United States v. Toyer , 414 F. App'x 584 ( 2011 )


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  •                             UNPUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 08-5036
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff - Appellee,
    v.
    LAMONT A. TOYER,
    Defendant - Appellant.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of
    Maryland, at Greenbelt. Roger W. Titus, District Judge. (8:07-
    cr-00513-RWT-1)
    Argued:   May 11, 2010                    Decided:   February 25, 2011
    Before WILKINSON and DAVIS, Circuit Judges, and C. Arlen BEAM,
    Senior Circuit Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for
    the Eighth Circuit, sitting by designation.
    Affirmed by unpublished per curiam opinion.    Judge Davis wrote
    Parts I and II of the opinion, in which Judge Wilkinson and
    Senior Judge Beam joined.   Judge Wilkinson wrote Parts III and
    IV of the opinion, in which Senior Judge Beam joined.      Judge
    Davis wrote a separate opinion concurring in part and dissenting
    in part.
    ARGUED:   Pat   M.   Woodward, Jr.,   Annapolis,   Maryland,  for
    Appellant.    Mushtaq Zakir Gunja, OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES
    ATTORNEY, Baltimore, Maryland, for Appellee.     ON BRIEF: Rod J.
    Rosenstein, United States Attorney, Baltimore, Maryland, Robert
    K. Hur, Assistant United States Attorney, OFFICE OF THE UNITED
    STATES ATTORNEY, Greenbelt, Maryland, for Appellee.
    Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.
    PER CURIAM:
    Appellant     Lamont    Toyer     (“Toyer”)      entered       a     conditional
    guilty plea to knowingly and unlawfully possessing a firearm
    that had traveled in or affected interstate commerce after being
    convicted of one or more crimes punishable by imprisonment for a
    term exceeding one year, in violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 922
    (g)(1).
    The indictment arose from events occurring at Toyer’s residence,
    during which the police seized two handguns discovered after a
    warrantless search.          Toyer raises two issues on appeal.                     First,
    he contends that the district court erred when it denied his
    motion to suppress the handguns found in his residence.                            Second,
    he contends that the district court erred in sentencing him to
    an enhanced sentence under the Armed Career Criminal Act.
    I.
    Shortly      before     midnight        on    June    5,     2007,      Officers
    Christopher      Adams       (“Officer      Adams”)      and       William     Weathers
    (“Officer     Weathers”)       were    dispatched       to     a    house     in    Upper
    Marlboro, Maryland, to respond to a 911 call.                        Toyer lived at
    the    residence     with    his   sister      Kimberly      Ballard      (“Ballard”).
    Officers Adams and Weathers were met at the door of the house by
    Ballard and her friend Kimberly Elliot (“Elliot”), who had also
    been staying at the house as a guest of Ballard’s.                           Elliot had
    made    the   911    call,    telling     the       dispatcher      that     Toyer     had
    2
    threatened to shoot her if she did not leave the house.                                  She
    repeated that information to the officers when they arrived.
    Ballard and Elliot also told the officers that Toyer had been
    drinking alcohol, was possibly intoxicated, and that Toyer was
    in the basement of the house.
    After speaking with the two women, the officers entered the
    house and, standing at the top of the basement stairs with their
    weapons      unholstered,           asked    Toyer    to     come    upstairs.         Toyer
    replied that he would not come upstairs.                         A conversation between
    Toyer     and       the   officers         ensued    for    two     to   three      minutes;
    eventually,          Toyer    came     upstairs.           The     officers   immediately
    handcuffed Toyer, placed him on the floor, and conducted a pat
    down search, but they did not find any weapons on Toyer.                                 The
    officers asked Toyer if he had a gun, and Toyer replied that he
    did not.            Elliot had previously told the officers that Toyer
    kept the weapon “downstairs” — possibly on a shelf — and so
    Officer Adams began a sweep of the basement area.                             When he did
    not   find      a    weapon    in     the    basement      after    searching    the    area
    twice, Officer Adams went back upstairs and advised the other
    officers that there was no weapon in the basement.
    Another         officer,       who     had    just    arrived      on   the     scene,
    overheard       Officer       Adams    and    told   him     that    Elliot   had     stated
    that the weapon might be in the drop ceiling of the basement.
    Officer Adams then returned to the basement a third time and
    3
    noticed that one of the tiles in the drop ceiling was ajar.                               He
    used a chair to boost himself up and, feeling around, pulled
    down two handguns.           The guns were fully loaded with the safety
    in the “off” position and with rounds in the chambers.                                  Toyer
    was formally arrested after the guns were found.
    After the grand jury returned an indictment on November 7,
    2007, charging Toyer with possession of a firearm in violation
    of    
    18 U.S.C. § 922
    (g),   he   filed       a    motion       to   suppress     the
    firearms.        The district court conducted an evidentiary hearing.
    After      hearing      testimony   from   the       officers        and    Ballard,     the
    district court denied Toyer’s motion to suppress, finding that
    (1)     there     was    valid   consent       for       the    search      and,   in    the
    alternative, (2) the search was justified by the existence of
    exigent circumstances.
    Toyer then entered into a plea agreement pursuant to which
    he pled guilty to violating 
    18 U.S.C. § 922
    (g).                              In the Pre-
    Sentence        Investigation    Report    (“PSR”),            the   probation     officer
    assigned Toyer 11 criminal history points, which established a
    criminal history category of V.                  The PSR, however, concluded
    that    Toyer     should    be   classified     as       an    armed    career     criminal
    under      
    18 U.S.C. § 924
    (e)   of   the       Armed      Career      Criminal     Act
    (“ACCA”), resulting in a criminal history category of VI.
    At sentencing, Toyer challenged his classification as an
    armed career criminal, arguing that his August 2004 conviction
    4
    in Maryland Circuit Court for second-degree assault was not an
    ACCA predicate offense.          The district court disagreed, finding
    that the second-degree assault conviction was a “violent felony”
    under the ACCA.     See 
    18 U.S.C. § 924
    (e)(1)(B).         The court based
    its determination on the plea colloquy relating to that offense:
    while   reciting    the     factual    basis   for    Toyer’s   plea,    the
    prosecutor   stated       that   he   would    have   proved    that    Toyer
    threatened his girlfriend with a handgun.
    Accordingly, the court sentenced Toyer to 210 months of
    imprisonment, which was at the bottom of the applicable advisory
    guidelines range.     Toyer filed a timely notice of appeal.
    II.
    When a motion to suppress is denied, we review the evidence
    in the light most favorable to the government.           United States v.
    Perkins, 
    363 F.3d 317
    , 320 (4th Cir. 2004).                We review the
    factual findings underlying the ruling on the motion to suppress
    for clear error and the legal determinations de novo.                  United
    States v. Grossman, 
    400 F.3d 212
    , 216 (4th Cir. 2005).
    On appeal, Toyer argues that Officer Adams’s search for
    weapons exceeded the scope of any consent given and that the
    search did not fall under any other exception to the Fourth
    Amendment’s warrant requirement.            The district court, however,
    did not clearly err in finding that the officers had consent
    5
    from Ballard and Elliot to search the basement area for weapons,
    or that, in the alternative, exigent circumstances validated the
    warrantless search.
    A.
    The   Fourth       Amendment   provides    that    “[t]he      right    of    the
    people   to   be   secure     in    their    persons,     houses,    papers,       and
    effects against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be
    violated . . . .”        U.S. Const. amend. IV.         The Fourth Amendment,
    therefore,    protects       against    warrantless       searches     of     homes.
    But “the Amendments are not rigid; they protect by insisting on
    judicial oversight, not by pressing inflexible rules,” Mora v.
    City of Gaithersburg, 
    519 F.3d 216
    , 222 (4th Cir. 2008), and
    this general rule is “subject to certain exceptions,” Brigham
    City v. Stuart, 
    547 U.S. 398
     (2006).
    We first consider Toyer’s argument that the officers did
    not have consent to search his residence for weapons.                          Valid
    consent is a well-recognized exception to the Fourth Amendment’s
    prohibition against warrantless searches. Illinois v. Rodriguez,
    
