Nathaniel Capler pleaded guilty to two drug offenses and was sentenced to 141 months’ imprisonment based in part on an Illinois conviction for unlawful restraint that the district court deemed to be a “crime of violence” within the meaning of U.S.S.G. § 4B1.2. See 720 III. Comp. Stat. 5/10-3. On appeal he challenges only the district court’s conclusion that his prior conviction is a crime of violence. 1
We affirm. The district court’s ruling finds direct support in our decisions in
United States v. Wallace,
*323 I. Background
Capler sold crack cocaine to a police informant. He was arrested and pleaded guilty to two counts of distribution.
See
21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). The district court sentenced him as a career offender to a total of 141 months’ imprisonment.
See
U.S.S.G. § 4B1.1. The career-offender designation is based on two Illinois cоnvictions, one for delivery of a controlled substance and the other for unlawful restraint. Capler’s appointed lawyer initially cast the appeal as frivolous and moved to withdraw under
Anders v. California,
In deciding if a conviction is for a crime of violence, we look to the statutory elements and the manner in which the offense ordinarily is committed.
United States v. Sonnenberg,
Unlawful restraint is not one of the specific crimes listed in the first part of § 4B1.2(a)(2), so to count as a violent felony, the crime must fall within the residual clause, which covers offenses that “otherwise involve! ] conduct that presents a serious potеntial risk of physical injury to another.” This requires a determination that the offense is “roughly similar” to those that are specifically enumerated.
See Begay v. United States,
After
Begay
we held in
Woods
that when the statute in question is divisible— when it defines alternative means of committing a crime, some violent and some not — the district cоurt may expand its categorical inquiry by examining a limited set of additional materials to determine whether the defendant was convicted of the violent version of the crime.
See
*324
Woods,
II. Discussion
The sole issue in this appeal is whether unlawful restraint as defined by Illinois law falls within § 4B1.2(a)’s residual clause for crimes roughly similar to the enumerated offenses. Capler argues that the statute encompasses too much nonviolent conduct for it to be categorically labeled as a violent felony. Although Capler concedes that
Wallace
and
Billups
are on point, he contends that both decisions are incorrect and urges us to reconsider them in light of more recent opinions from this court. Because Capler preserved this argument for appeal, our review is plenary.
See United States v. Clinton,
In
Wallace
we held that unlawful restraint as defined in Illinois is a violent felony for purposes of the Armed Career Criminal Act,
see
18 U.S.C. § 924(e)(2)(B), which tracks the language in § 4B1.2(a).
Wallace,
Our decision in
Wallace,
then, is not a dead letter. If anything it anticipated
Be-gay
even though we did not articulate the analysis in precisely the same terms as the standard later announced by the Supreme Court. Like any precedential decision,
Wallace
stands until we are given good reason to overrule it.
See United States v. Sykes,
In
Billups
we made explicit what we left to inference in
Wallace:
Restraining another against his will, apart from carrying a serious risk of injury, is an aggressive act categorically similar to the crimes enumerated in § 4B1.2(a)(2). The Wisconsin
*325
statute analyzed in
Billups
provides that “[w]hoever intentionally confines or restrains another without the person’s consent and with knowledge that he or she has no lawful authority to do so is guilty of a Class H felony.” Wis. Stat. § 940.30. A separate chapter of the code, § 939.22(48), defines “without consent” to mean “no consent in fact” or consent given because the assailant threatened violence, or because the victim did not give knowing consent, either by reason “of ignоrance or mistake of fact or of law other than criminal law or by reason of youth or defective mental condition, whether permanent or temporary.” We examined the elements of § 940.30 and the definition of “without consent” in concluding that the conduct encompassed by the statute is categorically violent.
Billups,
Billups read the Wisconsin statute to reаch five types of victims. The first four variations of the offense — a nonconsenting victim, a victim who consented to the confinement out of fear, a victim who consented because she believed the assailant had authority to confine her, and a victim who was tricked into consenting — carry a substantial risk of physical injury because each scenario sets the stage for a violent confrontation between victim and assailant. Id. at 580-81. In the fifth variation where the victim is legally incapable of giving consent, we recognized that the risk of confrontation, while lower, is not insubstantial because the potential remains that the victim could be injured trying to escape. We never decided whether the fifth variation involves а serious risk of injury because we were satisfied that a crime with four out of five dangerous modes of commission is categorically violent. Id. at 582.
Moreover, we distinguished a subsection of Indiana’s criminal-confinement statute that had been held to be a nonviolent felony.
See United States v. Gilbert,
Because
Billups
analyzes a statute that is closely analogous to the Illinois crime of unlawful restraint, the reasoning in that decision provides post
-Begay
support for our holding in
Wallace.
