United States v. Eddy Wilmer Vail-Bailon ( 2017 )


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  •                Case: 15-10351      Date Filed: 08/25/2017      Page: 1 of 67
    [PUBLISH]
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    ________________________
    No. 15-10351
    ________________________
    D.C. Docket No. 9:14-cr-80117-KLR-1
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff - Appellee,
    versus
    EDDY WILMER VAIL-BAILON,
    Defendant - Appellant.
    ________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Florida
    ________________________
    (August 25, 2017)
    Before ED CARNES, Chief Judge, and TJOFLAT, HULL, MARCUS, WILSON,
    WILLIAM PRYOR, MARTIN, JORDAN, ROSENBAUM, JULIE CARNES, and
    JILL PRYOR, Circuit Judges.∗
    JULIE CARNES, Circuit Judge:
    ∗
    Judge Kevin C. Newsom, who joined the Court on August 4, 2017, did not participate in these
    en banc proceedings.
    Case: 15-10351    Date Filed: 08/25/2017    Page: 2 of 67
    This appeal requires us to decide whether Florida felony battery is a crime of
    violence under the Sentencing Guidelines. Defendant Eddy Wilmer Vail-Bailon
    was convicted in 2014 of illegally reentering the United States, in violation of 
    8 U.S.C. §§ 1326
    (a) and (b)(1), after having been deported following a conviction
    for felony battery under Florida Statute § 784.041. Based on Vail-Bailon’s felony
    battery conviction, the district court imposed a sentencing enhancement that
    applies when a defendant has been deported after committing a crime of violence
    as defined by the applicable Guidelines provision. Vail-Bailon appealed his
    sentence, arguing that a Florida felony battery conviction does not qualify as a
    crime of violence. A divided panel of this Court agreed with Vail-Bailon, and
    vacated his sentence. See United States v. Vail-Bailon, 
    838 F.3d 1091
     (11th Cir.
    2016), reh’g en banc granted, opinion vacated (11th Cir. Nov. 21, 2016). Our full
    Court granted the Government’s petition to rehear the case en banc, and we now
    hold that Florida felony battery does categorically qualify as a crime of violence
    under § 2L1.2 of the Guidelines. Thus, we affirm and reinstate Vail-Bailon’s
    sentence.
    BACKGROUND
    Vail-Bailon, a citizen of Guatemala, was deported in 2008 following his
    conviction for felony battery under Florida Statute § 784.041. In 2014, Vail-
    Bailon was arrested in Palm Beach County, Florida and charged with illegally
    2
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    reentering the United States after being deported following a felony conviction, in
    violation of 
    8 U.S.C. §§ 1326
    (a) and (b)(1). Vail-Bailon pled guilty to the charge.
    At Vail-Bailon’s sentencing, the district court imposed a 16-level
    enhancement pursuant to § 2L1.2 of the Sentencing Guidelines. At the time of the
    sentencing, § 2L1.2 required this enhancement for a defendant previously deported
    after being convicted of a felony that is a crime of violence. U.S.S.G.
    § 2L1.2(b)(1)(A)(ii)(2014). 1 Over Vail-Bailon’s objection, the district court
    concluded that felony battery as set forth in Florida Statute § 784.041 qualifies as a
    crime of violence under § 2L1.2, and that the enhancement thus applied to Vail-
    Bailon. As enhanced, Vail-Bailon’s advisory guidelines range was 37 to 46
    months. He was sentenced to 37 months. As noted, on appeal, a divided panel of
    this Court agreed with Vail-Bailon that Florida felony battery under § 784.041
    does not constitute a crime of violence.
    1
    Section 2L1.2 was amended in November 2016. See U.S.S.G. § 2L1.2 (2016). Under the
    amended version, the level of enhancement applicable to a defendant who previously was
    deported after a felony conviction depends on the length of the sentence the defendant received
    for the felony offense. Id. § 2L1.2(b)(2). The 2016 amendments are substantive rather than
    clarifying. See United States v. Jerchower, 
    631 F.3d 1181
    , 1185 (11th Cir. 2011) (“An
    amendment that alters the text of the Guideline itself suggests a substantive change[.]”). Thus,
    the pre-amended version of § 2L1.2 governs our analysis in this case. See 
    18 U.S.C. § 3553
    (a)(4)(A)(ii) (instructing the sentencing court to apply the Guidelines “that . . . are in
    effect on the date the defendant is sentenced”); Jerchower, 
    631 F.3d at 1184
     (“Substantive
    amendments to the Guidelines . . . are not applied retroactively on direct appeal.”).
    3
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    STANDARD OF REVIEW AND ANALYTIC FRAMEWORK
    We review de novo whether Vail-Bailon’s felony battery conviction
    qualifies as a crime of violence under § 2L1.2 of the Sentencing Guidelines, and
    we apply a categorical approach. United States v. Garcia-Martinez, 
    845 F.3d 1126
    , 1129–30 (11th Cir. 2017). That is, we look at how the Florida statute
    defines felony battery to determine whether the offense qualifies as a crime of
    violence rather than looking at the particular facts underlying Vail-Bailon’s
    conviction. See Welch v. United States, 
    136 S. Ct. 1257
    , 1262 (2016) (“Under the
    categorical approach, a court assesses whether a crime qualifies as a violent felony
    in terms of how the law defines the offense and not in terms of how an individual
    offender might have committed it on a particular occasion.” (internal quotation
    marks omitted)). More specifically, we assume Vail-Bailon committed felony
    battery by the least of the acts criminalized under the statute, and then we ask
    whether that act necessarily satisfies the definition of a crime of violence as set
    forth in § 2L1.2. See Moncrieffe v. Holder, 
    133 S. Ct. 1678
    , 1684 (2013)
    (“Because we examine what the state conviction necessarily involved, not the facts
    underlying the case, we must presume that the conviction rested upon nothing
    more than the least of the acts criminalized[.]” (alterations adopted and internal
    quotation marks omitted)).
    4
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    In some cases, we are able to use a modified categorical approach to
    determine whether a conviction qualifies as a crime of violence. See Mathis v.
    United States, 
    136 S. Ct. 2243
    , 2249 (2016) (describing the modified categorical
    approach and clarifying when it is applicable). The modified categorical approach
    only applies when a criminal statute is divisible, meaning that it “list[s] elements in
    the alternative, and thereby define[s] multiple crimes.” 
    Id.
     When that is the case,
    the modified approach allows us to examine a “limited class of documents”—
    known as Shepard2 documents and including such items as the indictment, jury
    instructions, and plea agreement—“to determine what crime, with what elements, a
    defendant was convicted” of so that we can then assess whether the conviction
    satisfies the definition of a crime of violence. Mathis, 
    136 S. Ct. at 2249
    .
    Because there are no available Shepard documents in this case, the modified
    categorical approach has no applicability here.3 See Johnson v. United States, 
    559 U.S. 133
    , 140 (2010) (“Curtis Johnson”) (applying the categorical approach where
    there were no Shepard documents to show that the defendant’s conviction rested
    on anything more than the least of the acts criminalized by Florida’s simple battery
    2
    Shepard v. United States, 
    544 U.S. 13
     (2005).
    3
    The majority in the now-vacated panel opinion in this case assumed that Florida Statute
    § 784.041 is divisible because it can be violated either by touching or by striking. But given the
    lack of Shepard documents, the panel was unable to apply the modified categorical approach.
    Because we hold that Florida felony battery under § 784.041 categorically qualifies as a crime of
    violence, we need not reach the question whether the statute is divisible.
    5
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    statute). That means that the only question before us is whether Florida felony
    battery constitutes a crime of violence under the categorical approach.
    DISCUSSION
    I.     Legal Background
    A.      Section 2L1.2
    The operative version of § 2L1.2 requires a 16-level enhancement if a
    defendant who is convicted of illegal entry previously was deported after being
    convicted of a felony “crime of violence.” U.S.S.G. § 2L1.2(b)(1)(A)(ii). The
    commentary 4 to § 2L1.2 defines the term crime of violence to include, among
    other qualifying crimes, a state offense “that has as an element the use, attempted
    use, or threatened use of physical force against the person of another.” U.S.S.G. §
    2L1.2 cmt. n.1(B)(iii). We refer to this part of § 2L1.2’s definition 5 of the term
    crime of violence as the “elements clause.” Garcia-Martinez, 845 F.3d at 1129. 6
    4
    The commentary “is authoritative” as to the meaning of a term used in the Guidelines “unless
    it violates the Constitution or a federal statute, or is inconsistent with, or a plainly erroneous
    reading of” the guideline at issue. United States v. Jordi, 
    418 F.3d 1212
    , 1216 (11th Cir. 2005)
    (quotation omitted). The parties agree that the commentary’s definition of the term crime of
    violence is controlling here.
    5
    Likewise, § 4B1.2(a)(1) includes an elements clause in its definition of a crime of violence for
    purposes of imposing a career offender enhancement.
    6
    The commentary also includes a list of enumerated offenses that qualify as crimes of violence.
    See U.S.S.G. § 2L1.2, cmt. n.1(B)(iii). We refer to that list as the “enumerated offenses clause.”
    Garcia-Martinez, 845 F.3d at 1129. The enumerated offenses clause is not at issue here.
    6
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    B.      Curtis Johnson
    As the basis for his challenge, Vail-Bailon argues that Florida felony battery
    does not require the use of “physical force.” And because a statute must proscribe
    the use, attempted use, or threatened use of physical force before it can be said to
    constitute a crime of violence, Vail-Bailon contends that his felony-battery
    conviction therefore does not qualify.
    In Curtis Johnson v. United States, the Supreme Court defined “physical
    force” for purposes of the elements clause to mean “violent force—that is, force
    capable of causing physical pain or injury to another person.” Curtis Johnson, 
    559 U.S. at 140
     (underlined emphasis added). However, in contrast with this case,
    which involves a felony battery conviction under Florida Statute § 784.041,7 Curtis
    Johnson examined whether a conviction for simple battery under Florida Statute
    § 784.03 satisfied the elements clause of the Armed Career Criminal Act
    (“ACCA”), 
    18 U.S.C. § 924
    (e)(2)(B)(i).8 
    Id. at 136
    . The Florida simple battery
    statute is violated when a defendant “[a]ctually and intentionally touches or strikes
    7
    As set out infra, Florida felony battery under § 784.041 requires as an element of the offense
    that the defendant’s battery cause great bodily harm, permanent disability, or permanent
    disfigurement to the victim.
    8
    The elements clause of the ACCA is identical to the elements clause of § 2L1.2. Cases
    construing the ACCA’s elements clause are thus relevant to our inquiry here. See United States
    v. Romo-Villalobos, 
    674 F.3d 1246
    , 1248 (11th Cir. 2012) (noting that “cases dealing with the
    elements clauses of the ACCA and the career offender guidelines” are instructive in a case
    involving the elements clause of § 2L1.2).
    7
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    another person against the will of the other.” 9 
    Fla. Stat. § 784.03
    (1)(a)(1). As
    interpreted by the Florida Supreme Court, actual and intentional touching—the
    only element necessary to support a conviction for simple battery—is satisfied by
    any physical contact, “no matter how slight.” State v. Hearns, 
    961 So. 2d 211
    ,
    218–19 (Fla. 2007) (explaining that simple battery “may be committed with only
    nominal contact”). For example, even a slight but unwanted tap on the shoulder
    suffices for a conviction under the simple battery statute. See 
    id. at 219
    . That
    being so, the Supreme Court concluded in Curtis Johnson that simple battery, as
    defined by Florida Statute § 784.03, does not require the use of force capable of
    causing physical pain or injury and thus does not categorically satisfy the elements
    clause. See Curtis Johnson, 
    559 U.S. at 145
    .
    C.      Florida’s Felony Battery Statute
    Unlike the simple battery statute at issue in Curtis Johnson, Florida’s felony
    battery statute requires more than a slight unwanted touch. As defined by Florida
    Statute § 784.041,10 a person commits felony battery if he:
    9
    The simple battery statute also can be violated by “[i]ntentionally caus[ing] bodily harm to
    another person.” 
    Fla. Stat. § 784.03
    (1)(a)(2). But lacking the Shepard documents necessary to
    determine the basis of the defendant’s conviction—and thus unable to analyze the conviction
    under the modified categorical approach—the Court in Curtis Johnson assumed the defendant
    committed simple battery by actually and intentionally touching his victim, which the Court
    identified as the least of the acts criminalized by the simple battery statute. See Curtis Johnson,
    
    559 U.S. at 137
    .
    10
    Florida felony battery under § 784.041, which requires a battery that causes great bodily
    harm, permanent disability, or permanent disfigurement, should be distinguished from Florida
    8
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    (1)(a) [a]ctually and intentionally touches or strikes another person
    against the will of the other; and
    (b) [c]auses great bodily harm, permanent disability, or permanent
    disfigurement.
    
