Petitioner Joe Freeman appeals from the district court’s denial of his Rule 60(b) motion as a successive habeas corpus petition over which the court lacked jurisdiction. Whether or not his motion may be treated as a successive petition, we nevertheless elect to affirm the denial of habeas relief on the merits.
I. Background
A. Facts
We briefly outline the facts relevant to our consideration of Freeman’s habeas petition. In so doing, we rely on the Illinois Appellate Court’s discussion on Freeman’s direct appeal, 1 which we may presume correct pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1).
The relevant events began at the Cook County Criminal Courts Building on California Avenue, where Freeman was facing charges of aggravated battery and attempted murder. The events underlying those charges occurred on June 27, 2000, and the victim was Charles Gregory. On November 8, 2000, Freeman visited the courthouse, apparently to check the status of that case. Charles Gregory was there as well with his friend Richard Tyler. An argument erupted, wherein Freeman accused Gregory of pressing a false attempted murder charge. Gregory left the courthouse with Tyler, and as they were walking on the sidewalk a car pulled up alongside them and Freeman emerged. Freeman shot Gregory three times, hitting his chest, forearm and shoulder; Tyler escaped. In connection with this second attempt on Charles Gregory’s life, Freeman was charged with attempted murder and tried in the Illinois Circuit Court for Cook County. (For reasons apparently irrelevant to our case, the state nolle prosequied Freeman’s initial assault and attempted murder charges.)
B. Procedural History
Freeman’s Cook County bench trial was marked by the procedural oddity that his counsel testified in his defense. This occurrence is the focal point of Freeman’s *866 habeas case, so we recount the circumstances in detail.
One of Freeman’s two attorneys, Robert Nemzin, testified to an event that allegedly occurred at the California Avenue courthouse on November 8 (the same day as the shooting underlying the present case) while Nemzin , was serving as counsel to Freeman with respect to Freeman’s initial assault and attempted murder charges. Allegedly, Charles Gregory approached Nemzin and stated, “[t]here [are] two forms of compensation. Either, one, your client can go to the joint, or the other is open for negotiation. What’s the deal?”
Nemzin continued to represent Freeman in connection with his attempted murder charge for the November 8 shooting. At that trial, Nemzin proposed to testify about his November 8 interaction with Gregory, and the judge decided to allow it. Nemzin’s co-counsel and law partner, Mr. Hickey, elicited testimony related to Nemzin’s interaction with Gregory. Nemzin also testified in relation to his possession of a couple of McDonald’s receipts, significant in connection with Freeman’s defense.
Following Nemzin’s testimony, Nemzin conducted direct examination of Freeman. But before Freeman testified in his own defense, the judge engaged in a lengthy colloquy with him, which we reproduce in relevant part:
The Court: Mr. Freeman, you want Mr. Nemzin to continue as your attorney.
Freeman: Yes.
The Court: No complaints about Mr. Hickey or Mr. Nemzin?
Freeman: No, your Honor.
The Court: No complaints, whatsoever, about Mr. Nemzin being a witness and now acting as your attorney?
Freeman: No, your Honor.
Freeman was convicted of attempted murder, and the court sentenced him to a 25-year term of incarceration.
Freeman appealed directly from his bench trial, raising
inter alia
the argument that there had been no proper waiver of conflict-free counsel. The state appellate court affirmed. No. 1-03-0059 (Ill.App.Ct. July 27, 2004). The Illinois Supreme Court denied him leave to appeal.
People v. Freeman,
Freeman then filed a federal habeas corpus petition in the district court in May of 2007. In his habeas petition prepared by counsel, Freeman did not articulately complain about deprivation of conflict-free counsel. The one indicated reason he urged for granting the habeas petition was that “[t]he [Illinois] Appellate Court erred when it held defendant knowingly waived counsel of his choice.” But later in his discussion, he also stated, “[t]he conversation between the court and the defendant did not constitute a sufficient knowing and intelligent waiver of defendant’s right to a conflict-free counsel and of counsel of his choice.”
The district court denied Freeman’s habeas petition.
Freeman v. Hulick,
No. 07-CV-2927,
Freeman filed a pro se motion pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60, “Relief from Judgment or Order,” alleging that his attorney had failed to properly raise the issue of conflict-free counsel, and he wished the court to decide it. The court ruled that the motion was a successive petition within the meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b), because it asserted new claims of errors in Freeman’s state conviction but was not based on new facts or law. The court therefore ruled that it lacked jurisdiction and denied his requested relief.
We granted Freeman a certificate of appealability from the denial of his self-styled Rule 60(b) motion on the following issues:
(1) Whether Freeman’s Rule 60(b) motion was an unauthorized successive collateral attack;
(2) Whether the district court should have reopened the judgment on the ground that it mistakenly failed to identify all of Freeman’s claims; and
(3) Whether Freeman was denied his right to conflict-free counsel.
II. Analysis
The Supreme Court has recently visited the question whether a Rule 60(b) motion for “Relief from Judgment” is properly treated as a successive petition in habeas cases in
Gonzalez v. Crosby,
Here, we will not look past the district court’s express statement that Freeman had not raised the question of conflict-free counsel. We therefore can properly assume that the court did not decide the issue. It is true that the court’s discussion looks very much like an analysis of conflict-free counsel, but courts commonly discuss matters they do not decide. We can properly hold that the district court treated the question of conflict-free counsel as waived.