The Wisconsin statute analyzed in
Billups
is substantively indistinguishable from its Illinois counterpart.
Compare
720 III. Comp. Stat. 5/10— 3(a) (2010) (“A person commits the offense of unlawful restraint when he or she knowingly without legal authority detains another.”),
with
WIS. STAT. § 940.30 (“Whoever intentionally confines or restrains another without the person’s consent and with knowledge that he or she has no lawful authority to do so is guilty of a Class H felony.”). One minor difference is that Wisconsin makes nonconsent an express requirement and defines the phrase by statute, while the Illinois offense is silent about consent. Illinois caselaw, however, shows that nonconsent is an implicit requirement, its contours shaped by state common law that appears to adopt a common-sense understanding of the term.
See People v. Hunt,
Furthermore,
Billups
stands alone as the only post
-Begay
decision from this court involving criminal confinement, and its holding is consistent with previous decisions interpreting similar crimes.
See United States v. Franco-Fernandez,
Capler, not surprisingly, seeks to overturn
Wallace
by arguing that
Billups
too was wrongly decided, albeit
after Begay.
Specifically, he contends that
Billups
should be disregarded because we decided it on the incorrect assumption that the Wisconsin statute at issue was indivisible; that our opinion in
Billups
improperly applied the
Begay
аnalysis and offered only conclusory support for its holding; that subsequent decisions in this circuit applying the crime-of-violence inquiry call
Bill-ups
into question; and that
Billups
should be reassessed in light of the Supreme Court’s decision in
Chambers v. United States,
Before addressing Capler’s challenges to
Billups,
we must resolve a threshold dispute over how to approach the question of what conduct typifies the “ordinary case” of unlawful restraint. Capler insists that
*327
the “ordinary case” of unlawful restraint should encompass only separately
punishable
instances of the offense — that is, it should exclude cases in which a judgment of conviction for unlawful restraint cannot be entered because the conduct at issue supports a separate conviction for a more serious crime, thus making unlawful restraint a lesser-included offense.
See, e.g., Brials,
Capler holds little back in his attack on Billups. As a preliminary matter, he contends that the Billups analysis is flawed from the outset because in applying the categorical approach, we did not treat the false-imprisonment statute as divisible. His point has some aрpeal: Wisconsin law, which requires that false imprisonment occur without the consent of the victim, provides four definitions for “without consent” and so would appear to create several divisible means of committing false imprisonment. Wis. Stat. § 939.22(48). But even if Billups was mistaken in analyzing the Wisconsin statute as a whole instead of focusing on the particular subsections of the definition of “without consent,” our holding in Billups — that false imprisonment as generally committed carries a risk of violence — can still inform our analysis. The Illinois crime of unlawful restraint is indivisible; that is, it resembles the Wisconsin false-imprisonment statute as we conceptualized it in Billups.
Capler contends that
Billups
bungled the
Begay
inquiry — both in terms of its assessment of the crime’s similarity to the listed offenses in the residual clause and its assessment of the risks рosed by unlawful restraint. With respect to the similar-in-kind inquiry, Capler contends that
Billups
offers only conclusory support for the holding that unlawful restraint typically involves violent and aggressive behavior. Not so. In
Billups
we concluded that restraining a person against his will generally creates a significant risk of violence, even where restraint is not accomplished by force.
Capler insists that recent precedent in this circuit calls into question the similar-in-kind analysis. In support he relies on several recent cases in whiсh we vacated crime-of-violence determinations because
*328
the predicate statutes covered nonviolent conduct.
See Goodpasture,
As for the second part of the
Begay
inquiry that focuses on the potential for physical injury, Capler argues that
Billups
and
Wallace
should be reconsidered in light of the Supreme Court’s decision in
Chambers,
Capler maintains that
Chambers
dislodged certain precedents underlying this court’s holding in
Wallace,
casting further doubt on the decision. In
Wallace
we cited two escape cases,
United States v. Franklin,
As yet another basis for attacking
Wallace,
Capler contends that the decision is inconsistent with
Hagenow,
In the end we are left with no reason to question the continuing validity of Wallace and Billups. As a faithful application of Begay to a closely analogous crime, Bill-ups lends support to our holding here. But our lengthy defense of Billups should not distract focus from Wallace, the only decision in this circuit that has analyzed the Illinois crime of unlawful restraint, and accordingly, the decision that controls the outcome of this appeal. For the reasons we have explained, we are satisfied that Wallace survived Begay, that the decision’s analysis is in harmony with the present-day approach of the Supreme Court, and that its holding remains sound.
The judgment of the district court is Affirmed.
Notes
. Donte L. Stewart, the second appellant in this consolidated appeal, has been released from prison and is no longer in the custody of the Bureau of Prisons. His lawyers have moved to dismiss his appeal as moot. That motion is granted.
