OPINION OF THE COURT
Defendants in criminal cases have a constitutional right to effective assistance of counsel (US Const 6th Amend; NY Const, art I, § 6). In
People v Baldi
(
L
A Nassau County jury found defendant guilty of murder in the second degree and criminal possession of a weapon in the second degree, for which the court sentenced him to concurrent prison terms of 25 years to life and 7V2 to 15 years.
At trial, the People introduced proof that defendant and an accomplice shot and killed Todd Biggins in a park in Uniondale. A park employee testified that just before the shooting she had seen the victim talking on a payphone alongside a park administration building. Shortly after the phone call, two men— defendant and an accomplice—walked past her, toward the victim. From a distance of five or six feet she watched defendant for about 25 seconds. She saw defendant and his companion pull out handguns and shoot the victim several times before fleeing by car. Several months later, she picked defendant out of *280 a photo array and a lineup. 1 She stated that, when killing the victim, defendant had a smirk on his face that she would “never, ever forget.”
The People also proved that, while searching the deceased’s room, police found a paper containing the name “Noey” and a phone number that police linked to defendant. 2 Further, by using a digital code, police identified the telephone number of the park payphone and learned that on the date of the murder three calls were placed from that phone to defendant’s beeper. Also, a police detective testified that several weeks after the shooting he saw a car parked in defendant’s driveway. The vehicle resembled the getaway car and was registered to defendant’s mother.
Shortly before trial, almost two years after the murder and about a year after defendant’s arrest, Michelle Dolberry told the Nassau County police that she had witnessed the killing and knew the shooter to be Anthony Anderson, and not defendant. She gave the police a signed, sworn statement to that effect and in a sworn videotaped account repeated it to the prosecutors. The prosecution turned this material over to defense counsel to whom Dolberry reiterated that Anderson was the killer. Anderson’s brother, she said, was with him at the time. Although Dolberry was in jail on an unrelated charge, both sides expected her to testify, and when authorities brought her into court, the trial judge assigned her a Legal Aid lawyer. She refused to testify, asserting her privilege against self-incrimination.
At that, defendant argued that Dolberry’s testimony was critical because it supported his claim of mistaken identity. The defense asked the prosecution to grant Dolberry immunity, urging that without her testimony defendant would be denied due process and a fair trial. The prosecutor, however, declined and, despite defense counsel’s protestations over the prospect of losing Dolberry as a witness, the trial court did not ask her why she felt in danger of self-incrimination. Ultimately, the court concluded that it could not compel her to testify. Defense counsel did not try to get Dolberry’s statements admitted into evidence.
*281
After the guilty verdict and sentence, defendant appealed his conviction to the Appellate Division. That Court affirmed (
In advancing his claim that appellate counsel was ineffective, defendant contends that this Court should apply the Baldi “meaningful representation” standard, and that appellate counsel did not meet it. We will consider these contentions in order.
The Standard for Evaluating Claims of Ineffective Assistance of
Appellate Counsel
In
People v Baehert
(
Now presented with the opportunity to review these claims, we must set the appropriate standard. We begin with the
*282
premise that defendants in criminal cases have a federal and state constitutional right to effective assistance of appellate counsel.
