Defendant-Appellant Gary Mills appeals from a judgment of conviction of the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut (Peter C. Dorsey,
Judge)
by which he was sentenced principally to a term of imprisonment of 188 months under the Armed Career Criminal Act (“ACCA”), 18 U.S.C. § 924(e). The ACCA applies to persons who violate 18 U.S.C. § 922(g) and who have “three previous convictions ... for a violent felony or a serious drug offense, or both.” 18 U.S.C. § 924(e)(1). Mills met the first requirement inasmuch as he pled guilty to being a felon in possession of a firearm in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). He argues, however, that he did not have three prior convictions for violent felonies or serious drug offenses, and that he therefore should not have been sentenced under the ACCA. Specifically, Mills asserts that his prior conviction for first-degree escape in violation of Conn. Gen.Stat. § 53a-169 should not have been treated as a violent felony within the meaning of the statute. The government concedes that under the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Chambers v. United States,
— U.S. -,
Mills contends further that his sentence was procedurally unreasonable because the sentencing court failed to address his request for a downward departure. Because we remand for resentencing in any event, we need not and do not resolve this issue.
BACKGROUND
On February 18, 2003, Mills was indicted on one count of being a felon in possession of a firearm in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). On October 19, 2006, he pled guilty. The United States Probation Office prepared a presentence investigation report (“PSR”) recommending that Mills be sentenced under the ACCA because he had three prior convictions for a violent felony or serious drug offense. Mills objected, arguing that one of the three predicate offenses identified in the PSR, first-degree escape in violation of Conn. Gen. Stat. § 53a-169, was not a violent felony. 1
*510 At an evidentiary hearing in the district court, defense counsel established the circumstances of Mills’s conviction in state court for first-degree escape. On July 15, 1997, Mills was released from prison and placed in “transitional supervision,” under which he was authorized to reside in a private residence. By statute, however, he remained under the jurisdiction of the Connecticut Commissioner of Correction, see Conn. Gen.Stat. § 18-100(e), and was required to satisfy conditions similar to those required of parolees, including reporting regularly to a community enforcement officer.
On July 16, 1997, the day after his release, Mills reported as scheduled to his community enforcement officer. He was required to do so thereafter on a weekly basis. Following that appointment, however, he failed to appear for the meetings.
When Mills missed his next appointment, the enforcement officer attempted to find Mills by visiting the private residence in which he had been authorized to reside. Mills was not there. In light of Mills’s continued missed appointments and the officer’s continued inability to locate him, Mills was charged with first-degree escape in violation of Conn. Gen.Stat. § 53a-169(a). On June 2, 1998, he was convicted of this crime. The PSR. relied on this conviction as a predicate violent felony conviction in recommending that Mills be sentenced under the ACCA.
At a sentencing hearing held on January 22, 2007, the district court rejected Mills’s objection to the classification of this offense as a violent felony for purposes of sentencing him under the ACCA. Employing the “categorical approach,”
see Taylor v. United States,
Defense counsel argued for a below-Guidelines sentence equal to the mandatory minimum, 180 months, based on the nonviolent nature of Mills’s “escape” and his “extraordinary rehabilitation” while incarcerated prior to sentencing. Mills also filed a sentencing memorandum setting *511 forth two additional grounds for a below-Guidelines sentence: the restrictive conditions of his confinement while in state custody under a federal detainer and “the profound effect upon Mr. Mills during his formative years” of the suicides of his sister and godfather.
The district court explicitly discussed the sentencing factors enumerated in 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a). “The credit you are entitled to,” the district judge said, “includes an accommodation for the fact that you have manifested a redirection of your life ... and I think you’re entitled to some credit for that, but on the other hand, the seriousness of the offense ... is something I cannot ignore.... I am not inclined to think that in reaching for what is a reasonable sentence, that going below the [Guideline range is warranted.” Transcript of January 22, 2007, Sentencing Hr’g (page unnumbered); Government Appendix at 126-27. The court therefore imposed a sentence of 188 months, which was at the bottom of the Guidelines range and eight months above the mandatory minimum sentence under the ACCA.
DISCUSSION
I. Applicability of the ACCA
A. Standard of Review.
“We review de novo the district court’s determination of whether a prior offense is a ‘violent felony’ under the ACCA.”
