Vacated and remanded by published opinion. Judge GREGORY wrote the opinion, in which Chief Judge TRAXLER and Judge Shedd joined.
OPINION
South Carolina makes it a crime “to escape,” and broadly defines the term to include both unlawfully leaving and failing to report to custody. S.C.Code An. § 24-13-410(A) (2009). We consider two questions regarding the relationship between this statute and the Amed Career Criminal Act (“ACCA”), 18 U.S.C. § 924(e) (2006), in this appeal: First, whether a conviction under the state’s escape statute necessarily constitutes a “violent felony” under the ACCA. Ad second, if it does not, whether this defendant’s conviction necessarily involves the type of violent conduct contemplated by the ACCA.
In light of the Supreme Court’s decision in
Chambers v. United States,
— U.S. -,
I.
The defendant, Andrew Jermaine Bethea (“Bethea”), challenges his 180-month prison sentence, imposed after he pled guilty to being a felon in possession of a firearm, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). The district court enhanced Bethea’s sentence after determining that he had three prior ACCA-predicate convictions.
Under the ACCA, a defendant who is convicted of being a felon in possession of a firearm and who has “three previous convictions ... for a violent felony or a serious drug offense, or both, committed on occasions different from one another,” is subject to a fifteen-year mandatory minimum prison sentence. § 924(e)(1). The ACCA defines a “violent felony” as a “crime punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one year” that either
(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 the use of explosives, or otherwise involves conduct that presents a serious potential risk of physical injury to another.
§ 924(e)(2)(B).
Before the district court, Bethea did not dispute that two of his prior convictions were ACCA-predicate offenses; however, he argued that his conviction for violating South Carolina’s escape statute was not. The district court disagreed, finding that Bethea’s conviction was a violent felony within the meaning contemplated by the ACCA. Though it apparently agreed that escape, as defined by South Carolina, is not a categorically violent crime, it found that Bethea violated the statute in a way that would constitute a violent crime after considering the relevant charging and judicial documents. It therefore enhanced Bethea’s sentence in accordance with the ACCA. Bethea timely appealed.
II.
a.
When deciding whether an offense constitutes a violent felony under the ACCA, the Supreme Court has made clear that our first step is to determine which of two, potentially applicable interpretive methods applies to the challenged statute. First, we are to consider whether the statute proscribes conduct that “as generally committed” includes an element of violence.
Chambers,
Where, however, a statute broadly criminalizes conduct that could be “generally committed” in multiple ways, some violent and some not, the categorical approach is inapplicable.
Id.; Taylor,
b.
Until recently, the question of which approach to apply to the escape statute before us would likely have been resolved by Circuit precedent. In
United States v. Hairston,
Last term, however, the Supreme Court decided
Chambers v. United States,
which directly undermines our holding in
Hairston,
particularly where an escape statute can be violated by a defendant’s failure to report to custody. Addressing an Illinois escape statute, which by its terms could be violated by a defendant’s breaking out of jail or by a defendant’s failing to report, the Court found that a defendant’s conviction under that statute had to be considered under the modified-categorical approach.
Chambers,
III.
a.
At first blush, it is unclear whether South Carolina’s escape statute proscribes one or more generic forms of conduct. By its terms, the statute merely makes it a crime “for a person, lawfully confined in prison or upon the public works of a county or while in the custody of a superintendent, guard, or officer, to escape.” § 24-13-410(A). 1 Unlike the Illinois statute in Chambers, the statute here does not reduce escape to different forms of conduct, but rather makes it a crime simply “to escape.” Id.
It is clear, however, that the term “escape” under South Carolina law broadly encompasses both traditional escape and failure to report. A separate statutory provision dealing with inmate furloughs states that “[t]he wilful failure of a prisoner to remain within the extended limits of his confinement or return within the time prescribed to the places of confinement ... is considered an escape from the custody of the director punishable as provided in Section 24-13-410.” S.C.Code Ann. § 24-3-210 (emphasis added). South Carolina therefore defines and treats the failure to return to custody 2 in the same way *258 it does unlawfully leaving custody. A defendant who commits either offense is simply charged with escape under section 24-13-410.
