In this appeal of the denial of a habeas corpus petition, David Julian asks this court to consider whether the state court properly determined that his counsel did not provide ineffective assistance of counsel during plea negotiations when that counsel misinterpreted the Supreme Court decision in
Apprendi v. New Jersey,
I.
On August 15, 2000, Julian and his state court trial counsel, Dennis Sheehan, met with Illinois State’s Attorneys and the court to discuss a negotiated plea agreement. He was looking down both barrels of a double-barreled gun, having been indicted on May 3, 2000 for a robbery committed that same day, and indicted on May 18, 2000 for a robbery committed on April 30, 2000. At the hearing, the State summarized the plea disposition under which Julian would be sentenced to twenty-three year concurrent terms for the two armed robberies!- Just before Julian started to enter his plea, the State mentioned that Julian was on supervised release for a previous armed robbery conviction. In response, the trial judge, informed Julian that state law required that he serve his sentence for the armed robbery consecutively with any separate sentence imposed for a parole violation. At that point, Julian conferred with his attorney and then rejected the plea. According to Julian, his lawyer informed him that the Supreme Court had just recently issued a new opinion in
Apprendi v. New Jersey,
After Julian was sentenced in the first trial, Sheehan filed an unsuccessful motion to reconsider the sentence, arguing that based on Apprendi, Julian should have received thirty years, at most. Several days later, at a sentencing hearing for the second conviction, Julian submitted a letter to the court that stated, in part:
I want you to now bring up the Apprendi v. N. [sic] Jersey as a factor in my sentencing as well as the fact that you stated to me that due to the states [sic] mishandling of the indictment in these cases that I’ve guaranteed myself a maximum of 30 years, per charge.
(R. at 10, Ex. D, p. 3 & Ex. A, p. 32-33, 39-40) 3 . The court did not review the letter, but it was entered into the record under seal, over the State’s objection.
Julian filed timely direct appeals and motions for post-conviction relief that raised the issue of ineffective assistance of counsel. In those appeals, Julian argued that his attorney was ineffective when he advised Julian that he could not receive more than a thirty-year sentence because of limitations set forth in Apprendi. He also contended that he would have accepted the plea offer of twenty-three years had he known that his potential sentence could have exceeded thirty years.
During the evidentiary hearing held during the post-conviction proceedings, both Julian and Sheehan testified about the Ap-prendi issue. Sheehan’s version of the facts differs from Julian’s only in the level of certainty Sheehan provided regarding the thirty-year sentence. Julian described Sheehan’s advice as a guarantee as shown in the following exchange:
Q: And did Mr. Sheehan advise you what the absolute maximum sentence would be that you could receive?
A: Yes, sir.
Q: And what did he tell you the absolute maximum sentence you could receive would be on these cases?
A: 30 years.
Q: Did he cite any particular case that you remember in support of his statements to you?
A: Yes, sir.
Q: What was that?
A: The Apprendi vs. New Jersey.
*491 Q: And what was your — from what he told you during these meetings on this issue, what was your understanding of that?
A: My understanding was that due to the way I was improperly—
Q: I’m sorry, let me cut you off. What did Mr. Sheehan tell you regarding that, to the best of your recollection, Apprendi?
A. He told me, due to the Apprendi, that I have guaranteed myself no more than 30 years.
(Tr. 3/13/03 at 6-7). Sheehan testified about the Apprendi advice as follows:
First, on direct examination the following exchange occurred:
Q: And did you ever advise or make a statement to Mr. Julian to the effect that because of this Apprendi Case, that he was guaranteed or that the most he could get was 30 years in the Department of Corrections?
A. No.
(Tr. 3/17/03 at 12). On cross-examination, he elaborated further:
Here is what I remember telling him about it. I remember saying to him that my reading of the Apprendi Case indicated to me that since there wasn’t an additional clause in the Bill of Indictment that made comment about his first conviction for armed robbery, that under those circumstances it would seem to me that based upon a reading of Apprendi, he couldn’t get anything more than 30. That’s basically what I told him.
