United States v. Merlin Marcia-Acosta , 780 F.3d 1244 ( 2015 )


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  •                 FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,                No. 13-10475
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    D.C. No.
    v.                      2:12-cr-00318-
    JAT-1
    MERLIN MARCIA-ACOSTA, AKA
    Marcos Ramos Garcia,
    Defendant Appellant.           OPINION
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Arizona
    James A. Teilborg, Senior District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted
    September 12, 2014—San Francisco, California
    Filed March 23, 2015
    Before: Raymond C. Fisher, Marsha S. Berzon,
    and Morgan Christen, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion by Judge Berzon
    2            UNITED STATES V. MARCIA-ACOSTA
    SUMMARY*
    Criminal Law
    The panel vacated a sentence imposed upon a defendant
    convicted of unlawful reentry into the United States, and
    remanded for resentencing, in a case in which the district
    court determined, using the modified categorical approach,
    that the defendant’s prior state conviction for aggravated
    assault, in violation of Arizona Revised Statutes §§ 13-1203
    and 13-1204, was a “crime of violence” under U.S.S.G.
    § 2L1.2.
    The panel held that the district court’s application of the
    modified categorical approach contravened the principles
    underlying Descamps v. United States because the district
    court, in concluding that the defendant had pled to the generic
    elements of aggravated assault, relied solely upon a statement
    by defense counsel, during the state court plea colloquy,
    concerning the factual basis for the defendant’s plea.
    The panel emphasized that courts remain restricted to the
    modified categorical approach’s focus on the elements, rather
    than the facts, of a crime. The panel wrote that in a case like
    this one – in which there is no narrowing through the
    indictment, information, or other charging document, and no
    narrowing of the offense of conviction through the actual
    conviction documents or pleas – a sentencing court may not
    rely on an extraneous factual-basis statement detail, standing
    alone, to supply the narrowing for purposes of the modified
    *
    This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
    been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
    UNITED STATES V. MARCIA-ACOSTA                   3
    categorical approach. The panel could say for sure only that
    the Shepard documents do not prove that the defendant was
    convicted of the crime of intentional (or knowing) aggravated
    assault, and so the modified categorical approach is not
    satisfied.
    COUNSEL
    Diego Rodriguez (argued), Rodriguez Law Office PLLC,
    Phoenix Arizona, for Defendant-Appellant.
    Lacy Cooper (argued), Assistant United States Attorney, John
    S. Leonardo, United States Attorney, and Mark S.
    Kokanovich, Deputy Appellate Chief, United States
    Attorney’s Office, Phoenix, Arizona, for Plaintiff-Appellee.
    OPINION
    BERZON, Circuit Judge:
    Merlin Marcia-Acosta was found guilty under 8 U.S.C.
    § 1326 of unlawful reentry into the United States. Sentences
    for that offense are governed by United States Sentencing
    Guideline § 2L1.2. The district court determined, using the
    modified categorical approach, that Marcia-Acosta’s prior
    state conviction for aggravated assault, in violation of
    Arizona Revised Statutes §§ 13-1203 and 13-1204, was a
    “crime of violence” under that Guideline. See Taylor v.
    United States, 
    495 U.S. 575
    , 602 (1990). In so determining,
    it relied upon a single statement by Marcia-Acosta’s defense
    attorney, during the state court plea colloquy, concerning the
    factual basis for Marcia-Acosta’s plea. The district court then
    4             UNITED STATES V. MARCIA-ACOSTA
    applied the § 2L1.2(b)(1)(A)(ii) 16-level sentencing
    enhancement and imposed a sentence of 77 months in prison.
    We hold that the district court’s application of the
    modified categorical approach contravened the principles
    underlying Descamps v. United States, 
    133 S. Ct. 2276
    (2013), and so vacate Marcia-Acosta’s sentence.
    I.
    Marcia-Acosta is a citizen of Honduras. He unlawfully
    entered the United States for the first time in 1991. He had
    fled El Salvador, where he was living at the time, because of
    that country’s civil war. In 2001, Marcia-Acosta sought
    asylum. His application was denied in 2002.
    Marcia-Acosta was indicted in late 2006 for
    “intentionally, knowingly or recklessly caus[ing] a physical
    injury” to another “using a metal bar, a deadly weapon or
    dangerous instrument,” in violation of Arizona’s aggravated
    assault statute, Ariz. Rev. Stat. §§ 13-1203 and 13-1204.
    Marcia-Acosta pled guilty to the assault; his plea agreement
    and change of plea order referred to “A.R.S. §§ 13-1203,
    [and] 13-1204,” but did not specify the subsection of § 13-
    1203 to which he pled.1 During the change of plea hearing,
    Marcia-Acosta confirmed that he voluntarily pled guilty to
    what the state court judge described as “agg assault, a class 3
    felony.” The court then had the following exchange with
    Marcia-Acosta’s trial counsel, Jose Colon:
    1
    Arizona’s aggravated assault statute, Ariz. Rev. Stat. § 13-1204, cross-
    references Arizona’s simple assault statute, 
    id. § 13-1203,
    and sets forth
    aggravating circumstances. See p. 8, infra.
