Defendant Scott Moree appeals from a sentence imposed pursuant to a judgment of conviction entered April 14, 1999 in the United States Court for the District of Connecticut (Aan H. Nevas, Judge), on his plea of guilty to counts of conspiracy to possess cocaine base with intent to distribute cocaine base, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 846, and illegal reentry into the United States after deportation, in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1326(a). On appeal, Moree contends that he was denied his Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel at his sentencing hearing because his appointed attorney was laboring under an actual conflict of interest resulting from the fact that Moree had accused him of coercing Moree’s plea and of ineffective representation. Moree, however, is not seeking to vacate the plea. He seeks only to be re-sentenced while represented by new counsel.
We affirm the judgment.
BACKGROUND
A. The criminal conduct charged
Defendant Scott Moree, an alien and citizen of Jamaica, was deported from the United States on May 12, 1995. Sometime thereafter he reentered the United States
After his illegal reentry, Moree became involved with a gang that sold drugs in Bridgeport, Connecticut. Wiretapped telephone conversations captured Moree participating in the conspiracy by agreeing to sell drugs to customers. On March 16, 1998, Moree was arrested after he sold a small quantity of cocaine to an undercover United States Marshall. By indictment, Moree was charged with- conspiracy to possess cocaine base with intent to distribute, as well as with distribution and possession with intent to distribute, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 846 and 841(a)(1). By separate indictment, Moree was charged with two counts of illegal reentry, in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1326(a).
B. Moree’s relationship with counsel prior to his plea
On March 17, 1998, counsel was appointed to represent Moree. On December 1, 1998, following several months of pre-trial proceedings, the district court ordered jury selection to commence on February 1, 1999, trial to begin immediately thereafter. On December 5, 1998, Moree wrote to Judge Nevas complaining that his counsel had failed to move for a speedy trial, which he characterized as “highly prejudicial;” Moree requested a “hearing to determine my attorney’s competency.” On the same date, Moree wrote to counsel, returning unsigned a form of waiver of speedy trial that counsel had previously sent him and requesting that counsel file instead a motion for speedy .trial. On December 15, 1998, counsel filed a motion for speedy trial on Moree’s behalf. On December 21, 1998, the court denied this motion. The court held no hearing to “determine [counsel’s] .competency” as Moree had requested.
On January 21, 1999, Moree filed a pro se motion seeking appointment of new counsel. In support of the motion, Moree argued that counsel had failed to seek a speedy trial; “failed to prepare the defense case properly;” had not forwarded papers to Moree; and had failed to discuss with him “strategic choices or possible defenses.” After receiving a copy of this motion, counsel filed a motion to be relieved.
On January 26, 1999, the court held a hearing on the issue of the effectiveness of counsel’s representation. At that hearing Moree informed the judge that counsel had visited him on only a single occasion in jail. He complained about and held counsel responsible for the slow progress of the case. Moree further complained that counsel was “incompetent,” “inefficient,” had not sent him any “paperwork” about his case and had not adequately explained the case to him. In response, counsel disputed these characterizations. While counsel conceded that he had visited Mor-ee only once at the jail, he informed the court that he had had meetings with Mor-ee at the courthouse cellblock. On one of these occasions, Moree met with -a voice identification expert whom counsel had hired, and they spent several hours preparing a voice authentication exemplar. Counsel also informed the court that he had played all of the wiretap tapes, had gone over all of the transcripts, and was “completely prepared to start trial” having “spent a lot of time preparing.”
The court found that counsel had “done everything that' [he was] required to do” and that Moree was “attempting to manipulate the court.” The court therefore denied both Moree’s motion for new counsel and counsel’s motion to be relieved.