(Tr. 3/17/03 at 25). On re-direct examination, Sheehan testified as follows:
Q: ... [D]id you ever tell Mr. Julian then that based on that case and based on your interpretation of that case [Apprendi], would be held here in the State of Illinois, that he was guaranteed to only get 40[sie] years?
A: ... [T]he answer to that question is no. I indicated to him that it was for the Court to make a determination as to his penalty and certainly not myself.
(Tr. 3/17/03 at 31-32).
Julian’s friend, Riehye Herlihy, testified that Sheehan told her that Julian could get up to thirty years in prison, but no more. (Tr. 3/13/03 at 50).
Julian and Sheehan agree that, prior to the decision in Apprendi at his first court appearance on May 3, 2000, both Sheehan and the trial Judge informed Julian that he was eligible for a term of up to sixty years. Julian testified, however, that Sheehan later informed him that Apprendi had altered the landscape and changed the maximum he could receive. (Tr. 3/13/03 at 45-46, 55).
The state post-conviction court denied Julian’s request for post-conviction relief, finding clear evidence that both the court and Julian’s counsel advised Julian that he was eligible for an extended term of up to sixty years. (R. at 10, Ex. H, p. 1). Julian’s appeal to the state appellate court resulted in a similar conclusion (R. at 10, Ex. L), and the Illinois Supreme Court denied his petition to appeal (R. at 10, Ex. N).
On petition for a writ of habeas corpus, the district court below concluded that there was no clear and convincing evidence that the state court’s factual determination — that Julian’s counsel did not erroneously inform him that he could not receive a sentence greater than 30 years— was unreasonable based on the record. Our review of the district court’s decision to deny the petition for writ of habeas corpus is de novo.
Barrow v. Uchtman,
II.
Our review of this habeas petition, like all habeas petitions, is limited by the terms of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA). Habeas relief must not be granted unless the state court’s adjudication of the claim
(1) resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States; or
(2) resulted in a decision that was based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented in the State court proceeding.
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). In assessing the reasonableness of the state court’s decision, the federal court assumes that the state courts’ factual determinations are correct unless the defendant rebuts them with clear and convincing evidence. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1).
Our review of this case utilizes both prongs of the § 2254(d). We begin with a discussion of the state court’s fact-finding. The state post-conviction court’s complete discussion of the evidence on this matter consisted of the following four sentences:
Evidence was clear that Mr. Julian was advised by his attorney and by the court that he was eligible for an extended term of up to 60 years in the Illinois Department of Corrections. Mr. Shee-han did state that when discussing a plea negotiation offer by the state he [Sheehan] opined that the sentence might be 30 years. He never stated that that was the maximum sentence or that a sentence could not be longer. Mr. Julian knew, because both the court and his attorney told him, that he was eligible for an extended term.
(R. at 10, Ex. H, at p. 1). The appellate court came to two conclusions based on the trial court’s scant discussion. First, the appellate court concluded that “the post-conviction court found that the defendant was advised both by his attorney and the trial court that he faced a maximum penalty of 60 years’ imprisonment.” Second, it concluded that “[t]he postconviction court found that Sheehan merely expressed his opinion concerning the effect of Apprendi, and did not guarantee that the defendant’s sentence would not exceed 30 years.” (R. at 10, Ex. L, p. 7). In sum, the post-conviction appellate court’s conclusion that Sheehan’s counsel was not ineffective appears to be based on two distinct theories. The first is that Sheehan did not err. He correctly informed Julian that he could receive up to a sixty year sentence. The second is that because Sheehan merely expressed an opinion about the effect of Apprendi, and did not guarantee Julian thirty years, his misinformation about Ap-prendi did not constitute ineffective assistance of counsel.