    UNITED STATES V. MARCIA-ACOSTA                   5
    THE COURT: Mr. Colon, any factual basis?
    MR. COLON:          Your Honor, back on
    December 8th, 2006, at 400 South 9th Avenue
    — it was in Phoenix, Arizona, Maricopa
    County — [Marcia-Acosta] got into an
    altercation with the victim. At this point he
    grabbed a metal bar. He hit the victim on the
    head, and he caused an injury to the victim’s
    skull. And he did that intentionally.
    THE COURT: Any additions or corrections
    for the record?
    [PROSECUTOR]: No, Your Honor.
    THE COURT:            The Court finds the
    defendant’s plea is knowingly, intelligently,
    and voluntarily made. There is a factual basis
    for it. Please accept it entered of record.
    Marcia-Acosta was sentenced to two-and-a-half years in
    prison. After serving half his sentence he was deported, in
    April 2008.
    Marcia-Acosta reentered the country the following year.
    An immigration official later encountered Marcia-Acosta and
    learned that he had recently entered the country without
    permission. Marcia-Acosta was then taken into federal
    custody, and indicted for illegal reentry after deportation, in
    violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1326(a) and (b)(1). Following a two-
    day jury trial, Marcia-Acosta was found guilty.
    6              UNITED STATES V. MARCIA-ACOSTA
    The initial Presentence Investigation Report (“PSR”)
    proposed a four-level sentencing enhancement for Marcia-
    Acosta’s prior aggravated assault conviction.           The
    prosecution filed an objection to the PSR, arguing that the
    2007 conviction was for a “crime of violence.” Accordingly,
    the prosecution argued, Marcia-Acosta should have been
    given a 16-level enhancement under Section
    2L1.2(b)(1)(A)(ii) of the Federal Sentencing Guidelines.2 In
    support of its objection, the prosecution argued that the
    transcript of the plea colloquy — in particular, Colon’s
    statement that Marcia-Acosta hit the victim on the head
    “intentionally” — established that his 2007 conviction
    qualified as a crime of violence, because it corresponded to
    the “generic” definition of aggravated assault.
    The probation department subsequently amended Marcia-
    Acosta’s final PSR to include a 16-level sentencing
    enhancement, relying upon the change of plea transcript
    provided by the government. In light of this enhancement
    and Marcia-Acosta’s prior criminal history, the final PSR
    calculated Marcia-Acosta’s Guidelines range as 77 to 96
    months, and recommended a sentence of 77 months. Marcia-
    Acosta objected to the final PSR.
    In his sentencing hearing, Marcia-Acosta reiterated his
    objection to the enhancement, but the district court rejected
    it, finding that the 2007 change of plea transcript made
    “clear” that Marcia-Acosta’s prior aggravated assault
    2
    Section 2L1.2(b)(1) provides: “If the defendant previously was
    deported, or unlawfully remained in the United States, after . . . (A) a
    conviction for a felony that is . . . (ii) a crime of violence . . . increase by
    16 levels if the conviction receives criminal history points under Chapter
    Four . . . .”
    UNITED STATES V. MARCIA-ACOSTA                  7
    “satisfies the generic definition,” and thus “justifie[d]” the
    16-level sentencing enhancement. The district court adopted
    the PSR’s Guidelines calculation and imposed a sentence of
    77 months in prison. Marcia-Acosta timely appealed.
    II.
    We review de novo a district court’s determination that a
    prior conviction constitutes a “crime of violence” under the
    Federal Sentencing Guidelines. See United States v.
    Quintero-Junco, 
    754 F.3d 746
    , 749 (9th Cir. 2014) (citing
    United States v. Gonzalez–Monterroso, 
    745 F.3d 1237
    , 1243
    (9th Cir. 2014)).
    The Federal Sentencing Guidelines generally apply a 16-
    level sentencing enhancement to a defendant convicted under
    8 U.S.C. § 1326 when that “defendant previously was
    deported” after a conviction for a “crime of violence.”
    U.S.S.G. § 2L1.2(b)(1)(A)(ii). The definition of “crime of
    violence” includes the crime of “aggravated assault” under
    state law. See U.S.S.G. § 2L1.2, cmt. n.1(B)(iii). We use the
    categorical approach set forth in Taylor v. United 
    States, 495 U.S. at 602
    , to determine whether a defendant’s prior
    conviction constitutes a “crime of violence” for the purposes
    of U.S.S.G. § 2L1.2(b)(1)(A). See United States v.
