OPINION OF THE COURT
POLLAK, District Judge.
On October 7, 2004, pursuant to a plea agreement and on advice of counsel, Gerald Orocio pled guilty in the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey to one count of simple possession of a controlled substance in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 844(a). This 2004 conviction triggered removal proceedings initiated against Mr. Orocio some years later.1 Mr. Orocio then filed a petition for writ of error coram nobis in the District Court to challenge the plea conviction, arguing that his attorney’s failure to advise him of the immigration consequences of pleading guilty to a federal drug charge constituted ineffective assistance of counsel in violation of the Sixth Amendment rights pronounced in Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 104 S.Ct. 2052, 80 L.Ed.2d 674 (1984). On January 6, 2010, the District Court denied Mr. Orocio’s petition, and Mr. Orocio filed the timely appeal now before us. During the pendency of this appeal, the Supreme Court decided Padilla v. Kentucky, 559 U.S. -, 130 S.Ct. 1473, 176 L.Ed.2d 284 (2010). In Padilla, the Court, addressing for the first time a factual scenario akin to Mr. Orocio’s, ruled that Strickland requires plea counsel to advise an alien defendant of the potential removal consequences of a recommended plea. The government contends that Padilla’s holding is not pertinent to Mr. Orocio’s situation for the reason that Padilla, decided in 2010, announced a “new rule ... not dictated by precedent existing at [634]*634the time [2005] the defendant’s conviction became final.” Teague v. Lane, 489 U.S. 288, 301, 109 S.Ct. 1060, 103 L.Ed.2d 334 (1989). Hence, in the government’s view, Padilla lacks retroactive applicability. For the reasons that follow, we hold that Padilla is retroactively applicable on collateral review, and we therefore vacate the judgment of the District Court and remand for further proceedings.
1. Background2
Gerald Orocio was born in the Philippines in 1977, and he became a lawful permanent resident of the United States on September 4, 1997. Mr. Orocio was arrested in New Jersey on October 3, 2003, and he was later charged by indictment in federal court with drug trafficking. At that time, he was questioned regarding his immigration status, and he advised that he was a lawful permanent resident. He was initially assigned a public defender, but he discharged her because she recommended that he plead guilty to the trafficking offense and serve a ten-year sentence. A private attorney, Joseph A. Portelli, was retained in June 2004, and he represented Mr. Orocio in the balance of the criminal proceedings.
In his coram nobis petition, Mr. Orocio has alleged that on or about October 7, 2004, Mr. Portelli told him that the government had offered a plea agreement in which he would be charged with controlled substance possession instead of drug trafficking and would receive a sentence of time served plus a two-year period of supervised release. According to Mr. Orocio, Mr. Portelli did not inform him of the immigration consequences of the proposed guilty plea. Mr. Orocio accepted the plea agreement, and on October 7, 2004, he pled guilty to one count of possession of a controlled substance (methamphetamine) in contravention of 21 U.S.C. § 844. He was sentenced on March 10, 2005, to time served and two years of supervised release.
Mr. Orocio successfully completed his sentence and was discharged from supervision in 2007. Subsequent to completion of his sentence, Mr. Orocio was placed in removal proceedings.3 He consulted with an immigration attorney, his present counsel, who advised him that removal proceedings were initiated because he had pled guilty to a controlled substance offense and was therefore facing mandatory deportation. In hopes of halting the removal proceedings, Mr. Orocio filed a petition for a writ of error coram nobis4 in the District Court on November [635]*63530, 2009, and removal proceedings were stayed pending resolution of the petition. The basis of Mr. Orocio’s petition was that his plea counsel, Mr. Portelli, failed in two ways to provide the effective assistance of counsel required by Strickland. First, Mr. Orocio argued that Mr. Portelli was ineffective because he did not try to secure for Mr. Orocio a guilty plea pursuant to the Federal First Offender Act, 18 U.S.C. § 3607 — a disposition that might ultimately have resulted in dismissal of the charges. Second, Mr. Orocio argued that Mr. Portelli was ineffective because he did not advise Mr. Orocio of the immigration consequences — namely, mandatory removal — of pleading guilty to drug possession. Mr. Orocio contends that he would not have pled guilty had he been correctly advised of that near certainty.
The District Court denied the petition on January 6, 2010. After identifying Strickland as providing the governing standard, the District Court dismissed the petition without a hearing on the ground that, even if his plea counsel was ineffective, Mr. Orocio had failed to demonstrate prejudice as required under Strickland. Mr. Orocio timely appealed.
