dissenting from the order denying the petition for rehearing en banc:
There’s a very good reason appellate panels must defer to the broad discretion of district courts in fashioning habeas remedies, a reason other than that the Supreme Court has said so: These remedies call for complex, fact-based work with numerous pleadings and balancing of multiple competing interests. When an appellate panel second-guesses the district court’s judgment, it’s liable to get things wrong, sometimes very wrong. Don’t believe me? Read on.
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Locked up awaiting trial, Kennard Johnson wanted a way out so he could see the birth of his son. Report and Recommendation of a U.S. Mag. Judge 15, Johnson v. Uribe, No. EDCV 10-0164-GW(RC) (C.D. Cal. Nov. 12, 2010). At Johnson’s urging, counsel negotiated a deal: Johnson would plead guilty to all charges and enhancements and receive the maximum sentence of fourteen years and four months, but he’d be furloughed prior to the start of the sentence so he could attend the birth. Id. at 15-16. But if Johnson adhered to the conditions of his release, the prosecutor would agree to a lower sentence of six years. Id. at 16. Johnson took the deal in time to see his son’s birth, id. at 18, but he violated his conditions of release, id. at 19. That triggered the higher sentence — a sentence that turned out to be three years longer than permitted by law. Id. at 35. On federal habeas, Johnson claimed that ineffective assistance of counsel had caused him to accept the miscalculated plea. Id. at 4. The district court agreed and ordered Johnson resentenced to a legal term. Order Adopting Report and Recommendation 2, Johnson v. Uribe, No. ED CV 10-164-GW(JEM) (C.D. Cal. Jan. 25, 2011). The state is willing to accept the reduced sentence.
We have been told that district courts have broad discretion in selecting habeas remedies, Hilton v. Braunskill, 481 U.S. 770, 775, 107 S.Ct. 2113, 95 L.Ed.2d 724 (1987), so that should have been the end of it. But a panel of our court knows better; it holds that the district court abused its discretion by ordering mere resentencing. Op. 426. In the panel’s estimation, nothing short of vacating Johnson’s guilty plea will do. Id. at 426-28. Not only does this make mincemeat of the Supreme Court’s firm instruction that the choice of habeas remedy rests with the district court; it also tramples several established procedural rules, mucking up our law on exhaustion of remedies and amendment of habeas petitions. There certainly was abuse of discretion in this case, but it was committed by our panel, not the district court.
1. The panel’s conclusion that vacating the conviction was the only appropriate remedy rests on the mistaken belief that the magistrate judge found ineffective assistance of counsel (IAC) “before, during, and after the plea negotiation stage, as well as at the time Johnson entered his unconstitutional guilty plea.” Id. at 425 (emphasis added). According to the panel, the district court’s remedy is defective because it addresses only the ineffectiveness relating to the plea itself: “To be constitutionally sufficient,” the panel holds, “the remedy must account for that [pre-sentencing] period of ineffective assistance as well.” Id. at 426. But the district court never found IAC at the negotiation stage; it found ineffective assistance only as to the miscalculation of the sentence. See *417Report and Recommendation of a U.S. Mag. Judge 17, 18, 35, 36, 41-42, Johnson v. Uribe, No. EDCV 10-0164-GW(RC) (C.D. Cal. Nov. 12, 2010).
In alluding to additional ineffectiveness findings, the panel is either making its own findings or hopelessly confused. While the district court noted counsel’s lackluster performance throughout his representation of Johnson, this is not enough to establish IAC in the constitutional sense. For that, Johnson also needs a finding that the poor performance prejudiced him. Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687, 104 S.Ct. 2052, 80 L.Ed.2d 674 (1984). And the district court found prejudice only with respect to counsel’s errors relating to the miscalculated plea. That prejudice was remedied by resentencing. Without a finding that counsel’s other missteps prejudiced Johnson, there is no IAC in need of correction.
2.Nor could there be, because Johnson never alleged ineffectiveness during the plea negotiations. Johnson’s federal habeas petition focused narrowly on the illegal sentence: First, he claimed counsel “fail[ed] to object to imposition of a sentence clearly higher than authorized by law and to convictions unauthorized by law.” Pet. for Writ of Habeas Corpus 5, Johnson v. Uribe, No. EDCV 10-00164-GW(RC) (C.D. Cal. Feb. 2, 2010). Second, he claimed counsel “fail[ed] to advise me that the plea agreement required a plea to illegal convictions and a sentence clearly higher than authorized by law.” Id.
Johnson did not move to amend his habeas petition to claim he suffered IAC because his lawyer was an insufficiently crafty negotiator. The state was given no opportunity to address any such claim. It makes a mockery of orderly procedure and the statutory limits imposed on federal courts in considering habeas petitions to let Johnson amend his petition retroactively on appeal. This is a wide-open door through which many a habeas petitioner will try to walk out of prison.