    Marquez-Lobos, 
    697 F.3d 759
    , 762 (9th Cir. 2012). When
    the statute of conviction “‘sweeps more broadly than the
    generic crime, a conviction under that law cannot
    [categorically] count as [a qualifying] predicate, even if the
    defendant actually committed the offense in its generic
    form.’” United States v. Acosta-Chavez, 
    727 F.3d 903
    , 907
    (9th Cir. 2013) (alterations in original) (quoting 
    Descamps, 133 S. Ct. at 2283
    ). “In a narrow range of cases, however,
    sentencing courts may instead apply the modified categorical
    8              UNITED STATES V. MARCIA-ACOSTA
    approach . . . to determine whether the defendant’s conviction
    necessarily involved facts corresponding to the generic
    federal offense.” 
    Quintero-Junco, 754 F.3d at 751
    (internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    Under Arizona law, an individual commits assault by:
    1. Intentionally, knowingly or recklessly
    causing any physical injury to another person;
    or
    2. Intentionally placing another person in
    reasonable apprehension of imminent physical
    injury; or
    3. Knowingly touching another person with
    the intent to injure, insult or provoke such
    person.
    Ariz. Rev. Stat. § 13-1203(A). An assault qualifies as felony
    “aggravated assault” if it was committed under any of the
    aggravating circumstances described in § 13-1204(A). At the
    time of Marcia-Acosta’s conviction, such aggravating
    circumstances included, among others, “[i]f the person causes
    serious physical injury to another” or “[i]f the person uses a
    deadly weapon or dangerous instrument.” 
    Id. § 13-
    1204(A)(1), (2) (2006).3 The 2006 indictment stated that
    Marcia-Acosta, “using a metal bar, a deadly weapon or
    dangerous instrument, intentionally, knowingly or recklessly
    caused a physical injury . . . in violation of A.R.S. §§ 13-1203
    3
    Ariz. Rev. Stat. § 13-1204 has been amended numerous times since
    Marcia-Acosta’s conviction in 2007. All references to § 13-1204 in this
    opinion are to the 2006 version.
    UNITED STATES V. MARCIA-ACOSTA                   9
    [and] 13-1204.” Given this language, the parties are in
    accord that Marcia-Acosta was indicted for and pled guilty to
    § 13-1203(A)(1). The parties also agree that Marcia-Acosta’s
    conviction under § 13-1203(A)(1), as aggravated by § 13-
    1204, does not categorically qualify as a crime of violence
    under our precedent. They are correct.
    In United States v. Esparza-Herrera, 
    557 F.3d 1019
    (9th
    Cir. 2009), the government appealed the district court’s ruling
    that Esparza-Herrera’s prior conviction for aggravated
    assault, in violation of Ariz. Rev. Stat. §§ 13-1203(A)(1) and
    13-1204(A)(11), was not a conviction for a crime of violence.
    We determined that the generic aggravated assault offense
    definition “requires a mens rea of at least recklessness ‘under
    circumstances manifesting extreme indifference to the value
    of human life.’” 
    Id. at 1025.
    In Arizona, however,
    aggravated assault can be committed with a mens rea of
    ordinary recklessness. See Ariz. Rev. Stat. § 13-1203(A)(1).
    Consequently, the statute of conviction “encompasses
    conduct beyond [generic] aggravated assault,” and, under the
    categorical approach, is “not a conviction for a crime of
    violence under Guidelines § 2L1.2(b)(1)(A)(ii).” Esparza-
    
    Herrera, 557 F.3d at 1025
    .
    It is at the next stage of inquiry, into the impact of the
    prior conviction on the Guidelines calculation, that the
    parties’ disagreement arises: The government and Marcia-
    Acosta dispute whether the district court, applying the
    modified categorical approach, correctly concluded that
    Marcia-Acosta had been convicted of committing assault
    intentionally under § 13-1203(A)(1). If so, the generic
    aggravated assault offense definition was satisfied. We turn
    to that question, beginning with the general principles
    governing the modified categorical approach.
    10          UNITED STATES V. MARCIA-ACOSTA
    III.
    A.
    In Descamps, the Supreme Court clarified that the
    modified categorical approach serves a “limited function,”
    “effectuat[ing] the categorical analysis when a divisible
    statute, listing potential offense elements in the alternative,
    renders opaque which element played a part in the
    defendant’s conviction.” 
    Descamps, 133 S. Ct. at 2283
    . To
    determine whether a statute is divisible, we consider whether
    “an element of the crime of conviction contains alternatives,
    one of which is an element of its federal analogue.”
    
    Acosta-Chavez, 727 F.3d at 909
    (citing 
    Descamps, 133 S. Ct. at 2283
    –84).
    Rendon v. Holder, 
    764 F.3d 1077
    , 1086 (9th Cir. 2014),
    recently held that a disjunctive statute is divisible “only if it
    contains multiple alternative elements, as opposed to multiple
    alternative means.” More specifically, under Rendon, “[o]nly
    when state law requires that in order to convict the defendant
    the jury must unanimously agree that he committed a
    particular substantive offense contained within the
    disjunctively worded statute are we able to conclude that the
    statute contains alternative elements and not alternative
    means.” 
