Petitioner-Appellant Charles Covey brings this action to vacate, set aside, or correct his sentence pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255. The district court 1 denied his motion, and we granted a certificate of appealability on the issue of whether counsel’s alleged conflict of interest rendered *905 his assistance ineffective in violation of Mr. Covey’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel. For the reasons stated herein, we affirm the district court’s decision.
I. BACKGROUND 2
In 1999, a jury convicted Mr. Covey of conspiracy to commit money laundering and aiding and abetting money laundering in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1956(a)(l)(B)(i), 1956(h), and 1956(a)(2). The district court entered preliminary judgment on the forfeiture count in the amount of $70,000 pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 982, denied Mr. Covey’s post-trial motions, sentenced Mr. Covey to fifty-seven months imprisonment, and fined Mr. Covey $19,118.44. Mr. Covey appealed his conviction and the preliminary order of forfeiture. In
United States v. Covey,
Mr. Covey was a certified public accountant, and he owned a corporation that specialized in making high risk loans. His conviction arose out of a loan he made to drug traffickers, Gary and Darrell Hart. The Harts were brothers and aspired to open a motorcycle business. The Harts had ample cash derived from their illegal drug activities to fund the business. However, federal law requires that certain cash transactions be reported to federal authorities. In order to disguise the source of funding for the motorcycle business, the Harts entered into an agreement with Mr. Covey. Through his corporation, Mr. Covey loaned the Harts $50,000 in exchange for a $70,000 cash payment. Mr. Covey and the Harts agreed that $10,000 of the loan was an origination fee, another $10,000 was collateral for interest on the loan, and the remaining $50,000 was collateral on the principal. The loan agreement documentation did not express these terms, however. Instead, the documentation represented that the Harts’ motorcycle business inventory was to be collateral for the loan, even though the inventory did not yet exist. Furthermore, Mr. Covey did not take a security interest in the later-acquired inventory.
The Harts transferred the $70,000 cash payment for the loan to Mr. Covey in a restaurant parking lot. This large sum of cash was bound by rubber bands and was delivered to Mr. Covey in a paper bag. In keeping with the loan agreement, the Harts made monthly payments on the loan. However, their business failed, and after only six months, they ceased making payments. Consequently, Mr. Covey began taking payments from the cash collateral.
At some point, Mr. Covey contacted a lawyer about concluding the loan. Mr. Covey’s attorney advised him to deposit the remaining principal in Mr. Covey’s corporate account and to return the excess collateral to the Harts. Mr. Covey attempted to return the excess collateral by mail, but the Harts suspected that they were under investigation and that Mr. Covey was cooperating with law enforcement. Therefore, they refused to retrieve their mail. In addition, counsel advised Mr. Covey to belatedly file the proper federal form, Internal Revenue Service Form 8300, to report his receipt of over $10,000 in cash. Mr. Covey complied and checked the “suspicious transaction” box on the federal form. A federal grand jury returned a superseding indictment in August *906 of 1999, charging Mr. Covey with money laundering offenses arising out of these facts.
At trial, Mr. Covey sought to establish the legitimacy of the Harts’ loan, and he testified to this effect. In returning a guilty verdict, the jury rejected his testimony. In this § 2255 petition, Mr. Covey alleges that trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance because counsel had a conflict of interest. Because trial counsel advised Mr. Covey how to conclude the loan, Mr. Covey claims that an advice-of-counsel defense should have been presented to the jury to rebut the government’s attempt to paint his actions in concluding the loan as criminal. The government disagrees that a conflict of interest existed and contends that, even assuming a conflict did exist, it did not adversely affect the proceedings. The district court rejected Mr. Covey’s arguments and found that, even if Mr. Covey’s trial attorney had a conflict, Mr. Covey waived his right to be represented by conflict-free counsel.
II. DISCUSSION
A district court’s decision in a habeas claim of ineffective assistance of counsel presents a mixed question of law and fact.
Laws v. Armontrout,
The Supreme Court has long-recognized -the critical role that assistance of counsel plays in protecting the Sixth Amendment’s guarantee of a fair trial. See Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S.
668, 685,
An ineffective-assistance claim generally requires two showings. “First, the defendant must show that counsel’s performance was deficient.”
Strickland,
However, there are three classes of ineffective-assistance claims, described in
Strickland,
in which we presume prejudice rather than require a defendant to demon
*907
strate it.
See Strickland,
The Supreme Court recently noted that some circuits have “unblinkingly” applied
Cuyler
to “all kinds of alleged attorney ethical conflicts.”
Mickens v. Taylor,
The parties have proceeded under the assumption that the Cuyler standard applies to the conflict alleged by Mr. Covey. This is so even though Mr. Covey does not allege a conflict arising out of multiple or successive representation. Instead, he argues that his lawyer gave him faulty advice concerning how to properly “wind up” the Harts’ loan. Mr. Covey argues that the government painted his actions in complying with counsel’s advice as evidence of criminal behavior. Therefore, he contends that either he or his lawyer should have been able to testify as to this pre-indictment advice to show the legitimacy of the Harts’ loan and Mr. Covey’s actions. Mr. Covey claims that he could not present such testimony without waiving the attorney-client privilege, and his lawyer was ethically precluded from acting as an advocate-witness. Moreover, Mr. Covey contends that his lawyer had an interest in preventing such testimony to cover up the allegedly incompetent nature of the advice.
In this circuit, it is unclear whether we limit application of
Cuyler
to conflicts involving multiple or serial representation.
See Wemark v. Iowa,
For purposes of our
Cuyler
analysis, we will assume that Mr. Covey’s trial counsel labored under a conflict of interest.
See United States v. Merlino,
“Adverse effect” is not the equivalent of prejudice.
Id.
at 349-50,
The Fourth Circuit requires defendants urging an ineffective-assistance claim based on conflict of interest to “identify a plausible alternative defense strategy or tactic that [their] defense counsel might have pursued,” “show that the alternative strategy was objectively reasonable under the facts of the case,” and “establish that the defense counsel’s failure to pursue that strategy or tactic was linked to the actual conflict.”
Mickens v. Taylor,
The district court properly recognized that reliance on the advice of counsel requires independent evidence “showing (1) [the defendant] made full disclosure of all material facts to his [or her] attorney before receiving the advice at issue; and (2) he [or she] relied in good faith on the counsel’s advice that his [or her] course of conduct was legal.”
United States v. DeFries,
In short, all the evidence in this case (apart from Mr. Covey’s self-serving testimony) indicates that Mr. Covey was well aware of the illegality of the loan to the Harts. To assert good faith reliance on his trial counsel’s advice, Mr. Covey would had to have introduced evidence that he disclosed this knowledge to his counsel, and this evidence would have been damning. Clearly, reliance on counsel’s advice would not have been objectively reasonable under the facts of Mr. Covey’s case. Consequently, counsel’s alleged conflict did not adversely affect his decision to forego the adviee-of-counsel defense.
See Mickens,
For these same reasons, Mr. Covey was not prejudiced within the meaning of
Strickland,
nor was his attorney’s performance deficient.
See Strickland,
Finally, we conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion in ruling without an evidentiary hearing, because the record included all of the information necessary for the court to rule on the motion.
Rogers v. United States,
Accordingly, we affirm.
Notes
. The Honorable Gary A. Fenner, United States District Judge for the Western District of Missouri.
. Portions of this background discussion are taken directly from this panel's earlier decision,
United States v. Covey,
. Historically, we characterized the
Cuyler
standard as requiring, one, a showing of an actual conflict, and two, a showing that the conflict adversely affected the lawyer's representation.
See, e.g., Johnson
v.
Notris,
