OPINION
The petitioner appeals the denial of his motion to vacate sentence filed under 28 U.S.C. § 2255. He was convicted by a jury of several counts of sexual misconduct perpetrated against female inmates at a federal prison while he was employed at the facility as a prison guard. He also was found guilty of lying during a hearing into his misconduct before the Merit Systems Protection Board. The principal ground for Smith’s motion is that his attorney was constitutionally ineffective because he failed to properly advise and counsel Smith concerning a pretrial guilty plea offer made by the government that would have resulted in a sentence considerably shorter than the 262 months Smith ultimately received. We believe that the factual record before the district court is not sufficient to properly adjudicate the motion. We therefore vacate the lower court’s judgment and remand for an evidentiary hearing.
I.
On April 20, 1995, a federal grand jury sitting in the Eastern District of Kentucky returned a multi-count indictment against petitioner Eddie D. Smith. A superseding indictment was handed down on August 16, 1995, which charged Smith with eight counts of sexual misconduct and one count of perjury. Counts one through five alleged that Smith engaged in sexual acts by force with four different inmates while he was employed as a correctional officer at the Federal Mediсal Center (FMC) in Lexington, Kentucky, all in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2241(a)(1). Counts six and seven charged that Smith engaged in sex acts with one of the previously-named inmates while she was under his authority, contrary to 18 U.S.C. § 2243(b). Count eight alleged that Smith engaged in sexual contact with yet a different inmate while she was officially detained and under his supervision in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2244(a)(4). Finally, count nine alleged that, on or about January 12, 1994, Smith gave false material testimony under oath before United States Administrative Law Judge Jack E. Salyer, during a Merit Systems Protection Board proceeding concerning the removal of Smith from his position as a correctional officer at the Lexington Medical Center, contrary to 18 U.S.C. § 1621.
At his arraignment, Smith was represented by the same attorney that had appeared for him at the prior proceeding before the Merit Systems Protection Board in which Smith was removed from his job with the Bureau of Prisons on аccount of the same misconduct that led to his indictment. Smith contends, and the government does not dispute, that sometime before the indictment was returned, the prosecution offered to allow Smith to plead guilty to a one-count information charging perjury with a maximum reeom- *549 mended sentence of twenty months, in exchange for abandoning the prosecution of the sexual misconduct offenses. Smith did not accept that offer. About оne month after his arraignment, his lawyer withdrew and attorney Andrew M. Stephens was appointed to represent Smith. Stephens avers that the guilty plea offer remained open until approximately ten days before trial.
Trial commenced on September 25, 1995. Smith testified on his own behalf, and maintained his innocence of the charges. However, the jury convicted Smith as charged on all counts but count seven, for which he was found not guilty. On March 8, 1996, Smith wаs sentenced to multiple terms of 262 months imprisonment on counts one, two, three and five, with thirty-six months of supervised release to follow; twelve months imprisonment on count six, with three months of supervised release; six months imprisonment on count eight, with three years of supervised release; and sixty months imprisonment on count nine, with three years of supervised release. Count four was dismissed on the government’s motion. The sentences were all to be served concurrently. We affirmed Smith’s convictions on direct appeal on March 20, 1998 in an unpublished opinion.
United States v. Smith,
No. 96-5385,
On March 5, 1999, the petitioner filed a motion seeking to vacate, set aside, or correct his sentence pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255. In the motion Smith alleges that defense counsel was ineffective for failing to advise him to accept the twenty-month guilty plea agreement offered by the government, and for failing to interview and call as a defense witness a FMC inmate who would have testified that the government’s witnesses fabricated the stories about Smith. Smith further contended in the motion that his convictions violated the Fifth Amendment’s prohibition against double jeopardy.
