UNITED STATES of America v. Wayne BEARDSLEY, aka Sealed Defendant, aka Wayne S. Beardsley
Docket No. 11-2206-cr.
United States Court of Appeals, Second Circuit.
Argued: May 15, 2012. Decided: Aug. 27, 2012.
691 F.3d 252
In this context, I believe a jury could conclude that this boy‘s teacher did not need to be explicitly told that subsequent acts of physical abuse—which a jury might find were far from commonplace—were similarly motivated by the boy‘s race in order to conclude that he was in fact being harassed, both physically and verbally, because he was black. Put simply, I believe that a jury could find that this teacher used her common sense and connected the dots. See Gant ex rel. Gant v. Wallingford Bd. of Educ., 195 F.3d 134, 141 n. 6 (2d Cir.1999) (“Of course, a showing that the defendant ‘should have known’ can, in some circumstances, create an inference—at least sufficient to raise a genuine issue—that the defendant did know.“).
For the foregoing reasons, I am unable to agree with the majority‘s conclusion that no reasonable jury could find that Uccello was actually aware that the subsequent physical abuse Nicholas reportedly suffered, following the slapping incident, was racially-motivated. Accordingly, I do not believe that Uccello is entitled to qualified immunity from liability for deliberate indifference to either the verbal or the physical harassment allegedly suffered by Nicholas in kindergarten.2
Paula Ryan Conan, Assistant United States Attorney (Lisa M. Fletcher, on the brief), for Richard S. Hartunian, United States Attorney for the Northern District of New York, Syracuse, NY, for Appellee.
Before: NEWMAN, STRAUB, and LYNCH, Circuit Judges.
GERARD E. LYNCH, Circuit Judge:
Defendant-appellant Wayne Beardsley appeals from a judgment of conviction entered in the Northern District of New York (Glenn T. Suddaby, Judge) following his plea of guilty to knowingly receiving and possessing child pornography, in violation of
BACKGROUND
I. Federal Offense of Conviction
On December 14, 2009, Beardsley, then age 42, went to the library at the Cayuga Community College in Auburn, New York,
The following day, Beardsley returned to the library and asked to check out laptop #13 again so that he could visit the websites he had saved in his “favorites” folder. Once again, he used that laptop to search for and view pornographic images of young girls. When laptop #13‘s battery began to die, he exchanged it for another laptop, #7, and continued visiting child pornography websites.
While Beardsley was using laptop #7, library staff noticed that laptop #13, which Beardsley had just checked back in, was still running. In shutting down laptop #13, a library staff member saw images of naked children on the computer‘s screen and alerted campus police, who in turn called the town‘s police department and reported that Beardsley was viewing child pornography in the community college library. Police officers arrived at the library and approached Beardsley. He admitted that he had been looking at “porn” on the library‘s laptops. An on-the-scene forensic examination of laptop #13 established that it had been used to view numerous sexual images of girls who appeared to be under the age of 16. The police took laptops #13 and #7 into evidence and transported Beardsley to the Auburn Police Department to be interviewed. At the station, he provided a written statement admitting that he had used the library‘s laptops as described above. Subsequent forensic searches of both laptops confirmed Beardsley‘s statement.
Federal authorities arrested Beardsley in January 2010. A federal grand jury subsequently returned a two-count indictment charging him with one count each of knowingly receiving child pornography,
On or about May 11, 2006, in Auburn (New York) City Court, WAYNE BEARDSLEY entered a plea of guilty to the crime of Endangering the Welfare of a Child, a class A misdemeanor, in violation of
New York Penal Law Section 260.10(1) , which makes it unlawful to act in a manner likely to be injurious to the physical, mental or moral welfare of a child less than seventeen years old. The basis for the conviction, as stated in the accusatory instrument, is that the defendant did subject an 18 month old female child to sexual contact.