II. Jurisdiction and Standard of Review
The District Court had jurisdiction over the petition for writ of error coram nobis, made available to federal courts in criminal matters under the All Writs Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1651(a), in aid of the courts’ jurisdiction over criminal proceedings pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3231. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
This court has not yet articulated the precise standard of review to apply to a district court’s denial of a petition for writ of error coram nobis. The parties disagree as to the appropriate standard, with Mr. Orocio arguing for plenary review, and the government arguing for abuse of discretion. Other circuits have also considered this issue; the Courts of Appeals for the Sixth and Ninth Circuits have held that the “determination of legal issues in coram nobis proceedings” should be reviewed de novo, but that findings of fact are reviewed for clear error. United States v. Johnson, 237 F.3d 751, 755 (6th Cir.2001); Hirabayashi v. United States, 828 F.2d 591, 594 (9th Cir.1987). We find this standard to be the most logically appropriate and therefore adopt it.
III. Discussion
We begin by examining the Supreme Court’s Padilla decision and its implications. Next, given that (a) Mr. Orocio’s guilty plea was in 2004, (b) Mr. Orocio completed his sentence in 2007, and (c) Padilla was decided in 2010, we assess whether Mr. Orocio is entitled, retroactively, to the benefit of that ruling. Whether Padilla is retroactive is a Teague v. Lane problem, and we hold that, under Teague v. Lane, Padilla is retroactively applicable. We then examine the two Strickland prongs — ineffective assistance of counsel and prejudice. With respect to the first prong, we first evaluate whether Mr. Orocio has alleged a prima facie ineffective assistance claim under Padilla. We hold that he has. Finally, we turn to prejudice. The District Court, confining its analysis to prejudice, held as a matter of law that Mr. Orocio had not been prejudiced because he could not establish that, had he rejected the proffered guilty plea, there was a reasonable probability that he would [636]*636not have been found guilty at trial. We hold that Mr. Orocio has alleged sufficient prejudice under Strickland and subsequent case law to warrant a remand to determine what options he could have pursued.
A. The Supreme Court decides Padilla
Soon after the District Court denied Mr. Orocio’s coram nobis petition and this appeal was docketed, the Supreme Court decided Padilla v. Kentucky, a case that goes to the heart of Mr. Orocio’s claim. The Padilla decision clarified the Strickland standard for ineffective assistance of counsel in the context of the immigration consequences of plea agreements. The Padilla Court ruled that counsel, in order to be constitutionally competent, has an obligation to advise criminal defendants whether an offense to which they may plead guilty will result in removal from the United States. 130 S.Ct. at 1478.
To do so, the Court first had to determine whether Strickland applied at all to advice concerning the immigration consequences of a plea. Eschewing the view of a number of state and federal courts that immigration consequences were “collateral” and thereby beyond the scope of the representation required by the Sixth Amendment, the Court held that because “deportation is a particularly severe ‘penalty,’ ... advice regarding deportation is not categorically removed from the ambit of the Sixth Amendment right to counsel.” Id. at 1481-82. Thus, the Court highlighted the need to apply Strickland’s two-prong test for ineffective assistance of counsel in Jose Padilla’s case: (1) the performance prong — i.e., “whether counsel’s representation ‘fell below an objective standard of reasonableness’ and (2) the prejudice prong — i.e., “whether ‘there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.’ ” Id. at 1482 (quoting Strickland, 466 U.S. at 688, 694,104 S.Ct. 2052).
In addressing the first Strickland prong, the Court concluded that Jose Padilla “ha[d] sufficiently alleged constitutional deficiency” in his attorney’s failure to advise him of a plea’s immigration consequences. Id. at 1483. The Court noted that “the terms of the relevant immigration statute are succinct, clear, and explicit in defining the removal consequence for Padilla’s conviction,” which was a controlled substance offense rendering him removable pursuant to 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(2)(B)(i). Id. The Court went on to observe that:
Padilla’s counsel could have easily determined that his plea would make him eligible for [removal] simply from reading the text of the statute, which addresses not some broad classification of crimes but specifically commands removal for all controlled substances convictions except for the most trivial of marijuana possession offenses. Instead, Padilla’s counsel provided him false assurance that his conviction would not result in his removal from this country. This is not a hard case in which to find deficiency: The consequences of Padilla’s plea could easily be determined from reading the removal statute, his [removal] was presumptively mandatory, and his counsel’s advice was incorrect.
Id.5 The Court then rejected the suggestion of the Solicitor General, as amicus [637]*637curiae, to limit Strickland in the context of Padilla’s claim only to the extent he alleged affirmative misadvice about immigration consequences, as opposed to the mere failure to provide any advice at all. Id. at 1484-86. In declining to follow the Solicitor General’s recommendation, the Court said “[i]t is quintessentially the duty of counsel to provide her client with available advice about an issue like [removal] and the failure to do so clearly satisfies the first prong of the Strickland analysis.” Id. at 1484 (internal quotation marks omitted).
