Carlos Velarde was convicted of possessing with intent to distribute cocaine in excess of five kilograms in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and (b)(1)(A)(ii). He appealed his conviction,' challenging the district court’s denial of his motion to suppress, and we affirmed.
United States v. Velarde,
Velarde raises the following issues in his habeas petition, none of which were raised on direct appeal: 1) ineffective assistance of trial counsel; 2) ineffective assistance of appellate counsel; 3) denial of a fair trial because of the government’s use of allegedly perjured testimony; and 4) denial of the Sixth Amendment right tо confront witnesses. Because Velarde’s attorney on direct appeal was also his trial counsel, he is not barred from raising his ineffective assistance of trial counsel claim for the first time on post-conviction review.
United States v. Taglia,
Wе turn first to the merits of Velarde’s claim of ineffectiveness of trial counsel. To prevail, Velarde must establish that his attorney committed serious errors that fell “below an objective standard of reasonableness” and “outside the wide range of professionally competent assistance,”
Strickland v. Washington,
The facts underlying Velarde’s conviction are set forth in our prior opinion, and we do not repeat them here. Velarde’s ineffective-assistance claim centers on the alleged perjury of witness Samuel Jiminez. Jiminez, through an interpretеr, testified at trial that he had purchased at Velarde’s request the Cadillac which Velarde was driving when he was stopped by the Illinois police officer. He further testified that he had no knowledge of the cocaine found in the vehicle. Velarde’s attorney conducted cross-examination, after which he requested the court to keep Jiminez available for recall. The court, without ruling on the request, then took a recess, during which Jiminez, through his interpreter, told the prosecutor that he did in fact have knowledge of the drugs at issue. According to Jiminez, Velarde had asked him to be a middleman in the transaction, given him $90,000 to purchase the six kilos of cocaine, and paid him approximately $1,200 for his assistance in proсuring it. The government advised Jiminez of his rights, and Jiminez requested an attorney.
The government then notified the court and the defense of Jiminez’s statements. The court held an in-chambers hearing, and appointed a counsel for Jiminez. The defense moved fоr a mistrial, and the government moved to recall Jiminez to the stand. Shortly thereafter, the court requested Jiminez to appear, and asked him if he would testify further if recalled to the stand. Jiminez responded that he would waive his Fifth Amendment rights only in exchange for a grant of immunity. In light of this, the court refused to allow the government to recall Jiminez. The court did, however, allow Jiminez’s previous testimony to stand. Velarde’s attorney renewed his request for a mistrial, and, subsequently, raised the issue of the alleged pеrjury in his motion for a new trial.
Velarde contends that his attorney’s performance at trial was constitutionally defective because he did not move to recall Jiminez to the stand for further cross-examination, thereby allowing the allegedly perjured testimony to go unrebutted (and failing to preserve the issue for appeal); did not attempt to introduce Jiminez’s out-of-court statements into evidence; and referred to the perjured testimony in his closing argument. According to Velarde, since Jiminez’s testimony implicated Velarde, and since Jiminez’s out-of-court statements called his credibility into question, the failure to recall Jiminez, or to impeach his testimony through his out-of-court statements, was prejudicial because the jury might otherwise have discounted Jiminez’s testimony and found that “all the evidence available incriminated Mr. Jiminez and not Mr. Velarde.” Appellant’s Br. at 18. Ve-larde argues in the alternative that “[e]ven if the jury did not conclude that Jiminez was the sole perpetrator of the drug transaction, it may still have had a reasonable doubt about convicting [Velarde].” Id. We disagree.
As the district court noted, it is “extremely unlikely” that Jiminez’s testimony denying any knowledge of the cocaine could have affected the jury’s verdict. Indeеd, when Velarde was stopped by the police officer, cocaine was hidden not only in the car, but on his person. Moreover, as the district court observed, had Jiminez testified that Velarde had travelled to Florida to purchase $90,000 wоrth of cocaine, that testimony certainly would have further implicated Velarde, by directly linking him to the purchase of the cocaine. Ve-larde has not established a reasonable probability that, but for his attorney’s errors, the result of thе proceeding would have been different,
see Strickland,
*829
Although we are not obligated to address both prongs,
United States v. Fakhoury,
Velarde also contends that his attorney rendered ineffective assistance of counsel on appeal by failing to raise the issue of the alleged perjury. According to Velarde, Jiminez’s out-of-court statements were the “most significant appellate issue,” Appellant’s Br. at 32, and had the issue been raised on direct appeal he would have received a new trial.
Id.
at 34. The specific аcts of appellate counsel that form the basis of Velarde’s ineffective assistance claim,
see Strickland,
With regard to the failure to appeal the trial court’s refusal to grant a new trial, the district court, citing
United States v. Douglas,
*830
As to the alleged confrontation clause violation resulting from the trial court’s refusal to recall Jiminez to the stand, Velarde relies on
United States v. Bourjaily,
Finally, we find no prejudice in the failure to appeal the trial court’s refusal to give the jury a limiting instruction revealing Jiminez’s perjured testimony. Although Velarde relies on
Napue v. Illinois,
The failure of Velarde’s counsеl to raise the perjury-related issues on appeal meet neither the performance nor prejudice prong under Strickland and, therefore, Ve-larde’s claim of ineffective assistance of appellate counsel fails. Bеcause this failure also means that Velarde cannot establish cause for the procedural default of his remaining claims, which we touched upon in the context of Velarde’s ineffective assistance of counsel arguments, we need not further address their merits.
Affirmed.