    497 U.S. 177
    , 181 (1990); United States v. Neely, 
    564 F.3d 346
    ,
    350 (4th Cir. 2009) (per curiam); Trulock v. Freeh, 
    275 F.3d 391
    , 401 (4th Cir. 2001).            The government bears the burden of
    establishing,      by    a   preponderance     of   the    evidence,        that    it
    obtained valid consent to search.             See United States v. Buckner,
    6
    
    473 F.3d 551
    , 554 (4th Cir. 2007); United States v. Block, 
    590 F.2d 535
    , 539 (4th Cir. 1978).
    A consent must be (1) knowing and voluntary, and (2) given
    by one with authority to consent.                       Buckner, 
    473 F.3d at 554
    .
    There is no question in this case that any consent given by
    Ballard and Elliot was knowing and voluntary. 1                   The analysis then
    turns        to   whether      the   person       giving    consent   had      apparent
    authority and whether the police officers exceeded the scope of
    the given consent.
    A warrantless search can be justified by showing permission
    to search by “a third party who possessed common authority over
    or   other        sufficient    relationship       to    the   premises   or    effects
    sought to be inspected.”               United States v. Matlock, 
    415 U.S. 164
    , 171 (1974).            The defendant is not the only person with
    1
    In her direct examination at the motions hearing, Ballard
    stated that although she authorized the officers to enter the
    house, she never consented to a search of the house:
    Q:    Other than saying they could step inside the
    house, did you say that they could search the house?
    A:    No.    No, I did not.
    J.A. 106.   Nevertheless, the district court declined to credit
    Ballard’s testimony in this regard, finding that the facts
    clearly showed that both Ballard and Elliot were “clearly upset
    and disturbed and wanted something done about [the situation]”
    and that Ballard’s grand jury testimony indicated the same.
    J.A. 185. We have no occasion to question the district court’s
    credibility determinations, and we therefore fully accept the
    court’s finding that Ballard gave consent to search the house at
    the same time that Elliot also gave consent.
    7
    authority          to    consent    to   a    search      of   his   home     or    residence;
    authority arises from mutual use of the property by those with
    joint access or control.                     Trulock, 
    275 F.3d at 403
    .                   “Common
    authority” is not merely a question of property interest but
    requires evidence of “mutual use” by one generally having “joint
    access or control for most purposes.”                          Matlock, 
    415 U.S. at
    171
    n.7.        Such use makes it “reasonable to recognize that any of the
    co-[users] has the right to permit the inspection in h[er] own
    right and that the other have assumed the risk that one of their
    number might permit the common area to be searched.”                                     
    Id.
        In
    the context of a house, a co-habitant of the house may give
    valid       consent       to    search   even   if     other     co-habitants         have     not
    given consent.                United States v. Hylton, 
    349 F.3d 781
    , 785 (4th
    Cir. 2003).
    A    lack        of    actual    authority,       however,       does      not    render
    consent invalid.                 The government may also show that a third
    party        had        apparent    authority        to    consent       to     the      search.
    Rodriguez, 
    497 U.S. at 188
    ; see also Buckner, 
    473 F.3d at 555
    .
    An   officer            can    reasonably     believe      that      a   third      party      has
    apparent authority to consent to a search if the facts available
    to the officer warrant a person of reasonable caution in the
    belief that the consenting party had authority.                               Rodriguez, 
    497 U.S. at 188
    .               Evidence obtained by the police acting under a
    reasonable belief that a third party had authority to grant a
    8
    valid consent need not be suppressed.                   United States v. Kinney,
    
    953 F.2d 863
    , 866-67 (4th Cir. 1992).
    Here, Ballard, who lived at the residence with her brother,
    the    defendant,    had    authority      to    give    consent       to   search     the
    house, and it was also reasonable for the officers to believe
    that Elliot had authority to consent to the search of the house.
    Any officer responding to the 911 call at that residence would
    have faced circumstances where they could reasonably infer that
    both Ballard and Elliot had authority to give consent to search:
    when the officers arrived at the residence, both women met them
    outside the house and repeated to the police that Toyer had a
    gun,    was   in    the    house,   and    was    in     the    basement       where    he
    regularly stored his guns.
    Although Toyer argues that the officers exceeded the scope
    of    any   valid   consent    because         Ballard    and    Elliot       only   gave
    permission to enter the house to search for him, and not for any
    weapons, his argument is not persuasive.                    The scope of consent
    for a search is “objective reasonableness,” or rather, what a
    reasonable     person      would    have       understood       from    the    exchange
    between the officer and consenting person.                      Florida v. Jimeno,
    