    Fla. Stat. § 784.041
    (1) (emphasis added). Thus, in addition to touching or striking
    a victim against his will, an offender must also cause the victim to suffer
    significant bodily harm in order to be convicted of felony battery under § 784.041.
    See id.
    Florida’s felony battery statute was intended to fill a gap between simple
    battery, which under Florida Statute § 784.03 is committed when the offender
    subjects his victim to any type of unwanted physical contact, and aggravated
    battery, which under Florida Statute § 784.045 is committed when the offender
    commits a battery and thereby “intentionally or knowingly causes great bodily
    harm, permanent disability, or permanent disfigurement” to his victim. T.S. v.
    State, 
    965 So. 2d 1288
    , 1290 & n.3 (Fla. 2d D.C.A. 2007). All three forms of
    battery require intentional conduct—at the very minimum a touch—that is against
    the will of the victim. See 
    id. at 1290
     (describing the differences between Florida’s
    simple, felony, and aggravated battery statutes). The felony battery statute adds
    felony battery under § 784.03(2), which punishes as a recidivist an offender who has more than
    one prior battery conviction, and Florida felony battery under § 784.07(2)(b), which applies to an
    offender who has committed simple battery against a certain kind of victim, such as a police
    officer. Unless stated otherwise, we are referring to § 784.041 when we use the term “felony
    battery.”
    9
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    the requirement that the intentional and unwanted touch cause great bodily harm to
    the victim. See id. The aggravated battery statute in turn adds the requirement that
    the offender “intended to cause the enhanced level of harm or knew that this level
    of harm would be caused.” See id. Aggravated battery is thus a specific intent
    crime, while simple battery and felony battery are crimes of general intent. See id.;
    Lewis v. State, 
    817 So. 2d 933
    , 934 (Fla. 4th D.C.A. 2002) (noting that Florida
    felony battery is a general intent crime).
    II.   Analysis
    The question raised by this appeal is whether felony battery as defined by
    Florida Statute § 784.041 necessarily requires the use of physical force, and thus
    categorically qualifies as a crime of violence under the elements clause of § 2L1.2.
    Applying the definition of physical force articulated by the Supreme Court in
    Curtis Johnson, we readily conclude that it does.
    A.     “Physical force” for purposes of § 2L1.2’s elements clause means
    “force capable of causing physical pain or injury.”
    As discussed above, the Supreme Court in Curtis Johnson defined the term
    physical force as used in the elements clause to mean: “violent force—that is,
    force capable of causing physical pain or injury to another person.” Curtis
    Johnson, 
    559 U.S. at 140
    . The Court arrived at that definition by looking to the
    ordinary meaning of the words “physical” and “force.” 
    Id.
     at 138–39. Citing
    numerous dictionary definitions, the Court determined that the “physical”
    10
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    component referred to “force exerted by and through concrete bodies,” as
    distinguished from intellectual or emotional force. 
    Id. at 138
    . As for the “force”
    component of the term, the Court noted that in general usage the word force
    connoted a degree of strength or power sufficient to cause pain or injury. 11 
    Id.
     at
    139–40. Nevertheless, physical force “might consist . . . of only that degree of
    force necessary to inflict pain—a slap in the face, for example.” 
    Id. at 143
    .
    Since Curtis Johnson was decided, and until the majority panel opinion in
    this case, there had been no debate in this Circuit about the meaning of the term
    physical force as used in the elements clause. In numerous cases, we have cited
    Curtis Johnson for the proposition that physical force in this context means force
    that is capable of causing physical pain or injury. See United States v. Brown, 
    805 F.3d 1325
    , 1327 (11th Cir. 2015) (“As used in the elements clause, the phrase
    physical force means violent force—that is, force capable of causing physical pain
    or injury to another person.” (internal quotation marks omitted)); United States v.
    Hill, 
    799 F.3d 1318
    , 1322 (11th Cir. 2015) (“The phrase physical force in the
    context of the statutory definition of violent felony means force capable of causing
    11
    The Court recognized that the word force has a specialized meaning that encompasses “even
    the slightest offensive touching” when it is used to define the common-law crime of battery,
    which was treated as a misdemeanor regardless of the manner in which it was committed. Curtis
    Johnson, 
    559 U.S. at
    139–41. But the Court declined to import that specialized meaning of force
    into the elements clause, which is intended to describe violent crimes that would not ordinarily
    include mere offensive touching, and which applies only to felonies rather than misdemeanors.
    See 
    id.
    11
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    physical pain or injury to another person.” (internal quotation marks omitted));
    United States v. Rosales-Bruno, 
    676 F.3d 1017
    , 1021 (11th Cir. 2012) (“[W]hen
    interpreting physical force in defining the analogous statutory category of violent
    felonies, the Supreme Court has confirmed that the phrase physical force means
    violent force—that is, force capable of causing physical pain or injury to another
    person.” (alterations adopted and internal quotation marks omitted)).
    In stating and restating the above definition, we have done nothing more
    than repeat the words that the Supreme Court itself used in articulating the
    applicable standard. Yet, clearly aware that the definition of physical force
    articulated by the Supreme Court in Curtis Johnson—and cited repeatedly by this
    Court—dooms the viability of his position in this case, Vail-Bailon urges us to
    jettison the Supreme Court’s standard in favor of an alternative definition.
    Specifically, Vail-Bailon argues that we should abandon the Supreme Court’s
    definition of physical force as force that is “capable” of causing physical pain or
    injury, and that instead we should substitute a new standard: Physical force is
    force that is “likely to cause pain.” In making this argument, Vail-Bailon relies on
    the Seventh Circuit’s decision in Flores v. Ashcroft, 
    350 F.3d 666
     (7th Cir. 2003)).
    The defendant in Flores was convicted of misdemeanor battery under an Indiana
    statute that criminalized “touching in a rude, insolent, or angry manner” that results
    in “bodily injury.” See Flores, 
    350 F.3d at
    669 (citing 
    Ind. Code § 35-42-2-1
    ).
    12
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    The question before the Seventh Circuit was whether the statute required the use of
    physical force and thus qualified as a crime of violence under the elements clause
    of 
    18 U.S.C. § 16.12
     See 
    id.
     at 669–72. Emphasizing that any contact—even
    indirect contact with an object such as a snowball or paper airplane—counted as a
    touch under the statute, and that even the slightest injury, such as a bruise, satisfied
    the bodily injury element, the court held that a violation of the statute did not
    necessarily require the use of physical force and thus did not qualify as a crime of
    violence. 
    Id.
     at 669–72. The court ultimately defined physical force for purposes
    of the elements clause of § 16 to mean force that is “violent in nature—the sort that
    is intended to cause bodily injury, or at a minimum likely to do so.” Id. at 672.
    And it is this “likelihood” standard that Vail-Bailon argues we should use.
    A litigant asks a lot when he urges a lower court to disregard the standard
    articulated by the Supreme Court in favor of a contrary standard adopted by a
    circuit court. Nonetheless, Vail-Bailon says we should acquiesce because in Curtis
    Johnson, immediately after stating that physical force as used in the elements
    clause refers to violent force and then articulating its “capability” test, the Supreme
    Court cited to the Flores decision.13 See Curtis Johnson, 
    559 U.S. at 140
    .
    12
    Similar to the elements clause of § 2L1.2, 
    18 U.S.C. § 16
     defines the term crime of violence
    to mean “an offense that has as an element the use, attempted use, or threatened use of physical
    force against the person or property of another.” 
    18 U.S.C. § 16
    (a).
    13
    The Court stated, “We think it clear that in the context of a statutory definition of ‘violent
    felony,’ the phrase ‘physical force’ means violent force—that is, force capable of causing
    13
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    According to Vail-Bailon, because the Supreme Court included a pinpoint cite to
    page 672 of the Flores decision and because, among other things, the discussion on
    page 672 includes the articulation of a “likelihood” test, then that means the
    Supreme Court was signaling to the reader that it had not actually adopted the
    “capability” test it had just expressly announced, but instead it was incorporating a
    “likelihood” test that it never bothers to mention. For several reasons, we are not
    persuaded.
    First, we think it unlikely that the Supreme Court would engage in the verbal
    sleight of hand that Vail-Bailon attributes to it. It is a safe operating assumption
    that when the Supreme Court articulates a standard, it actually means the words it
    has used to set out that standard, not words found in a cited circuit court decision.
    To put it another way, if the Supreme Court in Curtis Johnson had intended to
    adopt a likelihood-based standard found in Flores, it would have simply said so,
    and not confused the reader by articulating a test that it never intended to be used.
    See Rambaran v. Sec’y, Dep’t of Corr., 
    821 F.3d 1325
    , 1333 (11th Cir. 2016)
    (“[J]ust as Congress does not generally hide elephants in mouseholes, the Supreme
    Court does not hide clearly established federal law in parenthetical quotations of
    circuit courts’ decisions.” (internal citation and quotation marks omitted)). See
    physical pain or injury to another person. See Flores v. Ashcroft, 
    350 F.3d 666
    , 672 (C.A.7
    2003) (Easterbrook, J.).” Curtis Johnson, 
    559 U.S. at 140
    .
    14
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    also Mathis, 
    136 S. Ct. at 2254
     (“[A] good rule of thumb for reading our decisions
    is that what they say and what they mean are one and the same[.]”). Instead, it is a
    more reasonable assumption that, having cited Flores, the Supreme Court was
    aware of how the Seventh Circuit had defined physical force, but the Court
    deliberately opted for a different definition.
    We note further that the “likely to cause pain” definition proposed by Vail-
    Bailon does not in fact appear in Flores. Indeed, to our knowledge, no court has
    ever defined physical force to mean force that is “likely to cause pain.” As quoted
    above, the court in Flores defined physical force to mean force that is “intended to
    cause bodily injury, or at a minimum likely to do so.” Flores, 
    350 F.3d at 672
    .
    Vail-Bailon concedes that neither part of his proposed definition is consistent with
    Curtis Johnson. That is, the Supreme Court did not identify intent to cause injury
    as a relevant consideration, and it spoke of force that is capable of causing “pain or
    injury” rather than just injury. See Curtis Johnson, 
    559 U.S. at 140
     (emphasis
    added). These acknowledged inconsistencies further undermine Vail-Bailon’s
    argument that we should rely on Flores to supplant the definition of physical force
    articulated by the Supreme Court in Curtis Johnson.
    Nor would the capability-based definition of physical force articulated by
    the Supreme Court in Curtis Johnson swallow the holding of that case, as Vail-
    Bailon argues. According to Vail-Bailon, even the slightest touch is always
    15
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    capable of causing pain or injury and therefore qualifies as physical force under a
    capability-based definition, and yet we know from Curtis Johnson that slight
    touching alone is insufficient to establish physical force. Thus, Vail-Bailon
    contends, if capability of causing pain were the true standard, then the Supreme
    Court would have reached a different result in Curtis Johnson. This argument rests
    on a faulty premise that every slight touch is always capable of causing pain or
    injury. Under normal circumstances, a slight tap on the shoulder or a tickle might
    be offensive if it is unwanted, but it will not be capable of causing either pain or
    injury. Consequently, a statute requiring nothing more than a slight touch does not
    categorically qualify as physical force under the capability-based definition applied
    by Curtis Johnson, as opposed to a statute requiring a touch that is forceful enough
    to cause great bodily harm, which is what the Florida felony battery statute
    requires.
    In short, we conclude that the test set out in Curtis Johnson articulates the
    standard we should follow in determining whether an offense calls for the use of
    physical force, and that test is whether the statute calls for violent force that is
    capable of causing physical pain or injury to another. A statute that requires a
    touching that causes “great bodily harm, permanent disability, or permanent
    disfigurement,” which is what Florida felony battery requires, would certainly
    appear to be a statute that calls for force that is capable of causing physical pain or
    16
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    injury. That the “touching” identified in the Florida felony battery statute actually
    “caused” the significant injury called for by the statute logically suggests that the
    force used in administering the touch was necessarily “capable” of causing that
    injury.
    And on that point, we find agreement with the Seventh Circuit, which has
    recently held that a conviction under an Indiana felony battery statute that is
    materially indistinguishable from the Florida felony battery statute satisfies the
    elements clause. 14 In so holding, the Seventh Circuit rejected essentially the same
    challenges to the statute’s eligibility as a crime of violence15 raised by Vail-Bailon
    and also advocated by the majority panel opinion in support of its holding that
    Florida felony battery does not require the use of violent force. See Douglas v.
    United States, 
    858 F.3d 1069
    , 1071–72 (7th Cir. 2017). 16 In concluding that the
    Indiana felony battery statute meets the elements clause’s requirement of the use of
    physical force, the Seventh Circuit makes it clear that the capability standard
    14
    The Indiana statute requires (1) an intentional touch that (2) results in serious bodily injury.
    
