*908 ORDER AND AMENDED OPINION
ORDER
The mandate issued on July 13, 2005 is recalled for the purpose of amending the opinion as follows:
The amended opinion filed July 5, 2005, slip op. 7773, appearing at
1) Slip op. at 7793 (2005 WL 1560269 , at *9): The first sentence of the third full paragraph, beginning “We conclude that a limited remand is proper in all pending direct criminal appeals involving unpreserved Booker error,” is deleted. In its place, the following sentence is inserted: “We conclude that defendants are entitled to limited remands in all pending direct criminal appeals involving unpre-served Booker error, whether constitutional or nonconstitutional.”
2) Slip op. at 7794 (2005 WL 1560269 , at *9): A footnote is inserted at the end of the last sentence of the opinion, which begins ‘We will therefore remand.” The text of footnote is as follows:
It is clear that the district court, under Ameline, will have to at least consider the available sentence under the now-discretionary federal Guidelines in determining whether it would have imposed a different sentence had it known the Guidelines were advisory.
That is why we resolve the question that was fully briefed and argued in this court concerning the applicability of the enhancement. By doing so, we assure that the district court will begin in this regard with the proper interpretation of the Guidelines in determining whether it would have imposed a different sentence. Cf. United States v. Baclaan,948 F.2d 628 , 630-31 (9th Cir.1991) (per curiam) (interpreting the district court’s application of non-binding policy statements in the Guidelines).
No further petitions for rehearing or petitions for rehearing en banc shall be entertained. The mandate shall reissue forthwith.
OPINION
Once more, we are asked to determine whether a federal defendant’s previous state-law conviction is for a “felony that is ... a crime of violence” under section 2L1.2(b)(l)(A)(ii) of the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines (“Guidelines”).
See, e.g., United States v. Lopez-Patino,
Under Oregon law, assault in the fourth degree (“Assault IV”), normally a “Class A misdemeanor” punishable by no more than one year in prison, is a “Class C felony” punishable by up to five years in prison when committed, inter alia, in the presence of the victim’s minor child. See OR. Rev. Stat. § leS.lOOlSXc). 1 At issue in this ap *909 peal is whether the presence of the victim’s minor child should be considered in ascertaining whether the Oregon statute defines a “felony” for purposes of the Guidelines.
Sentencing factors based on some aspect of the defendant’s legal history, such as recidivist sentencing enhancements, are not considered in determining whether a state-law offense is a felony.
See, e.g., United States v. Pimentel-Flores,
We therefore agree with the district court that Defendanb-Appellant Isidro Moreno-Hernandez’s underlying Oregon conviction was, as far as this consideration goes, for a “felony.” As Moreno-Hernandez challenges the applicability of a federal sentencing enhancement, however, we grant a limited remand pursuant to
United States v. Ameline,
1. Background
This appeal comes to us from Moreno-Hernandez’s third conviction for illegally reentering the United States after removal. See 8 U.S.C. § 1326. All three federal convictions occurred subsequent to a 1999 Oregon state conviction for assault in the fourth degree, for “unlawfully and intentionally caus[ing] physical injury” to Yolanda Robinson in the presence of her minor child, Deanndra Wright. For that offense, Moreno-Hernandez was sentenced to sixty days in jail and three years on probation.
After pleading guilty to this most recent § 1326 charge, Moreno-Hernandez was sentenced to a term of seventy-seven months. Under the then-recently amended Guidelines, 2 the district court enhanced Moreno-Hernandez’s sentence by sixteen levels, because he was deported, or unlawfully remained in the United States, after a conviction for a “felony that is ... a crime of violence.” U.S.S.G. § 2L1.2(b)(l)(A)(ii) (2003). 3 From this sentence Moreno-Hernandez timely appeals.
*910 II. “Felony”
The crux of Moreno-Hernandez’s argument is that we should not consider the factor that made his offense punishable by as much as a five-year sentence — the presence of the victim’s minor child — in ascertaining whether his underlying Oregon conviction was for a “felony.” 4
Federal law and the Guidelines both define a felony as “any federal, state, or local offense punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one year.” U.S.S.G. § 2L1.2, cmt. n. 2;
see also
18 U.S.C. § 3559(a). This bright-line distinction between felonies and misdemeanors, which dates back, at least in some form, to 1865,
see United States v. Graham,
Assault IV without the presence of the victim’s minor child carries a maximum sentence of one year in prison. See Ob. Rev. Stat. § 161.615. Because of the presence of the victim’s minor child during the assault, Moreno-Hernandez’s offense carried a maximum sentence of five years. See id. §§ 161.605; 163.160(3)(c). Moreno-Hernandez’s underlying conviction is therefore a “felony” only if the minor child enhancement is pertinent in determining whether his conviction was for a “felony.” The question before us is whether it should be so considered.