The Padilla Court expressly refrained from determining whether Jose Padilla had met the second Strickland prong and demonstrated that he had been prejudiced. That issue was remitted “to the Kentucky courts to consider in the first instance.” Padilla, 130 S.Ct. at 1483-84.
B. Retroactivity of Padilla
Because Padilla was decided after Mr. Orocio’s conviction became final, we must consider whether retroactivity principles bar the application of Padilla’s holding to this case.
1. Teague and retroactivity
In Teague v. Lane, 489 U.S. 288, 109 S.Ct. 1060, 103 L.Ed.2d 334 (1989), the Supreme Court set forth two regimes governing the retroactive application of constitutional principles to criminal cases. Teague divided the world into two categories, “old rules” and “new rules.” A rule is a “new rule” for Teague purposes “if the result was not dictated by precedent existing at the time the defendant’s conviction became final.” Id. at 301, 109 S.Ct. 1060. Teague held that a “new rule” is retroactively applicable to cases on collateral review if and only if one of two exceptions apply: (1) the new rule places certain kinds of criminal conduct beyond the power of the criminal law-making authority to proscribe; or (2) the new rule is a “watershed rule[] of criminal procedure” that “alter[s] our understanding of the bedrock procedural elements that must be found to vitiate the fairness of a particular conviction.” Teague, 489 U.S. at 311, 109 S.Ct. 1060 (emphasis in original) (internal quotation marks omitted). By contrast, an “old rule,” applies on both direct and collateral review. See Whorton v. Bockting, 549 U.S. 406, 416, 127 S.Ct. 1173, 167 L.Ed.2d 1 (2007).
Thus, if Padilla did not announce a “new rule,” then Mr. Orocio would be entitled to invoke the protection of Padilla even though his conviction had achieved finality and his sentence was fully served prior to Padilla. If Padilla announced a “new rule,” however, then Mr. Orocio would have to demonstrate that it falls within one of the very narrow Teague exceptions.
2. Does Padilla apply retroactively under Teague?
The government argues that Padilla is a “new rule” in two ways.
First, it argues that Padilla is a “new rule” because it has extended Strickland’s Sixth Amendment analysis to a non-criminal setting — namely, the failure of criminal defense counsel to advise a client of the mandatory civil removal consequences of pleading guilty to drug trafficking charges. It is true that the precise question of whether the civil removal consequences of a plea are within the scope of Strickland had never been addressed by the Supreme Court before Padilla. But that is an incomplete approach to the Strickland question presented in this case. The question we confront is whether counsel has been [638]*638constitutionally adequate in advising a criminal defendant whether to accept a plea bargain. The Court held only one year after Strickland that “the same two-part standard [of Strickland ] ... [is] applicable to ineffective-assistance claims arising out of the plea process,” and a court must therefore determine “whether counsel’s advice [to accept a plea] was within the range of competence demanded of attorneys in criminal cases.” See Hill v. Lockhart, 474 U.S. 52, 56-57, 106 S.Ct. 366, 88 L.Ed.2d 203 (1985) (internal quotation marks omitted). In Padilla, the Court relied on “recent changes in our immigration law [that] have made removal nearly an automatic result for a broad class of noncitizen offenders.” Padilla, 130 S.Ct. at 1481. Moreover, the Padilla Court noted that it had “never applied a distinction between direct and collateral consequences to define the scope of constitutionally ‘reasonable professional assistance’ required under Strickland,” a distinction “ill-suited” for removal scenarios. Id. at 1481-82. The application of Strickland to the Padilla scenario is not so removed from the broader outlines of precedent as to constitute a “new rule,” for the Court had long required effective assistance of counsel on all “important decisions,” Strickland, 466 U.S. at 688, 104 S.Ct. 2052, in plea bargaining that could “affeetf ] the outcome of the plea process,” Hill, 474 U.S. at 59, 106 S.Ct. 366. In that light, Padilla is best read as merely recognizing that a plea agreement’s immigration consequences constitute the sort of information an alien defendant needs in making “important decisions” affecting “the outcome of the plea process,” and thereby come within the ambit of the “more particular duties to consult with the defendant” required of effective counsel. Strickland, 466 U.S. at 688, 104 S.Ct. 2052. Far from extending the Strickland rule into uncharted territory, Padilla reaffirmed defense counsel’s obligations to the criminal defendant during the plea process, a critical stage in the proceedings.
