X

Thank you for sharing!

Your article was successfully shared with the contacts you provided.

Fredis Reyes-Contreras pleaded guilty of illegal reentry under 8 U.S.C. § 1326(a) and (b). Because he had been convicted of manslaughter in Missouri, the court applied the sixteen-level crime-of-violence (“COV”) enhancement under U.S.S.G. § 2L1.2(b)(1)(A)(ii). Reyes-Contreras appeals the enhance­ment, claiming that Missouri’s manslaughter statute is non-generic under   Mathis. Though we find that the statute is divisible and could warrant an enhancement under the modified categorical approach, the documents of con­viction do not indicate the subsection of conviction, so as required by our caselaw we vacate and remand for resentencing.I.Reyes-Contreras was apprehended after illegally crossing from Mexico. Because he had been deported, he was charged with illegal reentry under 8 U.S.C. § 1326(a) and (b). He admitted to being a citizen of Honduras and entered a guilty plea with no plea agreement. He claims he entered illegally because a gang in Honduras threatened his life if he did not pay them money.A criminal record check revealed two Missouri convictions from 2006: one for voluntary manslaughter in the first degree and a second for armed criminal action. An immigration check showed that Reyes-Contreras had been deported in 2012.Given the above information, the presentence report (“PSR”) assigned Reyes-Contreras a base offense level of 8 under U.S.S.G. § 2L1.2(a)[1] and applied a 16-level COV enhancement under U.S.S.G. § 2L1.2(b)(1)(A)(ii). Two levels were subtracted for acceptance of responsibility, and a third level for timely acceptance was subtracted at the sentencing hearing, leaving Reyes- Contreras at a level of 21.The PSR assigned four criminal history points, three for the Missouri convictions and one for a 2001 conviction that was later subtracted because it was more than ten years old. That yielded a Category II criminal history. The Guidelines range for the offense was 41-51 months, and the district court sentenced Reyes-Contreras to 41 months.At issue is the sixteen-level enhancement for a COV given the Missouri conviction for voluntary manslaughter. Reyes-Contreras was seen striking the victim—his brother-in-law—on the head with a baseball bat, causing death. Reyes-Contreras contends he committed the offense in defense of his younger brother because his brother-in-law had attacked his brother with a knife.Reyes-Contreras was charged with second degree murder, a Class A felony. The indictment includes the fact that Reyes-Contreras caused the death of another by striking him with a baseball bat. Reyes-Contreras pleaded guilty of voluntary manslaughter, a Class B felony. The plea includes neither an elaboration of the facts nor the subsection of conviction. Because the Mis­souri manslaughter statute criminalizes generic manslaughter in subsection (1) as well as knowingly assisting another in self-murder in subsection (2), Reyes-Contreras asserts that the statute is indivisible and overbroad under Mathis. Reyes-Contreras preserved his objection to the enhancement, so our review is de novo. United States v. Rodriguez, 711 F.3d 541, 548 (5th Cir. 2013) (en banc).II.A.The Guidelines establish that a COV enhancement applies to an enum­erated list of crimes, including manslaughter, and to offenses that “ha[ve] as an element the use, attempted use, or threatened use of physical force against the person of another.” U.S.S.G. § 2L1.2 cmt. 1(B)(iii). To qualify as an enum­erated crime, the statute of conviction must match the generic offense. Mathis v. United States, 136 S. Ct. 2243, 2247 (2016); Taylor v. United States, 495 U.S. 575, 598 (1990). Under this categorical approach, the court must ignore the facts of the case and ask whether the elements of the crime of conviction and the elements of the generic crime are sufficiently similar. Mathis, 136 S. Ct. at 2248. When a defendant pleads guilty, the elements are those things he necessarily admits in his plea. Id.If a statute is divisible, we employ the modified categorical approach and look to certain documents to determine which subsection of the statute was the basis for conviction. Shepard v. United States, 544 U.S. 13, 25 (2005). We then compare the elements of that subsection with the elements of the generic crime. But if the statute lists means of fulfilling a single offense, it is indivisi­ble and must be taken as a whole instead of using the facts of the offense to narrow the statute. Descamps v. United States, 133 S. Ct. 2276, 2290 (2013).B.The Missouri voluntary manslaughter statute, MO. ANN. STAT. § 565.023, reads as follows[2]: A person commits the crime of voluntary manslaughter if he: Causes the death of another person under circum­stances that would constitute murder in the second degree