Joseph Perrone v. United States ( 2018 )


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  •                               In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    ____________________
    No. 16-2437
    JOSEPH PERRONE,
    Petitioner-Appellant,
    v.
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Respondent-Appellee.
    ____________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the
    Southern District of Illinois.
    No. 3:14-cv-00281-DRH — David R. Herndon, Judge.
    ____________________
    ARGUED JANUARY 4, 2018 — DECIDED MAY 14, 2018
    ____________________
    Before WOOD, Chief Judge, and HAMILTON and BARRETT,
    Circuit Judges.
    BARRETT, Circuit Judge. Terry Learn died after Joseph Per-
    rone injected her with 7.5 grams of cocaine. Perrone pleaded
    guilty to a single count of unlawful drug distribution and
    stipulated that his distribution of the cocaine had caused
    Learn’s death. In accordance with Perrone’s plea agreement,
    the district court applied a statutory sentencing enhance-
    ment that mandates a twenty-year minimum term of impris-
    2                                                  No. 16-2437
    onment if unlawful drug distribution results in death. The
    Supreme Court has since clarified that this provision re-
    quires a defendant’s drugs to be a but-for cause of the death,
    not merely a contributing cause. Perrone filed a petition for
    relief under 
    28 U.S.C. § 2255
     on the ground that the Court’s
    narrowed interpretation of the enhancement reveals that he
    is actually innocent of causing Learn’s death. In addition, he
    asserts that his counsel was ineffective for failing to advise
    him of a Seventh Circuit case decided on the day before his
    sentencing that interpreted the “death results” enhancement
    the same way that the Court ultimately did. He claims that if
    he had known that the enhancement required the govern-
    ment to show that his cocaine was the but-for cause of
    Learn’s death, he would have sought to withdraw his plea.
    The district court denied Perrone’s petition, and we affirm its
    judgment.
    I.
    At approximately 4 a.m. on April 17, 2008, Terry Learn
    and her coworker Madonna Narog went to Narog’s hotel
    room, where they did heroin and cocaine for several hours.
    They left the hotel around 8 a.m. to purchase more cocaine,
    about fifty dollars’ worth for Learn and twenty-five dollars’
    worth for Narog. They returned to the hotel and did cocaine
    until close to noon, when Learn left for her shift at Roxy’s
    Night Club. Narog saw Learn again around 2 p.m., when
    Narog went to the club to pick up some money, and again at
    8 p.m., when Narog was beginning her shift and Learn was
    ending hers.
    After her shift, Learn met her boyfriend, Joseph Perrone,
    and went back to his home. According to Perrone, the two
    made a suicide pact. After watching Learn inject herself with
    No. 16-2437                                                  3
    a mixture of cocaine and water, Perrone told her that she had
    not taken enough to kill herself. He then prepared and in-
    jected 7.5 grams of cocaine into Learn. Perrone later told the
    police that Learn convulsed, fell to the floor, and died im-
    mediately after he injected her for the last time. He did not
    specify the time at which he administered the final injection,
    but he said that it happened on April 18th. It was therefore at
    least four hours after Narog saw Learn at the shift change
    and at least twelve hours after Narog last saw her do any
    drugs not distributed by Perrone.
    Perrone moved Learn’s body to her apartment. He wiped
    his fingerprints off the syringe and put it into Learn’s hand.
    As he stipulated in his plea agreement, he aimed “to create
    the false impression that Terry Learn had died alone in her
    own residence.” The body was not discovered until April
    26th, when a concerned neighbor flagged down police to re-
    port that she had not seen Learn in several days. Police offic-
    ers discovered Learn’s body in her apartment. According to
    the coroner’s report, the cause of death was “[c]ombined tox-
    icity with cocaine, ethanol and opiates.”
    Several months later, Perrone was arrested on an unrelat-
    ed firearms charge. He chose that time to confess to police
    that he had killed Learn, describing what he had done as
    “premeditated murder.” During this interview, he told the
    police that he gave Learn one injection of an unspecified
    amount of cocaine; during a second interview a few weeks
    later, he said that he injected Learn with 7.5 grams of cocaine
    in three separate injections of 2.5 grams each.
