Opinion for the court by Circuit Judge HENDERSON.
Ronald Tavares appeals his conviction on one count of possessing lysergic acid diethyl-amide (LSD) with intent to distribute, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1), and the district court’s denial of his motion pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255 to vacate his resulting sentence. He does not challenge his conviction on a second count involving a smaller amount of LSD. He argues that he received ineffective assistance of counsel in that his trial counsel failed to take the proper steps to preserve his right to testify in his own defense, which right he relinquished due to his poor health during the trial. The district court applied the analysis set forth in
Strickland v. Washington,
I. FACTS
On June 12,-1991, in his Washington, D.C. apartment, Tavares sold 1,000 doses of LSD to William Denford (Denford), an undercover detective, for $1,000. Tavares and Denford subsequently agreed to a second transaction, in which Tavares was to give Denford cash and more LSD in exchange for marijuana, to take place the following week.
On June 21, Tavares and Denford met at a restaurant in Baltimore. During the course of their conversation, which was captured on audiotape, Tavares stated “I got plenty” of doses of LSD and “you get the lightning bolts and then there’s more of the green ying-yangs [sic]_green yangs just came in _ they laid a thousand at a time.” Tavares’s accomplice, Hans Howarth (Ho-warth), went outside with Denford and, at Tavares’s direction, gave the detective $3,750 and 100 doses of LSD in exchange for 17 pounds of marijuana. Denford and his fellow agents promptly arrested Tavares and Ho-warth.
Denford .and the other agents then returned to Washington to execute a search warrant for Tavares’s apartment. They discovered 141 doses of LSD configured in a “bug design” in Tavares’s bedroom and 8,440 doses in a yin-yang design hidden in a record album cover in the living room. Tavares was ultimately indicted by superseding indictment on one count of LSD distribution (for the June 12 sale) and one count of LSD possession with intent to distribute (for the LSD found in his apartment on June 21). 1
Problems developed with his appointed counsel, Robert Werdig (Werdig), almost immediately. As a result of Werdig’s failure to meet with him, Tavares asked for new counsel but withdrew that request after Werdig finally arranged a brief meeting. According to Tavares, he and Werdig agreed that he would testify but did not discuss his testimony. Werdig apparently attempted to build a selective prosecution defense but also put on some evidence of a straightforward exculpatory nature. For example, the only defense witness — Tavares’s girlfriend, Denise Helou (Helou) — testified that she had never seen record albums or a record player in Ta-vares’s apartment before and that Tavares’s younger brother and another man, Joe Johnson (Johnson), had unrestricted access to the apartment.
Before calling Helou, Werdig informed the court that Tavares “might wish to take the stand but that he could not do it today, that his state of physical well-being is not such that he feels strong enough to commence his *997 testimony at this time.” 2 App. 73. The court recessed for the day after Helou’s testimony. Tavares’s health grew worse overnight and by morning he felt physically unable to testify. Before court reconvened that morning, Werdig advised Tavares not to testify but did not advise him that he could seek a continuance until his health improved. Ta-vares agreed.
Werdig then informed the court that Ta-vares had decided not to testify and rested his case. Tavares was convicted on both counts. Tavares’s health continued to decline, requiring him to go to the hospital two days later. He suffered from a variety of symptoms and was diagnosed with an inflammation, and possible abscess, of his hip muscles. His doctor stated in an affidavit that in his opinion Tavares “would not have been well enough to focus and participate effectively” in his trial. App. 236.
II. DISCUSSION
Tavares argues that his counsel’s failure to take appropriate measures in light of his health problems effectively deprived him of his right to testify. As the district court correctly noted,
Strickland v. Washington,
Applying
Strickland’s
two-part analysis, Tavares argues that his trial counsel’s performance fell below an objectively reasonable standard and there is a reasonable probability that the outcome of his trial would have been different absent the deficiency.
Strickland,
Although not speaking in the context of an ineffective assistance of counsel claim, the Supreme Court has repeatedly emphasized the importance of the defendant’s testimony in his own defense.