under subdivision (1) of subsection 1 of section 565.021, ex­cept that he caused the death under the influence of sudden passion arising from adequate cause; or Knowingly assists another in the commission of self-murder. The defendant shall have the burden of injecting the issue of influence of sudden passion arising from adequate cause under subdivision (1) of subsection 1 of this section. Voluntary manslaughter is a class B felony. Second degree murder under MO. Ann. STAT. § 565.023.1(1) has the following elements[3]:1. A person commits the crime of murder in the second degree if he:(1) Knowingly causes the death of another person or, with the purpose of causing serious physical injury to an­other person, causes the death of another person . . . .The parties do not dispute that manslaughter as defined in subsec­tion (1) is a COV meeting the elements of generic manslaughter.[4] Reyes- Contreras contends that the statute is indivisible and cannot be generic be­cause of the criminalization of assisting another in self-murder in subsec­tion (2). He further asserts that subsection (2) lacks as an element the use of force such that it does not qualify under the alternative definition of a COV.C.To determine whether an alternatively phrased statute lays out ele­ments or means, we follow Mathis and look first to state-court decisions, second to the statute itself, and finally to a limited permissible list of documents such as the indictment, jury instructions, and plea agreement and colloquy. If none of those sources definitively answers the question of divisibility, then Taylors demand for certainty has not been met, and we must consider the statute as a whole. Mathis, 136 S. Ct. at 2256-57.We conclude that Missouri’s manslaughter statute is divisible. There is no state highest-court decision definitively saying that, but the statutory framework and state caselaw as a whole convincingly demonstrate that subsec­tion (1) and subsection (2) manslaughter are offenses with distinct elements.[5]1.Divisibility is first seen in the statutory scheme. The provision on lesser- included offenses, MO. Ann. STAT. § 565.025.2(2),[6] delineates subsection (1) voluntary manslaughter as a lesser-included offense of second-degree murder.[7]It does not so list voluntary manslaughter as a whole or under subsection (2). Thus the statutory structure establishes manslaughter under subsections (1) and (2) as separate crimes requiring different elements, given that only one is included in the section on lesser-included offenses.When voluntary manslaughter under subsection (1) is charged as a lesser-included offense, there are accompanying instructions specifying what the jury must find. This satisfies the Mathis criteria, 136 S. Ct. at 2256, that a statute identify “which things must be charged.” State caselaw lays out these instructions, showing that to convict a defendant of voluntary manslaughter as a lesser-included offense, the jury must unanimously find the elements of subsection (1) without any consideration of subsection (2).[8] Because the jury must find every element of subsection (1), standing alone, to convict, subsec­tion (1) must contain elements that are distinct from subsection (2).[9]2.Missouri state-court opinions also discuss voluntary manslaughter in a way that treats it as divisible. For example, “[a] person commits the crime of voluntary manslaughter if he” satisfies each element under subsection (1).[10]The court ends there full-stop with no mention of alternative means or a dis­cussion of subsection (2). Taking state law as a whole, then, Taylors “demand for certainty” is met that the voluntary manslaughter statute sets out two sep­arate offenses.III.Even though the statute is divisible, we must be able to discern whether the generic subsection (1) manslaughter formed the basis of Reyes-Contreras’s conviction. If he was convicted under the statute as a whole or under subsec­tion (2), the enhancement cannot apply unless subsection (2) is generic or has as an element the use of force. See United States v. Neri-Hernandes, 504 F.3d 587, 589 (5th Cir. 2007).A.Under Shepard v. United States, 544 U.S. 13 (2005), we may use the “modified categorical approach” and look to “a limited class of documents” such as the indictment, jury instructions, or plea agreements and colloquies to determine the crime of conviction. Mathis, 136 S. Ct. at 2249; see also Shepard,   544 U.S. at 26. Those may be used solely “as a tool to identify the elements of the crime of conviction” and not to identify facts supporting a COV enhance­ment. Mathis, 136 S. Ct. at 2253; see also Descamps, 133 S. Ct. at 2285.Reyes-Contreras’s indictment shows that he was charged with second- degree murder (Count One) and armed criminal action (Count Two). The indictment makes no mention of a lesser-included offense or of manslaughter as a separate offense. Count One does reflect that Reyes-Contreras “knowingly or with the purpose of causing serious physical injury to [the victim] caused [his death] by striking him with a baseball bat.” His conviction, however, merely states “voluntary manslaughter first degree.”At sentencing, the district court stated it was clear which subsection formed the basis of conviction because the judgment shows “voluntary man­slaughter first degree.” There is, however, no such crime; there is only volun­tary manslaughter with two subsections ungraded by degree. See MO. Ann. STAT. § 565.023. The district court stated that the degrees were defined in MO. Ann. STAT. § 565.025.