Lead Opinion
BRIGHT, J., delivered the opinion of the court. GILMAN, J. (pp. 601-603), delivered a separate concurring opinion. BOGGS, J. (pp. 603-605), delivered a separate dissenting opinion.
OPINION
Andrew Jackson, the warden of a Michigan state correctional institution, appeals a federal district court’s conditional grant of habeas corpus to prisoner Dashawn Lyons
In 1990, Lyons was sixteen years old and had received an education to the seventh grade. On advice of counsel, who believed it likely the trial court would impose a juvenile sentence, Lyons pled guilty in Michigan state court to first degree murder. The trial court did sentence Lyons as a juvenile. The prosecution appealed, the Michigan Court of Appeals reversed, and Lyons received the only available adult sentence under Michigan law: life in prison without possibility of parоle. Lyons’ trial counsel did not consider or advise Lyons that the prosecutor could appeal the imposition of a juvenile sentence.
Lyons petitioned for a writ of habeas corpus, and the federal district court
I. BACKGROUND
On November 27, 1989, Lyons shot and killed Douglas Thomas. The statе of Michigan charged Lyons with first degree murder and possession of a firearm during commission of a felony.
Lyons’ trial in the Recorder’s Court for the city of Detroit was scheduled to begin on March 5,1990. The assigned judge had another jury trial that day, so Lyons’ trial was postponed to the next day and transferred to the docket of Judge Roberson, Chief Judge of the Recorder’s Court. The next day, March 6, Lyons pled guilty to first degree murder before Chief Judge Roberson on the advice of his defense counsel, Laurence Burgess.
At the plea hearing that day, Burgess informed the court that he recognized it was unusual to offer a plea to first degree murder, but he had discussed the matter with Lyons and Lyons’ father who was present in the courtroom. Burgess stated his conviction that he would be able to convince the court to sentence Lyons as a juvenile and explained that “on the basis of that” Lyons wanted to offer a guilty plea.
The court questioned Lyons as to whether he understood the two greatly disparate sentencing possibilities available
The court then questioned Lyons briefly as to the factual basis of the crime. Lyons stated that he knew the victim and went to the victim’s house. Lyons was carrying a revolver at the time. Lyons stated: “I went to take his wallet. There was a struggle and I got scared and shot him.” The court specifically asked Lyons if he had tried to rob the victim and Lyons admitted he had.
On November 30, 1990, after a sentencing hearing conducted over a number of months, Chief Judge Roberson concluded that it was аppropriate to sentence Lyons as a juvenile. The court ordered that Lyons be confined to a maximum security state juvenile facility until age twenty-one.
The prosecutor appealed the juvenile sentence disposition.
At his resentencing before Chief Judge Roberson on January 30, 1995, Lyons orally moved to withdraw his guilty plea. Pursuant to recent Michigan Supreme Court orders in similar cases, Chief Judge Robеrson immediately imposed the adult sentence of life without parole and deferred consideration of the motion until an evi-dentiary hearing could be scheduled.
On April 13, 1995, the trial court held an evidentiary hearing on Lyons’ motion to withdraw his plea. Lyons’ trial counsel, Burgess, testified. Burgess stated that he
Burgess acknowledged that prior to March 5, he and Lyons had “discuss[ed] the trial more than anything else” and their main discussion regarding Lyons’ guilty plea took place only in the few hours after the case had been reassigned to Chief Judge Roberson. Burgess realized that the sixteen-year-old Lyons was relying heavily on his advice, nonetheless he strongly recommended the plea. Burgess also discussed the situation with Lyons’ father and advised him that it was in Lyons’ best interest to plead guilty.
Burgess testified that, in formulating his advice to Lyons, he did not consider the prosecutor’s right to appeal a trial court’s sentencing decision.
Q In formulating your advice to Mr. Lyons did you take into account the fact that the Prosecution had a right to appeal Judge Roberson’s decision?