    Ind. Code § 35-42-2-1
    (a) (2005).
    15
    Douglas dealt with the Armed Career Criminal Act, which characterizes the prior predicate
    offense as a violent felony, whereas Vail-Bailon’s predicate offense under the Sentencing
    Guidelines is called a crime of violence, but the elements clause applies equally to both a violent
    felony and a crime of violence, and the terms are synonymous. See Romo-Villalobos, 
    674 F.3d at 1248
     (noting that the elements clause of § 2L1.2 “is the same as the elements clause[] of the
    Armed Career Criminal Act”).
    16
    The author of the Douglas opinion, Judge Easterbrook, was also the author of the Flores
    decision, whose citation by the Supreme Court in Curtis Johnson was heavily relied on by the
    majority panel opinion in reaching its holding. See Vail-Bailon, 838 F.3d at 1096, 1097.
    17
    Case: 15-10351     Date Filed: 08/25/2017      Page: 18 of 67
    announced in Curtis Johnson controls the inquiry, not the likelihood standard set
    out in Flores. See id. at 1071 (“The Court [in Curtis Johnson] stated that the sort
    of force that comes within the elements clause is force capable of causing physical
    pain or injury to another person.” (internal quotation marks omitted)). In fact, the
    Douglas court never mentions a “likelihood” standard nor does it even cite to its
    own opinion in Flores, suggesting the court’s recognition that, in terms of the
    physical force required by a statute, a simple battery statute is obviously
    distinguishable from a statute requiring that the battery cause serious injury.
    Instead, applying the plain language of Curtis Johnson, Douglas explained:
    “[F]orce that actually causes injury necessarily was capable of causing that injury
    and thus satisfies the federal definition.” Id. We agree.
    In short, we see no need to look any further than Curtis Johnson itself for the
    controlling definition of physical force as used in the elements clause. As
    articulated by the Supreme Court in Curtis Johnson, physical force for purposes of
    the elements clause means “violent force—that is, force capable of causing
    physical pain or injury.” Curtis Johnson, 
    559 U.S. at 140
    . We now analyze under
    that standard the Florida felony battery statute and Florida caselaw interpreting it.
    18
    Case: 15-10351     Date Filed: 08/25/2017    Page: 19 of 67
    B.     Florida Statute § 784.041 necessarily requires the use of force
    “capable of causing physical pain or injury.”
    1.     Florida Caselaw
    By its plain terms, felony battery in violation of Florida Statute § 784.041
    requires the use of physical force as defined by Curtis Johnson. To be convicted
    under § 784.041, an offender must intentionally use force—a touch or a strike—
    that is against the victim’s will and that causes the victim to suffer great bodily
    harm. See 
    Fla. Stat. § 784.041
    (1). As noted, we conclude that intentional force—
    even of the touching variety—that in fact causes “great bodily harm, permanent
    disability, or permanent disfigurement,” as required to sustain a conviction under
    § 784.041, necessarily constitutes force that is capable of causing pain or injury.
    Moreover, Florida courts have emphasized that “great bodily harm” in this
    context does not include “slight, trivial, minor, or moderate harm.” E.A. v. State,
    
    599 So. 2d 251
    , 252 (Fla. 3d D.C.A. 1992) (discussing the meaning of great bodily
    harm as used in Florida’s aggravated battery statute) (quotation omitted). For
    example, “mere bruises as are likely to be inflicted in a simple assault and battery”
    do not satisfy the great bodily harm element. 
    Id.
     (quotation omitted); see also
    Smith v. State, 
    175 So. 3d 906
    , 907 (Fla. 4th D.C.A. 2015) (noting that Florida
    courts have defined great bodily harm to exclude slight or trivial harm); Gordon v.
    State, 
    126 So. 3d 292
    , 295 (Fla. 3d D.C.A. 2011) (finding insufficient evidence of
    great bodily harm where the defendant struck the victim one time with a belt,
    19
    Case: 15-10351      Date Filed: 08/25/2017   Page: 20 of 67
    causing bruises that healed without requiring medical treatment); Nguyen v. State,
    
    858 So. 2d 1259
    , 1260 (Fla. 1st D.C.A. 2003) (finding insufficient evidence of
    great bodily harm where the defendant shot the victim with a stun gun, causing
    burn marks but no lasting ill effects).
    In short, slight discomfort and minor injuries do not satisfy the great bodily
    harm element of § 784.041. See E.A., 599 So. 2d at 252; Smith, 175 So. 3d at 907.
    Instead, that element requires that the defendant inflict a severe physical injury on
    the victim. See E.A., 599 So. 2d at 252. In addition, Florida caselaw confirms that
    the statute categorically requires the use of physical force. The most relevant
    Florida caselaw arises in the context of the state’s Prison Releasee Reoffender
    (PRR) and Violent Career Criminal (VCC) statutes, which provide for an enhanced
    sentence when a prison releasee commits, or when a defendant to be sentenced
    previously has been convicted of, a felony that “involves the use or threat of
    physical force or violence against an individual.” See 
    Fla. Stat. § 775.082
    (9)(a)(1)
    (defining the term “prison releasee reoffender” to include a defendant who
    commits a felony that involves the use or threat of physical force or violence
    within three years of being released from a state correctional facility); 
    id.
    § 775.084(1)(d)(1)(a) (defining the term “violent career criminal” to include a
    defendant who has been convicted three times of any forcible felony); id. § 776.08
    20
    Case: 15-10351        Date Filed: 08/25/2017   Page: 21 of 67
    (defining “forcible felony” to encompass a felony that “involves the use or threat
    of physical force or violence”).
    As interpreted by the Florida courts, the physical force clause of the PRR
    and the VCC is materially indistinguishable from the federal elements clause.
    Florida courts apply a categorical approach to determine whether an offense
    qualifies for an enhancement under the clause, and they narrowly construe the
    clause to require that, similar to the federal elements clause, a qualifying offense
    have as a statutory element the use or threat of physical force. See Perkins v. State,
    
    576 So. 2d 1310
    , 1313 (Fla. 1991). In addition, and consistent with the definition
    of physical force articulated in Curtis Johnson, the Florida Supreme Court has
    defined physical force as used in the PRR and VCC statutes to require more than
    mere touching. See Hearns, 
    961 So. 2d at
    218–19. As the Florida Supreme Court
    explained in Hearns, “minor infractions” such as tapping a person on the shoulder
    without consent are “incompatible with the level of force” contemplated by the
    PRR and VCC statutes, and thus do not constitute physical force for purposes of
    those statutes. 
    Id. at 219
    .
    Since Hearns, and with the benefit of its reasoning, the Florida appellate
    courts uniformly have concluded that felony battery as defined by Florida Statute
    § 784.041 categorically qualifies as a predicate under the PRR and VCC statutes
    because it “cannot be committed without the use of physical force or violence.”
    21
    Case: 15-10351     Date Filed: 08/25/2017    Page: 22 of 67
    Dominguez v. State, 
    98 So. 3d 198
    , 200 (Fla. 2d D.C.A. 2012); see also Brooks v.
    State, 
    93 So. 3d 402
    , 403 (Fla. 2d D.C.A. 2012) (holding that felony battery in
    violation of § 784.041 is a qualifying offense for PRR sentencing); State v.
    Williams, 
    9 So. 3d 658
    , 660 (Fla. 4th D.C.A. 2009) (noting that § 784.041 cannot
    be violated “without the use or threat of physical force or violence” (internal
    quotation marks omitted)). In reaching this conclusion, the Florida courts have
    distinguished between simple battery under § 784.03, which requires nothing more
    than a slight unwanted touch, and felony battery under § 784.041, which requires a
    touch or strike sufficient to inflict great bodily harm. Compare Williams, 
    9 So. 3d at 660
     (clarifying that when the statutory elements of § 784.041 are satisfied,
    felony battery qualifies for PRR sentencing), and Spradlin v. State, 
    967 So. 2d 376
    ,
    378 (Fla. 4th D.C.A. 2007) (holding that a second offense of simple battery, which
    is punished as a felony but only requires nominal contact as defined by Florida
    Statute § 784.03, does not necessarily involve physical force and thus does not
    qualify for PRR sentencing).
    We draw the same distinction, and reach the same conclusion. Simple
    battery in violation of Florida Statute § 784.03, which is satisfied by a slight
    unwanted touch, does not require the use of force capable of causing pain or injury
    and thus does not qualify as a predicate under the federal elements clause. On the
    other hand, felony battery, which includes the additional element that the touch or
    22
    Case: 15-10351      Date Filed: 08/25/2017    Page: 23 of 67
    strike in fact cause significant physical injury, necessarily requires the use of force
    capable of causing pain or injury and therefore does so qualify.
    Vail-Bailon argues that the cited Florida caselaw is irrelevant to whether
    Florida felony battery qualifies as a predicate under § 2L1.2 because that question
    is governed by federal law. Of course, federal law rather than Florida law
    determines the meaning of physical force as that term is used in the federal
    elements clause. See Curtis Johnson, 
    559 U.S. at 138
    . For that reason, we apply
    the definition of physical force provided by the Supreme Court in Curtis Johnson
    to determine whether Florida felony battery satisfies the elements clause.
    Furthermore, we recognize that we are not bound by the Florida courts’
    interpretation of a state sentencing provision that is similar—or even identical—to
    the federal elements clause. See 
    id.
     But state law does determine the elements of
    the underlying state statute at issue. 
    Id.
     See also Romo-Villalobos, 
    674 F.3d at 1249
     (“While [Curtis] Johnson proscribes us from relying on state case law to
    determine whether a crime requires violent force, it expressly directs us to look at
    state cases to determine the elements of the state offense.” (internal quotation
    marks omitted)).
    That being so, it is significant that (1) in applying a definition of physical
    force that is consistent with the definition set forth in Curtis Johnson (2) in the
    context of a state sentencing provision that is indistinguishable from the federal
    23
    Case: 15-10351     Date Filed: 08/25/2017   Page: 24 of 67
    elements clause, (3) Florida courts have held that felony battery in violation of
    Florida Statute § 784.041 “cannot be committed without the use of physical force
    or violence.” Dominguez, 
    98 So. 3d at 200
    . Likewise, given the Florida Supreme
    Court’s guidance in Hearns that the PRR and VCC statutes are not intended to
    encompass “minor infractions” that are “incompatible” with the degree of force
    contemplated by those statutes, it is noteworthy that Florida appellate courts
    uniformly have held that Florida felony battery qualifies as a predicate offense for
    PRR and VCC sentencing purposes.
    Alternatively, Vail-Bailon argues that we should ignore the Florida appellate
    cases because he thinks they reached the wrong decisions. We disagree that the
    courts reached the wrong decision or that we could disregard their decisions even if
    we thought them wrong. These appellate decisions are controlling as to this issue
    absent “some persuasive indication that the [Florida Supreme Court] would decide
    the issue differently.” Hill, 799 F.3d at 1322 (internal quotation marks omitted).
    There is no such indication here. Vail-Bailon contends that the appellate cases
    conflict with Hearns, but Hearns is easily distinguishable. In Hearns, the Florida
    Supreme Court held that battery on a law enforcement officer did not necessarily
    involve physical force because, like simple battery, it could be accomplished by
    “any intentional touching, no matter how slight.” Hearns, 
    961 So. 2d at 218
    . That
    holding is entirely consistent with Dominguez, Williams, and Brooks because, in
    24
    Case: 15-10351     Date Filed: 08/25/2017    Page: 25 of 67
    order to be convicted of felony battery under Florida Statute § 784.041, the
    defendant must touch or strike the victim in a manner that causes not just offense
    or slight discomfort but great bodily harm. See E.A., 599 So. 2d at 252. Indeed, as
    noted, the Florida appellate courts have on this basis distinguished felony battery
    from simple battery for purposes of the PRR and VCC statutes. See Williams, 
    9 So. 3d at
    659–60 (distinguishing the defendant’s felony battery conviction under
    § 784.041 from the second offense simple battery conviction at issue in Spradlin).
    2.     The hypotheticals proffered by Vail-Bailon do not alter our
    conclusion.
    Contrary to every Florida court that has considered the issue, Vail-Bailon
    argues that Florida felony battery does not categorically require the use of physical
    force because it is possible for an offender to violate Florida Statute § 784.041 by
    engaging in conduct that consists of no more than a slight touch or nominal
    contact. In support of this argument, Vail-Bailon proffers the following
    hypotheticals: (1) an offender lightly taps on the shoulder a victim who happens to
    be standing at the top of a staircase, startling the victim, who then falls down the
    stairs and suffers grievous injury; (2) an offender tickles a victim who is standing
    near an open window, startling the victim, who then hurtles through the open
    window and suffers severe injury; and (3) an offender applies a seemingly
    innocuous lotion onto the skin of a victim who has an unknown allergy,
    unexpectedly triggering an allergic reaction that results in serious injury.
    25
    Case: 15-10351        Date Filed: 08/25/2017       Page: 26 of 67
    According to Vail-Bailon, because the offender in each of these scenarios
    could conceivably be prosecuted under Florida Statute § 784.041, even though the
    force used by the offender is minimal, the statute therefore flunks the physical
    force test. The defendant in the Douglas case made essentially the same
    arguments, and the Seventh Circuit rejected these farfetched hypotheticals, as do
    we. First, there is no support in Florida law for the idea that Florida Statute
    § 784.041 is designed to criminalize the conduct described in the proffered
    hypotheticals. See Douglas, 858 F.3d at 1071 (rejecting a similar “tickling”
    argument and noting that the defendant “ha[d] not located any decision in which
    Indiana’s courts have convicted someone of committing [the serious bodily injury
    version of] felony battery after a light touch initiates a long causal chain that ends
    in serious injury”). To our knowledge, there is likewise no case in which tapping,
    tickling, or lotion-applying—or any remotely similar conduct—has been held to
    constitute a felony battery under Florida Statute § 784.041. Rather, the real-world
    examples of Florida felony battery we are aware of all involve conduct that clearly
    required the use of physical force, as defined by Curtis Johnson. 17 See, e.g.,
    Williams, 
    9 So. 3d at 659
     (biting the victim with such force that the resulting
    17
    As did Vail-Bailon’s conduct in this case. According to the description of the underlying
    facts in his PSR, Vail-Bailon, after an argument with his wife, broke down her bedroom door and
    “choked, strangled, and punched her multiple times,” repeatedly stating, “You destroyed my
    life,” and “I will kill you.” When his wife fled to seek help, Vail-Bailon “grabbed her by the hair
    and dragged her back to the house” while repeatedly punching her in the head and face.
    26
    Case: 15-10351     Date Filed: 08/25/2017    Page: 27 of 67
    laceration required emergency medical treatment); Lewis, 
    817 So. 2d at 933
    (punching the victim in the face “with a force that required stitches and left a
    scar”); Harris v. State, 
    111 So. 3d 922
    , 923–24 (Fla. 1st D.C.A. 2013) (grabbing
    the victim, pushing her, sitting on her chest, and strangling her with sufficient force
    to break her clavicle). For sure, several of these cases involve touching, but not of
    the tapping or tickling variety. Rather, the type of touching that has resulted in
    felony battery convictions is more along the lines of strangling, dragging, and
    biting. See Williams, 
    9 So. 3d at 659
    ; Harris, 
    111 So. 3d at
    923–24.
    Nor has Vail-Bailon shown that prosecution under Florida Statute § 784.041
    for the conduct described in the hypotheticals is a realistic probability. The
    hypotheticals involve relatively benign conduct combined with unlikely
    circumstances and a bizarre chain of events that result in an unforeseeable injury:
    the ticklee is standing at an open window, the tapped person is so startled that he
    careens down a flight of stairs, the recipient of the lotion has an unknown allergy
    (and apparently stands still long enough to allow the perpetrator to spread said
    lotion on his body). As discussed, felony battery differs from aggravated battery in
    that felony battery is a general intent crime. See Lewis, 
    817 So. 2d at 934
    . In other
    words, the prosecution is not required to prove that the defendant had the specific
    intent to cause the level of physical harm that the victim suffered in order to sustain
    a conviction for felony battery. See id.; T.S., 
    965 So. 2d at 1290
    . But there is no
    27
    Case: 15-10351      Date Filed: 08/25/2017    Page: 28 of 67
    support in Florida law for the argument that felony battery has been applied to
    penalize freak accidents of the sort that Vail-Bailon concocts.
    Indeed, the Supreme Court has cautioned that the need to focus on the least
    culpable conduct criminalized by a statute “is not an invitation to apply ‘legal
    imagination’” to the statute. Moncrieffe, 
    133 S. Ct. at
    1684–85 (noting that “there
    must be a realistic probability, not a theoretical possibility, that the State would
    apply its statute to conduct that falls outside” the qualifying definition of a
    predicate crime (citing Gonzales v. Duenas-Alvarez, 
    549 U.S. 183
    , 193 (2007)
    (internal quotation marks omitted))). See also James v. United States, 
    550 U.S. 192
    , 208 (2007) (explaining that the categorical approach does not require that
    “every conceivable factual offense” must qualify), overruled on other grounds by
    Samuel Johnson v. United States, 
    135 S. Ct. 2551
     (2015).
    The hypotheticals proffered by Vail-Bailon—all of which pose highly
    improbable ways of inflicting severe physical injury on a victim—reflect little
    more than the verboten legal imagination proscribed in the above Supreme Court
    decisions. Accord United States v. Redrick, 
    841 F.3d 478
    , 484–85 (D.C. Cir. 2016)
    (characterizing as “farfetched” the argument that robbery with a deadly weapon
    could be committed with weapons such as poison or lethal bacteria, which would
    not supply the requisite physical force necessary to satisfy the ACCA’s elements
    clause); United States v. Hill, 
    832 F.3d 135
    , 141 (2d Cir. 2016) (rejecting the
    28
    Case: 15-10351     Date Filed: 08/25/2017    Page: 29 of 67
    argument that Hobbs Act robbery could be committed by putting a victim in fear of
    injury to his property through non-forceful means such as “threatening to throw
    paint on the victim’s house, to spray paint his car, or, most colorfully, to pour
    chocolate syrup on his passport” (alteration adopted and internal quotation marks
    omitted)). In short, Vail-Bailon’s florid exercise of legal imagination does not
    provide a persuasive basis upon which to conclude that Florida felony battery lacks
    the requirement of physical force necessary to satisfy the elements clause of
    § 2L1.2.
    3.     Our conclusion is consistent with Leocal.
    Finally, we reject Vail-Bailon’s argument that a conviction under Florida
    Statute § 784.041 cannot satisfy the elements clause under the Supreme Court’s
    reasoning in Leocal v. Ashcroft, 
    543 U.S. 1
     (2004). The defendant in Leocal was
    convicted of DUI causing serious bodily injury in violation of Florida Statute
    § 316.193(3)(c)(2). The Supreme Court held that the conviction did not qualify as
    a crime of violence under the elements clause of 
    18 U.S.C. § 16
     because the
    Florida DUI statute does not require that the defendant intentionally use any force
    at all against another person, but rather only that the defendant operate a vehicle
    while under the influence and thereby cause serious bodily injury to a person he
    accidentally, or perhaps negligently, hits with the vehicle. Leocal, 
    543 U.S. at 7
    .
    The Court explained that the “use” of physical force “suggests a higher degree of
    29
    Case: 15-10351    Date Filed: 08/25/2017   Page: 30 of 67
    intent than negligent or merely accidental conduct” and that, as used in a provision
    describing crimes of violence, the term physical force “suggests a category of
    violent, active crimes that cannot be said naturally to include DUI offenses.” 
    Id. at 9, 11
    .
    The Court’s concern in Leocal—that the DUI crime at issue did not require
    the intentional use of any force at all, and that a defendant might be convicted of it
    after engaging in accidental or at most negligent conduct—is not a concern here.
    As Douglas noted in rejecting a similar Leocal challenge, “Indiana’s statute makes
    intent to use force an element of the offense; that satisfies the elements clause as
    Leocal understands it.” Douglas, 858 F.3d at 1072. Likewise, by its terms, Florida
    Statute § 784.041 requires an intentional use of force—a touch or a strike—that is
    against the victim’s will and that causes the victim to suffer great bodily harm.
    
