and § 924(c)(3)(B) is unconstitutional. The answer is

that it cannot. Section 924(c)’s text, read as a whole, in its statutory context, and

with the Supreme Court’s guidance, cannot plausibly be read to permit a conduct-

based approach to the residual clause.

      First of all, the Supreme Court has already told us that a categorical

approach is the only approach we can take to this text. In Leocal, the Supreme

Court unanimously explained that the text of § 16(b)—“identical” to the language

in § 924(c)(3)(B), Maj. Op. at 10, 16——“requires us to look to . . . the nature of

the offense of conviction, rather than to the particular facts relating to [the] crime”

because the text includes “offense” in conjunction with “by its nature.” Leocal,

543 U.S. at 7 (emphasis added); see Dimaya, 138 S. Ct. at 1217-18 (plurality
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opinion) (describing why § 16(b)’s language—specifically, “offense that is a

felony and . . . that by its nature”—“has no plausible fact-based reading” (internal

quotation marks omitted)); id. at 1235-36 (Roberts, C.J., dissenting) (reaffirming

the validity of the Supreme Court’s unanimous holding in Leocal that the

categorical approach must be used to interpret § 16(b)). The Supreme Court did

not say that this text merely suggests a categorical approach, nor did it leave room

for us to conclude that the text is amenable to more than one reading. Instead, the

Court said the text requires a categorical approach. Leocal, 543 U.S. at 7; see also

Dimaya, 138 S. Ct. at 1218 (plurality opinion) (“The upshot of all of this textual

evidence is that § 16’s residual clause—like ACCA’s, except still more plainly—

has no plausible fact-based reading.” (internal quotation marks omitted)).9 Text

cannot both require a categorical approach and also plausibly support a conduct-

based approach.



9
  When the majority says that “[o]nly a plurality of the [Supreme] Court concluded that [§ 16(b)]
actually requires the categorical approach,” Maj. Op. at 15, it fails to account for Leocal. No
doubt realizing this shortcoming, the majority rationalizes that “the Leocal Court didn’t provide a
detailed explanation” when it held that § 16(b)’s language requires a categorical approach. Maj.
Op. at 23. But the Court did provide an explanation—a textual one. See supra at 14-15. We are
not free to ignore the Supreme Court’s decisions, whatever their level of detail. Nor, for that
matter, are we free to ignore Leocal even if we might question whether its unanimous
proclamation that § 16 requires a categorical approach remains good law in light of Dimaya’s
invalidation of § 16(b). “The [Supreme] Court has told us, over and over again, to follow any of
its decisions that directly applies in a case, even if the reasoning of that decision appears to have
been rejected in later decisions and leave to that Court the prerogative of overruling its own
decisions.” Evans v. Sec’y, Fla. Dep’t of Corr., 699 F.3d 1249, 1263 (11th Cir. 2012) (internal
quotation marks omitted).

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      The reasoning behind Leocal’s holding applies with at least equal force to

§ 924(c). To recap, § 924(c)’s “crime of violence” definition looks like this:

      For purposes of this subsection the term “crime of violence” means an
      offense that is a felony and—

      (A)    has as an element the use, attempted use, or threatened use of
             physical force against the person or property of another, or

      (B)    that by its nature, involves a substantial risk that physical force
             against the person or property of another may be used in the
             course of committing the offense.

18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(3). “[O]ffense that is a felony,” language that required a

categorical approach to § 16(b), is part of the definition of “crime of violence” in

both the residual clause and the elements clause, and no one disputes that the latter

requires a categorical approach. “[W]here . . . Congress uses similar statutory

language and similar statutory structure in two adjoining provisions, it normally

intends similar interpretations.” Nijhawan v. Holder, 557 U.S. 29, 39 (2009).

Since “offense that is a felony” in the elements clause is categorical language, the

same words in the adjoining residual clause must be, too. And we know from

Leocal that “by its nature,” present in § 16(b) and in § 924(c)(3)(B), is categorical

language. Leocal, 543 U.S. at 7.

      There is additional textual support for a categorical reading of

§ 924(c)(3)(B) beyond the “crime of violence” definition. The categorical

approach also applies, without a doubt, to the other possible predicate offense, a

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“drug trafficking crime.” See 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(2). That the categorical

approach applies to the drug trafficking crime definition as well as the elements

clause’s crime of violence definition is evidence that the same approach must also

apply to the residual clause’s crime of violence definition. Nijhawan, 557 U.S. at

39; see U.S. Bank of Or. v. Indep. Ins. Agents of Am., Inc., 508 U.S. 439, 455

(1993) (“Statutory construction is a holistic endeavor, and, at a minimum, must

account for a statute’s full text, language as well as punctuation, structure, and

subject matter.” (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)).

      The text of § 924 as a whole further supports a categorical reading of

§ 924(c). Section 924 also contains ACCA, § 924(e). The statutes are unique in

establishing mandatory minimum sentences for federal firearms offenses. See U.S.

