Appellant Kelly was tried in federal court in Georgia and convicted of four drug-related offenses, including possession with intent to distribute marijuana, conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute marijuana, importation of marijuana, and conspiracy to import marijuana. His conviction was affirmed on direct appeal to this court.
United States v. Kelly,
At his trial on the drug charges, Kelly was first represented by Rex Ryland, an attorney who also represented one of Kelly’s codefendants. On Saturday, February 5, 1983, two days prior to the beginning of trial, Kelly decided to dismiss Ryland because he did not feel that Ryland was effectively pursuing his case. Later that day Kelly retained another attorney, Steven Kermish, who discussed the case with Kelly that night and obtained the file from Ryland the following evening. After the trial began, the government acknowledged that Ryland was a target of the continuing criminal investigation which had resulted in Kelly’s indictment. Kermish moved for a continuance suggesting that some conflict of interest existed between Ryland and Kelly, but the district court denied that motion. 2 Kelly was ultimately convicted by a jury on all counts.
At the district court’s evidentiary hearing on Kelly’s section 2255 motion, Ryland and Kermish both testified regarding their involvement in a drug case, prosecuted subsequent to Kelly’s Georgia trial, in federal court in Arizona. Ryland testified that he, Ryland, was convicted of several drug related offenses in the Arizona case. Kermish stated that at the same time he plead *1175 guilty to criminal charges and agreed to become a government witness. One of the defendants against whom Kermish testified in the Arizona case was his former client Kelly. Kermish further testified that he was hospitalized for cocaine addiction several months after Kelly’s trial. He admitted that he used cocaine before and after Kelly’s trial, and that he smoked marijuana during the trial.
On appeal Kelly presents several grounds in support of his ineffective assistance claim. First, he contends that there existed a conflict of interest between himself and both Kermish and Ryland. He further asserts that he suffered a total lack of counsel because Kermish had an inadequate opportunity to prepare a defense, and because Kermish’s drug addiction diminished his capacity to conduct a defense. In addition, Kelly points to specific instances at trial where he alleges that Kermish’s performance was deficient.
Kelly’s conflict of interest claim is governed by
Cuyler v. Sullivan,
Although the events in this case raise the ugly specter of attorneys involved in criminal conduct with their clients, Kelly has failed to establish that an actual conflict of interest existed between himself and Kermish at the time of his Georgia trial. Kermish’s testimony against Kelly in the Arizona case came
after
the conviction of which Kelly now complains. Moreover, Kermish’s testimony against Kelly did not include any information learned as a result of the attorney-client privilege, nor did it relate to the specific drug smuggling activity which was the subject of this conviction. Thus, there is no evidence of any conflict of interest which adversely affected Kermish’s performance during Kelly’s Georgia trial.
See Cuyler,
Kelly’s claim that Kermish had an inadequate opportunity to prepare a defense also was properly disposed of by the district court. In
United States v. Cronic,
Neither do we regard the fact of Kermish’s drug addiction as sufficient in this case to meet the
Strickland
standard of ineffectiveness. The district judge found that “an overall review of the trial transcript does not reveal that Kermish was working under a diminished capacity. Generally, his objections or motions were timely and quite cogent.” Distr.Ct.Order at 21. There being no specific evidence that Kermish’s drug use or dependency impaired his actual conduct at trial, Kelly has not met his initial burden of showing that Kermish’s representation fell below an objective standard of reasonableness.
See Strickland,
Kelly’s specific claims of his counsel’s deficient performance at trial also are without merit. Kelly first complains that Kermish’s cross-examination of the shrimp boat captain was “ludicrous” because it opened the door to damaging evidence which the government elicited on redirect examination. Kermish asked the captain where Kelly was when the captain opened a bale of marijuana and rolled himself a marijuana cigarette, and the captain answered that Kelly was sleeping at the time. On redirect, the prosecutor inquired about the captain’s conversations with Kelly, to which the captain responded that Kelly “knew more than anyone else did.” A strategic decision by defense counsel will be held to constitute ineffective assistance “only if it was so patently unreasonable that no competent attorney would have chosen it.”
Adams v. Wainwright, 709
F.2d 1443, 1445 (11th Cir.1983),
cert. denied,
Kelly also claims that Kermish was ineffective because he admitted Kelly’s guilt on the importation charges during closing arguments. In his brief to the district court, however, Kelly stated that it was part of his trial strategy to admit guilt on the importation charges but to attempt to persuade the jury of his innocence on the distribution charges. Clearly, this was a reasonable argument to make considering the fact that Kelly was arrested on board a boat loaded with marijuana. See Adams, 709 F.2d at 1445.
In sum, the criminal conduct of both of Kelly’s defense attorneys constitutes an embarrassment to the legal profession. Unfortunately for Kelly, however, Kermish’s conduct at this trial does not constitute ineffective assistance of counsel under the Cuyler and Strickland tests. Accordingly, the judgment of the district court denying the writ is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. For a complete recitation of the facts underlying appellant’s conviction, see
Kelly,
. On direct appeal, this court held that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying the motion for a continuance.
Kelly,
. Kelly also alleges that there existed a conflict of interest between himself and Ryland, apparently based upon his allegation that the government used his trial as part of an ongoing investigation against Ryland. However, Kelly offered no evidence that the government improperly transformed his trial into an investigation of his counsel. Additionally, this claim was not raised before the district court and therefore need not be considered on appeal.
United States
v.
Hosford,
. In addition, Kelly contends that Kermish was ineffective because he failed to call a witness who allegedly would have impeached the captain’s testimony. At the evidentiary hearing, however, Kelly could not recall the name of the alleged impeachment witness and failed to provide any explanation as to how this witness would have affected the case. Thus, his allegation that Kermish was ineffective for failing to call this mystery witness is frivolous.
