United States v. James

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 2, 2026
Docket25-50144
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. James (United States v. James) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. James, (5th Cir. 2026).

Opinion

Case: 25-50144 Document: 99-1 Page: 1 Date Filed: 06/02/2026

United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit ____________ United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit

No. 25-50144 FILED June 2, 2026 ____________ Lyle W. Cayce United States of America, Clerk

Plaintiff—Appellee,

versus

Allen Houston James,

Defendant—Appellant. ______________________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Texas USDC No. 6:21-CR-106-1 ______________________________

Before Willett, Wilson, and Douglas, Circuit Judges. Don R. Willett, Circuit Judge: In June 2000, an unknown assailant entered M.M.’s barracks room at Fort Hood, sexually assaulted her, and stabbed her again and again—twice in the neck, missing major blood vessels by mere millimeters.1 The investigation soon went cold. Nearly two decades later, forensic genealogy revived it. DNA from semen found on M.M.’s mattress cover led

_____________________ 1 Out of respect for the victim’s privacy, we use only her initials. Case: 25-50144 Document: 99-1 Page: 2 Date Filed: 06/02/2026

No. 25-50144

investigators first to a close genetic relative of the attacker, and then to Allen James. A jury convicted James of attempted murder,2 and the district court sentenced him to 200 months’ imprisonment and three years of supervised release. James now raises three arguments: (1) the evidence did not prove an intent to kill, (2) the jury instructions failed to require such an intent, and (3) the district court violated the Ex Post Facto Clause3 by using the Sentencing Guidelines in effect at sentencing rather than those in effect when the crime occurred. Only the last argument succeeds. A rational jury could find that James intended to kill M.M., and James cannot obtain reversal based on instructional language he materially requested. But, as the Government concedes, the district court plainly erred by applying a later Guidelines Manual that increased James’s advisory range. We therefore AFFIRM the conviction, VACATE the sentence, and REMAND for resentencing. I. Background A. The Attack and Injuries In June 2000, M.M. had been stationed at Fort Hood for just over a year. She lived in Room 230 in one of four barracks surrounding a grassy field. Sometime after 1:00 a.m. on June 18, she awoke to the sound of someone opening her unlocked door. A man was standing in the doorway. M.M. did not recognize him, but she later described him as “a tall light-skinned black man, [with] a bald head [and] a baby face.” He wore black jeans and a white

_____________________ 2 See 18 U.S.C. § 1113. 3 U.S. Const. art. I, § 9, cl. 3 (“No . . . ex post facto Law shall be passed.”).

2 Case: 25-50144 Document: 99-1 Page: 3 Date Filed: 06/02/2026

tank top, and he appeared “maybe lost or confused,” as though “under the effects of something.” M.M. pretended to be asleep. The man closed the door and walked to her bed. He pulled his jeans down to his knees, pulled the blanket off M.M., put one hand on each side of her head, and leaned in to kiss her. M.M. pushed him away. She asked who he was and where he lived. He answered that he lived in “Room 233 in these barracks.” M.M. told him he was in the wrong room. As he stood, she saw a black knife with a short blade in his hand. The man tried to remove M.M.’s pants. When he could not, he tried to cut them off with the knife. He then pulled her pants down to her ankles and tried to force himself on her. As M.M. fought back, he stabbed her twice in the left knee, forced her legs down, and climbed on top of her. He kept stabbing her. He also bit and hit her, including on the head. M.M. used her right hand to prevent penetration. The man responded by stabbing her again—twice in the right shoulder and in both wrists. One wound pierced entirely through her right wrist, impaling it on the nightstand. The violence escalated. The man pressed the knife against M.M.’s throat and asked, “what is more important, your life or the p***y?” M.M. continued resisting. He again pressed the knife to her throat—this time hard enough to keep her from breathing—and repeated the threat. When she still resisted, he stabbed her twice in the neck. He continued stabbing even after she stopped resisting. After the stabbing ended, the man knelt on the bed and began to masturbate. He tried to penetrate M.M. but was unable to do so. He then simulated intercourse by rubbing against her vagina. Before leaving, he tried unsuccessfully to cut the mattress cover off the bed.

3 Case: 25-50144 Document: 99-1 Page: 4 Date Filed: 06/02/2026

Once M.M. realized he was gone, she counted to ten “very slowly” and made her way to the barracks’ Charge of Quarters office. She reported that a black man from Room 233 had tried to rape her. Seeing M.M. covered in blood, the Charge of Quarters called 911. One responding EMT described her condition as “shocking”—“like something you would see in the movies or on TV.” M.M. was taken by ambulance to the hospital, where she underwent surgery. Doctors found lacerations to her arms, hands, fingers, knee, shoulder, upper chest, and neck. The wound to her right wrist had both an entrance and an exit wound, confirming that the knife had passed entirely through it. The wounds to her neck penetrated the carotid sheath—the tissue surrounding the carotid artery and jugular vein—and missed those major blood vessels by only “a couple millimeters.” Had either vessel been pierced, M.M. would have bled out within minutes. The medical resident who treated her later testified that the case was “one of the few that stood out over [his] career” and that he had “never seen a victim with that many stab wounds before.” B. Initial Investigation When Army Criminal Investigation Division (CID) agents searched M.M.’s room, they found a fresh semen stain on the mattress cover. They collected a sperm sample from the stain. DNA from that sample was consistent with one of two contributors to the DNA obtained from M.M.’s hospital rape kit; M.M. was the other contributor. Investigators compared that DNA sample against blood samples from more than thirty people. Every one was excluded as a potential contributor. This included the resident of Room 233 in M.M.’s barracks building, who also did not match M.M.’s description of her attacker. The investigation eventually went cold.

4 Case: 25-50144 Document: 99-1 Page: 5 Date Filed: 06/02/2026

C. Subsequent Investigation In 2019, CID Special Agent Matthew Walters was assigned to the case. That same year, he attended an FBI training seminar where Dr. Colleen Fitzpatrick presented on the forensic-genealogy company she had founded. “Forensic genealogy is law enforcement’s use of DNA analysis combined with traditional genealogy research to generate investigative leads for unsolved violent crimes.”4 Forensic genetic genealogy, a related subfield, gained national prominence in 2018 when investigators used it to identify the Golden State Killer.5 It works by comparing an unidentified DNA profile against consumer DNA data to identify potential genetic relatives.6 After the seminar, Agent Walters enlisted Dr. Fitzpatrick to assist with M.M.’s case. Dr. Fitzpatrick compared DNA markers from the mattress-cover sample with profiles in GEDmatch, a database containing DNA data uploaded from services such as AncestryDNA and 23andMe. The search produced a match to “a very close cousin” of the man whose DNA was found on the mattress cover. From there, Dr. Fitzpatrick’s team identified four individuals with the correct degree of relationship to have potentially contributed the mattress-cover DNA.

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United States v. James, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-james-ca5-2026.