Vacated and remanded by published opinion. Judge NIEMEYER wrote the opinion, in which Judge KING and Senior Judge SILER joined.
OPINION
This appeal presents the question of whether Willie Alston’s sentence for possession of a firearm in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1) was properly enhanced under the Armed Career Criminal Act (“ACCA”), 18 U.S.C. § 924(e), which provides for an enhancement based on a defendant having three prior convictions for a violent felony or a serious drug offense. In enhancing Alston’s sentence, the district court relied on a prior conviction resulting from Alston’s
Alford
*
plea to a Maryland charge for second-degree assault. Under Maryland law, the second-degree assault offense includes several different generic crimes, some of which are violent felonies and some of which are not.
See United States v. Coleman,
*221
Because Alston’s
Alford
plea to second-degree assault did not
necessarily
rest on facts establishing his participation in a type of assault that qualifies as a violent felony,
see Shepard v. United States,
I
In March 2008, officers stopped a vehicle driven by Antoinetta Green for failure to stop at a stop sign. When officers smelled a strong odor of marijuana emanating from the vehicle, they asked the passenger, Willie Alston, to step out of the car. When he did, the officers saw a 9 mm handgun resting on the seat he had vacated. Alston subsequently pleaded guilty to possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1).
The presentence report indicated that Alston qualified for a sentencing enhancement under ACCA based on his Maryland convictions for (1) robbery with a deadly weapon, (2) second-degree assault, and (3) manufacturing a controlled dangerous substance. Alston objected to the report’s designation of him as an armed career criminal, contending that there was a lack of evidence from which to determine that the second-degree assault offense for which he was convicted was a violent felony qualifying as an ACCA predicate offense.
At Alston’s sentencing hearing, the district court agreed with Alston that the charging document for his second-degree assault conviction did not show on its face that the crime was a violent felony. The court, however, continued the hearing to allow the government to obtain materials approved by
Shepard,
The government obtained and submitted the transcript of the proceeding in which Alston pleaded guilty to second-degree assault, which revealed that on March 7, 2002, in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City, Alston entered an Alford plea to three counts of second-degree assault and three counts of unlawfully wearing, carrying, or transporting a handgun. During the course of the proceeding, the state prosecutor proffered the evidence that she would have presented at trial, indicating that the State’s witnesses would have testified that Alston pointed a gun at three victims and threatened to kill them. Following the proffer, Alston, through counsel, stipulated that the State’s witnesses would have testified to that effect, but Alston never agreed to the truth of the proffered facts. The state judge accepted Alston’s Alford plea and sentenced Alston to five years’ imprisonment, with all but three years suspended.
When Alston’s sentencing hearing in this case was reconvened, Alston maintained his objection to being designated as an armed career criminal on the ground that the state prosecutor’s proffer in connection with the second-degree assault conviction did not satisfy the demands of Shepard. Alston argued that although “an Alford plea results in a conviction for criminal history purposes[,] .... it does not result in the kind of certainty that Shepard requires for the Court to know ... what the defendant [was] pleading guilty to.”
The district court rejected Alston’s argument, reasoning that “by his plea of *222 guilty [in the state court], the defendant effectively acquiesced in” the state judge’s acceptance of the facts proffered in support of the guilty plea. Accordingly, the court found that the government had carried its burden of showing that Alston qualified as an armed career criminal under 18 U.S.C. § 924(e) and sentenced him to the statutory mandatory minimum term of 180 months’ imprisonment. Alston appealed, raising the single issue:
Where the defendant enters a plea under the doctrine announced in North Carolina v. Alford,400 U.S. 25 ,91 S.Ct. 160 ,27 L.Ed.2d 162 (1970), can the district court consider the disputed facts proffered by the prosecutor to establish the nature of a prior conviction and whether that conviction qualifies as a [violent felony] under the Armed Career Criminal Act?
II
A violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g) ordinarily carries a maximum prison term of 10 years. See 18 U.S.C. § 924(a)(2). But ACCA specifies that a defendant who has “three previous convictions ... for a violent felony or a serious drug offense, or both, committed on occasions different from one another” must be sentenced to at least 15 years’ imprisonment. Id. § 924(e)(1). The Act defines a “violent felony” as “any 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).