    The government obtained an indictment against Perrone
    for distributing a controlled substance in violation of 
    21 U.S.C. §§ 841
    (a)(1) and 841(b)(1)(C). The indictment specified
    4                                                   No. 16-2437
    that Learn died as a result of Perrone’s distribution, which, if
    proved, would enhance his statutory sentencing range under
    § 841(b)(1)(C). That provision mandates a twenty-year min-
    imum sentence if “death or serious bodily injury results
    from the use” of the unlawfully distributed substance.
    Perrone pleaded guilty. In his plea agreement, he admit-
    ted that his conduct had violated the “death results” provi-
    sion—namely, he stipulated that “the ingestion of the con-
    trolled substance distributed by the Defendant caused the
    death of another person.” He also signed a stipulation of
    facts admitting that he “injected Terry Learn with a syringe
    containing cocaine” and that she “died immediately after
    receiving the injection.” At his plea hearing a few weeks lat-
    er, Perrone stated that he had read the documents, that he
    understood them, and that they were accurate.
    On the day before Perrone was sentenced, the Seventh
    Circuit decided United States v. Hatfield, 
    591 F.3d 945
     (7th Cir.
    2010), which held that the “death results” enhancement re-
    quires the government to prove that “ingestion of the de-
    fendants’ drugs was a ‘but for’ cause of the death[].” 
    Id. at 948
    . Hatfield rejected jury instructions that used vaguer, less
    demanding language to describe the necessary causal rela-
    tionship; it said that the district court could not summarize
    the “death results” enhancement as requiring the jury to find
    only that the illegal drugs “played a part” in the victim’s
    death. 
    Id. at 949
    .
    At sentencing the next day, the district court applied the
    “death results” enhancement and sentenced Perrone to 240
    months’ imprisonment. Before imposing the sentence, the
    district judge said that he had reviewed Perrone’s Stipulation
    of Facts to see “what impact, if any, the Rex Hatfield case
    No. 16-2437                                                   5
    was going to have on this case.” Perrone’s attorney did not
    engage this point with the judge, nor did he inform Perrone
    about Hatfield. Instead, he once again agreed that the sen-
    tencing enhancement applied. Perrone did not appeal his
    sentence. He eventually received an 80-month reduction of
    his sentence for assistance to the government, a possibility
    contemplated by the plea agreement and that Perrone and
    the district court had discussed at his sentencing hearing.
    Four years later, the Supreme Court decided Burrage v.
    United States, 
    134 S. Ct. 881
     (2014), which effectively ratified
    Hatfield’s standard of causation. The Court held that the
    “death results” enhancement ordinarily requires the gov-
    ernment to prove that the victim would have lived but for
    the unlawfully distributed drugs. 
    Id. at 888
    . In Burrage, the
    victim died with multiple drugs in his bloodstream, includ-
    ing metabolites from heroin that had been distributed by the
    defendant. Although morphine, a heroin metabolite, was the
    only drug present at a level above the therapeutic range, the
    government’s experts could not say whether the victim
    would have lived if he had not taken the heroin. They testi-
    fied only that heroin was a “contributing factor” to a death
    caused by “mixed drug intoxication.” That testimony dove-
    tailed with instructions requiring the jury to find “that the
    heroin distributed by the Defendant was a contributing
    cause of [the victim’s] death.” 
    Id. at 886
    . The Court said that
    the statute requires the government to show more than that
    the distributed drug contributed to the victim’s death. The
    enhancement applies when “death or serious bodily injury
    results from the use of [the distributed] substance,” which
    means that the substance must be a “but for” cause of the
    death. 
    Id.
     at 887–88.
    6                                                   No. 16-2437
    Within a month of Burrage, Perrone filed a petition to va-
    cate or alter his sentence pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 2255
    . His
    initial petition asserted that the new interpretation of the
    “death results” enhancement announced in Burrage renders
    him actually innocent of causing Learn’s death. In his reply
    brief below, Perrone added a claim that his attorney had
    been constitutionally ineffective for not telling him about
    Hatfield.
    The district court dismissed Perrone’s claims with preju-
    dice. We granted a certificate of appealability on three ques-
    tions: whether Perrone was actually innocent of his sentence
    under Burrage, whether Perrone’s sentencing counsel had
    been constitutionally ineffective for failing to address the is-
    sue of causation in light of Hatfield, and whether Perrone’s
    plea was knowing and voluntary. Perrone presses only the
    first two of these arguments on appeal.