5
6 Twenty-three years ago, in
Baldi,
we went through a similar exercise when addressing claims of ineffective assistance of trial counsel and concluded that a “meaningful representation” criterion comports with both the Sixth Amendment and our own state constitutional sensibilities. The road to
Baldi
extended over several decades. Because that analysis leads us to the same result in fashioning a rule for evaluating appellate effectiveness, it is important to recognize some of the turns along the way. Equally important is that we have retained
Baldi
in preference to the federal
(Strickland v Washington,
Although appellate lawyers have increasingly challenged the effectiveness of trial counsel (as a basis for reversing convictions), the right to effective trial counsel is not new. 6 In the earliest such cases—late 19th and early 20th century decisions—a few courts addressed claims relating to counsel’s abject incompetency and, once in a great while (based generally on the court’s supervisory powers), ordered new trials. 7
In New York, we have long recognized the importance of adequate counsel in criminal cases
(see e.g. People v Silverman,
Finally, in
Baldi,
we departed from the “farce or mockery” test and articulated a new standard of “meaningful representation.” We recognized, in essence, that a criminal trial should be more efficient, and fairer, than one that rises just above the level of farce. But we have been careful to distinguish between true ineffectiveness and losing tactics or unsuccessful efforts in advancing appropriate defenses
(see People v Henry,
In
Strickland v Washington
(
From time to time, we have referred to the Strickland standard and measured counsel’s performance under it, 10 but have never applied it with such stringency as to require a defendant to show that, but for counsel’s ineffectiveness, the outcome would probably have been different. Under our Baldi standard, we are not indifferent to whether the defendant was or was not prejudiced by trial counsel’s ineffectiveness. We would, indeed, *284 be skeptical of an ineffective assistance of counsel claim absent any showing of prejudice. But under our Baldi jurisprudence, a defendant need not fully satisfy the prejudice test of Strickland. We continue to regard a defendant’s showing of prejudice as a significant but not indispensible element in assessing meaningful representation. Our focus is on the fairness of the proceedings as a whole.
Based in part on our State Constitution, this Court had decided Baldi three years before Strickland, and in two later cases 11 declined to abandon the Baldi standard for Strickland’s. 12 We now decide that we should apply the Baldi standard in connection with claims of ineffective assistance of appellate counsel.
To begin with, it is inapt to have one standard for trials and another for appeals. We are confident that the appellate courts will be able to apply the Baldi standard appropriately when dealing with allegations of appellate counsel’s ineffectiveness. Appellate courts are uniquely suited to evaluate what is meaningful in their own arena.
Allegations relating to trial counsel’s performance are difficult to measure based on a cold record. A trial lawyer’s decision to adopt one course or another often rests on strategies that cannot be gleaned from the record on appeal. For that reason, appellate courts usually can’t tell whether trial counsel’s approach was the result of a tactic that does not appear on the record. For example, to the uninitiated eye, it may appear that an attorney should have called a particular witness. Often, however, the trial record will not reveal that the attorney may have had a very good reason, known only to the defense, for not doing so. An appellate court cannot fault the attorney until after the nonrecord proof has been aired.
This is in contrast to appellate argument, which must be based on the record. The appellate court is eminently suited to evaluate appellate counsel’s product because the court examines *285 the very same record and ordinarily requires no proof beyond its four corners.
In delineating what is meaningful, however, it would be unwise and possibly misleading to create a grid or carve in stone a standard by which to measure effectiveness. Just as defense attorneys enjoy a wide latitude in defending clients at the trial level, appellate lawyers vary in style and approach. A lengthy brief may be a virtue in some instances but not in others. Some arguments properly emphasize two or three cogent issues while others may raise a multiplicity of claims. There can be no rules about these appellate tactics, but there are certain general guidelines. 13 Appellate advocacy is meaningful if it reflects a competent grasp of the facts, the law and appellate procedure, supported by appropriate authority and argument. Effective appellate representation by no means requires counsel to brief or argue every issue that may have merit. When it comes to the choice of issues, appellate lawyers have latitude in deciding which points to advance and how to order them. With that in mind, we turn to the claim before us.
Application of the Standard
On his direct appeal to the Appellate Division, defendant submitted a 53-page brief, prepared by two lawyers highly experienced in criminal law and appeals. Their brief reflects it.
In advancing their legal contentions, appellate counsel argued first that defendant’s constitutional right to a fair trial was violated by the prosecution’s refusal to grant immunity to Dolberry and the court’s failure to learn why she invoked the Fifth Amendment. They supported their contention with nine pages of compelling argument, citing relevant state and federal constitutional provisions and decisional law.
Second, and in comparable length and detail, they argued that the court erred in refusing to suppress defendant’s statements in which he revealed his nickname and pager number. The briefs contained pertinent case law dealing with Miranda, the pedigree exception, the commencement of judicial proceedings, the right to counsel and the test for what constitutes interrogation.