The government responded to the motion on April 20, 1999, attaching an affidavit of attorney Stephens. The affidavit states that Stephens’ conversations with predecessor counsel indicated that Smith was aware, prior to the filing of the indictment, that an offer was on the table for a guilty plea to the perjury charge. Stephens Aff. at 1, J.A. at 69. The affidavit further states that “Mr. Smith had been fully active in participation of the pension denial hearings and his potential wrongful termination. It is also relevant to the undersigned that Mr. Smith’s wife accompanied him on every office conference, discovery conference, and discovery investigation conferenсe of which there were at least fifteen or twenty.” Ibid. “At no time,” Stephens insists, “during the course of lengthy investigations, review of literally reams of documents and travel between various Federal Correctional Institutions accomplished by the undersigned in investigation and defense of this case, did Mr. Smith ever consider the entry of a guilty plea.” Stephens Aff. at 2, J.A. at 70. The affidavit speculates that “Smith at some point was attempting to save face in front of his wife during the pendency of their marriage and thus, that maybe [sic] the motivation for his denial of any desire to entry [sic] a guilty plea.” Ibid. Stephens also states, somewhat cryptically, that “[i]t would be incorrect for Mr. Smith to assert that their [sic] wasn’t some talk of a guilty plea since the offer was made and held open by the United States until approximately ten days before trial.” Ibid.
The evidence against Smith, Stephens insists, was overwhelming. He further states thаt he prepared with Smith more than he has with any other client. When the guilty plea offer was discussed, “it was *550 discussed with disgust.” Stephens Aff. at 4, J.A. at 72. There was no doubt in his mind, Stephens states, that Smith “never considered a plea though a plea was discussed.” Stephens Aff. at 3—4, J.A. at 71-72. “[N]ever ever was undersigned counsel directed to explore negotiated plea offers even though same was made.” Stephens Aff. at 3, J.A. at 71.
On March 28, 2000, Magistrate Judge James B. Todd filed a report recommending that the motion be denied. After considering the petitioner’s exceptions to that report, and the government’s response to those exceptions, the district court adopted the report in an Opinion and Order filed January 11, 2001. No evidentiary hearing was conducted in the lower court. The district court denied the motion on the ground that the petitioner had failed to show prejudice as required by
Strickland v. Washington,
The district court’s judgment against the petitioner was timely appealed on February 5, 2001. The issues raised relate only to the question of whether Stephens’ advice to Smith concerning the government’s guilty plea offer was constitutionally adequate, and whether the district court erred by not conducting an evidentiary hearing to resolve that question.
II.
On appeal of the district court’s denial of a motion to vacate, alter, or amend sentence pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255, we review the lower court’s legal conclusions
de novo
and its factual findings for clear error.
Nagi v. United States,
A prisoner who files a motion under Section 2255 challenging a federal conviction is entitled to “a prompt hearing” at which the district court is to “determine the issues and make findings of fact and conclusions of law with respect thereto.” 28 U.S.C. § 2255. The hearing is mandatory “unless the motion and the files аnd records of the case conclusively show that the prisoner is entitled to no relief.”
Fontaine v. United States,
Here, Smith seeks a hearing on the question of whether his attorney was constitutionally ineffective. Such claims are guided by the now familiar two-element test set forth by the Supreme Court in
Strickland v. Washington,
The Supreme Court has applied this test to evaluate the performance of attorneys representing guilty-pleading defendants, with special attention to the second element:
The second, or “prejudice,” requirement ... focuses on whether counsel’s constitutionally ineffective performance affected the outcome of the plea process. In other words, in order to satisfy the “prejudice” requirement, the defendant must show that there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s errors, he would not have pleaded guilty and would have insisted on going to trial.
Hill v. Lockhart,
In this case, the trial court summarily rejected Smith’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim for failure of proof on this second element. The lower court found that a defendant’s “own self-sеrving testimony” that he would have pleaded guilty if properly advised is not sufficient; in addition, the lower court required that the defendant also present “objective evidence” to establish prejudice. Opinion and Order at 3; J.A. at 112. However, we recently stated: “Although some circuits have held that a defendant must support his own assertion that he would have accepted the offer with additional objective evidence, we in this circuit havе declined to adopt such a requirement.”
