Danny Banks v. United States ( 2019 )


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  •                NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    File Name: 19a0255n.06
    Case No. 18-5510
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    FILED
    May 15, 2019
    DANNY LEE BANKS,                                  )                    DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
    )
    Petitioner-Appellant,                      )
    )      ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED
    v.                                                )      STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR
    )      THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,                         )      TENNESSEE
    )
    Respondent-Appellee.                       )
    BEFORE: MOORE, SUTTON, and MURPHY, Circuit Judges.
    MURPHY, Circuit Judge. The Armed Career Criminal Act increases the punishment for
    felons who unlawfully possess firearms (or, as in this case, ammunition) from a maximum of ten
    years’ imprisonment to a minimum of 15 years if the defendant has three prior convictions that
    qualify as “violent felonies.” Compare 18 U.S.C. § 924(a)(2), with 
    id. § 924(e)(1).
    Under what
    has been labeled the “elements” or “use-of-force” clause, the Act defines the phrase “violent
    felony” to include crimes that have “as an element the use, attempted use, or threatened use of
    physical force against the person of another.” 
    Id. § 924(e)(2)(B)(i).
    Today, we must decide
    whether this elements clause reaches a Tennessee offense—assault with intent to commit first-
    degree murder, Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-2-103(a) (1982)—that has been repealed for some 30 years.
    We hold that it does.
    Case No. 18-5510, Banks v. United States
    I.
    We detailed Danny Lee Banks’s violent criminal career on direct appeal from his felon-in-
    possession conviction under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g). United States v. Banks, No. 96-5597, 
    1997 WL 561421
    , at *1–2 (6th Cir. Sept. 9, 1997) (per curiam). In 1981, a 16-year-old Banks pleaded guilty
    to manslaughter after shooting and killing another teenager. 
    Id. at *1.
    In 1987, while paroled for
    two attempted burglaries, Banks “was convicted of robbery and assault with intent to commit
    murder” for two separate episodes, during one of which he “shot a man in the chest at close range.”
    
    Id. Soon after
    his release for those crimes, Banks went on “another vicious crime spree.” 
    Id. On November
    4, 1991, he shot up an apartment complex, holding residents at gunpoint. 
    Id. On December
    14, he shot two victims during an armed robbery. 
    Id. at *2.
    Two weeks later, he shot
    another victim during another armed robbery. 
    Id. On January
    5, 1992, he committed a carjacking.
    
    Id. All told,
    this crime spree led to various state convictions in 1993 for attempted murder,
    attempted aggravated robbery, and aggravated robbery. 
    Id. Banks’s federal
    conviction stemmed from a different event on November 26, 1991. 
    Id. at *1.
    After responding to a complaint, police found ammunition on Banks and a gun in the car that
    he had been driving. 
    Id. The United
    States charged him with being a felon in possession of a
    firearm and ammunition, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g). A jury convicted him of possessing
    the ammunition, but not the firearm. 
    Id. Banks’s presentence
    report treated him as qualifying for
    the Armed Career Criminal Act’s sentencing enhancement, 18 U.S.C. § 924(e)(1), based on five
    convictions from the 1980s: the manslaughter conviction, the two attempted burglary convictions,
    the robbery conviction, and the assault-with-intent-to-commit-first-degree-murder conviction.
    Departing upward from the Sentencing Guidelines’ calculated range, the district court sentenced
    Banks to life in prison. 
    Id. at *2–3.
    We affirmed on direct appeal. 
    Id. at *3–4.
    At that time,
    Banks did not dispute his eligibility for the Armed Career Criminal Act’s sentencing enhancement.
    2
    Case No. 18-5510, Banks v. United States
    Nearly twenty years after Banks’s conviction, the Supreme Court held that another part of
    the Act’s violent-felony definition—the “residual clause” covering a crime that “otherwise
    involves conduct that presents a serious potential risk of physical injury to another,” 18 U.S.C.
    § 924(e)(2)(B)(ii)—was too vague to be judicially enforceable under due-process principles. See
    Johnson v. United States, 
    135 S. Ct. 2551
    , 2563 (2015). The next year, the Court made Johnson
    “retroactive in cases on collateral review.” Welch v. United States, 
    136 S. Ct. 1257
    , 1268 (2016).
