Lead Opinion
This appeal requires us to decide whether Clifford Gandy Jr.'s prior conviction for battery of a jail detainee,
I. BACKGROUND
In June 2016, a grand jury indicted Gandy for possession with intent to distribute cocaine and marijuana, *1336
The probation officer classified Gandy as a career offender based on three prior felony convictions: a 2010 nolo contendere plea for battery upon a detainee,
Gandy objected to his classification as a career offender on the ground that his battery convictions were not crimes of violence. He asserted that our decision in United States v. Green (Green I) ,
The government responded that Gandy's battery convictions constituted crimes of violence based on Green I . In Green I , we explained that the Florida simple battery statute is divisible between "touching," "striking," and "intentionally causing bodily harm" battery, and that a court should use the modified categorical approach and consult Shepard -approved documents to decide which elements of battery a conviction was based on.
With respect to the 2010 conviction, the government submitted four Shepard documents. First, the government submitted a charging document that stated that Gandy committed a battery upon a jail detainee "by actually and intentionally touching or striking [the victim] ... or by intentionally causing bodily harm to [the victim,] by hitting the victim in the face and head," in violation of
Second, the government submitted Gandy's sentence-recommendation form, which is the equivalent of his plea agreement. The sentence recommendation reflects that Gandy pleaded nolo contendere to "Battery Upon a Jail Visitor or Other Detainee." The sentence recommendation, which Gandy and his state-court counsel signed, also includes the following factual basis:
*1337FACTUAL BASIS: The arrest report ... which is a part of the court record filed with the clerk of the court is hereby incorporated by reference and agreed to by the defendant as a factual basis for this plea and/or the factual basis is as follows:
...
On December 11, 2010, deputies responded to the Red Pod in the Escambia County Jail and observed victim Clunion Galloway laying on the floor and bleeding. Victim Galloway stated that he was playing cards with other inmates when he was hit from behind. Victim Galloway did not see who the attacker was.
Video surveillance was reviewed and shows the defendant approached the victim and str[uck] him in the head multiple times causing the victim to fall to the ground. The video then shows the defendant continuing to strike the victim on the ground. The video does not show any provocation.
Gov. Ex. A at 5, United States v. Gandy , No. 3:16-cr-00055-MCR-1 (N.D. Fla. Dec. 9, 2016), ECF No. 58-1 (emphasis altered).
Third, the government submitted the arrest report that Gandy expressly incorporated as the factual basis for his plea. The arrest report includes the following statement of probable cause:
On 12/11/2010 ... Clifford Gandy, Jr did knowingly and intentionally commit the offense of Battery Causing Bodily Harm , as follows.
On 12/12/10, I was dispatched to [the jail] in reference to a battery complaint. Upon arrival, I made contact with Sergeant Bullion ... who stated that at approximately 2135 hours on 12/11/2010 an inmate attacked another inmate. Sergeant Bullion provided me with their incident report .... The report stated that Deputy Frymire ... responded to the Red Pod where he observed V/Clunion Galloway lying on the floor and bleeding. V/Galloway told Deputy Frymire that he was playing cards when someone hit him from behind. V/Galloway stated that he did not see who hit him. V/Galloway was transported to the Infirmary where he was treated by medical staff. Deputy Frymire stated that S/Clifford Gandy later admitted to hitting V/Galloway. S/Gandy was also escorted to the Infirmary where he was seen by medical staff.
I was advised by Sergeant Bullion that V/Galloway wished to pursue criminal charges, and he also advised me that there was a video of the incident. Sergeant Buillion played the video for me at which time I observed V/Galloway playing cards. I could then clearly see S/Gandy walk up behind V/Galloway and unprovokedly str[ike] V/Galloway in the face which caused V/Galloway to fall down to the ground. S/Gandy then continued to strike V/Galloway multiple times on the head. ... Sergeant Bullion took photographs of V/Galloway's injuries which he provided to me. ... V/Galloway had a cut below his right eye, a scratch below his right ear, a bruise on the top of his head, a minor cut on his nose and a cut above his left eye.
S/Gandy was charged with battery causing bodily harm .
*1338Fourth, the government submitted the state-court judgment. The judgment states that Gandy pleaded nolo contendere to "battery upon a jail visitor or other detainee," in violation of sections 784.03 and 784.082.
