Anthony Owens filed a motion under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 to set aside his drug conviction and sentence because his trial lawyer fumbled what should have been a successful motion to suppress evidence seized pursuant to a warrant to search Owens’s house. The district court denied the motion, and Owens appeals. He is met at the threshold by our decision in
Holman v. Page,
The warrant pursuant to which evidence (consisting mainly of cocaine, marijuana, and guns) was used against Owens at his trial was based on a barebones affidavit, signed by a detective, which stated that three months earlier an informant had bought “a quantity of crack” from Owens at a house believed to be Owens’s residence. There was no indication either of the actual quantity of crack or of the reliability of the informant. Owens’s trial lawyer moved to suppress the evidence, arguing that a sale of an unknown quantity of an illegal drug three months before a search warrant was sought does not, without more (as in
United States v. Pless,
So inadequate was the affidavit that the search cannot be saved by
United States v. Leon,
The evidence was overwhelming that it was indeed Owens’s house in which the crack was found. The lawyer’s decision to bet his all on a denial of that fact and by doing so forfeit a compelling ground for excluding evidence essential to convict his client was therefore a blunder of the first magnitude. Had he acknowledged that it was Owens’s house, the motion to suppress would have been granted and Owens would have been acquitted. And in the unlikely event that the motion failed, the defense could change course and try to prove at trial that it was not Owens’s house after
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all. His earlier denial would not be a bar. “[W]hen a defendant testifies in support of a motion to suppress evidence on Fourth Amendment grounds, his testimony may not thereafter be admitted against him at trial on the issue of guilt unless he makes no objection.”
Simmons v. United States,
So we come to
Holman v. Page,
where we reasoned as follows.’ A claim o'f ineffective assistance of counsel requires proof not only that the lawyer’s handling of the defense failed to come up to minimum professional standards but also that his failure “prejudiced” the defendant.
Strickland v. Washington,
The essence of Holman’s analysis was thus a narrow definition of “prejudice”: the defendant is prejudiced by his lawyer’s inadequacy only if that inadequacy created a risk of convicting an innocent person. Provided the evidence seized in an illegal search is reliable, suppressing that evidence is not required in order to protect the innocent — -it is merely a tool for deterring violations of the . Fourth Amendment. Yet this rationale, far from being compelled by
Stone v. Powell,
is, we now realize, inconsistent with that decision. The Court had, remember, said that a federal habeas corpus claim could be based on a Fourth Amendment violation if the defendant hadn’t had an opportunity to present his Fourth Amendment defense at his trial.
Stone v. Powell, supra, 428 U.S.
at 494,
The holding of
Kimmelman v. Morrison
— that the Sixth Amendment
does
provide a remedy for counsel’s failure to argue a Fourth Amendment defense — is inconsistent with holding that a defendant is not prejudiced by, and therefore has no Sixth Amendment grievance concerning, a failure to suppress illegally seized evidence. It -is true that Justice Powell’s concurring opinion argued that the use of illegally seized, but reliable, evidence is not “prejudice,” because its use does not make the defendant’s trial “unfair.”
Id.
at 391-98,
This language cannot be dismissed as dictum. It is the explanation of the holding. Justice Powell complained that the parties hadn’t argued the issue.
Id.
at 391,
The right to counsel is intended to place a criminal defendant in the approximate position that he would occupy if he were learned in the law and could thus defend himself effectively. Had Owens been learned in the law he would have admitted that it was his house that was searched, gotten the evidence found there suppressed, and been acquitted because there was negligible evidence of his guilt other than what was found in the search of the house. The “prejudice” essential to a violation of the Sixth Amendment right to the effective assistance of counsel is not being convicted though one is innocent, although that is the worst kind; it is being convicted when one would have been acquitted, or at least would have had a good shot at acquittal, had one been competently represented.
The line runs between cases in which the defendant is complaining of his lawyer’s failure to do something illegal or unethical (such as to put on testimony that he knows to be perjured), as in
Nix v. Whiteside,
Thus far, however, we have merely been elaborating the argument made in the dissent of three members of this court (not including the author of this opinion) from the denial of rehearing en banc in
Holman. Holman v. Page,
Holman
is further undermined by the subsequent Supreme Court decisions of
Glover v. United States,
We conclude that Holman ■ should be overruled, and we have therefore circulated this opinion to the full court in advance of - publication, pursuant to 7th Cir. R. 40(e). A majority of the judges voted not to hear the case en banc. Judges Manion, Kanne, and Evans voted to hear the case en banc, and Chief Judge Flaum and Judge Williams did not participate in the consideration or decision of whether to hear the-case en banc.
Reveksed And Remanded.