[11] That section, however, delineates lesser-included offenses of first- and second-degree murder. Although it does state that “volun­tary manslaughter under subdivision (1) of subsection 1 of section 565.023″ is a “lesser degree” offense of second-degree murder, MO. Ann. STAT. § 565.025, it nowhere defines subsection (1) manslaughter as “first degree.” Thus, the district court’s reliance on this language in the plea is misguided.B.As a general rule, we cannot use an indictment to narrow the subsection of conviction if it is for a crime different from the crime pleaded. United States v. Turner, 349 F.3d 833, 836 (5th Cir. 2003). The general rule in Turner was explained further in Neri-Hernandes and Bonilla. In Neri-Hernandes, 504 F.3d at 590, we stated broadly that “the district court cannot use the indictment to pare down the statute of conviction to determine under which subsection [the defendant] pleaded guilty” if the defendant never pleaded to the crime in the indictment. Accord Bonilla, 524 F.3d at 652.There is an exception where the plea references a lesser-included offense, allowing the indictment to clarify the ambiguity in the plea. For example, in United States v. Martinez-Vega, 471 F.3d 559, 563 (5th Cir. 2006), the court looked to an indictment charging a different crime from the judgment because the defendant pleaded to “the lesser charge contained in the Indictment.” The indictment was used to clarify to which crime the judgment referred.Similarly, in United States v. Hernandez-Borjas, 641 F. App’x 367 (5th Cir. 2016) (per curiam), the indictment charged a crime different from the crime of conviction. But the court looked to the indictment because the convic­tion was “pursuant to a guilty plea to ‘the lesser charge contained in the Indictment.’” Id. at 372 (quoting Martinez-Vega, 471 F.3d at 562). Though the indictment did not spell out a lesser-included offense, its language tracked the elements of a particular subsection, and it provided the necessary context to look to state law to discover that only one lesser-included offense was possible. Thus, “the indictment [was] relevant to ascertain the meaning of ‘the lesser included offense.’” Id.Neither Reyes-Contreras’s indictment nor his plea refers to a lesser- included offense. It is clear from Missouri law that subsection (1) is the only possible offense in the judgment, in light of the elements and crime in the indictment. Moreover, the use of “first degree” in the judgment seems to indicate an intention to narrow down the subsection.This is not enough to allow us to look to the indictment. The court in Bonilla, 524 F.3d at 653 n.4, expressly distinguished Martinez-Vega on the ground that “the lesser charge was made clear from the judgment, and was found by the court as actually being charged in the original indictment.” In contrast, in Bonilla, the disposition did not “refer back to a lesser offense in the original indictment.” Id.[12] Because there is no ambiguity in the judgment re­quiring us to cross-reference the indictment, we consider the statute as a whole.IV.The statute as a whole can support the enhancement if subsection (2) manslaughter is generic or if it contains as an element the use of force. Neither obtains.A.The government posits that the entire statute is generic because subsec­tion (1) is undisputedly generic manslaughter, and subsection (2) should be considered generic murder. The government does not try to fit subsection (2) into generic manslaughter, which would be difficult given the generic defini­tion adopted by this circuit.[13]Assisting another in self-murder is not generic murder. Though assisted suicide historically was considered murder, LAFAVE, § 15.6(c), many states now treat it as a separate offense or as part of manslaughter, id. & nn.30-31. If a defendant actively participates or directly causes the death of another, a murder conviction can still lie. Id. & n.33. The statutes defining assisted sui­cide, however, are similar to Missouri’s and do not delineate the specific role played by the defendant under the assisted-suicide provision. Id. at n.31. The MPC also contains a separate section dealing with “Causing or Aiding Suicide” as a crime separate from murder and manslaughter. MODEL PENAL CODE § 210.5. Thus although some conduct can warrant a conviction under either assisted suicide or murder, the two are treated as separate crimes. Further, this circuit has not adopted a generic definition of murder, and this is not the proper case in which to do so.B.Nor does assisting in self-murder require the use of force as defined by this circuit.