Marcus Mosby appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Western District of New York (Richard J. Arcara,
Chief
Judge) denying his petition for a writ of habeas corpus. Mosby contends that he was denied his Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of appellate counsel when, on direct appeal, his counsel failed to raise a suppression issue arising under the Fourth Amendment and the New York State Constitution. The state trial court ruled that Mosby lacked standing to challenge his warrantless arrest because he did not live in the house where he was arrested, and denied his motion to suppress a confession and photo identification that ultimately led to his murder conviction. Because the underlying suppression issue, when considered in accordance with the attenuation analysis of
Brown v. Illinois,
BACKGROUND
On April 15, 1994, witnesses observed an assailant known only by the nickname “Florida” shoot and kill two men on Bloomingdale Street, in Rochester, New York. Five days later, Rochester police officers conducted an unrelated “buy and bust” operation, in which Mosby sold a $20 bag of crack cocaine to a police informant, with an undercover officer present. The drug deal took place through the window of a house at 46 Costar Street, two miles from the site of the homicides. Four uniformed police officers arrived shortly thereafter, without a warrant for Mosby’s arrest. They knocked at the front door of the house, which was answered by Mosby’s ten-year-old son. The child informed them that his father was upstairs, sleeping. After four or five attempts to coax him downstairs, the uniformed officers entered the house and took Mosby into custody. The undercover officer then identified Mosby as the person he had observed selling cocaine earlier, and Mosby was placed under arrest.
While Mosby was waiting in a police car outside the house, a passing neighbor, Lanna Pulley, noticed him in the car and asked an officer what was happening with “Florida.” According to the arresting officers’ report, Ms. Pulley told police that Mosby had been living at 46 Costar for the past two months.
On hearing the nickname “Florida” attributed to Mosby, the arresting officers contacted investigators working on the Bloomingdale Street homicides. Later that evening, the police presented a photo array including Mosby’s photo to four different witnesses to the homicides. All four identified Mosby as the shooter. After being read Miranda warnings, Mosby declined an attorney, and the police questioned him about the homicides. Mosby *518 ultimately confessed, and the police prepared a written statement which he reviewed and signed after midnight, on the same night as his arrest. He was subsequently indicted, tried, and convicted on homicide charges. 1
Prior to trial, Mosby moved to suppress the confession and photo identifications on the ground that his warrantless home arrest violated the Fourth Amendment. Mosby claimed that he had been living at 46 Costar Street for at least two months. The trial court held that Mosby did not have standing to assert a Fourth Amendment claim since he was merely a “casual visitor” with a “transient presence” at 46 Costar and thus had no “legitimate expectation of privacy” there. Accordingly, the court denied Mosby’s suppression motion.
At trial, Mosby testified that he shot the two individuals in self-defense. The four eyewitnesses testified, identifying Mosby as the gunman. His confession was admitted during the state’s rebuttal case. The jury convicted Mosby on two counts of murder in the second degree, and the court sentenced him to consecutive terms of twenty-five years to life.
On direct appeal, Mosby’s attorney did not challenge the adverse suppression ruling. The only issue he raised was that, during cross-examination, the prosecutor improperly impeached Mosby by asking him about details in his trial testimony that did not appear in the statement he had given to the police. The Appellate Division rejected this argument, and the New York Court of Appeals denied Mosby leave to appeal.
People v. Mosby,
Mosby then filed an application for a writ of
coram nobis
seeking to vacate his conviction on the ground of ineffective assistance of appellate counsel for failure to raise several issues, including the trial court’s suppression ruling. The Appellate Division summarily denied the application.
See People v. Mosby,
DISCUSSION
I. Standard of Review
We review a district court’s decision to deny a petition for a writ of habeas corpus
de novo,
and its factual conclusions for clear error.
See Gersten v. Senkowski,
We have held that in light of
Strickland v. Washington,
To establish ineffective assistance under
Strickland,
Mosby must show (1) that his appellate counsel’s “representation fell below an objective standard of reasonableness” and (2) that he was prejudiced by the deficient representation.
Strickland,
Under § 2254(d)(1), our inquiry is not whether the Appellate Division’s rejection of Mosby’s ineffective assistance claim was incorrect, but whether, in light of
Strickland,
it was “objectively unreasonable.”