    Fla. Stat. § 784.041
    (1). And, unlike the DUI offense at issue in Leocal, felony
    battery is exactly the type of “violent, active crime[]” that the elements clause is
    designed to encompass. Leocal, 
    543 U.S. at 11
    . Accordingly, our conclusion that
    felony battery in violation of § 784.041 qualifies as a crime of violence under the
    elements clause of § 2L1.2 comports with the Supreme Court’s reasoning in
    Leocal. See Douglas, 858 F.3d at 1072 (explaining that Leocal does not help a
    defendant who is prosecuted under a statute that “applies only to a person who
    30
    Case: 15-10351     Date Filed: 08/25/2017   Page: 31 of 67
    knowingly or intentionally touches another person in a forbidden manner” (internal
    quotation marks omitted)).
    CONCLUSION
    For the above reasons, we hold that Vail-Bailon’s conviction for felony
    battery in violation of Florida Statute § 784.041 qualifies as a crime of violence
    under the elements clause of the operative version of § 2L1.2 of the Sentencing
    Guidelines. Thus, we AFFIRM Vail-Bailon’s sentence.
    31
    Case: 15-10351       Date Filed: 08/25/2017      Page: 32 of 67
    WILSON, Circuit Judge, dissenting, joined by MARTIN, JORDAN,
    ROSENBAUM, and JILL PRYOR, Circuit Judges:
    If, while walking down the street, you tap a jogger on the shoulder and the
    tap startles him, causing him to trip, hit his head, and suffer a concussion, have you
    committed a violent act? Most would say no. But if you punch the jogger and the
    punch causes him to fall, hit his head, and suffer a concussion, you have
    undoubtedly committed a violent act. The difference between a non-violent and
    violent act, then, is the degree of force used. Both a tap and a punch are capable of
    causing great bodily harm, but a tap involves a limited degree of force while a
    punch involves a substantial degree of force. Or, in the words of the Sentencing
    Guidelines, a punch involves “physical force.” See U.S.S.G. § 2L1.2 cmt. n.2
    (2016).
    The Guidelines and certain criminal statutes use the phrase “physical force”
    to distinguish non-violent and violent conduct. Under § 2L1.2 of the Guidelines,
    for example, a crime is a “crime of violence” if it “has as an element the . . . use of
    physical force.” Id. And interpreting “physical force” in a provision similar to
    § 2L1.2, the Supreme Court in Curtis Johnson 1 found that “physical force” refers
    to a certain threshold degree of force—it refers to the substantial degree of force
    that is associated with punching, kicking, and other violent acts.
    1
    Johnson v. United States, 
    559 U.S. 133
    , 
    130 S. Ct. 1265
     (2010) (Curtis Johnson).
    32
    Case: 15-10351      Date Filed: 08/25/2017   Page: 33 of 67
    This case requires us to apply Curtis Johnson and determine whether Florida
    felony battery is a crime of violence under § 2L1.2. We must determine whether
    felony battery requires a degree of force that is sufficient to qualify as “physical
    force.” It does not. Felony battery criminalizes a mere touching that happens to
    cause great bodily harm. See 
    Fla. Stat. § 784.041
    ; Jefferies v. State, 
    849 So. 2d 401
    , 404 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2003) (“Felony battery is . . . a species of the specific
    intent crime of battery . . . but with resulting and unintended great bodily harm.”
    (emphasis in original)). A mere touching is not violent—it does not involve a
    substantial degree of force. A tap on a jogger’s shoulder that happens to cause the
    jogger to suffer a concussion is still just a tap.
    The Majority’s decision cannot be reconciled with Curtis Johnson. Curtis
    Johnson thoroughly analyzes “physical force,” explaining over the course of
    several pages that “physical force” refers to a threshold degree of force. But the
    Majority, reading this lengthy analysis out of Curtis Johnson, creates a new test for
    “physical force” that disregards degree of force. Although the Supreme Court has
    cautioned against reading a statement from one of its opinions “in isolation” rather
    than “alongside” the rest of the opinion, the Majority does exactly that. See
    Endrew F. v. Douglas Cty. Sch. Dist., 580 U.S. ___, ___, 
    137 S. Ct. 988
    , 998
    (2017). The Majority announces that just one sentence in Curtis Johnson matters
    and, based on an isolated reading of the sentence, proclaims that “physical force” is
    33
    Case: 15-10351     Date Filed: 08/25/2017   Page: 34 of 67
    any force that is capable of causing pain or injury. This “capacity test” turns not
    on the amount of force an act involves but rather on the possible consequences of
    the act. Degree of force is irrelevant. Even the slightest touching involves
    “physical force” if the touching could cause pain or injury.
    Applying its novel capacity test, the Majority concludes that Florida felony
    battery is a crime of violence. I cannot agree with that conclusion. The Florida
    legislature chose to define felony battery as a crime that can be committed by a
    mere touching, and a mere touching, even one that happens to cause great bodily
    harm, is not a violent act.
    I. CURTIS JOHNSON’S ANALYSIS OF PHYSICAL FORCE
    Under Curtis Johnson, our inquiry into whether a crime requires “physical
    force” begins and ends with the degree of force that the crime requires. If the
    crime can be committed using a limited degree of force, the crime does not require
    “physical force.” However, if “violent force” (i.e., “a substantial degree of force”)
    is necessary to commit the crime, the crime requires “physical force.” See Curtis
    Johnson, 
    559 U.S. at 140
    , 
    130 S. Ct. at 1271
     (emphasis in original); United States
    v. Castleman, 572 U.S. ___, ___, 
    134 S. Ct. 1405
    , 1411 n.4 (2014) (indicating that,
    under Curtis Johnson, “physical force” refers to “a range of force . . . which
    constitutes ‘violence’ simpliciter”).
    34
    Case: 15-10351       Date Filed: 08/25/2017      Page: 35 of 67
    The Curtis Johnson Court considered the meaning of “physical force” in
    deciding whether Florida simple battery is a “violent felony” under the Armed
    Career Criminal Act. 2 Looking to dictionary definitions and the relevant statutory
    context, the Court “g[a]ve the phrase its ordinary meaning”: “violent force,” or
    rather, a “substantial degree of force.” See Curtis Johnson, 
    559 U.S. at
    138–45,
    
    130 S. Ct. at
    1270–74 (emphasis in original).
    The Court began its analysis of “physical force” by examining dictionary
    definitions of “force”:
    In more general usage [“force”] means “strength or
    energy; active power; vigor; often an unusual degree of
    strength or energy,” “power to affect strongly in physical
    relations,” or “power, violence, compulsion, or constraint
    exerted upon a person.” [Webster’s New International
    Dictionary 985 (2d ed. 1954)]. Black’s Law Dictionary
    717 (9th ed. 2009) . . . defines “force” as “power,
    violence, or pressure directed against a person or thing.”
    And it defines “physical force” as “force consisting in a
    physical act, esp. a violent act directed against a robbery
    victim.”
    