A. Corona-Sanchez
In
Coronar-Sanchez,
we considered whether the California state-law crime of petty theft committed by a previous offender was an aggravated felony under the Guidelines. The answer to that question turned on whether the crime was a “theft offense” punishable by a sentence of one year or more in prison.
Corona-Sanchez
applied the categorical approach outlined in
Taylor v. United States,
Corona-Sanchez
explained the cleaving of the recidivist enhancement from the underlying offense largely on the basis that the enhancement was measured by
recidivism.
Following the Supreme Court’s reiteration in
Apprendi v. New Jersey
that “recidivism does not relate to the commission of the offense,”
Here, by contrast, the enhancement in the Oregon Assault IV statute for the presence of the victim’s minor child is not related to recidivism or any other past actions of the offender. Instead, it is the facts of the offense, not the legal history of the offender, that gives rise to the maximum available sentence of more than one year.
By way of example, we note that the other variants of Assault IV under Oregon law, in contrast, do mirror the enhancements at issue in Corona-Sanchez. Moreno-Hernandez was convicted of assault in the presence of the victim’s minor child, see OR. Rev. Stat. § 163.160(3)(c), but Assault IV is also a Class C felony if “(a) The person has previously been convicted of assaulting the same victim; [or] (b) The person has previously been convicted at least three times under this section or under equivalent laws of another jurisdiction and all of the assaults involved domestic violence, as defined in ORS 135.230....” Id. § 163.160(3). These two enhancements fall into the class of recidivist sentencing enhancements, like those in Corona-Sanchez. Were Moreno-Hernandez’s Assault IV conviction enhanced by one of these factors, Corona-Sanchez would mandate our holding that his earlier offense was not a “felony.”
There is, however, some language in
Corona-Sanchez
that is not expressly limited to recidivist factors. For example, the en banc court stated in one passage that it was “[examining the crime itself, rather than any sentencing enhancements,”
B. Pimentel-Flores
The broader reading of
Corona-Sanchez,
to encompass all factors that increase
*912
a sentence, is to some degree supported by our decision one year later in
Pimentel-Flores,
the first case in this circuit to consider the current version of § 2L1.2.
Pimentel-Flores
first concluded that a “crime of violence” need not be an aggravated felony under § 2L1.2. It then considered whether Pimentel-Flores was subject to the 16-level enhancement based on a state-court conviction for “assault, in violation of [a] court order.”
Pimentel-Flores,
Pimentel-Flores went on to discuss various issues that the district court was directed to consider on remand. For instance, the court held that Taylor “applies to the determination of whether a defendant’s prior offense constitutes a ‘crime of violence’ for purposes of [§ 2L1.2].” Id. at 968. More central to this case, the court also concluded that “there is a plausible prospect that the outcome might have been different had the government [provided the statute of conviction],” id., because:
We have held in the past that state sentencing enhancements raising misdemeanors to felonies cannot be considered in determining whether a prior conviction is an “aggravated felony.” Instead, the court must examine the statute under which a defendant was convicted for his core offense. The same logic would apply to the determination of whether a defendant’s prior offense was a “felony.”
Id.
at 969 (citing
Corona-Sanchez,
The violation of a court order — the enhancement at issue in Pimentel-Flores — is similar to a recidivist factor, for it is backward-looking. Further, rather than delineating the conduct that constituted the crime of conviction, the enhancement in Pimentel — Flores is concerned with a legal history characteristic that the offender already possessed before committing the offense in question — namely, being subject to a court order. It is thus unlikely that the less-than-clear language of Pimentel-Flores, summarizing Corona-Sanchez, was meant to go beyond the circumstances before the court in either of the two cases. 6
We are left, then, at something of a doctrinal impasse. Corona-Sanchez was not entirely clear as to whether it was enunciating a rule only for recidivist sen- *913 teneing enhancements, although the basis for its holding turned largely on recidivism principles enunciated in Almendarez-Tor-res and Apprendi; Pimentel-Flores widened the potential confusion over Corona-Sanchez’s scope. In the abstract, then, whether Coronctr-Sanchez and Pimentel-Flores extend to this case may best be described as uncertain, with plausible arguments on both sides.