Second, the government argues that Padilla “clearly broke new ground regarding counsel’s duty to advise her client about [removal], and was not ‘dictated’ by prior Supreme Court[6] precedent.” We are convinced that Padilla did not “br[eak] new ground” in holding that counsel must inform a criminal defendant of the immigration consequences of a guilty plea in order to be constitutionally adequate. Although the Padilla Court acknowledged that some courts had previously held that the “‘failure of defense counsel to advise the defendant of possible [removal] consequences is not cognizable as a claim for ineffective assistance of counsel,”’ 130 S.Ct. at 1481, the Court straightforwardly applied the Strickland rule — and the norms of the legal profession that insist upon adequate warning to criminal defendants of immigration consequences — to the facts of Jose Padilla’s ease. See id. at 1482 (“Strickland applies to Padilla’s claim.... Under Strickland, we first determine whether counsel’s representation fell below an objective standard of reasonableness.” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
[639]*639At bottom, our inquiry focuses on whether Padilla’s application of the Strickland standard to a new factual context is a “new rule” for Teague purposes. The Strickland standard “provides sufficient guidance for resolving virtually all ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claims.” Lewis v. Johnson, 359 F.3d 646, 655 (3d Cir.2004) (internal quotation marks omitted). In Lewis, the most recent instance in which we performed this kind of analysis, we sought to determine whether the Supreme Court’s decision in Roe v. Flores-Ortega, 528 U.S. 470, 480, 120 S.Ct. 1029, 145 L.Ed.2d 985 (2000), holding that counsel has a duty to consult with his client about taking an appeal under certain circumstances, announced a new rule. We found that it did not, and in doing so, discussed in some detail the appropriate retroactivity analysis for cases involving Strickland.
Looking to the intersection of Strickland and Teague, we made three observations that guide the “new rule” inquiry: (1) “case law need not exist on all fours to allow for a finding under Teague that the rule at issue was dictated by ... precedent,” Leuns, 359 F.3d at 655; (2) “Strickland is a rule of general applicability which asks whether counsel’s conduct was objectively reasonable and conformed to professional norms based ‘on the facts of the particular case, viewed as of the time of counsel’s conduct,’ ” id. (quoting Strickland, 466 U.S. at 690, 104 S.Ct. 2052 (emphasis in quotation)); and (3) “ ‘it will be the infrequent case that yields a result so novel that it forges a new rule, one not dictated by precedent,’ ” id. (quoting Wright v. West, 505 U.S. 277, 308-09, 112 S.Ct. 2482, 120 L.Ed.2d 225 (1992) (Kennedy, J., concurring in judgment) (emphasis omitted)).
“[T]he Strickland Court identified ‘certain basic duties’ that ... criminal defense attorneys must carry out to perform competently within the meaning of the Sixth Amendment,” including a duty “to consult with the defendant on important decisions.” Id. at 656 (internal quotation marks omitted) (emphasis omitted). When the Supreme Court decides a Strickland case with novel facts, we do not place “emphasis on the particular duty identified by the [Supreme] Court ... as a basis for classifying th[e] rule as ‘new’ for Teague purposes.” Id. at 655 (emphasis in original). We look instead to “precedents and then-existing professional norms” to determine whether the decision “broke ... new ground.” Id. at 656.
Padilla followed from the clearly established principles of the guarantee of effective assistance of counsel. Strickland and Hill required counsel to advise criminal defendants at the plea stage in accordance with precedent and prevailing professional norms to ensure that the defendant makes an informed, knowing, and voluntary decision whether to plead guilty. Padilla is set within the confines of Strickland and Hill, as it concerns what advice an attorney must give to a criminal defendant at the plea stage. When Mr. Orocio pled guilty, it was “hardly novel” for counsel to provide advice to defendants at the plea stage concerning the immigration consequences of a guilty plea, undoubtedly an “important decision” for a defendant. See Padilla, 130 S.Ct. at 1485 (“For at least the past 15 years, professional norms have generally imposed an obligation on counsel to provide advice on the [removal] consequences of a client’s plea.”). Padilla “merely clarified the law as it applied to the particular facts of that case.” Of. Lewis, 359 F.3d at 655. We therefore hold that Padilla “broke no new ground in holding the duty to consult also extended to counsel’s obligation to advise the defendant” of the immigration consequences of a guilty plea and “did not ‘yield[ ] a result so novel [640]*640that it forge[d] a new rule.’ ” See id. at 657, 655 (alterations in original).
