A federal jury convicted Derrick Gardner of possession of a firearm by a felon, prohibited by 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1), after police frisked him and discovered a pistol inside his coat pocket. Gardner insisted that the police had planted the gun on him; this led his lawyer to believe that he could not argue that the firearm was the fruit of a suspicionless search. In this collateral proceeding under 28 U.S.C. § 2255, Gardner argues that his trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance in two respects: (1) by refusing to move to suppress the firearm as the product of an unreasonable search; and (2) by not explaining to Gardner that his testimony at a suppression hearing could not be used at trial as evidence of his guilt. See
Simmons v. United States,
We reject Gardner’s Simmons argument, but we agree with his first point. Gardner’s insistence that the police planted the gun on him neither justified nor compelled counsel to refrain from challenging the search that produced the weapon. We thus reverse the district court’s decision and remand for the court to determine whether counsel’s failure to move to suppress the weapon prejudiced Gardner.
I
In October 2002 two police officers responded to a radio dispatch reporting an “assault in progress” by a “man with a gun” at unit 407 of a Chicago apartment building. According to the officers’ testimony at trial, when they arrived they saw *1008 Gardner just outside an entrance to the building, about 50 feet from their car. Gardner approached them, and one officer asked him where he was coming from. He responded “407” and voluntarily placed his hands on the squad car for a pat-down search. The officers quickly found a nine-millimeter pistol in his jacket pocket and arrested him.
The account that Gardner eventually gave of the encounter bore no resemblance to that of the officers. He flatly denied that he offered to be searched. Instead, he said, he was “minding his own business” outside of the apartment building when the officers approached him and ordered him to submit to a search. In addition, Gardner “dispute[d] that he was actually carrying a gun, or that the officer retrieved a gun from his person.”
What Gardner could not deny, however, was the fact that he had several prior felony convictions at the time of the encounter when he was allegedly carrying the gun. This led to his indictment on one count of possession of a firearm by a felon. 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). Gardner wanted to challenge the search that produced the gun, but his first appointed counsel refused to file a motion to suppress. Frustrated, Gardner himself filed a
pro se
motion that sought to suppress “all evidence and statements” stemming from the frisk. According to Gardner, who is African-American, the officers knew from the radio dispatch that the assailant was a black male weighing 165 pounds and with a height of 5' 7". Because Gardner weighs 225 pounds and is 6' 2", he argued in his
pro se
submission that the police lacked reasonable suspicion to detain and frisk him under
Terry v. Ohio,
New counsel also refused to move to suppress the gun, but he did not try to withdraw. As a result, Gardner accused him of providing ineffective assistance and asked the court to dismiss him, but the court refused. The trial judge later stated at a pretrial conference that “you cannot file a motion to suppress an item taken from you while at the same time denying that the item was taken from you. It’s just that simple.... And two attorneys have told you that.” Later at the pretrial conference, Gardner reiterated that he was not carrying a gun when the police searched him, saying “I ain’t never seen the weapon.”
After a two-day trial at which the defense called no witnesses, Gardner was convicted. Before sentencing, he filed a pro se motion for a new trial in which he argued that the court had never properly ruled on his motion to suppress. At sentencing the prosecutor responded, without disagreement from Gardner’s counsel, that if Gardner did “not have a possessory interest in the firearm, then he has no Fourth Amendment interests to vindicate.” Counsel added that he had repeatedly discussed “this same issue” with Gardner, to no avail. The court denied Gardner’s motion for several reasons: the motion had not been signed, filed by counsel, or served upon the prosecution; and Gardner’s denial of possession divested him of “standing.”
Following a successful appeal based on
United States v. Paladino,
In an affidavit attached to the § 2255 motion, Gardner also acknowledged for the first time that the officers did recover a gun from his pocket. He explained that he had contested possession in his motion to suppress only because he had believed that his assertions at a suppression hearing had to remain consistent with his not-guilty plea or they would be used against him at trial. He had not known otherwise, Gardner said, because counsel had not advised him of the rule in
Simmons,
The district court denied the § 2255 motion. It ruled that counsel was not ineffective for failing to move to suppress because Gardner’s position before trial that the police had planted a gun on him made any effort to suppress the gun a “nonstarter.” The court then determined that counsel was not ineffective for failing to mention the Simmons rule because Gardner never told counsel that he had in fact possessed the gun. Without an assertion that Gardner was prepared to admit possession to his lawyer, the court reasoned, the lawyer could not be faulted for failing to advise Gardner that such an admission could be made at a suppression hearing without fear that the admission would then be usable at trial as evidence of his guilt.