    500 U.S. 248
    , 251 (1991).            When an official search is properly
    consented to, the scope of the search is limited by the terms of
    the authorization.         Walter v. United States, 
    447 U.S. 649
    , 656-
    57 (1980).
    9
    We have held that a consenting person need not even give
    explicit and express consent to search for a reasonable officer
    to understand that valid consent was given.                                See Hylton, 
    349 F.3d at 786
     (holding that consent may be inferred from actions
    as well as words); United States v. Wilson, 
    895 F.2d 168
    , 170
    (4th Cir. 1990) (finding consent where defendant raised his arm
    after agent asked him permission for a pat down search); see
    also United States v. Risner, 
    593 F.3d 692
    , 694 (7th Cir. 2010)
    (finding implied consent for police to enter and search home for
    defendant      where       consenting        person      had    called      911,    and    also
    voluntarily told the police where the defendant was hiding in
    the house); United States v. Buetter-Janusch, 
    646 F.2d 759
    , 764
    (2d Cir. 1981) (“[A] search may be lawful even if the person
    giving consent does not recite the talismanic phrase: ‘You have
    my permission to search.’”).
    We    found,      in    Hylton,        implicit         consent      to    search    the
    apartment in which the defendant and his girlfriend lived based
    on the circumstances and the girlfriend’s words.                                  
    349 F.3d at 786
    .        This   court      found    that        the   girlfriend        gave    the   police
    consent to search the apartment to enable her to return to the
    apartment safely, and that the officers reasonably inferred that
    she authorized them to retrieve the gun that had put her at
    risk.        
    Id.
          We    were      also    persuaded         by   the    fact    that    the
    girlfriend         had      advised          the     officers        of      the     specific
    10
    circumstances     inside   the   apartment,     concluding    that   “when   a
    tenant calls police for assistance . . . expressing fear about
    the presence of a gun, and describing precisely where the gun is
    located, it can be inferred that she is authorizing the police
    to enter the apartment and retrieve the gun.”          
    Id. at 786-87
    .
    The situation here — one of a domestic dispute involving
    threats of violence with a gun — is similar to the situation in
    Hylton, and even if Ballard and Elliot did not give express
    consent to search the house for weapons, the officers reasonably
    inferred   that    such    implicit   consent    had   been    given.      The
    government’s burden is heavier where consent is not explicit,
    since consent is not lightly to be inferred.           Neely, 
    564 F.3d at
    350 (citing United States v. Impink, 
    728 F.2d 1228
    , 1232 (9th
    Cir. 1984)).      But the government meets the burden in this case.
    In their testimony, both officers stated that Ballard and Elliot
    seemed concerned and scared that Toyer had threatened Elliot
    with a gun, and told the officers that Toyer was in the basement
    of the house with the weapon.         Additionally, Elliot told Officer
    Adams that the gun was on a shelf, but then later told another
    officer that the gun may have been in the drop ceiling.                 Though
    she did not explicitly state “I consent for you to search the
    basement area for the gun,” it is reasonable to believe that a
    rational officer would find her statements about the whereabouts
    of the gun to be consent to search for the gun.              Furthermore, it
    11
    is reasonable for the officers responding to the frantic 911
    call to believe that both Ballard and Elliot were giving consent
    for the officers to enter the house, search for Toyer and his
    weapon, and diffuse the potentially dangerous situation.
    Although the officers made it clear to Ballard and Elliot
    after       they   had   detained      and    secured        Toyer   that    they    were
    searching for the gun, even asking the two women if they knew
    where the gun was kept, neither woman withdrew her permission to
    search the house for the weapon.                  And while Toyer, who was a co-
    habitant of the house, could have expressly refused consent for
    the police to enter and search the house for weapons, he did no
    such thing even after he was detained and knew that the officers
    were       continuing    to   search   the        basement    for    a   weapon. 2    See
    2
    There is some dispute as to whether Toyer explicitly told
    the officers that they did not have his consent to search the
    house, but the record persuasively convinces us that he did not.
    First, during his testimony at the motions hearing, Officer
    Adams was asked whether he had heard Toyer state at any point
    that they could not search his house without a warrant. Officer
    Adams replied that he had not.     J.A. 120.    Second, although
    Ballard testified that she heard her brother explicitly deny
    consent to search, the district court found that her testimony
    was not credible:
    I do not credit the testimony of the sister at all on
    the notion that he invoked his right to be free from
    unreasonable searches and seizures.  My understanding
    from what I’ve heard and in this testimony is that he
    simply refused to come upstairs.
    J.A. 182.   Given the high standard and deference we give to a
    district court’s factual finding, and given the testimony of the
    (Continued)
    12
    Georgia   v.   Randolph,   
    547 U.S. 103
    ,    123    (2006)   (holding    that
    where there was an express refusal of consent to search from a
    co-habitant, the consent of the fellow occupant is not valid).
    Therefore, it is clear that the officers had valid consent from
    Ballard and Elliot to search the house and all evidence found
    during that search was correctly admitted.
    B.
    Not only did the officers have valid consent to justify the
    warrantless search, but the search of Toyer’s residence was also
    valid because of exigent circumstances.                It is well-established
    that even when an officer has probable cause to believe that
    contraband is present in a home, a warrantless search of the
    home is unlawful unless exigent circumstances exist at the time
    of entry.      United States v. Mowatt, 
    513 F.3d 395
    , 399 (4th Cir.
    2008) (citing Payton v. New York, 
    445 U.S. 573
    , 589 (1980)).
    Exigent   circumstances       justify    a   warrantless     search   when    an
    officer   would   have   an   objectively       reasonable   belief   that    an
    officers that they did not hear Toyer refuse consent to search
    the house, we cannot find that the district court committed a
    clear error in finding that Toyer stayed silent with respect to
    the search of the house. See also Ornelas v. United States, 
    517 U.S. 690
    , 699 (1996) (reviewing factual findings by “giving due
    weight to inferences drawn from those facts by resident judges
    and local law enforcement officers”).
    13
    emergency     existed       that       required    immediate       entry      to    render
    assistance or prevent harm.                   United States v. Moss, 
    963 F.2d 673
    , 678 (4th Cir. 1992).                 The government bears the burden of
    demonstrating that exigent circumstances existed to overcome the
    presumption of unreasonable search and entry.                          See Mowatt, 
    513 F.3d at 399
    .           Exigency is determined at the moment the search
    occurs.          
    Id.
           Exigent       circumstances         exist    in    situations
    involving a “risk of danger to the police or to other persons
    inside or outside the dwelling,” as well as in situations where
    officers have probable cause to believe that there is illegal
    activity present, where there is a compelling need for official
    action, and where there is no time to secure a warrant.                             United
    States v. Moses, 
    540 F.3d 263
    , 270 (4th Cir. 2008) (quoting
    Minnesota v. Olson, 
    495 U.S. 91
    , 100 (1990)); see also Michigan
    v. Tyler, 
    436 U.S. 499
    , 509 (1978).                    In ascertaining whether an
    officer acted reasonably in determining whether urgency existed,
    the   court      must     look    at    the   events     and    officer’s      knowledge
    immediately       prior     to     commencing      the     search       and   apply    an
    objective standard.          Moses, 
    540 F.3d at 273
    ; Hunsberger v. Wood,
    