    II.
    Perrone’s strongest argument is that he is actually inno-
    cent of the “death results” sentencing enhancement. He
    claims that when he entered his plea agreement and pleaded
    guilty, he did not know that the enhancement required but-
    for causation. Since then, Burrage has made the standard
    clear, and under it, he says, there is insufficient evidence to
    show that Learn’s death resulted from the cocaine he gave
    her. Although Perrone generally waived his right to raise col-
    lateral challenges, the waiver excludes collateral attacks
    based on “any subsequent change in the interpretation of the
    law” by the Supreme Court that is declared retroactive and
    renders Perrone innocent.
    No. 16-2437                                                     7
    A.
    The government contends that Perrone procedurally de-
    faulted his Burrage claim by failing to raise it on direct ap-
    peal. McCoy v. United States, 
    815 F.3d 292
    , 295 (7th Cir. 2016)
    (“A claim cannot be raised for the first time in a § 2255 mo-
    tion if it could have been raised at trial or on direct appeal.”).
    In response, Perrone has invoked the “actual innocence” ex-
    ception, which permits a petitioner to assert a defaulted
    claim if he “can demonstrate that he is ‘actually innocent’ of
    the crimes of which he was convicted.” Id. Perrone’s invoca-
    tion of this exception means that “actual innocence” does
    double duty in this case: it is both what Perrone must show
    to overcome procedural default and the standard he must
    satisfy to prevail on the merits of his Burrage claim.
    Perhaps because of this overlap, both parties assume (as
    did the district court) that the “actual innocence” exception
    to procedural default is available to Perrone. That assump-
    tion is doubtful. The point of the exception is to ensure that
    “federal constitutional errors do not result in the incarcera-
    tion of innocent persons.” Herrera v. Collins, 
    506 U.S. 390
    , 404
    (1993). The Supreme Court has flagged the possibility that
    actual innocence might be enough to justify collateral relief
    in a capital case on the theory that the execution of one who
    is actually innocent violates the Eighth Amendment. 
    Id. at 405
    . Apart from that potential exception, however, the
    Court’s “habeas jurisprudence makes clear that a claim of
    ‘actual innocence’ is not itself a constitutional claim, but in-
    stead a gateway through which a habeas petitioner must
    pass to have his otherwise barred constitutional claim con-
    sidered on the merits.” 
    Id. at 404
    . This is a problem for Per-
    rone. He does not ask us to determine that he is actually in-
    8                                                              No. 16-2437
    nocent so that we can consider a claim of constitutional er-
    ror; rather, his innocence of the “death results” enhancement
    is the error he asks us to correct.1
    The government, however, has not made this argument.
    Instead, apparently believing that default and the merits will
    rise or fall together, it has treated Perrone’s assertion of the
    “actual innocence” exception as functionally no different
    from his claim on the merits to be actually innocent of the
    “death results” enhancement. Procedural default is a wai-
    vable defense, not a jurisdictional bar. We treat the govern-
    ment as having waived the defense and analyze Perrone’s
    petition on the merits.
    1 Perrone’s petition for a certificate of appealability appeared to con-
    nect his Burrage claim to a constitutional argument insofar as he sought
    review of the question whether his plea was “knowing and voluntary.”
    Cf. Bousley v. United States, 
    523 U.S. 614
    , 623 (1998) (holding that petition-
    er could seek relief on his otherwise procedurally barred claim that his
    guilty plea was not voluntary and intelligent if he could demonstrate his
    actual innocence of the offense to which he had pleaded guilty). But Per-
    rone abandoned that argument on appeal as a separate ground for relief.
    He mentions it only in the context of his claim that he received inade-
    quate assistance of counsel; he contends that if his lawyer had told him
    about Hatfield, he would have been able to withdraw his plea as not
    knowing and voluntary. His ineffective-assistance claim is not the consti-
    tutional claim for which “actual innocence” serves as the gateway, be-
    cause that claim is not procedurally defaulted. Vinyard v. United States,
    
    804 F.3d 1218
    , 1227 (7th Cir. 2015) (“The Supreme Court has definitively
    held that ineffective-assistance claims need not be presented on direct
    appeal to preserve them for collateral attack under § 2255….”).