The government relies heavily on Justice Alito’s observation in Padilla that “[u]ntil today, the longstanding and unanimous position of the federal courts was that reasonable defense counsel generally need only advise a client about the direct consequences of a criminal conviction.”7 130 S.Ct. at 1487 (Alito, J., concurring in the judgment). The government sees this as convincing evidence that Padilla announced a “new rule.” However, Strickland did not freeze into place the objective standards of attorney performance prevailing in 1984, never to change again. See 466 U.S. at 688, 104 S.Ct. 2052 (“The Sixth Amendment ... relies instead on the legal profession’s maintenance of standards ....’” (emphasis added)). The Court’s opinion in Padilla reiterated this reference to “the practice and expectations of the legal community: ‘The proper measure of attorney performance remains simply reasonableness under prevailing professional norms.’ ” 130 S.Ct. at 1482 (quoting Strickland, 466 U.S. at 688, 104 S.Ct. 2052); id. (“We have long recognized that ‘[prevailing norms of practice as reflected in American Bar Association Standards and the like ... are guides to determining what is reasonable....’” (alterations in original) (quoting Strickland, 466 U.S. at 688,104 S.Ct. 2052)).
Lower court decisions not in harmony with Padilla were, with few exceptions, decided before 1995 and pre-date the professional norms that, as the Padilla court recognized, had long demanded that competent counsel provide advice on the removal consequences of a client’s plea.8 Padilla, 130 S.Ct. at 1485. While at the time of those early decisions courts had not yet recognized that a lawyer fails in his professional duty when he does not advise an alien client of the potentially grave immigration consequences of a guilty plea, by 2004, when Mr. Orocio pled guilty, the norms of effective assistance — norms keyed to contemporaneous professional standards — had become far more demanding.
Every Strickland claim requires a fact-specific inquiry, but it is not the case that every Strickland ruling on new facts requires the announcement of a “new rule.” We have held in Lewis, 359 F.3d at 655, quoting Justice Kennedy’s observations in Wright, 505 U.S. at 308-09, 112 S.Ct. 2482 (Kennedy, J., concurring in the judgment), that under rules that require a “ ‘case-by-case examination of the evidence, ... we can tolerate a number of specific applications without saying that those applications themselves create a new rule.’ ” Accordingly, a court’s disposition of each individual factual scenario arising under the long-established Strickland standard is not in each instance a “new rule,” [641]*641but rather a new application of an “old rule” in a manner dictated by precedent. Padilla is no different.
Indeed, close scrutiny of the Padilla opinion leads us to consider it not unlikely that the Padilla Court anticipated the retroactive application of its holding on collateral review when it considered the effect its decision would have on final convictions:
We have given serious consideration to the concerns that the Solicitor General, respondent, and amici have stressed regarding the importance of protecting the finality of convictions obtained through guilty pleas.® We confronted a similar “floodgates” concern in Hill, but nevertheless applied Strickland to a claim that counsel had failed to advise the client regarding his parole eligibility before he pleaded guilty.... A flood did not follow in that decision’s wake.
130 S.Ct. at 1484-85 (citation omitted) (footnote omitted). We therefore hold that, because Padilla followed directly from Strickland and long-established professional norms, it is an “old rule” for Teague purposes and is retroactively applicable on collateral review.9
10 Mr. Orocio is thus entitled to the benefit of its holding.
C. Under Padilla and Strickland, was Mr. Orocio’s plea counsel ineffective?
Mr. Orocio alleges that neither his prior counsel nor Mr. Portelli advised him that accepting the proposed guilty pleas would result in near-mandatory removal from the United States. We address a question left unanswered by the District Court: did this alleged failure to advise constitute ineffective assistance of counsel under the first prong of the Strickland test? Our analysis is rendered straightforward by Padilla. Padilla recognized that the failure of defense counsel to warn a defendant that a plea would make the defendant eligible for removal is a constitutional defect in representation that satisfies the first prong of the Strickland test. 130 S.Ct. at 1483. The facts of Padilla closely mirror those presented here, and we therefore hold that Mr. Orocio’s affidavit sufficiently alleges that his counsel was constitutionally deficient.
Jose Padilla was subject to removal for a controlled substance offense. His attorney affirmatively misled him, telling Padilla prior to Padilla’s guilty plea that he “did not have to worry about immigration status since he had been in the country so [642]*642long.” Id. at 1478. While Mr. Orocio does not allege that Mr. Portelli affirmatively misled him, Mr. Orocio does allege that Mr. Portelli wholly failed to advise him of the near-certain removal consequence of pleading guilty to a controlled substance offense. The Padilla Court expressly rejected any requirement that a defendant be affirmatively misled; for eases such as those in which the consequences can be divined “simply from reading the text of the statute,” the mere failure to warn of a removal consequence is constitutionally deficient representation because “there is no relevant difference between an act of commission and an act of omission.” Id. at 1483, 1484 (internal quotation marks omitted).
