CA8: Defense counsel not ineffective for not arguing that the law should be changed

Defendant in his § 2255 failed to show that defense counsel was ineffective for not arguing that he had a reasonable expectation of privacy in a hospital room. He cited no controlling case law. The law is unsettled on that at best, and no case from the Eighth Circuit is in point. Defense counsel is [essentially] not charged with being ineffective for not arguing that the law should be changed. New v. United States, 652 F.3d 949 (8th Cir. 2011):

This court has held that an attorney’s failure to anticipate changes in the law does not constitute constitutionally ineffective assistance. Parker v. Bowersox, 188 F.3d 923, 929 (8th Cir. 1999). Then in Fields v. United States, 201 F.3d 1025 (8th Cir. 2000), this court reached the same conclusion about unsettled issues. We denied relief to a § 2255 movant who argued that his attorney’s failure to object to the district court’s jury instructions deprived him of effective assistance of counsel. See id. at 1026. We noted that neither the Eighth Circuit nor the Supreme Court had decided whether the jury instructions at issue were adequate, and that two other courts of appeals had addressed the issue and come to contrary conclusions. We then said the following:

Given this split of authority at the time Fields was tried, and the complete lack of Eighth Circuit or Supreme Court authority on the subject, it must be said that counsel’s performance fell within the wide range of professionally competent assistance. … If counsel’s failure to anticipate a change in the law will not establish that counsel performed below professional standards, then counsel’s failure to anticipate a rule of law that has yet to be articulated by the governing courts surely cannot render counsel’s performance professionally unreasonable. Moreover, Fields has not directed our attention to Supreme Court or Eighth Circuit precedent (and our research has located none) that can be said to clearly portend the law … as Fields would have us state it.

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