    Banks filed a § 2255 motion on Welch’s heels alleging that his Armed Career Criminal Act
    enhancement violated due process because his prior convictions could qualify as “violent felonies”
    only under the unconstitutional residual clause. The United States responded that Banks’s robbery
    convictions (one from 1987 and four from 1993) were “violent felonies” under the elements
    clause’s separate definition (which Johnson did not affect). But four of those convictions, Banks
    replied, came after the 1991 possession of ammunition for which he was convicted, and so could
    not qualify as “previous” convictions under 18 U.S.C. § 924(e)(1). The district court ordered
    another answer, and this time the United States said that Banks’s manslaughter conviction (from
    1981), robbery conviction (from 1987), and assault-with-intent-to-commit-first-degree-murder
    conviction (from 1987) also qualified as violent felonies under the elements clause.
    The district court agreed and denied Banks’s § 2255 motion. Banks v. United States, No.
    16-cv-02275, 
    2018 WL 1954840
    , at *5–11 (W.D. Tenn. Apr. 25, 2018). It also denied the
    certificate of appealability that Banks needed to appeal. 
    Id. at *11–12;
    28 U.S.C. § 2253(c)(1).
    Banks turned to us for such a certificate. We granted one. While we have held that the
    Tennessee statute barring assault with intent to commit first-degree murder falls within the now-
    unconstitutional residual clause, we left open whether it fell within the still-valid elements clause.
    United States v. Jones, 
    673 F.3d 497
    , 505–06 (6th Cir. 2012). We confront that question here.
    3
    Case No. 18-5510, Banks v. United States
    II.
    The Tennessee statute that underlies our certificate of appealability provided: “Whoever
    shall feloniously and with malice aforethought assault any person, with intent to commit murder
    in the first degree, or shall administer or attempt to give any poison for that purpose, though death
    shall not ensue, shall, on conviction, be imprisoned in the state penitentiary for not less than five
    (5) nor more than twenty-five (25) years.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-2-103(a) (1982), repealed by
    1989 Tenn. Pub. Acts 1169 § 1. Banks asserts three challenges to the district court’s conclusion
    that the assault portion of this statute fell within the elements clause. First, he argues that the
    United States waived reliance on his assault conviction. Second, he argues that the assault and
    poisoning parts of the statute are not “divisible” from one another under our cases, and that the
    poisoning portion does not contain the “physical force” required by the elements clause. Third, he
    asserts that, even if the statute were divisible, the assault portion also does not include the necessary
    physical force. We take these three arguments in turn.
    Did the United States waive reliance on Banks’s assault conviction? No. It is debatable
    whether this argument even falls within the scope of the question on which we granted a certificate
    of appealability. See Dunham v. United States, 
    486 F.3d 931
    , 934–35 (6th Cir. 2007). Regardless,
    Banks is mistaken. The United States’ initial answer to his § 2255 motion did not “waive” (that
    is, intentionally abandon) the use of his assault conviction; it expressly stated that, if needed, the
    United States might invoke it. See United States v. Olano, 
    507 U.S. 725
    , 733 (1993). Nor did the
    United States “forfeit” (that is, fail to timely raise) the use of this conviction by inadequately
    addressing it in its answer. See 
    id. Banks points
    to no statute or procedural rule commanding that
    such a response exhaust all arguments in detail. Cf. 28 U.S.C. § 2255(b); Rule 5(b) of the Rules
    Governing § 2255 Cases. Even assuming (without deciding) that the United States needed to do
    so, the district court gave the United States an opportunity to file another response. The rules
    4
    Case No. 18-5510, Banks v. United States
    governing § 2255 proceedings authorize amended pleadings “when justice so requires.” Fed. R.
    Civ. P. 15(a)(2); Rule 12 of the Rules Governing § 2255 Cases. And, even for affirmative defenses,
    the Supreme Court has held that a habeas court may on its own initiative order additional briefing
    to address an overlooked defense. See Day v. McDonough, 
    547 U.S. 198
    , 209 (2006).
    For his part, Banks cites Armstrong v. United States, 107 F. App’x 522 (6th Cir. 2004)
    (order), which held that a district court wrongly found a habeas claim untimely when the
    government’s answer failed to raise a statute-of-limitations defense. 
    Id. at 523.
    To the extent
    Armstrong holds that a district court may never sua sponte raise such a defense, it did not survive
    
    Day. 547 U.S. at 209
    . The district court in Armstrong, moreover, appears to have invoked the
    defense without giving the defendant “fair notice and an opportunity to present [his] position[].”
    
    Id. at 210;
    Armstrong, 107 F. App’x at 523. Here, however, the district court allowed Banks to
    file a reply and evidence to explain why his assault conviction was not a violent felony.