    No. 16-2437                                                              9
    B.
    Perrone’s petition claims that the Supreme Court’s nar-
    rowed interpretation of the “death results” enhancement
    renders him actually innocent of causing Learn’s death. The
    Supreme Court has held that when a subsequent statutory
    interpretation narrows the elements of a crime, revealing
    that the petitioner has been convicted and sentenced for “an
    act that the law does not make criminal,” the petitioner has
    suffered “a complete miscarriage of justice” that justifies re-
    lief under § 2255. Davis v. United States, 
    417 U.S. 333
    , 346–47
    (1974). We have extended the reasoning of Davis to mandato-
    ry sentencing enhancements. In Narvaez v. United States, 
    674 F.3d 621
    , 627–28 (7th Cir. 2011), we held that when a peti-
    tioner’s sentence is increased by application of an enhance-
    ment of which he was actually innocent, the petitioner has
    suffered a “miscarriage of justice” cognizable under
    § 2255(a). See also Brown v. Caraway, 
    719 F.3d 583
    , 588 (7th Cir.
    2013) (holding that a claim identical to the one raised under
    § 2255(a) in Narvaez “constitutes a miscarriage of justice cor-
    rigible in a § 2241 proceeding.”). Thus, regardless whether
    we treat Perrone’s petition as challenging his conviction or
    his sentence (a choice that bears on the standard of review,
    as we explain below), Perrone has stated a claim under
    § 2255.
    The parties agree that Perrone has a cognizable claim,2
    but they disagree about the standard we should apply in as-
    2 While the government concedes that Perrone’s claim is viable un-
    der our precedent, it invites us to overrule that precedent. We decline the
    invitation.
    10                                                 No. 16-2437
    sessing whether Perrone is actually innocent of causing
    Learn’s death. Perrone argues that the standard should be
    the one that Schlup v. Delo provides for determining “actual
    innocence” in the context of procedural default. In Schlup,
    the Court held that “a petitioner must show that it is more
    likely than not that no reasonable juror would have found
    petitioner guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.” 
    513 U.S. 298
    ,
    327 (1995). The government, in contrast, says that Perrone
    must show that it is more likely than not that no reasonable
    judge would have found him guilty by a preponderance of
    the evidence. The government’s insistence on a “preponder-
    ance” standard is grounded in its belief that we must treat
    Perrone’s petition as asserting innocence of a sentencing fac-
    tor rather than innocence of an element of the crime.
    The government stresses that when Perrone pleaded
    guilty and was sentenced, the “death results” enhancement
    was treated as a sentencing factor that a judge could find by
    a preponderance of the evidence. That changed with Alleyne
    v. United States, 
    570 U.S. 99
     (2013), which held that any fact
    that increases the mandatory minimum sentence for a crime
    is an element of a crime that must be submitted to a jury and
    found beyond a reasonable doubt. Alleyne, however, is not
    retroactive on collateral review. Crayton v. United States, 
    799 F.3d 623
    , 624 (7th Cir. 2015). The government reasons that
    this means that we must evaluate the sufficiency of the evi-
    dence supporting the application of the enhancement to Per-
    rone as the issue would have been resolved at the time Per-
    No. 16-2437                                                               11
    rone was sentenced: through the eyes of a judge and by a
    preponderance standard.3
    The government’s position is inconsistent with our hold-
    ing in Krieger v. United States, 
    842 F.3d 490
     (7th Cir. 2016).