See, e.g., Rock v. Arkansas,
We believe, however, that it would be unwise to adopt, as Tavares urges upon us, a rule under which defense counsel’s performance resulting in the denial of the defendant’s right to testily constitutes prejudice
per se.
In some cases, the defendant’s testimony would have no impact, or even a negative impact, on the result of his trial.
See, e.g., Payne,
To assess whether prejudice occurred in this case, we assume (as the district court’s order and the government’s brief do) that absent his counsel’s actions Tavares would have testified and that his testimony would have been as he describes in the affidavit accompanying his reply to the government’s opposition to his section 2255 motion.
See United States v. Green,
Even if Tavares could have contributed something new and substantive to his de *999 fense, the evidence of his guilt of possessing the 8,440 doses of LSD found in the record album in his house was so strong that there is no reasonable probability his testimony would have altered the outcome of the trial. For example, given Tavares’s own proposed admission that he sold 1,000 doses of LSD in a single transaction on June 12, it seems unlikely that the jury would have believed that the 141 doses found in his bedroom were his only supply. Most damning are Ta-vares’s recorded statements that he had a large supply of LSD and that he had just received a supply of LSD doses in the yin-yang design (the design of the 8,440 doses found in the record album cover) that had been produced by the thousand. It is not reasonably probable that the jury, having heard those statements, would have believed that the doses found in Tavares’s living room did not belong, at least jointly, to Tavares.
We conclude that given the facts of the case even the defendant’s own testimony would not have influenced the outcome of his trial. 7 Accordingly, Tavares’s conviction and the district court’s denial of his motion to vacate his sentence based on ineffective assistance of counsel are
Affirmed.
Notes
. He was tried in Maryland state court for the June 21 sale, was convicted and received a five-year suspended sentence.
. The district court had noticed that Tavares had been walking with a limp and asked “Is your leg all right? Can I do anything with respect to that?” App. 37. Tavares answered, "I have some problems with my bladder. I have a kidney infection and I have intestinal matters. It’s not really much that I can do besides maybe get a decent meal. I haven’t had a decent meal in four months.” App. 37.
. According to Tavares, on the first day of the trial Werdig advised Tavares not to testify “because he did not feel that [Tavares] could handle cross-examination and [Tavares’s] testimony could weaken his vindictive prosecution defense and jeopardize [Tavares’s] appeal.” App. 229. Tavares states that on the final morning of the trial Werdig again advised him not to testify "given [his] health and the additional time that the prosecutor had had (i.e., overnight) to prepare to cross-examine me.” App. 231.
.The district court similarly elected not to discuss defense counsel’s performance in its order denying Tavares’s section 2255 motion. App. 242. Because it determined the lack of prejudice was dispositive, it was not obliged to address the question of performance.
See Strickland,
. Tavares does not contest that whoever possessed the 8,440 doses of LSD violated the law, arguing instead that he was not that person. Appellant’s Br. 27.
. We note as well that Tavares's proposed testimony regarding the LSD found in his apartment has been revised on appeal. Tavares states in the affidavit he submitted to the district court that he would have testified that he "had no knowledge that any drugs were hidden in [his] house” and that he "did not know that LSD was hidden inside one of the albums (or anywhere else in [his] house).” App. 232. In keeping with his theory on appeal that he was only a small-time dealer, however, he now asserts that he would have admitted the 141 doses found in his bedroom were his and he knew they were hidden there. Appellant's Reply Br. 10 ("Mr. Tavares’s proffered testimony was not that he did not know about the 141 doses of LSD in his bedroom, but rather that he did not know that the 8440 doses were hidden in the album or that those doses were hidden anywhere else in the house.”).
. Tavares also argues that the district court should have held an evidentiary hearing to resolve factual questions. Because the district court assumed Tavares would have testified as he claimed when it ruled on his section 2255 motion, there was no need for an evidentiary hearing.
See Green,