The South Carolina Supreme Court has emphasized section 24-13-410’s broad scope. In
South Carolina v. Murray,
Because it is clear that the term “to escape” broadly encompasses at least two generic classes of conduct under South Carolina law, including failure to report,
Chambers
requires us to use the modified-categorical approach to determine whether the defendant’s conduct was generically violent.
See
b.
In his brief,
3
Bethea argues that in light of
Chambers’
holding that the challenged Illinois escape statute contained “at least two separate crimes,”
id.,
we should further expand the range of crimes that generally constitute escape. Specifically, he urges us to find that “walk-away” escapes are a separate category of conduct, distinct from “break-out” escapes, and that the former category is insufficiently “purposeful, violent, and aggressive,”
Begay v. United States,
Bethea’s argument has gained significant traction in the federal appellate courts. Indeed, each circuit to consider this question in a published opinion
4
after
Chambers
has held that walk-away escape is a distinct form of generic conduct that does not constitute a violent felony under
*259
the ACCA.
See United States v. Lee,
IV.
Because South Carolina’s escape statute includes, by definition, at least one form of conduct that is and one form of conduct that is not an ACCA predicate, we must now consider whether Bethea’s charging documents and any judicial records “necessarily” show that Bethea pled guilty to generic conduct that would constitute a violent felony.
See Shepard,
Besides the statute, itself, the only documents relating to Bethea’s escape conviction that we may consider are the indictment and the sentencing sheet.
See id.
at 15,
Yet, these documents simply state that Bethea escaped, which alone makes it possible that Bethea engaged in patently nonviolent conduct. Because a defendant “escapes” under South Carolina law by either breaking out or failing to report,
see Murray,
It is true that were we to interpret the term “escape,” as used in the indictment and sentencing sheet, in the way in which the word is commonly used, then we would likely have to conclude that Bethea unlawfully departed prison, and not that he merely failed to report. We have no basis for assuming, however, that South Carolina ascribes one meaning to escape when it is used in statutes and court opinions, but another entirely when used in charging documents and sentencing sheets. This is especially true in light of
Murray,
in which the indictment used the term “escape” to describe the defendant’s failure to return to custody.
V.
Our holding that Bethea’s prior escape conviction is not an ACCA predicate necessarily means that Bethea should not have been subjected to the ACCA’s fifteen-year, mandatory-minimum provision. We therefore vacate his sentence and remand to the district court for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
VACATED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Section 24-13-410(A) also makes it a felony to attempt to escape or possess tools of escape. Neither of these provisions is applicable to this appeal.
. The Supreme Court made clear in
Chambers
that for ACCA purposes, a failure to report and a failure to return to custody are consid
*258
ered part of the same generic course of conduct.
. At oral argument, Bethea’s counsel argued, in the alternative, that we should apply the categorical approach to find that violations of the South Carolina statute are not violent felonies. We cannot do so in light of
Chambers,
in which the Supreme Court made clear that escape statutes, which include in their definitions failure to report, should be analyzed under the modified-categorical approach.
Furthermore, we disagree with counsel’s contention that our recent decision in
United States v. Rivers,
. The Fifth Circuit held in an unpublished decision that walk-away escape should still be treated as a violent felony after
Chambers. United States v. Delgado,
. We also note that the government does not challenge Bethea's argument that walk-away escapes are separate crimes that do not implicate the ACCA, and that it conceded this same point before at least one other court of appeals.
See Lee,
. Citations to J.A. — refer to the Joint Appendix filed by the parties upon appeal.
. Because the indictment specifies that Bethea escaped while waiting to appear in court, we recognize that the most plausible explanation for his specific conduct is that he fled custody, rather than that he simply failed to report. Under
Shepard,
however, we are charged with considering whether Bethea’s conduct was "necessarily” violent, not whether his conduct was plausibly or even likely so.
. Bethea also urges this Court to apply the doctrine of constitutional avoidance to interpret the ACCA as requiring that predicate convictions be pled in an indictment and proved beyond a reasonable doubt. We do not reach this question because the offense at issue is not an ACCA predicate under these facts. And as Bethea notes, the Supreme Court's decisions in
Apprendi v. New Jersey,