    570 F.3d 546
    , 554 (4th Cir. 2009).
    We have articulated a nonexhuastive list of factors for the
    police      to         consider        when    determining         whether         exigent
    circumstances are present:               “(1) the degree of urgency involved
    and the amount of time necessary to obtain a warrant; (2) the
    14
    officers’ reasonable belief that the contraband is about to be
    removed or destroyed; (3) the possibility of danger to police
    guarding the site; (4) information indicating the possessors of
    the contraband are aware that the police are on their trail; and
    (5) the ready destructability of the contraband.”                       United States
    v. Turner, 
    650 F.2d 526
    , 528 (4th Cir. 1981).
    We   have     no     hesitation         in   concluding           that   exigent
    circumstances existed in this case. The record reflects that
    officers responded to a frantic 911 call about a man threatening
    an occupant of a residence with a firearm.                    Having gleaned the
    reason for responding to the 911 call, and after arriving at
    Toyer’s    residence      and     talking     to   Ballard        and    Elliot,   any
    reasonable officer would have believed that urgent circumstances
    necessitated a warrantless search of the basement for a gun.                        In
    her 911 call, Elliot stated specifically that she was threatened
    by Toyer with a handgun, and this information was conveyed to
    the   responding    officers.         After    arriving      at   the     house,   both
    Ballard and Elliot confirmed and repeated that Toyer had a gun,
    was   intoxicated,       and    had   threatened    to    shoot     Elliot.        Both
    Officers Adams and Weathers understood that the urgency existed
    in not only finding and physically securing Toyer, but also in
    securing the handgun used in the threat.                 See Moses, 
    540 F.3d at 270
       (finding     exigent      circumstances      for   a    warrantless      search
    where officers suspected a dangerous person in the dwelling);
    15
    Mowatt, 
    513 F.3d at 399
     (finding exigent circumstances where the
    officers had a reasonable suspicion that the defendant had a
    weapon in his house).
    Furthermore, the officers only searched the house for Toyer
    and his firearm — the person and item that posed the risk in
    this situation.        At no time did they exceed the scope of their
    authority   to    search   by    looking    around     the     house    for   other
    contraband.       In   fact,    Officer    Adams’     search    was    constrained
    specifically to the basement, where Ballard and Elliot had told
    him that Toyer kept a gun, and he only looked in the places that
    Elliot had advised him that Toyer might have kept the gun — on
    the shelves and in the drop ceiling, but never in any drawers or
    other areas not in plain sight.             The officers’ actions further
    persuade us that they reasonably believed that the urgency and
    safety risks posed by this situation required them to secure
    both Toyer and his weapon.           This was not a situation where “a
    search that is far more intrusive than necessary to accomplish
    its   purpose    may   raise   questions    as   to    whether    the   proffered
    explanation for the search is the true one.”                   United States v.
    Johnson, 
    410 F.3d 137
    , 146 (4th Cir. 2005) (adhering to the
    principle that warrantless entry for emergency reasons cannot be
    used as an excuse for discovery of other items not related to
    the purpose of the entry).            Therefore, exigent circumstances
    necessitated     the   warrantless    search     of    Toyer’s    residence     not
    16
    only to secure him, but also the weapon he used to threaten
    other occupants of the house.
    III.
    We turn now to Toyer’s contention that the district court
    erred   in   sentencing    him    under     the    Armed     Career   Criminal      Act
    (“ACCA”),     which    imposes      a     fifteen-year         mandatory     minimum
    sentence for any defendant who violates 
    18 U.S.C. § 922
    (g) and
    who has three prior convictions for “serious drug offense[s]” or
    “violent felon[ies].”         
    18 U.S.C. § 924
    (e)(1).               Toyer concedes
    that he violated 
    18 U.S.C. § 922
    (g) and does not contest the
    district     court’s      determination         that     his     1996      and     2002
    convictions    for    possession     with      intent   to     distribute    cocaine
    constitute “serious drug offense[s]” under the ACCA.                             See 
    18 U.S.C. § 924
    (e)(2)(A).            Instead, Toyer argues that the third
    conviction used as an ACCA predicate – a 2004 conviction for
    second-degree    assault     in    Maryland       in   violation      of   Md.    Code.
    Ann., Crim. Law § 3-203 (the “Maryland conviction”) – is invalid
    because the crime was not a “violent felony” under 
    18 U.S.C. § 924
    (e)(2)(B)(i).
    A.
    In evaluating Toyer’s argument, we keep several facts in
    mind.    The first is that while the ACCA provides two specific
    17
    definitions of the term “violent felony,” only one is at issue
    here.         The     government        has    not     argued      that        the     Maryland
    conviction is a violent felony under the so-called “otherwise
    clause” of the ACCA, which defines a violent felony as any crime
    that    “is     burglary,        arson,       or     extortion,      involves          use    of
    explosives,         or   otherwise        involves        conduct    that        presents      a
    serious    potential          risk   of   physical        injury    to    another.”            
    18 U.S.C. § 924
    (e)(2)(B)(ii).                So we are confined to evaluating the
    district      court’s         determination        that    the     Maryland          conviction
    qualifies as an ACCA predicate under what is known as the “force
    clause.”        See      
    18 U.S.C. § 924
    (e)(2)(B)(i).              That        provision
    states that a violent felony is any offense that “has as an
    element the use, attempted use, or threatened use of physical
    force against the person of another.”                     
    Id.
    The second fact we keep in mind involves the methodology of
    determining whether or not the Maryland conviction constitutes a
    “violent felony.”             The preferred approach for evaluating whether
    prior convictions qualify as “violent felonies” and thus as ACCA
    predicates is the categorical approach, under which we look only
    to the fact of conviction and the statutory elements of the
    offense.       See Taylor v. United States, 
    495 U.S. 575
    , 600-02
    (1990); United States v. Harcum, 
    587 F.3d 219
    , 222 (4th Cir.
    2009)   (“In        assessing     whether      an    offense     constitutes           an    ACCA
    predicate      offense,         we   must      first      utilize        the     categorical
    18
    approach.       As we have recently explained, we are obliged, under
    that approach, to analyze the offense generically – that is, by
    relying solely on its essential elements, rather than on the
    particular underlying facts.”) (internal quotations omitted).
    In Johnson v. United States, 
    130 S. Ct. 1265
     (2010), the
    Supreme Court held that in order for a crime categorically to be
    a violent felony under 
    18 U.S.C. § 924
    (e)(2)(B)(i), it must have
    the use of violent force as an element.                      See Johnson, 
    130 S. Ct. at 1271
    .      Here,    the        government    has       conceded     that   Maryland
    second-degree assault does not include use of violent force as
    an element of the crime.               That concession makes good sense; the
    statutory     definition        of    Maryland     second-degree          assault   is    so
    broad that it is impossible to tell based on the elements alone
    whether or not a defendant “use[d] . . . physical force against
    the    person    of    another.”          
    18 U.S.C. § 924
    (e)(2)(B)(i);          see
    Harcum, 
    587 F.3d at 224
     (“Maryland ‘common-law assault is not
    per     se      a      violent         felony         within      the      meaning        of
    § 924(e)(2)(B)(i).’”)           (quoting        United    States     v.    Coleman,      
    158 F.3d 199
    , 204 (4th Cir. 1998)).
    Accordingly,      we     must     turn     to     the    modified     categorical
    approach set forth in Shepard v. United States, 
    544 U.S. 13
    , 26
    (2005).       See     Harcum,    
    587 F.3d at 223
         (“[W]hen    the   fact     of
    conviction      and    the    statutory        definition       of   the    offense      are
    unduly vague or ambiguous, a sentencing court is entitled to
    19
    turn       to     and    apply       the    alternative    ‘modified      categorical’
    approach.”). Under that approach, we may look to a circumscribed
    set    of       court    documents     to    determine    whether   or    not   a   prior
    conviction constitutes an ACCA predicate.                    In particular, we may
    consider         “charging     documents,      plea   agreements,     transcripts     of
    plea colloquies, findings of fact and conclusions of law from a
    bench trial, and jury instructions and verdict forms,” Johnson,
    
