Congress has provided a minimum sentence of five years for any person who, in relation to any crime of violence, “uses or carries a firearm, or who, in furtherance of any such crime, possesses a firearm.” 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(A)®. The minimum penalty increases to seven years if the firearm “is brandished,” § 924(c)(l)(A)(ii), and to ten if it “is discharged,” § 924(c)(l)(A)(iii). The question here is whether the accidental discharge of a weapon triggers a ten-year sentence for discharging. Phrased more formally, the question is whether an intent requirement is implicit in the discharge provision. We conclude that it is.
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The relevant facts are undisputed. About ten minutes before it closed, Kevin Patrick Luke Brown entered a SunTrust bank in downtown Washington, D.C. with a semi-automatic pistol. Brown approached the bank’s acting manager and forced her, at gunpoint, to lead him into the locked teller area. Once inside, Brown directed another bank employee to put money from the tellers’ drawers into a bag. Irritated because he thought she was moving too slowly, Brown snatched the bag, threw it at another employee, and jammed the barrel of the gun into the back of the second employee’s head. That employee then stuffed cash into the bag before handing it back to Brown. As Brown closed the bag, his gun fired. Apparently startled, Brown asked, “Did I hurt anybody? Did I hurt anybody?” The bank employees responded that no one was injured; as it turned out, the bullet had lodged in the bank’s ceiling. Brown then forced the second employee, at gunpoint, to direct him to an exit in the back of the bank. The police apprehended Brown moments later, aided by a SunTrust customer who had seen the robbery through a window at the bank’s entrance.
The judge asked the jury not only for its verdict on the armed-robbery count (violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2113(a), (d)) and the firearm count (violation of § 924(c)(1)(A)), but also on whether the firearm was discharged during the robbery. About ninety minutes after the judge dismissed the jury to begin its deliberations, he received a note asking whether the gun had to have been discharged knowingly. The judge responded in the negative. Shortly thereafter, the jury returned two guilty verdicts and a finding that the firearm had been discharged. As the judge had before trial *202 granted Brown’s unopposed motion to sever the felon-in-possession charge under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g) and to proceed without a jury, the judge himself found guilt on that issue. The judge imposed a sentence that included ten years under § 924(c)(l)(A)(iii).
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We review the district court’s interpretation of a criminal statute de novo.
United States v. Wade,
We start with the text of § 924(c)(1)(A):
Except to the extent that a greater minimum sentence is otherwise provided by this subsection or by any other provision of law, any person who, during and in relation to any crime of violence ... uses or carries a firearm, or who, in furtherance of any such crime, possesses a firearm, shall, in addition to the punishment provided for such crime of violence ...
(i) be sentenced to a term of imprisonment of not less than 5 years;
(ii) if the firearm is brandished, be sentenced to a term of imprisonment of not less than 7 years; and
(iii) if the firearm is discharged, be sentenced to a term of imprisonment of not less than 10 years.
As the text makes clear, the minimum penalty doesn’t kick in anytime a gun is present on the scene of one of the specified crimes; instead, the firearm must be used or carried “during and in relation to” the crime, or possessed “in furtherance of’ the crime. See
Muscarello v. United States,
The three subsections of § 924(c)(1)(A) penalize increasingly culpable or harmful conduct. The government doesn’t dispute that the five-year sentence in § 924(c)(1)(A)© requires proof of mens rea. See
United States v. Harris,
*203 To be sure, discharges of a firearm are more likely to cause severe injury or even death than mere brandishing (though in cases where they actually do so the defendant would virtually always become independently guilty of another, major substantive offense). Nonetheless, as between an intentional brandishing and a purely accidental discharge, the increment in risk, given the less reprehensible intent, seems inadequate to explain a congressional intent to add three years (or five years if the discharge occurs without brandishing).
Moreover, the presumption against strict liability in criminal statutes supports the inference of an intent requirement. Our circuit has said that “[although cases generally apply [this presumption] to statutes that define criminal offenses, we have little doubt that it should also be applied to legal norms that define aggravating circumstances for purposes of sentencing.”