[Burgess] No, didn’t consider that at all and I certainly didn’t discuss it with him. But it really didn’t enter my mind.
Q You didn’t take that into consideration in formulating your own opinion as to the best choice for him?
[Burgess] No. It’s not something that I would even think about. My reasoning was that Judge Roberson would be fair. I thought I could convince him that this young man should be sentenced as a juvenile. I never in my wildest dreams thought the Court of Appeals or a Supreme Court would reverse a judge on a discretion such as this....
Q If you had taken that into consideration, are you able to say whether it would have made a difference in your advice?
[Burgess] ... I can’t really tell you whether or not I would have gone ahead and still advised him of this but at least he should have been aware of it and in that case I was remiss, I guess. But it’s not something I even thought about. I can tell you.
Lyons J.A. at 143-45.
Lyons testified at the evidentiary hearing as well. He stated that when Burgess advised him to plead guilty, he initially “wanted to fight” the charges and go to trial. However, he eventually acceded to the plea, relying on the advice and information Burgess provided to him. Lyons then testified about Burgess’s failure to inform him of the prosecutor’s right to appeal and the impact such information would have had on his decision to plead guilty.
*594 Q Did you and Mr. Burgess discuss the fact that the Prosecutor had a right to appeal the case and if Judge Roberson sentenced you as a juvenile another court could decide to reverse that and say, no, you have to be sentenced as an adult?
[Lyons] No, we did not.
Q If [Burgess] advised you there was a second hurdle to get past, a second risk regarding a juvenile versus the adult sentence, would you have plead guilty to first degree murder?
[Lyons] Likely I would have chosen to go to trial.
Lyons J.A. at 156.
Lyons testified that he first learned about the prosecutor’s appeal when a relative read in a newspaper that Lyons’ juvenile sentence had been overturned by the court of appeals.
As to the factual basis for his earlier plea, Lyons testified that he did not go to the victim, Thоmas’s, residence with the intent to kill him, but rather to see about some money Thomas owed him. Lyons tried to get the money by reaching for the wallet in Thomas’s pocket. A gun was on the floor. Thomas grabbed the gun first and the two ■ of them struggled over it. Lyons got the gun and shot Thomas. Lyons denied trying to rob Thomas of his wallet.
The trial court determined that Lyons’ guilty plea had not been voluntary, knowing and intelligent due to ineffectiveness of trial counsel. The court granted Lyons’ motion to withdraw his guilty plea. The Michigan Court of Appeals granted leave to the prosecutor to appeal that order.
In a consolidated decision addressing Lyons’ case along with two other similarly situated appellants, the appeals court reversed the trial court.
In August 1998, Lyons petitioned the federal district court for a writ of habeas corpus. The court conditionally granted the writ, ordering Lyons’ release unless he was given a trial. The district court eon-
II. DISCUSSION
A. Habeas Corpus Review
Provisions of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA) codified at 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d) govern our review of the state court decisions in this habeas corpus case.
(d) An application for a writ of habeas corpus on behalf of a person in custody pursuant to the judgment of a State court shall not be granted with respect to any claim that was adjudicated on the merits in State court proceedings unless the adjudication of the claim—
(1) resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States[.]
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1).
The federal district court considered Lyons’ petition for habeas corpus under the “unreasonable application” prong of this statute. Neither party argues that the federal district court should have inquired whether the Michigan Court of Appeals decision was “contrary to” clearly established federal law. We proceed, therefore, under the “unreasonable application” prong of 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1).
In Williams v. Taylor,
In Hill v. Lockhart,
Under Strickland, a defendant claiming ineffective assistance of counsel must show both deficient performance by counsel and prejudice to the defendant resulting from that deficiеnt performance.
Although the Michigan Court of Appeals did not mention either Hill or Strickland by name, it did apply the law of those cases.