The indictment asserted that Beardsley‘s prior state conviction constituted a “prior final conviction relating to the aggravated sexual abuse, sexual abuse, or abusive sexual conduct involving a minor or ward” under
Beardsley moved to strike or dismiss the indictment‘s prior conviction allegation and the special information, arguing that “[b]ecause nothing in the New York stat-
The district court denied Beardsley‘s motion. The court agreed with Beardsley that his prior state conviction for endangering the welfare of a child was not categorically a qualifying offense under
As discussed in the following section, the state-court documents available to the district court under the modified categorical approach established that Beardsley‘s conviction for endangering the welfare of a child was based on two incidents in 2001 when Beardsley had sexual contact with a victim who was “18 months of age at the time.” After having reviewed these documents, the district court concluded that they “allow[ed] for no reasonable conclusion other than that” Beardsley‘s prior state conviction for endangering the welfare of a child was under a law “relating to aggravated sexual abuse, sexual abuse, or abusive sexual conduct involving a minor,” and thus qualified as a federal predicate offense. See
Pursuant to a written plea agreement preserving his right to appeal the district court‘s denial of his motion to strike or dismiss the indictment‘s prior conviction allegation and the special information, Beardsley pled guilty to both counts of the indictment. The district court sentenced him to fifteen years in prison, the mandatory minimum sentence provided by
II. State Offense
The following facts are drawn from the state-court documents reviewed by the district court in connection with Beardsley‘s prior conviction for endangering the welfare of a child.
In 2005, when Beardsley‘s daughter was five years old, Child Protective Services in Seneca County, New York, received a hotline complaint that she had touched another child inappropriately, and that she had learned the behavior from her father. Beardsley agreed to be polygraphed by the sheriff‘s department about inappropriately touching his daughter. He failed the examination. He then agreed to a voluntary interview at the sheriff‘s station, where, in a written statement, he admitted to having inappropriately touched his daughter‘s clitoris on two occasions in 2001 while he was changing her diaper. The Cayuga County District Attorney‘s Office charged Beardsley with two counts of felony sexual abuse. However, in May 2006, in Auburn (New York) City Court, pursuant to a an agreement between Beardsley and the county, Beardsley pled guilty to the reduced charge of “Endangering the Welfare of a child, committed on or about May 17, 2001.” The New York offense of
The accusatory instrument to which Beardsley pled guilty was an “Information/Complaint” filed in Auburn City Court that charged that
on or about the 17th day of May, 2001, ... DEFENDANT DID intentionally, knowingly, unlawfully COMMIT THE misdemeanor of ENDANGERING THE WELFARE OF A CHILD contrary to the provisions of
Section 260.10, subdivision 1 of the PENAL Law of the State of New York ....To wit: [Beardsley] did subject the victim, 18 months of age at the time of the incident, to sexual contact. All contrary to the provisions of the statute in such case made and provided.
Basis for deponent‘s information and grounds for belief being the police investigation and the affidavits of the defendant ... attached hereto and made a part thereof.
The state court, “after reviewing the complaints,” made “a finding that the facts also support the misdemeanor offenses, and so amends the complaint—the complaints, to charge the Defendant with misdemeanor offenses.” The subsequent plea colloquy was brief:
THE COURT: ... I will read to you the complaint on a—read you the complaint, and ask you whether the allegations are accurate, to the best of your recollection....
The complaint alleges, Mr. Beardsley, that on or about May 17th, of 2001, you did engage in conduct which endangered the welfare of a young child by having inappropriate contact. Is that accurate?
THE DEFENDANT: Yes.
THE COURT: I will accept that.
The state court accepted Beardsley‘s plea to the charge of endangering the welfare of a child “in full satisfaction of the pending charges,” and sentenced him to three years’ probation, conditioned upon successful completion of a sex offender treatment program, and a $90 fine.
DISCUSSION
We review de novo all questions of law relating to the district court‘s application of a federal sentence enhancement. United States v. Rosa, 507 F.3d 142, 151 (2d Cir.2007). We “apply clear error review to a district court‘s factual findings regarding the nature of a prior offense,” United States v. Brown, 629 F.3d 290, 293 (2d Cir.2011), or “nature of the [prior] conviction,” United States v. Houman, 234 F.3d 825, 827 (2d Cir.2000). But questions that “concern the district court‘s authority to make a factual finding about the nature of the conviction ... are ... questions of law.” Rosa, 507 F.3d at 151 n. 8. “The government bears the burden of showing that a prior conviction counts as a predicate offense for the purpose of a sentencing enhancement.” United States v. Savage, 542 F.3d 959, 964 (2d Cir.2008).
New York‘s Endangering the Welfare of a Child statute provides, in pertinent part:
A person is guilty of endangering the welfare of a child when:
1. He or she knowingly acts in a manner likely to be injurious to the physical, mental or moral welfare of a child less than seventeen years old or directs or authorizes such child to engage in an occupation involving a substantial risk of danger to his or her life or health....