See Sellan,
II. Mosby’s Suppression Claim
A. Warrantless Arrest
To determine whether the Fourth Amendment claim underlying Mosby’s ineffective assistance argument has merit, we begin with the state trial court’s ruling that Mosby did not have standing to challenge his warrantless home arrest. This ruling turned on the factual determination that Mosby did not live at 46 Costar, and thus had no legitimate expectation of privacy there. In
Payton v. New York,
the Supreme Court observed that nowhere “is the zone of privacy more clearly defined than ... [in] an individual’s home,” and held that, absent exigent circumstances or consent, the police must obtain a warrant before entering a suspect’s home to make a routine felony arrest.
In cases subsequent to
Payton,
the Supreme Court has held that the zone of Fourth Amendment protection against warrantless arrests, despite probable cause, can extend beyond one’s own home: for example, even an overnight guest in
*520
the home of another may have a “legitimate expectation of privacy” sufficient to invoke the protection.
Minnesota v. Olson,
In ruling on the suppression motion, the trial court acknowledged that both Payton and Olson applied, but held that Mosby was a transient presence at 46 Costar, who had no legitimate expectation of privacy there. The trial court relied mainly on the testimony of Ms. Pulley, the neighbor who identified Mosby as “Florida.” According to the court, Ms. Pulley “did not say that [Mosby] was an overnight guest at the apartment on the evening before his arrest.” The court also noted that there was no evidence that Mosby had keys to the house, received mail there, or paid rent, and that, on the night of his arrest, Mosby told police that he lived at a different address.
The trial court ignored or mischaracter-ized evidence in the record that supported Mosby’s assertion that he had a legitimate expectation of privacy at 46 Costar. The arresting officers’ report, for example, included Ms. Pulley’s statement that Mosby had been staying at 46 Costar for the past two months. This was confirmed during the suppression hearing, both on cross-examination of an officer and by Ms. Pulley herself. Mosby’s aunt also testified that Mosby had been living at 46 Costar Street at the time of the arrest and that he kept his belongings there.
Regardless of whether 46 Costar was his permanent residence, the record before the trial court established that, at the time of his arrest, Mosby had a legitimate expectation of privacy there, and, at the very least, his suppression claim presented a highly compelling issue for appeal. Applying
Payton
and its progeny to facts in the record, we believe that the trial court had no reasonable basis to conclude that Mos-by’s presence at 46 Costar was more fleeting than even that of an overnight house-guest.
Cf. United States v. Fields,
B. Attenuation
Evidence obtained from an unlawful search or seizure is generally subject to exclusion as “fruit of the poisonous tree.”
See Wong Sun v. United States,
The attenuation doctrine allows introduction of evidence obtained after an unlawful arrest when “the causal link” between a Fourth Amendment violation and a subsequent confession, identification, or other form of evidence is “so long or tortuous that suppression of the evidence is unlikely to have the effect of deterring future violations of the same type.”
United States v. Singh,
As a matter of federal law, Mosby’s Fourth Amendment claim would almost certainly fail before even reaching a full attenuation analysis. In
New York v. Harris,
Applying this logic here, Mosby’s confession at the station house cannot be deemed a product, for Fourth Amendment purposes, of any
Payton
violation that may have occurred.
4
However, ineffective assistance of counsel in violation of the Sixth Amendment is not limited to failures to raise meritorious federal claims. Failure to raise a valid state law claim on appeal may also constitute ineffective assistance, so long as the relevant standards under
Strickland
are met.
See Claudio v. Scully,
The Supreme Court’s decision in
New York v. Harris (“Harris II”)
reversed a
*522
prior decision of the New York Court of Appeals,
People v. Harris,
Thus, while Mosby’s Fourth Amendment suppression claim appears to lack merit under Harris II, on direct appeal he might have been able to demonstrate that his confession and the photo identifications should have been suppressed under New York state law on the strength of Harris III
1. Mosby’s Confession
Indeed, both parties concede that
Harris III
governs our analysis of Mosby’s confession. Accordingly, to evaluate attenuation in the context of a custodial confession following a warrantless home arrest, we apply the
Brown
factors.
See supra; Harris III,
The police did not begin questioning Mosby about the Bloomingdale Street homicides until approximately five hours after his arrest and following
Miranda
warnings. New York courts have found custodial statements given after
Miranda
warnings and similar passages of time sufficiently attenuated to break the causal chain from an unlawful arrest.