The conclusion that the defendant was advised effectively both by his attorney and the trial court that he faced a maximum penalty of 60 years’ imprisonment constitutes an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented in the state court proceeding. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). It is true that, at one time, both Sheehan and the court advised Julian that the maximum sentence he could receive would be sixty years. Both of these admonishments, however, came before the Apprendi decision was released. There is no dispute that after the Apprendi decision Sheehan discussed the case with Julian and told him that the law had changed. Julian and Sheehan’s testimony aligned on this point. See (Tr. 3/13/03 at 45^46); (Tr. 3/17/03 at 24-25): Julian testi *493 fied that his lawyer’s information changed after the Apprendi case was decided:
Q: ... [B]efore you received the first 40-year sentence, at any point did he tell you you could get over 30 years?
Q: A long time before that, before he ever told me about the Apprendi.
Q: So sometime between your first appearance and when he told you about Apprendil
A: Yes. After that, it was never an issue, he told me I couldn’t get more than thirty years.
(Tr. 3/13/003 at 45). On re'-cross-examination, Julian elaborated:
Q: I just want to make sure I heard this correctly. Did I understand you to say, Mr. Julian, that at some point Mr. Sheehan did tell you that you could get 60 years and then afterwards he said you could only get 30 years based on Apprendil
A: Yes.
Q: And that is—
A: After he told me about the Appren-di and that I could get no more than 30 years, he never discussed an extended term again.
Q: Okay, so it did come up? It did come up, then, prior to your first trial with Mr. Sheehan that you could get 60 years? You are just saying that he then said something different after that, but again, prior to the first trial?
A: He told me a long time before my first trial, yes, that I could get an extended term. Then after he learned of the Apprendi, he told me that due to the Apprendi, a new Supreme Court ruling, I could get no more than 30 years. I have guaranteed myself no more than 30 years.
(Tr. 3/13/03 at 46).
Sheehan testified consistently with Julian as follows:
A: When we spoke about this case originally, and when I found out what his prior criminal record was, . and that he was on parole for an armed robbery, I was telling him that he was eligible for the 60 year sentence.
Q: Okay. But you had also just answered me, that you couldn’t specifically remember saying those words, in the context of that discussion, but you could get 60, correct?
A: That’s right.
Q: So at some point it came up, but maybe not every time you discussed the possible sentence.
A: That’s also correct.
* * *
Q: Did you ever mention the Apprendi case to Mr. Julian and what you believed it represented?
A: I remember having a brief discussion with him about it.
Q: Okay. And in that discussion, if you recall, do you recall telling him that it would preclude an extended term sentence in this case?
A: Here is what I remember telling him about it. I remember saying to him that my reading of the Appren-di Case indicated to me that since there wasn’t an additional clause in the Bill of Indictment that made comment about his first conviction for armed robbery, that under those circumstances it would seem to me that based upon a reading of Ap-prendi, he couldn’t get anything *494 more than 30. That’s basically what I told him.
(Tr. 3/17/03 at 23-25).
This is not, as the State asserts, a swearing match between Julian and Shee-han. And we need not redetermine credibility.
See Marshall v. Lonberger,
Even if it were not, in formulating its alternate theory, the post-conviction appellate court unreasonably applied the United States Supreme Court’s clearly established law on ineffective assistance of counsel claims. Recall that the post-conviction appellate court’s other (and perhaps primary) conclusion was that “Sheehan merely expressed his opinion concerning the effect of Apprendi, and did not guarantee that the defendant’s sentence would not exceed 30 years.” (R. at 10, Ex. L, p. 7). 4 From this, the court could conclude that “Shee-han did not provide the defendant with ineffective assistance at trial.” Id.
A state court must analyze a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel pursuant to the guidelines set forth in
Strickland v. Washington,
The
Strickland
test applies where a defendant challenges the legal assistance received during plea negotiations.