    Id. As only
    two of the three mental states listed in
    the disjunctive in § 13-1203(A)(1) — “intentionally” and
    “knowingly” — are elements of the federal analogue of
    aggravated assault, Arizona’s aggravated assault statute
    would be subject to the modified categorical approach under
    Rendon only if such mental states are considered alternative
    elements, rather than alternative means.
    UNITED STATES V. MARCIA-ACOSTA                               11
    Marcia-Acosta did not argue in his opening brief that
    Arizona’s aggravated assault statute is not divisible.
    Accordingly, we conclude that Marcia-Acosta waived any
    argument concerning the statute’s divisibility. See United
    States v. Kama, 
    394 F.3d 1236
    , 1238 (9th Cir. 2005)
    (“Generally, an issue is waived when the appellant does not
    specifically and distinctly argue the issue in his or her
    opening brief.”).4 We thus assume, without deciding, that
    Arizona’s aggravated assault statute does state alternative
    mens rea elements, is therefore divisible, and so must be
    analyzed under the modified categorical approach.
    B.
    Our question, then, is whether the district court correctly
    applied the modified categorical approach when it relied upon
    the single factual-basis statement made by Marcia-Acosta’s
    attorney during the 2007 plea colloquy to conclude that
    Marcia-Acosta’s prior conviction qualified as a crime of
    violence. We hold that it did not.
    When the statute of conviction is divisible, “the modified
    categorical approach permits sentencing courts to consult a
    limited class of documents . . . to determine which alternative
    formed the basis of the defendant’s prior conviction.”
    
    Descamps, 133 S. Ct. at 2281
    . These documents include “the
    charging document, the terms of a plea agreement or
    4
    In his reply brief, Marcia-Acosta stated that he “does not concede . . .
    that the statute at issue[] constitutes a divisible statute,” but articulated no
    argument in support of this statement. Thus, even if we were to consider
    an issue raised for the first time in a reply brief, his argument has been
    waived. See Martinez-Serrano v. INS, 
    94 F.3d 1256
    , 1259 (9th Cir. 1996)
    (“Issues raised in a brief that are not supported by argument are deemed
    abandoned.”).
    12          UNITED STATES V. MARCIA-ACOSTA
    transcript of colloquy between judge and defendant in which
    the factual basis for the plea was confirmed by the defendant,
    or . . . some comparable judicial record of this information.”
    Shepard v. United States, 
    544 U.S. 13
    , 26 (2005). “The court
    can then . . . compare the elements of the crime of conviction
    (including the alternative element used in the case) with the
    elements of the generic crime.” 
    Descamps, 133 S. Ct. at 2281
    .
    Consideration of only “the elements of the crime of
    conviction” is the pivotal concept in applying the modified
    categorical analysis. Descamps emphasizes that a court
    cannot use the modified categorical approach “to try to
    discern what a trial showed, or a plea proceeding revealed,
    about the defendant’s underlying conduct.” 
    Id. at 2288.
    Instead, the modified approach must “retain[] the categorical
    approach’s central feature: a focus on the elements, rather
    than the facts, of a crime.” 
    Id. at 2285.
    In this case, two of the available Shepard-approved
    documents — the charging documents and plea agreement —
    refer generally to Arizona’s aggravated assault statute, and so
    provide no insight as to the mens rea aspect of § 1203(A)(1)
    that formed the basis of Marcia-Acosta’s conviction. In
    concluding that Marcia-Acosta had pled to the generic
    elements of aggravated assault, the district court relied solely
    upon part of defense attorney Colon’s factual-basis statement
    during the 2007 plea colloquy — that Marcia-Acosta had
    assaulted the victim “intentionally.”
    Sentencing courts may review the plea colloquy or other
    “comparable judicial record.” 
    Shepard, 544 U.S. at 26
    .
    Shepard emphasizes, however, that “any enquiry beyond
    statute and charging document must be narrowly restricted to
    UNITED STATES V. MARCIA-ACOSTA                         13
    implement the object of the statute and avoid evidentiary
    disputes.” 
    Id. at 23
    n.4. The focus of a court’s examination
    of the transcript of the plea colloquy therefore must be “not
    to determine ‘what the defendant and state judge must have
    understood as the factual basis of the prior plea,’” 
    Descamps, 133 S. Ct. at 2284
    (emphasis added) (quoting 
    Shepard, 544 U.S. at 25
    ), but to assess “whether the plea had
    ‘necessarily’ rested on the fact identifying the [offense] as
    generic,” 
    Shepard, 544 U.S. at 21
    (quoting 
    Taylor, 495 U.S. at 602
    ). So restricting the examination of plea colloquies
    assures that a sentencing court not “substitute . . . a facts-
    based inquiry for an elements-based one.” Descamps, 133 S.
    Ct. at 2293.