We find unpersuasive the government’s argument that, because Strickland measures counsel’s performance “on the facts of the particular case viewed as of the time of counsel’s conduct,” Mr. Orocio’s claim should fail because it was not reasonable to expect his attorney, in 2004, to predict a Supreme Court decision nearly six years later. This argument misses the mark.11 His attorney is not alleged to be deficient because he failed to predict the Padilla decision — he is alleged to be deficient because he did not measure up to prevailing professional norms demanded of counsel at the plea stage as required by Strickland and its progeny. The Strickland decision did not hold that only existing Supreme Court decisions guide the reasonableness inquiry. Instead, it said:
More specific guidelines are not appropriate. The Sixth Amendment refers simply to “counsel,” not specifying particular requirements of effective assistance. It relies instead on the legal profession’s maintenance of standards sufficient to justify the law’s presumption that counsel will fulfill the role in the adversary process that the Amendment envisions. The proper measure of attorney performance remains simply reasonableness under prevailing professional norms.
466 U.S. at 688, 104 S.Ct. 2052 (citation omitted). After reiterating that language from Strickland, the Padilla Court stated that “[t]he weight of prevailing professional norms supports the view that counsel must advise her client regarding the risk of deportation.” 130 S.Ct. at 1482 (citing sources from 1993, 1995, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2002, and 2004). These professional norms did not come into being on the date of the Padilla decision, but quite the opposite: the Padilla decision reflected the fact that these professional norms were well established long before the Padilla decision— indeed, they were well established prior to the alleged deficiency of Mr. Orocio’s attorney.12 In any event, counsel had been required to adhere to professional norms in the decades since Strickland, and all of the sources of prevailing professional norms cited by the Court in Padilla predate Mr. Orocio’s conviction and his attorney’s failure to advise. It did not take the Padilla decision to establish what Mr. Portelli was required to do as a competent defense attorney.
In light of the long-standing principle that counsel will be held to the prevailing legal standards of the profession, it is beyond cavil that Mr. Orocio’s counsel was constitutionally deficient under the first [643]*643prong of the Strickland inquiry if, as is alleged, he did not advise Mr. Orocio of the adverse immigration consequences of his guilty plea to a controlled substance offense in accordance with the then-prevailing professional norms.
D. Was Mr. Orocio prejudiced by his plea counsel’s ineffectiveness?
Having determined that, assuming the truth of Mr. Orocio’s affidavit, Mr. Orocio’s counsel was ineffective under the standard laid out by Padilla and Strickland, and that Padilla is retroactively applicable, we turn to the question of whether Mr. Orocio has sufficiently alleged that counsel’s failure properly to advise prejudiced him. That is, we must determine “whether ‘there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.’ ” Padilla, 130 S.Ct. at 1482 (quoting Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694, 104 S.Ct. 2052). A “reasonable probability” is a standard of proof “somewhat lower” than a preponderance of the evidence. Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694, 104 S.Ct. 2052.
Although the Padilla decision clearly imposes a duty on counsel during the negotiation of a plea bargain, “a critical phase of litigation for purposes of the Sixth Amendment Right to effective assistance of eounsel[,] ... to inform her non-citizen client that he faces a risk of deportation,” Padilla, 130 S.Ct. at 1486, it does not undertake to provide instruction on whether a client was prejudiced by the ineffectiveness, id. at 1483-84. Instead, we turn to longstanding Supreme Court precedent to guide the prejudice inquiry.
In a challenge to a guilty plea based on ineffective assistance of counsel, the prejudice inquiry takes the form of “whether counsel’s constitutionally ineffective performance affected the outcome of the plea process.” Hill, 474 U.S. at 59,106 S.Ct. 366 (emphasis added). “[I]n order to satisfy the ‘prejudice’ requirement [of Strickland ], the defendant must show that there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s errors, he would not have pleaded guilty and would have insisted on going to trial.” Id. “This assessment, in turn, will depend in large part,” but not exclusively, “on a prediction whether the [errors] likely would have changed the outcome of a trial.” Id.