One of the sentence-enhancement provisions of
On appeal, Beardsley argues that his prior New York state conviction for endangering the welfare of a child is not a predicate offense under
Second, Beardsley argues that even if application of the modified approach was permitted here, his prior state conviction still does not fall within the scope of
We need not reach Beardsley‘s second and third arguments, however, because we agree with his first. The district court erred by applying the modified categorical approach to Beardsley‘s prior state conviction for endangering the welfare of a child. Under existing Supreme Court precedent, the modified categorical approach is appropriate only where a statute is divisible into qualifying and non-qualifying offenses, and not where the statute is merely worded so broadly to encompass conduct that might fall within with the definition of the federal predicate offense—here, “aggravated sexual abuse, sexual abuse, or abusive sexual conduct involving a minor or ward,”
I. The Categorical and “Modified Categorical” Approaches
In determining whether a prior conviction can serve as a predicate offense for a federal sentence enhancement, courts generally take a categorical or modified categorical approach.1 Under the categorical approach, “we consider the offense generically, that is to say, we examine it in terms of how the law defines the offense and not in terms of how an individual offender might have committed it on a particular occasion,” Begay v. United States, 553 U.S. 137, 141, 128 S.Ct. 1581, 170 L.Ed.2d 490 (2008), whereas under the modified categorical approach we may consider facts underlying the prior conviction if they are based upon “adequate judicial record evidence“—limited, in the context of guilty pleas, to the “charging document, written plea agreement, transcript of plea colloquy, and any explicit factual finding by the trial judge to which the defendant assented,” Shepard v. United States, 544 U.S. 13, 16, 20, 125 S.Ct. 1254, 161 L.Ed.2d 205 (2005).
We have not had occasion to decide whether and under what circumstances
A. The Supreme Court‘s Approach
The Supreme Court‘s current framework for determining whether a prior conviction falls within a federal sentence-enhancing provision traces its origins to Taylor v. United States, 495 U.S. 575, 110 S.Ct. 2143, 109 L.Ed.2d 607 (1990). There, the Court considered whether the defendant‘s prior burglary conviction was a “violent felony” under a sentence-enhancement provision of the Armed Career Criminal Act (“ACCA“),
The Court offered three main explanations for this conclusion. First, the ACCA sentencing statute “refers to ‘a person who1
[I]n cases where the defendant pleaded guilty, there often is no record of the underlying facts. Even if the Government were able to prove those facts, if a guilty plea to a lesser, nonburglary offense was the result of a plea bargain, it would seem unfair to impose a sentence enhancement as if the defendant had pleaded guilty to burglary.
Finally, the Taylor Court recognized a subset of cases where the categorical approach might permit courts to engage in some factual inquiry:
This categorical approach, however, may permit the sentencing court to go beyond the mere fact of conviction in a narrow range of cases where a jury was actually required to find all the elements of generic burglary. For example, in a State whose burglary statutes include entry of an automobile as well as a building, if the indictment or information and jury instructions show that the defendant was charged only with a burglary of a building, and that the jury necessarily had to find an entry of a building to convict, then the Government should be allowed to use the conviction for enhancement.
Id. at 602. This exception has come to be known as the “modified categorical approach.”
The modified categorical approach grew out of a recognition that the categorical approach presented a problem in cases where the statute of prior conviction covers multiple subjects. Since state and federal criminal statutes are written in various styles, and are not always limited to single subjects, the categorical approach, strictly applied, would often make it impossible to apply the enhancement even when it is apparent that it should be applicable.