In January 2017, the district court entered an order continuing Gandy's sentencing. The court was inclined to agree with Gandy that section 784.03 is not divisible between "touching" and "striking" elements, but it explained that it was "clearly" bound by Green I . The court also mentioned that it hoped that the issue of the divisibility of the Florida battery statute would be resolved in the then-pending appeal in United States v. Vail-Bailon , No. 15-10351 (11th Cir.). Gandy's sentencing was then rescheduled for after we decided that appeal. In August 2017, we issued our opinion in Vail-Bailon that felony battery under
At his sentencing hearing, Gandy renewed his objection to the career-offender designation. The district court explained that Green I remained binding precedent even after Vail-Bailon . The district court then overruled the objection.
After that ruling, the government requested and was granted the opportunity to further explain its position. The government first conceded that Gandy's 2012 battery conviction did not qualify as a crime of violence under the career-offender guideline. But the government maintained that Gandy was correctly designated a career offender because the 2010 conviction of battery of a detainee qualified as a crime of violence because it constituted "striking" battery under Green I .
The government also advanced an alternative argument: even if Green I was wrong about the divisibility of Florida battery, Gandy's battery conviction would still qualify as a crime of violence because battery would still be divisible between "touching and striking" and "intentionally causing bodily harm," and the Shepard documents leave "no doubt" that Gandy pleaded to "intentionally causing bodily harm." Gandy responded that a conviction for bodily-harm battery does not require proof of violent force, as required under Johnson v. United States (Curtis Johnson) ,
The court varied downward from the Guidelines range of 360 months to life imprisonment and imposed a 300-month sentence of imprisonment. One week later, we vacated Green I and issued a superseding opinion that did not address the divisibility of Florida simple battery. See United States v. Green (Green II) ,
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review de novo whether a battery conviction qualifies as a crime of violence under the Sentencing Guidelines. Vail-Bailon ,
III. DISCUSSION
Gandy argues that the district court erred when it classified him as a *1339career offender on the ground that his 2010 conviction for battery of a detainee was a crime of violence. To be classified as a career offender, Gandy must have at least two prior felony convictions for crimes of violence or controlled-substance offenses. U.S.S.G § 4B1.1(a). A "crime of violence" is defined as a felony offense that "has as an element the use, attempted use, or threatened use of physical force against the person of another."
Gandy was convicted in 2010 under two statutes,
(1)(a) The offense of battery occurs when a person:
1. Actually and intentionally touches or strikes another person against the will of the other; or
2. Intentionally causes bodily harm to another person.
Because section 784.03 does not define a crime of violence under the categorical approach, see Curtis Johnson ,
The parties agree that the battery conviction cannot be classified as a crime of violence for "striking" battery because section 784.03 is only divisible between "touching or striking" battery and "intentionally causing bodily harm" battery. The parties also agree that "touching or striking" battery does not constitute a crime of violence. But the government argues that because Gandy necessarily pleaded to "bodily harm" battery, his conviction still qualifies as a crime of violence.
Because we agree with the government that we can determine that Gandy was necessarily convicted of "intentionally causing bodily harm," which qualifies as a crime of violence, we need not decide whether "touching" and "striking" are divisible or whether Gandy's conviction would qualify as "striking" battery. The parties do not dispute, and we agree, that the Florida statute is divisible and that battery by "intentionally causing bodily harm" is a separate element of the offense.
Battery by "intentionally causing bodily harm" categorically constitutes a *1340crime of violence. Bodily-harm battery is proved by establishing two elements: the defendant caused bodily harm to another person, and he did so intentionally. See
We next look to the Shepard documents for Gandy's battery conviction to determine whether he was necessarily convicted of intentionally causing bodily harm. See Shepard ,
Although the charging document, the judgment, and Gandy's sentence recommendation do not identify which crime within section 784.03 he was convicted of committing, the incorporated arrest report clearly identifies his offense as bodily harm battery. To be sure, we ordinarily do not rely on police reports under the modified categorical approach because a defendant ordinarily does not admit the conduct described in them. United States v. Rosales-Bruno ,
The incorporated arrest report "speaks plainly" that Gandy's offense was bodily-harm battery. The report begins by listing the charge as "Battery Caus[ing] Bodily Harm," and it refers exclusively to the subsection of the Florida simple battery that Gandy violated as section 784.03(1)(a)(2), the "bodily harm" subsection. The report then alleges in its statement of probable cause that "[o]n 12/11/2010 ... [Gandy] did knowingly and *1341intentionally commit the offense of Battery Causing Bodily Harm ." It next describes how Gandy attacked his fellow inmate and caused him to suffer a variety of injuries, such as bruising and cuts around the face and head. At the conclusion of the statement of probable cause, the report again lists the charge as "battery causing bodily harm." The arrest report never mentions "touching or striking" battery, nor does it cite the subsection for that type of battery. So the arrest report unambiguously identifies Gandy's offense as bodily harm battery. Because Gandy agreed to this description of his offense, he necessarily pleaded nolo contendere to bodily harm battery.