    130 S. Ct. at 1273
    ,    in    determining     whether      or   not   Toyer
    “necessarily admitted” facts amounting to a violent felony under
    the ACCA, Shepard, 
    544 U.S. at 24
    .                        With these principles in
    mind, we turn to whether the district court erred in determining
    that the Maryland conviction was an ACCA predicate.
    B.
    The only Shepard-approved document on record with respect
    to the Maryland conviction is the transcript of Toyer’s plea
    colloquy in the Circuit Court of Maryland. 3                    As a result, it is
    worth setting out the colloquy in some detail.                        Early on, while
    confirming that Toyer’s plea was voluntary and free of coercion,
    3
    The Government initially argued that the district court
    was allowed to consider the Maryland District Court’s Statement
    of Probable Cause in determining whether the Maryland conviction
    (which occurred in Maryland Circuit Court) was an ACCA
    predicate. The government has abandoned that argument in light
    of our decision in Harcum. See Harcum, 
    587 F.3d at 224-25
    .
    20
    the judge asked Toyer whether he was actually guilty of second-
    degree assault.   Toyer agreed that he was:
    THE COURT: You’re pleading guilty because you are, in
    fact, guilty of a second degree assault?
    MR. TOYER: Yes, sir.
    After asking a few more questions designed to ensure Toyer’s
    understanding of the proceedings, the judge asked the prosecutor
    to set forth the factual basis for the plea.    In response, the
    prosecutor described the basic facts of the case:
    Your Honor, had this matter proceeded to trial
    the State would show that on January 1, 2004 . . . the
    victim, Carmen Pickford, and her boyfriend, Lamont
    Toyer . . . . got into an argument over the fact that
    Ms. Pickford had allegedly seen another man while Mr.
    Toyer was unavailable.     The defendant, the victim
    called the police . . . and she told the police the
    defendant had pulled a handgun on her and threatened
    her with that handgun.
    When the police arrived they did search the area
    where Mr. Toyer was sitting and found a handgun
    underneath the seat of the cushion of the couch that
    he was sitting on. The defendant made a statement to
    the police that his prints weren’t on that particular
    weapon. The gun actually was test fired and found to
    be operational.
    The court then asked Toyer if he “agree[d] that’s basically what
    happened,” and Toyer’s counsel responded as follows:
    MR. BEAU: Your Honor, we’ll agree that’s the evidence
    they presented. My client says I have no involvement
    with the gun involved.    I did have a fight with her
    and that’s part of the reason that the case is being
    resolved this way.
    THE COURT:   All right, I’m going to accept the plea
    and enter a finding of guilty as to Count II.
    21
    If Toyer actually did threaten Pickford with a handgun, his
    crime would amount to a violent felony under the ACCA.                           A threat
    involving a handgun plainly constitutes the “threatened use of
    physical force against the person of another” within the meaning
    of 
    18 U.S.C. § 924
    (e)(2)(B)(i).                   After all, threatening someone
    with a handgun necessarily entails threatening them with “force
    capable of causing physical pain or injury to another person.”
    Johnson, 
    130 S. Ct. 1271
    ; see United States v. Cook, 
    26 F.3d 507
    , 509 (4th Cir. 1994) (using a handgun to threaten a state
    witness   constitutes           a     violent        felony      under     
    18 U.S.C. § 924
    (e)(2)(B)(i)).        By contrast, if the dispute between Toyer
    and Pickford was a purely verbal argument involving no threats
    of force, Toyer’s crime would not qualify as an ACCA predicate.
    See 
    18 U.S.C. § 924
    (e)(2)(B)(i).
    C.
    Toyer      contends    that       our    decision      in   United     States       v.
    Alston,   
    611 F.3d 219
           (4th   Cir.     2010),     forecloses        us    from
    concluding   that    he    committed         a    violent     felony     based    on    his
    alleged threat with a handgun because his attorney disclaimed
    Toyer’s “involvement with the gun involved.”
    22
    1.
    In    Alston,    we    determined       that    a    prior    conviction    for
    Maryland second-degree assault could not constitute a “violent
    felony” under the ACCA where the defendant entered an Alford
    plea.        Alston, 
    611 F.3d at 220-21
    ; see North Carolina v. Alford,
    