In Shepard v. United States, 544 U.S. 13, 125 S.Ct. 1254, 161 L.Ed.2d 205 (2005), the Court applied the modified categorical approach to cases where a prior conviction rests on a prior guilty plea rather than on a jury verdict. The Court held that a sentencing court seeking “to determine whether an earlier guilty plea necessarily
In subsequent cases, the Court has continued to recognize that the modified categorical approach is the exception in ACCA cases, and that the categorical approach is the general rule. In James v. United States, 550 U.S. 192, 127 S.Ct. 1586, 167 L.Ed.2d 532 (2007), the Court stated that courts must use the categorical approach to determine whether a prior state conviction for attempted burglary was a predicate offense under the ACCA. Id. at 201-02. The Court, reviewing Taylor and Shepard, reiterated that under the ACCA, courts “look only to the fact of conviction and the statutory definition of the prior offense, and do not generally consider the particular facts disclosed by the record of conviction. That is, we consider whether the elements of the offense are of the type that would justify its inclusion within the residual provision, without inquiring into the specific conduct of this particular offender.” Id. at 202 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
Similarly, in Chambers v. United States, 555 U.S. 122, 129 S.Ct. 687, 172 L.Ed.2d 484 (2009), the Court considered whether the defendant‘s prior state conviction for failure to report to a local prison for weekend confinement qualified as a “violent felony” under the ACCA because the conviction “involves conduct that presents a serious potential risk of physical injury to another.” Id. at 124, quoting
In ordinary speech, words such as “crime” and “felony” can refer not only to a generic set of acts, say, burglary in general, but also to a specific act committed on a particular occasion, say, the burglary that the defendant engaged in last month. We have made clear, however, that, for purposes of ACCA‘s definitions, it is the generic sense of the word “felony” that counts. The statute‘s defining language, read naturally, uses “felony” to refer to a crime as generally committed. And by so construing the statute, one avoids the practical difficulty of trying to ascertain at sentencing, perhaps from a paper record mentioning only a guilty plea, whether the present defendant‘s prior crime, as committed on a particular occasion, did or did not involve violent behavior. Thus, to determine, for example, whether attempted burglary is a “violent felony,” we have had to examine, not the unsuccessful burglary the defendant attempted on a particular occasion, but the generic crime of attempted burglary.
Id. at 125 (citations omitted) (emphasis added).
And sometimes the choice is not obvious. The nature of the behavior that likely underlies a statutory phrase matters in this respect. Where Massachusetts, for example, placed within a single, separately numbered statutory section (entitled “Breaking and entering at night“), burglary of a “building, ship, vessel or vehicle,” this Court found that the behavior underlying, say, breaking into a building differs so significantly from the behavior underlying, say, breaking into a vehicle that for ACCA purposes a sentencing court must treat the two as different crimes.
Id. at 126 (citation omitted). The Court explained that the Illinois “failure to report” crime was part of a broader state statute that, like the Massachusetts burglary statute at issue in Shepard and Taylor, “places together in a single numbered statutory section several different kinds of behavior.” Id. The Illinois statute “separately describes those behaviors as (1) escape from a penal institution, (2) escape from the custody of an employee of a penal institution, (3) failing to report to a penal institution, (4) failing to report for periodic imprisonment, (5) failing to return from furlough, (6) failing to return from work and day release, and (7) failing to abide by the terms of home confinement.” Id.
The Court noted that the state-court information in the record established that the defendant had pled guilty to knowingly failing to report for imprisonment, “[b]ut we must decide whether for ACCA purposes a failure to report counts as a separate crime.” Id. The Court held that
a failure to report (as described in the statutory provision‘s third, fourth, fifth, and sixth phrases) is a separate crime, different from escape (the subject matter of the statute‘s first and second phrases), and from the potentially less serious failure to abide by the terms of home confinement (the subject of the final phrase). The behavior that likely underlies a failure to report would seem less likely to involve a risk of physical harm than the less passive, more aggressive behavior underlying an escape from custody. Moreover, the statute itself not only lists escape and failure to report separately (in its title and its body) but also places the behaviors in two different felony classes (Class Two and Class Three) of different degrees of seriousness.
Id. at 126-27 (citations omitted). The Court treated the statutory phrases that set forth various kinds of failure to report or return as “variations on a single theme” and thus “a single category.” Id. at 127. The Court therefore treated the Illinois statute “for ACCA purposes as containing at least two separate crimes“—escape from custody and failure to report. Id.
The Court concluded that the “failure to report” crime does not satisfy the ACCA‘s “violent felony” definition,
More recently, the Supreme Court, reviewing the development of the modified categorical approach, has suggested that the approach is available only where a statute of prior conviction is divisible into predicate and non-predicate offenses. In Nijhawan v. Holder, a 2009 immigration case, the Court, reviewing Taylor and James, noted that “the categorical method is not always easy to apply“:
[S]ometimes a separately numbered subsection of a criminal statute will refer to several different crimes, each described separately. And it can happen that some of these crimes involve violence while others do not. A single Massachusetts statute section entitled “Breaking and Entering at Night,” for example, criminalizes breaking into a “building, ship, vessel or vehicle.” In such an instance, a court must determine whether an offender‘s prior conviction was for the violent, rather than the non-violent, break-ins that this single five-word phrase describes (e.g., breaking into a building rather than into a vessel), by examining the indictment or information and jury instructions, or, if a guilty plea is at issue, by examining the plea agreement, plea colloquy or some comparable judicial record of the factual basis for the plea.