[14] For the use of force to be an element, force must be a “constituent part of a claim that must be proved for the claim to succeed” in every case charging that offense.[15] Citing Vargas-Duran, 356 F.3d at 599, Reyes- Contreras defines use of force as requiring the use of destructive or violent force as distinguished from causing bodily injury through even indirect means. The government stakes the position that indirect force is sufficient, asserting that United States v. Castleman, 134 S. Ct. 1405 (2014), overruled Fifth Circuit precedent requiring destructive or violent force by interpreting the use-of-force clause in 18 U.S.C. § 921(a)(33)(A)(ii) to encompass the common-law definition, which includes offensive touching and indirect applications of force.Castleman interpreted a provision in the context of domestic violence and expressly distinguished its broad definition of “force” in that context from its use in other statutes.[16] “In defining a violent felony [under 18 U.S.C. § 924(e)(1)], we held, the phrase physical force must mea[n] violent force.” Cas- tleman, 134 S. Ct. at 1410 (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting John­son v. United States, 559 U.S. 133, 140 (2010)). The Court also clarified that its opinion was tailored to domestic violence and was not meant to cast doubt on circuit-court opinions interpreting COV in other contexts. Id. at 1411 n.4.A post-Castleman panel, in United States v. Rico-Mejia, 859 F.3d 318 (5th Cir. 2017), has already held that Castleman does not abrogate our deci­sions on the use of force under the Guidelines, binding us by the rule of order­liness. Teague v. City of Flower Mound, Tex., 179 F.3d 377, 383 (5th Cir. 1999). “By its express terms, Castleman’s analysis is not applicable to the physical force requirement for a crime of violence . . . . Accordingly, Castleman does not disturb this court’s precedent regarding the characterization of crimes of vio­lence.” Rico-Mejia, 859 F.3d at 322-23.Our precedent includes Calderon-Pena, 383 F.3d at 260, in which the en banc court expressly held that an offense that can be committed without “any bodily contact (let alone violent or forceful contact) . . . does not qualify for the sixteen-level enhancement.” Assisting in self-murder is just such an offense. It “can—but need not—involve the application of physical force.” Id. For   example, a man was charged under Missouri’s voluntary-manslaughter statute for entering a suicide pact with a friend even though his only action was to hand his friend the weapon.[17] Therefore subsection (2) manslaughter is not a crime that has use of force as an element.The government rightly points out that many circuits have rejected this view and have expanded Castleman to state that indirect causation of bodily injury may warrant a COV enhancement. But Castleman does not on its own terms make this expansion, and a previous panel declined to interpret it as doing so, thus binding us. See United States v. Tanksley, 848 F.3d 347, 350 (5th Cir. 2017).V.The government advances the alternative position that if this panel reverses the enhancement for the manslaughter conviction, Reyes-Contreras’s conviction for armed criminal action can support the enhancement as a crime having as an element the use of force. The statute reads, “Except as provided in subsection 4 of this section, any person who commits any felony under the laws of this state by, with, or through the use, assistance, or aid of a dangerous instrument or deadly weapon is also guilty of the crime of armed criminal action.” MO. ANN. STAT. § 571.015. Missouri further defines “dangerous instrument” as “any instrument, article or substance, which, under the cir­cumstances in which it is used, is readily capable of causing death or other serious physical injury.” MO. ANN. STAT. § 556.061(9).