Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge TATEL.
Appellant challenges his conviction for possession of more than fifty grams of cocaine base with intent to distribute, arguing that it was plain error for the trial court to admit certain expert testimony about intent, that he received ineffective assistance of counsel, and that the trial court improperly admitted as rebuttal evidence testimony regarding a pri- or arrest. Concluding that appellant has not shown prejudice from the admission of the expert testimony or from his counsel’s performance and that the district court did not abuse its discretion in allowing the rebuttal testimony, we affirm his conviction.
I.
Shortly after midnight, on December 6, 1993, a United States Park Police officer observed appellant Darryl Wayne Askew in the passenger seat of a car parked in front of Washington, D.C.’s Union Station. Another person entered the car and started to drive away with Askew still inside. Noticing that it had no front license plate, the police officer stopped the car. After obtaining the occupants’ names and running an information check on them, the officer returned to the car to arrest Askew. Askew stepped out of the ear and ran away. Several police officers eventually apprehended him, arrested him, and found in his possession 148.3 grams of cocaine base, five glass pipes, four lighters, and a pager. Askew was charged with one count of unlawful possession with intent to distribute 50 grams or more of cocaine base in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) and (b)(l)(A)(iii).
Askew was appointed counsel, Assistant Federal Public Defender Amy Seidman. Less than a week before trial, claiming dissatisfaction with Seidman, Askew requested a different attorney. Another attorney from the Federal Public Defender Office, Assistant Federal Public Defender Michael Wallace, who had spoken with Seidman about the case, was appointed to represent Askew. Wallace reviewed the case files on a Friday evening, met with Askew and Seidman for about an hour the next day, and then left town, returning the following Wednesday, the day before trial.
Testifying at Askew’s jury trial in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, the arresting officer described the circumstances of Askew’s arrest, noting that afterwards, Askew repeatedly stated that he “need[ed] a hit.” The prosecution also presented an expert witness who testified that in his opinion, the amount of cocaine base found in Askew’s possession was consistent with intent to distribute.
Askew’s theory of defense was that he possessed the cocaine base for his personal use, not for distribution. At trial, he testified that he had been addicted to crack cocaine for four or five years. He also asserted that he had obtained the cocaine earlier on the day he was arrested from two boys who were selling drugs in an alley. According to Askew, when a police car pulled up, he snatched the drugs from the boys and ran away. Askew’s fiancée testified on his behalf, stating that beginning in the summer of 1993 he began losing weight quickly, his appearance deteriorated, they stopped having sexual relations, and she noticed that money and jewelry were missing from her home.
Over the objection of Askew’s counsel, the prosecution called as a rebuttal witness a New Jersey state trooper who testified that he arrested Askew in New Jersey in 1989 on *1068 drug charges. Askew’s attorney, Wallace, was unaware that these charges had been dismissed as a result of a class action alleging trooper bias. The jury was never informed that the New Jersey charges were no longer pending against Askew.
The jury convicted Askew, and the district court sentenced him to a prison term of 121 months followed by five years of supervised release. Askew later sought to have his conviction vacated pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255, alleging that he had received ineffective assistance of counsel. After a hearing, the district court rejected his claims, and Askew now appeals.
II.
Askew argues for the first time on appeal that the district court committed plain error by admitting into evidence certain statements of opinion regarding intent by the Government’s expert witness. The expert, Metropolitan Police Detective Tyrone Thomas, testified that the amount of cocaine base found in Askew’s possession was enough to make 1,032 individual doses and that its street value exceeded $20,000. Detective Thomas also gave his opinion that possession of this amount of cocaine was consistent with an intent to distribute rather than with personal use. He stated, “My opinion would be that anyone who possessed the equivalent of 1,032 bags of crack cocaine would be in the business of selling drugs on the streets of Washington, D.C. or wherever for a profit.” He also testified, referring to a Government exhibit containing the cocaine, pipes, and lighters that had been found in Askew’s possession, “I believe that the 148 grams that are inside of here was intended to be sold on the streets of Washington for a profit for a drug dealer.” On cross-examination, Detective Thomas said, “[M]y opinion is that no one is going to possess the equivalent of 1,032 bags of crack cocaine for their personal use.” Askew argues that this testimony violated Federal Rule of Evidence 704(b), which provides:
No expert witness testifying with respect to the mental state or condition of a defendant in a criminal case may state an opinion or inference as to whether the defendant did or did not have the mental state or condition constituting an element of the crime charged or of a defense thereto.
Because Askew did not object to the admission of these particular statements at trial, we review for plain error under Rule 52(b) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. The Supreme Court has explained that Rule 52(b) allows for correction of a trial error not drawn to the attention of the court if an error is shown, the error is “plain” under current law, and the error affected substantial rights.