We emphasize that Hill and Strickland state the relevant law in this case. Relying on a string of circuit court cases, the warden argues that defense counsel’s failure to inform Lyons of the prosecution’s right to appeal the imposition of a juvenile sentence does not comprise ineffective assistance because the prosecutor’s right of appeal represents a collateral, as opposed to a direct, consequence of the plea. We reject this argument on two grounds.
First, the warden’s reliance on circuit court cases is imprоper. The AEDPA prohibits use of lower court decisions in determining whether the state court decision is contrary to, or is an unreasonable application of, clearly established federal law. Williams,
C. Analysis
The federal district court concluded that the Michigan Court of Appeals decision was an unreasonable application of Hill and Strickland. We review de novo a district court’s legal conclusions in a habeas corpus proceeding. Miller v. Francis,
1. Performance of Counsel
The proper measure of attorney performance is whether counsel’s assistance was reasonable “under prevailing professional norms” and “considering all the circumstances.” Strickland,
The professional norms that guide us rest upon defense counsel’s fundamental duties “to bring to bear such skill and knowledge as will render the trial a reliable adversarial testing process” and “to consult with the defendant on important decisions and to keep the defendant informed of important developments in the course of the prosecution.” Id. at 688,
The federal district court articulated the circumstances relevant to the performance inquiry in this case:
[T]rial counsel’s performance was deficient within the meaning of the Strickland standard where he failed to advise petitioner that the prosecutor could appeal a juvenile sentence to a Michigan appellate court with the very real possibility that a higher court would order petitioner resentenced as an adult. Because of petitioner’s young age, petitioner was particularly reliant on his attorney’s advice to plead guilty to the offenses in this case. In light of cоunsel’s extraordinary advice to petitioner that he plead guilty to an offense which carried a mandatory sentence of life imprisonment without parole, counsel had a duty both to consider and to advise petitioner of the prosecutor’s right to appeal any sentence to the Michigan appellate courts, with the possibility that petitioner’s juvenile sentence would be overturned on appeal and he would then have to serve a nonparola-ble life sentence.
Lyons’ trial counsel, Burgess, brought to bear on this case his knowledge of Chief Judge Roberson’s sentencing practices. Without any doubt, in this regard Lyons initially benefitted from counsel’s knowledge. Furthermore, Burgess adequately informed Lyons regarding the risks as they related to Chief Judge Roberson’s sentencing determination. Lyons understood that if he pled guilty Chief Judge Roberson could opt to impose either a severe adult sentence of life imprisonment or a lenient juvenile sentence.
However, Burgess acted incompetently in failing to consider the likelihood that the prosecutor would exercise his right to appeal the district court’s imposition of a juvenile sentence. Any juvenile sentence imposed on Lyons would be less than five years in a juvenile facility. Given such a lenient sentence for first degree murder, it was unreasonable for Burgess not to have considered that the prosecutor could appeal and the juvenile sentence could be reversed. Yet Burgess did not factor this scenario into his advice to Lyons that pleading guilty was in Lyons’ best interest.
Thus, Lyons did not know that the prosecutor could appeal and that the juvenile sentence could be reversed, and, if so, Lyons would serve a life sentence without possibility of parole. Lyons was left unaware that, even if Burgess’s assessment on his chances of receiving a juvenile sentence from Chief Judge Roberson were correct, this was not a one-act play in Chiеf Judge Roberson’s courtroom.
Burgess should have considered these possibilities, informed Lyons about them, and incorporated them into his risk assessment when he advised Lyons about pleading guilty. He failed to do so. Rather, he advised Lyons to plead guilty based solely upon his assessment of the relative risks in going to trial versus pleading guilty before Chief Judge Roberson. As a result, Burgess misinformed Lyons regarding the likelihood he would receive an adult sentence. Lyons was not fully apprised of the risks he faced.
The duty of defense counsel to consult is paramount when a client has to decide whether or not to waive a constitutional right, such as the right to trial. Because the decision whether or not to plead guilty ultimately rests with the client, see Jones v. Barnes,
We conclude that Lyons’ trial counsel was incompetent. It is an objeсtively unreasonable application of Hill and Strickland for the Michigan Court of Appeals to hold otherwise.