    There, in holding that Burrage announced a substantive rule
    that applies retroactively on collateral review, we described
    the “death results” enhancement as the Supreme Court did
    in Burrage: as an element of the crime. Krieger, 842 F.3d at 500
    (“[T]he rule announced in Burrage altered the range of con-
    duct that the law punishes.”); Burrage, 
    134 S. Ct. at 887
     (char-
    acterizing the “death results” enhancement as “an element
    that must be submitted to the jury and found beyond a rea-
    sonable doubt”). Had we thought ourselves bound by Al-
    leyne’s non-retroactivity (which we acknowledged) to treat
    Burrage as changing only the scope of a sentencing factor, we
    presumably would have relied on Narvaez when we held
    that Krieger’s Burrage error was cognizable under § 2255. In-
    stead, consistent with Burrage’s treatment of the enhance-
    ment as an element of the crime, we relied on the progeny of
    Davis v. United States, 
    417 U.S. 333
     (1974) to hold that Krieger
    3  The government also asserts that Perrone’s petition described his
    challenge as going to his sentence rather than his conviction and that this
    is another reason we should treat it that way. Gov’t Brief at 24 (quoting
    Perrone’s petition, which provided that “the Petitioner[’s] sentence ex-
    ceeds that which is otherwise authorized by law and Perrone, in light of
    Burrage, supra, should be resentenced accordingly”). Putting aside
    whether that is a fair characterization of Perrone’s pro se petition, we are
    not bound to accept a party’s characterization of a question of law. Krieg-
    er v. United States, 
    842 F.3d 490
    , 499 (7th Cir. 2016) (“Of course we are not
    bound to accept the government’s concession [that Burrage is retroactive]
    when the point at issue is a question of law.”).
    12                                                  No. 16-2437
    could assert her claim. Krieger, 842 F.3d at 497–500. It is
    worth noting that the government itself conceded in Krieger
    that “Burrage is substantive because it defines an essential
    element of a federal crime….” 842 F.3d at 497. And even in
    circuits that maintain—contrary to our approach in Nar-
    vaez—that a challenge to a mandatory sentencing enhance-
    ment is not cognizable on collateral review, Burrage claims
    are cognizable precisely because they go to the validity of a
    conviction rather than to the validity of a sentence. Compare
    Sun Bear v. United States, 
    644 F.3d 700
    , 705 (8th Cir. 2011) (en
    banc) (holding that an error under the mandatory guidelines
    was not a miscarriage of justice because the petitioner’s sen-
    tence remained “within the statutory maximum authorized
    for the offense”), with Ragland v. United States, 
    784 F.3d 1213
    ,
    1214 (8th Cir. 2015) (holding that a petitioner’s challenge un-
    der Burrage is “a challenge to the validity of his conviction”).
    To be sure, Krieger did not address the standard of review
    that would be applicable when a court collaterally reviews
    whether there is sufficient evidence to support application of
    the enhancement according to Burrage’s standard of but-for
    causation. In that respect, Krieger technically leaves the
    standard-of-review question open. Yet it would be in signifi-
    cant tension with Krieger’s treatment of the enhancement as
    an element of the crime to review Perrone’s claim under the
    regime previously applicable to sentencing factors.
    We thus reject the government’s attempt to slice Burrage’s
    characterization of the “death results” enhancement (as an
    element of crime) away from its definition of what applica-
    tion of that enhancement requires (but-for causation). Be-
    cause Alleyne is not retroactive, Perrone could not get relief
    on the ground that the “death results” question went to a
    No. 16-2437                                                  13
    judge rather than jury. Once he is before us with a cognizable
    claim, however, there is no reason for us to describe his
    claim as something it is not. Burrage, unlike Alleyne, is retro-
    active, and it makes clear that Perrone’s claim goes to his in-
    nocence of a crime, not a sentence. Whether the government
    has proven an element of the crime is always a question for
    the jury. That means that Perrone’s burden is to show that it
    is more likely than not that no reasonable juror would have
    found him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of causing
    Learn’s death. Schlup, 
    513 U.S. at 327
    .
    C.
    This dispute is about causation, so we will begin by clear-
    ly stating what “but for” causation requires. It does not re-
    quire proof that the distributed drug was present in an
    amount sufficient to kill on its own. The Court explained in
    Burrage that death can “result[] from” a particular drug
    when it is the proverbial “straw that broke the camel’s back.”
    
    134 S. Ct. at 888
    . As the Court put it: “if poison is adminis-
    tered to a man debilitated by multiple diseases, it is a but-for
    cause of his death even if those diseases played a part in his
    demise, so long as, without the incremental effect of the poi-
    son, he would have lived.” 
    Id.
     Here, then, the fact that other
    substances in Learn’s bloodstream played a part in her death
    does not defeat the government’s claim that her death result-
    ed from the cocaine Perrone gave her. A jury could have
    found him guilty of causing her death if it concluded beyond
    a reasonable doubt that Perrone’s cocaine pushed her over
    the edge.