Hill v. Lockhart,
This court previously has identified some of the specific criteria that constitute objectively reasonable representation in the context of advice concerning a plea agreement. A reasonably competent attorney will attempt to learn all of the facts of the case, make an estimate of the likely sentence, and communicate the result of that analysis before allowing the client to plead guilty.
Bethel v. United States,
The state appellate court, therefore, was headed in the wrong direction when it determined that Sheehan did not provide ineffective assistance of counsel because he “merely expressed his opinion ... and did not guarantee that the defendant’s sentence would not exceed 30 years.” (R. at 10, Ex. L, p. 7). The only query we make is whether the attorney’s actions in learning the facts, analyzing the law, and communicating the results of that analysis to the client, were objectively reasonable.
Moore,
The first prong of the state court’s Strickland analysis, therefore, should have focused not on whether Sheehan offered advice or a guarantee, but rather on whether Sheehan’s advice was that of a reasonably competent defense lawyer. 5 In this case, it will be helpful to our assessment of Sheehan’s analysis of the facts and law, and his efforts to communicate the results of his analysis to revisit the key facts leading up to the rejection of the plea. They are as follows:
On May 3, 2000 Julian was brought before a judge on charges that he had committed a robbery that same day. The judge advised Julian that the usual sentencing range for the offense was six to thirty years imprisonment, but that if Julian had “been convicted of the same or greater class offense within the past 10 years excluding any time spent in custody, that could be extended as high as 60 years.” (R. at 10, Ex. L, p. 1-2). Sheehan similarly advised Julian that his maximum sentence could be sixty years. (Tr. 3/17/03 at 10). Fifty-four days later, on June 26, 2000, the Supreme Court released its decision in
Apprendi v. New Jersey,
Of course, this reading of the
Apprendi
decision was wrong.
Apprendi
clearly held that “Other than the fact of a prior conviction, any fact that increases the penalty for a crime beyond the prescribed statutory maximum must be submitted to a jury, and proved beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Apprendi,
It is true, as the government notes, that the
Apprendi
opinion was fifty-three pages in length and contained two concurrences and two dissents. Nevertheless, had Sheehan read only the syllabus or even just the one-sentence (thirty-nine word) holding of
Apprendi,
demarcated in the syllabus of the opinion by an italicized
“Held:”
he would have known, without any doubt, that the fact of a prior conviction need not be submitted to a jury and proved beyond a reasonable doubt.
6
The majority opinion contains a lengthy discussion regarding the exception for the “fact of a prior conviction” which includes a discussion of why this particular type of fact is particularly reliable and relevant and a clear announcement that the holding of
Almendarez-Torres,
None of that matters, however, if Julian cannot show that but for his lawyer’s advice, he would have taken the plea offer. Because the district court upheld the state court conclusion that Sheehan did not provide erroneous information, it did not have the opportunity to consider whether the ill advice prejudiced Julian. Although we could remand the issue to the district court so that it might address this issue, the district court would merely review the
*498
same post-conviction court record that we have already scoured for evidence of prejudice. Because our review is de novo and the issue has been fully briefed, efficiency dictates that we resolve the question here.
See e.g., Amcast Indus. Corp. v. Detrex Corp.,
To meet the second of the
Strickland
prongs — prejudice—the defendant must show that “there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different. A reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.”
Id.
at 694,
Julian testified that he based his decision to go to trial on the information provided by Sheehan: “I understood that Mr. Sheehan told me I couldn’t get more than 30 years, and with the time I was being offered, it wasn’t very much of a difference, seeing as how there was little extra added to it that put me in a position that I might as well take my chances since I couldn’t have gotten more than 30 years anyway.” (Tr. 3/13/03 at 42). During direct examination, the following exchange occurred:
Q: Was your decision [not to take the plea and to go to trial] based at least in part on your belief that you would get no more than 30 years?
A: Sure.
Q: Had you been aware that you could have gotten more than 30 years, in fact anywhere up to 60 years, would that have affected your decision to go to trial or not?
