Isiah Kitchen appeals the district court’s denial of his motion under 28 U.S.C. § 2255. We have already detailed the facts underlying Kitchen’s arrest and conviction in our decision on his direct appeal,
see United States v. Kitchen,
The events relevant to this appeal, however, took place between his conviction in the district court and our decision of his direct appeal. On February 22, 1994, while his direct appeal was pending, Kitchen filed a motion for a new trial on the basis of newly discovered evidence under Rule 33 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure in the district court. In that motion, he pointed to two pieces of newly discovered evidence that he argued entitled him to a new trial. First, he claimed to have new information regarding one of the government’s trial witnesses. Second, Kitchen alleged that he had discovered evidence that revealed a scheme by the government to prevent Mary Williams (Kitchen’s girlfriend) from testifying at trial. The briefing in Kitchen’s direct appeal was stayed for almost a year, allowing the district court to decide Kitchen’s Rule 33 motion, which it denied on July 25, 1994. Kitchen wanted to appeal that denial, but his counsel (who represented him both at trial and on direct appeal) inadvertently failed to file a notice of appeal, thus precluding our review of the denial of Kitchen’s motion for a new trial. On June 7, 1995, as noted, we decided Kitchen’s appeal of his conviction and sentence, but without consideration of the Rule 33 motion.
On October 23, 1996, Kitchen filed the present motion under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 in the district court. In his motion, Kitchen argued that he had been denied his right to effective assistance of counsel when his trial/appellate counsel failed to file a notice of appeal from the July 25, 1994 denial of his motion for a new trial. The district court denied Kitchen’s § 2255 motion. That court assumed that Kitchen had a right to counsel for the motion for a new trial but concluded that Kitchen failed to establish that he had been prejudiced by his counsel’s failure to file a notice of appeal. This court granted Kitchen a certificate of appealability on the following issue:
Whether petitioner was denied effective assistance of counsel due to his attorney’s admitted failure “through inadvertence” to file a notice of appeal from the district court’s denial of [a post-trial, as opposed to a post-appeal] motion for a new trial.
Kitchen v. United States, No. 97-3808 (7th Cir., Nov. 25, 1998) (order granting certificate of appealability) (citation omitted). Kitchen initially filed a pro se brief, and the government responded, but on June 30, 1999, counsel (Howard Eisenberg, dean and professor of law at Marquette University Law School) was appointed for Kitchen. Both sides rebriefed the case, and we proceeded to oral argument.
We review
de novo
the district court’s denial of Kitchen’s motion under 28 U.S.C. § 2255.
See Lanier v. United States,
I. Right to Counsel
Our initial inquiry in this case must be whether Kitchen had a right to counsel for his pre-appeal motion for a new
*1018
trial because “[wjhere there is no constitutional right to counsel there can be no deprivation of effective assistance.”
Coleman v. Thompson,
The timing of Kitchen’s motion for a new trial is an important factor supporting his right to counsel in prosecuting the motion and in an appeal from an adverse determination in the district court. His Rule 33 motion came well after the initiation of criminal proceedings (when his right to counsel attached,
see Kirby,
The government, however, argues that Kitchen had no right to counsel for his post-trial but pre-appeal motion for a new trial by pointing to several courts of appeals that have held, quite explicitly, that there is no right to counsel in Rule 33 proceedings.
United States v. Tajeddini,
*1019
However, it is wide of the mark to label a pre-appeal motion for a new trial as a “collateral attack.” We have noted the converse proposition that “[w]hen made following the outcome of a direct appeal, a Rule 33 motion plainly is ‘collateral’ in the usual sense of that term.”
United States v. Woods,
II. Counsel’s PERFORMANCE
Having determined that Kitchen had a right to counsel, we must now determine whether his right to effective assistance of counsel has been violated. In order to prevail on an ineffective assistance claim based on his counsel’s failure to file a notice of appeal, Kitchen must satisfy the familiar test of
Strickland v. Washington,
In a narrow sense, reasonable counsel should file a notice of appeal from an order denying a new trial when requested to do so by the defendant. In a broader sense, however, failing to pursue one issue so strongly destined to fail, in light of counsel’s otherwise fine performance, is not constitutionally unacceptable.
2d Gov. Br. at 17. While we think it sensible to view Kitchen’s appeal as a whole, we are not entirely persuaded by the government’s reasoning. The 'government is correct that, as a general matter, failing to pursue a particular issue is not necessarily deficient performance, for there is “[n]o particular set of detailed rules for counsel’s conduct”
Strickland,
III. Prejudice
Merely demonstrating deficient performance, however, is not enough to succeed on an ineffective assistance claim. Under
Strickland,
Kitchen must also show that he was prejudiced by his counsel’s deficient performance.
