The defendant was charged, along with Arlandis Issac, with armed bank robbery in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 2113(a), (d). He pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 110 months in prison. (Issac, not an appellant in this case, also pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 168 months.) The question presented by the appeal is whether the district judge was correct to add two levels to the defendant’s base offense level pursuant to section 2B3.1(b)(4)(B) of the federal sentencing guidelines. That section requires the enhancement if a person is “physically restrained to facilitate the commission of the offense [of robbery] or to facilitate escape.” The term “physically restrained” is defined as “the forcible restraint of the victim such as by being tied, bound, or locked up.” U.S.S.G. § 1B1.1, application note 1(K). The enhancement raised the defendant’s guidelines sentencing range from 92-115 months to 110-137 months. (These ranges include a six-level increase above the defendant’s base offense level because he had used a gun in the robbery.) The judge thus gave him a sentence that was at the bottom of the range that the enhancement for physical *813 restraining lifted him into and below the maximum without the enhancement.
The defendant and Issac had entered the bank with two other men. With the other two guarding the lobby, the defendant ordered a teller at gunpoint to open her money drawer while Issac went to the vault at the back of the bank where another teller was standing, whom Issac ordered at gunpoint to get down on her knees. He tugged her back to a standing position and with one hand holding a gun pointed at her back and the other placed on the back of her neck or head led her from the vault to her teller’s position, shoved her, face down, to the floor, and held her there. The robbers looted the tellers’ money drawers and fled.
The enhancement for physically restraining the second teller in order to facilitate the robbery was based not on anything the defendant had done but rather on Issac’s conduct, which the judge deemed “relevant conduct” of the defendant. See U.S.S.G. § lB1.3(a)(l)(B). That ruling is not questioned but the judge’s reasoning in imposing the enhancement is. She said: “I’m not at all convinced that being moved at the point of a gun is all that different in impact, effect on the victim[,] as being tied, bound or locked up. The person is physically restrained from moving in any direction but the direction in which the robber wants her to go. Now it’s true the gun was not pointed directly at her face ..., but the gun was there.” The judge added that Issac had “pushed [the teller] to the ground and pushed [her] in the small of her back to make sure she was on the ground.... [H]e walked her into the other room while holding a firearm. I think that kind of activity, moving from place to place ... where the firearm is being held clearly to be used on you if you make the wrong move, ... complies with the definition of forcible restraint of a victim.”
Even if Issac’s conduct didn’t satisfy the guideline definition of physical restraint, if the judge reasonably thought it as evil as, say, handcuffing the teller and locking her in the vault — conduct that clearly would satisfy the definition — she could increase the defendant’s sentence without worrying about the definition. A sentencing judge in this post-Booker era is.entitled to enhance a sentence whether or not the technical requirements of the guidelines are met. But since the judge based her sentence instead on her understanding of the physical-restraint guideline we must decide whether that understanding was correct.
Had she based the enhancement not on Issac’s having pointed his gun at the teller to control her movement but on his having shoved and dragged or pushed her to the floor and held her down, there would be no issue for appeal; that would be “physically restraining” in even the narrowest sense of the term.
United States v. Old Chief,
He claims that
Begay v. United States,
What is true is that a statutory list of examples of conduct that violates the statute can be a clue to the statute’s intended scope; that is the core of good sense in the “canon of construction” known as
eiusdem generis
(Latin for “of the same kind,” in law Latin usually spelled
ejusdem generis
). The examples are a substitute for or supplement to a definition.
Begay
was interpreting a statute that defined as a violent felony an act or series of acts that constitute “burglary, arson, or extortion, involves use of explosives, or otherwise involves conduct that presents a serious potential risk of physical injury to another.” 18 U.S.C. § 924(e)(2)(B)(ii) (emphasis added). The examples provided help in interpreting “conduct that presents a serious potential risk of physical injury to another.” The Court held that driving under the influence, although a dangerous activity, was not within the statute’s scope because it lacked the essential character of the listed crimes, which the Court described as “purposeful, violent, and aggressive” conduct.
The essential character of conduct that is subject to the physical-restraint guideline (which defines “physically restraining” only tautologically, as “forcible restraint”) is depriving a person of his freedom of physical movement,
United States v. Old Chief, supra,
The difference, though it has penological relevance only by virtue of the structure of the guidelines, is the six-level enhancement that the defendant received for using a gun. When he pointed his gun at a teller and told her to open her money drawer, he effectively prevented her from responding that she’d be happy to do that in a moment but first she’d like to go outside for a smoke. But it is not suggested that since he prevented her from moving, as she doubtless would have wanted to do, he should get the two-level physical-restraint enhancement on top of the six-level enhancement for use of a gun. For that would make the enhancement available in every robbery case, since the rob
*815
ber must always make his victim stay still while being robbed. But a characteristic shared by all instances of a crime is reflected in the base offense level for the crime and therefore is unavailable for use as an enhancement.
United States v. Rodgers,
We examine that question through the lens provided by two of our previous decisions. The first,
United States v. Doubet,
In the second case,
United States v. Carter,
Carter
governs our case. It accords with the decisions in all the comparable cases that we’ve found in the other courts of appeals,
United States v. Stevens,
One small matter remains to be considered. The judge ordered the defendant to participate in the Inmate Financial Responsibility Program, 28 C.F.R. § 545.10. That was error; participation is voluntary.
United States v. Munoz,
The judgment is modified accordingly, and as modified is
Affirmed.