2. Prejudice
To determine whether Lyons was prejudiced by his counsel’s deficient performance, we ask whether there is a reasonable probability that, had he been advised of the prosecutor’s right of appeal, he would not have pled guilty. A “reasonable probability” is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome; it is less than a preponderance of the evidence. Strickland,
The warden argues that Lyons could not have been prejudiced by any deficiency on the part of his trial counsel because Lyons acknowledged at the plea hearing in March 1990 that he could receive an adult sentence of life imprisonment without parole.
The warden maintains that if a defendant is aware of the maximum possible sentence he cannot be prejudiced by his counsel’s failure to inform him of the prosecutor’s right to appeal. We decline to adopt the warden’s argument. An awareness of the sentencing range available to the trial judge is not the same as an informed understanding that a sentencing judge’s decision is subject to reversal. The rule suggested by the warden would preclude courts from finding prejudice in any situation where the defendant knew the range of penalties to which he was subject.
Furthermore, the circumstances of this case illustrate the failings of the warden’s argument. Lyons pled guilty in hopes of avoiding life imprisonment without parole. A reduced likelihood of being sentenced as an adult was the sole benefit of Lyons’ guilty plea before Chief Judge Roberson. In reality, the risk of being sentenced as an adult came in two parts:
Indeed, Lyons puts forth evidence that he would have pled not guilty. At the evidentiary hearing on his plea withdrawal motion, Lyons testified that he would not have pled guilty had he known of the prosecutor’s right to appeal. This testimony, though self-serving, may be enough by itself to satisfy the prejudice prong under the circumstances here. See Magana v. Hofbauer,
At the March 1990 plea hearing, Burgess told the court that Lyons wished to offer a plea of guilty “on the basis of’ Burgess’s belief that he could convince Chief Judge Roberson to sentence Lyons as a juvenile. Later, at the evidentiary hearing on Lyons’ motion to withdraw his guilty plea, Burgess acknowledged the possibility that, had he considered the possibility that the prosecutor would appeal a juvenile sentence, he might not have recommended that Lyons plead guilty. Both Lyons and his counsel testified that Lyons relied heavily on the attorney’s advice; thus, evidence that Burgess might have changed his recommendation indicates that Lyons would have been more likely to demand a trial rather than plead guilty.
Lyons testified at the plea withdrawal hearing that, when first presented with Burgess’s advice that he plead guilty, Lyons initially “wanted to fight” and put the government to its burden of proof. Burgess corroborated Lyons’ belief that he had defenses to the first degree murder charge. In fact, Burgess and Lyons had been concentrating almost exclusively on trial preparation up until the date of the trial, when the case was transferred to Chief Judge Roberson. Given this background, had Burgess advised Lyons of all the risks he was facing, Lyons might have pled not guilty.
To meet the prejudice requirement under Strickland, and Hill, Lyons need only show a reasonable probability that he would have pled not guilty had Burgess’s performance been objectively reasonable. We conclude that Lyons’ and Burgess’s testimony, along with reasonable inferences from the facts and circumstances of this case, are sufficient to demonstrate not only a reasonable probability that Lyons would have decided to plead not guilty but also that a contrary conclusion is objectively unreasonable.
III. CONCLUSION
We conclude that Lyons received constitutionally ineffective assistance of counsel. We further conclude that a decision to the contrary on the facts of this case is an unreasonable application of clearly established federal law. We therefore AFFIRM the federal district court’s conditional grant of habeas corpus.
Notes
. Lyons has changed his name legally to James Edwin Lyons, Jr.
. The Honorable Denise Page Hood, United States District Court Judge for the Eastern District of Michigan.
