Edgar Keaton Martin v. United States of America
No. 17-2232
United States Court of Appeals For the Eighth Circuit
September 14, 2018
Submitted: April 12, 2018
Appeal from United States District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas - Little Rock
Before SMITH, Chief Judge, WOLLMAN and LOKEN, Circuit Judges.
A jury convicted Edgar Martin of being a felon in possession of a firearm. The district court1 concluded he had at least three prior violent felony convictions and sentenced him under the Armed Career Criminal Act (ACCA) to 188 months imprisonment. See
In the district court, Martin moved to vacate his sentence, arguing he lacked the three prior violent felony convictions required to trigger ACCA sentencing because his two Arkansas convictions for first-degree terroristic threatening were not violent felonies. This new argument does not warrant successive § 2255 relief under Johnson because Martin‘s terroristic threatening convictions were classified as violent felonies under the ACCA‘s “force clause,”
We begin with a summary of the established judicial formula for determining whether a prior conviction qualifies as a “violent felony” under the ACCA:
[C]ourts use a categorical approach that looks to the fact of conviction and the statutory elements of the prior offense. In cases where a statute describes alternate ways of committing a crime -- only some of which satisfy the definition of a violent felony -- courts may use a modified categorical approach and examine a limited set of documents to determine whether a defendant was necessarily convicted of a violent felony. These materials include charging documents, jury instructions, plea agreements, transcripts of plea colloquies, or “some comparable judicial record.”
United States v. Headbird, 813 F.3d 1092, 1095-96 (8th Cir. 2016) (citations omitted). In determining if a conviction was a violent felony under the ACCA‘s force clause, we examine whether “the conviction, based on the elements of the offense, necessarily involved the ‘use, attempted use, or threatened use of physical force against the person of another.‘” Boaz v. United States, 884 F.3d 808, 809 (8th Cir.), quoting
The Arkansas terroristic threatening statute provides, in relevant part: “A person commits the offense of terroristic threatening in the first degree if: (A) With the purpose of terrorizing another person, the person threatens to cause death or serious physical injury or substantial property damage to another person ....”
In Descamps, the Supreme Court noted that it had applied the modified categorical approach only if a state statute was “divisible,” that is, a statute that “sets out one or more elements of the offense in the alternative.” 570 U.S. at 257. In Mathis, resolving a circuit conflict, the Court held that the modified categorical approach may not be applied if a statute, instead of defining multiple crimes by listing elements in the alternative, merely “lists alternative means of fulfilling one (or more)” elements. 136 S. Ct. at 2253. Martin argues that each subsection of
In preparing for oral argument, we discovered that this same argument had been submitted two months earlier to another panel in United States v. Myers, No. 17-2415, a case arising on direct appeal rather than by a successive § 2255 motion. To conserve resources and avoid possible inconsistent panel rulings that would require en banc attention, we had this case submitted without argument and awaited the other panel‘s decision. In United States v. Myers, 896 F.3d 866 (8th Cir. 2018), we concluded that (i) Mathis did not address the ACCA‘s force clause and therefore does not require reconsideration of the otherwise controlling decision in Boaz I that
Our decision in Myers that
Alternatively, we conclude that Martin is not eligible for successive § 2255 relief. The recent Supreme Court decisions on which he relies -- Descamps and Mathis -- did not announce “a new rule of constitutional law, made retroactive to cases on collateral review by the Supreme Court.”
For these reasons, we affirm the Order of the district court dated May 16, 2017.