At oral argument, Gandy argued that we cannot rely on the statements identifying his offense as bodily harm battery because these statements are "legal conclusions." He argued that by agreeing to the police report as the factual basis of his plea, he only agreed to the report's "factual allegations." We disagree.
Florida law requires a factual basis for a plea to ensure "that the facts of the case fit the offense with which the defendant is charged." Allen v. State ,
We conclude that because Gandy agreed to the arrest report as the factual basis of his plea without qualification, he agreed with the statements describing his offense as bodily-harm battery and that he necessarily pleaded nolo contendere to that offense. And our conclusion is consistent with that of the only other Circuit that has addressed whether a defendant's agreement to a police report as a factual basis includes his agreement to the report's *1342description of his offense. See United States v. Almazan-Becerra ,
Gandy argues that we cannot conclude that he was convicted of bodily harm battery in the absence of an amendment to the charging document that narrows the elements of his conviction, but we disagree. What matters under the modified categorical approach is not the offense charged, but what elements the government proved or the defendant admitted committing. Although a charging document is one possible Shepard document that we may consult, it is not the only document. When a charging document contains multiple alternative elements from the same divisible statute and the judgment does not specify which elements were proved or admitted, we may still determine the elements by consulting other Shepard documents. For example, in Diaz-Calderon , the defendant pleaded nolo contendere to an information charging that he "did intentionally touch or strike the victim against that person's will or did intentionally cause bodily harm to said person."
Gandy also contends that we may not rely on the factual basis included in his sentence recommendation because, in entering his nolo contendere plea, he only "acknowledged that the evidence would be sufficient to support a judgment of conviction under
Gandy also argues that we cannot rely on the factual basis in the arrest report because, absent a plea colloquy, we cannot determine either that the state court found a factual basis to support the nolo contendere plea or that it specifically relied on the factual basis as stated in the arrest report. As we understand it, Gandy's argument suggests that we cannot apply the modified categorical approach unless we have a plea colloquy, as there could always be some question about whether the elements of the conviction stated in a particular Shepard document were actually relied upon by the court in accepting the plea. But a plea colloquy is only one of several Shepard -approved documents, and we are aware of no authority suggesting that the absence of a plea colloquy bars consideration of other Shepard documents.
Gandy also renews his argument from the district court that bodily-harm battery does not satisfy the definition of a crime of violence because one may cause *1343bodily injury indirectly, such as by "digging a hole and putting a blanket over it or loosening someone's tires." This argument fails because we have held that "[w]hen a statute requires the use of force 'capable of causing physical pain or injury to another person,' whether that use of force 'occurs indirectly, rather than directly (as with a kick or punch), does not matter.' " United States v. Deshazior ,
Gandy was convicted of battery of a jail detainee by intentionally causing bodily harm. His prior conviction constitutes a crime of violence under the Sentencing Guidelines. U.S.S.G. § 4B1.2(a)(1). So he has two qualifying predicate offenses for purposes of his career-offender designation. U.S.S.G. § 4B1.1(a).
IV. CONCLUSION
We AFFIRM Gandy's sentence.
Dissenting Opinion
I agree with the panel that
But I dissent from the panel's application of the modified categorical approach.
*1344The panel incorrectly applies the modified categorical approach, creating a circuit split in the process. As a result, the panel mistakenly concludes that Gandy's prior conviction for violating § 784.03 was "necessarily" for bodily-harm battery. Since a correct application of the modified categorical approach does not allow us to identify which offense defined in § 784.03 Gandy was "necessarily" convicted of committing, I would vacate the sentence and remand for resentencing.
I.
I begin by reviewing the categorical and modified categorical analyses.