    Id.
     at 138–39, 
    130 S. Ct. at 1270
    . Under these definitions, “force” refers to a
    certain degree of power, the Court recognized. The definitions “suggest a degree
    of power that would not be satisfied by the merest touching.” 
    Id. at 139
    , 
    130 S. Ct. at 1270
    .
    2
    “Physical force” appears in the Armed Career Criminal Act’s definition of “violent
    felony.” The phrase has the same meaning in the Guidelines and in the Armed Career Criminal
    Act. See United States v. Romo-Villalobos, 
    674 F.3d 1246
    , 1248 (11th Cir. 2012) (per curiam).
    35
    Case: 15-10351      Date Filed: 08/25/2017    Page: 36 of 67
    The Court also recognized that “force” has a specialized meaning which
    differs from the dictionary definitions. “Force” under the common law was an
    element of battery that could “be satisfied by even the slightest offensive
    touching.” 
    Id.
     But the Court rejected that meaning in favor of the dictionary
    definitions, stating: “[C]ontext determines meaning . . . [and] we are interpreting
    the phrase ‘physical force’ as used in defining not the crime of battery, but rather
    the statutory category of ‘violent felonies’ . . . .” 
    Id.
     at 139–40, 
    130 S. Ct. at 1270
    .
    Embracing the definition of “force” as a degree of power, the Court next
    elaborated on the degree of power necessary for “physical force.” According to
    the Court, “physical force,” when used in a statutory definition of “violent felony,”
    is force of such a degree that it can be considered “violent force.” 
    Id. at 140
    , 
    130 S. Ct. at 1271
     (emphases in original). The Court explained:
    [I]n the context of a statutory definition of “violent
    felony,” the phrase “physical force” means violent
    force—that is, force capable of causing physical pain or
    injury to another person. See Flores v. Ashcroft, 
    350 F.3d 666
    , 672 (C.A.7 2003) (Easterbrook, J.). Even by
    itself, the word “violent” . . . connotes a substantial
    degree of force. Webster’s Second 2846 (defining
    “violent” as “[m]oving, acting, or characterized, by
    physical force, esp. by extreme and sudden or by unjust
    or improper force; furious; severe; vehement”); 19
    Oxford English Dictionary 656 (2d ed. 1989)
    (“characterized by the exertion of great physical force or
    strength”); Black’s 1706 (“of, relating to, or
    characterized by strong physical force”). When the
    adjective “violent” is attached to the noun “felony,” its
    connotation of strong “physical force” is even clearer.
    36
    Case: 15-10351     Date Filed: 08/25/2017   Page: 37 of 67
    See id., at 1188 (defining “violent felony” as “a crime
    characterized by extreme physical force, such as murder,
    forcible rape, and assault and battery with a dangerous
    weapon”); see also United States v. Doe, 
    960 F.2d 221
    ,
    225 (C.A.1 1992) (Breyer, C.J.) (“The term to be defined,
    ‘violent felony,’ calls to mind a tradition of crimes that
    involve the possibility of more closely related, active
    violence.”).
    
    Id.
     at 140–41, 
    130 S. Ct. at 1271
    . “Physical force,” in other words, is a unique
    type of force; it is powerful, violent force.
    The Court then concluded its thorough discussion of “physical force” by
    further underscoring that “physical force” refers to a powerful amount of force.
    The Court expressly rejected an argument that “physical force” does not require a
    certain threshold degree of force: “[Although] there is no modifier in [the Armed
    Career Criminal Act] that specifies the degree of ‘physical force’ required[,] . . .
    the term ‘physical force’ itself normally connotes force strong enough to constitute
    ‘power’—and all the more so when it is contained in a definition of ‘violent
    felony.’” 
    Id. at 142
    , 
    130 S. Ct. at 1272
    .
    Curtis Johnson thus requires our court, when determining whether a crime
    necessarily involves “physical force,” to analyze the degree of force used to
    commit the crime. If the crime requires a “substantial degree of force”—the type
    of strong physical power that is generally “capable of causing physical pain or
    injury” upon impact—the crime requires “physical force.” See 
    id.
     at 140–41, 
    130 S. Ct. at 1271
    . This standard makes identifying the actions that involve “physical
    37
    Case: 15-10351      Date Filed: 08/25/2017    Page: 38 of 67
    force” simple. Touching, tapping, pinching, and other actions involving limited,
    non-violent contact do not constitute “physical force.” But kicking, striking,
    punching, and other actions that are associated with violence do constitute
    “physical force.”
    Indeed, since Curtis Johnson was decided in 2010, our court, without
    difficulty, has adhered to the Supreme Court’s finding that degree of force is the
    gravamen of the physical-force inquiry. In United States v. Owens, for example,
    we considered whether the Alabama offenses of second-degree rape and second-
    degree sodomy require “physical force.” 
    672 F.3d 966
    , 970–72 (11th Cir. 2012).
    And we held that those offenses do not necessarily involve “physical force”
    because they “require[] only slight penetration” and thus “do[] not require, as an
    element, strong physical force or a substantial degree of force.” 
    Id.
     at 971 (citing
    Curtis Johnson).
    In this case, then, we must consider the degree of force that Florida felony
    battery requires.
    II. APPLYING CURTIS JOHNSON TO FLORIDA FELONY BATTERY
    Under Curtis Johnson, Florida felony battery is not a physical-force crime.
    It does not require a degree of force that is sufficient to constitute “physical force.”
    Curtis Johnson’s analysis of Florida simple battery is dispositive. The degree of
    force required by simple battery, Curtis Johnson held, is insufficient to constitute
    38
    Case: 15-10351     Date Filed: 08/25/2017    Page: 39 of 67
    “physical force.” And felony battery can be committed using the exact same
    insufficient degree of force as simple battery.
    Curtis Johnson concluded that Florida simple battery does not require
    “physical force” because one of the physical acts that can support a simple battery
    conviction—intentional touching—involves an insufficient degree of force. See
    Curtis Johnson, 520 U.S. at 138–39, 145, 
    130 S. Ct. at
    1269–70, 1274; United
    States v. Braun, 
    801 F.3d 1301
    , 1307 (11th Cir. 2015) (“The Supreme Court . . .
    made clear [in Curtis Johnson] that ‘physical force’ . . . requires violent contact
    beyond a mere touching.”). Under Florida law, an intentional touching is a mere
    touching. Curtis Johnson, 520 U.S. at 138, 
    130 S. Ct. at 1270
    . It covers “nominal
    contact” like “a tap on the shoulder”—conduct that involves a limited amount of
    power. 
    Id.
     (internal quotation marks omitted).
    An intentional touching can also give rise to a Florida felony battery
    conviction. The actus reus elements of felony and simple battery are identical.
    Both crimes have as an element the “[a]ctual[] and intentional[] touch[ing] or
    strik[ing] [of] another person.” See 
    Fla. Stat. § 784.03
    (1)(a) (simple battery); 
    Fla. Stat. § 784.041
    (1) (felony battery). The only difference between the crimes is that
    39
    Case: 15-10351        Date Filed: 08/25/2017        Page: 40 of 67
    felony battery is limited to instances when the touching happens to result in great
    bodily harm. See Jefferies, 
    849 So. 2d at 404
    .3
    Hence, the exact same non-violent physical act—an intentional touching—
    can serve as the basis of both felony battery and simple battery. Because Curtis
    Johnson held that such an act does not involve “physical force,” felony battery
    does not require “physical force.”
    The Majority, however, believes that under Curtis Johnson the result
    element (the causes-great-bodily-harm element) of felony battery distinguishes
    felony battery from simple battery and renders it a physical-force crime. I
    disagree. The result element is not relevant under Curtis Johnson because the
    element has no bearing on the degree of force necessary to commit felony battery.
    The degree of force associated with a touching is not somehow altered because the
    touching happens to result in great bodily harm. Cf. Chrzanoski v. Ashcroft, 
    327 F.3d 188
    , 195 (2d Cir. 2003) (“[A crime] requiring proof of physical injury, does
    not [necessarily] require, as an element of the offense, that the defendant use
    3
    Extrapolating from a series of Florida decisions discussing Florida’s own definition of
    “physical force,” the Majority suggests that Florida felony battery requires more force than
    simple battery. But Jefferies and other Florida precedent undercut that suggestion. Under those
    precedents, felony battery is just a simple battery that happens to cause great bodily harm. See
    Jefferies, 
    849 So. 2d at 404
     (“Felony battery is . . . a species of the specific intent crime of
    battery . . . but with resulting and unintended great bodily harm.” (emphasis in original)); T.S. v.
    State, 
    965 So. 2d 1288
    , 1290 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2007) (“The definition of felony battery recites
    the first prong of the [simple] battery definition and adds the element of causing great bodily
    harm, permanent disability, or permanent disfigurement.”); 
    id.
     (indicating that felony battery is
    “simple battery plus . . . causing great bodily harm”). Since simple-battery conduct underlies a
    felony battery, felony battery involves the same force as simple battery.
    40
    Case: 15-10351        Date Filed: 08/25/2017       Page: 41 of 67
    physical force to inflict that injury.” (emphasis in original) (internal quotation
    marks omitted)). If, for instance, a student shoots a spitball at a classmate, the
    student commits a touching under Florida law. See State v. Hearns, 
    961 So. 2d 211
    , 218–19 (Fla. 2007). That touching involves the same limited degree of force
    regardless of whether it results in great bodily harm. The spitball could hit the
    classmate in his eye and cause a serious eye injury, or the spitball could hit the
    classmate in his eye while his eyelid is closed and cause no injury. Although these
    results differ, the degree of force used is constant. A spitball that happens to cause
    great bodily harm is still just a spitball. A mere touching that happens to cause
    great bodily harm is still just a mere touching.4
    III. THE MAJORITY’S CAPACITY TEST CANNOT BE RECONCILED
    WITH CURTIS JOHNSON.
    The Majority concludes that Florida felony battery is a physical-force crime
    because it misapplies Curtis Johnson; it relies on a test for “physical force” that
    4
    The Majority contends that Florida felony battery does not cover mere touchings that
    cause great bodily harm. A mere touching can cause great bodily harm only when there are
    “bizarre” circumstances, the Majority says, and there is no reasonable probability that Florida
    would apply the felony battery statute to that type of conduct. I find this argument unconvincing.
    First, the Majority’s premise that a mere touching can cause great bodily harm only under
    “bizarre” circumstances is problematic. An unwanted touch causing a jogger to trip and suffer a
    concussion or ankle injury, for example, is not a bizarre circumstance. Second, the felony
    battery statute specifically refers to “touch[ing]” that “[c]auses great bodily harm,” 
    Fla. Stat. § 784.041
    (1), and Florida courts have defined “touching” in the battery context to refer to a mere
    touching, see Curtis Johnson, 520 U.S. at 138, 
    130 S. Ct. at
    1269–70. Felony battery’s
    “statutory language itself” therefore creates a “realistic probability that [Florida] would apply
    [the] statute to” a mere touching that happens to cause great bodily harm. Ramos v. Att’y Gen.,
    
    709 F.3d 1066
    , 1071–72 (citing Gonzales v. Duenas-Alvarez, 
    549 U.S. 183
    , 193, 
    127 S. Ct. 815
    ,
    822 (2007)). The Florida legislature would not have included a mere touching as an operative
    act in felony battery if the legislature did not intend to punish some mere touchings.
    41
    Case: 15-10351         Date Filed: 08/25/2017         Page: 42 of 67
    cannot be reconciled with Curtis Johnson. In finding that the result element of
    felony battery distinguishes felony battery from simple battery, the Majority
    applies a capacity test for “physical force.” Under the test, the possible result of an
    act, not the degree of force associated with the act, is dispositive.
    The Majority derives its capacity test from a single sentence in Curtis
    Johnson: “[T]he phrase ‘physical force’ means violent force—that is, force
    capable of causing physical pain or injury to another person.”5 Curtis Johnson,
    130 U.S. at 140, 
    130 S. Ct. at 1271
     (emphasis in original). To the Majority, the
    word “capable” in that sentence is dispositive, establishing a capacity-based
    definition of “physical force.”
    This reading of Curtis Johnson does not pass muster. The Supreme Court
    chose to devote several pages to explaining the meaning of “physical force.” See
    