    In Burrage, the Court left open the possibility that the
    government could prove causation another way: it said that
    strict “but-for” causation might not be required when “mul-
    14                                                  No. 16-2437
    tiple sufficient causes independently, but concurrently, pro-
    duce a result.” 
    134 S. Ct. at 890
    . In other words, the “death
    results” enhancement might apply to a defendant who dis-
    tributes a lethal dose of cocaine to a person who also con-
    sumes a lethal dose of heroin. The government suggests that
    a jury could have found Perrone guilty on this theory as
    well, because Perrone gave Learn a lethal amount of cocaine.
    We need not decide whether this second theory is viable,
    however, because there is sufficient evidence to have permit-
    ted a jury to find Perrone guilty on the first.
    Perrone admitted that he distributed 7.5 grams of cocaine
    to Learn in a deliberate attempt to kill her, that he personally
    injected Learn with cocaine intending to kill her, and that
    she convulsed and died immediately after he injected her.
    That in itself strongly supports the conclusion that Learn’s
    death resulted from the cocaine Perrone administered. It also
    distinguishes Perrone from the defendants in Burrage, Hat-
    field, and Krieger, none of whom stated that they had distrib-
    uted the drug to the user with the intent to kill.
    The best evidence on Perrone’s side is the coroner’s re-
    port, which listed the cause of death as “[c]ombined toxicity
    with cocaine, ethanol and opiates.” This, Perrone says, is the
    kind of evidence the Court found insufficient to establish
    causation in Burrage. There, a state medical examiner testi-
    fied that the drug user died of “mixed drug intoxication,”
    with a number of substances, including the heroin distribut-
    ed by the defendant, all playing a “‘contributing’ role.” Bur-
    rage, 
    134 S. Ct. at 886
    . And the two medical experts who testi-
    fied at the defendant’s trial stated that they could not say
    whether the drug user would have lived had he not taken
    the defendant’s heroin. 
    Id.
     at 885–86. So here, Perrone says,
    No. 16-2437                                                         15
    the coroner’s report indicates that cocaine combined with
    other drugs to cause Learn’s death. And when the coroner,
    Dr. Raj Nanduri, testified before the grand jury, she never
    expressly opined that Learn would have lived if she had not
    consumed the cocaine Perrone gave her.
    Before the grand jury, the government seemed focused on
    eliciting testimony that the cocaine Perrone distributed was
    independently sufficient to kill Learn. Nanduri repeated the
    conclusion she reached in the autopsy report: that Learn’s
    cause of death was the combined toxicity of cocaine, ethanol,
    and opiates.4 When the prosecutor followed up with a ques-
    tion about which substance was “primarily responsible for
    her death,” Nanduri clarified that “if she just had cocaine in
    her system and the other two drugs were not present, then
    cocaine would be the toxic agent that killed her.” The prose-
    cutor returned to this point a few minutes later, saying “I
    don’t mean to beat this into the ground, but it is a very im-
    portant point for us. It is your testimony under oath that to a
    medical certainty this quantity of cocaine found in this
    woman’s blood would have killed her all by itself?” Nanduri
    replied “yes.” Nanduri repeated several more times before
    the grand jury that the cocaine in Learn’s bloodstream was a
    lethal dose. She did not, however, testify that alcohol and
    morphine in Learn’s system were not lethal. She said that the
    alcohol was not at a level she would expect to be fatal, but
    she expressed uncertainty about the role the morphine had
    played in Learn’s death. Although Learn’s morphine level
    4  Nanduri testified that she used the term “opiates” because heroin
    and other opiates are metabolized into morphine, which is what Nanduri
    identified in Learn’s blood.
    16                                                  No. 16-2437
    was low, Nanduri explained that whether such a low dose
    could kill a person depends on numerous factors, including
    the person’s past history of using opiates. She also said that a
    person’s morphine level might be deceptively low if the per-
    son became comatose and continued metabolizing the mor-
    phine before dying.