United States v. Olano,
For the district court’s admission of the challenged statements to be plain error, “it must ... have been error under settled law of the Supreme Court or this circuit” at the time of trial.
United States v. Mitchell,
In
Williams,
the prosecutor asked an expert witness whether a certain quantity and packaging of zip-lock bags “indicate anything in [the expert’s] opinion as to the
intentions
of the person who possessed those bags.”
Williams,
In
Mitchell,
the prosecutor asked an expert witness, “Now, what, if anything, does the packaging of that crack cocaine into nine individual ziplocks tell you about the intent of the person that was carrying those ziplocks?”
Mitchell,
In Askew’s case, Detective Thomas made one statement regarding intent that seems to fall somewhere between the facts of
Williams
and
Mitchell:
“[T]he 148 grams that are inside of here was intended to be sold on the streets of Washington for a profit for a drug dealer.” As in
Williams,
the statement appears to refer more to the object possessed than to the possessor, but, as in
Mitchell,
the statement lacked a corrective interjection by the judge. Detective Thomas’s statement seems, like the expert’s statement in
Williams,
not to point precisely to the defendant’s intent, but rather, in the words of the
Williams
court, “to answer a different question,
ie.,
for what purpose [was the cocaine] designed?”
Williams,
Although the question is close, we agree with the Government that at the time of Askew’s trial we had not clearly held that questions such as the one answered by Detective Thomas, framed so as not to refer to the intent of the actual defendant, are forbidden under Rule 704(b). Neither
Williams
nor
Mitchell
explicitly found impermissible testimony that, while linking an intent with certain contraband, did not go so far as to link intent with a specific person. Although we stated in
Williams
that such testimony would be “troubling” without a corrective interjection by the district court,
see Williams,
At any rate, we do not think that Askew has shown that admission of this statement “‘seriously affeet[ed] the fairness, integrity or public reputation of judicial proceedings.’ ”
Olano,
Askew also challenges two other statements by the expert: “anyone who possessed the equivalent of 1,032 bags of crack cocaine would be in the business of selling *1070 drugs on the streets of Washington, D.C. or wherever for a profit” and “no one is going to possess the equivalent of 1,032 bags of crack cocaine for their personal use.” Askew argues that, by “categorically excluding] everyone from intending personal use of these particular drugs, [Detective Thomas] ‘pointed directly’ to Askew’s mental state.” Reply Brief for Appellant at 12. Askew, however, cites no cases holding that Rule 704(b) renders impermissible expert testimony using categorical terms such as “anyone” or “no one.”
Although we are troubled by such testimony absent corrective instruction, we need not reach the issue here, for Askew has failed to show unfair prejudice from the admission of this testimony. As the Supreme Court explained in
Olano,
Rule 52(b) assigns to “the defendant rather than the Government ... the burden of persuasion with respect to prejudice.”
Olano,
III.
Askew also challenges the performance of his trial counsel as constitutionally ineffective on numerous grounds. To prevail on these claims, Askew must show that counsel’s performance was deficient, falling below “an objective standard of reasonableness” defined by “prevailing professional norms.”
Strickland v. Washington,
Askew first argues that counsel’s performance was deficient because he failed to request a continuance in order to obtain the services of an expert to testify that the amount of cocaine base found in Askew’s possession could be consistent with personal use. According to Askew, because Wallace knew that the prosecution planned to call an expert witness to testify that the amount of cocaine base found in Askew’s possession was consistent with an intent to distribute, Wallace should have either hired an expert to counter that testimony or asked the district court for a continuance until an expert was available to testify. At the section 2255 hearing, Askew’s first attorney, Seidman, testified that she had spoken with two experts; one was not willing to say that 148.3 grams of cocaine base was consistent with personal use, and the other told Seidman that it was possible that such an amount could be consistent with personal use but that his schedule would not permit him to participate in the trial. Testifying at the section 2255 hearing, Wallace said that he contacted several experts who told him that they could not testify in good faith that someone could consume such a large amount of cocaine base. Wallace also testified that, as a tactical matter, he generally avoided using such experts because he did not think that “they give a clear indication of what ... the mental state of the defendant is.”
A special filing by Askew in this appeal demonstrates why he has not shown that counsel’s failure to call an expert was unconstitutionally deficient performance. In the course of moving this court for leave to hire expert witnesses and to file their affidavits on appeal, Askew sought to justify his unusual request as follows:
[I]t appears that defense narcotic experts are not often called in this jurisdiction so it is difficult to put before the Court what they typically say. Counsel has also attempted to find such testimony in other reported opinions, which the Court could judicially notice, but has been unsuccessful.