Sentencing Comm’n, Mandatory Minimum Penalties for Firearms Offenses in the

Federal Criminal Justice System 2 (2018). The Supreme Court has, without

exception, construed ACCA (including, when it was in effect, its residual clause)

to require a categorical approach. Taking an even broader look at the statutory

scheme, we know that § 924(c), ACCA, and § 16 all were created or amended as

part of the same legislative action, the CCCA. The use of very similar residual

clauses in these statutes is more evidence still that Congress intended the same

categorical meaning for § 924(c)(3)(B). See Rodriguez, 138 S. Ct. at 845 (rejecting

construction of an immigration statute that was “incompatible with the rest of the

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statute” and explaining that only one reading of the statute “makes sense in the

context of the statutory scheme as a whole”).

      None of the majority’s three text-based factors convinces me that

§ 924(c)(3)(B) plausibly can be read to support a conduct-based approach. Nor am

I persuaded that we can divine the meaning of one clause of a statute by breaking it

down word by word and isolating those words from their surrounding context. See

Antonin Scalia & Bryan A. Garner, Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal

Texts § 2, at 56 (2012) (“The words of a governing text are of paramount concern,

and what they convey, in their context, is what the text means.”). Indeed, by

separating the text of § 924(c) into three “considerations” that are hardly separate

ideas, the majority performs a sleight of hand that, the Supreme Court has told us

on numerous occasions, has no place in textual analysis. See, e.g., Rodriguez, 138

S. Ct. at 845. Even picked apart, though, the words do not support majority’s

interpretation.

      The majority’s three textual considerations or factors are: “the text of

[ACCA’s] operative provisions focused not on conduct, but rather on

‘convictions’—and thus . . . solely on formal legal elements” (factor 2 of the

majority’s six-factor test); ACCA’s and § 16’s “definitional provisions used terms

and phrases like ‘offense,’ ‘felony,’ and ‘by its nature,’ which . . . pointed toward a

categorical (rather than conduct-based) inquiry” (factor 3); and “those statutes

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lacked any reference to the underlying crime’s commission or circumstances”

(factor 4). Maj. Op. at 27. I address them in turn.

      1. The “Operative Provision” of Section 924(c) Does Not Permit a
         Conduct-Based Approach to the Residual Clause.

      In its analysis of § 924(c)’s text, the majority first notes that what it deems

ACCA’s “operative provision”—“[a]ny person who violates [18 U.S.C. § 922(g)]

and has three previous convictions . . . for a violent felony or a serious drug

offense, or both”—refers to “convictions” rather than underlying conduct, yet there

is no reference to “convictions” in § 924(c)’s “operative provision,” § 924(c)(1).

Rather, the majority says, § 924(c)(1) “refers to conduct,” Maj. Op. at 30-31

(emphasis in original), pointing to the language that “any person who, during and

in relation to any crime of violence . . . uses or carries a firearm, or who, in

furtherance of any such crime, possesses a firearm,” id. (quoting § 924(c)(1)(A)).

According to the majority, this language offers strong support for applying a

conduct-based approach to the statute’s residual clause.

      I find the majority’s argument unpersuasive for at least two reasons. First,

setting aside for now comparisons to other statutes, the language in § 924(c)(1) that

the majority insists “refer[s] exclusively to conduct,” Maj. Op. at 37, cannot bear

the weight the majority places on it. Section 924(c)(1) makes it a federal crime to

use, carry, or possess a firearm “during and in relation to” one of three categories

of crimes: drug trafficking crimes, elements-clause crimes of violence, or residual-
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clause crimes of violence. If the “during and in relation to” language supported a

conduct-based approach to the residual clause, it necessarily would do the same for

the drug trafficking and elements-clause definitions. After all, the same words—

“during and in relation to”—must be ascribed the same meaning for each category

of crime listed in § 924(c), whether a drug trafficking crime, an elements- clause

crime of violence, or a residual-clause crime of violence. “To give these same

words”—[“during and in relation to”]—“a different meaning for each category”—

[the elements- and residual-clause definitions of crime of violence and the drug

trafficking crime definition]—“would be to invent a statute rather than interpret

one.” Clark v. Martinez, 543 U.S. 371, 378 (2005). The Supreme Court

emphatically has instructed that we cannot avoid a constitutional problem by

inventing or reinventing a statute. Rodriguez, 138 S. Ct. at 843 (“Spotting a

constitutional issue does not give a court the authority to rewrite a statute as it

pleases.”).

      Second, and relatedly, by comparing § 924(c)(3)(B) to ACCA the majority is

in some sense setting up a straw man, because ACCA is not the best analogue to

§ 924(c)(3); § 16 is. As the Dimaya plurality noted, § 16’s text, even “more

plainly” than ACCA’s, requires a categorical approach. Dimaya, 138 S. Ct. at

1218 (plurality opinion); see id. at 1235-36 (Roberts, C.J., dissenting) (reaffirming

Leocal). So to compare and contrast ACCA’s language with § 924(c)’s is a bit

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disingenuous when a more similar statute exists. The majority does not look to

§ 16(b) when examining this textual factor, perhaps because the majority confines

all discussion of § 16(b) to its incorporation into the INA, where it, like ACCA’s

residual clause, defined a prior conviction. But § 16(b) in its numerous other

applications functioned just as § 924(c)(3)(B) does, yet § 16(b) “require[d]” a

categorical approach. Leocal, 543 U.S. at 7, 11 n.8; see also Martinez, 543 U.S. at

380, 392 (explaining that when construing the same statutory language in one of a

statute’s many applications, “[t]he lowest common denominator, as it were, must

govern,” such that any “construction called for by one of the statute’s applications”

must apply to all applications).