    Is Tennessee’s assault statute “divisible”? Yes. Before explaining why, we must set the
    stage with some well-worn Armed Career Criminal Act basics. “Since 1990, the Supreme Court
    has instructed federal sentencing courts to use the ‘categorical approach’ to determine whether a
    defendant’s previous state or federal felony convictions ‘ha[ve] as an element the use, attempted
    use, or threatened use of physical force against the person of another.’” United States v. Burris,
    
    912 F.3d 386
    , 392 (6th Cir. 2019) (en banc). This approach bars courts from diving into the details
    of specific crimes to decide whether specific defendants used force on specific occasions. 
    Id. Instead, courts
    ask more categorically (hence, the name) whether a crime necessarily entails the
    use, attempted use, or threatened use of force such that all defendants convicted of the crime must
    have done so. 
    Id. If not,
    the offense does not count as a violent felony as a legal matter, even
    5
    Case No. 18-5510, Banks v. United States
    though many defendants—like Banks, who “shot a man in the chest at close range,” Banks, 
    1997 WL 561421
    , at *1—will have used violent force as a factual matter. 
    Burris, 912 F.3d at 392
    .
    This “categorical approach” sometimes comes with a modification—one that the Justices
    have “not very inventively” (their words, not ours) dubbed the “modified categorical approach.”
    Descamps v. United States, 
    570 U.S. 254
    , 257 (2013). This approach gets triggered by “so-called
    ‘divisible statute[s].’” 
    Id. A divisible
    statute “list[s] elements in the alternative, and thereby
    define[s] multiple crimes.” Mathis v. United States, 
    136 S. Ct. 2243
    , 2249 (2016). Such a statute,
    for example, may define aggravated assault as either causing serious injury or causing injury with
    a weapon. E.g., Davis v. United States, 
    900 F.3d 733
    , 736 (6th Cir. 2018). These statutes create
    distinct crimes with different elements, and the modified categorical approach allows courts to
    examine certain records (“for example, the indictment, jury instructions, or plea agreement and
    colloquy”) to figure out which offense a defendant committed. 
    Mathis, 136 S. Ct. at 2249
    . Some
    statutes, however, will list only separate means (such as using “a ‘knife, gun, bat, or similar
    weapon’”) to commit a single crime (“use of a ‘deadly weapon’”). 
    Id. (citation omitted).
    For these
    statutes, courts revert to the categorical approach by asking if the entire offense—including the
    least forceful “means” of violating it—falls within the elements clause. 
    Id. at 2251–57.
    This divide raises a question: How do courts distinguish a statute that lists separate
    elements identifying separate crimes from one that lists separate means for committing the same
    crime? The Supreme Court has offered guideposts. 
    Id. at 2256.
    If a state supreme court has
    already answered this elements-versus-means question, its reading controls the state-law issue. 
    Id. Or the
    statute may offer textual clues on its face. If, for example, different alternatives generate
    different punishments, those alternatives necessarily qualify as elements that must be found by a
    jury under Apprendi v. New Jersey, 
    530 U.S. 466
    (2000). 
    Id. Judicial records
    might offer a third
    6
    Case No. 18-5510, Banks v. United States
    clue: if specific alternatives are routinely charged in state indictments, state actors more likely treat
    the alternatives as elements rather than means. See 
    Burris, 912 F.3d at 403
    –04.
    With this summary complete, we can return to the Tennessee assault statute. We find this
    statute divisible into two offenses: (1) “feloniously and with malice aforethought assault[ing] any
    person, with intent to commit murder in the first degree,” and (2) “administer[ing] or attempt[ing]
    to give any poison for that purpose.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-2-103(a) (1982). Both state decisions
    and state indictments guide us to this conclusion. See 
    Mathis, 136 S. Ct. at 2256
    –57.
    Start with state decisions. The Tennessee legislature enacted the assault-with-intent-to-
    commit-first-degree-murder statute in 1829. See 1829 Tenn. Pub. Acts 27, 39 § 52. In the ensuing
    decades, the Tennessee Supreme Court issued a trio of decisions clarifying that the statute
    “include[d] two classes of cases” (assault and poisoning), Floyd v. State, 
    50 Tenn. 342
    , 345 (1872),
    and that these two classes “define[d] distinct offenses,” Collins v. State, 
    50 Tenn. 14
    , 17 (1870).
    The trio begins with Dains v. State, 
    21 Tenn. 439
    (1841). There, the defendant had been
    convicted of the assault offense. 
    Id. at 439–40.
