ORDER
Andre Welch was found guilty by a jury of bank robbery, see 18 U.S.C. § 2113(a), and sentenced to 160 months in prison. After his conviction and sentence were affirmed on direct appeal, Welch filed a motion to vacate under 28 U.S.C. § 2255. He claimed that the federal public defender who represented him at trial was ineffective because he either mishandled a plea offer from the government or else failed even to pursue plea negotiations with prosecutors. After an evidentiary hearing, the district court denied Welch’s motion. The court found that the government had never proposed, and defense counsel had never solicited, a plea agreement, and that counsel for Welch had acted reasonably given Welch’s insistence on going to trial and the relative weakness of the government’s case against him. We' affirm the judgment.
Although no eyewitness identified him and no physical evidence at the bank tied him to the robbery, Welch was convicted in 2003 based on the testimony of his ex-wife, a former roommate, and a former coworker, all of whom identified Welch as the man in the grainy photographs taken by surveillance cameras at the bank. Welch’s direct appeal took a long time to resolve because Booker was decided while the case was pending. See United States v. Welch,
The district court conducted an eviden-tiary hearing to explore whether the 48-month plea deal had actually been offered and what, if any, discussions occurred between Chiphe and Welch regarding potential sentencing issues and the decision to go to trial. At the hearing, Welch contradicted the allegations in his pro se and counseled § 2255 motions. Now he testified that he never talked to Chiphe at all about the possibility of pleading guilty, despite his contrary descriptions of the allegedly mishandled 48-month plea deal. According to Welch, Chiphe never discussed with him potential sentencing scenarios, and, in particular, Chiphe never explained the possibility of getting credit for acceptance of responsibility if he pleaded guilty. Welch did concede, however, that he never told Chiphe he was interested in negotiating a plea agreement. And, despite his admission that he is familiar with plea negotiations after having entered guilty pleas in three previous cases, Welch also conceded that he never asked Chiphe about the possibility of pleading guilty nor did he tell Chiphe to contact the prosecutor to find out about a plea deal.
For his part, Chiphe testified that he and the prosecutor never discussed a possible plea agreement — 48 months or otherwise. From the very beginning, Chiphe recounted, Welch had vehemently maintained his innocence and had agreed with Chiphe that, given the weakness of the government’s evidence, the case could be won at trial. Chiphe explained that “Mr. Welch was never seriously contemplating pleading guilty,” and that all along their plan was to go to trial. Chiphe did not remember whether Welch ever specifically told him not to engage in plea discussions with the government, but he added that he “had a client who was telling me he was innocent, so, I mean, that’s kind of the same thing.” When Welch “told me he was innocent and told me he wanted to go to trial,” Chiphe continued, “I took that to mean that he did not want to plea[d].” Chiphe disputed Welch’s testimony that they did not discuss different sentencing scenarios; although he could not remember the specific dates, Chiphe confirmed that he engaged in extensive discussions with Welch about possible guidelines outcomes and their consequences, including his eligibility for an acceptance reduction under U.S.S.G. § 3E1.1. Chiphe explained that Welch was “well aware” of the possibility of guidelines adjustments based on obstruction and the uncharged robberies because he had been “very involved in the litigation of [his] case.”
The prosecutor corroborated Chiphe’s testimony. He explained that he never made a plea offer because it was his practice to wait for the defendant to approach him, which never happened in this case.
After the evidentiary hearing, Welch’s lawyers abandoned his allegations about a 48-month plea offer. Instead, in post-hearing submissions, Welch offered an entirely new legal theory: Chiphe’s failing was not that he mishandled a 48-month deal, but that he never initiated plea negotiations in the first place. The district court acknowledged this about-face when the judge rejected Welch’s claim of ineffective assistance and denied his § 2255 motion. The judge highlighted Welch’s shifting and contradictory assertions and determined, based on Chiphe’s credible testimony corroborated by the prosecutor, that there never had been a plea offer. Regarding Welch’s new theory that Chiphe should have initiated plea negotiations, the court concluded that Chiphe’s decision not to approach the government did not constitute deficient performance. Welch had maintained his innocence and
In this court Welch argues that Chiphe’s performance was deficient because, says Welch, the lawyer unilaterally decided not to initiate plea negotiations. In defining what he believes to have been counsel’s unfulfilled obligation, Welch insists that Chiphe either should have independently pursued a plea deal with the government or else conferred with him before deciding against that plán of action. On appeal from the denial of § 2255 relief, we review issues of law de novo and issues of fact for clear error. Bednarski v. United States,
Defendants have a constitutional right to effective assistance of counsel during plea negotiations. Hill v. Lockhart,
Under the circumstances, Chiphe’s decision not to initiate plea negotiations was reasonable and in accordance with Welch’s own insistence on going to trial. It is well-established, and Welch concedes, that counsel does not have an absolute obligation to pursue plea negotiations in every case. See United States v. Wells,
But there is no factual support for Welch’s contention. The district court credited Chiphe’s testimony and found that the lawyer had engaged in extensive conversations with Welch about trial strategy, different sentencing scenarios (including the possibility of receiving a reduction for acceptance of responsibility if Welch entered a plea), and the weaknesses of the government’s case. The court also found that, throughout these discussions, Welch adamantly maintained his innocence and consistently expressed his desire to have a trial. These findings deserve great deference, see Bednarski,
To the extent that Welch argues that Chiphe should have ignored his protestations of innocence and independently approached the government about a potential plea deal, his position is untenable. We do not require counsel to do that which is futile, and thus we would not mandate that counsel engage in the empty endeavor of negotiating a plea agreement for a client who has made it clear that he has no interest in entering a guilty plea. See Wells,
Because we agree with the district court that counsel’s performance was reasonable, the prejudice prong of Strickland falls away. We note, however, that even now Welch continues to insist that he is innocent, which makes it difficult to believe his assertion that he would have accepted a plea deal if Chiphe had negotiated one. See, e.g., Humphress v. United States,
Accordingly, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