C. Non-Recidivist Enhancements
We are nevertheless persuaded that Co-ronar-Sanehez and Pimentel-Flores go only so far, and no further. Otherwise, as the government argues here, “logic would prohibit use of any felony prior conviction if there was also a necessarily included misdemeanor version of the offense.” Most felonies have some misdemeanor as an element, to which other elements are added. Thus, if we adopted the broader reading of our precedents, the line drawing, as the government suggests, would become an impossible exercise, turning on semantic fortuities of statutory numbering or drafting.
Consider, for example, Oregon’s definition of assault in the first degree: “A person commits the crime of assault in the first degree if the person intentionally causes serious physical injury to another by means of a deadly or dangerous weapon.” OR. Rev. Stat. § 163.185(1). Under Moreno-Hernandez’s logic, the facts that the assault was committed “intentionally,” that the assault resulted in serious physical injury, and that the assault was “by means of a deadly or dangerous weapon” would each be sentencing factors separate from the underlying offense — assault— which Oregon law defines as a misdemean- or in a separate statutory section. See id. § 163.160(2). Taking the argument to its extreme, even homicide, which under Oregon law occurs when “without justification or excuse, [a] person intentionally, knowingly, recklessly or with criminal negligence causes the death of another human being,” id. § 163.005(1), would be a misdemeanor, since the offense could also be characterized as an assault with a number of aggravating factors, only one of which is the death of the victim.
Moreno-Hernandez’s alternative position — that we should look at the structure of the state statute — is equally unconvincing. Under this approach, if the same statutory section included an offense and a lesser-included version thereof — as does Oregon’s Assault TV statute — -then the lesser-included version would govern whether the offense defined a felony. By contrast, if another state codified simple assault without the presence of the victim’s minor child in a separate “Assault V” statute, then, under Moreno-Hernandez’s argument, the same offense would be a felony for federal sentencing purposes in that state, but not in Oregon. This dichotomy is untenable, and explains why we may not look to the state statutory labeling or structure in ascertaining whether the offense is a felony.
Put simply, Moreno-Hernandez’s argument, that we should read Coronar-San-chez and Pimentel-Flores to reach all sentencing factors, would necessarily require us to hold that nearly all state-law offenses are misdemeanors for federal sentencing purposes. We cannot agree with this re-ductio ad absurdum.
Instead, we read Corona-Sanchez and Pimentel-Flores as applying only to sentencing enhancements not based directly on the facts of the offense of conviction. 7 *914 When legislatures have chosen to demarcate sentences based on specific characteristics of the offense itself rather than on some aspect of the offender’s legal history, we believe that the Corona?-Sanchez “core offense” concept does not apply, and that the entire sentence, including its offense-based aggravating characteristics, must be factored into our determination of whether or not it is a “felony.”
Because we do not consider Moreno-Hernandez’s Assault TV conviction separately from the aggravating factor, and because Assault IV in the presence of the victim’s minor child carries a maximum sentence of five years’ imprisonment, we conclude that the statutory maximum sentence for Moreno-Hernandez’s offense of conviction under Oregon law is five years in prison.
III. Blakely and Rios-Beltran
At oral argument and in supplemental briefing ordered by the court, Moreno-Hernandez advanced an argument purportedly based on
Blakely v. Washington,
"Whether or not Moreno-Hernandez’s argument would otherwise have merit in light of
United States v. Rios-Beltran,
In Rios-Beltran — which was decided before Blakely — we held that “what matters for federal sentencing purposes is that the statutory maximum sentence for the offense for which [the defendant] was convicted exceeded one year.” Id. at 1209. Because the statutory maximum for Rios-Beltran’s prior conviction was greater than one year, and because “Oregon [had] not ruled out the possibility” that Rios-Bel-tran’s actual sentence could lawfully exceed one year, we did not decide what effect it would have for purposes of section 2L1.2 if Oregon had ruled out that possibility. Id. at 1209 n. 4. Likewise, at the time of Moreno-Hernandez’s prior conviction, the statutory maximum for his offense was greater than one year, and Oregon law did not necessarily preclude the imposition of an actual sentence of more than one year.
Oregon law has changed in light of
Blakely,
so that any sentence in excess of the presumptive range in the state guidelines is now recognized as unconstitutional unless based on facts found by a jury or a prior conviction.
State v. Dilts,
Moreno-Hernandez’s argument thus is tantamount to a collateral attack on his original conviction. We cannot consider such an attack as part of his challenge to a subsequent sentencing enhancement.