      A look at some examples of § 16’s incorporation into the criminal code

proves both points. By examining § 16’s incorporation into the criminal code, we

see how conduct-based elements and categorical elements exist side-by-side

without the former allowing a conduct-based reading of the latter. And we see just

how similar § 16(b)’s incorporations are to § 924(c)(3)(B)’s incorporation into

§ 924(c)’s “operative provision,” and thus why § 16 is a better textual analogue for

§ 924(c)(3)(B) than ACCA is.

      Let’s take, for example, 18 U.S.C. § 25, which, as I mentioned in Part I.A.,

criminalizes an adult’s intentional use of a minor to commit a crime of violence.

To convict a defendant under § 25, a jury must find that the defendant intentionally

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used a minor to commit the crime of violence, an element that necessarily will

require examination of the defendant’s conduct. But the “crime of violence”

element of the statute necessarily is categorical, see Leocal, 543 U.S. at 7; it is

unaffected by the mens rea element. There are plenty of other examples. Take 18

U.S.C. § 119(a), which makes it a crime to knowingly disclose to the public

restricted personal information about certain persons (most often, witnesses or

informants in federal criminal proceedings) when that information will be used to

incite or facilitate a crime of violence against that person or her family member.

Section 119(a) contains several conduct-based elements, including that the

defendant must make restricted information public, have knowledge that the

information is restricted and is being made public, and have the intent either to

personally incite the commission of a crime of violence against a covered person or

her family member or that the personal information be used to facilitate the

commission of a crime of violence. These conduct-based elements appearing in

crimes incorporating § 16’s definition of crime of violence did not, to the Supreme

Court, suggest a conduct-based approach for § 16(b), so they do not suggest a

conduct-based approach for § 924(c)(3)(B), either.

      2. The Phrases “Offense that Is a Felony” and “By its Nature” Require a
         Categorical Approach to Section 924(c)’s Residual Clause.




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       Next, the majority examines the words “offense,” “felony,” and “by its

nature,” concluding that although in some contexts they may signal a categorical

reading, in this context they do not necessarily. I am unpersuaded.

       The majority says that “offense” plausibly can be read to refer to the

defendant’s conduct, pointing to other contexts in which “offense” denotes

conduct. In the case the majority relies primarily upon, Nijhawan, the Supreme

Court recognized “the linguistic fact” that in ordinary speech words such as

“offense” or “felony” can refer to a person’s conduct rather than a statute of

conviction. 557 U.S. at 33-34. No dispute there. But the far more important

lesson from Nijhawan is that context—the words surrounding “offense” or

“felony”—drives those words’ meaning in any particular provision. And here, the

context could not be clearer: “offense that is a felony” applies both to the elements

clause and to the residual clause; in that context, “offense that is a felony” must be

categorical.10 Nijhawan offers direct support for this. In Nijhawan, the Supreme

Court held that one definition of “aggravated felony” in the INA, 8 U.S.C. § 1101,

requires courts to examine the specific facts and circumstances of a crime as it was

committed. 557 U.S. at 36-39. Unlike § 924(c)’s three predicate offense

definitions, the definitions of “aggravated felony”—of which there are many,

10
   At the same time, the majority ignores the highest and best guidance we have—the Supreme
Court’s unanimous statement in Leocal that the precise words we are tasked with interpreting in
this case require a categorical approach.

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including “crime of violence” as defined in § 16—contain some that clearly require

an examination of underlying conduct. Id. at 36-38. Specifically at issue in

Nijhawan was the “aggravated felony” definition found in subsection

(a)(43)(M)(i). That subsection, and the one following it, collectively defined

“aggravated felony” as:

      an offense that—

      (i)    involves fraud or deceit in which the loss to the victim or victims
             exceeds §10,000; or

      (ii)   is described in section 7201 of Title 26 (relating to tax evasion) in
             which the revenue loss to the Government exceeds $10,000[.]

8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(43)(M) (emphasis added). The Supreme Court explained that

the second of these definitions has to refer to the actual circumstances of the

petitioner’s offense because “[t]here is no offense ‘described in section 7201 of

title 26’ that has a specific loss amount as an element.” Nijhawan, 557 U.S. at 38

(quoting 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(43)(M)(ii)). Because the “offense . . .in which”

language necessarily refers to the circumstances of the petitioner’s actual conduct

in subsection (a)(43)(M)(ii), the language must be read the same way for

subsection (a)(43)(M)(i). The Court explained that where “Congress uses similar

statutory language and similar statutory structure in two adjoining provisions, it

normally intends similar interpretations.” Id. at 39. In Nijhawan, it was




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“offense”—in the prefatory phrase—and “in which”—present in both

subsections—that required interpreting both subsections to apply to conduct.