See, e.g., People v. Divine,
In addition, there were significant intervening circumstances between the war-rantless arrest and the confession — most notably, Ms. Pulley’s spontaneous appearance and reference to Mosby as “Florida.” While his arrest might, in some sense, have been a but-for cause of his encounter with Ms. Pulley outside the house, this is not sufficient to justify exclusion.
See Hudson,
The final
Brown
factor, flagrancy and purpose of police conduct, reflects the policies of deterrence and judicial integrity underlying the exclusionary rule.
See Dunaway v. New York,
Suppressing Mosby’s confession would be unlikely to deter future police misconduct, since the police — at the time they entered 46 Costar to make a routine drug arrest — could not have anticipated the fortuitous chain of events that ultimately connected Mosby to the homicides. This is especially true because the catalyst for those events was the appearance of Ms. Pulley and her spontaneous comment to the police.
Cf. Ceccolini,
2. Identification Evidence
The New York Court of Appeals has held that the New York State Constitution “does not require the suppression of evidence of a lineup identification made after an arrest based on probable cause but in violation of
Payton.” People v. Jones, 2
N.Y.3d 235, 244-45,
Both parties agree that
Jones
controls, or at least is highly relevant to our analysis of whether the photo identifications should have been suppressed. Although
Jones
was decided after Mosby’s direct appeal, the Supreme Court has held that current law should be applied retroactively for purposes of determining whether a party has demonstrated prejudice under
Strickland’s
second prong.
Lockhart v. Fretwell,
Here the trial court found that the police had probable cause to arrest Mosby for selling drugs. The photo array later presented to witnesses of the Bloomingdale Street homicides was not prompted by the officers’ warrantless arrest of Mosby at 46 Costar, or by anything they discovered while inside the house, but rather by Ms. Pulley’s identification of Mosby as “Florida” when she saw him on the street. Here, as in
Jones,
application of the exclusionary rule is not warranted, since “the requisite connection between the violation of a constitutional right and the derivative evidence is absent.”
III. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
The district court did not explicitly endorse the trial court’s conclusion that Mosby lacked standing to assert a Fourth Amendment claim, but emphasized the trial court’s finding that the police had probable cause to arrest Mosby. The district court held that because Mosby could not demonstrate both that it was objectively unreasonable for his appellate counsel not to pursue the suppression issue, and that, had he done so, there was a reasonable probability that the appeal would have succeeded, he failed to establish ineffective assistance of counsel under Strickland,. We agree.
In light of
Harris II,
Mosby cannot maintain that the Fourth Amendment claim underlying his petition is meritorious, and his ineffective assistance claim on that issue fails accordingly.
See Kimmelman,
New York law affords Mosby somewhat more latitude in claiming that his confession following an arrest in violation of Pay-ton should have been suppressed. See generally Harris III. However, due to intervening events and other surrounding circumstances, Mosby’s voluntary confession was attenuated from his warrantless arrest. Thus, even if he could show that appellate counsel’s failure to raise the suppression claim “fell below an objective standard of reasonableness,” Mosby can *525 not show that he was prejudiced by the omission.
Finally, any state law claim Mosby’s counsel might have raised on direct appeal regarding suppression of the photo identification evidence is governed by the New York Court of Appeals’ decision in
Jones.
Because the trial court’s denial of Mosby’s motion to suppress that evidence did not deprive him of any right under current New York law, his appellate counsel’s failure to raise the issue did not render the proceeding unreliable or unfair.
See Lockhart,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s denial of Mosby’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus.
Notes
. On June 23, 1995, after a separate jury trial, Mosby was convicted on charges of possession of a controlled substance in the third degree, and sale of a controlled substance in the third degree.
. AEDPA provides, in part:
An application for a writ of habeas corpus on behalf of a person in custody pursuant to the judgment of a State court shall not be granted with respect to any claim that was adjudicated on the merits in State court proceedings unless the adjudication of that 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....
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d).
. Because we ultimately decide this case on attenuation grounds, we do not reach the issue of whether the warrantless arrest was justified because of consent or exigent circumstances,
see Georgia v.
Randolph,-U.S. -,-,
. Although
Harris II
involved a confession, the Court's holding has been applied to other forms of evidence as well, including identifications.
See United States v. Villa-Velazquez,