    This focus is particularly critical in the plea-bargaining
    context. As Descamps specifically cautioned, factual
    admissions made during a plea hearing may be “downright
    wrong,” because the defendant “often has little incentive to
    contest facts that are not elements of the charged offense,”
    and “the defendant may not wish to irk the prosecutor or
    court by squabbling about superfluous factual allegations.”
    
    Id. at 2289.
    When a defendant pleads guilty to a crime, “he
    waives his right to a jury determination of only that offense’s
    elements; whatever he says, or fails to say, about superfluous
    facts cannot license a later sentencing court to impose extra
    punishment.” 
    Id. at 2288.
    5
    5
    Justice Kennedy elaborated on this point in his Descamps concurrence:
    [I]n the regular course of the criminal process,
    convictions may be entered, often by guilty pleas, when
    either the attorney or the client, or both, have given no
    consideration to possible later consequences . . . . As a
    result, certain facts in the documents approved for
    judicial examination . . . may go uncontested because
    14                UNITED STATES V. MARCIA-ACOSTA
    Consistent with these admonitions, our post-Descamps
    decisions have recognized that sentencing courts’ review of
    plea colloquies or other “comparable judicial record[s],”
    
    Shepard, 544 U.S. at 26
    , for modified categorical approach
    purposes must be appropriately circumscribed to identify the
    elements pled to, not the underlying facts. United States v.
    
    Quintero-Junco, 754 F.3d at 752
    , for example, held that a
    district court “misapplied the modified categorical approach”
    by “review[ing] the transcript of Quintero-Junco’s plea
    colloquy” to determine whether the defendant had been
    convicted of the elements under Arizona’s sexual abuse
    statute that corresponded to the generic federal forcible sex
    offense. In that case, the district court had determined that
    the conduct described in the transcript of the plea colloquy,
    “show[ing] that Quintero–Junco was accused of attempting
    forcibly to remove a woman’s clothing in order to touch her
    breasts,” constituted a forcible sex offense. 
    Id. We held
    this
    application of the modified categorical approach “flawed” as
    violative of Descamps, because it focused on whether the
    defendant “‘actually’ committed the generic crime,” rather
    than on the elements of the statute for violation of which he
    was convicted. Id.6
    they do not alter the sentencing consequences of the
    crime, even though their effect is to require a later
    enhancement . . . . This significant risk of failing to
    consider the full consequences of the plea and
    conviction is troubling.
    
    Id. at 2293
    (Kennedy, J., concurring) (citations omitted).
    6
    Quintero-Junco held the district court’s error “inconsequential”
    because the indictment to which Quintero-Junco pled guilty contained the
    “statutory alternative” that “categorically match[ed] the elements of the
    generic definition.” 
    Quintero-Junco, 754 F.3d at 752
    ; see also Coronado
    v. Holder, 
    759 F.3d 977
    , 986 (9th Cir. 2014) (permitting reliance, under
    UNITED STATES V. MARCIA-ACOSTA                          15
    Similarly, in United States v. Cabrera-Perez, 
    751 F.3d 1000
    (9th Cir. 2014), the defendant, like Marcia-Acosta,
    argued that his prior aggravated assault conviction under
    Ariz. Rev. Stat. §§ 13-1203 and 13-1204 did not constitute a
    “crime of violence.” He contended — and we accepted —
    that the transcript of the plea colloquy was “devoid of
    evidence regarding [his] intent.” 
    Id. at 1006
    n.6 (internal
    quotation marks omitted). We held that Cabrera-Perez’s
    conviction qualified as a “crime of violence” under the
    modified categorical approach, but only because the plea
    colloquy and the written plea agreement referred directly
    back to the charging language of the complaint, which had
    “narrow[ed] the charge to generic limits.” 
    Id. at 1006
    (internal quotation marks omitted).7
    The charging document and plea agreement in this case,
    unlike those in Quintero-Junco or Cabrera-Perez, shed no
    light on whether Marcia-Acosta’s prior conviction meets the
    generic elements of aggravated assault. Rather, they merely
    restate the disjunctively phrased list of mens rea elements in
    the cross-referenced statute, § 13-1203(A)(1). Attorney
    Colon’s statement supplying the factual basis at Marcia-
    Acosta’s change of plea hearing is thus the only support for
    the modified categorical approach, on a certified electronic docket and
    minutes that “specif[y] that a defendant pleaded guilty to a particular
    count of a criminal complaint”).
    7
    Cabrera-Perez’s criminal complaint “track[ed] the language,”
    
    Cabrera-Perez, 751 F.3d at 1006
    , of § 13-1203(A)(2), which proscribes
    “intentionally placing another person in reasonable apprehension of
    imminent physical injury.” Ariz. Rev. Stat. § 13-1203(A)(2). In contrast
    to Marcia-Acosta’s conviction under § 13-1203(A)(1), a conviction under
    § 13-1203(A)(2) is a categorical crime of violence, as it “proscribes only
    intentional conduct.” 