The sole question here is whether the district court properly found that Alston’s second-degree assault conviction was a conviction for a “violent felony” when the conviction was obtained pursuant to an Alford plea, during which the state prosecutor proffered evidence of conduct constituting a violent felony but Alston agreed only that if the case were tried, “the State’s witnesses would testify” as indicated in the proffer.
In Maryland, the statute prohibiting second-degree assault provides simply that “[a] person may not commit an assault” and that a person found guilty “is subject to imprisonment not exceeding 10 years.” Md.Code Ann., Crim. Law § 3-203. “Assault” is defined to mean “the crimes of assault, battery, and assault and battery, which retain their judicially determined meanings.”
Id.
§ 3-201(b). The Maryland courts treat “assault” as a term of art “ ‘connot[ing] any of three distinct ideas: 1. A consummated battery or the combination of a consummated battery and its antecedent assault; 2. An attempted battery; and 3. A placing of a victim in reasonable apprehension of an imminent battery.’”
Cruz v. State,
The common law offense of battery thus embraces a wide range of conduct, including kissing without consent, touching or tapping, jostling, and throwing water upon another. It may include even indirect applications of force such *223 as directing a dog to attack or exposing a helpless person to the inclemency of the weather.... At the other end of the spectrum, a battery includes a fatal shooting or stabbing of a victim.
United States v. Kirksey,
Recognizing this ambiguity, the district court invited the government to produce the transcript of Alston’s guilty plea proceeding to determine, under the “modified categorical approach” of
Shepard,
whether Alston was convicted of a violent felony.
See Johnson,
The transcript from Alston’s plea hearing, however, revealed that Alston’s conviction was based on an Alford plea during which Alston did not adopt or accept the facts proffered by the government. Indeed, when Alston elected to tender an Alford plea, the state judge explained to him that “[an Alford plea] [i]s when you say, T want the deal. I’ve talked it over with my lawyer. I know what the witnesses are going to say. I think it’s in my best interests to take the deal rather than go to trial and run the risk I might get the maximum penalty. So I want the deal, but I don’t want to say I did the crime.’” After ascertaining that Alston wished to proceed with an Alford plea, the state court instructed Alston to “have a seat because I still have to make sure that the State can prove the charges against you.” The court then asked the prosecutor, “What would the witnesses say, what would the State prove if there was a trial?” After the prosecutor outlined the evidence she would have introduced at trial, which indicated that Alston had pointed a gun at three victims and stated that he would kill them all, Alston’s counsel “agree[d] that if the case were called, the State’s witnesses would testify to that effect.”
The district court concluded that the state prosecutor’s proffer of facts in the state proceeding was imputable to Alston and therefore could be used under Shepard to conclude that Alston’s conviction was necessarily for a violent felony.
Alston contends that the district court erred in relying on the proffer to qualify his second-degree assault conviction as a predicate conviction under ACCA. He maintains that the transcript of the plea hearing could be considered only if he had admitted or confirmed the factual basis for the plea during the plea colloquy. He argues that because the State’s charging *224 documents simply alleged that he had committed second-degree assault and because he entered a guilty plea pursuant to Alford, the transcript of his plea hearing does not show that his guilty plea necessarily rested on facts identifying his second-degree assault offense as a type of assault that qualifies as a violent felony. The district court, he contends, therefore violated his Sixth Amendment rights by making a finding of fact about the nature of his second-degree assault conviction in order to impose a sentence above what would otherwise be the statutory maximum.
The question that Alston presents is one of first impression, although a few courts of appeals have addressed analogous questions within the context of the Sentencing Guidelines, and most have adopted a position that supports Alston.
See United States v. Ventura,
Beginning with
Taylor v. United States,
In Shepard, the Court refined this “modified categorical approach” by extending Taylor to convictions stemming from guilty pleas. Looking for “the right analogs for applying the Taylor rule to pleaded cases,” the Court specified that
[i]n cases tried without a jury, the closest analogs to jury instructions would be a bench-trial judge’s formal rulings of law and findings of fact, and in pleaded cases they would be the statement of factual basis for the charge, Fed. Rule Crim. Proc. 11(a)(3), shown by a transcript of plea colloquy or by written plea agreement presented to the court, or by a record of comparable findings of fact adopted by the defendant upon entering the plea.
