DARYL LYNN HIGDON, Petitioner-Appellant, v. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Respondent-Appellee.
No. 17-5027
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
Decided and Filed: February 13, 2018
18a0030p.06
Before: GRIFFIN, KETHLEDGE, and BUSH, Circuit Judges.
RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b). Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee at Greeneville. Nos. 2:12-cr-00104-1; 2:16-cv-00246—Robert Leon Jordan, District Judge. Argued: December 7, 2017
COUNSEL
ARGUED: Jennifer Niles Coffin, FEDERAL DEFENDER SERVICES OF EASTERN TENNESSEE, INC., Knoxville, Tennessee, for Appellant. Luke A. McLaurin, UNITED STATES ATTORNEY‘S OFFICE, Knoxville, Tennessee, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Rosana E. Brown, FEDERAL DEFENDER SERVICES OF EASTERN TENNESSEE, INC., Knoxville, Tennessee, for Appellant. Luke A. McLaurin, UNITED STATES ATTORNEY‘S OFFICE, Knoxville, Tennessee, for Appellee.
OPINION
KETHLEDGE, Circuit Judge. Daryl Higdon was sentenced as an armed career criminal based in part on a North Carolina conviction for discharging a firearm into an occupied structure. The question here is whether that offense—which requires an application of force to an occupied structure, but not to the occupants themselves—nonetheless counts as an offense that involves the use “of physical force against the person of another.”
Higdon pled guilty in 2012 to being a felon in possession of a firearm in violation of
An offense counts as a “violent felony” under the ACCA if (among other things) it “has as an element the use, attempted use, or threatened use of physical force against the person of another[.]”
Any person who willfully or wantonly discharges or attempts to discharge: (1) Any barreled weapon capable of discharging shot, bullets, pellets, or other missiles at a muzzle velocity of at least 600 feet per second; or
(2) A firearm
into any building, structure, vehicle, aircraft, watercraft, or other conveyance, device, equipment, erection, or enclosure while it is occupied is guilty of a Class H felony.
Here, the district court did not hold, and the government has not presented any developed argument, that these elements involve the “attempted” or “threatened” use of physical force against the person of another. Indeed the government all but disavowed any such theory at oral argument. Thus the question here is simply whether these elements, taken separately or together, require the “use . . . of physical force against the person of another[.]” Plainly they do not: the North Carolina offense requires the use of force (in the form of discharging a firearm) against a structure, not “against the person of another.” The projectile can miss the structure‘s occupants altogether—with no physical force applied to the person of anyone—and yet the shooting can satisfy all the elements of the North Carolina offense. Thus, discharging a firearm into an occupied structure in violation of
In arguing the contrary, the government confuses the mens rea requirements of
The government also seems implicitly to adopt a meaning of “against” that is implausible in the context of
The district court‘s January 3, 2017 judgment is reversed, and the case remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