The District Court ultimately based its determination that there was no prejudice on its finding that Orocio had not shown that he would have been acquitted, had he gone to trial. In so doing, the District Court followed an older line of reasoning in this Circuit which originated in United States v. Nino, 878 F.2d 101, 105 (3d Cir.1989). The Supreme Court, how ever, requires only that a defendant could have rationally gone to trial in the first place, and it has never required an affirmative demonstration of likely acquittal at such a trial as the sine qua non of prejudice. See Hill, 474 U.S. at 59, 106 S.Ct. 366. To the extent that we have previously interpreted Hill to require such a showing, the Supreme Court’s intervening decision in Padilla (of which the District Court did not have the benefit) has made it clear that that is not appropriate. Instead, “to obtain relief on this type of claim, a petitioner must convince the court that a decision to reject the plea bargain would have been rational under the circumstances,” Padilla, 130 S.Ct. at 1485, and a rational decision not to plead guilty does not focus solely on whether a defendant would have been found guilty at trial — Padilla reiterated that an alien defendant might rationally be more concerned with removal than with a term of imprisonment, see id. at 1483 (recognizing that “ ‘[preserving a client’s right to remain in the United States may be more important to the client [644]*644than any potential jail sentence’ ” (quoting St. Cyr, 533 U.S. at 323, 121 S.Ct. 2271)). Therefore, Nino’s requirement that a defendant affirmatively show that he would been acquitted in order to establish prejudice in this context is no longer good law.13 See In re Krebs, 527 F.3d 82, 84 (3d Cir.2008) (“A panel of this Court may reevaluate the holding of a prior panel which conflicts with intervening Supreme Court precedent.”).
Mr. Orocio argues two forms of prejudice from his attorney’s failure to inform him of possible immigration consequences. First, he argues that prejudice should be presumed in his case because the failure to advise of immigration consequences is “easy to identify and prevent.” Second, he argues that he suffered actual prejudice because he would have chosen to go to trial instead of agreeing to a plea that subjected him to automatic deportation. We reject his first contention, but we agree with his second.
With respect to presumed prejudice, Mr. Orocio takes the “easy to identify and prevent” standard from Strickland. When taken in context, however, the language does not support a finding of presumed prejudice in this case. The full passage from Strickland reads as follows:
In certain Sixth Amendment contexts, prejudice is presumed. Actual or constructive denial of the assistance of counsel altogether is legally presumed to result in prejudice. So are various kinds of state interference with counsel’s assistance. Prejudice in these circumstances is so likely that case-by-case inquiry into prejudice is not worth the cost. Moreover, such circumstances involve impairments of the Sixth Amendment right that are easy to identify and, for that reason and because the prosecution is directly responsible, easy for the government to prevent.
466 U.S. at 692, 104 S.Ct. 2052 (citations omitted) (emphases added). The Court further held that “actual ineffectiveness claims alleging a deficiency in attorney performance are subject to a general requirement that the defendant affirmatively prove prejudice [because] [t]he government is not responsible for, and hence not able to prevent, attorney errors that will result in a reversal of a conviction or sentence.” Id. at 693, 104 S.Ct. 2052. Mr. Orocio does not allege that he was denied the assistance of counsel altogether, and he does not allege that the government was responsible for his counsel’s omission or interfered with his representation. Simply put, he has not alleged the type of scenario where government-caused prejudice is “so likely” that an examination into the facts of his particular case is “not worth the cost.” Accordingly, his argument of presumed prejudice is unpersuasive, and he must “affirmatively prove prejudice.”
In order to prove prejudice affirmatively, Mr. Orocio must show that, “but for counsel’s errors, he would not have pleaded guilty and would have insisted on going to trial.” Hill, 474 U.S. at 59, 106 S.Ct. 366. Mr. Orocio’s affidavit states that he “would have taken his case to trial” if he could not have secured a plea agreement that would avoid a removal consequence. App. 39. The District Court held that Mr. Orocio’s prior concession of guilt during the plea colloquy was dispositive and necessarily foreclosed a credible, objectively reasonable claim that he would [645]*645have nonetheless rolled the dice and gone to trial in the hope of avoiding removal:
The Court rejects Mr. Orocio’s argument because the second prong of Strickland requires him to show that, but for his counsel’s errors, there is a reasonable probability that he would not have [pled] guilty and that he would not have been convicted at trial. Mr. Orocio has failed to show this. To the contrary, Mr. Orocio has not disputed the accuracy of the underlying facts giving rise to his guilty plea. Because Mr. Orocio has admitted in open court that he was guilty of the crime which he was convicted and does not now challenge his guilt (but merely asserts that , a more favorable plea deal could have been negotiated on his behalf), the Strickland test is not satisfied and Mr. Orocio’s motion cannot prevail.
App. 22. We disagree with this assessment. Mr. Orocio’s guilty plea does not end the Hill inquiry because, had he not pled guilty, there would not have been any acknowledgement of guilt in open court foreclosing a rational decision to go to trial. Instead, the inquiry must focus on whether Mr. Orocio, if made aware of the dire immigration consequences of the proposed guilty plea, could have reasonably chosen to go to trial even though he faced a drug distribution charge constituting an aggravated felony with a 10-year minimum sentence. We believe it would have been a reasonable decision.