United States v. Burke,
The government argues that “[t]he ten year mandatory minimum sentence is applicable ‘if the firearm is discharged.’ ... No words of qualification or limitation are included.” Brief for Appellees 39 (citation omitted). But at oral argument the government conceded some implicit limitations: for example, that the statute (despite its use of the passive voice) wouldn’t render an armed robber liable for the discharge by a law enforcement officer or bank teller who got a hold of the robber’s gun and used it to threaten the robber. See Oral Argument Recording at 16:58-17:26. Even with that concession, however, the government’s reading would produce a mandatory ten year sentence (i.e., five more than under the basic possession bump) if a defendant’s weapon accidentally discharged when he dropped it to comply with a police request to do so.
The government’s other arguments for a (limited) strict-liability reading do not convince us. The government seeks to draw a contrast between § 924(c)(4)’s definition of “brandish” — which explicitly includes an intent requirement — and the absence of such a provision for “discharge.” We don’t find the proposed inference compelling. There is a very reasonable explanation for Congress’s decision to include a definition of one term but not the other. The statute’s definition of “brandish” is broader than the dictionary definition, as it (Congress’s definition) includes uses of a gun invisible to the person threatened so long as the perpetrator somehow makes its presence known. Compare, e.g., Webster’s II New Riverside Dictionary 89 (1984): (defining “brandish” to mean “[t]o wave or flourish threateningly, as a weapon”); Webster’s Third New International Dictionary, Unabridged 268 (1981) (defining “brandish” to mean (1) “to shake or wave (a weapon) menacingly”; (2) “to exhibit or expose in an ostentatious, shameless, or aggressive manner”). Having embarked on a definition, the drafter thought it proper to specify the required intent.
The government also relies on
United States v. Harris,
We note that in rejecting any intent requirement for the discharge provision, the Tenth Circuit broadly reasoned that because the two provisions penalizing brandishing and discharging were sentencing factors rather than independent offenses, “no mens rea [was] required.”
Navar-Sotelo,
Having concluded that the discharge must be intentional, we must consider the character of the necessary intent. Like the Ninth Circuit in
Dare,
we find that, to trigger the minimum sentence under the discharge provision, the defendant must have acted with “general intent.”
There is no evidence that in discharging his firearm Brown acted purposely or knowingly. Nor can his conduct with respect to the discharge be viewed as “reckless.” Obviously anyone who robs a bank and brandishes a firearm has already taken risks that themselves render his overall conduct reckless as the word is used in ordinary language or in, say, Model Penal Code § 2.02(2)(c) (“A person acts recklessly with respect to a material element of an offense when he consciously disregards a substantial and unjustifiable risk that the material element exists or will result from his conduct.”). But if
that
intent sufficed for the discharge provision, the separate mens rea requirement for the discharge provision would be meaningless or virtually so. Cf.
United States v. Ray,
Brown raises two other substantive arguments, but neither is persuasive. First, Brown’s appellate counsel argues that his trial counsel furnished ineffective assistance of counsel by not trying to suppress evidence of a nonverbal “statement” Brown made to a police officer indicating the location of his gun shortly after his arrest outside the bank. None of the officers had yet read Brown his rights. But the police officer’s inquiries fall squarely within the public-safety exception to
Miranda v. Arizona,
Second, Brown argues that the district court abused its discretion by permitting the government’s introduction of physical evidence found with Brown at the time he was arrested — including a gun and a bag containing approximately $23,000 in cash— without a proper evidentiary foundation. In fact, witnesses testified to every step of the evidence’s custody, from its original acquisition at the crime scene to its transmission to FBI agents and its handling by those agents.
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Brown was sentenced on November 1, 2004 — after the Supreme Court’s decision in
Blakely v. Washington,
*206
The government concedes that the first sentence reflected constitutional
Booker
error and that, because the constitutional error was preserved, our review is for harmless error — that is, we ask whether it appears, “beyond a reasonable doubt, that the error complained of did not contribute to the sentence obtained.” See
United States v. Simpson,
I understand the family difficulties he’s had and the loss of family members and illnesses among his family and his wife’s family and him having had psychiatric treatment and medications in the past.
As we noted in
United States v. Gomez,
“[i]f
Booker’s,
rendering the Guidelines discretionary means anything,” it must give district court judges greater latitude in assessing potentially mitigating factors than they had under the Sentencing Guidelines.
* * * if if if
The judgment is vacated and the case remanded for resentencing.
So ordered.
Notes
. Circuits have disagreed whether the revised machinegun provision sets out a sentencing factor or a separate offense. Compare
United States v. Harris,