[18] We have determined that, to qualify for the COV enhancement, use of such an instrument must be more than mere possession but must include at least threatening physical force. United States v. Velasco, 465 F.3d 633, 640 (5th Cir. 2006).Because, under Missouri law, possession that bolsters a defendant’s con­fidence to commit the felony is sufficient for conviction of armed criminal action, the statute criminalizes more than the “use” of force under the Guide­lines. State v. Jones, 479 S.W.3d 100 (Mo. 2016). “Armed criminal action under section 571.015.1 does not require that the defendant actually attack or threaten an imminent attack with the weapon.” Id. at 108. Rather, a defen­dant who commits a burglary with a gun in hand is guilty if the weapon “bol- ster[ed] his confidence,” even though no one sees him, no one is threatened, and the gun is not used to breach the threshold. Id. at 109. That is because the words “aid” and “assistance” sweep in more conduct than does “use” alone, id. at 107, and make the statute broader than permitted for a COV having the use of force as an element.VI.The district court’s error in the Guidelines calculation was not harmless. To show that error is harmless, the government must demonstrate both that the district court would have imposed the same sentence for the same reasons and that it was “not influenced by an erroneous Guidelines calculation.” United States v. Castro-Alfonso, 841 F.3d 292, 298 (5th Cir. 2016).To show that it would have imposed the same sentence, a district court need not use “magic words,” but it must be evident that it would have imposed the same sentence absent the error. United States v. Shepherd, 848 F.3d 425, 427 (5th Cir. 2017). The court considered the Guidelines range given the sixteen-level enhancement, mitigating circumstances, and the Guidelines range under the then-forthcoming 2016 amendments that would have lowered the range from 41-51 months to 21-27 months. The court stated that the 2016  Guidelines did not “adequately address the type of conviction that we have on the record here” and sentenced Reyes-Contreras to the low end of the erron­eously calculated Guidelines range. Given the eight-level enhancement for armed criminal action, the proper range is 15-21 months. Though the record strongly supports that the district court would think this too low, given that it saw the amended range as too low, it never stated that it would impose the same 41-month sentence absent any error.[19] The government thus fails to establish harmless error on the first prong.Even if the evidence were sufficient to find that the court would have departed upward from the proper range, the government also fails to carry its burden to show that the chosen sentence was not influenced by the erroneous calculation.[I]t is a stretch to say that the court’s choice of the same param­eters as the improperly calculated guidelines range in this case were mere serendipity. While the court expressed a multitude of reasons for imposing a sentence above the properly calculated range, we can find no indication that the court’s decision . . . was independent of the erroneous calculation that called the court’s attention to that range in the first instance.Martinez-Romero, 817 F.3d at 926; see also United States v. Ibarra-Luna, 628 F.3d 712, 717 (5th Cir. 2010). Because the district court did not provide a basis for the chosen sentence independent of the erroneously calculated range, the error was not harmless.The judgment of sentence is VACATED and REMANDED for resentencing.EDITH H. JONES, Circuit Judge, concurring in the judgment:The rule of orderliness binds us to follow a prior published opinion that renders a res nova interpretation of a Supreme Court decision. This rule requires my concurrence here, but I write separately to explain why I believe that a prior panel erred in holding that United States v. Castleman, 134 S. Ct. 1405 (2014) does not abrogate our circuit’s “direct force” requirement for “crimes of violence.” See United States v. Rico-Mejia, 859 F.3d 318, 322-23 (5th Cir. 2017) (“Castleman does not disturb this court’s precedent regarding the characterization of crimes of violence.”). For the following reasons, Rico- Mejia decided this issue incorrectly and should be reconsidered.[20]Under the Sentencing Guidelines for illegal reentry, a “crime of violence” includes offenses that “ha[ve] as an element the use, attempted use, or threatened use of physical force against the person of another.” U.S.S.G. § 2L1.2 cmt. 2.[21] The key issue here is whether the indirect application of violent force—e.g., administering a deadly poison—qualifies as the “use of force.” Unfortunately, this court has indicated that such indirect applications of force do not qualify. See United States v. Villegas-Hernandez, 468 F.3d 874, 879 n.6 (5th Cir. 2006) (concluding that this circuit had rejected a view of “use of force” encompassing “tricking a person into consuming poison”) (quoting United States v. Calderon-Pena, 383 F.3d 254, 270 (5th Cir. 2004) (Smith, J., dissenting)).   