    Cabrera-Perez, 751 F.3d at 1007
    .
    16            UNITED STATES V. MARCIA-ACOSTA
    the district court’s determination that Marcia-Acosta’s prior
    conviction qualified as a crime of violence. In light of
    Descamps’s admonition to sentencing courts to focus only on
    the elements — not the facts — of a defendant’s prior
    conviction, the district court’s reliance on this statement,
    standing alone, was erroneous.
    Indeed, this case clearly illustrates the concerns
    underlying Descamps. As a matter of state law, Marcia-
    Acosta’s conviction under § 13-1203(A)(1) could have been
    supported by a finding of recklessness.8 Marcia-Acosta was
    not required to admit he acted knowingly or intentionally.
    And the trial judge had no reason to so find; under the
    circumstances of this case, whether the conviction was for
    “intentional” or “reckless” aggravated assault would not have
    altered the conviction nor the sentencing consequences.9
    Thus, it made no difference during the plea hearing whether
    8
    Moncrieffe v. Holder, 
    133 S. Ct. 1678
    (2013), noted that, when
    “examin[ing] what the state conviction necessarily involved . . . we must
    presume that the conviction rested upon [nothing] more than the least of
    th[e] acts criminalized.” 
    Id. at 1684
    (second alteration in original)
    (internal quotation marks omitted). Thus, in applying the modified
    categorical approach, we would be required to assume that Marcia-
    Acosta’s conviction was for reckless assault.
    9
    The simple assault statute provides that “[a]ssault committed
    intentionally or knowingly pursuant to [subsection (A)(1)] is a class 1
    misdemeanor,” while “[a]ssault committed recklessly pursuant to
    [subsection (A)(1)] . . . is a class 2 misdemeanor.” Ariz. Rev. Stat. § 13-
    1203(B). But when an assault is aggravated by “us[ing] a deadly weapon
    or dangerous instrument,” 
    id. § 13-1204(A)(2),
    as is this case here, the
    aggravated assault is “a class 3 felony,” 
    id. § 13-1204(B),
    no matter the
    defendant’s mental state. In other words, Marcia-Acosta’s 2007 sentence
    would not have differed regardless of whether he committed the assault
    intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly.
    UNITED STATES V. MARCIA-ACOSTA                  17
    he acted with one or the other mental state. Like the
    defendant in Descamps, “[Marcia-Acosta] may have let [his
    attorney’s] statement go by because it was irrelevant to the
    proceedings [whether he was reckless, knowing or
    intentional]. He likely was not thinking about the possibility
    that his silence could come back to haunt him in [a later]
    sentencing.” 
    Descamps, 133 S. Ct. at 2289
    .
    Moreover, absent any narrowing language in the charging
    documents or plea agreement, relying on Colon’s statement
    that Marcia-Acosta committed the assault “intentionally” is
    no different than relying on a statement to the same effect
    made by a defendant while on the stand during a trial. The
    latter approach is clearly foreclosed by Descamps as an
    impermissible “look behind [the defendant’s] conviction in
    search of record evidence that he actually committed the
    generic offense.” 
    Id. at 2293
    . In the trial context, the
    government would be required to prove that the jury
    necessarily found that Marcia-Acosta had committed a crime
    intentionally or knowingly, rather than recklessly;
    demonstrating that there was testimony to that effect would
    not suffice. That Colon made a statement concerning Marcia-
    Acosta’s mens rea as part of the factual basis during the plea
    colloquy rather than at trial does not convert an improper
    fact-based inquiry into an elements-based one.
    To support the district court’s application of the modified
    categorical approach, the government points only to our
    decision in United States v. Smith, 
    390 F.3d 661
    (9th Cir.
    2004), amended by 
    405 F.3d 726
    (9th Cir. 2005). Smith
    reviewed the district court’s determination that the
    defendant’s prior convictions under California’s burglary
    statute, Cal. Penal Code § 459, qualified as “violent felonies”
    for purposes of the sentencing enhancement under the Armed
    18          UNITED STATES V. MARCIA-ACOSTA
    Career Criminal Act, 18 U.S.C. § 924(e). As California’s
    burglary statute does not require that the defendant’s entry be
    unlawful, it was not a categorical match to generic burglary.
    Accordingly, the district court applied the modified
    categorical approach to the record of conviction, which
    “consist[ed] of the transcript of the plea hearing and the
    abstract of judgment.” 
    Smith, 390 F.3d at 664
    .
    As it turned out, the abstract of judgment provided no
    further clarity as to the elements of Smith’s conviction. The
    district court therefore relied only on the transcript of the plea
    hearing, in which the prosecutor stated, as part of the factual
    basis for the burglary charge, that Smith “unlawfully” entered
    “a dwelling.” 
    Id. at 663,
    665. We held that the prosecutor’s
    statement of the factual basis for the burglary charge,
    standing alone, “unequivocally establish[ed] that Smith was
    convicted of unlawfully entering a building.” 