       As I explained above, applying this same logic to § 924(c)(3) compels a

categorical reading of the statute. Like subsection (a)(43)(M)’s “offense . . . in

which” language, the prefatory phrase “offense that is a felony” in § 924(c) is

incorporated into the definitions for both the elements clause and the residual

clause. If we start with the uncontroversial proposition that “offense that is a

felony” is categorical in the elements clause and then apply the Supreme Court’s

reasoning in Nijhawan, we must conclude that Congress intended “offense that is a

felony” to be categorical for both crime of violence definitions in § 924(c)(3). See

Nijhawan, 557 U.S. at 39. 11

       Aside from its reading of “offense,” the majority appears to acknowledge

that the phrase “by its nature” is best read to require a categorical approach. But,


11
   The majority also cites United States v. Hayes, 555 U.S. 415, 426 (2009), for the proposition
that the Supreme Court has employed a conduct-based approach rather than a categorical
approach to a statutory term using the word “offense.” Hayes did not, however, reject a
categorical approach in favor of a factual approach. Instead, Hayes held that the definition of
“misdemeanor crime of domestic violence” in 18 U.S.C. § 921(a)(33)(A) has two distinct
elements, one of which is categorical—an elements clause crime of violence definition—and one
that requires that “a person who has a specified domestic relationship with the victim” have
“committed” the “offense.” Id. There was never a suggestion that the “committed” element
could be interpreted categorically—it is necessarily based on who actually committed the offense
and that person’s relationship with the victim. So § 921(a)(33)(A)’s conduct-based element
operates independently of its categorical element. The same is true for § 924(c)’s conduct-based
elements and categorical (crime of violence or drug trafficking crime) element. See supra Part
II.A.1. (explaining why § 924(c)’s conduct-based elements do not support reading the residual
clause as conduct-based).

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says the majority, Justice Thomas, in dissent in Dimaya, makes some good points

about the meaning of the word “nature” that make a conduct-based reading

possible. “Nature,” the majority says, might mean “the essential character or

constitution of something,” and that “something” might be “particular acts” rather

than the elements of a crime of conviction. Maj. Op. at 35. The problem with the

majority’s argument is that the text of § 924(c) tells us precisely what that

“something” is: when the statute says “by its nature,” its clearly refers to “offense

that is a felony.” 12 And for the reasons I just explained, “offense that is a felony”

must be read categorically. Isolating the word “nature” and claiming that it is

amenable, out of context, to more than one meaning does little to inform the

meaning of § 924(c)(3)(B) when § 924(c) is read as a whole.

       The majority also credits Justice Thomas’s suggestion that “the words ‘by its

nature,’ ‘substantial risk,’ and ‘may’ would mean only that an offender who

engages in risky conduct cannot benefit from the fortuitous fact that physical force

was not actually used during his offense.” Maj. Op. at 36 (quoting Dimaya, 138 S.

Ct. at 1254). Taken separately, I agree that these words and phrases could mean

that. But together? No way.


12
  In holding that ACCA’s residual clause must be read with a categorical approach and defined
by the “ordinary case” of an offense, the Supreme Court described an offense that would fall
within the residual clause as one “that, by its nature, presents a serious risk of injury to
another”—categorical language—even though ACCA does not contain that phrase. James, 550
U.S. at 209.

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       Again, the residual clause defines “crime of violence” as “an offense that is

a felony and . . . that by its nature, involves a substantial risk that physical force . . .

may be used” during commission of the offense. 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(3)(B). The

“substantial risk” requirement on its own means that an offender who engages in

risky conduct cannot benefit from the fact that force was not actually used, so the

addition of “may” would serve no purpose other than to abstract the defendant’s

actual conduct one step further. Of course, we cannot read words out of a statute

in the name of constitutional avoidance. See Gustafson v. Alloyd Co., 513 U.S.

561, 574 (1995) (emphasizing that courts must “avoid a reading [of a statute]

which renders some words altogether redundant”).

       3. Section 924(c)(3)(B)’s “In the Course of Committing the Offense”
          Language Does Not Support a Conduct-Based Approach.

       Third, in its reach to find another meaning in the statute, the majority

considers as a factor the presence or absence of “any reference to the underlying

crime’s commission or circumstances,” a factor that it says it distills from Dimaya.

Maj. Op. at 27. The majority argues that § 924(c)’s residual clause “is different”

from § 16(b) because § 924(c)(3)(B) says “in the course of committing the

offense,” which it deems to be “conduct-based language.” Id. at 37. This is flat

wrong—both statutes contain “in the course of committing the offense.”

Therefore, the statutes are not different at all. And if this temporal language



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somehow suggested a conduct-based approach, it likewise would do so for the

identically worded § 16(b), and we know from Leocal that that is not the case.