3. It’s actually even worse: Johnson himself asked the district court for resentencing. In Johnson’s district court traverse, he argued that the ineffective assistance he received “warranted] reversal of the convictions, remanding of the unlawful sentence, and resentencing him approprietly [sic] under the law.” Traverse to Resp’t’s Answer to the Pet. for Writ of Habeas Corpus 7, Johnson v. Uribe, No. EDCV 10-164-GW(RC) (C.D. Cal. Jun. 7, 2010). A page later, he claimed that “[t]he unlawful sentence should be vacated, the plea rescinded, and the appropriate sentence imposed.” Id. at 8. After he was given a lawyer, Johnson asked for vacatur of the guilty plea but continued to argue that, “[alternatively, the Court should vacate [his] sentence and return his case for resentencing.” Pet’r’s Post-Hr’g Br. in Supp. of Pet. for Writ of Habeas Corpus 13, Johnson v. Uribe, No. EDCV 10-164-GW(RCx) (C.D. Cal. Oct. 27, 2010). It wasn’t until the magistrate judge recommended granting relief and ordering re-sentencing that Johnson first claimed that resentencing is insufficient. Pet’r’s Objections to the Report and Recommendation 13-15, Johnson v. Uribe, No. EDCV 10-164-GW(RCx) (C.D. Cal. Nov. 29, 2010). How could the district court have abused its discretion by giving Johnson the relief he asked for?
4. Even if the panel could sidestep these problems, there’s still an insurmountable hurdle to finding that Johnson’s lawyer committed IAC at the pre-plea stages of the proceedings: Johnson never exhausted that claim, so the district court couldn’t grant relief on it. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b)(1)(A). The opinion of the California Court of Appeal, the last reasoned decision, shows that Johnson raised four *418grounds of ineffective assistance, none of which alleged ineffectiveness “before, during, and after the plea negotiation stage.” The first three alleged counsel was ineffective in signing off on a guilty plea that impermissibly double-counted various charges. People v. Johnson, No. E045514, 2009 WL 1365764, at *2 (Cal.Ct.App. Jun. 17, 2009). The fourth was the one on which the district court granted relief: Counsel “concurred in the plea agreement and allowed defendant to be sentenced” based on the miscalculated plea. Id. All other claims are unexhausted, thus precluding the district court from considering whether there was ineffective assistance of counsel at any stage of the proceedings prior to sentencing. AEDPA bars the district court from granting the type of relief the panel holds to be mandatory. In the Ninth Circuit, it’s now an abuse of discretion to comply with AEDPA.
5. Finally, the panel shows a total lack of interest in what the Supreme Court has said about district courts’ discretion in fashioning habeas remedies in general, and IAC remedies in particular. The Court has instructed that habeas corpus “is, at its core, an equitable remedy,” Schlup v. Delo, 513 U.S. 298, 319, 115 S.Ct. 851, 130 L.Ed.2d 808 (1995), and that district courts possess “broad discretion” in fashioning remedies “to dispose of habeas corpus matters as law and justice require,” Hilton, 481 U.S. at 775, 107 S.Ct. 2113 (internal quotation marks omitted). In so doing, the district court must choose a remedy that is “tailored to the injury suffered from the constitutional violation” and does “not unnecessarily infringe on competing interests.” Lafler v. Cooper, — U.S. -, 132 S.Ct. 1376, 1388, 182 L.Ed.2d 398 (2012) (quotation marks omitted). Vacating a conviction often isn’t appropriate because it imposes “substantial social costs” on “jurors, witnesses, courts, the prosecution, and the defendants.” United States v. Mechanik, 475 U.S. 66, 72, 106 S.Ct. 938, 89 L.Ed.2d 50 (1986).
The district court took these admonitions seriously. It focused its remedy on the constitutional violation it had found: the lawyer’s acquiescence in an illegal sentence. The remedy it selected addresses the constitutional violation while inflicting the minimum costs on society. Because there were not, and could not have been, any other ineffectiveness findings, there was nothing else to remedy and thus no reason to vacate the conviction.
In concluding that this was an abuse of discretion, the panel changes the focus from aspects of counsel’s performance that were found to be ineffective to other aspects that were not found to be ineffective. “[I]t is mere speculation to assume that the plea negotiations would have progressed in a similar fashion with competent counsel,” the panel writes, holding that it “cannot allow the defendant to be prejudiced by that uncertainty.” Op. 427. But it is the panel that engages in untethered speculation. The district court wasn’t asked to find, and couldn’t find, that Johnson was prejudiced by whatever poor performance counsel rendered prior to the actual plea. It is this missing prejudice finding that causes the uncertainty the panel worries about. Since it was petitioner’s burden to show prejudice, the risk of that uncertainty must fall on him. The panel thus shatters yet another ironclad federal habeas rule by holding that mere suspicion of prejudice requires a habeas remedy. Prisoners will be dancing in their cells once word of this gets out.
The panel here made a series of errors that upend our AEDPA jurisprudence. But the biggest error is the full court’s failure to go en banc to rein in this renegade opinion. The en banc process exists *419so we can fix our own messes before they get fixed for us. We should have taken advantage of that opportunity.