    400 U.S. 25
     (1970).           As in this case, the court had to apply the
    modified       categorical      approach    because         Maryland       second-degree
    assault was not categorically a violent felony.                             Id. at 223.
    Under Shepard, however, courts may only rely on facts “inherent
    in the conviction” or “admitted by the defendant” in determining
    the predicate status of a conviction.                  Id. at 226.
    In Alston’s case, the use of violent force was not inherent
    in his conviction.            Nor was it admitted by the defendant; while
    the prosecutor’s proffer during the plea colloquy suggested that
    Alston had “pointed a gun at three individuals and threatened to
    kill them,” the fact that Alston entered into an Alford plea
    meant    that     he    had    “pleaded    guilty       without      admitting     these
    facts.”       Id. at 227.      Indeed, in response to the proffer, Alston
    quite clearly stated, “I think it’s in my best interests to take
    the deal rather than go to trial and run the risk I might get
    the maximum penalty.            So I want the deal, but I don’t want to
    say I did the crime.”           Id. at 223.       Thus, because Alston had not
    admitted       facts    establishing      that    his       crime    was    a   “violent
    23
    felony,”    the    court       concluded     that     his      Maryland    second-degree
    assault conviction could not serve as an ACCA predicate.
    Toyer argues we should reach the same result here because
    his attorney attempted to disavow Toyer’s involvement with the
    handgun    found     at    the    scene.          When    the    court    asked     if    the
    prosecutor’s       proffer       set     forth       “basically       what      happened,”
    Toyer’s attorney agreed that the proffer set forth “the evidence
    they presented,” but went on to note that his client had “no
    involvement     with      the    gun    involved”        and    instead    merely       had   a
    fight with the victim.                 Based on that statement, Toyer argues
    that his plea was the functional equivalent of an Alford plea
    with respect to his alleged use of a handgun.                            In other words,
    Toyer    contends    that       the    colloquy      cannot     serve     as    proof    that
    Toyer committed a violent felony because Toyer refused to admit
    to the one fact that would support such a determination.
    The principal difficulty with this argument, however, is
    quite simply that Toyer, unlike Alston, did not tender an Alford
    plea.     Indeed, during the entire plea colloquy, Toyer neither
    disclaimed     his     guilt     of     second-degree          assault    nor    voiced       a
    desire    to   enter      an     Alford      plea.        To    the   contrary,         Toyer
    expressly      acknowledged            his    guilt       immediately          before     the
    prosecutor’s proffer:
    THE COURT: You’re pleading guilty because you are, in
    fact, guilty of a second degree assault?
    MR. TOYER: Yes, sir.
    24
    (emphasis added).          Toyer’s conduct at the plea colloquy was, in
    short,       designed     to    do    one        thing      –   facilitate       the   court’s
    approval of his guilty plea.                      And for good reason – the plea
    allowed      Toyer   to    cut      his     prison       exposure       by   half.     Toyer’s
    indictment charged him with one count of first-degree assault,
    one count of second-degree assault, and one count of use of a
    handgun in the commission of a crime of violence.                               Second-degree
    assault was by far the least serious of these charges, carrying
    a maximum ten-year prison term in comparison with the twenty-
    five year maximum term for first-degree assault and the five-
    year   mandatory        minimum      and        twenty-year       maximum       term   for   the
    handgun charge.           See Md. Code. Ann., Crim. Law §§ 3-202 (first-
    degree assault), 3-203 (second-degree assault), 4-204 (use of
    handgun in commission of crime).
    Given    these      circumstances,              Toyer    willingly       admitted     his
    guilt of second-degree assault to avoid prosecution on the other
    counts.       His conduct stands in stark contrast to that of Alston,
    who expressly refused to say that he “did the crime” before
    tendering a formal Alford plea.
    Our    distinguished          colleague         in   dissent      argues      that    this
    distinction does not matter – that it “will not do” to give
    “talismanic       significance             to    the     label        ‘Alford    plea,’”     see
    Dissenting      Opinion        at    34.        However,        the    distinction     between
    25
    Alford and non-Alford pleas is indeed critical because the two
    categories differ in a number of salient ways.            For example, in
    an Alford plea, the defendant maintains his innocence but pleads
    guilty because “his interests require entry of a guilty plea.”
    Alford, 
    400 U.S. at 37
    .        By contrast, in a traditional guilty
    plea,   the   defendant    “admi[ts]     that   he   committed     the    crime
    charged against him.”       Alford, 
    400 U.S. at 32
    .          What is more,
    the   prosecutor’s   proffer   of   the   factual    basis   for    the    plea
    serves a fundamentally different purpose in each type of plea
    agreement.    In an Alford plea, the prosecutor tenders a proffer
    to ensure the voluntariness of the plea.             In the words of the
    Alford Court, the proffer “provide[s] a means by which the judge
    [can] test whether the plea [i]s being intelligently entered.”
    See 
    id. at 37-38
    .      In a non-Alford plea, however, the proffer
    defines and frames the agreement, clarifying the nature of the
    offense to which the defendant has decided to plead.
    It thus makes little sense to treat Alford and non-Alford
    pleas as fungible.        That is especially true where, as here, a
    defendant seeks to carve out a subset of non-Alford pleas for
    special treatment.    Alford pleas, like traditional guilty pleas,
    have a well-defined meaning and occupy a well-defined niche in
    the law of plea agreements: an Alford plea serves as a formal
    expression of disagreement with the factual basis for one’s plea
    agreement.     See Alston, 
    611 F.3d at 226
    .             “Quasi-Alford” or
    26
    “faux-Alford”      pleas,        by     contrast,     stand       on     much       shakier
    doctrinal   footing,       and    we     see    no   reason      to    fashion      such    a
    category from whole cloth.
    As a result, we cannot agree with our colleague’s view that
    Alston is “binding.”             See Dissenting Opinion at 34, 35, 39.
    Alston never once suggested that its holding reached outside the
    context    of   formal     Alford       pleas.       Because      Toyer’s       offhanded
    disavowal   of     the    prosecutor’s         proffer     did    not    constitute        an
    Alford plea, his case does not fall within Alston’s ambit.                                 In
    other words, Alston could not be more different, and it does not
    control the outcome here.
    2.
    The lack of an Alford plea is not the only difficulty with
    Toyer’s argument.          In Shepard, the Court determined that “any
    sentence under the ACCA” must “rest on a showing that a prior
    conviction ‘necessarily’ involved (and a prior plea necessarily
    admitted) facts” sufficient to establish ACCA-predicate status.
    Shepard, 
    544 U.S. at 24
    .                Here, Toyer argues that he did not
    “necessarily admit[ ]” to having used a handgun in a threatening
    fashion, meaning that his conviction is not a violent felony.
    But Toyer’s argument collapses on itself.
    The    prosecutor’s         proffer       established        that    the       dispute
    between    Toyer    and    his        girlfriend     had    two       parts:    a   verbal
    27
    argument      followed     by    Toyer’s       threatening     use    of    a   handgun.
    Under      Maryland    law,     the       verbal    argument   does   not   constitute
    second-degree         assault;        a    purely    verbal    exchange     devoid      of
    threats would not involve the actual, attempted, or threatened
    use of “unlawful force.”                   Kellum v. State, 
    162 A.2d 473
    , 176
    (Md. 1960); see Cruz v. State, 
    963 A.2d 1184
    , 1188 n.3 (Md.
    2009). 4     Indeed, as the district court recognized, and as Toyer
    does not dispute, “You can’t commit an assault by arguing.                             The
    only way you can commit an assault is to put somebody in fear of
    an impending battery.               In other words, a force being applied to
    your person.”
    As      a   result,      the     only    possible    factual     basis     for   the
    Maryland conviction was the threat involving a handgun.                           Thus,
    only one of two results can possibly obtain.                         Either Toyer did
    “necessarily admit[ ]” to using a handgun, or he entered a plea
    without any factual basis.                  Under this latter scenario, Toyer’s
    plea to second-degree assault would have been unlawful.                               With
    respect to Toyer, this result would likely have necessitated a
    4
    In particular, Maryland’s second-degree assault statute
    states that “[a] person may not commit an assault,” 
    Md. Code Ann., Crim. Law § 3-203
    , and the statute elsewhere defines the
    term “assault” to mean “the crimes of assault, battery, and
    assault and battery, which retain their judicially determined
    meanings,” 
    Md. Code Ann., Crim. Law § 3-201
    . Maryland case law,
    in turn, defines “battery” to require “unlawful force used
    against the person of another, no matter how slight,” Kellum,
    162 A.2d at 476.
    28
    trial and possible conviction on the other charges.   By the same
    token, the judge would have acted improperly in accepting a plea
    without a factual basis.   Indeed, had the judge been sitting in
    federal court, such conduct would amount to a clear violation of
    Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 11(b)(3), which requires a
    judge entering a plea to “determine that there is a factual
    basis for the plea.”   Fed. R. Crim. P 11(b)(3).   Even in state
    court, the judge’s conduct might raise constitutional concerns.
    See, e.g., Willett v. Georgia, 
    608 F.2d 538
    , 540 (5th Cir. 1979)
    (“[W]e hold that, when a defendant pleads guilty while claiming
    his or her innocence, the court commits constitutional error in
    accepting the plea unless the plea is shown to have a factual
    basis.”). 5
    5
    Our colleague in dissent argues that this point is a
    nonstarter insofar as “exactly the same thing can and must be
    said about the prosecutor’s factual proffer in support of the
    Alford plea in Alston.” See Dissenting Opinion at 36. But that
    analysis misses the mark.     Alford declared that it was not
    unconstitutional for a court to accept “a plea containing a
    protestation of innocence” where the defendant “intelligently
    concludes that his interests require entry of a guilty plea and
    the record before the judge contains strong evidence of actual
    guilt.”    Alford, 
    400 U.S. at 37
    .   But Alford did nothing to
    disturb the hornbook principle that a non-Alford plea without a
    factual basis would be unconstitutional. See Willett, 
    608 F.2d at 540
    ; see also Alford, 
    400 U.S. at
    38 n.10 (“A criminal
    defendant does not have an absolute right under the Constitution
    to have his guilty plea accepted by the Court.”).       In other
    words, while defendants are free to enter Alford pleas, with all
    of their attendant formalities, see Zinkand v. Brown, 
    478 F.3d 634
    , 635-36 (4th Cir. 2007) (example of an Alford plea
    colloquy), they cannot obtain the benefit of Alford pleas by
    (Continued)
    29
    Of course, Toyer did not assert that his plea agreement was
    illegal back in 2004, and he does not make any such assertion
    now.       By all accounts, Toyer was satisfied with the outcome of
    the plea negotiations.          There is a simple reason for this fact:
    the plea agreement was favorable to Toyer.                  At bottom, then,
    Toyer wants contradictory things from the Maryland conviction.
    On the one hand, he wants his second-degree assault plea to
    stand      because    it   significantly   reduced   his    potential   prison
    exposure.      On the other hand, he seeks to undermine the factual
    basis for that very conviction in order to bar a career criminal
    sentence      under   the   ACCA.    In    other   words,   Toyer   wants   the
    benefits of an Alford plea without having actually entered one.
    Toyer cannot have it both ways.            Toyer knowingly pled guilty to
    the crime described by the prosecutor and “necessarily admitted”
    his use of a handgun, meaning that his offense is indeed a
    violent felony. 6
    acquiescing    in     non-Alford    arrangements   of    dubious
    constitutionality.   Our colleague’s analysis thus suffers from
    the same difficulty as earlier: the insistence that Alford pleas
    and non-Alford pleas must be treated alike.
    6
    Even the statements Toyer’s counsel made reinforce the
    conclusion that Toyer committed a violent felony.         Those
    statements cannot be divorced from the fact that Toyer pled
    guilty to second-degree assault based on what his attorney
    described as a “fight” with Toyer’s girlfriend that resulted in
    her calling the police.    It would be quite a stretch of the
    imagination to conclude from the colloquy that Toyer’s actions
    (Continued)
    30
    3.
    Finally, it is well to take a step back and examine the
    consequences of adopting Toyer’s approach.             Alston presents a
    clear and easy-to-administer rule given that parties and courts
    alike are and will continue to be well aware of how Alford pleas