    Nanduri’s testimony thus does not establish that cocaine
    was the but-for cause of Learn’s death. But the government
    has testimony from another expert, Dr. Chris Long, who did
    expressly state that Learn would have lived but for the co-
    caine. Long prepared a toxicology report on Learn’s body in
    2008. After reviewing his report in 2014, he confirmed that
    the alcohol would not have killed Learn “absent the cocaine”
    and that “[t]he opiate is of no significance.” A reasonable ju-
    ror could credit Long’s testimony.
    Perrone’s best response is to say that even if cocaine
    caused Learn’s death, the cocaine that killed her was not the
    cocaine he gave her. Learn had, after all, done a fair amount
    of cocaine with Narog the day before. And given her pattern
    of cocaine use, it is at least possible that Learn did some co-
    caine during her shift at work. Perrone may have injected
    cocaine into a woman with an already-lethal amount of co-
    caine in her body.
    This evidence helps Perrone, but only a little. There is no
    evidence that Learn acquired or took any cocaine between
    starting her shift at noon and meeting up with Perrone
    sometime after the 8 p.m. end of her shift, and Narog testi-
    fied before the grand jury that it was not usually possible to
    take drugs while at work. Furthermore, even if Learn took
    some cocaine between noon and whenever she met up with
    Perrone, a rational factfinder could easily conclude that she
    No. 16-2437                                                   17
    would have taken only a nonlethal dose. Narog testified be-
    fore the grand jury that Learn was a practiced drug user who
    was very particular about the amount of cocaine she injected
    and rarely varied. That evidence paints a picture of a woman
    who met up with Perrone while she was still on track to sur-
    vive the night.
    That Learn arrived at Perrone’s without enough cocaine
    in her system to kill her is bolstered by what happened
    when she got there. Perrone said that the two had a suicide
    pact, which suggests that they both thought Learn needed to
    consume more drugs if she wanted to end her life. And after
    Learn injected herself with a dose of cocaine, Perrone himself
    made the judgment that what she had taken was not enough
    to kill her. According to his own statement, he gave Learn an
    additional 7.5 grams of cocaine because he concluded that
    she would not die unless she had more. He told the police
    that Learn convulsed and fell to the floor immediately after
    he injected her, and he later characterized what he did as
    “premeditated murder.” In his stipulation of facts, Perrone
    admitted that Learn died “immediately after receiving the
    injection.”
    Given this evidence, Perrone cannot carry his burden of
    showing that it is more likely than not that no reasonable ju-
    ror would have voted to find him guilty beyond a reasonable
    doubt. He is thus not entitled to relief on the ground that he
    is actually innocent of causing Learn’s death.
    III.
    Perrone also argues that his sentencing counsel was con-
    stitutionally ineffective for failing to tell him about (and pos-
    sibly not even knowing about) Hatfield. Had Perrone been
    18                                                  No. 16-2437
    aware of Hatfield, he says, he might have sought the court’s
    permission to withdraw his plea on the ground that it was
    not knowing and voluntary. Because he did not know that
    the “death results” enhancement required the government to
    show but-for causation, he did not correctly understand
    what he was pleading to when he stipulated that he
    “caused” Learn’s death.
    To prevail on his ineffective assistance claim, Perrone
    must show both deficient performance and prejudice. Strick-
    land v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 687 (1984). On the perfor-
    mance prong, he “must overcome the ‘strong presumption
    that counsel’s conduct falls within the wide range of reason-
    able professional assistance.’” Wyatt v. United States, 
    574 F.3d 455
    , 458 (7th Cir. 2009) (quoting Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 689
    ).
    On the prejudice prong, he must show that “but for counsel’s
    errors, there is a reasonable probability that the result would
    have been different.” United States v. Graf, 
    827 F.3d 581
    , 584
    (7th Cir. 2016). In the context of a guilty plea, a petitioner
    demonstrates prejudice by “show[ing] that there is a reason-
    able probability that, but for counsel’s errors, he would not
    have pleaded guilty and would have insisted on going to tri-
    al.” Hill v. Lockhart, 
    474 U.S. 52
    , 59 (1985). As with the first
    prong, there is a presumption that the petitioner has not suf-
    fered prejudice. Graf, 827 F.3d at 584–85.