Nijhawan, 557 U.S. at 35 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
Finally, in Johnson v. United States, 559 U.S. 133, 130 S.Ct. 1265, 176 L.Ed.2d 1 (2010), the Court analyzed whether the Florida felony offense of battery by “[a]ctually and intentionally touch[ing]” another person,
B. The Second Circuit‘s Approach
In the contexts of the ACCA and the removability provisions of the Immigration and Nationality Act (“INA“) for aliens convicted of aggravated felonies, see
However, our Court has never provided a clear definition of what “divisible” means. We have acknowledged this ambiguity in INA and ACCA cases. In INA cases, we have noted, for example, that we have “not yet fixed on an approach for determining when a statute is [] divisible,” Oouch v. DHS, 633 F.3d 119, 122 (2d Cir.2011), and suggested that statutes of conviction might be divisible “regardless of their structure, so long as they contain an element or elements that could be satisfied either by removable or non-removable conduct,” Lanferman, 576 F.3d at 91 (internal quotation marks omitted). And we have described as an “open question” the issue of “whether a statute is divisible and therefore susceptible to the modified categorical approach when it encompasses both removable and non-removable offenses, but does not describe the removable offenses only in distinct subsections or elements of a disjunctive list.” Hoodho v. Holder, 558 F.3d 184, 189 n. 3 (2d Cir.2009). Similarly, in ACCA cases, we have stated that “[a]lthough certain of this Court‘s decisions suggest that a statute is susceptible to [modified categorical] analysis when it encompasses both violent felonies and other crimes, but does not describe the violent felonies only in distinct subsections or elements of a disjunctive list, other recent decisions have indicated that this is an open question.” United States v. Daye, 571 F.3d 225, 229 n. 4 (2d Cir.2009) (citations omitted).
Nevertheless, at least in practice, our Court, in both the INA and ACCA contexts, has applied the modified categorical approach only to situations where the statute of prior conviction described qualifying and non-qualifying offenses in distinct subsections or elements of a list. No case of ours, that is, has determined a statute to be “divisible” when the statute prohibits a broad category of conduct described by a single generic formulation, which encompasses both conduct that would trigger application of an adverse consequence in a subsequent case, and conduct that would not.
C. Other Circuits’ Approaches
Most of our sister circuits, in a range of contexts that includes the ACCA and the
The decisions cited above arise in a variety of criminal and immigration contexts requiring courts to decide whether a given prior crime is a predicate for adverse treatment under some federal law. In the specific context of
When the Third Circuit reviewed prior state convictions under broad but indivisible Pennsylvania statutes dealing with “Corruption of Minors,” “Endangering the Welfare of a Child,” and “Indecent Assault,” the court limited itself to application of the categorical approach to determine whether the convictions qualified as predicate offenses under
A parent, guardian, or other person supervising the welfare of a child under 18 years of age commits an offense if he knowingly endangers the welfare of the child by violating a duty of care, protection or support.
The Third Circuit rejected the government‘s argument that a court could depart from the strict categorical approach and look to the underlying facts of state convictions under these broad, indivisible statutes. See id. at 583. That the defendant‘s state convictions under these statutes might have involved conduct relating to the sexual exploitation of children did not permit courts to apply the modified categorical approach, and therefore did not trigger
Although it involved a different section of Title 18—albeit a section with a “relating to” clause nearly identical to the one in
II. Application to 18 U.S.C. § 2252A(b)(1)
In the present case, we follow the Third Circuit‘s approach in Galo and hold that the district court should have limited itself to the categorical approach, because the New York statute of conviction is not divisible into predicate and non-predicate offenses, listed in separate subsections or a disjunctive list.11 In determining the ap-
under ... the laws of any State relating to aggravated sexual abuse, sexual abuse, abusive sexual conduct involving a minor or ward, or sex trafficking of children, or the production, possession, receipt, mailing, sale, distribution, shipment, or transportation of child pornography, such person shall be fined under this title and imprisoned for not less than 25 years nor more than 50 years....