      We also know from the Supreme Court’s decisions applying the categorical

approach to ACCA that the fact that the risk must arise in the course of committing

the offense does not admit of a conduct-based approach. In James, the Supreme

Court explained that the “risk” that triggered ACCA’s residual clause must arise

“while the crime is in progress”—that is, in the course of committing the offense.

James, 550 U.S. at 203. Although ACCA’s residual clause “lacked an express

temporal limit,” the limit was built into the case law such that “the analyses under

ACCA’s residual clause and § 16(b) coincide[d].” Dimaya, 138 S. Ct. at 1219-20

(majority opinion). Because we know ACCA’s residual clause and § 16(b) require

a categorical approach, we also know that the statutes’ temporal limitations,

explicit or implicit, do not plausibly suggest a conduct-based approach; otherwise,

the majorities in Johnson and Dimaya would have had to accede to the dissenters’

suggestions that they employ the canon of constitutional avoidance. To the

contrary, the Supreme Court has explained that the categorical approach

necessitates a temporal limitation because “the riskiness of a crime in the ordinary

case depends on the acts taken during [the crime’s] commission.” Id. at 1220.

Section 924(c)(3)(B)’s “in the course of committing the offense,” then, is

categorical language, not conduct-based language.

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                                   *      *      *

      The majority’s strained reading of § 924(c)’s residual clause does not, in my

view, even approach plausible. Under Rodriguez, we must end the analysis there.

The statute cannot be construed to avoid a plain violation of due process. And yet,

“[u]nable to find sure footing in the statutory text, the [g]overnment and [the

majority] pivot away from the plain language and raise a number of practical

concerns. These practical considerations are meritless and do not justify departing

from the statute’s clear text.” Pereira, 138 S. Ct. at 2118.

B.    The Majority’s Extra-textual Factors Do Not Support Application of a
      Conduct-Based Approach.

      Even if we could set aside the text of the statute (which of course we may

not do), the majority’s three “practical considerations” lacking a textual hook

support no different reading of § 924(c)’s residual clause. To review, these three

practical considerations are because: in Johnson and Dimaya the government

“never asked the Court to consider a conduct-based approach” (factor 1); “applying

the categorical approach would avoid the impracticability of requiring sentencing

courts to engage in after-the-fact reconstructions of the circumstances underlying

prior convictions” (factor 5); and “applying the categorical approach would avoid

the Sixth Amendment issues that could arise from sentencing courts making

findings of fact that properly belong to juries” (factor 6). Maj. Op. at 27-28.



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      Before I get into the majority’s factors, I pause to note that although the

majority claims to have distilled its factors from Taylor and its progeny, absent

from the majority’s consideration is one of Taylor’s three reasons for applying the

categorical approach to ACCA: that “the legislative history of the enhancement

statute shows that Congress generally took a categorical approach to predicate

offenses.” 495 U.S. at 601. Because § 924(c)(3)(B) is amenable to only one

plausible reading, I would no more wade into legislative history than I would

explore the majority’s extra-textual factors. But if we were to peek at the

legislative history of § 924(c), it—like ACCA’s legislative history—supports a

categorical approach only. As part of the CCCA, Congress “completely revised”

§ 924(c). S. Rep. 98-225, at 313 (1983). Before the revision, the Supreme Court

had interpreted § 924(c) to exclude certain potential predicate criminal “statutes,”

like the federal bank robbery statute and the assault-on-a-federal-officer statute,

which contained penalty enhancements of their own. Id. Congress then amended

§ 924(c) to include these statutes. In so doing, the Senate expressly acknowledged

the Supreme Court case law as the motivating factor for its revision. Even more

importantly, as it acknowledged that case law the Senate itself referred to crimes in

terms of categories: statutes, not conduct.

      The Senate stated that the purpose of its revision was to “ensure that all

persons who commit federal crimes of violence, including those crimes set forth in

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statutes which already provide for enhanced sentences for their commission with a

dangerous weapon, receive a mandatory sentence.” Id. (emphasis added). The

Senate sought to do so in response to the Supreme Court’s body of cases that had

“negated [§ 924(c)]’s use in cases involving statutes, such as the bank robbery

statute and assault on a federal officer statute.” Id. at 312 (emphasis added).

Congress explained that “[t]hese are precisely the type of extremely dangerous

offenses for which a mandatory punishment for the use of a firearm is most

appropriate,” so it overrode the court decisions to ensure that certain statutes fell

within the purview of § 924(c). Id. (emphasis added); see also United States v.

Robinson, 844 F.3d 137, 148 (3d Cir. 2016) (Fuentes, J., concurring in judgment)

(“The Senate report discussion of Section 924(c) included comments on which

precise offenses are ‘crime[s] of violence’ under the statute, but never which facts

would qualify a conviction as a ‘crime of violence’ and which facts would

disqualify the same conviction.”).

      Relatedly, our court and nearly every other federal court in the nation has

consistently applied the categorical approach to § 924(c)(3), and Congress has not

once sought to intervene—despite the fact that, as evidenced by the above

legislative history, Congress previously has substantially revised the statute in

response to the federal courts’ construction of it. “The claim to adhere to case law

is generally powerful once a decision has settled statutory meaning” because

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“unlike in the context of constitutional interpretation, the legislative power is

implicated, and Congress remains free to alter what [a] [c]ourt has done.”