    Id. at 665.
    Smith is indeed in tension with our decision today. But
    the analysis conducted by Smith — applying the modified
    categorical approach to the unlawful entry element — is
    contrary to Descamps, which held that Penal Code § 459 is
    indivisible, and thus not subject to the modified categorical
    approach, with respect to that very element. 
    Descamps, 133 S. Ct. at 2283
    . So our application of the modified categorical
    approach to the unlawful entry element in Smith would be
    entirely precluded if we faced the same case today.
    Moreover, Smith was decided prior to Descamps, which
    more clearly than earlier cases limited the extent to which
    courts may satisfy the modified categorical approach by
    looking at the “facts” of prior convictions. Our approval in
    Smith of the district court’s consideration of statements by the
    defense counsel during the plea colloquy — for instance, that
    UNITED STATES V. MARCIA-ACOSTA                  19
    Smith had “entered his former home” and that the “codes
    were 
    changed,” 390 F.3d at 665
    (internal quotation marks
    omitted) — makes clear that Smith engaged in the very type
    of “fact-based” analysis that Descamps proscribes. In other
    words, “[i]nstead of reviewing documents like an indictment
    or plea colloquy only to determine which statutory phrase
    was the basis for the conviction,” Smith “look[ed] to those
    materials to discover what the defendant actually did.”
    
    Descamps, 133 S. Ct. at 2287
    (internal quotation marks
    omitted). Smith therefore is “clearly irreconcilable” with
    Descamps, and is no longer controlling. Miller v. Gammie,
    
    335 F.3d 889
    , 899–900 (9th Cir. 2003) (en banc).
    We acknowledge that our conclusion here is in tension
    with the Third Circuit’s decision in United States v. Marrero,
    
    743 F.3d 389
    (3d Cir. 2014) (“Marrero II”). In Marrero II,
    the defendant appealed the district court’s finding that his
    prior conviction under Pennsylvania’s simple assault statute,
    18 Pa. Cons. Stat. Ann. § 2701(a), qualified as a crime of
    violence under the Guidelines. As in Arizona, a defendant
    can be convicted under Pennsylvania’s assault statute if he
    acted intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly. 
    See 743 F.3d at 396
    . The district court determined that Marrero’s
    admissions during the state court plea colloquy — that he
    “plac[ed] his hands on the victim’s neck” and “grabbed [the
    victim] by the neck, attempting to drag her upstairs” —
    established that Marrero had pled guilty to an “intentional and
    knowing violation” of the assault statute. 
    Id. at 392–93.
    Marrero contended that, “by looking to specific facts
    established during the colloquy,” the district court improperly
    applied the modified categorical approach. 
    Id. at 396.
    Before Descamps was decided, the Third Circuit affirmed
    Marrero’s sentence. After Descamps, the Supreme Court
    20          UNITED STATES V. MARCIA-ACOSTA
    granted Marrero’s petition for writ of certiorari, vacated the
    Third Circuit’s judgment, and remanded for further
    consideration in light of Descamps. 
    Id. at 393;
    see also
    Marrero v. United States, 
    133 S. Ct. 2732
    (2013). The Third
    Circuit once again affirmed, repeating essentially verbatim its
    earlier holding that the district court had “properly examined”
    Marrero’s plea colloquy to “determine whether he pleaded
    guilty to intentional, knowing, or reckless assault.” Marrero
    
    II, 743 F.3d at 397
    ; compare United States v. Marrero,
    
    677 F.3d 155
    , 162 (3d Cir. 2012) (“Marrero I”).
    In our view, Marrero II cannot be squared with the
    Supreme Court’s clear prohibition on substituting “a facts-
    based inquiry for an elements-based one.” Descamps, 133 S.
    Ct. at 2293. Like Marcia-Acosta, Marrero was not required
    to act knowingly or intentionally to be convicted of assault;
    under Pennsylvania law, he could be convicted if he acted
    recklessly. 18 Pa. Cons. Stat. Ann. § 2701(a)(1). That the
    Supreme Court vacated and remanded the Third Circuit’s
    original decision in the case suggests, as Justice Alito wrote
    in his dissent to the order granting Marrero’s petition, that the
    Court was “troubled by the possibility that petitioner was
    convicted merely for reckless 
    conduct.” 133 S. Ct. at 2733
    (Alito, J., dissenting). But Marrero II discussed Descamps
    only in the context of explaining why the Pennsylvania
    statute was divisible, and not in the course of applying the
    modified categorical approach once determining it applicable.
    Marrero 
    II, 743 F.3d at 395
    –96. Yet, as here, there is no
    basis for concluding that the defendant was convicted of
    intentional assault, as the charge to which he pleaded guilty
    was not limited to intentional acts. Such an inference would
    be tantamount to “look[ing] behind [the] conviction in search
    of record evidence that he actually committed the generic
    offense,” an approach Descamps expressly rejected as
    UNITED STATES V. MARCIA-ACOSTA                             21
    improperly “extending judicial factfinding beyond the
    recognition of a prior 
    conviction.” 133 S. Ct. at 2288
    , 2293.