As the "first step" of determining whether a defendant's prior conviction qualifies as a "crime of violence" under the Sentencing Guidelines, we apply the categorical approach set forth in Taylor v. United States ,
Here, the categorical approach does not reveal whether Gandy was "necessarily" convicted of a crime that includes as an element the "use, attempted use, or threatened use of physical force against the person of another." As the panel accurately points out, Gandy's judgment reveals only that he was convicted of violating
We therefore must turn to the modified categorical approach to help us identify, if possible, whether Gandy was convicted of the touch-or-strike provision or the bodily-harm provision. Estrella ,
Critically, and as the Supreme Court has repeatedly emphasized, courts may use the *1345modified categorical approach to determine only " 'which statutory phrase was the basis for the conviction .' " Descamps v. United States ,
Significantly, the modified categorical approach "preserves the categorical approach's basic method," Descamps ,
On the record here, as shown in the next section, the Shepard documents do not allow us to conclude that Gandy was "necessarily convicted under" a particular statutory phrase within § 784.03. For that reason, the panel opinion's determination that Gandy was "necessarily convicted" of bodily-harm battery is incorrect.
II.
In concluding Gandy was "necessarily convicted" of bodily-harm battery and affirming Gandy's sentence, the panel relies on the arrest report in two ways that the modified categorical approach does not permit, even though the report was incorporated "as a factual basis" for the plea. First, the panel opinion appears to contend that where, as here, the factual basis for an offense satisfies the elements of both a qualifying offense and a non-qualifying offense, the district court is entitled to conclude that the defendant was "necessarily" convicted of the qualifying offense. Maj Op. at 1341. And second, the panel opinion seems to conclude that the officer's legal conclusion that Gandy committed bodily-harm battery, which appears in the arrest report, means that Gandy was "necessarily" convicted of that offense.
The panel opinion's first apparent contention contravenes the Supreme Court's "demand for certainty" in determining a *1346defendant's prior offense of conviction. Shepard ,
A.
I begin with the panel opinion's apparent contention that, since the factual basis for Gandy's plea would have satisfied the elements of both bodily-harm battery and touch-or-strike battery, the district court was entitled to conclude that Gandy's conviction must have been for bodily-harm battery. We have not previously considered whether a factual basis that satisfies the elements of two crimes-one that qualifies as a crime of violence and one that does not-suffices to show that a defendant charged in the alternative with both crimes was "necessarily" convicted of the qualifying crime. But the Eighth Circuit has. And in United States v. Horse Looking ,
In Horse Looking , the defendant was charged with possessing a firearm after having been previously convicted of a "misdemeanor crime of domestic violence." The applicable statute, in turn, defines that term as a crime that, as relevant here, has as an element "the use or attempted use of physical force, or the threatened use of a deadly weapon."
As it turned out, the South Dakota simple-assault-domestic-violence statute contained five divisible provisions, and Horse Looking was charged with three of them. Id . As relevant here, Horse Looking's underlying South Dakota indictment alleged that Horse Looking "(4) [a]ttempt[ed] by physical menace or credible threat to put another in fear of imminent bodily harm, with or without the actual ability to harm the other person," or "(5) [i]ntentionally cause[d] bodily injury to another which does not result in serious bodily injury."
Applying the modified categorical approach, the court looked to the South Dakota charging and sentencing documents to determine whether Horse Looking had been convicted of subsection (4) or (5), or both.
Continuing with the modified categorical approach, the Eighth Circuit next examined the plea colloquy in Horse Looking's South Dakota case. In that colloquy, Horse Looking had said that he and his wife "got into an argument and she became physical and she cut me and I pushed her."
*1347
Based on this factual recitation, the Eighth Circuit concluded that the colloquy "establishe[d] that Horse Looking could have been convicted under subsection (5)," which was a misdemeanor crime of domestic violence.
So the court concluded that "the judicial record d[id] not establish that Horse Looking necessarily was convicted of" the qualifying part of the South Dakota statute.
Gandy's case presents the same problem, and we should have resolved it in the same way. Here, as in Horse Looking , the judgment and sentencing documents indicate that Gandy was convicted of a general offense, without specifying which particular subsection of that general offense is the offense of conviction. And like Horse Looking, Gandy pled guilty to a charging instrument that contained both qualifying and non-qualifying offenses. Also like Horse Looking, Gandy admitted to conduct that satisfied the elements of both the qualifying offense and the non-qualifying offense. Neither the South Dakota court in Horse Looking's case nor the Florida court in Gandy's case specified whether the defendant's case was for the qualifying subsection or the non-qualifying subsection. And finally, just as was the case with the factual recitation in Horse Looking , the statement of Gandy's actions contained in the arrest report does not exclude the possibility that Gandy committed one of the two crimes ultimately charged in the alternative. So like the Eighth Circuit, we should have concluded that Gandy's past conviction was not "necessarily" for a qualifying offense.