    His “friendly invitation to drink,” by the end of
    the night, had turned into a “violent blow with [his] axe,” and the court addressed whether this
    assault arose from an intent to murder. 
    Id. at 440–42.
    The court explained that the assault must
    be “of such a character, and made under such circumstances, that, had death ensued, [the
    defendant] would have been guilty of murder in the first degree.” 
    Id. at 440.
    That crime, in turn,
    required that the defendant act “wilfully, deliberately, maliciously, and with premeditation.” 
    Id. Yet the
    evidence failed to show that the defendant had acted with premeditation. 
    Id. at 441–42.
    Collins addressed the poisoning 
    offense. 50 Tenn. at 16
    . The defendant there argued that
    the indictment charging him with attempted poisoning did not make out a statutory violation
    because it nowhere alleged “any assault.” 
    Id. The Tennessee
    Supreme Court gave short shrift to
    7
    Case No. 18-5510, Banks v. United States
    this argument, explaining that it was “answered by the statute under which the indictment [was]
    had.” 
    Id. at 17.
    It said that the assault and poisoning provisions created “distinct offenses.” 
    Id. Completing the
    trifecta, Floyd discussed the relationship between the two offenses. While
    Tennessee’s murder statute then treated “[a] murder perpetrated by lying in wait” as a first-degree
    murder without the need to prove premeditation, Floyd recognized that the assault statute lacked
    this “lying in wait” 
    text. 50 Tenn. at 344
    –45. The court thus held that an assault committed by a
    defendant “lying in wait” still required proof of premeditation to commit murder, as opposed to
    some other felony. 
    Id. at 345–46.
    When reaching this result, the court recognized that the assault
    statute did “include cases where poison is administered or attempted to be given for the purpose
    of murder.” 
    Id. at 345.
    The court thus found that it created “two classes of cases.” 
    Id. In the
    first,
    “where poison is administered or attempted to be given,” “no proof of deliberation or
    premeditation is necessary.” 
    Id. In the
    second, where there is an “assault,” “deliberation and
    premeditation must be proved.” 
    Id. To sum
    up, state decisions have treated these alternatives as
    distinct offenses with distinct elements. See 
    Mathis, 136 S. Ct. at 2256
    .
    Now turn to state indictments. The “record of [Banks’s] prior conviction” tends to suggest
    that the offenses are distinct. 
    Id. at 2256–57.
    His indictment charged him with the assault (not the
    poisoning) offense and listed the premeditation element required for only the former (not the
    latter). It was no outlier. See 
    Burris, 912 F.3d at 404
    . A sampling of cases shows that other
    indictments also have identified the portion of the statute under which a defendant was charged—
    whether poisoning, see 
    Collins, 50 Tenn. at 15
    –16, or assault with premeditation, see Pryor v.
    Rose, 
    724 F.2d 525
    , 527 (6th Cir. 1984) (en banc); Cooley v. State, 
    14 S.W. 556
    , 556 (Tenn. 1889);
    Partee v. State, No. M2008-01773-CCA-R3-HC, 
    2008 WL 4949246
    , at *4 (Tenn. Crim. App.
    Nov. 20, 2008). Indeed, when an indictment failed to include the premeditation element, the
    8
    Case No. 18-5510, Banks v. United States
    Tennessee Supreme Court noted that it did not properly charge assault with intent to commit first-
    degree murder. See State v. Saylor, 
    74 Tenn. 586
    , 587 (1880).
    Banks’s arguments fail to convince us otherwise. He begins with textual grounds for
    believing that the alternatives list separate means for a single crime: (1) the statute identifies the
    alternatives in one sentence rather than subsections; (2) the title “assault with intent to murder”
    covers both alternatives; and (3) a nearby subsection increases the punishment if bodily injury
    results from “such an assault” (language most naturally read to cover poisoning). All fair points.
    But Banks makes them to the wrong court. Mathis teaches that state courts are in charge of
    deciding whether alternatives create separate 
    offenses. 136 S. Ct. at 2256
    . And Tennessee’s courts
    have treated this statute as creating “two classes of cases,” one of which has a premeditation
    element and the other of which does not. 
    Floyd, 50 Tenn. at 345
    . Banks responds that these older
    cases addressed earlier versions of the statute, and that Collins suggested that the two alternatives
    at that time were in different sentences with different punishments. 
    Collins, 50 Tenn. at 17
    . But
    Collins also elsewhere recognized that the poisoning offense was in “the last clause of said
    section.” 