. The district court ordered that, unless Michigan took action within 120 days to afford Lyons a new trial, Lyons could apply for a writ ordering his forthwith release from custody. The district court did not publish its decision in this case. On the same day the district court granted Lyons’ habeas corpus petition, it granted two other petitions in similar cases. The court analyzed all three cases similarly and published only one opinion. See Haynes v. Burke,
. Under Michigan law at that time, the trial court had discretion to determine whether juveniles convicted of first degree murder should be sentenced as juveniles or as adults. See Mich. Comp. Laws Ann. § 769.1 (1990). The Michigan legislature amended the statute in 1996 to remove this discretion. See Mich. Pub. Act 1996 No. 247. All juveniles convicted of first degree murder are now mandatorily sentenced as adults. See Mich. Comp. Laws Ann. § 769.1(g) (2001).
. A 1988 amendment to Michigan statutory law granted Michigan prosecutors an appeal of right from "[a] final judgment or final order of the ... recorder’s court” in criminal cases. Mich. Comp. Laws Ann. § 770.12 (as amended, Mich. Pub. Act 1988 No. 66). In November 1989, the Michigan Court of Appeals published a decision in which it construed the amendment to allow prosecutors to appeal criminal sentences as of right. People v. Reynolds,
.See People v. Haynes,
. Burgess stated that Lyons' father "didn't really know anything about the law as it related to this situation. It was all new.”
. The Michigan Court of Appeals handed down its decision reversing imposition of a juvenile sentence and remanding for imposition of an adult sentence on August 3, 1992. On August 18, 1992, Lyons wrote a letter to Chief Judge Roberson requesting new counsel: "My [appellatе counsel] never came to see me and never wrote to me. My family and I learned of my sentence being changed in the news paper [sic].”
. This denial is contrary to Lyons' admission during his plea colloquy with Chief Judge Roberson in 1990.
.Those two appellants, Cortez Miller and Kermit Haynes, also petitioned for writs of habeas corpus in federal district court. In an opinion filed contemporaneously with the instant case, we have affirmed the grant of habeas corpus relief to Miller and Haynes by the district court. Haynes v. Burke,
. In federal district court, Lyons alleged denial of due process as a second ground for habeas corpus relief. The federal district court, having granted relief based on Lyons' ineffective assistance of counsel claim, did not address the due process argument.
. The Supreme Court in Williams acknowledged the difficulty in defining the term "unreasonable,” but explained that "it is a common term in the legal world and, accordingly, federal judges are familiar with its meaning.”
. The court of appeals recognized that a determination of whether Lyons’ guilty рlea was made knowingly and voluntarily turned on whether his counsel’s advice was "within the range of competence demanded of attorneys in criminal cases." Haynes (After Remand), 562 N.W.2d at 244, 250. This is the equivalent of the performance inquiiy in Strickland. See Hill,
. In addition, Burgess entirely failed to consider that an appeals court, faced with the same two radically different sentencing possibilities as Chief Judge Roberson, might well reverse the trial court in favor of the more severe sentence.
. Citing the Supreme Court's recent decision in Bell v. Cone, - U.S. -,
. The warden also argues that Lyons cannot show prejudice because, after learning that the prosecution had appealed the juvenile sentence, Lyons failed to request that the case be remanded to the trial court so that he could withdraw his plea. A defendant’s decision not to abandon the appellate process in an effort to withdraw his guilty plea does not obviate prejudice to the defendant in pleading guilty as the decision to plead had already been made. Moreover, the warden's contention is weakened because the case remainеd in the appeals court, not the trial court where withdrawal pleas must be made.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I fully concur with the lead opinion’s conclusion that Lyons’s counsel was constitutionally ineffective because of the lawyer’s failure to inform Lyons that the state could appeal the decision of the trial judge to sentence him as a juvenile. My reason for writing separately is to explain, in what I regard as an extremely close case, why I find the well-written dissenting opinion less persuasive than the lead opinion.