C. The Plea Agreement and Allocution
The Assistant United States Attorney had previously faxed counsel a proposed plea agreement. Although counsel had mailed a copy of that agreement to Moree, Moree had not received it at his detention facility. However, on January 26, 1999, following the hearing mentioned above, counsel, the Assistant, and Moree met to discuss the terms of this agreement. Un
Moree then appeared before Magistrate Judge William I. Garfinkel, and pled guilty pursuant to this agreement. At allocution, Moree affirmed that he did not have any difficulty communicating with counsel, that his mind was clear, that he understood the applicable penalties, that he was satisfied with the representation he had received from counsel, and that he had been well-advised and understood everything. The court reviewed the terms of the plea agreement with Moree and determined that Moree understood those terms and the rights he was waiving by agreeing to plead guilty. The court also questioned Moree to make sure that he understood how the Guidelines applied and how they might affect his sentence. The court then assured itself that there was a factual basis for Moree’s plea and that Moree agreed with the government’s proffered evidence. While Moree contested certain details of the prosecutor’s proffer, relating to a count to which he did not plead, Moree affirmed that he had conspired to purchase and then resell the drugs. Based on the allocution, Magistrate Judge Garfinkel found that there was a factual basis for the plea and that Moree “enter[ed] the plea voluntarily, knowingly and of his own free will.”
D. Sentencing
Sentencing was scheduled for April 14, 1999, before Judge Nevas. The presen-tence report (“PSR”) prepared by the Probation Department originally recommended a sentence in the range 188 to 235 months’ imprisonment. This was the same range estimated in the plea agreement, and was based on the same assumptions, including that Moree was a career offender under U.S.S.G. § 4B1.1.
Prior to sentencing, however, the Probation Department discovered that the career offender designation was not appropriate. This was because one of Moree’s previous narcotics convictions occurred when he was under the age of 18, and the sentence was imposed more than five years before the commencement of the conspiracy in this case. Therefore, this prior conviction generated no criminal history points and could not serve as a career offender predicate. See U.S.S.G. §§ 4A1.2(d); 4B1.2(c) & cmt. 3. All parties then agreed that the original career offender designation was incorrect. The proper guideline range was determined to be 135 to 168 months’ imprisonment.
At the sentencing hearing, the court inquired of Moree whether he had had the opportunity to discuss the presentence report with his attorney. Moree embarked on a long, rambling response in the course of which he said that both his counsel and the prosecutor had told him that if he rejected the plea, he would be tried and his sentence could be much longer. He claimed that the prosecutor had told him that if he did not plead he would be “leaving the prison system in a body bag.” As a result, he claimed he started “getting all scared.” He claimed that his attorney had made the agreement with the prosecutor “behind my back” and that “I don’t really deserve all this time because it’s like he never — ” He complained further that having pled to five grams, he should not be
Moree’s counsel made no response.
Counsel urged the court to grant Moree an adjustment for acceptance of responsibility and argued for leniency. There was no motion for downward departure. The court proceeded to sentence Moree to concurrent terms of 135 months’ imprisonment, the bottom of the applicable guideline range.
Defendant, pro se, filed notice of appeal. On appeal he is represented by new counsel.
DISCUSSION
Moree contends he was denied effective assistance of counsel at his sentencing, claims his counsel had a conflict of interest, and seeks a remand for resentencing with new counsel.
A defendant who claims, that he was denied effective assistance of counsel must ordinarily show that (1) his attorney’s performance fell below “an objective standard of reasonableness,” and (2) he suffered prejudice.
Strickland v. Washington,
While the Supreme Court originally articulated this more lenient standard in cases where the conflict arose between the interests of several co-defendants represented by a single defense counsel, see,
e.g., id.; Holloway v. Arkansas,
Because under
Cuyler
the defendant benefits from a presumption of the prejudice that he must affirmatively prove under
Strickland,
courts have noted the
Moree alleges that an actual conflict of interest existed between him and his counsel. First, Moree contends that when his counsel defended himself against Moree’s allegations of professional incompetence and neglect at the January 26 hearing, a conflict resulted. Moree contends that a further conflict arose at the sentencing hearing when Moree criticized counsel’s conduct at the time of Moree's plea bargaining. He contends counsel coerced his plea. Moree further contends that this conflict resulted in several lapses in representation, including failure to discern that Moree was not chargeable under the career offender guideline, failure to move for a downward departure and failure to file a notice of appeal. He claims he was denied effective assistance of counsel at his sentencing hearing.
In support of his claims Moree relies heavily on our decision in
Lopez v. Scully,
In
United States v. White,
On appeal from his sentence, relying on
Lopez,
White alleged that an actual conflict of interest had arisen when his attorney was faced with the choice of defending herself against White’s allegations of professional incompetence or supporting White’s requests for substitute counsel, thereby “subjecting herself to liability for malpractice.”
