Wе decided this case by unpublished order on October 27. The defendant has now askеd us to publish the portion of the order that decides whether the Illinois robbery statutе defines a “crime of violence” for purposes of sentence enhancement under § 4B1.-1 of the federal sentencing guidelines, which deals with career offenders. We have decided to grant the motion and issue as an opinion a somewhat amplified version of' the relevant part of the order, becausе the issue could recur.
In deciding whether a previous conviction, which the government wants to use to increase the defendant’s sentence under a new cоnviction, is a “crime of violence,” the district court may inquire into the facts underlying thе previous conviction — may inquire, that is, whether the crime
really
involved violence — only if the offense in question could, as a matter of law, be committed without violence within the meaning of the guidelines.
United States v. Jones,
We classified robbery under Illinois law as a per se crime of violence for purposes of sentence enhancement in
United States v. Carter,
We have no doubt, however, thаt the “force” to which the Illinois statute refers is force against a person, not against an animal or a thing. It would be unpleasant to be threatened with the destruсtion of your grandfather’s gold watch or your daughter’s pet canary if you refused tо surrender your money to the threatener, but it would not be robbery. It would be theft by extortion if the extortionist obtained your property, Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 38, 111115-5(a), 16-1(c), whether or not hе carried out the threat.
People v. Bell,
Affirmed.