In Padilla, the Supreme Court reiterated that ‘“[preserving the client’s right to remain in the United States may be more important to the client than any potential jail sentence.’ ” Padilla, 130 S.Ct. at 1483 (quoting INS v. St. Cyr, 533 U.S. 289, 323, 121 S.Ct. 2271, 150 L.Ed.2d 347 (2001)14) (alteration in original) (emphasis added). For the alien defendant most concerned with remaining in the United States, especially a legal permanent resident, it is not at all unreasonable to go to trial and risk a ten-year sentence and guaranteed removal, but with the chance of acquittal and the right to remain in the United States, instead of pleading guilty to an offense that, while not an aggravated felony, carries “presumptively mandatory” removal consequences. Just as “the threat of [removal] may provide the defendant with a powerful incentive to plead guilty to an offense that does not mandate that penalty in exchange for a dismissal of a charge that does,” id. at 1486, the threat of removal provides an equally powerful incentive to go to trial if a plea would result in removal anyway. Mr. Orocio was only 27 years old at the time he entered the plea agreement, and he rationally could have been more concerned about a near-certainty of multiple decades of banishment from the United States than the possibility of a single decade in prison. Accordingly, we hold that, on the facts as alleged in his coram nobis petition, a decision by Mr. Orocio “to reject the plea bargain would have been rational under the circumstances.” Id. at 1485; accord State v. Sandoval, 171 Wash.2d 163, 249 P.3d 1015, 1021-22 (2011) (finding prejudice to lawful permanent resident defendant on similar facts).
The government further contends that any prejudice to Mr. Orocio was mitigated [646]*646by two statements made by the District Court during the change of plea hearing and the later sentencing hearing. First, at the change of plea hearing, in October of 2004, the court made a brief reference to immigration authorities:
[The court]: Nor is [the plea agreement] — and I should tell you too — it’s not binding upon any civil authorities such as the Internal Revenue Service and it’s not binding upon the Immigration and Naturalization Service.
Do you understand that?
[Mr. Orocio]: Yes.
App. 66. At the sentencing hearing, in March of 2005, the court again alluded to immigration authorities:
You also ... are to cooperate with Immigration and Customs Enforcement to resolve any problems with your status in this country. You are to provide truthful information and abide by the rules and regulations of Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
If you are deported, Mr. Orocio, you cannot come back to this country without first getting the written permission of the Attorney General of this country. If you do come back, you are to report in person to the nearest United States Probation Office within 48 hours of your reentry.
App. 52-53. The gist of the government’s argument is that these two colloquies, in tandem, put Mr. Orocio on notice that he could be removed. With that notice, the government argues, Mr. Orocio should have prepared arguments on appeal or filed a § 2255 petition. The question under Strickland and Hill, however, is not whether Mr. Orocio had later access to remedies, but whether he would have pled guilty at all.
The allusion to immigration authorities at the change of plea hearing was insufficient to mitigate the prejudice suffered by Mr. Orocio. The fact that a plea agreement is not binding on the Immigration and Naturalization Service did not alert Mr. Orocio to the fact that his removal was a near certainty as a consequence of pleading guilty to a controlled substance offense. Moreover, the single reference to the INS was in the context of a series of warnings that included a statement that the plea agreement was not even binding on the District Court. App. 65. In sum, the warning at the change of plea hearing was sufficient to alert Mr. Orocio that his plea was binding on only himself and the government, id., but was wholly insufficient to alert him of the immigration consequences of a guilty plea.
The allusion to immigration authorities at sentencing was likewise insufficient to mitigate any prejudice. As the Padilla Court noted, because the law was “succinct and straightforward” and “truly clear” with respect to removal for controlled substance offenses, the District Court’s sensible advice to Mr. Orocio to cooperate with ICE was too generalized — and, also, far too late in the process — to effectively alert Mr. Orocio to the severe removal consequences of his guilty plea of five months before. 130 S.Ct. at 1483.
We conclude that, assuming Mr. Orocio can establish at an evidentiary hearing the facts that he has alleged in his affidavit, Mr. Orocio will have shown prejudice in the Strickland sense flowing from the failure of counsel to inform him, at the time the guilty plea agreement was proffered, of the grave immigration consequences that acceptance of the agreement would entail.
IV. Conclusion
Having concluded that Mr. Orocio’s petition for a writ of error coram nobis failed to allege Strickland prejudice and hence [647]*647was deficient as a matter of law, the District Court dismissed the petition without conducting an evidentiary hearing. The District Court’s decision pre-dated the Supreme Court’s decision in Padilla. We have ruled that Padilla has retroactive application. Accordingly, we will remand this case to the District Court in order to give that court the opportunity to decide this case within the framework of Padilla and on the basis of a developed factual record.15 The judgment of the District Court will be vacated and the case remanded to that court.