See
Kitchen argues that he need not show a likelihood of success on appeal because this case is analogous to cases like
Castellanos
and
Flores-Ortega.
Although it is a close question; we must ultimately reject this argument. For in those cases in which the Supreme Court, as well as this and other circuits, have presumed prejudice from the failure to file a notice of
*1021
appeal, defendants have had
no
assistance of counsel for
any
issues.
See Flores-Ortega,
Here, however, we need not employ our imaginations to determine what appealable issues were present in Kitchen’s case. His counsel filed a timely notice of appeal from Kitchen’s conviction and sentence and argued several issues before this court on direct appeal — some with success. Thus, one cannot characterize such a situation as one in which Kitchen was “abandoned” by his attorney or the denial of counsel on appeal was “complete.” His attorney’s deficient performance did not deprive[ ] [Kitchen] of the appellate proceeding altogether.”
Flores-Ortega,
We believe that Kitchen’s situation most closely resembles one in which his counsel has failed to preserve a particular is.sue for appellate review.
3
Our most recent decision addressing the omission of one issue from an appeal is
Mason v. Hanks,
In his Rule 33 motion, Kitchen first claimed to have new evidence regarding Lawrence Griffin, who testified for the government at trial about the staged cocaine purchase. (Kitchen does not press this portion of the motion on appeal, but, for the sake of completeness, we briefly discuss it.) This piece of claimed new evidence concerned Griffin’s receipt of allegedly unauthorized payments that constituted undisclosed benefits from the government. Apparently, the government had been paying Griffin fees for “decoding” various taped conversations and only completely disclosed this fact on the last day of the trial.
5
This certainly would have been useful for impeachment of Griffin’s testimony by tending to show bias,
6
but we have clearly stated that “impeachment evidence cannot provide the basis for a new trial.”
United States v. Austin,
Kitchen’s argument to us focuses exclusively on the second piece of newly-discovered evidence that he raised in his Rule 33 motion. Kitchen claims to have uncovered evidence that the government intimidated one of his potential witnesses, Mary Williams, who, on this account, did not testify. Had Ms. Williams testified, she would have explained that the guns that formed the basis of Kitchen’s § 922(g) conviction were hers and her cousin’s, not Kitchen’s. The intimidation of Ms. Williams, claims Kitchen, involves a second search of her home and her arrest in 1992, that was, allegedly, engineered by Assistant U.S. Attorney Hogan (Kitchen’s prosecutor). Another factor was Hogan’s decision to ask her incriminating questions if she took the stand. Williams did not testify at trial, and in an affidavit submitted by Kitchen with his § 2255 motion, she claims that:
Mr. Hogan cautioned me against testifying for Isiah Kitchen. In addition, the agents who searched my home on October 5, 1989 made what I considered were threats against my home, car, possessions, and, most importantly, children. The agents had indicated to me that if I did not cooperate with them (and I took that to mean if I did not say the guns belonged to Mr. Kitchen) I would be harmed by them, harmed in the sense that they would attempt to take my home and children away from me.
Williams’s Aff. ¶ 21. Of course, a prosecutor may properly “caution” a defense witness about the risks of
testifying-
— e.g., the danger of self-incrimination — but the prosecution cannot “interfere! ] with a defense witness’ free and unhampered choice to testify.”
United States v. Jackson,
Far from demonstrating that she was intimidated by the alleged scheme orchestrated by the government, Ms. Williams’s affidavit shows that she was totally unfazed. We have, at most, allegations of a failed attempt to coerce a witness. In her affidavit, Williams explains that Kitchen’s counsel attempted to reach an “understanding” with the court and the government that no punitive action would be taken against her. 7 She further explains that “[although no understanding was reached, I still wanted to get on the stand and tell the truth about the ownership of the guns.” Williams’s Aff. ¶ 23. Thus, it is quite apparent from Ms. Williams’s affidavit that she was ready, willing and able to testify despite the alleged threats. See also id. ¶ 23 (“When the time for Mr. Kitchen’s trial arrived, I wanted to testify on his behalf.”); id. ¶ 25 (“If I ever had the opportunity to take the stand regarding the issue of ownership and possession of the guns ... I would testify.... ”). The alleged conduct of the government actors may have been egregiously inappropriate (accepting, of course, Williams’s allegations), but in the face of her clear statements that it had no effect on her willingness to testify, the alleged behavior (even if true) cannot be the basis of a witness coercion claim. We need evidence not only that there was an attempt to coerce a witness but also that the attempted coercion actually influenced the witness’s decision to testify or not to testify. On the basis of the allegations, Kitchen asks us to “infer” that Williams was coerced and to remand the issue for a hearing. We will not do this because Ms. Williams’s own affidavit flat out refutes Kitchen’s desired inference that she was dissuaded from testifying.