Indeed, the Eighth Circuit did exactly what Supreme Court precedent requires in applying the modified categorical approach. Unfortunately, though, today we do not.
*1348B.
Nor, as the panel opinion seems to suggest, can we find the answer to our dilemma by relying on the officer's arrest-report legal conclusion that Gandy committed bodily-harm battery, which he offered to identify his legal authority to make the arrest. It's not that we can't consult the arrest report to help us ascertain the factual basis for Gandy's crime of conviction; we can, since Gandy agreed that the arrest report provided a "factual basis" for his plea. But to paraphrase Inigo Montoya in The Princess Bride , I do not think the presence of the officer's statement in the arrest report means what the panel opinion thinks it means.
To explain why, I review the purpose of the arresting officer's report in the context of the plea proceeding in Gandy's Florida case. The arresting officer's report was incorporated by reference to the sentence recommendation only "as a factual basis" for Gandy's plea. And the report contained both statements of fact-reporting the actions Gandy took that resulted in his arrest-and the officer's statement of the crime he decided to arrest Gandy for-bodily-harm battery. But the arresting officer's statement of the crime he arrested Gandy for was not a part of the "factual basis" for Gandy's plea. Rather, it served only the purpose of identifying the crime for which the officer arrested Gandy.
To understand the impact of the arrest report's limited purpose, we must consider the role of the "factual basis." Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.170 requires a court to determine that, among other things, a "factual basis for the plea" exists before the court may accept a plea. Satisfying this requirement demands the court "ensure that the facts of the case fit the offense with which the defendant is charged." Williams v. State ,
In applying these concepts, we start with "the offense with which [Gandy] [was] charged."
Two elements compose touch-or-strike battery: "(1) actually and intentionally *1349touching or striking another person; and (2) [doing so] against the will of the other person." Khianthalat v. State ,
As for bodily-harm battery, a single element-that the defendant "intentionally caused bodily harm" to the victim-comprises that crime. See Fla. Jury Instruction 8.3 Battery. And along with the arrest report's recounting of the specific injuries the victim incurred as a result of Gandy's actions, the same facts from the arrest report that showed Gandy undertook actions that meet the elements of touch-or-strike battery likewise demonstrated that Gandy engaged in actions that check off bodily-harm battery's single element.
So the facts in the arrest report establishing that Gandy undertook actions that specifically satisfied the elements of each charged crime comprise the "factual basis" for Gandy's plea; they showed the particular actions Gandy committed that supported the conclusions that he "actually and intentionally touch[ed] or str[uck] another person," "against the will of the other person" and that he "intentionally caused bodily harm" to the victim. They did not simply restate an element of a particular crime or the crime for which Gandy was arrested.
By contrast, the officer's legal conclusion that Gandy intentionally caused bodily harm to another did no more than restate a crime. It did not "provide the factual information necessary to establish the elements of the offense." Williams ,
Nor do the Florida cases cited in the panel's decision support its position that legal conclusions may properly be part of the factual basis for a Florida guilty plea. See Maj. Op. at 1341 (citing Johnson v. State ,
United States v. Almazan-Becerra ,
In Almazan-Becerra , the federal court had to determine whether Almazan-Becerra had previously been convicted of a drug-trafficking crime to ascertain whether a sentencing enhancement applied to him. See Almazan-Becerra ,
But since Almazan-Becerra stipulated as a factual basis for his plea to the police reports concerning his arrest, the court considered the contents of the reports to see whether they could resolve whether Almazan-Becerra had been convicted of sale or transport of marijuana.
So contrary to the panel opinion's suggestion, the Ninth Circuit's explanation for why the reports could not also "describe the offense of transporting marijuana" shows that it did not employ that phrase to refer to an officer's statement of the offense for which he arrested the defendant, but rather to the defendant's specific actions documented in the reports. See
But even not considering the principle that an officer's statement identifying the *1351crime for which he arrests a person cannot constitute a part of the "factual basis," a second reason also compels the determination that we cannot view the arresting officer's legal conclusion as dispositive. While the arresting officer may have accurately stated the crime for which he arrested Gandy, the officer was not responsible for Gandy's prosecution. That was up to the State Attorney. See
The following hypothetical illustrates this point more bluntly:
Suppose that the victim in Gandy's case tragically suffered permanent brain damage when Gandy hit him. Florida courts have held such an injury constitutes "great bodily harm," an element of aggravated battery.
