MEMORANDUM OPINION
Thе defendant in this criminal case has filed, by counsel, a motion for postconviction relief pursuant to 28 U.S.C. section 2255. In that the Court’s review of the mоtion in light of the files and records of the Court convince it beyond any question that the movant is not entitled to any relief in this Court, an order will be enterеd separately, summarily dismissing the motion, pursuant to Rule 4(b), Rules Governing Section 2255 Proceedings.
The defendant’s first argument is that his guilty plea to the offense of conspiracy was tainted and induсed by the fact that various potential witnesses against him were co-operators in an ongoing child pornography investigation in the District of New Jersey, who had been given or promised favorable treatment by federal prosecutors in exchange for their testimony. Citing the recent panel decision of the Tenth Circuit in
United States v. Singleton,
The Court, first, notes that the panel opinion in Singleton has been vacated. Thus, it is no longer of any authoritative weight at all. Furthermore, it never was, in my judgment, persuasive authority. Before it was vacated, the undersigned read that opinion, and he concluded that it was amazingly unsound, not to mention nonsensical, especially in its creation ex nihilo of an exclusionary rule barring testimony from virtually every cooperating federal witness. The chances of either or both the Fourth Circuit and the Supreme Court reaching the same conclusion as the Singleton panel are, in this Court’s judgment, about the same as discovering that the *522 entire roster of the Baltimore Orioles consists of cleverly disguised leprechauns.
The defendant’s second point is that he was denied effective assistance of counsel in the pretrial stage of the proceedings. He complains that the Maryland attorney who represented him pre-charging in New Jеrsey (the case having been transferred here for guilty plea to a criminal information pursuant to Fed.R.Crim.P. 20) was not competent in the early stаges of the investigation, when he allegedly gave Mr. Eisenhardt bad advice about cooperating in the investigation.
There is no Sixth Amendment conсern raised by this contention. The Sixth Amendment right to counsel does not attach until the initiation of formal criminal proceedings.
Kirby v. Illinois,
Thus, in that there is no indication that there was any violation of thе Sixth Amendment, and in that defendant does not claim the necessary Sixth Amendment predicates of incompetent advice and prejudice in connection with the
entry
of his plea of guilty to warrant relief under settled law,
see Hill v. Lockhart,
Finally, the defendant claims that the Sixth Amendment was violated when his retained attorney failed to advise him to pursue
certiorari
relief from thе Supreme Court after the Fourth Circuit affirmed on direct appeal. The Supreme Court has flatly held that no ineffective assistance claim under the Sixth Amendment is made out by a contention that counsel, retained or appointed, failed to pursue discretionary relief in the Suprеme Court.
Wainwright v. Torna,
For the stated reasons, an Order will be entered separately that summarily dismisses the present motion.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
In a Memorandum Opinion and Order thеreon entered July 30, 1998, this Court summarily dismissed the defendant’s Section 2255 motion pursuant to Rule 4(b), Rules Governing Section 2255 Proceedings.
The defendant has now filed аn “Amended Motion for Reconsideration,” directed only at so much of the Court’s disposition of his original motion as held that there was no viable claim of ineffective assistance of counsel in his counsel’s failure to advise him of his right to petition to the United States Supreme Court for certiorari.
The dеfendant points out that, although counsel who represented defendant in this Court was retained, counsel was appointed to represent the defendant by the Fourth Circuit on appeal, a fact hitherto unknown to this Court. (This Court is not advised by the Fourth Circuit of its actions in appointing counsеl to pursue appeals.)
Citing
Proffitt v. United States,
Proffitt
hеld that the district court considering a Section 2255 motion erred in holding that there was no duty on the part of counsel to inform the defendant of his right to sеek
certiorari
review and to prepare and file such a petition, on request. The Fourth Circuit, in
Proffitt,
remanded for a determination of whether the defendant was “denied effective assistance of counsel.”
This Court must seriously question the continuing validity of so much of
Proffitt, supra,
as requires appointed counsel in all cases to inform the indigent defendant of his right to petition for
certiorari
and to file such a petition, if requested. In
Austin v. United States,
This Court need not, however, decide whether the holding in
Proffitt
is still good law in light of
Austin.
Even if it were still good law, nothing in
Proffitt
holds that failure to seek or advise regarding collateral review is presumptively prejudicial, as distinguished from, for example, failure to prosecute an appeаl as of right.
Cf., Allen v. United States,
Thus, this Court concludes thаt, to have relief in this Court, the defendant must show prejudice from counsel’s failure to advise him of the possibility of certiorari review. Strickland v. Washington, supra. In this case, as appears conclusively from the record, see Rule 4(b), Rules Governing Section 2255 Proceedings, there was manifestly no prejudice to the defendant.
In its per curiam opinion disposing of Mr. Eisenhardt’s direct appeal without oral argument, the Fourth Circuit noted that the only issue presented for its review was the question of whether this Court had abused its discretion in refusing a downward departure in Mr. Eisenhardt’s sentence. Even if not legally frivolous within the opprobrium of Austin, a certiorari petition seeking review of the Fourth Circuit’s dеcision would undoubtedly have been doomed to failure. Given the nature of the underlying question and the Fourth Circuit’s disposition of it, the certiorari petition would have been dead on arrival at the Supreme Court, a conclusion with which no reasonable lawyer could disagree. Thus, there is no possibility of аny prejudice to Mr. Eisenhardt under these circumstances.
Accordingly, an Order will be entered separately, denying the defendant’s amended motion for reconsideration.
