Virgilio and Santo Ruiz were convicted in 1994 on four charges stemming from a fire that burned down their business in Boston, Massachusetts, in 1990. The brothers now challenge their convictions on the basis of new evidence that Virgilio uncovered in 2000 that had been in the possession of the Boston Police Department. The District Court reviewed and rejected their pro se § 2255 motion, containing an ineffeсtive-assistance-of-counsel claim. The Court also considered a later-filed motion (of an ambiguous nature) as both a § 2255 motion and as a motion for a new trial pursuant to Rulе 33 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. The Court concluded that it was time-barred regardless of its form. The Court went on, however, to address the substantive arguments raised in the motion and determined that they were without merit because the new evidence was not significant enough to raise any doubt about the defendants’ convictions. We affirm on the merits.
I.
The defendаnts, Virgilio Ruiz and Santo Ruiz, are brothers who owned and operated a clothing store. The store burned down under suspicious circumstances, and two-and-a-half years later the brothers wеre indicted and convicted of conspiracy, use of a fire to commit a felony, arson, and mail fraud. 18 U.S.C. §§ 371, 844(h)(1),
*41
844(i), 1341. The facts of the case have been thoroughly recited elsewhеre.
See United States v. Ruiz,
The defendants then filed a pro se § 2255 motion in May of 1998. They argued that they had received ineffective assistance from their attorneys. For the most part, their claims second-guessed their attorneys’ tactical decisions at trial. As this motion worked its way through the system, Virgilio Ruiz searched for exonerating evidence.
Virgilio filed a public records аct request with the Boston Police Department at the end of 1999. He received a response at the beginning of 2000, in the form of a report, which proved that there had been a gas leak at the business on June 1, 1989, when the business was owned by the defendants’ brother, Rafael Ruiz. The report would have been useful during the defendants’ trial — it bolstered the defendants’ theory that а gas leak might have caused the fire that destroyed their business. Additionally, the defendants would have been able to counter the testimony of a representative of the gas company who had contradicted the defendants by testifying that the company had no records from the prior six years of ever visiting the store because of a gas leak. In reliance on this new evidence, defendants filed a joint motion to expand the record on November 30, 2000. The District Court decided that the motion was really some sort of motion for a nеw trial and appointed attorneys to represent the defendants from then on.
In its thorough memorandum and order,
Ruiz v. United States,
The District Court went on to consider whether the absence of the police report prejudiced the defendants. It did not, the Court concluded, because the evidence against the defendants was so strong that the report would not have made a difference,
i.e.,
it did not satisfy the second requirement of the
Strickland
test.
Strickland v. Washington,
The District Court then analyzed the status of the defendants’ joint motion, which had been filed after the discovery of the police report in 2000. Because the motion focused on the effect the new evidence hаd on the case, the District Court *42 decided that it was, more likely than not, a Rule 33 motion. Fed.R.Crim.P. 33. To be thorough, the Court also considered whether the motion could be successful if treated as a § 2255 motion.
In either case, the Court said, the motion would be time-barred. The defendants attempted to circumvent this problem by arguing that the statute of limitations that applied to their motion was tolled on various grounds. The District Court rejected all three proffered grounds for tolling.
The District Court also addressed the substantive question of whether the newly discovered evidence could have any effect on the defendants’ convictions. Under either § 2255 or Rule 33, the defendants had to show that the uncovering of the report warranted a new trial.
Barrett v. United States,
II.
We have two issues before us. The first is whether the defendants’ § 2255 motion (the ineffective-assistance motion) had any merit. The second issue is multi-tiered. It consists оf three questions: what kind of motion was the joint motion; was it timely; and, if we reach its merits, does it warrant granting a new trial? We do not have to engage in a detailed discussion of all the questiоns raised by these two issues. The District Court has already done so. Instead, we note that both issues share the requirement that the report have a certain significance relative tо the evidence that convicted the defendants.
A. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
The question of ineffective assistance of counsel is a mixed question of fact and law.
Gonzalez-Soberal v. United States,
The report was not so significant as the defendants claim. At the time of trial, the defendants already had a Boston Fire Department document saying that firefighters had responded to a reported gas leak at the store on June 1, 1989. To the extent that the police report proved the same, it was cumulative evidence.
Additionally, there is a host of evidence that the brothers started the fire. The insurance agent who sold them their policy indicated that when the brothers obtained insurance on the building they expressed an unusual interest in how claims would be processed and paid by the insurance company. Two weeks before the fire, Santo Ruiz stopped setting the alarm, which *43 would have alerted the authorities to a fire. A government expert testified that the fire started in two places inside the store simultaneously, which is inconsistent with the theory that a gas leak caused the fire. An expert also said that an acceler-ant, such as gasoline, played a role in the fire. And there was no evidence pointing to an electrical or gas failure as the source of the fire. Finally, a government witness testified that there was reason to think that the store’s contents had been removed before the fire started.
We agree with the District Court that the cumulative weight оf this evidence is overwhelming. The defendants cannot prevail on this claim because, even if their counsel had been remiss in their duties, the introduction of evidence of a gas leak eighteen months before the fire would not have been enough to undermine confidence in the outcome of this case.
B. The Joint Motion
The joint motion suffers from the same problem.
Brady
claims are subject to the same prejudicе requirement as ineffective-assistance claims.
See Strickland,
The judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. Both defendants have served their sentences. Santo Ruiz has been deported. Virg-ilio Ruiz remains in the country in the custоdy of the INS pending the outcome of this appeal.
. The defendants also raise a Brady due-process claim. Assuming we could consider the Brady argument on its merits, it would fail for the same reason the ineffective-assistance claim must fail — the absence of prejudice under the applicable legal standard.