    id.
     at 138–145, 
    130 S. Ct. at
    1270–74. But the Majority reads that robust analysis
    out of Curtis Johnson by plucking one sentence from the opinion and then
    interpreting the sentence in isolation. The Majority decides that only the “violent
    force” sentence matters—the rest of the Supreme Court’s discussion of “physical
    force” is superfluous. And reading the “violent force” sentence in isolation, the
    Majority concludes, based on a single word in the sentence, that the sentence sets
    forth a capacity test.
    5
    I refer to this sentence as the “violent force” sentence.
    42
    Case: 15-10351       Date Filed: 08/25/2017        Page: 43 of 67
    The Supreme Court recently cautioned against reading its opinions in this
    way—that is, reading selected statements “in isolation.”6 See Endrew F., 
    137 S. Ct. at 998
    . But because the Majority fails to heed the Court’s warning, the
    Majority misreads Curtis Johnson, adopting a novel test that cannot be reconciled
    with Curtis Johnson. When we honor the Curtis Johnson Court’s decision to
    conduct a robust analysis of “physical force” and we consider the full analysis, the
    “violent force” sentence cannot be read as establishing a capacity test.
    Furthermore, the Majority’s capacity test is inconsistent with Curtis Johnson’s
    central holding; it swallows Curtis Johnson’s finding that Florida simple battery
    does not require “physical force.”
    A. The “violent force” sentence does not establish a capacity test.
    When the “violent force” sentence is read “alongside” the rest of Curtis
    Johnson, see 
    id.,
     the sentence confirms that degree of force is dispositive as to
    whether a crime requires “physical force.” Again, the sentence reads: “[T]he
    phrase ‘physical force’ means violent force—that is, force capable of causing
    physical pain or injury to another person.” Curtis Johnson, 130 U.S. at 140, 
    130 S. Ct. at 1271
     (emphasis in original). This statement, when read in context,
    6
    Similarly, Justice Scalia, who authored Curtis Johnson, expressed disapproval of
    reading Supreme Court opinions through such a selective lens. See Arizona v. Inter Tribal
    Council of Ariz., Inc., 570 U.S. ___, ___, 
    133 S. Ct. 2247
    , 2256 n.5 (2013) (Scalia, J.) (criticizing
    the dissenting opinion for “cherry-pick[ing] some language from a sentence in” a previous
    Supreme Court opinion).
    43
    Case: 15-10351      Date Filed: 08/25/2017   Page: 44 of 67
    underscores that “physical force” refers to a substantial degree of force. It does not
    declare that all contact that is capable of causing pain or injury is “physical force.”
    The “violent force” sentence is found in the middle of Curtis Johnson’s
    analysis of “physical force,” and the language in the sentence derives meaning
    from that analysis. The sentence appears shortly after Curtis Johnson states that
    “physical force” refers to a “degree of power,” and it is followed directly by Curtis
    Johnson’s conclusion that the word “‘violent’ . . . connotes a substantial degree of
    force.” See 
    id.
     at 138–41, 
    130 S. Ct. at
    1270–71. Thus, by equating “physical
    force” with “violent force,” the first clause of the sentence affirms that “physical
    force” refers to a substantial degree of force or power. The second clause of the
    sentence, the clause referencing “capable,” elaborates on that point, underscoring
    that “violent force” is associated with strength and power. The clause notes that
    “violent force” is the type of powerful action that typically causes pain or injury
    upon impact: “[T]he phrase ‘physical force’ means violent force [read a
    substantial degree of force]—that is, force [read a degree of power] capable of
    causing physical pain or injury to another person.” See 
    id. at 140
    , 
    130 S. Ct. at 1271
     (emphases in original).
    And even if we ignore the language surrounding the “violent force”
    sentence, the Majority’s reading of the sentence is problematic. The Majority’s
    reading cannot be squared with the language in the sentence itself. Interpreting the
    44
    Case: 15-10351      Date Filed: 08/25/2017   Page: 45 of 67
    sentence to mean that all contact capable of causing pain or injury involves
    “physical force,” the Majority reads the phrase “violent force” out of the sentence.
    The phrase “violent force” qualifies the clause “force capable of causing physical
    pain or injury,” so the conduct discussed by that clause is limited to conduct
    associated with violence. Yet under the Majority’s reading, the clause includes
    non-violent conduct. Many forms of non-violent conduct have the capacity to
    cause pain or injury; pinching and tapping, for example, both can at the very least
    result in a person suffering pain.
    The Supreme Court took the time to pen a thorough discussion of “physical
    force” in Curtis Johnson. We should take that entire discussion into account.
    When we do, it is apparent that the “violent force” sentence does not discard
    degree of force for a capacity test.
    B. The Majority’s capacity test swallows Curtis Johnson’s central holding.
    Confirming that the Majority’s capacity test cannot be reconciled with
    Curtis Johnson, the test “runs headlong into” Curtis Johnson’s central holding.
    See Endrew F., 
    137 S. Ct. at 998
    . Curtis Johnson held that Florida simple battery
    does not require “physical force,” but the Majority’s capacity test leads to the
    opposite conclusion.
    Florida simple battery, Curtis Johnson found, does not require “physical
    force” because the mere touching that it criminalizes, such as “a tap on the
    45
    Case: 15-10351    Date Filed: 08/25/2017   Page: 46 of 67
    shoulder without consent,” does not involve “physical force.” See Curtis Johnson,
    