Then why did Ms. Williams not take the stand during Kitchen’s trial? Simply put, because the defense decided not to call her as a witness. Kitchen’s brief explains:
As a result of [the 1992] search, Williams was charged in the state court with several offenses. Defense counsel wanted to call Ms. Williams to testify that she had these weapons in her home in 1992 to show that, unrelated to Petitioner, she regularly kept weapons in her home. 8 The U.S. Attorney responded by saying that if Williams testified about the 1992 weapons, he would cross examine her about whether she was selling drugs with [Kitchen] in 1989.
*1024 Originally defense counsel was concerned that questioning Williams would raise Fifth Amendment problems as to her pending 1992 state court charges. After the prosecutor mentioned the possibility of cross examining Williams about events that occurred in 1989, Judge Sharp and the U.S. Attorney began discussing possible Fifth Amendment issues relating to acts that occurred in 1989. Defense counsel then decided not to call Williams because of problems she might face on her Fifth Amendment privilege.
Appellant’s Br. at 19-20 (citations and quotations" omitted) (emphasis and footnote added). The defense counsel deciding not to call Williams because she ran the risk of incriminating herself (or asserting her Fifth Amendment right not to testify) on either direct or cross-examination is a far cry from Williams’s refusing to testify because she had been intimidated by the government. And surely Mr. Hogan should properly have been free to cross-examine Ms. Williams regarding her activities with Kitchen in 1989. It bears repeating that Williams, despite the risk of self-incrimination, “still wanted to get on the stand and tell the truth about the ownership of the guns” at the trial. Williams’s Aff. ¶ 23. In her affidavit, Williams states that “[i]t had always been my understanding that I was not called to the stand because of Mr. Kitchen’s concern for my own welfare.” Williams’s Aff. ¶ 24. He possibly did Williams a great service by keeping her off the stand, but Kitchen cannot now excuse his decision not to call Williams by alleging that she was coerced. Accordingly, Kitchen’s witness coercion argument fails.
In sum, Kitchen had a right to counsel in the appeal from his motion for a new trial, which was denied by the district court before our decision in his direct appeal. Counsel’s failure to file a notice of appeal from the district court’s denial of the Rule 33 motion was deficient performance. However, Kitchen was not entitled to a presumption of prejudice, and his ineffective assistance of counsel motion ultimately fails because he cannot show that his counsel’s failure to appeal prejudiced him. Therefore, we Affirm the district court’s denial of Kitchen’s § 2255 motion.
Notes
. We note for the sake of completeness that this circuit has confronted this factual situation before in
Perez v. United States,
. The Supreme Court has also used the decision of the direct appeal as the temporal boundary that defines a collateral attack for which a defendant has no right to counsel. In
Pennsylvania v. Finley,
the Court stated that a motion for postconviction relief is a "collateral attack that normally occurs only after the defendant has failed to secure relief through direct review of his conviction.”
. This analogy is bolstered by the fact that had his counsel filed a timely notice of appeal from the denial of his motion for a new trial, that appeal would have been consolidated with Kitchen’s direct appeal.
See United States v. Ellison,
. Because we must consider the hypothetical appeal, we must keep in mind that we review the district court’s denial of a motion for a new trial under Rule 33 for abuse of discretion only.
See United States v. Austin,
. The government had already disclosed that Griffin had been paid fees for "decoding,” but on the last day of trial added (1) that someone in the United States Attorney's office had recently had a conversation with a paralegal in which the paralegal admitted arranging for Griffin to receive fees in prior months when, in fact, Griffin had not been working on tapes and (2) that Griffin and another government paralegal had a drink together while waiting for lunch one day.
. At a hearing outside of the jury’s presence, Kitchen’s attorney was given the opportunity to voir dire Griffin about the additional information. The district court then denied the defense request to reopen testimony and recall Griffin for further cross-examination in front of the jury.
See United States v. Kitchen,
. Presumably, this "understanding” was some sort of immunity.
. The fact that defense counsel wanted to call Ms. Williams to testify that she had these weapons in her home in 1992 undermines Kitchen's intimation that the 1992 search and arrest were part of the scheme to coerce Williams. As the district court noted, "[i]t is difficult for this court to ascribe prosecutorial misconduct where the events allegedly engineered inured to the benefit of the defense."
United States v. Kitchen,