    Even assuming that Perrone could show “deficient per-
    formance” on the part of his counsel, it is unlikely that he
    could satisfy the “prejudice” prong. The evidence of causa-
    tion was strong and his plea agreement gave him the oppor-
    tunity to obtain a sentence reduction for cooperating with
    the government. The fact that he wants to withdraw from
    the agreement now—after he has already received an 80-
    No. 16-2437                                                            19
    month reduction—does not mean that he would have want-
    ed to do so before he received that benefit. The problems of
    proof he would face at resentencing make it doubtful that he
    would have put his deal at risk even if he had known about
    Hatfield. They also make it doubtful that the district judge
    would have permitted him to withdraw his plea. See United
    States v. Underwood, 
    174 F.3d 850
    , 852–54 (7th Cir. 1999) (not-
    ing that “[n]o defendant has an absolute right to withdraw a
    guilty plea” and that the utility of plea agreements would be
    undermined by allowing a defendant to renege based on his
    “reevaluation of his trial prospects”).
    At the end of the day, however, any difficulties Perrone
    has on the merits do not matter because his claim is barred
    as untimely. Although he was not required to bring his inef-
    fective-assistance claim in his direct appeal, Massaro v. United
    States, 
    538 U.S. 500
    , 509 (2003), he was still required to com-
    ply with § 2255(f)’s statute of limitations. Under § 2255(f)(1),
    Perrone had to bring his claim within one year of his convic-
    tion becoming final, which means that his window closed in
    2011.5 He did not file his § 2255 petition until 2014. Other
    claims in Perrone’s 2014 petition may have been timely based
    on the Supreme Court’s 2014 decision in Burrage, but § 2255’s
    statute of limitations runs separately for each claim. Davis v.
    United States, 
    817 F.3d 319
    , 327–28 (7th Cir. 2016). One claim’s
    timeliness cannot cure another claim’s untimeliness.
    5 Although § 2255(f) offers several different starting points for the
    one-year statute of limitations depending on the situation, no party con-
    tends that any starting point applies other than the day Perrone’s convic-
    tion became final.
    20                                                   No. 16-2437
    Perrone does not dispute that his claim is untimely. In-
    stead, he attempts to escape the bar by contending that the
    government forfeited its statute-of-limitations defense. Per-
    rone raised his ineffective-assistance claim before the district
    court for the first time in his reply to the government’s re-
    sponse brief. He faults the government for not asserting the
    limitations defense in response, but the district court’s local
    rules prohibited the government from filing a surreply. True,
    the district court chose to treat Perrone’s reply brief as an
    amended petition, so it appears with the benefit of hindsight
    that the government could have filed a new response. But
    the filing was denominated as a reply brief, not as an
    amended petition; it did not reproduce the claims that had
    appeared in Perrone’s original petition; and Perrone had re-
    peatedly told the district court that his court-appointed
    counsel was not authorized to amend his petition. It was
    therefore reasonable for the government to conclude that it
    lacked the ability under the local rules to respond to the
    newly raised claim of ineffective assistance. And even if this
    were forfeiture, we would find it excused due to the under-
    standable confusion in the district court. See Wood v. Milyard,
    
    566 U.S. 463
    , 471 (2012) (allowing a court of appeals to con-
    sider even sua sponte “a nonexhaustion argument ‘inadvert-
    ent[ly]’ overlooked by the State in the District Court”). Be-
    cause Perrone filed his petition after § 2255(f)’s statute of lim-
    itations had run, he is barred from raising that claim now.
    IV.
    The district court also correctly denied Perrone’s motion
    for an evidentiary hearing on his claims. A petitioner under
    § 2255 is entitled to an evidentiary hearing “[u]nless the mo-
    tion and the files and records of the case conclusively show
    No. 16-2437                                                   21
    that the prisoner is entitled to no relief.” 
    28 U.S.C. § 2255
    (b).
    When the record before the district court allows it to resolve
    the petition without such a hearing, the petitioner is not enti-
    tled to one. Rodriguez v. United States, 
    286 F.3d 972
    , 986–87
    (7th Cir. 2002) (affirming the denial of an evidentiary hearing
    when “[a] hearing would not have aided the district court”).
    Because Perrone has not raised any claim whose resolution
    requires an evidentiary hearing, the district court did not
    abuse its discretion in denying Perrone’s request.
    V.
    For the reasons stated above, the judgment of the district
    court is AFFIRMED.