Patterson v. McLean Credit Union, 491 U.S. 164, 172-73 (1989), quoted with

approval in Shepard v. United States, 544 U.S. 13, 23 (2005). “If Congress had

wanted judges to look into a felon’s actual conduct, it presumably would have said

so.” Dimaya, 138 S. Ct. at 1218 (plurality opinion) (internal quotation marks

omitted); see also id. at 1233 (Gorsuch, J., concurring) (noting that Congress

“remains free . . . to write a new residual clause that affords the fair notice lacking

here.”).

      The canon of constitutional avoidance “rest[s] on the reasonable

presumption that Congress did not intend the alternative which raises serious

constitutional doubts. The canon is thus a means of giving effect to congressional

intent, not of subverting it.” Martinez, 543 U.S. at 380 (internal citations omitted).

Here, we know Congress’s intent.

      I now turn to the majority’s extra-textual factors.

      1. Whether the Government Has Asked Us to Abandon the Categorical
         Approach Has No Relevance to the Constitutional Avoidance Analysis.

      The first factor the majority considers is that here, unlike in Johnson and

Dimaya, the government has argued for a conduct-based approach: “[T]he

government has expressly (and at length) urged us to abandon the categorical

approach to § 924(c)(3)(B) in favor of a conduct-based interpretation.” Maj. Op. at
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29. First, this description strikes me as incomplete at best. For years, and even

after Johnson, the government consistently has urged that we apply a categorical

approach to § 924(c). It was only after our court invited the government to argue

for abandonment of the categorical approach in supplemental panel briefing and en

banc briefing in this case that the government changed course. And even then, in

its en banc brief the government’s primary argument was not that we should

overrule McGuire, but rather that we should affirm Ms. Ovalles’s § 924(c)

conviction on the ground that her predicate offense satisfies the elements clause.

See En Banc Br. of the Appellee USA at ii. The government argued only in the

alternative that we should overrule McGuire insofar as it held that a categorical

approach must be applied to § 924(c)’s residual clause.

      Second, and more importantly, as the majority itself observes, this factor is

not really “interpretive,” id. at 29; and so it is “an odd place to start in interpreting

a statute.” Id. Under Rodriguez it is clear that the government’s suggestion (or

lack of it) that we should apply a conduct-based approach to a statute is irrelevant

to whether the text of the statute plausibly can be read to permit such an approach.

      2. The Majority’s Practical Problems and Sixth Amendment Factors in
         Reality Constitute One Irrelevant Factor that Fails to Support the
         Majority’s Position.

      The majority’s fifth factor—the supposed lack of practical problems

associated with a conduct-based approach—is yet another variety of extra-textual

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consideration that the Supreme Court in Rodriguez told us we cannot consider. See

Rodriguez, 138 S. Ct. at 843. In any event, the majority’s fifth and sixth

considerations (the need to avoid Sixth Amendment issues that could arise from

sentencing courts making findings that juries are required to make) are not separate

issues; instead they are two sides of the same coin. Here’s why.

      It certainly was possible to apply a conduct-based approach to ACCA’s

residual clause and § 16(b) and still comply with the Sixth Amendment. See

W. Pryor Concurrence at 8-9. Take ACCA’s residual clause, for example. Say a

defendant convicted of burglary three times in 2013 was charged in 2014 with

being a felon in possession of a firearm, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g). He

elected to have his case tried to a jury. The government could secure an ACCA

enhancement based on these burglary convictions so long as it proved to the jury

beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant’s commission of the burglaries

involved a serious potential risk of injury. (Maybe in each case the defendant was

still inside a home when the homeowners returned, and the homeowner in each

case could testify to that before the jury.) Securing the defendant’s ACCA-

enhanced sentence should be relatively straightforward (if somewhat time-

consuming) because the prior convictions were close in time to the § 922(g)

charge. Now assume those burglary convictions were 10 years old. Maybe the

government could scrape together enough evidence to prove the risk element of

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those long-ago crimes beyond a reasonable doubt, maybe not. But this is not a

Sixth Amendment problem. It is a practical problem for the prosecution that arises

because of the Sixth Amendment jury trial right. Applying a conduct-based

approach to ACCA would not have violated the Sixth Amendment; it merely

would have led to fewer ACCA-enhanced sentences because the government’s

burden to prove old facts to a jury could turn out to be difficult to satisfy in

practice. 13

       The same is true for § 16(b) as incorporated by the INA—a conduct-based

approach would merely lead to fewer removals. If a factfinder was tasked with

determining whether a noncitizen had committed a crime with conduct that

involved a substantial risk that physical force may be used, the factfinder’s ability

to make this finding could well depend on how long ago the crime was committed.

       The majority’s fifth and sixth factors, then, amount to one concern: that

given the Sixth Amendment’s dictates there may be serious practical hurdles to

proving prior convictions.