    559 U.S. at 138, 145
    , 
    130 S. Ct. at 1270, 1274
     (internal quotation marks omitted).
    But when “physical force” is defined as any contact that is capable of causing pain
    or injury, a mere touching does constitute “physical force.” Any unwanted
    touching could cause pain or injury. A tap on a pedestrian’s shoulder could
    distract the pedestrian causing her to collide with another person and suffer injury.
    A student’s spitball could hit its victim in the eye causing injury. A pat on the
    back could startle the victim causing her to jerk her body and suffer pain. A
    child’s innocent pinching of his friend could cause the friend to experience a sharp
    pain.
    The Supreme Court in Curtis Johnson did not, in one breath, hold that
    Florida simple battery does not require “physical force” and, in the next breath, set
    forth a test that dictates the opposite conclusion. The Majority’s capacity test
    cannot be reconciled with Curtis Johnson; the test swallows the holding of Curtis
    Johnson.
    IV. CONCLUSION
    When we comply with Curtis Johnson and use degree of force to determine
    whether Florida felony battery requires “physical force,” this case is
    straightforward. Felony battery can be committed by a mere touching, and Curtis
    Johnson told us that a mere touching does not require a degree of force that is
    46
    Case: 15-10351     Date Filed: 08/25/2017   Page: 47 of 67
    sufficient to qualify as “physical force.” A crime that can be committed by a mere
    touching is not a crime of violence.
    I respectfully dissent.
    47
    Case: 15-10351       Date Filed: 08/25/2017     Page: 48 of 67
    ROSENBAUM, Circuit Judge, joined as to Section II by MARTIN, Circuit Judge,
    and joined as to Sections II.A., II.B.1., and II.B.2.a by JORDAN, Circuit Judge,
    dissenting:
    No question about it: a crime called “felony battery” sure sounds like a
    violent crime. But sometimes intuition can be wrong. See Samuel Johnson v.
    United States, 
    135 S. Ct. 2551
    , 2560 (2015) (suggesting that Connecticut’s offense
    of “rioting at a correctional institution,” a crime that “certainly sounds like a
    violent felony,” may not, in fact, have qualified as a violent felony under the now-
    invalidated residual clause of the Armed Career Criminal Act (“ACCA”)).
    1
    So we evaluate whether a crime qualifies as a crime of violence under the federal
    definition of that term of art by conducting legal analysis and applying Supreme
    Court precedent.
    This case raises the question of whether Florida felony battery always and
    necessarily involves the “use . . . of physical force against the person of another,”
    under the federal definition of “crime of violence” as used in the U.S. Sentencing
    Guidelines Manual (“U.S.S.G.”). See U.S.S.G. § 2L1.2 cmt. n.1(B)(iii) (U.S.
    Sentencing Comm’n 2014). The Supreme Court has given us clear guidance for
    finding the answer to this question. And following it leads to a single answer:
    1
    The Supreme Court’s comments arose in the context of considering the residual clause of the
    ACCA’s definition of “violent felony.” But the principle that we cannot determine whether a
    crime should be a violent felony simply by considering its name remains the same, whether we
    are discussing the residual clause or the elements clause of the ACCA’s definition of “violent
    felony,” or, as here, the elements clause of the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines Manual § 2L1.2’s
    definition of “crime of violence.”
    48
    Case: 15-10351     Date Filed: 08/25/2017    Page: 49 of 67
    Florida felony battery does not satisfy the federal definition for a “crime of
    violence,” despite what intuition might otherwise tell us.
    As relevant here, a crime is a “crime of violence” if it “has as an element the
    use . . . of physical force against the person of another.” U.S.S.G. § 2L1.2 cmt.
    n.1(B)(iii). Florida felony battery has two elements we must examine. In Curtis
    Johnson v. United States, 
    559 U.S. 133
    , 138-143 (2010), the Supreme Court
    already told us that the first one does not satisfy the elements clause. And a trio of
    Supreme Court cases—Leocal v. Ashcroft, 
    543 U.S. 1
     (2004), United States v.
    Castleman, 
    134 S. Ct. 1405
     (2014), and Voisine v. United States, 
    136 S. Ct. 2272
    (2016)—just as surely demands the conclusion that the second doesn’t, either.
    The Majority Opinion reaches the opposite conclusion by attributing to
    Curtis Johnson a rule that the Supreme Court has expressly told us it did not
    establish and by ignoring Supreme Court precedent. We cannot do that. Because
    Supreme Court precedent requires the conclusion that felony battery, when
    committed by mere touch, does not contain an element involving “the use . . . of
    physical force against the person of another,” I respectfully dissent.
    I.    Supreme Court precedent requires the conclusion that Florida felony
    battery does not contain an element involving “the use . . . of physical
    force against the person of another.”
    Two elements comprise Florida felony battery: a person must (1) “[a]ctually
    and intentionally touch[] or strike[] another person against the will of the other;”
    49
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    and (2) “[c]ause[] great bodily harm, permanent disability, or permanent
    disfigurement.” 
    Fla. Stat. § 784.041
    (1). The Supreme Court has lit the way for us
    to determine whether either of these elements qualifies as one involving “the use . .
    . of physical force against the person of another” (“elements clause”). U.S.S.G. §
    2L1.2 cmt. n.1(B)(iii).
    Concerning the first element, the Supreme Court already held that it fails to
    satisfy the “physical force” requirement of the elements clause when the crime is
    committed by mere touch. In Curtis Johnson, 
    559 U.S. 133
    , the Supreme Court
    considered whether Florida simple battery, a crime that consists of the exact same
    element, word-for-word, as the first element of Florida felony battery, necessarily
    and always must involve “the use . . . of physical force against the person of
    another.” It held that it need not. We are bound by that ruling.2
    As to the second element—the causation of “great bodily harm, permanent
    disability, or permanent disfigurement”—three other Supreme Court cases dictate
    that that element cannot satisfy the “use” requirement of the elements clause
    where, as here, the statute does not require any kind of intent at all to cause harm.
    2
    Judge Wilson fully explains the basis for that ruling, so I do not repeat it here.
    50
    Case: 15-10351        Date Filed: 08/25/2017       Page: 51 of 67
    Leocal, Castleman, and Voisine provide important guidance on the meaning
    of “use” in the elements clause.3 They lead to the conclusion that where the crime
    has no element requiring intent to injure or to engage in an act that has a
    substantial likelihood of harming another, any harm that results from the prohibited
    conduct cannot, in and of itself, satisfy the elements clause.
    In Leocal, the Supreme Court considered whether the Florida crime of
    driving under the influence of alcohol (“DUI”) and causing serious bodily injury,
    in violation of 
    Fla. Stat. § 316.193
    (3)(c)(2), satisfied the definition of “crime of
    violence” under, among other things, 
    18 U.S.C. § 16
    ’s “elements clause.”4 The
    Court characterized the issue in Leocal as concerning “whether state DUI offenses
    . . . which either do not have a mens rea component or require only a showing of
    negligence in the operation of a vehicle, qualify as a crime of violence.” 
    543 U.S. at 6
    .
    As the Court saw it, the key consideration under the “elements clause”
    concerned the requirement that a crime of violence be one involving the “use . . . of
    physical force against the person or property of another.” 
    Id. at 9
     (emphasis
    omitted). And that phrase, the Court reasoned, “most naturally suggests a higher
    3
    Leocal suggests that its analysis does not construe the word “use,” but Castleman and Voisine
    treat it as part of the line of cases interpreting the meaning of that word in the elements clause.
    4
    The Supreme Court recognized in Curtis Johnson, 
    559 U.S. at 140
    , that § 16’s “elements
    clause” is materially indistinguishable from ACCA’s “elements clause.” And ACCA’s
    “elements clause,” in turn, is materially indistinguishable from § 2L1.2’s “elements clause.”
    51
    Case: 15-10351    Date Filed: 08/25/2017   Page: 52 of 67
    degree of intent than negligent or merely accidental conduct.”            Id. (citation
    omitted). So the Court held that DUI—even DUI involving negligence—does not
    satisfy the “elements clause.” Id. at 9-10. Significantly, the Court reached this
    conclusion despite the fact that, like Florida felony battery, the Florida DUI statute
    had as an element the requirement that “serious bodily injury” have occurred as a
    result of the DUI. So Leocal suggests that an element that requires only grievous
    bodily injury or even death cannot satisfy the elements clause.
    Ten years later, the Supreme Court revisited Leocal in Castleman.
    Castleman described Leocal as having held that “‘use’ requires active
    employment,” and “‘use’ of force must entail ‘a higher degree of intent than
    negligent or merely accidental conduct.’”       Castleman, 
    134 S. Ct. at
    1414 n.8
    (quoting Leocal, 
    543 U.S. at 9
    ) & 1415 (quoting Leocal, 
    543 U.S. at 9
    ). Though
    the Court found that “intentionally or knowingly caus[ing] bodily injury to”
    another required the “use” of physical force, it expressly left open the question of
    whether “the merely reckless causation of bodily injury” may be a “use” of force
    under the similar definition of “misdemeanor crime of domestic violence.” Id. at
    1414.
    We did not have to wait too long to learn the answer to that question. Two
    years later, in Voisine, the Supreme Court held that a reckless domestic assault
    involves the “use” of physical force under the definition of “misdemeanor crime of
    52
    Case: 15-10351        Date Filed: 08/25/2017         Page: 53 of 67
    domestic violence.” 
    136 S. Ct. 2272
    . In reaching this determination, the Court
    rested on the definition of “use,” which it described as “the act of employing
    something.” 
    Id. at 2278
     (citations and quotation marks omitted). Based on this
    definition, the Court observed that the word “use” “does not demand that the
    person applying force have the purpose or practical certainty that it will cause
    harm,” but “use” does anticipate the “understanding that it is substantially likely to
    do so.”5 
    Id. at 2279
    .
    We must apply the lessons of the Leocal/Castleman/Voisine trilogy when we
    consider whether the second element of felony battery—the causation of “great
    5
    Castleman and Voisine addressed the meaning of “a misdemeanor crime of domestic violence”
    under 
    18 U.S.C. § 922
    (g)(9). 
    134 S. Ct. at 1408
    . As with the words “crime of violence” in
    U.S.S.G. § 2L1.2, the definition of “misdemeanor crime of domestic violence” under § 922(g)(9)
    requires, in relevant part, an element that involves “the use . . . of physical force . . . .” 
    18 U.S.C. § 921
    (g)(33)(A)(ii). So the cases addressing the federal definition of felony “crime of violence”
    can be instructive in construing the meaning of “misdemeanor crime of domestic violence,” and
    vice-versa. See, e.g., Castleman, 
    134 S. Ct. at
    1415 (citing Leocal in discussing what constitutes
    a “use” of force). Nevertheless, some differences between the analyses exist: (1) “misdemeanor
    crime of violence” is governed by the common-law concept of “force,” see Castleman, 
    134 S. Ct. at 1414-15
    , whereas the federal definition of “crime of violence” that appears in the ACCA
    and the Sentencing Guidelines is not, see Curtis Johnson, 
    559 U.S. at 139-40
    . That fact goes
    only to the meaning of “physical force” in both definitions, in that the common-law definition of
    “physical force” is broader and covers more conduct than does the definition of “physical force”
    within the federal definition of “crime of violence”; and (2) though the Supreme Court has held
    that a reckless act that results in harm to another entails a “use” of physical force under the
    definition of “misdemeanor crime of domestic violence,” it has reserved the issue of whether the
    same is true under the federal definition of “crime of violence,” as set forth at 
    18 U.S.C. § 16
    .
    See Voisine, 
    136 S. Ct. at
    2279-80 & 2280 n.4. But there is no reason to believe that the
    Supreme Court would find that anything less than recklessness would satisfy the elements clause
    of the federal definition of “crime of violence.” Indeed, the Supreme Court noted in Castleman
    that “the Courts of Appeals have almost uniformly held that recklessness is not sufficient.”
    Castleman, 
    134 S. Ct. at
    1414 n.8. So while the definition of “a misdemeanor crime of domestic
    violence” under 
    18 U.S.C. § 922
    (g)(9) cannot tell us how narrow the definition of “the use . . . of
    physical force” is under the federal definition of a felony “crime of violence,” it can and does
    inform us about the broadest the meaning of the phrase can be.
    53
    Case: 15-10351     Date Filed: 08/25/2017   Page: 54 of 67
    bodily harm, permanent disability, or permanent disfigurement”—requires the
    “use” of physical force. Since we know from this line of cases that an accident
    does not involve the “use . . . of physical force” within the definition of “crime of
    violence,” we must consider whether felony battery can occur when the actor
    neither knows nor should know that his act is “substantially likely,” Voisine, 
    136 S. Ct. at 2279
    , to cause grievous bodily harm.
    The answer to that question is clear. In T.S. v. State, 
    965 So. 2d 1288
    , 1290-
    91 (Fla. 2d Dist. Ct. App. 2007), the court held that felony battery includes no
    element requiring that the perpetrator intended to harm another or knew harm
    would result. See also Jefferies v. State, 
    849 So. 2d 401
    , 404 (Fla. 2d Dist. Ct.
    App. 2003) (“Felony battery is clearly a species of the specific intent crime of
    battery . . . , but with resulting and unintended great bodily harm”), receded from
    on other grounds by Hall v. State, 
    951 So. 2d 91
     (Fla. 2d Dist. Ct. App. 2007).
    Because a person need not intend—or even have reason to expect—that his act will
    cause great bodily harm, see Voisine, 
    136 S. Ct. at 2279
    , in order to commit felony
    battery, the second element of felony battery fails the “use” requirement of the
    federal definition of “crime of violence.”
    The Majority Opinion disagrees. To support its position, it contends that
    Leocal requires only an intent to touch, not an intent to harm.
    54
    Case: 15-10351      Date Filed: 08/25/2017       Page: 55 of 67
    To be sure, in a vacuum, one conceivable reading of Leocal is that it requires
    only an intent to touch, not an intent to harm. But Leocal is not the last word on
    the meaning of “use.” And the Supreme Court has since explained that that word
    anticipates that the person applying force have the “understanding that [doing so]
    is substantially likely to [cause harm].” 
    Id.
     So when a person has no reason to
    believe that harm is substantially likely to result from his mere touch of another,
    under Voisine, he cannot be said to have “use[d]” physical force in the sense that
    the federal definition of “crime of violence” requires.6
    In short, Supreme Court precedent demands the conclusion that Florida
    felony battery, when committed by mere touch, does not constitute a “crime of
    violence.”
    II.    The Majority Opinion’s reasons for resisting the conclusion dictated
    by Supreme Court precedent do not hold up to scrutiny.
    The Majority Opinion pursues two overriding lines of attack to fight the
    Supreme-Court-precedent-dictated conclusion that Florida felony battery does not
    qualify as a “crime of violence.” Neither withstands scrutiny.
    A.
    6
    Aside from being the law under binding Supreme Court precedent, this makes perfect sense.
    Notice considerations dictate that the inquiry into whether a crime qualifies as a “crime of
    violence” under the “elements clause” should be forward-looking, from the perspective of the
    wrongdoer, not Monday-morning quarterbacking in hindsight. That way, when a person is held
    responsible for committing a “crime of violence,” that person either intended to commit a “crime
    of violence” or should have known before committing the act that resulted in the conviction that
    it was at least likely that his act would cause bodily harm.
    55
    Case: 15-10351        Date Filed: 08/25/2017       Page: 56 of 67
    First, the Majority Opinion plucks a single sentence out of the Supreme
    Court’s six-page discussion in Curtis Johnson, 
    559 U.S. at 138-143
    , about the
    meaning of the words “physical force.” Then, looking solely to this sentence and
    ignoring the rest of the Supreme Court’s discussion, the Majority Opinion
    formulates what it calls the “capability test.” Under that test, a crime contains an
    element that requires the “use . . . of physical force” if, regardless of its nature, the
    contact called for by the statute’s elements happens to actually result in “physical
    pain or injury to another person,” Maj. Op. at 10-18 (quoting Curtis Johnson, 
    559 U.S. at 140
    ) (internal quotation marks omitted). For good measure, the Majority
    Opinion asserts that Curtis Johnson requires this “capability test.”7 Id. at 17 (“the
    capability standard announced in Curtis Johnson controls the inquiry”).
    Not so.
    7
    And going even further, the Majority Opinion suggests that we have always used the
    “capability test” since the Supreme Court issued Curtis Johnson. Maj. Op. at 11. That is simply
    not accurate. True, we have quoted the same sentence from Curtis Johnson that the Majority
    Opinion relies on in isolation, but we have not previously concluded that the mere fact that an act
    results in bodily pain or harm necessarily means that the act employed “physical force.” To the
    contrary, in United States v. Rosales-Bruno, 
    676 F.3d 1017
    , 1021 (11th Cir. 2012), which the
    Majority Opinion cites as support for the notion that we have always employed the “capability
    test,” we were careful to put the quoted sentence from Curtis Johnson into context, noting that
    “[t]he ordinary meaning of the phrase ‘physical force’ suggests a category of violent, active
    crimes . . . .” (quoting Leocal v. Ashcroft, 
    543 U.S. 1
    , 11 (2004) (quotation marks omitted), and
    that “the term ‘physical force itself normally connotes force strong enough to constitute
    ‘power’—and all the more so when it is contained in a definition of ‘violent felony,’” (quoting
    Curtis Johnson, 
    130 S. Ct. at 1272
    ). As for the other two cases the Majority Opinion cites—
    United States v. Brown, 
    805 F.3d 1325
    , 1327 (11th Cir. 2015), and United States v. Hill, 
    799 F.3d 1318
    , 1322 (11th Cir. 2015), both analyzed crimes that by their terms required the use of
    violence, so there was no need to apply a “capability test,” and, in fact, we did not do so.
    56
    Case: 15-10351       Date Filed: 08/25/2017       Page: 57 of 67
    Indeed, the Supreme Court itself expressly confirmed as much four years
    after it issued Curtis Johnson, 8 when it released Castleman, 
    134 S. Ct. 1405
    . In
    Castleman, the Supreme Court determined that the misdemeanor offense of having
    “intentionally or knowingly cause[d] bodily injury to” a domestic relation
    constitutes “a misdemeanor crime of domestic violence” under 
    18 U.S.C. § 922
    (g)(9). 
    Id. at 1408
    . As with the words “crime of violence” in U.S.S.G. §
    2L1.2, the definition of “misdemeanor crime of domestic violence” under §
    922(g)(9) requires, in relevant part, an element that involves “the use . . . of
    physical force . . . .” 
    18 U.S.C. § 921
    (g)(33)(A)(ii).
    Construing the words “physical force” in § 921(g)(33)(A)(ii), Justice Scalia
    concurred specially because he reasoned that under Curtis Johnson, “it is
    impossible to cause bodily injury without using force ‘capable of’ producing that
    result.” Castleman, 
    134 S. Ct. at 1416-17
     (Scalia, J., concurring). In other words,
    he applied the same “capability test” that the Majority Opinion urges binds us here.
    The Supreme Court disagreed that Curtis Johnson had created any such test.
    It noted that Justice Scalia’s concurrence “suggests that [even the most minor
    “cut[s], abrasion[s] [or] bruise[s]”] necessitate violent force, under [Curtis]
    Johnson’s definition of that phrase” because they actually result in “bodily injury.”
    8
    Judge Wilson has already explained why Curtis Johnson itself did not create a “capability test”
    but rather construed the phrase “physical force” to refer to “substantial” and “violent” force—the
    kind involved in “violent” felonies.
    57
    Case: 15-10351     Date Filed: 08/25/2017      Page: 58 of 67
    