Like the lead opinion, I believe that the Michigan Court of Appeals’s determination that Lyons’s counsel performed competently was an unreasonable application of Strickland v. Washington,
First, in reaching the conclusion that Lyons’s counsel provided competent representation, the dissent does not address the failurе of counsel to inform Lyons that the state could appeal the trial judge’s sentencing decision. The dissent instead focuses solely on whether counsel’s strategy was reasonable in light óf his knowledge of the trial judge’s sentencing tendencies, thereby overlooking the very omission that in my opinion rendered the performance of Lyons’s counsel deficient.
Second, because Lyons’s counsel never considered the possibility of the state appealing the trial judge’s sentencing decision, his advising Lyons to plead guilty to first-degree murder cannot be considered a reasonable strategic decision to which deference should be accorded. Strickland,
Finally, I believe that the dissent’s consideration of the strength of the state’s case against Lyons in assessing whether counsel provided competent representation, including the suggestion that his only available defense was a hope for jury nullification, focuses on the wrong issue. Lyons, in my opinion, was entitled to be advised of the possibility of an appeal before deciding whether to plead guilty, because without that knowledge his decision was not based upon all of the relevant facts. Although the Supreme Court has held that the Sixth Amendment does not require a correct assessment of the risks and benefits of pleading guilty as opposed to proceeding to trial, it recognizes that counsel must at least be aware of such risks, especially where the lack of awareness directly impacts the reasoning behind whatever advice is provided. See McMann v. Richardson,
I also agree with the lead opinion that if Lyons’s counsel had informed Lyons that the state could appeal the trial judge’s
The dissent concludes that Lyons’s effort to withdraw his guilty plea constituted an attempt to get “a second bite at the apple,” and that Lyons entered his guilty plea voluntarily and with full knowledge of the possible sentence that he faced. I respectfully disagree. Although Lyons did not seek to withdraw his guilty plea during the state appellate process, the record reflects that he was not advised by his attorney that the state had even appealed. His first knowledge of the state’s appeal was approximately two years later, when a relative read about the Michigan Court of Appeals’s decision ordering him to be sentenced as an adult. Thus, the dissent’s inference that Lyons was “gaming the system” is unwarranted under these circumstances.
With respect to whether Lyons entered his guilty plea knowingly and intelligently, I believe that the dissent underestimates the significance of a possible appeal in any calculation that Lyons or his counsel made. Lyons might have believed that he had, say, an 80% chance of being sentenced as a juvenile by the particular trial judge before whom he pled guilty. If he had been advised that the state could appeal, however, he might have evaluated the odds of the trial judge’s determination being sustained on appeal as only 50-50. The risk of the trial judge’s sentencing decision being reversed on appeal would, in this example, reduce the ultimate likelihood of Lyons being sentenced as a juvenile from 80% to only 40%.
We are unable, of course, to determine the exact odds that Lyons believed he faced prior to pleading guilty, but the above example illustrates the significance of failing to consider the possibility of the state appealing. The fact that Lyons was aware of the maximum penalty he faced does not, therefore, negate the significance of the information that neither he nor his counsel considered. Perhaps Lyons would have pled guilty even if he had known that the trial judge’s sentencing decision was not the only hurdle that he had to overcome in order to be sentenced as a juvenile. But he was entitled to be advised of all the risks that he faced before choosing to plead guilty and foregoing his right to a jury trial.