But was the district court correct? Did Freeman successfully raise the issue of conflict-free counsel in his habeas petition?
*868
As noted, Freeman most prominently highlighted the question of counsel of choice, and not conflict-free counsel, in his petition. But conflict-free counsel was also referenced in the petition, if inconspicuously. The state discussed conflict-free counsel throughout eleven pages of its answer, so there can be no argument that it was lulled into believing that Freeman was not arguing conflict-free counsel and was thereby prejudiced. And the district court discussed the merits of Freeman’s conflict-free counsel theory in its memorandum. In short, the question of conflict-free counsel received attention from everyone involved in Freeman’s habeas case, which suggests it was not waived. And, if not waived, the district court should have addressed this argument fully on the merits. Therefore, the district court should not have denied Freeman’s Rule 60(b) motion. The motion correctly observed that the district court had overlooked one of his arguments for habeas relief. Hence, the motion was not a successive habeas petition.
See Gonzalez,
Ordinarily the district court should rule on the merits of habeas petitions in the first instance,
see, e.g., Holleman v. Duckworth,
We agree that defense counsel’s conflict of interest can violate a defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel.
See United States v. Adkins,
The state points to the district court’s language to the effect that Freeman effectively waived any conflict-free counsel argument, during his colloquy with the trial judge. And on direct appeal, the state appellate court found Freeman had waived the argument. But despite these contrary analyses, we shall assume without deciding that Freeman did not waive the issue. This is not because we doubt the prior rulings on this issue, but simply because we prefer to consider the merits instead of deciding the case on procedural grounds. Therefore, solely for purposes of analysis, we shall treat Freeman’s conflict-free counsel argument as preserved.
The question of what Freeman must show to secure relief because of a conflict of interest on the part of defense counsel is a thicket, but here a clear answer emerges. The hitch is that there are two frameworks for analyzing the question, one of which derives from proceedings wherein counsel *869 represents multiple clients, and one of which considers whether counsel was ineffective.
Under the former framework, defense counsel is said to labor under an “actual” conflict of interest. If there is any “adverse effect” on the attorney’s performance, prejudice is presumed and the defendant’s argument prevails.
See Hall v. United States,
But where this
Cuyler
precedent does not apply, the defendant must carry the heavier burden of showing that the conflict resulted in ineffective assistance under the familiar framework of
Strickland v. Washington,
Freeman’s case does not come within the less demanding
Cuyler
line, because his counsel was not “actually” conflicted in the sense of being forced to choose between himself and his client. Indeed, Nemzin testified favorably to Freeman by impugning the credibility of the complaining witness.
Cf. Enoch v. Gramley,
Therefore, Freeman’s conflicted counsel argument must proceed pursuant to Strickland. The first prong in the Strickland analysis is whether counsel’s performance fell below an objectively reasonable standard of care. It is not at all likely that Nemzin’s performance did: much of the responsibility for allowing a defense attorney to testify on behalf of his client belongs to the circuit court. That Nemzin prevailed on the court to allow him to testify speaks to his persuasiveness, although it may reflect poorly on his command of criminal procedure (and the Illinois Rules of Professional Conduct 2 ). But the rules of ethics are not necessarily coextensive with Strickland’s objectively rea *870 sonable standard of care. 3 This question being legally murky and involved, we do not decide it, and instead we proceed to the second Strickland prong.
The second
Strickland
inquiry goes to the heart of this habeas case, by asking whether, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, it is reasonably probable that the outcome of the trial would have been different. In other words, Freeman’s appeal boils down to the question whether Nemzin’s testimony made any real difference in his trial. In view of the record before us (including the state appellate court’s adjudication of the issue, to which we owe deference
4
), we are quite confident that it did not. As discussed above, Nemzin testified favorably to Freeman, and the state, not Freeman, objected to his dual role. Nemzin’s testimony impugned the credibility of the complaining witness, and it was fairly effective in doing so: the judge indicated that Nemzin’s testimony was plausible. But this simply did not change the outcome in view of the other evidence of Freeman’s guilt. There was no chance of Nemzin’s dual role confusing a jury because Freeman’s was a bench trial.
Cf. United States v. Solis,
We may affirm on any grounds present in the record.
See Small v. Endicott,
Notes
. The same court's subsequent opinion in Freeman's post-conviction proceeding does not contain a discussion of the facts, but only procedural matters. Consequently, we rely on the court’s initial account of the facts, which has never been questioned in later adjudications.
. Under Rule 3.7(a), ”[a] lawyer shall not accept or continue employment in contemplated or pending litigation if the lawyer knows or reasonably should know that the lawyer may be called as a witness on behalf of the client.”
.
See Nix v. Whiteside,
. On direct appeal, the state appellate court held that Freeman could not show that he was prejudiced by Nemzin’s dual representation. We owe this determination deference, such that the question we ask on habeas review is "whether the state court's determination that such a probability [of prejudice] does not exist is
reasonable.” Ellison v. Acevedo,