White,
We disagreed and affirmed the sentence. We noted that such disputes between defendant and counsel are commonplace and “often culminate in a defendant’s request for substitute counsel.” Id. at 296. We made clear that “an actual conflict of interest” does not necessarily arise every time that an attorney responds to allegations of incompetent representation or contradicts his client in open court. See id. Recognizing that a trial court has the obligation to enquire into the basis of substantial complaints regarding counsel’s performance, we declined to adopt a broad rule that would give a defendant the unilateral power to establish a “conflict of interest” simply by “expressing dissatisfaction with his attorney’s performance.” Id. We concluded that under these circumstances the Strickland standard, requiring an affirmative showing of both objectively unreasonable performance and prejudice, remained the appropriate measure of counsel’s effectiveness. See id. at 296.
In
White,
we distinguished
Lopez
by indicating that “crucial” to the finding of a conflict in that case was Lopez’s claim that his attorney had “coerced him into pleading guilty.”
White,
Defendants for whom attorneys have been appointed under the Criminal Justice Act very commonly complain to the court in the early stages of the representation in an effort to have a new attorney appointed. It is commonplace for such a defendant to allege that the attorney is not paying sufficient attention to his case, has not come to see him in prison, has not undertaken sufficient investigation, is not making necessary motions, is not calling witnesses, or is trying to induce the defendant to plead guilty. If the mere making of such an accusation, regardless of lack of justification,
ipso facto
resulted in a conflict of interest because the attorney cannot defend himself without contradicting his client, district courts would lose control of the criminal cases before them. Defendants represented by appointed attorneys would effectively be able to change attorneys at will. Judges could be prevented from starting trials, and trials conducted by an attorney who had been previously accused of such dereliction would be sub
Moree contends that, like the defendant in Lopez, he has demonstrated an actual conflict of interest. Analysis of Moree’s charges in the light of Lopez and White, however, leads us to conclude that they did not place the lawyer in a conflict of interest. This is clearly so as to Mor-ee’s prerpleading complaints (reviewed in Part B above) that counsel failed to move for speedy trial, failed to prepare adequately, failed to forward papers, and failed to discuss strategic choices, etc. Those allegations clearly fall within the category identified by White as not creating a conflict of interest, and not within the Lopez category of having coerced or improperly induced the defendant’s plea.
We reach the same conclusion for different reasons as to Moree’s accusation made at the sentencing hearing about the circumstances of his' plea. In
Lopez,
the defendant accused his attorney of having procured his plea through ‘“threats and coercion and misinformation.’ ”
Lopez,
While Moree unquestionably was expressing unhappiness, he did not accuse his attorney of misconduct, much less of having coerced his plea. Although the words “behind my back” seek to impart a pejorative implication, defense attorneys conventionally discuss the prosecutor’s offer of a plea agreement out of the defendant’s presence. That is not misconduct. That the attorney advised him to take the offer and warned him that his failure to do so would lead to a thirty year sentence merely asserts that the lawyer gave professional advice as to what the consequences of his choice might - be. The defendant’s statement that he was “scared” is understandable, but is not attributed to any misconduct of his attorney. Counsel was not obliged, as in Lopez and Ellison, to choose between accusing himself of misconduct or defending himself against his client’s accusations at the cost of undermining his client’s motion to have his plea set aside. This is for two reasons. The first is that, as noted above, counsel was not accused of misconduct. In fact, at the sentencing hearing the attorney said nothing to rebut Moree’s claims. The second reason is that when Moree made these statements about his attorney, he was not applying to the court for revocation'of his plea. Thus, even if counsel had contradicted any of Moree’s assertions, he would not have been hindering his client’s application for relief.
We conclude that Moree has failed to demonstrate that his lawyer had a conflict of interest at his sentencing. Moree’s claim is one of ineffective assistance of counsel and is assessed under the Strickland standard. Moree has failed to show either that his attorney’s conduct fell below an objective standard of reasonableness or that he suffered prejudice.
The judgment of conviction is affirmed.