We issued a certificate of appealability on the question whether Gardner “received ineffective assistance when his trial counsel refused to file a motion to suppress on his behalf and did not explain to Gardner that any testimony he provided at a suppression hearing could not be used against him at trial.”
II
Within the general issue of the effectiveness of counsel, Gardner focuses on two instances of deficient performance: first, counsel’s refusal to move to suppress the gun that the police allegedly extracted from his pocket, and second, counsel’s failure to advise Gardner of the
Simmons
rule. The government primarily addresses the second issue and takes the position that the first is outside the scope of the certificate. We reject the latter contention. The certificate of appealability itself refers to two potential sources of incompetence — the refusal to file a motion
and
failure to render
Simmons
advice — not one. In addition, a certificate based on ineffective assistance of counsel brings up for appellate review all actions of counsel that the petitioner addressed in the district court.
Stevens v. McBride,
We begin with Gardner’s
Simmons
argument, which we conclude does not
*1010
support a finding of deficient performance. Gardner argues that competent counsel would have surmised that he denied possession for the sole reason that he did not know that
Simmons
prevents the government from using admissions received at a suppression hearing as evidence of guilt at trial. Gardner urges that the right created in
Simmons
has meaning only if defendants are aware of it, and that lay defendants will not have the necessary knowledge unless the lawyer discusses the point. But these arguments assume a duty to discuss
Simmons
even when counsel has no reason to disbelieve a client’s denial of possession. Gardner does not point to any evidence in the record contradicting the district court’s finding that Gardner himself did not tell counsel that he possessed the gun, and so counsel had no reason to delve into a series of “what ifs” based on hypothetical possession. Although a savvy criminal defense lawyer might well question a client’s denial of possession in this type of proceeding, we are not prepared to hold that a competent lawyer must always assume that her clients lie when they deny possession. See
Emmett v. Kelly,
We now return to Gardner’s first issue — whether counsel rendered constitutionally deficient performance when, relying on a misunderstanding of the law, he refused to move to suppress the results of Gardner’s frisk. See
Johnson v. United States,
In fact, no such case could have been found. A defendant who wishes to bring a Fourth Amendment challenge need only show that he had a legitimate expectation of privacy in the area searched.
Minnesota v. Carter,
*1011
The government counters that any effort to suppress the gun would have nonetheless failed because Gardner’s insistence that he did not possess a gun necessarily means that the search was not the “but-for” cause of the discovery of the gun. See
Hudson v. Michigan, 547
U.S. 586, 592,
If we were to adopt the government’s view, a defendant who truthfully contends that police stopped him unlawfully and planted a gun on him during a suspicionless search would be able to challenge the search only by perjuring himself at a suppression hearing by falsely stating that he possessed the gun. It should go without saying, however, that perjury is never required — it is not even permitted. Such lies could also expose a defendant to impeachment at trial if he later truthfully denied possession. See
United States v. Salvucci,
We also reject the possibility that counsel’s failure to move to suppress was based on a reasonable trial strategy rather than a misapprehension of law. See
Strickland,
Counsel’s belief that the law required Gardner to confess to possession, which the district court echoed, was a misapprehension of law that, as in
Johnson,
Because the district court found it unnecessary to reach the second part of the ineffectiveness inquiry — prejudice—we cannot resolve the case at this stage. Instead, the proper step is to remand for an evidentiary hearing on prejudice. This will require an assessment of the likelihood that a motion to suppress would have been granted. We do not regard the outcome of that inquiry as inevitable one way or the other. As far as we can tell at this point, although this is not a case where the motion to suppress would certainly have been successful but for counsel’s blunder, see
Owens v. United States,
Accordingly, we Reverse the district court’s decision and Remand for an evidentiary hearing to determine whether counsel’s failure to file a suppression motion prejudiced Gardner and for any other proceedings consistent with this opinion.