First, the language of
New York‘s statute prohibiting “Endangering the Welfare of a Child” is simply not that sort of law. Although no one doubts that aggravated sexual abuse does endanger the welfare of a child, the New York statute is not a law dealing with
involving a substantial risk of danger to his or her life or health,”
N.Y. Penal Law § 260.10(1) , but the defendant was not
sexual misconduct. Rather, it covers a wide variety of conduct, most of it nonsexual, that shares only the general defining characteristic of the endangerment of children in any way at all. Evidence establishing that this particular defendant violated the statute by a sexual act indicates how he committed the crime, not what crime he committed. The statute relates to minors, but it does not define any offense that specifically relates to sexual abuse.
The point may perhaps be illustrated by comparison to an offense that relates to sex but is not defined with specific reference to minors. Consider a defendant who has a prior conviction for patronizing a prostitute, and whose indictment references the fact that the prostitute in question was a minor. The defendant may originally have been charged with statutory rape—an offense unquestionably relating to the sexual abuse of a minor—but (as in this case) the resulting conviction for a lesser offense may have been the result of a plea bargain. As with the offense of endangering the welfare of a child, the elements of the unitary offense of prostitution cover both conduct that would fall within the
Second, our approach is most consistent with the results, language, and reasoning of the Supreme Court‘s governing precedents. The Court has obliged us to make a somewhat formalistic distinction between when we may and may not use the modified categorical approach in order to prevent federal courts from going beyond a
charged under that separate provision, which is itself not categorically a predicate for the sentencing enhancement in
§ 2252A(b)(1) .
Not only the results but also the language with which the Supreme Court has described the applicability of the modified categorical approach suggests that divisibility be defined in terms of express definition of multiple crimes in the same statute. In Johnson, the Court stated that the modified categorical approach is available “[w]hen the law under which [a] defendant has been convicted contains statutory phrases that cover several generic crimes, some of which require violent force and some of which do not,” and that the modified approach‘s purpose is “to determine which statutory phrase was the basis for the conviction by consulting the trial record.” 130 S.Ct. at 1273 (emphasis added); see also Nijhawan, 557 U.S. at 41. Similarly, in defining the categorical approach itself, the Court has em-
phasized that “we consider the offense generically, that is to say, we examine it in terms of how the law defines the offense and not in terms of how an individual offender might have committed it on a particular occasion.” Begay, 553 U.S. at 141. In dealing with statutes that use language similar to that of
The conceptual framework of the Supreme Court‘s modified categorical approach is more consistent with our definition than with the alternatives for which the government argues. It is important in this regard to remember what the modified categorical approach modifies. The point of the categorical approach is that a court does not attempt to determine what the defendant did and then to see whether that conduct matches the enhancing conditions. Rather, the statute directs, and the Supreme Court instructs, that courts are supposed to look to see what offense the defendant was convicted of, as determined by the elements of the offense of conviction. See Shepard, 544 U.S. at 19-23. It is in that sense that the approach is “categorical“: it looks to see whether the offense of conviction categorically, in every case, necessarily matches the enhancement‘s terms.12 An approach
er one possibility but not the other. The categorical approach is then “modified” to allow us to determine which branch of the statute was the basis for the conviction. But to expand the approach to cases in which the count of conviction was merely “possession” of narcotics, because in some cases the under-
Third, the approach to divisibility we take here is also consistent with our own precedents—not surprisingly, as our precedents track the results and follow the language of the Supreme Court‘s cases. Although we have not previously considered the question in the context of the child pornography sentencing enhancements,13 in other contexts, at least in practice, our Court has limited application of the modified categorical approach to divisible state statutes, as discussed above. See Part I.B, supra; see also Dickson, 346 F.3d at 48 (“Where ... a criminal statute encompasses diverse classes of criminal acts—some of which would categorically be grounds for removal and others of which would not—we have held that such statutes can be considered ‘divisible’ statutes.“); Akinsade, 678 F.3d at 144 (the modified categorical approach is appropriate “where a statute is ‘divisible‘“); Baker, 665 F.3d at 55 (the modified categorical approach is used to determine “which part of the statute” of prior conviction defendant “was convicted of violating, at least where the statute of conviction is divisible“). Moreover, as also discussed at greater length above, this approach is consistent with the approach taken by most of
lying conduct was possession in connection with a sale, would simply abandon the categorical approach in favor of determining, in every case, whether the underlying conduct, rather than the underlying offense triggers the enhancement.
