Frank LoCascio appeals from Judge Glasser’s denial of LoCascio’s Section 2255 motion for a writ of habeas corpus. Various claims were raised in the district court, but LoCascio argues on appeal only that he was denied the effective assistance of counsel. This claim is based on an affidavit from one of LoCascio’s attorneys stating that LoCascio’s trial counsel received death-threats from a cо-defendant, John Gotti, warning counsel not to “individualize! ] the interest of LoCascio at Gotti’s expense.” The affidavit further states that counsel thereafter conformed his conduct of the trial to Gotti’s wishes. The district court held the claim to be procedurally barred and otherwise without merit. We remand for an evidentiary hearing.
BACKGROUND
We assume familiarity with the criminal prosecution and conviction underlying the present matter.
See United States v. Gotti,
LoCascio was originally represented by David Greenfield. Later, John Mitchell joined Greenfield as co-counsel for LoCas-cio. Greenfield sought to withdraw but was not permitted to do so because Mitchell was a partner of James LaRossa, a potential government witness, and, as a result, the district court curtailed Mitchell’s ability to conduct cross-examination and аddress the jury. On January 6, 1992, George Santangelo filed a notice of appearance to act as co-counsel for LoCascio. The district court disqualified Santangelo on the same grounds relied upon in disqualifying Gotti’s original counsel.
See Gotti,
On January 27, 1992, Anthony Cardinale appeared as counsel for LoCascio, and Greenfield was finally relieved. Cardinale was a Massachusetts lawyer who practiced principally in the Boston area and had no known affiliation with Gotti or the Gambi-no crime family. However, Cardinale had represented defendаnts alleged to be engaged in organized crime.
LoCascio was tried and convicted along with Gotti of the murder of Louis DiBono and numerous other crimes of racketeering by the Gambino family.
See LoCascio,
In October 2000, LoCascio filed the instant Section 2255 motion. He was represented by Dennis P. Riordan. The motion alleged, inter alia, that LoCascio was not afforded the effectivе assistance of counsel based on counsel’s failure to pursue certain lines of cross-examination allegedly to protect Gotti. Two years later, while the motion was still pending, a motion to amend was filed. The motion was based on the allegations of an affidavit from Thomas Harvey, an attorney who was of counsel to Riordan. The affidavit stated in pertinent part:
Mr. Cardinale revealed to me that Mr. Gotti threatenеd to kill him if he individualized the interest of LoCascio at Got-ti’s expense. As a direct result of Mr. Gotti’s threats, Mr. Cardinale, among other things: (i) was prevented by Mr. Gotti from cross-examining Salvatore Gravano concerning Frank LoCascio’s lack of involvement in the murder of Louis DiBono, (ii) was threatened to be “taken care of’ by Mr. Gotti for asking questions solely about Mr. LoCascio, (iii) was forced by Mr. Gotti to cross-examine witnesses about facts and charges that involved only Mr. Gotti, (iv) and was forced by Mr. Gotti to concentrate on Mr. Gotti during the second part of the summation....
Mr. Cardinale revealed that after Mr. Gotti learned that Mr. Cardinale met alone with defendant LoCascio, Mr. Got-ti stated he would harm Mr. Cardinale if he ever met alone again with Mr. Lo-Cascio. Thereafter, Mr. Cardinale *54 failed to meet with Mr. LoCascio without Mr. Gotti being present....
Mr. Cardinale never revealed the aforementioned facts to anyone, including Mr. Locascio, and the only reason he is coming forward at this time with the information is that Mr. Gotti’s death has lessened the threat to his life, although the threat has not been completely removed.
Although Dennis Riordan, Esq. had interviewed Mr. Cardinale concerning the subject whether [sic] he suffered from a conflict of interest during Lo-Cascio’s trial prior to the preparation of both the 2255 motion itself and the Reply Memorandum filed on Mr. Lo-Cascio’s behalf in February 2001, Mr. Cardinale did not divulge the instant information and this information was not available to Mr. LoCascio or his present counsel, and is critical to the Court’s consideration of the defendant’s pending claim of deprivation of his constitutional right to conflict-free counsel.