    Id. at 15
    (emphasis added). Later decisions have also adhered to the same distinctions,
    e.g., Curry v. State, 
    290 S.W. 25
    , 26 (Tenn. 1926), and the 1850s statute largely mirrors the 1980s
    statute, compare Tenn. Code § 4626 (1858), with Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-2-103(a) (1982). To top
    it off, our Court has not been troubled by finding that even different verbs in a list of verbs created
    separate offenses. E.g., United States v. Eason, 
    919 F.3d 385
    , 389 (6th Cir. 2019).
    Banks next turns to a pragmatic point, finding it odd that a single act—“such as thrusting
    a poison-soaked rag into someone’s face”—could violate both offenses. That is not as uncommon
    as he believes. The Tennessee Supreme Court explained that one could violate the assault-with-
    intent-to-murder statute and the assault-with-intent-to-rob statute if the defendant harbored both
    9
    Case No. 18-5510, Banks v. United States
    intents during one assault. 
    Curry, 290 S.W. at 26
    . And we have found an assault statute divisible
    even though a defendant could simultaneously violate both alternatives (causing serious injury and
    causing injury with a deadly weapon). 
    Burris, 912 F.3d at 403
    –04.
    Banks lastly suggests that the assault and poisoning alternatives must be the same offense
    because they carry the same punishment. Not so. To be sure, “[i]f statutory alternatives carry
    different punishments, then under Apprendi they must be elements.” 
    Mathis, 136 S. Ct. at 2256
    .
    But the opposite is not true. Just because different punishments necessarily show different offenses
    does not mean that the same punishment necessarily shows the same offense. Or, for those who
    prefer formal logic, Banks’s reasoning suffers from the “fallacy of denying the antecedent.”
    United States v. Burtons, 696 F. App’x 372, 378 (10th Cir. 2017).
    One last point. Banks does not dispute that the state charged him with (and he pleaded
    guilty to) the assault offense. Thus, so long as that offense falls within the elements clause, it does
    not matter whether the poisoning offense also does so. See 
    Mathis, 136 S. Ct. at 2249
    .
    Does the assault offense satisfy the elements clause? Yes. As noted, the elements clause
    defines “violent felony” to mean a crime that “has as an element the use, attempted use, or
    threatened use of physical force against the person of another.” 18 U.S.C. § 924(e)(2)(B)(i). The
    text’s key phrase (physical force) commonly means “violent force—that is, force capable of
    causing physical pain or injury to another person.” Stokeling v. United States, 
    139 S. Ct. 544
    , 553
    (2019) (quoting Johnson v. United States, 
    559 U.S. 133
    , 140 (2010)). Two cases help visualize
    the force that surmounts this “violent” mark. Stokeling found that the force required for common-
    law robbery (the “force necessary to overcome resistance by a victim”) rose to the violent 
    level. 139 S. Ct. at 550
    –54. But Johnson held that the force required for common-law battery (the force
    necessary for “the slightest offensive touching”) fell 
    short. 559 U.S. at 139
    .
    10
    Case No. 18-5510, Banks v. United States
    The text next requires that the crime include the “use,” “attempted use,” or “threatened
    use” of this violent force “against the person of another.” The first word (“use”) commonly means
    “the ‘act of employing’ something,” so this portion of the clause clarifies that it covers crimes that
    require “an active employment of” the amount of force that Johnson and Stokeling demand. See
    Voisine v. United States, 
    136 S. Ct. 2272
    , 2278–79 (2016) (citation omitted). The second two
    phrases—“attempted use” and “threatened use”—clarify that a crime that does not require the use
    of violent force may still fall within the elements clause if it requires a threat or attempt of force
    reaching the violent level. E.g., United States v. Rafidi, 
    829 F.3d 437
    , 445–46 (6th Cir. 2016); see
    also Black’s Law Dictionary 127, 1480 (6th ed. 1990) (defining “attempt” and “threat”).
    Under either the Armed Career Criminal Act or the similarly worded Guidelines provision,
    we have applied these rules to a mix of “assault” or “battery”-like statutes that, in one form or
    another, punish a defendant for causing physical harm. We have held that this type of statute
    includes the use of “violent force” if, among other things, it requires defendants to cause a
    sufficient level of physical harm rising above Johnson’s mere “offensive touching.” Compare
    United States v. Mendez, 593 F. App’x 441, 443–44 (6th Cir. 2014), with United States v. Morris,
    
    885 F.3d 405
    , 411 (6th Cir. 2018). We have added that, even if the statute fails to reach that level,
    it may still qualify as the attempted or threatened use of violent force. So, for example, a statute
    that prohibits assault with a deadly weapon falls within the elements clause because, while it may
    include only a level of force that Johnson found insufficient, the use of a deadly weapon during
    the assault shows that violent force was at least attempted or threatened. See United States v.