Griffin v. United States,
The district judge in this case, who also presided over Smith’s trial, found that Smith was aware of the plea offer, rejected it, and maintained his innocence throughout the proceedings, including to the point of testifying under oath at trial that he did not engage in the conduct described by his accusers, which earned him a two-point enhancement of his offense level for obstruction of justice at sentencing. This point was addressed in
Griffin
as well,
*552
where we observed that defendants may enter a guilty plea while maintaining innocence under
North Carolina v. Alford,
In
Griffin,
there was no dispute over the fact that the petitioner’s trial counsel failed to convey a pretrial guilty plea offer, and that the petitioner proceeded to trial, where he testified that he was innocent. The panel noted that the substantial disparity between the five-year sentence offered by the government and the 156 months Griffin ultimately received was enough to warrant further exploration of the issue at an evidentiary hearing of the question of the reasonable likelihood that Griffin, competently advised, would have pleaded guilty.
Griffin,
offer, despite earlier protestations of innocence.
See Magana v. Hofbauer,
In this case, the petitioner concedes that he was aware of the government’s guilty plea offer. However, citing
Boria v. Keane,
On the other hand, the attorney has a clear obligation to fully inform her client of the available options. We have held that the failure to convey a plea offer constitutes ineffective assistance,
see Grif
*553
fin,
The record in this case leaves us in considerаble doubt over the nature and quality of the advice Smith received before he made his final decision to reject the government’s proposed plea bargain. Attorney Stephens’ affidavit states that Smith was aware of a plea offer, and that Smith was predisposed against a plea to save face in front of his wife, but it does not state that Stephens actually discussed the terms of the agreement with Smith. More importantly, the affidavit does not state that Stephens informed Smith of the dramatically higher sentence potential (over ten times as much incarceration) to which Smith was exposed if he were convicted of even one of many charges. The affidavit does not claim that Stephens at any time expressed to Smith how unlikely he was to prevail at trial.
Stephens stated in his affidavit that Smith “knew by virtue of letters sent from [Stephens] to him possibility [sic] of the steеp sentence which he ultimately got.” Stephens Aff., J.A. at 71. However, the only such correspondence in the record came from Stephens after the trial. In his October 17, 1995 letter, Stephens wrote to Smith: “I wanted to formally advise you of what I believe the relevant sentencing guideline provisions are and to confirm with you the substance of my meeting with [the probation officer] and to give you your various options at this point.” Letter of Oct. 17, 1995 from Stephens to Smith, J.A. at 105. There is no reference in the letter to earlier conversations or to pretrial discussions of the sentencing potential in the case. There is no other evidence that Smith’s sentencing exposure upon conviction of the charges in the superseding indictment — information that, in our view, was necessary for a proper consideration of the guilty plea offer — was ever conveyed to Smith before trial.
The failure of defense counsel to “provide professional guidance to a defendant regarding his sentence exposure prior to a plea may constitute deficient assistance.”
Moss v. United States,
Smith should have been given the opportunity at an evidentiary hearing to develop a record on these factual issues in the lower court.
III.
The petitioner asks that the matter be remanded to a different judge to preserve the appearance of fairness. Although we have the authority to grant that request under 28 U.S.C. § 2106, it is an “extraordinary power and should be rarely invokеd.”
Armco, Inc. v. United Steelworkers of America, AFL-CIO, Local 169,
None of these factors support the request to remand this case to a different district court judge. The record contains no evidence that the district court judge would have difficulty considering the case on remand in an objective manner. In fact, he is probably in a superior position to evaluate the claims, since he presided over Smith’s criminal trial. His familiarity with the case is nо evidence of a lack of propriety or fairness, since, as we observed earlier, the habeas judge may rely on his or her memory of the trial when relevant to the issues on collateral review.
See Blanton,
For the foregoing reasons, we VACATE the judgment of the district court denying the petitioner’s motion to vacate his sentence under 28 U.S.C. § 2255, and REMAND to the district court for an eviden-tiary hearing.