13. Cf. United States v. Rood, 679 F.3d 95, 98 (2d Cir.2012) (applying the modified categorical approach, which both parties agreed was the appropriate approach, to determine
our sister circuits. All of the other circuits that have had occasion to apply the modified categorical approach, with the exception of the Ninth Circuit, have either expressly adopted a divisibility rule of the sort we adopt today, or, while avoiding a broad formulation, have applied the approach only in cases that are consistent with that rule. See Part I.C, supra.
Guided by the language of the statute, the Supreme Court‘s precedents, and our own, we conclude that only statutes that are divisible in the sense that they define a number of separate offenses may be subject to the modified categorical approach under
We do not by any means suggest that there are no arguments for a different conclusion. There is an understandable temptation to apply the modified categorical methodology more generally than the Supreme Court has authorized. It would not be irrational as a matter of policy to
whether a conviction under the Ohio state crime of “Gross Sexual Imposition,”
Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 2907.05 , should be deemed a state sex offense, equivalent to18 U.S.C. § 2241(c) , for the purpose of the18 U.S.C. § 3559(e) sentencing enhancement for repeat sexual offenders, where the state and federal sex-offense statutes were “substantially similar, with the exception of the age cutoff” specified by each statute (footnote omitted)).
(a) inappropriate sexual contact with a minor, or
(b) endangering the welfare of a child by any other means
or
endangering the welfare of a child by inappropriate sexual contact or any other means,
such distinct subsections or such a disjunctive list of offense conducts would have permitted us to apply the modified categorical approach to assess the charging documents and other Shepard materials to determine under which subsection or distinct phrase of the statute the defendant had been convicted.
While a rule permitting broader use of reliable judgment-related information may make policy sense, that is not the approach Congress took in
There would be nothing in such an approach that could fairly be described as “categorical“—“modified” or otherwise. Instead, whenever a defendant had a prior conviction for violating a broad state statute the elements of which could conceivably cover conduct that matches the enhancement‘s terms, application of the enhancement would turn on the actual behavior charged, as found in the charging instrument or other acceptable documents, and not on the categorical analysis of the elements of an offense or a sub-offense defined by the statute. We would, in that event, be looking not at the type of offense, but at the particular instance of it. Such a method would be inconsistent with the purposes of the modified categorical approach as articulated by the Supreme Court. Either a court tries to determine the conduct underlying the offense, or it looks to the elements of the offense of
Moreover, while there are some attractions to permitting reliable materials relating to the conduct underlying a conviction to be broadly used, there are also strong policy considerations supporting the more insistently categorical approach that Congress and the Supreme Court have taken. Although the
To be sure, this case presents a close question, one that neither the Supreme Court nor our own precedents squarely answer. Nevertheless, our own binding precedents and the considered approaches of the majority of our sister circuits convince us that the district court erred in this case. While reasonable people could disagree about the intrinsic merit of imposing a formalistic limitation on use of the modified categorical approach, the weight of precedent makes clear that the Supreme Court has imposed that limitation. Accordingly, the district court should not have engaged in the modified categorical approach, because New York Penal Law
Indeed, New York‘s legislature has chosen to address sexual assault crimes in different statutes altogether—Beardsley, after all, was originally charged under one of them, before he pled guilty to the lesser misdemeanor offense of endangering the welfare of a child. Section 260.10 makes
We therefore join the majority of our sister circuits in adopting a divisibility requirement for application of the modified categorical approach, at least for purposes of
Here, those conditions plainly are not present. New York Penal Law
We emphasize that, as this case illustrates, a finding that the underlying offense is not a predicate for a mandatory sentencing enhancement does not require the sentencing judge to ignore that offense altogether. Unlike the decision about applicability of mandatory minimums, in imposing a sentence as a matter of discretion, the court can make its own factual determinations, based on any appropriate evidence, as to what the defendant did and what relevance those facts have to the goals of sentencing set out in
Finally, we note that the issues present in this case recur in many other contexts, particularly INA and ACCA cases. We do not seek to create a generalized rule for all federal sentence-enhancement statutes, including those that are worded differently from
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the sentence is vacated, and the case is remanded to the district court for resentencing consistent with this opinion.
Notes
Any individual who violates, or attempts or conspires to violate, this section shall be fined under this title and imprisoned not less than 15 years nor more than 30 years, but if such person has one prior conviction