See, e.g., United States v. Marks,
Conclusion; Impact of Ameline
As discussed above, we include the presence of the victim’s minor child in ascertaining the statutory maximum sentence, so the statutory maximum for the Oregon Assault IV offense (including the presence of the victim’s minor child) was imprisonment for no more than five years. Because the Guidelines define as a felony any offense punishable by a term of imprisonment exceeding one year, Moreno-Hernandez’s underlying state-law conviction was, in this respect, for a “felony that is ... a crime of violence.”
We must, however, consider what effect the recent decision in
United States v. Ameline,
We conclude that defendants are entitled to limited remands in all pending direct criminal appeals involving unpreserved Booker error, whether constitutional or nonconstitutional. Nothing in the Ameline opinion indicates that the en banc court intended to utilize that approach only in cases of Sixth Amendment error. Nor do we perceive any reason why Ameline should be so limited. After all, the reason for a limited remand is that it sometimes is not possible for us to answer the question whether the district court would have imposed the same sentence if it had known the guidelines were advisory, and the fact that the district court has not conducted any factfinding does not make this question any easier (or harder) for us to answer. We will therefore remand Moreno-Hernandez’s sentence in accordance with Ameline. 9
REMANDED.
Notes
. In full, section 163.160 provides:
(1) A person commits the crime of assault in the fourth degree if the person:
(a) Intentionally, knowingly or recklessly causes physical injury to another; or
(b) With criminal negligence causes physical injury to another by means of a deadly weapon.
(2) Assault in the fourth degree is a Class A misdemeanor.
*909 (3) Notwithstanding subsection (2) of this section, assault in the fourth degree is a Class C felony if the person commits the crime of assault in the fourth degree and:
(a) The person has previously been convicted of assaulting the same victim;
(b) The person has previously been convicted at least three times under this section or under equivalent laws of another jurisdiction and all of the assaults involved domestic violence, as defined in ORS 135.230; or
(c) The assault is committed in the immediate presence of, or is witnessed by, the person's or the victim’s minor child or stepchild or a minor child residing within the household of the person or victim.
(4) For the purposes of subsection (3) of this section, an assault is witnessed if the assault is seen or directly perceived in any other manner by the child.
. Moreno-Hernandez was not subject to the sixteen-level enhancement on his first two convictions. The Guidelines, at those times, allowed the sixteen-level enhancement only when the underlying offense was an "aggravated felony.” See U.S.S.G. § 2L1.2(b)(1)(A) (2001).
. Under U.S.S.G. § 2L1.2(b)(l)(A), the sixteen-level enhancement also applies to a conviction for a felony that is "(i) a drug trafficking offense for which the sentence imposed exceeded 13 months; ... (iii) a firearms offense; (iv) a child pornography offense; (v) a national security or terrorism offense; (vi) a human trafficking offense; or (vii) an alien smuggling offense.”
. Moreno-Hernandez challenges only whether his Assault IV conviction is a "felony.” He has not challenged whether it is a "crime of violence.” We therefore do not consider whether under the Supreme Court's recent decision in
Leocal v. Ashcroft,
-U.S. -,
. The court subsequently noted that "[t]hese are not clear-cut conclusions but only plausible possibilities to be critically assessed on remand,”
Pimentel-Flores,
. The government suggested that we are bound by the Oregon Court of Appeals' description of the presence of a minor child "as an element of the offense” of Assault IV.
See State v. Glaspey,
. To clarify our holding, we mean to speak only to offenses that incorporate lesser offenses as part of their definition, such as the Oregon assault statute at issue here. Offenses *914 that are only illegal because of the offender’s status, such as possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, see 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1), are not implicated by our holding today, for, absent consideration of the offender's status, there is no "core offense” remaining.
. Moreno-Hernandez seems to raise two distinct challenges to his enhancement based, at the time, on
Blakely.
The government responded only to his first argument — that
Blakely
(and now
Booker,
-U.S. -,
. It is clear that the district court, under
Ameline,
will have to at least consider the available sentence under the now-discretionary federal Guidelines in determining whether it would have imposed a different sentence had it known the Guidelines were advisory. That is why we resolve the question that was fully briefed and argued in this court concerning the applicability of the enhancement. By doing so, we assure that the district court will begin in this regard with the proper interpretation of the Guidelines in determining whether it would have imposed a different sentence.
Cf. United States v. Baclaan,