Shepard,
Two distinct rationales underpin these limitations. First, in confining the materials that can be consulted in determining the nature of a prior conviction, “collateral trials” are avoided.
Shepard,
Although the Sixth Amendment jury trial right does not include a right to have a jury find the fact of a prior conviction,
see Almendarez-Torres v. United States,
[T]he sentencing judge considering the ACCA enhancement would (on the Government’s view) make a disputed finding of fact about what the defendant and state judge must have understood as the factual basis of the prior plea, and the dispute raises the concern underlying Jones and Apprendi: the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments guarantee a jury standing between a defendant and the power of the State, and they guarantee a jury’s finding of any disputed fact essential to increase the ceiling of a potential sentence. While the disputed fact here can be described as a fact about a prior conviction, it is too far removed from the conclusive significance of a prior judicial record, and too much like the findings subject to Jones and Apprendi, to say that Almendarez-Tor *226 res clearly authorizes a judge to resolve the dispute.
Id.
To avoid serious risks of unconstitutionality, the plurality determined that the Court should limit the scope of judicial factfinding on the disputed nature of a prior conviction.
Id.
at 25-26,
Thus, only when the underlying charging document narrows the charge to a crime that amounts to a predicate offense or when “jury instructions, or bench-trial findings and rulings, or (in a pleaded case) ... the defendant’s own admissions or accepted findings of fact confirming the factual basis for a valid plea” establish that the crime for which the defendant was convicted was a predicate offense may a sentencing court rely on
Almendarez-Torres
and enhance the defendant’s sentence without running afoul of the Sixth Amendment.
Shepard,
In short, Shepard prevents sentencing courts from assessing whether a prior conviction counts as an ACCA predicate conviction by relying on facts neither inherent in the conviction nor admitted by the defendant.
Against this standard, a prosecutor’s proffer of the factual basis for an
Alford
plea does not satisfy the requirements of the modified categorical approach. In entering an
Alford
plea, the defendant waives a trial and accepts punishment,
but he does not admit guilt,
and the prosecutor’s proffer of what the State would have proved at trial does not amount to an admission or acceptance of the facts by the defendant. Rather, it serves the role of providing the court with a basis by which to evaluate the voluntariness of the defendant’s plea.
See Alford,
In
Alford,
the defendant was indicted for first-degree murder and chose to plead guilty to second-degree murder. At a plea hearing, the court heard the sworn testimony of a police officer who summarized the State’s case and the testimony of two additional witnesses. After Alford testified that he had not committed the murder but that he wanted to plead guilty to a reduced charge rather than face the possibility of the death penalty, the trial court accepted his guilty plea and sentenced him to 30 years’ imprisonment.
Alford,
Vacating the grant of Alford’s petition for post-conviction relief, the Supreme Court held that the trial court committed no constitutional error in accepting Alford’s plea “[i]n view of the strong factual basis for the plea demonstrated by the State and Alford’s clearly expressed desire to enter it despite his professed belief in his innocence.”
Alford,
Thus, although a court presented with an
Alford
plea “must make a careful inquiry into the factual basis” for the plea before accepting it,
United States v. Morrow,
Here, Alston tendered an
Alford
plea to second-degree assault, and his plea was accepted after the trial court found it was supported by a sufficient factual basis. But his plea did not “necessarily rest[ ] on” facts establishing his second-degree assault offense as a type of assault that qualifies as a violent felony.
Shepard,
*228
By analogy, it is clear under
Taylor
and
Shepard
that if Alston had proceeded to trial before a jury on the charge of second-degree assault and the jury had found him guilty after the State’s witnesses testified exactly as forecasted by the prosecutor during Alston’s
Alford
plea hearing, the resulting second-degree assault conviction could not later be used to enhance his sentence under ACCA unless the jury had been instructed that it was
required
to find all the facts that would establish the second-degree assault offense as a violent felony.
See Shepard,
We therefore conclude that the district court improperly relied on Alston’s conviction for second-degree assault in enhancing his sentence under ACCA. Accordingly, we vacate Alston’s sentence and remand for resentencing without consideration of that conviction as a predicate conviction under ACCA.
VACATED AND REMANDED
Notes
North Carolina v. Alford,