    Id.
     at 1414 (citing 
    id. at 1417
    ). And then the Court expressly rejected the idea that
    it had previously adopted such a standard. 
    Id.
    Instead, the Court confirmed, as of the issuance of Castleman, that question
    remained undecided. 
    Id.
     Nor does anything indicate that the Supreme Court has
    since adopted the “capability test.” So it is beyond all dispute that the Majority
    Opinion’s “capability test” is not, in fact, Supreme Court law. And the Majority
    Opinion’s insistence to the contrary is simply incorrect.
    B.
    But that is not the only problem with the Majority Opinion’s analysis. The
    Majority Opinion independently reasons that Florida felony battery necessarily
    requires the use of “physical force” as anticipated by § 2L1.2’s definition of “crime
    of violence” because, it posits, felony battery cannot be committed by mere touch.
    See Maj. Op. at 21-29. To reach this conclusion, the Majority opinion takes two
    different tacks: (1) it ridicules the idea that felony battery could occur by mere
    touch and that the state would prosecute felony battery where the conduct involved
    only a mere touch; and (2) it relies on Florida intermediate-appellate law to support
    the notion that the second element of felony battery—the infliction of grievous
    bodily injury—necessarily precludes the possibility that felony battery may be
    committed by mere touch. See Maj. Op. at 21-22. Each fails under examination.
    1.
    58
    Case: 15-10351     Date Filed: 08/25/2017   Page: 59 of 67
    First, the Majority Opinion suggests that, as a matter of fact, grievous bodily
    injury cannot occur as the result of a mere touching, except in the case of a highly
    improbable “freak accident[],” so it is practically impossible to commit felony
    battery by mere touch. Maj. Op. at 27; see also id. at 8 (“Unlike the simple battery
    statute at issue in Curtis Johnson, Florida’s felony battery statute requires more
    than a slight unwanted touch.”). Judge Wilson explains why this is incorrect.
    See Wilson Dissent at 10 n.4.
    I add that everyday experience tells us an unexpected touch can result in a
    start that causes a person to jerk involuntarily and sometimes, consequently, to
    injure himself.   Indeed, some people tap or tickle another just to see their
    involuntary reactions, though they no doubt think at the time that they are engaging
    in harmless pranks. So conceiving of how a person could commit felony battery
    by mere touch does not demand factual imagination.
    Nor, as the Majority Opinion asserts, does considering how a mere touch
    could result in grievous injury require “legal imagination.” See Maj. Op. at 27-28
    (quoting Moncrieffe v. Holder, 
    133 S. Ct. 1678
    , 1684-85 (2013)). As we have
    explained, a petitioner does not engage in “legal imagination” “when the statutory
    language itself . . . creates the ‘realistic probability’ that a state would apply the
    statute” to the identified least culpable conduct,” regardless of whether it actually
    59
    Case: 15-10351        Date Filed: 08/25/2017       Page: 60 of 67
    has done so. Ramos v. U.S. Att’y Gen., 
    709 F.3d 1066
    , 1071-72 (11th Cir. 2013)
    (emphasis added).
    The language of the felony-battery statute unquestionably crosses this
    threshold.    We know that, by its language, the first element applies to mere
    touching. State v. Hearns, 
    961 So. 2d 211
     (Fla. 2007); Curtis Johnson, 
    559 U.S. 133
    . We also know that the second element applies when grievous injury results
    from mere touching. And finally, we know that Florida has construed § 784.041 to
    lack any requirement concerning intent to harm. So the terms of the felony-battery
    statute itself make it plain beyond all doubt that mere touching that accidentally
    results in serious bodily injury squarely satisfies the statute’s requirements.
    Indeed, the government conceded as much at oral argument. 9 For this reason,
    despite the Majority Opinion’s reassurance that, “to [its] knowledge, there is . . . no
    case in which [mere touching that accidentally resulted in serious bodily injury]
    9
    The government tried to avoid the consequences of its concession by arguing that proximate-
    causation principles might prevent Florida from using the felony-battery statute to prosecute this
    type of conduct. But it also eventually conceded at oral argument that it is, at best, “not clear”
    whether proximate-causation requirements limit the application of Florida’s felony-battery
    statute. And neither the government nor we could find any cases where a Florida court appeared
    to have applied proximate-causation principles to felony battery. Plus even if Florida were to
    apply proximate-causation principles to felony battery, whether that would preclude prosecution
    of all mere touching that accidentally results in grievous injury is likewise unclear. Under these
    circumstances, and where the conduct at issue unambiguously falls within the bounds of the
    statute as written, we must presume that proximate-causation principles do not apply and
    conclude that mere touching that accidentally results in grave injury is the least culpable conduct
    that may be prosecuted under Florida’s felony-battery statute.
    60
    Case: 15-10351        Date Filed: 08/25/2017        Page: 61 of 67
    has been held to constitute a felony battery under Florida Statute § 784.041,”10
    whether Florida has actually prosecuted such a case is entirely irrelevant to the
    analysis. See Ramos, 709 F.3d at 1071-72.
    Contrary to the Majority Opinion’s suggestion, see Maj. Op. at 27 (“there is
    no support in Florida law for the idea that Florida Statute § 784.041 is designed to
    criminalize the conduct described in the proffered hypotheticals”), the enacting
    legislators’ supposed intentions in designing Florida’s felony-battery statute—even
    if we could discern them (the Majority Opinion offers no evidence of them)—
    likewise have no bearing on the inquiry. The Supreme Court has advised us on
    more than one occasion that when the statutory language is clear, it does not matter
    what the legislature had in mind when it enacted the law.                         See Oncale v.
    Sundowner Offshore Servs., Inc., 
    523 U.S. 75
    , 79 (1998). So all that matters to
    whether a mere touch that accidentally results in serious bodily injury will be
    prosecuted under the felony-battery law is whether the statutory language allows
    10
    Nevertheless, a Westlaw search of the Florida caselaw database for “‘felony battery’ &
    784.041” and a review of all notes of reported decisions under West’s 
    Fla. Stat. Ann. § 784.041
    ,
    where the basis for prosecution under the felony-battery statute was disclosed, did not reveal a
    single reported case of felony battery that did not involve striking, other than the two cited in the
    Majority Opinion (the third case the Majority Opinion cited, Lewis v. State, 
    817 So. 2d 933
    , 934
    (Fla. 4th Dist. Ct. App. 2002), involved striking (punching), not mere touching). See Maj. Op. at
    26. In my view, two reported opinions is not a sufficient sample size to conclude that no one has
    ever been convicted of felony battery for mere-touching conduct. And even if it were, as noted
    above, mere touching that accidentally results in grievous bodily injury falls squarely within the
    language of the crime that § 784.041(1) makes criminal. That requires us to account for it.
    61
    Case: 15-10351        Date Filed: 08/25/2017        Page: 62 of 67
    for it (it does) and whether the prosecuting authority at that time decides to
    exercise her discretion to charge it.
    2.
    The Majority Opinion alternatively suggests that Florida courts have held
    that felony battery may not be committed by mere touch. It relies on the opinions
    of two Florida intermediate-appellate courts that have held that felony battery is a
    violent crime under Florida law because one of its elements requires serious bodily
    injury. See, e.g., Dominguez v. State, 
    98 So. 3d 198
    , 200 (Fla. 2d Dist. Ct. App.
    2012); see also Brooks v. State, 
    93 So. 3d 402
    , 403 (Fla. 2d Dist. Ct. App. 2012);
    State v. Williams, 
    9 So. 3d 658
    , 660 (Fla. 4th Dist. Ct. App. 2009). But these
    opinions do not purport to analyze the first element of felony battery. And only
    one of these opinions even mentions the binding Hearns opinion, 
    961 So. 2d 211
    ,
    while none explains how it may be harmonized with Hearns.
    In Hearns, Florida’s Supreme Court considered the meaning under Florida
    law of the element of simple battery11 that requires a person to have “[a]ctually and
    intentionally touche[d] or str[uck] another person against the will of the other,”
    
    Fla. Stat. § 784.03
    (1). It explained that “any intentional touching, no matter how
    slight”—even “only nominal contact”—satisfies this element of simple battery. 
    Id.
    11
    It did so in the context of evaluating whether the separate offense of battery on a law-
    enforcement officer, which entails simple battery knowingly committed on a law-enforcement
    officer, necessarily qualifies as a forcible felony under Florida’s violent-career criminal statute,
    
    Fla. Stat. § 775.084
    (1)(d), and Florida’s prisoner-releasee-reoffender statute, 
    Fla. Stat. § 775.082
    .
    62
    Case: 15-10351    Date Filed: 08/25/2017   Page: 63 of 67
    at 218-19. Taking pains to make its position clear, the court noted that simply
    “tapping a law enforcement officer on the shoulder without consent” or “[a]
    child[’s] shooting [of] a spitball at a school police officer”—acts that it described
    as “minor infractions”—likewise fulfills this element. 
    Id. at 219
    .
    Then, based on the Florida Supreme Court’s description of the meaning of
    this element, the United States Supreme Court determined that, when committed
    by mere touch, the crime of simple battery could not qualify as a violent felony
    under 
    18 U.S.C. § 924
    (e)(2)(B)(i) because it did not involve “physical force.”
    Curtis Johnson, 
    559 U.S. at 1269-74
    .
    This element of simple battery—the “[a]ctual[] and intentional[] touch[ing]
    or strik[ing] [of] another person against the will of the other”—is, as noted earlier
    in this dissent, precisely the same as the first element of felony battery. Compare
    
    Fla. Stat. § 784.03
    (1)(a) with 
    Fla. Stat. § 784.041
    (1)(a). Yet two of Florida’s
    intermediate appellate courts endowed this element with a different meaning. And
    they did so without even addressing the element.
    Florida’s Fourth District Court of Appeal (“DCA”) was the first court to
    conclude that felony battery under 
    Fla. Stat. § 784.041
     “cannot be committed
    without the use or threat of physical force or violence,” under Florida’s prison-
    releasee-reoffender sentencing provision. Williams, 
    9 So. 3d at 660
     (citation and
    internal quotation marks omitted). But it did so without any explanation beyond
    63
    Case: 15-10351     Date Filed: 08/25/2017     Page: 64 of 67
    the observation that felony battery “requires great bodily harm, permanent
    disability, or permanent disfigurement.” 
    Id.
     That, of course, is nothing more than
    a recognition of the contents of the second element of felony battery. Nothing in
    the court’s analysis addressed the first element of felony battery at all. In fact, the
    court’s analysis did not account for Hearns, for Hearns’s analysis of the first
    element to include mere touching, or for the fact that mere touching alone can
    result in “great bodily harm, permanent disability, or permanent disfigurement.” It
    didn’t even cite Hearns.
    Then Florida’s Second DCA tackled the question in Brooks, 
    93 So. 3d 402
    .
    But it simply quoted Williams to reach the same conclusion as the Second DCA.
    
    Id. at 403
    . And while it did include a citation to Hearns, the Fourth DCA’s
    parenthetical description of that case suggests that the court may have determined
    that felony battery “cannot be committed without the use or threat of physical force
    or violence” because it may have mistakenly believed that felony battery requires
    “intentionally causing bodily harm.” See Brooks, 
    93 So. 3d at 403
     (emphasis
    added). As I have discussed, however, Florida law has been very clear in holding
    that felony battery contains no such requirement. See Jefferies, 
    849 So. 2d at 404
    (“Felony battery is . . . a species of the specific intent crime of battery . . . but with
    resulting and unintended great bodily harm.” (emphasis in original)). And under
    the Supreme Court’s “use” trilogy of cases, at least under federal law, an element
    64
    Case: 15-10351      Date Filed: 08/25/2017   Page: 65 of 67
    requiring an intent to cause bodily harm, coupled with an intentional touching for
    the purpose of doing so, is very different from an element requiring only a mere
    touching that is not intended to inflict bodily injury.
    Florida’s Second DCA next discussed the issue in dicta in Dominguez, 
    98 So. 3d 198
    . Like the Williams Court, it did not cite Hearns and instead simply
    offered the same conclusory statement as Brooks and Williams: “[F]elony battery
    under section 784.041—which requires that the defendant cause great bodily harm,
    permanent disability, or permanent disfigurement to the victim— . . . cannot be
    committed without the use of physical force or violence.” 
    Id. at 200
    .
    a.
    Despite my deep respect for the Florida intermediate courts of appeal, I
    cannot help but notice that these cases do not account for the fact that Hearns held
    that the exact same element as is the first element of felony battery—the “[a]ctual[]
    and [intentional[] touch[ing] or strik[ing] [of] another person against the will of the
    other”—can be committed by mere touch and does not require the use of any type
    of violent force. This seems to me to be a fatal flaw in these cases.
    I am fully aware that where no state supreme-court case is on point,
    generally, federal courts must follow the decision of an intermediate appellate state
    court when it comes to matters of state law. See Benante v. Allstate Ins. Co., 477
    65
    Case: 15-10351        Date Filed: 08/25/2017       Page: 66 of 
    67 F.2d 553
    , 554 (5th Cir. 1973).12 But that rule is not absolute. Rather, when “other
    persuasive indications [exist] that the highest court of the state would decide
    otherwise,” 
    id.,
     we are obligated to heed them.
    Here, Florida’s highest court has analyzed the meaning of “[a]ctually and
    intentionally touch[ing] or strik[ing] another person against the will of the other,”
    and it has expressly concluded that that language includes mere touching. See
    Hearns, 
    961 So. 2d at 218-19
    . I find that quite the “persuasive indication[]” that
    Florida’s Supreme Court would reach a conclusion about whether the first element
    of felony battery may be committed by mere touch, different from the intermediate
    courts of appeal. This is particularly the case since the intermediate courts of
    appeal’s decisions do not recognize that Florida’s Supreme Court has expressly
    held that the same words at issue here include mere touching, and those courts do
    not explain why those very same words should be construed differently in the case
    of felony battery.
    b.
    And if we view the decisions of the intermediate courts of appeal as resting
    on only the second element of felony battery—a sensible reading since the cases do
    not address the first element at all—the cases run head-on into the
    Leocal/Castleman/Voisine trilogy.            As the Supreme Court has noted, “[t]he
    12
    Fifth Circuit cases issued before October 1, 1981, are binding authority in the Eleventh Circuit.
    Bonner v. City of Prichard, 
    661 F.2d 1206
    , 1209-1210 (11th Cir. 1981).
    66
    Case: 15-10351     Date Filed: 08/25/2017    Page: 67 of 67
    meaning of ‘physical force’ in [federal law] is a question of federal law, not state
    law.” Curtis Johnson, 
    559 U.S. at 138
    . So, of course, is the meaning of “use” of
    physical force as that term exists in the federal definition of “crime of violence.”
    The intermediate courts of appeal here relied exclusively on the second element of
    felony battery as written to conclude that felony battery satisfies Florida’s
    definition of “physical force.” See, e.g., Williams, 
    9 So. 3d at 660
    . But as
    discussed earlier in this dissent, the Leocal/Castleman/Voisine trilogy requires the
    conclusion that, under federal law, the second element of felony battery does not
    involve the “use . . . of physical force” because felony battery has no intent
    requirement. For this reason, the decisions of Florida’s intermediate courts of
    appeal cannot justify the conclusion that felony battery necessarily and always
    requires the “use . . . of physical force” under federal law, even when committed
    by mere touch that accidentally results in grievous bodily injury.
    III.   Conclusion
    The Supreme Court has provided clear guidance to allow us to determine
    whether Florida felony battery qualifies as a “crime of violence” under § 2L1.2.
    We must follow that guidance. When we do, it is clear that Florida felony battery
    does not satisfy the federal definition of “crime of violence.” I therefore dissent.
    67