Appellant’s Reply to Opp’n to Mot. for Leave to Hire Expert Witnesses at 1. We quote from this request in light of
Strickland’s
holding that “[t]he proper measure of attorney performance remains simply reasonableness under prevailing professional norms.”
Strickland,
Further weakening Askew’s claim is Wallace’s testimony setting forth a reasonable tactical basis for his decision: his doubts about the effectiveness of expert testimony regarding intent. Indeed, in light of Askew’s own testimony at trial that he stole the 148.3 grams of cocaine base from street drug dealers, Wallace may have anticipated that testimony by a government expert that 148.3 grams of cocaine base is consistent with an intent to distribute would not be especially harmful to Askew’s defense. Askew has thus not “overcome the presumption that, under the circumstances, the challenged action ‘might be considered sound trial strategy.’ ”
Id.
at 689,
Askew also bases his ineffective assistance claim on counsel’s failure to prepare to rebut the testimony of the New Jersey state trooper — in particular, counsel’s failure to discover that the New Jersey charges about which the trooper testified had been dropped by the time of Askew’s trial. At trial, when the Government sought to introduce the *1072 trooper’s testimony as part of its ease in chief, Wallace requested a thirty-day continuance, stating that he knew “absolutely nothing about” the New Jersey charge. Denying the continuance, the district court noted that the Federal Public Defender’s Office had been on notice of the New Jersey arrest for four months. Because the prosecution had given only two days’ notice of its intention to use the trooper’s testimony, however, the district court permitted the trooper to testily only in rebuttal.
In his testimony, the New Jersey trooper described the circumstances under which he had arrested Askew nearly five years earlier. According to the trooper, as part of a narcotics investigation in New Jersey, he interviewed three suspects who had been detained in a road stop on drug charges. With their assistance, Askew was lured to a service station where he retrieved from a car a bag containing a “chunky” substance. At the section 2255 hearing, Wallace testified that he learned after Askew’s conviction that the New Jersey case had been dismissed as a result of a class action alleging trooper bias. Although Askew’s first attorney, Seidman, testified that she thought she knew before or during the trial that the New Jersey charges had been dropped, the district court thought “[h]er testimony was not very confident on that point.”
Askew first attempts to satisfy the prejudice prong of Strickland by arguing that had counsel discovered that the New Jersey charges had been dismissed, the district court would have had to exclude the officer’s testimony. We disagree. Askew has offered no reason to think that his arrest was based on an improper search of his property or that the officer in his case lacked probable cause to arrest him. Regardless of whether probable cause supported the initial road stop that resulted in the arrest of the three suspects who eventually lured Askew to the service station, Askew has given us no reason to doubt that the three suspects’ statements to the trooper that they were transporting cocaine for Askew, combined with Askew’s retrieval of the bag containing the chunky substance from a car, were sufficient to establish probable cause to arrest him.
Notwithstanding the likely admissibility of the trooper’s testimony, Askew may still satisfy Strickland’s prejudice prong by demonstrating a reasonable probability either that, had the jury known that the charges had been dropped for trooper bias, it would have discounted the trooper’s testimony and determined that the prosecution had not shown beyond a reasonable doubt that Askew had the intent to distribute the cocaine base in his possession, or that, had the district court known, it would not have admitted the trooper’s testimony as rebuttal evidence and the jury might not have convicted Askew. We think Askew’s showing is not sufficient for either of these purposes.
Askew concedes that he “do[es] not know what Wallace would have found if he had investigated the New Jersey case.” Brief for Appellant at 26. The only relevant evidence in the record indicates simply that the case against Askew had been dismissed as part of a class action alleging trooper bias. Askew’s suggestions in his brief that the bias at issue was racial and that bias was present in his case in particular are unsupported by any record evidence. The most that the record shows is that his case was dismissed as part of a class action alleging bias on the part of troopers whose identities we do not know against plaintiffs whose identities we likewise do not know. If further investigation by Askew’s trial counsel would have shown that the very trooper who arrested Askew was racially motivated, Askew would have a powerful argument for Strickland prejudice. But further investigation might instead have shown simply that, in order to settle a large class action involving other officers, New Jersey officials agreed to drop an entire class of minor drug charges regardless of who the arresting officers were. If this latter reason were the basis for dropping the charges against Askew, then the district court might have admitted the trooper’s testimony, and the jury might have felt no need to discount it. Without more information about why the New Jersey charges were dropped, we cannot say that Askew has demonstrated a reasonable probability that further investigation by his attorney would have resulted in an acquittal.