    Harris, 
    853 F.3d 318
    , 321 (6th Cir. 2017).
    These principles lead us to hold that the Tennessee assault offense in this case categorically
    includes the “attempted use” of violent force. This offense combines a somewhat undemanding
    11
    Case No. 18-5510, Banks v. United States
    actus reus (assault) with a very demanding mens rea (intent to commit first-degree murder).
    Before 1989, assault was a “common law offense” in Tennessee. Hagood v. State, 
    190 S.W.2d 1023
    , 1023 (Tenn. 1945). An assault was “an attempt, or the unequivocal appearance of an
    attempt, to do a corporal injury to another, the intent to do harm being essential.” Cowley v. State,
    
    78 Tenn. 282
    , 284 (1882) (citing Richels v. State, 
    33 Tenn. 606
    , 608 (1854)). We are not sure
    whether this common-law crime’s “corporal injury” element covered even an attempt to commit a
    common-law battery (that is, an attempt to use a level of force that Johnson found insufficient).
    Cf. 2 Wayne R. LaFave, Substantive Criminal Law § 16.3(a) (3d ed.), Westlaw (database updated
    Oct. 2018); 3 W. Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England *120.
    We need not decide that issue today. As noted, the Tennessee assault offense in this case
    also was a “specific-intent crime,” State v. Witherspoon, 
    769 S.W.2d 880
    , 882 (Tenn. Crim. App.
    1988), requiring a defendant to intend a premeditated murder, Phillips v. State, 
    455 S.W.2d 637
    ,
    641 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1970). Thus, Banks “could not have been convicted of nonviolent assault
    because the crime he was convicted of included as an element an intent to do great bodily harm”—
    indeed, the greatest of bodily harms. Raybon v. United States, 
    867 F.3d 625
    , 631–32 (6th Cir.
    2017). This intent means that all defendants convicted of the offense will have attempted “violent
    force.” That makes this offense like Michigan’s assault with intent to do great bodily harm or
    Florida’s assault with intent to commit murder—both of which fall within the elements clause.
    See id.; United States v. Pittro, 646 F. App’x 481, 483–85 (6th Cir. 2016).
    Banks’s responses again come up short. Citing language from our decision in Pryor that
    this offense requires only an “overt act” and a specific 
    intent, 724 F.2d at 530
    , Banks argues that
    the overt act need not be “physical force.” Yet the elements clause’s text reaches not just the
    actual use of physical force, but also its attempted use. And the black-letter definition of “attempt”
    12
    Case No. 18-5510, Banks v. United States
    combines the required intent to commit the crime with an overt “act” in furtherance of it. Black’s
    Law Dictionary 127 (6th ed. 1990). This same “attempted use” language dooms Banks’s related
    argument that common-law assault in Tennessee might reach defendants who merely “frighten
    others” without laying a finger on them. Again, an attempt to commit serious physical harm
    suffices so long as the harm rises to the “violent” level. See 
    Rafidi, 829 F.3d at 446
    . Under this
    Tennessee assault statute, the attempted harm (killing another) exceeds that level.
    Banks also argues that one could cause the physical harm necessary for the assault offense
    without using the physical force necessary for the elements clause. He posits such hypotheticals
    as “deceiving someone into walking into an open sinkhole” or “locking someone in a cryogenic
    chamber.” Our court has rejected textual arguments (and creative hypotheticals) of this kind. We
    have instead equated physical force with physical harm, holding that a “defendant uses physical
    force whenever his volitional act sets into motion a series of events that results in the application
    of a ‘force capable of causing physical pain or injury to another person.’” United States v.
    Verwiebe, 
    874 F.3d 258
    , 261 (6th Cir. 2017) (quoting United States v. Evans, 
    699 F.3d 858
    , 864
    (6th Cir. 2012)). We are not alone in doing so. According to a recent Fifth Circuit decision, all
    circuit courts have now reached the same conclusion under the Armed Career Criminal Act or its
    Guidelines equivalent. See United States v. Reyes-Contreras, 
    910 F.3d 169
    , 180–81 & n.23 (5th
    Cir. 2018) (en banc) (citing cases); cf. United States v. Castleman, 
    572 U.S. 157
    , 170 (2014).
    * * *
    We affirm the district court’s judgment denying Banks’s § 2255 motion.
    13