Mr. Cardinale has declined at this time to allow his declaration in support of this motion to be submitted because he is concerned for his welfare and on advice of his counsel. However, Mr. Cardinale has advised me that if he is compelled to testify, he will testify in accordance with facts in this declaration.
LoCascio also submitted an affidavit stating that Gotti was his co-defendant and that “[although my co-defendant and I had some issues in common, I at no time agreed that Mr. Cardinale could act in my co-defendant’s best interest at my expense.” LoCascio’s affidavit further stated that:
I at no time was advised, or was otherwise aware, that Mr. Gotti had threatened to kill Mr. Cardinale if he individualized my interests at Mr. Got-ti’s expense and that, as a result, Mr. Cardinale was restrained in cross-examining Salvatore Gravano concerning my lack of involvement in the murder of Louis DiBono, or in asking questions solely about me, and was forced to cross-examine witnesses about facts and charges that involved only Mr. Gotti and to concentrate on Mr. Gotti during the second part of Mr. Cardi-nale’s summation.
The district court denied the motion to amend as time-barred and in the alternative found the underlying ineffective assistance claims raised by the affidavit to be without merit.
LoCascio v. United States,
DISCUSSION
We “review[] factual findings for clear error and questions of law
de novo.” Triana v. United States,
a) Procedural Bar
The district court held that LоCascio’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim based on the Harvey affidavit was time-barred and therefore denied the motion to amend the Section 2255 petition.
Section 2255 provides that:
*55 [a] 1-year period of limitation shall apply to a motion under this section. The limitation period shall run from the latest of—
* * * * * *
(4) the date on which the facts supporting the claim or claims presented could have been discovered through the exerсise of due diligence.
28 U.S.C. § 2255(4). Subsection (4) “does not require the maximum feasible diligence, only ‘due,’ or reasonable, diligence.”
Wims v. United States,
The Harvey affidavit stated that Cardi-nale revealed the threats from Gotti for the first time during the three weeks preceding October 22, 2002 — the date on which the affidavit was signed. Denying the motion to amend as time-barred and therefore futile, the district court found that “the ‘new evidence’ upon which it is based, is not new at all. Gotti’s insistence upon controlling the attorneys appearing not only on his behalf, but on behalf of other members of the organized crime family of which he was the boss, was captured on tape in the starkest terms and was known to LoCascio long before this trial began.”
LoCascio,
Although a close call, the present claim involves more in our view than Got-ti’s general practice of controlling attorneys — -in particular those on his payroll. It also may involve more than the joint defense strategy in the trial, of which Lo-Cascio was aware. The claim here involves allegations that Gotti, without Lo-Cascio’s knowledge, interceded directly with trial counsel — who was not from the area or on Gotti’s payroll — gained control of LoCascio’s defense by threatening to kill counsel, and forbade counsel from meeting alone with LoCascio. Moreover, it is claimed that counsel altered his conduct of the trial in response. There is presently no evidence that LoCascio was aware of the particular death threat alleged, of Gotti’s direct orders to counsel, or of counsel’s conduct in response. While these facts are not inconsistent with Lo-Cascio’s understanding of Gotti’s practices, as alleged they go far beyond the previously available information (on this record) on thе extent of Gotti’s control of defense tactics during the trial. 1
Moreover, on the present record, the facts as alleged could not have been discovered earlier through due diligence. The Harvey affidavit states that Cardinale disclosed the threat only after Gotti died because of the reduced danger to Cardi-nale. Further, the affidavit and an accompanying affidavit of Riordan state that Riordan interviewed Cardinale “concerning the subject whether [sic] he suffered from a conflict of interest during LoCas-cio’s trial prior to the preparation of both the 2255 motion itself and the reply memorandum filed on Mr. LoCascio’s behalf in February of 2001, I did not receive from *56 him at those times any of the information contained in Mr. Harvey’s declaration or any other information demonstrating a conflict of interest.”