    work.     Toyer invites us to reject this approach and to create a
    new category of “quasi-Alford” plea agreements for ACCA purposes
    that is far less determinate.           Such an approach would make the
    ACCA sentencing process even more abstruse than it already is
    and   would   inject   yet    another   layer   of   uncertainty    into   an
    already complex process.
    Moreover,   the      “quasi-Alford”     plea    would      encourage
    gamesmanship at sentencing hearings.            The temptation would no
    doubt be great for defense counsel to quibble about the evidence
    presented in a plea colloquy in order to tee up a contest to a
    possible future ACCA sentence.          In such circumstances, even the
    slightest and most fleeting observation voiced during a plea
    colloquy would force reviewing courts to struggle with knotty
    questions about exactly how much uncertainty dooms a putative
    did not involve the use or threatened use of violent force, see
    Johnson, 
    130 S. Ct. at 1271
    , and instead amounted to some benign
    form of assault like “kissing without consent, touching or
    tapping, jostling, and throwing water upon another,” United
    States v. Kirksey, 
    138 F.3d 120
    , 125 (4th Cir. 1998) (quoting
    Epps v. State, 
    634 A.2d 20
    , 23 (Md. 1993)).
    31
    ACCA    predicate,       or     worse,     begin      to    parse      plea    colloquy
    transcripts      for    magic    words.         In   short,     sentencing     hearings
    would turn into nothing less than forums for relitigating the
    defendant’s earlier plea colloquies to a far greater extent than
    at present.          This result is fundamentally at odds with Taylor
    and Shepard, which sought “to protect sentencing courts from
    becoming forums in which the prosecution and defense attempt to
    reproduce      the    defendant’s    earlier         trial.”        United    States    v.
    Dean, 
    604 F.3d 169
    , 175 (4th Cir. 2010).
    There     is     little      need    for        us      to    encourage     such
    uncertainties.         Since 1970, a defendant who wishes to dispute
    the factual basis for his plea has had several options.                          He can
    seek to withdraw the plea.           He can attempt to offer some kind of
    alternative factual basis.            Or he can enter an Alford plea.                   If
    he avails himself of the last approach, Alston will prevent the
    resulting conviction from serving as an ACCA predicate.                                But
    when defendants like Toyer refuse each and every one of these
    options – either because they wish to acknowledge their guilt or
    because they seek a more favorable sentencing outcome – they
    necessarily fall outside Alston’s borders.
    32
    IV.
    Because Alston’s challenges to the search of his residence
    and   to   his   sentence   are   without   merit,   the   judgment    of   the
    district court is hereby affirmed.
    AFFIRMED
    33
    DAVIS, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and dissenting in part:
    I   concur      in     the       panel’s     resolution         of       Toyer’s     Fourth
    Amendment      claim,      but     I    dissent      from       its       resolution      of     his
    sentencing claim. If Alston is correctly decided, then this case
    is   wrongly    decided.         If    this   case    is    correctly           decided,        then
    Alston most assuredly is incorrectly decided.
    There     is      no       more     support         for     a        “violent       felony”
    determination in the sole Shepard-approved document available to
    the court in this case (i.e., the transcript of the guilty plea
    proceeding in which Toyer pled guilty to second-degree assault
    under     Maryland      law)       than    there     is     for       a    “violent       felony”
    determination in the sole Shepard-approved document available to
    the court in Alston (i.e., the transcript of the guilty plea
    proceeding in which Alston pled guilty to second-degree assault
    under Maryland law). In each case, the defendant pled guilty. In
    each case, only the use of a gun by the defendant elevated the
    second-degree assault to a “violent felony” under the ACCA. In
    each case, the use of a gun was not “inherent” in the offense of
    conviction,      thereby         necessitating           resort           to   the    “modified
    categorical” approach to the ACCA determination. In each case,
    there     is   neither        an       admission      by     the          defendant       nor     an
    adjudication     by     the      court    that     the     defendant           used   a   gun     to
    commit the assault.
    34
    How,     then,     does    the     majority        manage   to     skirt       the
    application of binding precedent in this case? It appears there
    are    three    reasons    offered,       which   neither     singly     nor   in     the
    aggregate genuinely distinguishes this case from Alston.
    A.
    First, the majority would give talismanic significance to
    the    label    “Alford    plea.”    But    this    will     not   do.   If    we     had
    occasion to apply the Taylor/Shepard “categorical test,” rather
    than    the     “modified    categorical          test”    necessitated        by     the
    expansive       elements     of     the    Maryland        second-degree       assault
    offense, it is clear that an “Alford plea” would be treated
    exactly like a more traditional guilty plea for purposes of the
    ACCA. See United States v. Vinton, --- F.3d ---, ---, 
    2011 WL 31526
    , *8 (8th Cir. Jan. 6, 2011)(finding state court conviction
    for    second     degree     burglary       qualifies       defendant      for      ACCA
    treatment      notwithstanding      that     conviction      was   pursuant      to    an
    Alford plea, distinguishing Alston); see also Note, Admitting
    Guilt by Professing Innocence: When Sentence Enhancements Based
    on Alford Pleas are Unconstitutional, 63 Vand.L.Rev. 1755, 1758
    n.16 (2010) (“An enhancement based simply on the fact of a prior
    conviction, even if that prior conviction was pursuant to an
    Alford plea, is constitutional . . . . [A]ll federal circuits
    35
    have,    at   least   in   some    form,    held    that   an   Alford   plea   is
    functionally a guilty plea.”). 1
    Thus, Alston’s binding holding rests not simply on the mere
    fact that Alston tendered an Alford plea in state court, but
    rather, as Alston makes perfectly clear, the fact that “Alston
    did not adopt or accept the facts proffered by the government.”
    United States v. Alston, 
    611 F.3d 219
    , 223 (4th Cir. 2010) (“The
    transcript from Alston's plea hearing, however, revealed that
    Alston's conviction was based on an Alford plea during which
    Alston    did   not   adopt   or   accept    the    facts    proffered    by    the
    government.”     (emphasis    added)). 2    As     the   majority   forthrightly
    1
    Accordingly, contrary to the majority’s view of the
    matter, it is of no moment whatsoever that “Toyer willingly
    admitted his guilt of second-degree assault.” Maj. Op. 25. Of
    course he did; the dispositive question under Alston, however,
    is whether the guilty plea transcript discloses that Toyer
    “admitted” he used a gun in committing second-degree assault. As
    the majority is required to acknowledge, not only did Toyer not
    admit any such thing, he (through counsel) affirmatively denied
    the relevant fact. If anything, the lack of an admission in this
    case is demonstrated even more strongly than in Alston because
    it is explicit, not buried in the vagaries of an Alford plea.
    2
    Thus, the majority is wrong to state:
    Since 1970, a defendant who wishes to dispute the
    factual basis for his plea has had several options [,
    including the option of] an Alford plea . . . . If
    [he] avails himself of [an Alford plea], Alston will
    prevent the resulting convictions from serving as an
    ACCA predicate.
    Maj. op. at 32 (alterations added). If a state court judge is
    willing, under an Alford rubric or otherwise, to accept a guilty
    plea from a defendant who denies the facts proffered by the
    (Continued)
    36
    acknowledges in the case at bar, precisely the same thing is
    true here. For present purposes, “[t]he distinguishing feature
    of an Alford plea is that the defendant does not confirm the
    factual basis for the plea.” United States v. Savage, 
    542 F.3d 959
    , 962 (2d Cir. 2008). That feature virtually leaps from the
    pages of Toyer’s plea proceeding transcript before us.
    B.
    Second, it appears the majority believes that Toyer must be
    deemed (for ACCA purposes) to have admitted using the gun to
    assault his girlfriend when he pled guilty because otherwise the
    state   judge’s   acceptance   of   his   guilty   plea   would   have   been
    constitutionally suspect. See Maj. op. at 29 (citing Willett v.
    Georgia, 
    608 F.2d 538
    , 540 (5th Cir. 1979)). With respect, it is
    utterly beyond me how the majority cannot see that exactly the
    same thing can and must be said about the prosecutor’s factual
    proffer in support of the Alford plea in Alston, in which the
    conviction for second-degree assault under Maryland law rested
    prosecutor, as did the state court judge in Toyer’s case, there
    is not a thing this or any federal court will be able to do
    about it. If, in such a circumstance, a subsequent federal court
    must apply the “modified categorical” approach to an ACCA
    determination, Alston will dictate the result, exactly as it
    does here, regardless of whether the plea is labeled an Alford
    plea.
    37
    solely on the fact that Alston had pointed a handgun at three
    people and threatened to “kill them all.” See 
    611 F.3d at 223
    (“[T]he     prosecutor     outlined      the    evidence       she   would    have
    introduced at trial, which indicated that Alston had pointed a
    gun at three victims and stated that he would kill them all.”).
    In both cases, if one excises from the factual basis recited to
    the state court in support of the guilty plea the defendant’s
    use    of   a   handgun,   there    is     no   crime. 3     The   constitutional
    propriety of the underlying conviction, an issue not before us
    in    any   event,   stands   on   equal      footing   in    both   cases.   This
    purported ground of distinction does not withstand scrutiny.
    3
    I note that at the government’s urging, the majority has
    waded into an analysis of the apparent benefits Toyer enjoyed in
    entering into the plea agreement with the state. Consideration
    of such data has absolutely nothing whatsoever to do with the
    application of the modified categorical approach to the
    determination of the “violent felony” question under the ACCA.
    In any event, the government’s argument is unavailing. The
    government argues that by stating that his client did not accept
    the state’s proffer about the gun, Toyer’s counsel “was
    attempting to ensure that his client’s conviction was for
    second-degree assault, rather than for first-degree assault or
    use of a handgun in the commission of a crime of violence.”
    Supp. Br. at 9. There is nothing in the record to support this
    contention. To the contrary, at the beginning of the state court
    proceeding, it was made clear that Toyer was pleading guilty to
    second-degree assault. J.A. 249 (Toyer’s attorney stating “this
    is second degree assault”); J.A. 250 (judge confirming the plea
    was for “second degree assault”). There is no merit in this
    speculation on the part of the government.
    38
    C.
    Finally, the majority seems to believe that by ignoring the
    binding holding of Alston, it achieves a level of “certainty”
    that will create a form of “bright line rule” beneficial to the
    law   of   this   circuit.     Respectfully,                 I    disagree.      Certainty     is
    achieved when this court is faithful to its precedents. To the
    extent that the majority contemplates the existence of some neat
    taxonomy of punishment-justifying pleas in state courts, i.e.,
    “guilty,” “no contest” and Alford, my friends in the majority
    need only examine the chaotic state of the law and practice
    described in Bishop v. State, 
    7 A.3d 1074
     (Md. 2010) (discussing
    so-called “hybrid pleas” recognized under Maryland law).
    *      *         *        *
    In   sum,    while     the       state    court        in    Toyer’s       second-degree
    assault case did not accept an Alford plea, Toyer’s guilty plea
    produced    the     jurisprudential              equivalent             for     ACCA     purposes
    because Toyer’s counsel explicitly stated on Toyer’s behalf that
    Toyer had “no involvement with the gun.”                               While an Alford plea
    has   specific    legal    meaning,           “[u]ltimately,             context       determines
    meaning,    and    we   do    not        force      term-of-art           definitions       into
    contexts where they plainly do not fit and produce nonsense.”
    Johnson    v.     United     States,          
    130 S. Ct. 1265
    .     1270     (2010)
    (citations omitted). Here, in context, Alston relies entirely on
    the fact that the defendant never admitted to the material facts
    39
    required by Supreme Court precedent to qualify the conviction
    for   ACCA   treatment.     To   ignore   the   rationale    and     holding
    supporting the result in Alston and choosing instead to apply
    them only to situations where a defendant formally enters an
    Alford plea produces illogical and inconsistent results plainly
    at odds with binding precedent.
    With   respect,   I   am   constrained    to   the   view    that   the
    majority’s enterprise fits the description it assigns to Toyer’s
    argument: it “collapses on itself.” Maj. op. 27.            I would affirm
    the conviction, vacate the sentence, and remand the case for
    resentencing without regard to the ACCA.
    40
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 08-5036