Castleman rejected the direct versus indirect force distinction and dismissed a defendant’s claim that poisoning is not the “use of force”:The “use of force” in Castleman’s example is not the act of “sprinkl[ing]” the poison; it is the act of employing poison knowingly as a device to cause physical harm. That the harm occurs indirectly, rather than directly (as with a kick or punch), does not matter. Under Castleman’s logic, after all, one could say that pulling the trigger on a gun is not a “use of force” because it is the bullet, not the trigger, that actually strikes the victim.Castleman, 134 S. Ct. at 1415 (emphasis added). Justice Sotomayor’s analysis in Castleman is common sense.Rico-Mejia held that Castleman applies only in the context of the misdemeanor crime of domestic violence defined in 18 U.S.C. § 921(a)(33)(A): “By its express terms, Castlemans analysis is not applicable to the physical force requirement for a crime of violence.” 859 F.3d at 322. This confuses the different legal questions discussed in Castleman. Certainly, Castleman held that the misdemeanor crime of domestic violence encompasses “the slightest offensive touching”—that is, the degree of force necessary for common-law battery. Castleman, 134 S. Ct. at 1410 (quoting Johnson v. United States, 559 U.S. 133, 139, 130 S. Ct. 1265, 1270 (2010)). The Court included a footnote acknowledging that “[t]he Courts of Appeals have generally held that mere offensive touching cannot constitute the ‘physical force’ necessary to a ‘crime of violence.’” Castleman, 134 S. Ct. at 1411 n.4. And the Court explained that “[n]othing in today’s opinion casts doubt on these holdings, because—as we explain—’domestic violence’ encompasses a range of force broader than that which constitutes ‘violence’ simpliciter.” Id. (emphasis in original).But the requisite degree or “range” of force is an issue entirely separate from whether that force is applied directly or indirectly. As Castleman specified, if the degree of force is sufficient, it “does not matter” whether “the harm occurs indirectly, rather than directly.” Id. at 1415. Thus, though Castleman does not alter the degree of force this circuit requires to satisfy the “crime of violence” enhancement, it ought to abrogate our decisions holding that indirect applications of force are distinct and insufficient.Every other circuit to address this issue has applied Castleman s direct- indirect analysis in the “crime of violence” or “violent felony” context. See United States v. Ellison, 866 F.3d 32, 37 (1st Cir. 2017) (Barron, J.) (finding “no argument as to why the logic of Castleman is inapplicable” to the “crime of violence” analysis); United States v. Hill, 832 F.3d 135, 144 (2d Cir. 2016) (Livingston, J.) (relying on Castleman to determine that Hobbs Act robbery constitutes a “crime of violence”); United States v. Chapman, 866 F.3d 129, 133 (3d Cir. 2017) (Greenaway, J.) (holding that Castleman “rejected the contention that knowingly or intentionally poisoning another person does not constitute a use of force”); United States v. Reid, 861 F.3d 523, 529 (4th Cir. 2017) (Niemeyer, J.) (holding that Castleman precludes the “argument that the phrase ‘use of physical force’ excludes indirect applications”) (emphasis in original); United States v. Verwiebe, 874 F.3d 258, 261 (6th Cir. 2017) (Sutton, J.) (relying on Castleman to reject the claim that “tripping somebody into oncoming traffic, or for that matter perpetrating a sarin gas attack, would not be a crime of violence”); Hill v. United States, 877 F.3d 717, 720 (7th Cir. 2017) (Easterbrook, J.) (citing Castleman to hold that “administering poison” satisfies the “use of force” requirement for a “violent felony”); United States v. Rice, 813 F.3d 704, 706 (8th Cir. 2016) (Murphy, J.) (relying on Castleman to hold that second degree battery “includes the use of physical force as an element”); United States v. Calvillo-Palacios, 860 F.3d 1285, 1291 (9th Cir. 2017) (O’Scannlain, J.) (“Castleman explicitly rejected the poison hypothetical frequently employed by other circuits”); United States v. Benton, 876 F.3d 1260, 1263 (10th Cir. 2017) (Briscoe, J.) (relying on Castleman to hold that aggravated assault with a deadly weapon is a “crime of violence”); United States v. Haldemann, 664 F. App’x 820, 822 (11th Cir. 2016) (per curiam) (relying on Castleman to hold that “whether that use of force occurs indirectly, rather than directly, by way of the defendant’s actions is of no consequence”); United States v. Redrick, 841 F.3d 478, 484 (D.C. Cir. 2016) (Silberman, J.) (relying on Castleman to reject the poison hypothetical).When every other circuit interprets a Supreme Court decision in one way, and we interpret it another, it is worth considering whether we are mistaken. Rico-Mejia devoted a mere three sentences to distinguishing Castleman, and the opinion did not acknowledge the circuit split. Because this court stands alone in holding the nonsensical position that murdering someone with poison is not a “crime of violence,” it is time to take another look.