A: Most definitely.’ I would have taken the 23, or the offer.
Q: And so your decision was based on information Mr. Sheehan provided to you—
A: Yes.
Q: —regarding that 30-year sentence?
A: Yes.
(Tr. 3/1/3/03 at 7).
The information Sheehan conveyed was “precisely the type of information that is likely to impact a plea decision.”
Moore,
In
Moore
we found prejudice where the lawyer mistakenly doubled the sentence at risk when advising the client to take a plea.
Moore,
Although this court has stated that a “mere allegation by the defendant that he would have insisted on going to trial is insufficient to establish prejudice,”
(United States v. Fudge,
The State attempts to chip away at Julian’s prejudice showing by citing several cases which rejected particular pieces of evidence - presented to prove prejudice. These cases, however, merely comment on the insufficiency of solitary pieces of evidence — a naked declaration that but for the erroneous advice, the defendant would have altered his choice to take a plea or go to trial; a third party affidavit stating the same; or after-the-fact evidence.
Toro v. Fairman,
The decision of the district court denying the writ of habeas corpus is reversed. Julian asks this court to order the State to put forth the original plea offer of two, twenty-three year concurrent terms of incarceration. The Supreme Court has announced that where there has been a finding of ineffective assistance of counsel in a § 2255 proceeding, the remedy “should be tailored to the injury suffered from the constitutional violation and should not unnecessarily infringe on competing interest” including the competing interest of preserving society’s interest in the administration of criminal justice.
United States v. Morrison,
Notes
. Because Julian's two habeas cases were not consolidated in the district court, the record on appeal consists of two identical volumes of pleadings and two identical supplemental volumes of state evidentiary hearing transcripts, one for each case. For some reason, although the records containing .the pleadings are identical, they are not numbered identi *490 cally. Consequently, for ease of reading, and to reduce confusion, -this opinion will refer only to the pleadings of the record on appeal of district court case number 05-1077. The transcripts of the evidentiary hearing are identical -in all respects and, therefore, transcript references can be found in either supplemental volume of the transcript.
. At the sentencing hearing, defense counsel informed the court that the defendant had prepared a written statement for the court, which included arguments that defense counsel did not believe were appropriate for him to argue to the court. The letter appears to be a letter of direction from Julian to defense counsel.' (R. at 10, Ex. A., p. 39-40). The trial judge allowed the letter to be made a part of the record, although he did not look at it.
. The appellate court’s factual findings differ slightly from the brief factual findings of the post-conviction court. Nevertheless, the state appellate court can make its own factual determinations which are owed the same deference as a trial court’s finding of fact.
Miranda
v.
Leibach,
. The State contends that prior to the briefing in the appellate court Julian consistently alleged ineffective assistance of counsel based on counsel's advice, rather than a guarantee. Consequently, the State argues that Julian cannot now claim that counsel was ineffective for making an erroneous prediction. Our task, on review of this habeas petition, is to determine whether the state court properly applied Strickland. In the case of an ineffective assistance claim, the first prong of Strickland requires a court to analyze whether the attorney gave objectively reasonable advice, not whether he guaranteed an outcome or merely opined about a possible outcome. Julian thus correctly notes that the distinction is irrelevant under his theory of the case.
. Although the Supreme Court admonishes readers that the syllabus “constitutes no part of the opinion of the court” it does provide a convenient synopsis of the opinion and its holding, and can quickly direct a reader to the relevant portion of the full opinion.
. By coming to this conclusion we do not mean to disparage generally Mr. Sheehan's skills as lawyer. Defense lawyers often work long hours, for little money, at times for more clients than they can reasonably handle. These conditions can lead to error. Mr. Shee-han, like all lawyers at some point in their career, erred. In this case, the error deprived Julian of effective assistance of counsel. Our review of the record indicates that but for this error, Mr. Sheehan admirably represented his client below.
