OPINION
Paulo Sergio Medina-Almaguer appeals his 27-month sentence for illegal reentry after deportation. At stake is whether the district court properly characterized a 1989 state-court conviction as a “drug trafficking offense” under the sentencing guidelines.
I.
On September 19, 2007, Medina-Alma-guer pleaded guilty to one count of illegal reentry following deportation. See 8 U.S.C. § 1326. In calculating his advisory guidelines range, the district court imposed a 16-level enhancement because Medina-Almaguer’s deportation arose from a “drug trafficking offense.” U.S.S.G. § 2L1.2(b)(l)(A). In 1989, he pleaded guilty to violating Cal. Health & Safety Code § 11352(a) (1989), which makes it a crime for any person to “transport, import ..., sell, furnish, administer, or give away” a controlled substance or to “offer[ ]” to do those things.
Medina-Almaguer objected to the 16-level enhancement on the ground that the broad sweep of the California statute covers conduct that comes within § 2L1.2(b)(l)(A)’s definition of a “drug trafficking offense,” as well as conduct that falls outside of it, and his guilty plea gave the district court no basis for determining whether his conduct amounted to a covered offense. The district court, however, did not just rely on the 1989 judgment in increasing Medina-Almaguer’s sentence. It also looked to a preliminary-examination transcript from the 1989 state-court proceedings, which showed that he was arrested after selling heroin to *422 an undercover police officer. Because a “drug trafficking offense” under the guidelines includes the “distribution ... or dispensing of a controlled substance,” U.S.S.G. § 2L1.2(b)(l)(A), app. note l(B)(iv) (2006), the court concluded that the conviction amounted to a “drug trafficking offense.”
The 16-level enhancement together with a three-level reduction for acceptance of responsibility, see U.S.S.G. § 3E1.1, left Medina-Almaguer with a 37-46 month guidelines range. Opting to vary his sentence downward because the predicate offense for the 16-level enhancement occurred nearly 18 years earlier and because Medina-Almaguer had (for the most part) stayed out of trouble since, the district court imposed a 27-month sentence.
II.
Medina-Almaguer’s appeal raises one issue: Does his 1989 state-court conviction qualify as a “drug trafficking offense” within the meaning of U.S.S.G. § 2L1.2(b)(l)(A)?
The Sixth Amendment, to start, does not bar this inquiry. Even though the question at hand is whether a sentencing court permissibly increased Medina-Almaguer’s guidelines range based on a form of fact finding about his 1989 conviction, that kind of adjustment does not violate the Sixth Amendment because the Supreme Court has long exempted fact finding related to “prior conviction[s],”
Almendarez-Torres v. United States,
In determining the nature of a pri- or offense, courts normally start — and stop — by looking at “the fact of conviction and the statutory definition of the prior offense.”
Taylor v. United States,
That does not end the inquiry, however. If the state-law definition of a prior offense covers more ground than the conduct reached by the federal-sentencing enhancement, a sentencing court may consult
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a limited range of judicial documents to determine the nature of the prior conviction.
See Shepard v. United States,
In Medina-Almaguer’s case, the 1989 information and abstract of judgment do not establish that he pleaded guilty to a “drug trafficking offense.” Both documents merely restate the text of § 11352(a) and offer no information about the specific acts, if any, that he admitted committing. To its credit, the district court thus did not rely on the 1989 information and judgment in ratcheting up Medina-Almaguer’s guidelines offense level.
The court, however, did believe that the transcript from his preliminary examination sufficed to support the enhancement. At the preliminary examination, a police officer testified about a controlled drug buy with Medina-Almaguer, in which the officer gave Medina-Almaguer $20 in exchange for heroin. Even granting for the sake of argument that a sentencing court may consult a preliminary-examination transcript in investigating the nature of a prior offense, this transcript does not show that Medina-Almaguer “necessarily admitted” to a “drug trafficking offense” when he pleaded guilty to violating § 11352(a). Much like a police report or a complaint application — upon which sentencing courts may not rely in determining the nature of a prior conviction,
see Shepard,
No doubt, a police officer testified at the preliminary examination that Medina-Al-maguer sold heroin to him. But that testimony showed only that the examining magistrate properly concluded that there was “sufficient cause” to believe that Medina-Almaguer violated § 11352(a). Medina-Almaguer did not admit that conduct during the examination, nor so far as the record shows did he admit that conduct when he pleaded guilty. The transcript at most provides a basis for establishing probable cause to hold him for violating the statute and perhaps for violating the statute in this way. But it does not follow that the transcript establishes the acts that he “necessarily admitted” when he later pleaded guilty.
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United States v. Jones,
Although
Jones
provides some support for the government’s argument, it does not provide enough. As we have since explained,
Jones
held that sentencing courts may rely on affidavits of complaint “only” for “the limited inquiry of whether prior offenses constitute a single criminal episode or multiple episodes,”
United States v. Wells,
In pushing us to extend
Jones
to this setting, the government may be right that preliminary-examination transcripts are “reliable].” Br. at 15 (internal quotation marks omitted). The problem is, they are not reliable in the sense that matters. The question is not whether the preliminary-examination transcript accurately captures the officer’s testimony or even whether the officer testified truthfully. It is whether the document establishes what Medina-Almaguer admitted when he pleaded guilty.
See Shepard,
We need not decide whether a preliminary-examination transcript is “an appropriate document upon which to rely when determining the nature of a previous offense.” Appellee Br. at 15. Even assuming it is, the preliminary-examination transcript before us does not identify the conduct Medina-Almaguer necessarily admitted when he entered his guilty plea. Just as a charging document, written plea agreement or plea-colloquy transcript— which sentencing courts clearly may use,
see Shepard,
However probable it may be that an officer’s testimony at a preliminary examination correctly establishes the facts of an offense to which a defendant later admits guilt,
Shepard
requires more than probable inferences and likely implications. It requires a judicial record that identifies the facts a defendant “necessarily admitted” in entering a guilty plea — as
Shepard
itself demonstrates. The question there was whether the prior offenses involved “violent felon[ies]” under the Armed Career Criminal Act, 18 U.S.C. § 924(e)(1). They met this requirement if they amount
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ed to “generic” burglaries, involving the burglarizing of buildings or related structures.
Shepard,
The same conclusion applies here. We therefore remand the case for resentenc-ing, making it unnecessary to reach Medina-Almaguer’s other sentencing arguments.
III.
For these reasons, we vacate the sentence and remand the case to the district court for resentencing.