 
Reprints & Licensing
Mentioned in a Law.com story?

License our industry-leading legal content to extend your thought leadership and build your brand.

More From ALM

With this subscription you will receive unlimited access to high quality, online, on-demand premium content from well-respected faculty in the legal industry. This is perfect for attorneys licensed in multiple jurisdictions or for attorneys that have fulfilled their CLE requirement but need to access resourceful information for their practice areas.
View Now
Our Team Account subscription service is for legal teams of four or more attorneys. Each attorney is granted unlimited access to high quality, on-demand premium content from well-respected faculty in the legal industry along with administrative access to easily manage CLE for the entire team.
View Now
Gain access to some of the most knowledgeable and experienced attorneys with our 2 bundle options! Our Compliance bundles are curated by CLE Counselors and include current legal topics and challenges within the industry. Our second option allows you to build your bundle and strategically select the content that pertains to your needs. Both options are priced the same.
View Now
April 08, 2025 - April 09, 2025
Chicago, IL

Join General Counsel and Senior Legal Leaders at the Premier Forum Designed For and by General Counsel from Fortune 1000 Companies


Learn More
November 18, 2024 - November 19, 2024
New York, NY

Join General Counsel and Senior Legal Leaders at the Premier Forum Designed For and by General Counsel from Fortune 1000 Companies


Learn More
November 27, 2024
London

Celebrating achievement, excellence, and innovation in the legal profession in the UK.


Learn More

We are seeking two experienced Litigation Associates with 2 to 7 years of experience to join our defense teams in our downtown New York City...


Apply Now ›

Description: Fox Rothschild has an opening for a Litigation Counsel in our Seattle office. Experience with insurance bad faith and coverage ...


Apply Now ›

Robert C. Gottlieb & Associates PLLC is a 40-year-old litigation boutique looking to hire a civil attorney who has concentrated in civil...


Apply Now ›