Third, defendant’s appellate counsel asserted that the court should not have admitted police hearsay testimony regarding *286 the telephone number of the payphone in the park. Fourth, they contended that the court prejudiced the jury by allowing it to learn of defendant’s aliases, and lastly, that the court should have suppressed the photographic and lineup identifications as unduly suggestive. All arguments were fortified by an abundance of authorities, statutes, record references and clear writing. 14
Notwithstanding these well-developed arguments, defendant asserts that appellate counsel should have attacked trial counsel as ineffective for not having tried to get Dolberry’s statements into evidence. We disagree.
People v Robinson
(
We agree with defendant that by invoking the Fifth Amendment Dolberry was “unavailable”
(see People v Settles,
Moreover, the circumstances under which Dolberry invoked her privilege against self-incrimination are highly suspect. It is fair to ask what possible reason she would have to invoke the privilege against self-incrimination. Incrimination from what? She was not a suspect in the murder and there is not the slightest suggestion that she could ever be even remotely answerable for it. The most obvious explanation is that she balked because she did not want to face perjury charges. That was the only crime for which she stood to incriminate herself.
*287 Given their aroma, the statements bore none of the reliability markings that qualify under Robinson. Trial counsel had no proper grounds on which to offer them and, more to the point, appellate counsel had no basis to castigate trial counsel for failing to advance a losing argument.
Dolberry’s statements were inadmissible and we are unwilling to assume that any trial judge, in the exercise of discretion, would have admitted them. Had trial counsel attempted to get the statements before the jury, he would undoubtedly have been rebuffed, and we cannot fault him for not trying. A defendant is not denied effective assistance of trial counsel merely because counsel does not make a motion or argument that has little or no chance of success.
We recognize that in making appellate arguments, attorneys must evaluate the performance of trial counsel and, when appropriate, raise claims of ineffective representation. Although it involves a kind of Monday morning quarterbacking, there are instances—unusual, to be sure, but on occasion merited—when trial counsel’s representation is derelict. The case before us involves a second layer of review, in which the Tuesday morning quarterback assails the Monday morning quarterback for not assailing the quarterback who actually played the game. While there may be instances in which a claim of this type will justify relief, 15 this is not one of them.
We have considered defendant’s other contentions and find them to be without merit.
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed.
Chief Judge Kaye and Judges G.B. Smith, Ciparick, Graffeo, Read and R.S. Smith concur.
Order affirmed.
Notes
. For several months after the killing, defendant was at large. He was apprehended when a police officer stopped him for a traffic violation and learned of the warrant for his arrest.
. After his arrest, defendant revealed his nickname, “Noey,” and his beeper number, which matched the one found in the deceased’s room.
. By that time, however, it had long been established that a defendant who by statute had an absolute right to appeal was entitled to assigned counsel (see
People v Hughes,
. See also
People v Claudio
(
.
See Anders v California,
.
See e.g. Glasser v United States,
.
See e.g. State v Gunter,
30 La Ann 536 (1878);
Roper v Territory,
. Other courts did as well (see
e.g. Commonwealth v Bernier,
359 Mass 13,
.
See e.g. People v Jones,
.
See e.g. People v Taylor,
.
See People v Benevento,
. Of course, in
Baldi
we did not create a state standard of ineffectiveness more difficult to prove than required under the Federal Constitution. In interpreting their own constitutions, states are free to provide greater protection than the Federal Constitution requires (see
California v Ramos,
. While there are American Bar Association guidelines for defense trial counsel (see e.g. ABA Standards for Criminal Justice 4-1.2 [3d ed 1993]), there are none for appellate counsel.
. Appellate counsels’ brief was a model of organization and clarity. It contains a CPLR 5531 statement, a two-page table of contents, a preliminary statement describing the proceedings below with a synopsis of the arguments to follow, a list of five “questions presented,” a 15-page factual statement with four headings and eight subheadings detailing the pretrial hearing and trial testimony, followed by 32 pages of legal argument covering five points. We do not suggest that presentations of this type (or defendant’s excellent brief on the appeal before us) are required to meet the “meaningful representation” standard. Obviously, many briefs will exceed it.
.
See e.g. Greer v Mitchell,