    To be clear, Shepard permits district courts to review
    transcripts of plea colloquies when applying the modified
    categorical approach, to ascertain the offense to which the
    defendant pled guilty. 
    See 544 U.S. at 26
    . If the operative
    charging document limits the charge to a statutory alternative
    that meets the generic offense definition, a factual-basis
    statement at the plea colloquy and the charge, together, can
    establish the crime of conviction, because that fact then does
    become essential. Likewise, there may be circumstances in
    which a factual-basis statement detail, not extraneous to the
    conviction, unequivocally establishes that the conviction
    “‘necessarily’ rested on the fact identifying the [offense] as
    generic.” 
    Shepard, 544 U.S. at 21
    (quoting 
    Taylor, 495 U.S. at 602
    ).10
    But courts remain restricted to the modified categorical
    approach’s “focus on the elements, rather than the facts, of a
    crime.” 
    Descamps, 133 S. Ct. at 2285
    . Thus, in a case like
    this one — in which there is no narrowing through the
    10
    Where a defendant’s factual-basis statement negates all possible
    statutory alternatives, the statement may be sufficient, standing alone, to
    establish that the defendant pled to the generic statutory alternative. In
    such cases, the statement is not extraneous to the conviction. For
    example, if a defendant pleading guilty to burglary stated, as part of his
    factual basis, that he “entered a house, not a boat,” cf. 
    Shepard, 544 U.S. at 17
    , a reviewing court could conclude that the defendant was not
    convicted of burgling a boat. Unlike the “boat” and “house” elements of
    this hypothetical burglary statute, however, the mens rea elements at issue
    in this case are nested. That is, they are inherently not mutually exclusive,
    as an assault can be reckless, knowing, and intentional. A factual-basis
    admission as to one mental state thus does not negate the possibility of
    conviction under another.
    22            UNITED STATES V. MARCIA-ACOSTA
    indictment, information, or other charging document, and no
    narrowing of the offense of conviction through the actual
    conviction documents or pleas — a sentencing court may not
    rely on an extraneous factual-basis statement detail, standing
    alone, to supply the narrowing for purposes of the modified
    categorical approach. At bottom, the Shepard documents in
    this case at most suggest that Marcia-Acosta committed the
    crime of intentional aggravated assault. They do not show
    that Marcia-Acosta was convicted of that crime. On the
    contrary, from this record we cannot say whether he was
    convicted of the crime of intentional aggravated assault, the
    crime of knowing aggravated assault, or the crime of reckless
    aggravated assault. Additionally, based on the charging
    documents, these mental states may have been treated as
    alternative means rather than alternative elements in Marcia-
    Acosta’s case, in which case Marcia-Acosta was convicted of
    none of these three alternative crimes, but instead was
    convicted of the single crime of intentional, knowing or
    reckless aggravated assault.11 We can say for sure only that
    the Shepard documents do not prove that Marcia-Acosta was
    convicted of the crime of intentional (or knowing) aggravated
    assault, and so the modified categorical approach is not
    satisfied.
    In sum, the district court misapplied the modified
    categorical approach in determining that Marcia-Acosta’s
    prior conviction was for a crime of violence, and therefore
    11
    Of course, if these three mental states really are alternative means
    rather than alternative elements — and we assume to the contrary for
    purposes of our analysis in this case — then this statute of conviction
    would be indivisible, and the modified categorical approach would not
    apply at all. See 
    Rendon, 764 F.3d at 1083
    , 1086.
    UNITED STATES V. MARCIA-ACOSTA                 23
    erred in including the 16-level enhancement in its calculation
    of the Guidelines sentence.
    IV.
    Although advisory after United States v. Booker, 
    543 U.S. 220
    (2005), the Guidelines remain “the starting point and the
    initial benchmark” of any sentencing determination. Gall v.
    United States, 
    552 U.S. 38
    , 49 (2007). “[S]entencing
    proceedings are to begin by determining the applicable
    Guidelines range. The range must be calculated correctly.”
    United States v. Carty, 
    520 F.3d 984
    , 991(9th Cir. 2008) (en
    banc). “A mistake in calculating the recommended
    Guidelines sentencing range is a significant procedural error
    that requires us to remand for resentencing.” United States v.
    Munoz-Camarena, 
    631 F.3d 1028
    , 1030 (9th Cir. 2011) (per
    curiam). We thus vacate Marcia-Acosta’s sentence and
    remand for resentencing consistent with this opinion.
    Accordingly, we need not address Marcia-Acosta’s
    arguments that his sentence was otherwise procedurally
    erroneous and substantively unreasonable.
    VACATED     AND                  REMANDED            FOR
    RESENTENCING.