Lоwry claims ineffective assistance of counsel because his lawyer did not move to suppress evidence. We reject his claim.
I. Facts
An Arizona state prisoner told the prison warden that а number of his fellow inmates in cell block 6, the administrative segregation unit, planned a violent riot. The plan was to stab an inmate in order to lure a number of guards into the unit. The guards would then be deluged with bombs made from blasting caps, shrapnel, and about a pound of explosives. The informant claimed the inmates kept contraband “keestered” in their ree-tums. He had decided to “snitch” and rеquest a transfer when he learned “through the vent” that he was to be the inmate stabbed. He corroborated his story by expelling from his own rectum a balloon filled with gun powder.
The prison authorities arranged for searches of prisoners’ rectums in the cell block. Fifteen inmates were taken from their cells. A medical assistant (wearing a new lubricated glove for each inmate) stuck his fingеr in each inmate’s rectum. Then each inmate was moved to the medical facility in the unit and probed again, this time by a doctor. The doctor felt something in Low-ry’s rectum, had him x-rayed, and confirmеd that a foreign object was there. Lowry was ordered to expel it, and he removed from his rectum a syringe wrapped in cellophane. The doctor probed him again, decided there was more, and Lowry expelled a red balloon filled with methamphetamine.
Lowry was convicted in state court of promoting prison contraband and possessing dangerous drugs. This case is his appeal of the denial of his habeas corpus petition. He claims that he was denied effective assistance of counsel because his lawyer in the state contrabаnd case did not file a motion to suppress the syringe and methamphetamine. Lowry contends that the evidence would have been suppressed because the manner in which the searсh was conducted violated his constitutional rights.
The ACLU had filed a lawsuit on behalf of the prisoners under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, claiming that the searches of their rectums violated the prisoners’ civil rights. 1 Counsel for Lowry knew about the suit, and knew his client was claiming in the civil suit that the manner of the search violated his constitutional rights.
Lowry’s attorney did not file a motion to suppress the evidence from the rectal search in the criminal case. He had done legal research in other cases on the issues upon which his motion to suppress in this case would depend. He also talked to lawyers representing inmates in the other criminal cases based on evidence found in their rectums from the same cell-block search. Seven of the fifteen inmates searched had contraband in their rectums, including gun powder and blasting caps.
See State v. Bloomer,
II. Analysis
We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. The magistrate’s findings of fact, adopted by the district court, have not been put at issue. We review the legal issues on denial of habeas corpus petitions de novo.
Adams v. Peterson,
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To demonstrate ineffective assistance of counsel, Lowry must establish deficient performance and prejudice.
Strickland v. Washington,
Lowry has not demonstrated that his lawyer’s performance fell below the
Strickland
standard of “reasonable professional judgment,” or that the lawyer’s decision not to file a motion to suppress was “outside the wide range of professionally competent assistance.”
Strickland,
Lowry’s new lawyer on the habeas petition argues that the motions would have been well taken, and the evidence should have been suppressed, under the first of our decisions in Lowry’s civil action,
Vaughan v. Ricketts,
Lowry’s habeas petition can be well taken, for its deficient performance аrgument, only if based on the proposition that “a defendant has ‘everything to gain and nothing to lose’ in filing a motion to suppress.”
See United States v. Molina,
This is not to say that a motion to suppress may be lightly dispensed with. Few things can more greatly benefit a criminal defendant than keeping the most probative evidence against him from being seen by the jury. But in this case, the experienced defense lawyer knеw from his research, and from the denial of suppression motions in other prisoners’ criminal cases arising out of the rectum searches of other prisoners in this same disturbance, that the motiоn would lose. Lowry’s lawyer did not render services that fell below the standard of reasonable professional judgment.
The other element of ineffective assistance of counsel is prejudice. Lowry must establish that had the motion been filed, there was a reasonable probability that the evidence
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would have been suppressed, and the outcome of the trial would have been different had the evidence been suppressed.
Kimmelman v. Morrison,
Lowry claims that the evidence would have been suppressed because the search was performed in an unconstitutional manner.
See Bell v. Wolfish,
The prisoners also lost their section 1983 suit.
Vaughan v. Ricketts,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
.
See Vaughan v. Ricketts,
. The inevitable discovery exception to the exclusionary rule has not been briefed, so we do not reach it. Lowiy argues that the prison guards should not have subjected him to the discomfort and indignity of the digital rectal searches, because they were going to x-ray him anyway, and could find out from the x-ray all they could learn from the digital rectal search and more. But that means they would have found the contraband in his rectum even without the digital search which he claims wаs unconstitutional. If his argument - is right, then his conclusion is wrong — evidence which would inevitably have been discovered by lawful means cannot be suppressed because the manner of discovery was unconstitutional.
Nix v. Williams,