Because I am not confident that Lyons would have pled guilty if his counsel had informed him that his sentence could be appealed, I concur with the lead opinion in concluding that the decision of the Michigan Court of Appeals was an unreasonable application of Strickland. 28 U.S.C. § 2245(d)(1) (providing that a writ of habe-as corpus is available for a person in state custody if the state court’s adjudication of the petitioner’s claim “resulted in a decision that ... involved an unreasonable ap
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I disagree with the majority’s analysis and would reverse the grant of habeas corpus. I therefore respectfully dissent. The Michigan Court of Appeals decided that, in this case, a failure to inform a criminal defendant, before a guilty plea, that the prosecution may have a right to appeal his bеing sentenced as a juvenile, does not constitute ineffective assistance of counsel. To succeed on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, the petitioner must show (1) deficient performance by the attorney, and (2) prejudice. Strickland v. Washington,
At trial, Lyons faced near-certain conviction. The defenses that he would have asserted at trial were, in essence, vague hopes for jury nullification. His defense counsel knew, however, that there was a very real hope that he could be sentenced as a juvenile if he pled guilty, because of the sentencing habits of the particular judge in the case. Counsel’s performance was not deficient; indeed, the idea for the gamble sprang from defense counsel’s superior and intimate knowledge of the court. Lyons’s counsel took extra steps to ensure that his client’s decision was well informed. He explained extensively the possible consequences of pleading to first degree murder. He arranged for Lyons’s father to be involved in the decisionmaking process. The decision to plead was calculated, voluntary, and informed; this is precisely the sort of competent representation that is excluded from the Strickland definition of deficient performance. Strickland,
As for the prejudice element of Strickland, it seems clear that even with knowledge of the possibility of prosecutorial appeal, Lyons would still have pled guilty. Lyons made no attempt to withdraw his guilty plea after the prosecution appealed; rather, he argued his case on the merits before the Court of Appeals. This makes sense: even with the possibility of prosecu-torial appeal, the chance tо be sentenced as a juvenile was petitioner’s only option short of trial. Lyons wanted a juvenile sentence, not a new trial. Lyons, through counsel, gamed the system and attempted to withdraw his guilty plea only after his juvenile sentence was rejected by the Court of Appeals. The entire point of the post-conviction strategy was to get two bites at the apple; that Lyons now argues he would have given up his first (and ex ante more likely) bite because of the possibility of prosecutorial appeal defies credence.
Lyons was very aware of the possible consequences of pleading guilty to first
Moreover, AEDPA imposes additional constraints on the ability of federal courts to grant a writ of habeas coi'pus. In order to meet the gatekeeper standards set forth by AEDPA, 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d), for the issuance of writs of habeas corpus, the state court adjudication of the claim that is challenged on collateral appeal must have resulted in a decision that was “contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States.” Ibid; Cone,
The Supreme Court held in Williams v. Taylor,
Judge Gilman’s concurrence makes a number of interesting points that deserve a brief response. Contrary to the statement at page 601, I had thought that I did note, in the first paragraph of this dissent, and did not dispute the obvious facts in the record, that counsel did not inform their clients of the possibility of a government appeal. All of the counsel involved noted that they did not contemplate that such an appeal could occur or that it would be successful. In the parallel case before us, Miller’s counsel, as well as his client, was in court when the prosecutor said that the state would appeal, and specifically testified that he felt that the chances of such an appeal succeeding (one had never been tried in Michigan, to this point), were sufficiently low that it did not affect their judgment. No. 00-2150,
Judge Gilman’s interesting mathematical analysis at page 602 begins to address the correct inquiry, but does not go far enough. The relevant question is whether the ultimate advice was a strategy within the broad bounds of professional competence. Relatedly, we ask whether the decrease in the probability of a successful
While my assigning of values is just as speculative as Judge Gilman’s, it does emphasize that the proper inquiry for effective assistance оf counsel should be the overall strategy employed. It does not appear to me that we can properly say, under the AEDPA standard, that the state courts unreasonably applied Strickland.
Finally, I do not agree with Judge Gil-man that the failure of the state court to discuss the prejudice prong of Strickland means that it did not correctly identify and apply Strickland as the governing federal rule. But even if we were to parse the two parts of Strickland in this way, we would not conduct a full de novo review, but rather a “independent” review as laid out in our recent case of Harris v. Stovall,
As the above analysis of Strickland, Williams, and Cone shows, we can by no means term the judgment of the Michigan Court of Appeals unreasonable. The judgment is perhaps debatable; if we ignore Strickland’s clear requirements, we might say it was incorrect; under no circumstances can we say it was unreasonable.