       Turning to that concern, the majority distinguishes ACCA and § 16, on the

one hand, from § 924(c), on the other, because by requiring the examination of


13
   The majority describes its concerns in terms of avoiding sentencing-judge-found facts, but of
course the same concern exists in the § 924(c) context: even under a conduct-based approach,
the Sixth Amendment would not permit sentencing judges to find the facts necessary to secure a
conviction. Thus, the real concern is whether it is practical to have a jury find the facts necessary
to determine whether the defendant has committed a crime of violence.

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prior convictions the two former statutes pose these practical hurdles, while the

latter does not. Yes, it may be difficult to reconstruct the facts underlying the

predicate convictions because of the passage of time and possible loss of witnesses

and records; conversely, because § 924(c) is always applied to a contemporaneous

offense, there is no such practical difficulty. This is true for ACCA and § 16 as

incorporated into the INA. But what of § 16 in its numerous other applications?

Many other, primarily criminal, statutes incorporate the “crime of violence”

definition in § 16 as an element that must satisfied at the same time as the statute’s

other elements. In those applications, no reconstruction of old facts is necessary

because, as with § 924(c)—and I use the majority’s words here—“it’s all one big

ball of wax.” Maj. Op. at 40. As I emphasized above, “§ 16 is a criminal statute,

and it has both criminal and noncriminal applications,” so we cannot solely look to

its applications in the INA when examining whether it is similar to or different

from § 924(c). Leocal, 543 U.S. at 11 n.8. Despite the lack of practical problems

with § 16(b)’s contemporaneous criminal applications, the Supreme Court did not

invoke the canon of constitutional avoidance to save § 16(b). I see no reason why

the same rationale would justify application of the canon here.

      And, contrary to the majority’s suggestion, practical problems do abound

with a conduct-based approach to § 924(c)(3)(B), even if those problems are not

completely coextensive with problems that might arise by using a conduct-based

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approach to ACCA’s residual clause and § 16(b) as incorporated into the INA. As

amici curiae the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers and Families

Against Mandatory Minimums explain: “Under a fact-based approach, whether

the charged predicate offense satisfies § 924(c)(3) would turn not on whether the

defendant committed the predicate offense, but how he committed it.” Br. of

Amici at 11. In some § 924(c)(3)(B) cases (like my ACCA residual clause

example above), proof of what made the defendant’s conduct risky (that is, how he

committed the predicate offense) will not be essential to satisfy the elements of the

predicate offense. In those cases, will prosecutors know whether the offense

ultimately will satisfy the residual clause, so as to facilitate informed charging

decisions? Will defendants and defense counsel know whether the charged

predicate will satisfy the residual clause, so as to enable informed plea bargaining

decisions? I doubt it.

      What’s more, given the abstract nature of the residual clause inquiry I am

not nearly as confident as the majority is that instructions can be fashioned to guide

juries appropriately on—or that juries are well equipped to decide—what kind of

conduct satisfies § 924(c)’s residual clause. Under a conduct-based approach,

which the majority concedes must be based on facts found by a jury looking at the

defendant’s conduct, the jury’s inquiry is divorced, in at least four ways, from the

conduct it is tasked with examining. First, the jury must ignore any conduct that

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forms the basis for other charged offenses and focus only on the conduct involved

in committing the § 924(c) predicate offense. This could prove difficult if, to use

as an example Ms. Ovalles’s case—in which she and her codefendants robbed a

store, carjacked three vehicles, and attempted to carjack a fourth—the predicate

offense (the attempted carjacking) occurred alongside other criminal conduct.

Then, the text of § 924(c)(3)(B) provides two additional abstractions: “substantial

risk” that physical force “may” be used. The majority says no problem—juries

routinely decide what kind of conduct satisfies a substantial risk standard or what

constitutes physical force. But “substantial risk” is only one abstraction. How

does a jury decide whether conduct presents a substantial risk that physical force

“may” be used? That is, how does a jury decide what conduct satisfies an

abstraction (“may”) of already abstract conduct (“substantial risk”)? The majority

has no answer for this. 14 Fourth, and further abstracting a jury’s inquiry is that a

defendant’s use, carrying, or possession of a gun is insufficient, without more, to

satisfy the risk standard in § 924(c)’s residual clause—or else the crime of violence

element would be meaningless. A jury therefore must decide whether a

defendant’s predicate offense conduct only, separate and independent from the

14
   It is no answer to say that the word “may” in the statute does not create an inquiry distinct
from the jury’s inquiry about “substantial risk” because “[i]t is our duty to give effect, if
possible, to every clause and word of a statute.” Duncan v. Walker, 533 U.S. 167, 174 (2001)
(internal quotation marks omitted). In crafting jury instructions, a district court, remaining
mindful of this rule, would have to explain how a “substantial risk” that physical force “may” be
used is distinct from a “substantial risk” that physical force will be used.

