The defendants were convicted of bank robbery. Only one issue, raised by only one defendant, merits discussion — whether for purposes of sentencing the judge properly classified Dan Jones as a “career offender,” a classification that resulted in a long sentence (twelve years). For him to be so classified, it was necessary that the bank robbery be a “crime of violence.” Sentencing Guidelines § 4B1.1. It was an unarmed robbery. Jones walked up to a teller and announced, “This is a hold up.” He demanded that the teller give him money from the teller’s drawer. When the teller hesitated, Jones leapt onto the teller’s counter, pulled open the drawer, grabbed $2,000 in cash from it, stuffed it in a bag that he had brought with him, and ran out of the bank with his accomplice. The accomplice had been holding a bag too, which the teller had surmised contained a weapon, and he had repeatedly warned her, “Don’t touch nothing,” presumably meaning don’t touch an alarm button. But neither robber brandished, or for that matter could have brandished, a weapon, because neither was armed.
The bank robbery statute required the government to prove, beyond a reasonable doubt of course, that Jones took the money “by force and violence, or by intimidation.” 18 U.S.C. § 2113(a). Intimidation means the threat of force. The threat can of course be a bluff.
United States v. Lucas,
That decides the case. For section 4B1.2(l)(i) of the Guidelines defines crime of violence to include an offense that “has as an element the ... threatened use of physical force against the person of another.” There is no “space” between “bank robbery” and “crime of violence.” A defendant properly convicted of bank robbery is guilty per se of a crime of violence, because violence in the broad sense that includes a merely threatened use of force is an element of every bank robbery.
United States v. Selfa,
Affirmed.
