Opinion by Judge WRIGHT.
A risk is a risk. But a risk of a risk is not enough of a risk. Every predicate attempted burglary conviction under the Armed Career Criminal Act must encompass conduct posing a risk of violent confrontation. It is not enough that most convictions would encompass such conduct.
BACKGROUND
The district court sentenced Edward Weekley to 65 months imprisonment for being a felon in possession of a fireаrm. 18 U.S.C. § 922(g). The government argued that because he had three prior violent felony convictions, two for burglary and one for attempted burglary, he should have been *1126 sentenced to 15 years as an Armed Career Criminal.
Chief Judge Quackenbush ruled that it was unclear from Washington’s attempt statute if the attemрted burglary conviction involved conduct that presented a serious potential risk of physical injury to others.
United. States v. Weekley,
ANALYSIS
The ACCA increases to 15 years the mandatory minimum sentence for a felon in possession conviction if the defendant has three predicate violent felony convictions as defined in § 924(e)(2). The first part of § 924(e)(2)(B)(ii) enumerates specific offenses as violent felonies. The second part (the so-cаlled “otherwise” clause) is a catchall encompassing convictions for offenses that “otherwise involve[ ] cоnduct that presents a serious potential risk of physical injury to another.” 18 U.S.C. § 924(e)(2)(B)(ii).
We have never decided if attemptеd burglary involves conduct posing a sufficiently serious potential risk of injury. And the circuits are split over how to assess the risk.
The Seventh and Fourth Circuits allow an attempted burglary conviction to operate as a predicate offense if
most
attempt convictions would meet a threshold level of risk.
See United States v. Davis,
But the Tenth and Fifth Circuits reqúire
every
attempt conviction to meet the threshold level of risk.
See United States v. Strahl,
This latter approach is consistent with
Taylor v. United States,
But rather than force district courts to waste resources on extensive fact-finding missions, thе Court limited the inquiry into past criminal conduct “to the fact of conviction and the statutory definition [or charging instrument and jury instructiоns] of the prior offense.”
Id.
at 602,
An attempt сonviction would involve risky conduct where the statute requires,
2
or the charging instruments and jury instructions show that the jury had to find,
3
an entry or nеar-entry into a budding. But an attempt conviction based on casing a home or merely possessing burglary tools would.not. We respectfully disagree with the ‘usually risky’ approach taken by the Fourth and Seventh Circuits, because it could capture сonvictions not based on the kind of risky conduct with which Congress was concerned.
Taylor
at 588-89,
Washington, like Utah and Texas, allows attemрted burglary convictions for relatively unrisky “substantial step” conduct.
State v. Vermillion,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. We rеview de novo the district court's interpretation of the ACCA.
United States v. O’Neal,
. Reviewing the case law interpreting Illinois' “substantial-step" attempt statute, the
Davis
court held that "the perpetrator in Illinois must come a great deal closer to completion of the crime” than in other substantial-step states.
Davis,
Other cases allowing attempted burglary to operate as а predicate offense came to the same conclusion.
See United States v. Payne,
. The charging instruments and plea agreements here indicate only that Weekley took a "substantial step." It is unclear from these documents what step was taken.