Thus, the requirements of Subsection (4) were met as to the discovery of new facts. The motion to amend the Section 2255 motion with an ineffective assistance of counsel claim based on the new facts was not time-barred, 2 and denial of leave to amend was an abuse of discretion.
b) Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
“A defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel includes the right to representation by conflict-free counsel.”
United States v. Schwarz,
To show that such a conflict adversely affected his counsel’s performance, LoCascio must establish an “actual lapse in representation” that resulted from the conflict.
Cuyler,
On the present record, we believe that an evidentiary hearing needs to be held as to the existence of both the alleged conflict created by the death threat and any resultant lapse in representation reflected by the alleged change in Cardinale’s conduct of LoCascio’s defense. “Unless the motion and the files and records of the case conclusively show that the prisoner is entitled to no relief, the court shall ... grant a prompt hearing thereon, determine the issues and make findings of fact and conclusions of law with respect thereto.” 28 U.S.C. § 2255.
With regard to the existence of a conflict of interest, no one would question that a credible death threat from a co-defendant ordering a lawyer to sacrifice a client’s interests constitutes an actual conflict of interest. However, whether a hearing is required on the present record is a very close question. In determining that issue we look “primarily to the affidavit or other evidence proffered in supрort of the application in order to determine whether, if the evidence should be offered at a hearing, it would be admissible proof entitling the petitioner to relief.”
Dalli v. United States,
The allegations in the Harvey affidavit concerning Gotti’s orders and death threat to Cardinale are entirely hearsay. Similarly, Cardinale’s alleged willingness to appear at an evidentiary hearing undеr subpoena to Confirm those allegations under oath is based on hearsay. We do not ignore the fact that this method of presenting the claim allows the various persons involved to avoid stating under oath any personal knowledge of a material fact regarding Gotti’s orders and threats. Moreover, the timing — years after the pertinent events — adds to the difficulty of verification. Ordinarily, we would be inclined not to order a hearing, particularly in light of the puzzling inconsistency between Car-dinale’s fear of submitting his own affidavit and his conversing with Harvey in a way that seems equally dangerous. However, the allegations here, if credited, involve an attempt to subvert the adversary process in a fundamental and criminal manner, and we are assured by an officer of the court that trial counsel has made the statements claimed and will provide testimonial evidence in support. We believe, albeit by a narrow margin, that an evidentiary hearing would best clarify whether that subversion was attempted and succeeded.
Therefore, we direct a hearing with regard to whether Gotti threatened Cardi-nale as claimed by the Harvey affidavit. Cardinale’s live testimony is essential to this claim because, as discussed infra, the existence of the threat cannot be reliably inferred from Cardinale’s conduct of the trial as reflеcted in the transcript. Therefore, the factual issue of the existence of orders from Gotti based on a death threat turns on Cardinale’s testimony and credibility.
If Cardinale’s testimony credibly establishes the death threat and accompanying
*58
orders from Gotti, the hearing must then turn to the question of whether the threat caused the requisite lapse in representation.
Winkler,
We have examined the record and find nothing in the transcript alone — without supporting credible testimony from Cardi-nale — that would support an inference of Cardinale’s altering his conduct of the trial because of a death threat. The record does indicate that LoCascio and Gotti engaged in a joint defense at trial to which LoCascio agreed. Indeed, both the district court and this court have made findings in this regard.
See United States v. Gotti,
If the death threat and orders to Cardi-nale are credibly established, therefore, the hearing must also address whether the threat altered Cardinale’s conduct of the trial. A defendant of course is free to pursue a joint defense strategy with a co-defendant, and such a strategy does not create a conflict of interest tainting a trial.
See United States v. Kirsh,
*59 CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the case is remanded to the district court for an evi-dentiary hearing.
Notes
. In this regard, the district cоurt's and the government's reliance on
United States v. Pollard,
. LoCascio claims that the district court had an obligation to inquire into Cardinale’s conflict because the court was aware that Gotti desired control over attorneys working on Gambino-related cases. The trial court has an obligation to inquire into the facts and circumstances of an attorney's interests either in response to a timely conflict of interest objection,
Holloway v. Arkansas,