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defendant’s possession of a gun, presented a substantial risk that physical force

may be used, that doubly abstract standard. We presume that juries follow

instructions, true, but we cannot presume that a jury will be able to make sense of

an inquiry this abstracted from the facts of the case. Nor can we presume, given

these realities, that a district court will be able to provide sufficiently concrete

instructions to guide the jury. 15

       Finally, the majority’s ultimate disposition of Ms. Ovalles’s appeal proves

my point about practical difficulties by highlighting another problem with a

conduct-based approach: appeals. The majority, sitting as an appellate court,

affirms Ms. Ovalles’s § 924(c)(3)(B) conviction even though Ms. Ovalles did not

admit, and no fact-finder found, that her conduct created a substantial risk that

physical force may have been used in the course of committing the predicate

offense of attempted carjacking. The majority decides as a matter of law that the

risk element has been satisfied by examining the elements of the predicate offense

to which she pled guilty. See Maj. Op. at 45-47 (explaining that Ms. Ovalles’s plea

to the elements of attempted carjacking satisfy the elements clause and that “the

15
  That is not all. Deeming the § 924(c)(3) inquiry a fact question for the jury rather than a
question of law for the court easily could lead to inconsistent verdicts across cases. Identical
conduct that one jury considers to be conduct presenting a substantial risk that physical force
may be used might not, to another jury, present such a risk. The categorical approach prevents
such disparities. See Moncrieffe, 569 U.S. at 201 (emphasizing that the government’s proposed
case-specific fact-finding approach would lead to unfair results wherein two noncitizens, “each
‘convicted of’ the same offense, might obtain different aggravated felony determinations”
depending on the evidence before the immigration judge about each noncitizen’s conduct).

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real-life details of [her] crime” only “confirm it”). If § 924(c)(3)(B) is to have a

new conduct-based “substantial risk” element, it often will not be the case that we

can look to the defendant’s admissions to the elements of the predicate offense to

determine that this conduct element is satisfied. This case is a prime example.

      To “confirm” its conclusion that the elements of the attempted carjacking

offense to which Ms. Ovalles pled guilty satisfied the conduct-based residual

clause element, the majority considers the totality of Ms. Ovalles’s and her co-

conspirators’ conduct. But under the majority’s own holding, whether the

defendant engaged in conduct that satisfies the “substantial risk” standard is an

element of the § 924(c) offense that must be decided by a jury or admitted by the

defendant. Again, Ms. Ovalles never admitted that her attempted carjacking

involved a substantial risk that the use of force might be used. Perhaps, without

saying so, the majority is performing a harmless error analysis—an analysis the

government never asked us to perform and on which the government bears the

burden.

      Will we uphold other convictions on appeal under this same flawed logic?

Many defendants like Ms. Ovalles were convicted when McGuire required use of

the categorical approach. Under McGuire, the district court was tasked with

deciding as a matter of law whether the defendant’s charged predicate offense

satisfied the residual clause. 706 F.3d at 1336. So even if a defendant was tried by

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a jury on his predicate offense charge and his § 924(c) charge, the government was

not required to prove beyond a reasonable doubt, and the jury was not required to

decide, whether his underlying conduct in fact met the risk standard. The same

would hold true for a defendant who pled guilty. Under the majority’s conduct-

based approach, on appeal these defendants should be entitled under the Sixth

Amendment to a remand or—at a minimum—the government would have to prove

that the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. See Neder v. United States,

527 U.S. 1, 9-11 (1999). But under the majority’s decision today, perhaps

defendants will not be afforded these rights. Time will tell.

                                         III.

      The majority claims to be avoiding one constitutional problem—the

unconstitutional vagueness of § 924(c)(3)(B)—with a practical solution—

abandoning the categorical approach as applied to that statute. The law does not

permit the majority’s approach, and the text of § 924(c) does not permit the

majority’s resolution. Even under the majority’s flawed framework, neither the

government’s position, the dictates of the Sixth Amendment, nor practical

considerations support application of a conduct-based approach over a categorical

one. And there is every indication that the majority’s practical solution will breed

a host of new practical problems.




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      Our displeasure with the categorical approach and the results of its

application to residual clauses does not permit us to jettison it. The categorical

approach is dictated by the text of the statute and Congress’s intent to impose

increased penalties based on the violation of certain predicate statutes. If Congress

wants to change course, or enact a residual clause that comports with the dictates

of due process, it can readily do so. See McCarthan v. Director of Goodwill

Indust.-Suncoast, Inc., 851 F.3d 1076, 1100 (Carnes, C.J., concurring) (“‘It is for

Congress, not this Court, to amend the statute if it believes’” the statute is too

restrictive (quoting Dodd v. United States, 545 U.S. 353, 359-60 (2005))); see also

Pryor Concurrence at 8-9.

      In my view, the majority’s erroneous decision perpetuates unconstitutional

sentences for inmates sentenced under § 924(c)’s residual clause in this circuit. If I

am correct that Leocal and Dimaya require a categorical approach to interpreting

§ 924(c)(3)(B), these inmates—who should be entitled to relief—are serving

between five years and life in prison beyond what our Constitution allows. And

we will have perpetuated that injustice by failing to apply faithfully the Supreme

Court’s directives.

      I would not throw out the plain text of § 924(c)(3)(B) to save it from

unconstitutionality. I would leave it to Congress save it. Respectfully, I dissent.




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