Under the circumstances of that hypothetical, could a later sentencing court correctly surmise that Gandy's conviction was "necessarily" for aggravated battery?
Inconceivable!
The officer's statement that Gandy committed the crime for which he was arrested could not define the offense of conviction . Only the court could do that because only the court had the power to adjudicate Gandy guilty and enter a judgment of conviction on the charge. Under this hypothetical scenario, the court identified
That principle-that the court, not the arresting officer, adjudicates guilt-applies equally to the case before us. The officer's conclusion that Gandy committed bodily-harm battery, and his decision to arrest him on that basis, cannot demonstrate that the Florida court convicted Gandy of that particular offense. Only the Florida court had the authority to determine the crime of Gandy's conviction. And here, we cannot ascertain the crime for which the Florida court convicted Gandy, since the information charged two crimes in the alternative, the factual basis for the plea satisfied the elements of both offenses, and the Florida *1352court's judgment reflected only that Gandy was convicted of the general crime of battery under § 784.03.
To find otherwise would undermine the role of the Florida courts in adjudicating defendants guilty of Florida crimes. Only the Florida court can determine the offense of conviction. But the panel opinion's reliance, for the purpose of identifying Gandy's crime of conviction, on the arresting officer's legal conclusion that Gandy committed the offense of bodily-harm battery steals that role from the Florida court and gives it to the arresting officer. That is not something we should be doing.
We are concerned only with what the Florida court convicted Gandy of. And on this record, we are bound to conclude that the Florida court did not "necessarily" convict him of a crime of violence. While it may be tempting to jump to the conclusion that Gandy was convicted of bodily-harm battery based on the officer's legal conclusion in his report, we are not authorized to modify a Florida court's judgment of conviction.
III.
For these reasons, I respectfully dissent. In my view, when we apply the modified categorical approach, Gandy's prior conviction for violating
The panel opinion concludes that bodily-harm battery is "necessarily" a crime of violence, though it notes that "under Florida law, bodily harm is broadly defined to encompass any 'slight, trivial, or moderate harm' to a victim." Maj. Op. at 1340. I agree that the injuries described in the two panel-opinion-cited Florida cases interpreting this definition-bruises in one and scratches, swelling, and puncture marks in the other-required the "use ... of physical force" as anticipated by the Supreme Court's interpretation of the elements clause. What is not clear to me after reviewing Florida law is the bottom end of the spectrum of "bodily injury"-that is, what is the most "trivial" or "slight" impact that still counts as "harm" so that it satisfies the definition of "bodily injury"? But because I conclude that we cannot "necessarily" determine that the Florida court convicted Gandy of bodily-harm battery, anyway, I do not opine on whether bodily-harm battery is categorically a crime of violence. My dissent therefore assumes without deciding that it is.
The panel opinion does not decide whether touch-or-strike battery is itself divisible. Under the methodology of Mathis v. United States , --- U.S. ----,
The officer's actual statement was "Gandy ... did knowingly and intentionally commit the offense of Battery Causing Bodily Harm, as follows," which preceded a description of the particular facts demonstrating that Gandy's actions, in fact, satisfied the element of that crime.
I can appreciate the Eighth Circuit's concern that the "absence of definitive records frustrates the application of the modified categorical approach." Id. at 749. But as the Eighth Circuit nonetheless correctly observed, "the Supreme Court has made clear that the vagaries of state court recordkeeping do not justify a different analysis." Id. (citing Johnson ,
Montoya's actual quotation, which he offers in response to the character Vizzini's repeated invocation of the word "inconceivable," is "You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means." Mandy Patinkin: Inigo Montoya , IMDb.com, https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0093779/characters/nm0001597 (last visited Mar. 5, 2019).
Rather, in Johnson , the appellant sought to withdraw her guilty plea because she claimed that she did not understand the consequences of the plea agreement and that she was coerced into pleading guilty. See
To be clear, "inconceivable" means exactly what I think it means: "Impossible to comprehend or grasp fully," or, "[s]o unlikely or surprising as to have been thought impossible; unbelievable." Inconceivable , The American Heritage Dictionary (5th ed. 2011).