United States v. Lynch,
B. Analysis
Mills was convicted in state court of escape in the first degree under Conn. Gen Stat. § 53a-169, the text of which is set forth in the margin at note 1 above. A person is guilty of this crime if,
inter alia,
he or she “escapes from a correctional institution,” Conn. Gen Stat. § 53a-169(a)(1), or “escapes from any public or private, nonprofit halfway house, group home or mental health facility or community residence to which he was transferred pursuant to subsection (e) of section 18-100 and he is in the custody of the Commissioner of Correction or is required to be returned to the custody of said commissioner upon his release from such facility,”
id.
at § 53a-169(a)(2). The Connecticut Supreme Court has interpreted “escape” within the meaning of Section 53a-169 to mean any “unauthorized departure from, or failure to return to, whatever may be designated as [the defendant’s] place of incarceration or confinement.”
State v. Lubus,
“In
Taylor
[,] ... the [Supreme] Court endorsed a ‘categorical approach’ to determining whether a prior conviction qualifies as a ‘violent felony’ under the ACCA. The sentencing court generally must ‘look only to the fact of conviction and the statutory definition of the prior offense.’ ”
United States v. Rosa,
The inquiry is an easy one here. The government concedes that Mills’s pri- or conviction for escape was pursuant to Conn. Gen Stat. § 53a-169(a)(2). The Connecticut Supreme Court has made clear that a violation of this section of the statute is consistent with both an affirmative escape from custody
and
a mere failure to return.
See Lubus,
For this reason, the record would not support, in the wake of Chambers, a conclusion that the defendant had been convicted in state court of an “escape” crime that generically qualifies as a violent felony under § 924(e)....
[E]ven the facts outside the scope of Shepard, if they could have been considered, would have narrowed Mills’[s] conviction only to either a failure to report or a walkaway escape from a non-secure facility.... [T]he Government concedes that a simple walkaway escape from a nonsecure community residence does not constitute the sort of purposeful, aggressive and violent behavior that is required ... to constitute a “violent felony” for the purposes of § 924(e).
Id. at 2-3.
We need not address whether a “walkaway escape” is, as the government says, not a violent felony for these purposes under
Chambers. Cf. Jackson,
Mills’s sentencing was thus improper, if understandably so. The district court’s determination that Mills was an armed career criminal under the ACCA had two effects on his sentencing: (1) it required a mandatory minimum sentence of 180 months under 18 U.S.C. § 924(e)(1); and (2) it changed Mills’s base offense level from 24 to 33 pursuant to U.S.S.G. § 4B1.4(b)(3)(B), which led to a Guidelines imprisonment range of 188 to 235 months. As noted, the district court sentenced Mills to a term of 188 months, at the bottom of this range. Because the district court’s calculation of the applicable Guidelines range was affected by its determination— which, in light of
Chambers,
we now recognize was incorrect—that Mills was an armed career criminal under the ACCA, we remand to the district court to vacate the sentence and to resentence Mills.
2
Cf.
*513
United States v. Fagans,
II. Whether Mills’s Sentence Was Proeedurally Unreasonable
We doubt that Mills’s sentence was imposed in a procedurally unreasonable manner.
See Rita v. United States,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we remand to the district court to vacate the sentence and to resentence Mills.
Notes
. In 1997 the statute provided, in pertinent part:
A person is guilty of escape in the first degree (1) if he escapes from a correctional institution or (2) if he escapes from any *510 public or private, nonprofit halfway house, group home or mental health facility or community residence to which he was transferred pursuant to subsection (e) of section. 18-100 and he is in the custody of the Commissioner of Correction or is required to be returned to the custody of said commissioner upon his release from such facility or (3) if he escapes from a work detail or school on the premises of the correctional institution or (4) if he fails to return from a furlough ... or (5) if he fails to return from work release or education release as authorized under sections 18-90a and 18-100 or (6) if he escapes from a hospital for mental illness in which he has been confined ... or (7) if, while under the jurisdiction of the Psychiatric Security Review Board, but not confined to a hospital for mental illness, he leaves the state without authorization of the board.
Conn. Gen.Stat. § 53a-169(a). Connecticut law further provides:
If the Commissioner of Correction deems that the purposes of this section may thus be more effectively carried out, the commissioner may transfer any person from one correctional institution to another or to any public or private nonprofit halfway house, group home or mental health facility or, after satisfactory participation in a residential program, to any approved community or private residence. Any inmate so transferred shall remain under the jurisdiction of said commissioner.
Conn. Gen.Stat. § 18-100(e).
. We intimate no view as to the appropriate course of action when an improper applica *513 tion of the ACCA does not affect the district court's calculation of the applicable sentencing range.
