The government appeals the grant of Kevin Riggs’s motion for collateral relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2255. Concluding that the district court abused its discretion by equitably tolling the statute of limitations for Riggs’s untimely motion, we reverse and dismiss the § 2255 motion.
I.
A.
In 1991, the police suspected Riggs and associates of drug trafficking and lured Riggs and John Jackson from their motel room based on the statements of Riggs’s associates that these two men possessed several grams of cocaine. Riggs got behind the wheel of their ear, and Jackson placed an object in the trunk. Riggs then slowly drove the car toward the motel lobby, with Jackson walking alongside. As the police approached the car, Riggs leaned toward the passenger-side floor as if to place something on or retrieve something from the floor.
The police arrested both men. A search of the car yielded seventy grams of cocaine from the trunk, a pistol from the underneath the passenger-side floor mat, and some pills scattered throughout the car.
Riggs was charged with, and convicted by a jury of, possession of cocaine with intent to distribute in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841 and using and carrying a firearm during a drug trafficking crime in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c). 1 The court sentenced him to 121 months’ imprisonment for the possession count and 60 months for the § 924(c) count, with the sentences to run consecutively. In 1994, we affirmed in an unpublished opinion.
*798 B.
In 1996, Riggs retained George Higgins III to file a motion for collateral relief under § 2255. Higgins never filed the motion; Riggs and Higgins dispute why. According to Higgins, he advised Riggs that they should challenge the § 924(c) conviction based on the intervening decision in
Bailey v. United States,
Riggs eventually retained new counsel and filed a § 2255 motion in December 2001, nearly five years after the limitations period expired. The Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (“AEDPA”), Pub.L. No. 104-132, 110 Stat. 1214 (1996), imposed a new, one-year statute of limitations on § 2255 motions. Because his conviction was final before the enactment of AEDPA, Riggs had a one-year grace period to file his § 2255 motion.
United States v. Flores,
The district court nevertheless granted the motion and vacated Riggs’s § 924(c) conviction. The court found that Higgins erred by advising Riggs “of the wrong time for filing his § 2255 motion.” It concluded that this “incorrect legal advice” amounted to ineffective assistance of counsel and warranted equitable tolling of the limitations period. The court granted the motion on the merits, apparently concluding that a reasonable jury would not have convicted Riggs of the § 924(c) count if given a proper, postrBailey instruction. 5
*799 II.
The government argues that the district court should not have equitably tolled the statute of limitations because Riggs has alleged, at worst, attorney error or neglect, which is not grounds for equitable tolling. Although we review a decision to invoke equitable tolling for abuse of discretion,
Fierro v. Cockrell,
Equitable tolling is permitted only “in rare and exceptional circumstances.”
Davis v. Johnson,
This holding was long implied in our caselaw and should not be surprising. As we noted in
Cousin,
a prisoner has no right to counsel during post-conviction proceedings.
Id.
at 849 (citing
Coleman v. Thompson,
The record contains no evidence that Higgins intentionally deceived Riggs about the statute of limitations for § 2255. The evidence is conflicting on why Higgins did not file the motion in 1996. Riggs asserts that Higgins misunderstood the statute of limitations, whereas Higgins asserts that Riggs refused to let him file the motion. Even if we accept Riggs’s version, 8 though, he merely asserts that Higgins committed a very basic and unprofessional error, not that Higgins intentionally *800 deceived him. Moreover, the district court, speaking as it did of Higgins’s being “ineffective in advising him” and offering “incorrect legal advice, apparently believed that Riggs had requested equitable tolling based on mere attorney error.” Finally, Riggs confirms, in his brief, the lack of evidence of intentional deceit; he can muster only a very tepid and conclusory assertion that Higgins’s statements “were possibly a deception.” 9
Riggs’s assertions, if proven, may warrant professional discipline against Higgins, but they do not warrant equitable tolling of the statute of limitations under our precedents. The district court abused its discretion by finding otherwise. The order granting the § 2255 motion is REVERSED, and the § 2255 motion is DISMISSED.
Notes
. Riggs also was charged with, and convicted by a jury of, conspiracy to possess cocaine with intent to distribute in violation 21 U.S.C. § 846, but the court granted Riggs's motion for acquittal on this count.
. In
Bailey,
the Court held that the “use” offense of § 924(c) requires “active employment” of a firearm, not “mere possession.”
Bailey,
. Riggs also asserts that he wrote repeatedly to Higgins, but Higgins denies receiving any letters from Riggs. Riggs also filed a complaint against Higgins with the state bar disciplinary office. The complaint and Higgins's response are in the record, and we have followed the lead of the parties in using them to describe Higgins's conduct and the dispute between Riggs and Higgins.
. Although the Supreme Court did not apply
Bailey
retroactively until
Bousley v. United States,
. The district court seemed concerned that the evidence suggested an equally plausible and innocent inference, namely, that Riggs reached toward the passenger-side floor to hide the pills, not to get the pistol (and thereby reveal his knowledge of its presence), and that Jackson was acquitted of the § 924(c) count. Although we do not reach the merits of Riggs's motion, we observe that a jury concluded that the evidence proved that Riggs was reaching for the pistol and that Jackson was walking outside the car when arrested. Furthermore, we note that, even if Riggs’s jury instruction was defective under Bailey, *799 this error was susceptible to harmless-error review.
.Fierro
involved a petition for a writ of habe-as corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, not a motion of collateral relief under § 2255, but AEDPA added similar one-year statutes of limitations to both sections, which we interpret similarly for the purpose of an equitable doctrine like equitable tolling.
Davis v. Johnson,
. A district court's error in unintentionally misleading a petitioner about the statute of limitations warrants equitable tolling,
United States v. Patterson,
. We do have some reason to accept Riggs's version. In his response to Riggs's complaint with the state bar disciplinary office, Higgins stated that he “believe[d] that the Bailey motion is still a viable motion to be filed on behalf of [Riggs].”
. Riggs also argues that he is actually innocent of the § 924(c) count because the allegedly defective jury instruction did not ensure that the jury convicted him of every element of the crime. More to the point, he argues that actual innocence warrants equitable tolling. The court, however, did not base equitable tolling on this argument. Moreover, "a petitioner’s claims of actual innocence are [not] relevant to the timeliness of his petition.”
Cousin,