Citation Numbers: 414 F. App'x 584

Judges: Arlen, Beam, Davis, Per Curiam, Wilkinson

Filed Date: 2/25/2011

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 8/3/2023

Authorities (41)

United States v. Savage , 542 F.3d 959 ( 2008 )

United States v. John Buettner-Janusch , 646 F.2d 759 ( 1981 )

timothy-zinkand-v-timothy-s-brown-and-anne-arundel-county-police , 478 F.3d 634 ( 2007 )

United States v. Russell Kinney , 953 F.2d 863 ( 1992 )

United States v. Dwayne Eugene Cook, A/K/A Craig S. Cook, ... , 26 F.3d 507 ( 1994 )

United States v. Dean , 604 F.3d 169 ( 2010 )

United States v. Kenzie Hylton , 349 F.3d 781 ( 2003 )

United States v. Frank Gary Buckner , 473 F.3d 551 ( 2007 )

United States v. Tyronski Johnson , 410 F.3d 137 ( 2005 )

United States v. Alston , 611 F.3d 219 ( 2010 )

United States v. Neely , 564 F.3d 346 ( 2009 )

United States v. Kenneth Grossman , 400 F.3d 212 ( 2005 )

notra-trulock-iii-linda-conrad-v-louis-j-freeh-in-his-personal-capacity , 275 F.3d 391 ( 2001 )

United States v. John Michael Perkins , 363 F.3d 317 ( 2004 )

United States v. Everton G. Wilson , 895 F.2d 168 ( 1990 )

United States v. Gregory Darnell Turner and Curtis Woodrow ... , 650 F.2d 526 ( 1981 )

Hunsberger v. Wood , 570 F.3d 546 ( 2009 )

United States v. Mowatt , 513 F.3d 395 ( 2008 )

United States v. Sidney R. Coleman , 158 F.3d 199 ( 1998 )

Mora v. City of Gaithersburg, Md. , 519 F.3d 216 ( 2008 )

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