Ryan Peters pleaded guilty to possession of a firearm as a convicted felon, for which the maximum penalty is ten years in prison. 18 U.S.C. §§ 922(g)(1), 924(a)(2). His base offense level under the Sentencing Guidelines would have been 15 (resulting in a sentencing range of 41-51 months), but the district court held that Peters’s two prior convictions — one for substantial battery with intent to commit bodily harm in violation of section 940.19(2) of the Wisconsin Statutes and one for battery, habitual criminality in violation of sections 940.19(1), 939.62(l)(a), and 939.62(2) of the Wisconsin Statutes— were “crimes of violence” as defined by the guidelines. See U.S.S.G. 4B1.2(a)(l). This increased his offense level to 24, resulting in a sentencing range of 110 to 137 months. See U.S.S.G. 2K2.1(a)(2).
Peters objected, arguing that the Fifth and Sixth Amendments required that a jury determine beyond a reasonable doubt whether his prior convictions were crimes of violence. He argued that the logic of
United States v. Booker,
Peters maintains that
AlmendarezTorres
is no longer good law in light of
Boolcer
— that juries, not judges, must determine beyond a reasonable doubt the fact and nature of prior convictions that increase penalties. That argument is foreclosed by several of this court’s
post-Booker
cases. We note as an initial matter that this case does not squarely implicate the question of whether
Almendarez-Torres
survives
Booker
because the two battery convictions increased only Peters’s guidelines range, not his statutory maximum penalty, and the remedial opinion in
Booker
cured the constitutional problem posed by the guidelines by making them advisory. Peters’s sentence was statutorily capped at ten years, and findings that move him up in the guidelines range do not implicate the rule of
Almendarez-Torres. See United States v. Ngo,
In any event,
Booker
explicitly maintained the
Almendarez-Torres
rule permitting judges rather than juries to determine the fact and nature of prior convictions used to increase sentences.
Booker,
Accordingly, we have repeatedly declined invitations to hold that
Almendarez-Torres
is no longer valid after
Booker. United States v. Williams,
Similarly, we have previously rejected the argument that the fact and character of prior convictions for guidelines purposes must be proven beyond a reasonable doubt. We have noted that guidelines calculations are conducted the same way now as they were before
Booker. See, e.g., United States v. Robinson,
Peters argues in the alternative that the information upon which the district court based its determination that his prior convictions were crimes of violence did not satisfy the requirements of Shepard. He says the presentence report referred only to the criminal complaints in his prior cases, not the actual judgments against him. It is unclear why Peters thinks the judgments are necessary — he did not dispute that he was convicted of the two offenses. Even if the presentence report referenced only the charging documents, as Peters asserts, that (coupled with his admission that the convictions were his) would be sufficient.
Shepard
— which dealt with mandatory penalty increases for recidivists under the Armed Career Criminal Act, but which also applies to guidelines recidivist enhancements,
United States v. McGee,
In any event, Peters’s presentence report does reference judgments. It states that Peters “was convicted of substantial battery-intended bodily harm in Case No. 96CF218 on 2/21/97 and of battery, habitual criminality in Case No. 99CM574 on 2/16/00,” and in an addendum notes that the report writer examined only “the judgment and criminal complaint to determine if the underlying offenses were crimes of violence.” The district court’s reliance on the information in the presentence report did not run afoul of Shepard. Accordingly, the only question left is whether the court correctly concluded that the two battery convictions were crimes of violence.
As we have noted, whether a pri- or conviction was for a crime of violence is a legal inquiry into the nature of the crime of conviction, not a factual inquiry into the underlying conduct of the defendant.
Lewis,
Accordingly, for the foregoing reasons, we reject Peters’s argument that he was entitled to have a beyond-a-reasonable-doubt jury determination of the fact and nature of his prior convictions. The district court properly concluded that his two battery convictions are crimes of violence for purposes of calculating his advisory sentencing range. Peters has not challenged the reasonableness of his sentence under Booker.
Affirmed.