*1073 In so ruling, we agree with the Seventh Circuit that to show prejudice, a defendant basing an inadequate assistance claim on his or her counsel’s failure to investigate must make
“a comprehensive showing as to what the investigation would have produced. The focus of the inquiry must be on what information would have been obtained from such an investigation and whether such information, assuming its admissibility in court, would have produced a different result.”
Sullivan v. Fairman,
Because we find that Askew has not demonstrated prejudice by virtue of counsel’s failure to discover that the New Jersey charges were dropped, we need not determine whether the performance of his counsel was deficient.
See Strickland,
At his section 2255 hearing, Askew offered several other arguments as to why he received ineffective assistance of counsel at trial. We are unconvinced by each. Askew’s assertion that Wallace did not spend enough time on his case does not in and of itself establish prejudice without some showing of how more time spent on his case might have influenced the outcome of the trial. Askew’s claim that Wallace’s failure to introduce into evidence a photograph showing Askew’s weight loss due to drug use does not rise to the level of deficient or prejudicial performance in light of other evidence at trial of Askew’s drug use, including his own testimony, his fianeée’s testimony, and the arresting officer’s testimony.
Finally, Askew now points for the first time to several other alleged instances of ineffective assistance. Because Askew failed to raise these claims in his section 2255 hearing, we deem them waived for purposes of this proceeding unless “the trial record alone conclusively shows that the defendant is entitled to no relief” or, to the contrary, that the defendant is entitled to relief.
United States v. Fennell,
We cannot evaluate Askew's remaining claims on the basis of the trial transcripts alone, for further inquiry into factual matters or potential tactical choices is necessary for each. For example, Askew points to Wallace's failure to object to the New Jersey trooper's reference to "contraband." But this may have involved a tactical choice; Wallace may have decided not to object to the New Jersey trooper's use of the term "contraband" because, having already objected to the trooper's use of the term "cocaine," he wished not to draw any more attention to the issue. Nor can we judge from the trial record alone Askew's claim that Wallace should have asked the district court to exclude any amount of cocaine base that Askew intended for personal use from the amount of cocaine used to calculate his sentence. The record does not indicate what portion of the cocaine base, if any, Askew intended to devote to personal use. Finally, although Askew argues that Wallace misunderstood the personal use defense, we cannot assess counsel's comprehension of the defense on the basis of the trial record alone. Following our practice in Fennel4 "we deem [these ineffective assistance claims] waived for purposes of this proceeding and will not remand." Id. at 1304.
rv.
We turn finally to Askew's argument that we should reverse his conviction because the trial court improperly admitted as rebuttal evidence the New Jersey trooper's testimony regarding Askew's 1989 arrest on drug charges. According to Askew, the trooper's testimony was not relevant because it did not constitute rebuttal evidence. In his brief, Askew points out that, because the district court made its decision to admit the evidence in chambers without transcription, we do not know the precise evidence that the prosecution expected the New Jersey trooper's testimony to rebut. Askew speculates that the only evidence it could have rebutted was his testimony that the cocaine base was for his own personal use. He then argues that because the trooper was not competent to testify that the substance allegedly being transported for Askew in the New Jersey case was cocaine-indeed, the district court struck from the record the trooper's reference to "cocaine"-the trooper's testimony about Askew's connection five years earlier with a chunky substance similar in appearance to the cocaine base he possessed in the present case could not rebut Askew's claim that he had no intent to distribute that cocaine base. According to the Government, by claiming that he obtained the cocaine base by snatching it from two young boys, Askew implicitly denied his involvement in drug trafficking; because evidence showing that Askew had formerly been arrested for picking up a container with a large quantity of a substance that looked like cocaine rebuts this implicit denial, it is relevant to Askew's intent to distribute the cocaine base.
Federal Rule of Evidence 402 states that "[ajll relevant evidence is admissible, except as otherwise provided." Rule 401 explains that evidence is relevant if it has "any tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of consequence to the determination of the action more probable or less probable than it would be without the evidence." We normally review a district court's relevance determinations for abuse of discretion. See Hamling v. United States,
Askew's claim fails under either standard. Because five years had passed and because the trooper was not competent to testify as to whether the substance for which Askew was arrested in New Jersey was in fact cocaine, the trooper's testimony was, as the district court noted, "thready or thin" and *1075 “[n]ot the strongest available testimony.” Nevertheless, a jury could make reasonable inferences from the trooper’s testimony that would make Askew’s denial of involvement in drug trafficking less likely. The district court thus did not abuse its discretion or commit plain error in admitting the trooper’s testimony as rebuttal evidence.
We affirm Askew’s'conviction.
So ordered.
