Henry N. Adams, Jr., convicted of two counts of aggravated robbery in Ohio, appeals the denial of his petition for habeas relief. Here, he raises only one issue— whether he received effective assistance of counsel at trial. We have reviewed the record and the opinion of the district court denying relief and affirm.
In the early morning hours of May 10, 1975, two men robbed the Four Star Cafe in Hamilton County, Ohio. Two eyewitnesses identified Adams and his codefendant as the perpetrators. One witness testified that the defendants used pistols during the robbery. The second said that Adams pressed something which appeared to be a gun into that witness’s back. In addition to thoroughly cross-examining the eyewitnesses, Adams called seven alibi witnesses in his defense.
Adams was convicted and sentenced to concurrent sentences of five to twenty-five years on each count to run consecutively with other sentences from previous convictions. The convictions were affirmed on appeal. State v. Adams, No. 76024 (1977). Leave to appeal to the Ohio Supreme Court was denied. State v. Adams, No. 77-1029 (1978). The Ohio trial court dismissed his petition for post-conviction relief.
In his first habeas corpus petition, Adams raised several issues including ineffective assistance of counsel. The district court denied relief without considering the sixth amendment issue, holding instead that as to this latter claim, Adams had failed to exhaust his state court remedies by failing to appeal from the state trial court’s denial of post-conviction relief. Adams then unsuccessfully moved the Ohio Court of Appeals for leave to file a delayed appeal from those post-conviction proceedings. When his appeal to the Ohio Supreme Court was denied, Adams filed this second petition for habeas relief in the district court. It was dismissed without a hearing.
Adams predicates his sixth amendment claim upon his counsel’s failure to obtain a copy of a police report allegedly stating that no weapon was used in the robbery and to interview four police officers who investigated the robbery. Had his counsel not failed in these respects, Adams claims, the report and the information obtained from the interviews might have been used to impeach the two eyewitnesses who both testified that Adams had a gun at the time of the robbery.
I.
We note at the outset that were we to slavishly follow our decision in
Poole v. Perini,
*980
Whether or not a criminal defendant has received the effective assistance of counsel mandated by the sixth amendment is clearly not a “basic, primary, or historical fact ... ‘in the sense of a recital of external events and the credibility of their narrators ....’”
Townsend v. Sain,
Poole
was decided without the benefit of the Supreme- Court’s illumination, in
Sumner v. Mata II,
The issue, then, of whether or not a criminal defendant received effective assistance of counsel as required by the sixth amendment involves questions of both fact and of law. Like other issues to be determined in the judicial process, there must first be findings of fact as to the actions, or inactions, of the party whose conduct is being evaluated; in this case, the attorney. The state court’s findings as to what was done or not done, and under what circumstances, are entitled to a presumption of correctness. On the other hand, the conclusion to be drawn from that conduct regarding the effectiveness of counsel’s assistance is legal in nature; those conclusions are not subject to the limitations imposed by section 2254(d).
Sumner II. See United States ex rel. Healey v. Cannon,
II.
As we have said so often, a criminal defendant’s sixth amendment right to counsel is protected when he is represented by counsel “reasonably likely to render and rendering reasonably effective assistance.”
Beasley v. United States,
There is nothing in the record before us that proves defense counsel did not read the police report. Be that as it may, however, his failure at trial to confront the two eyewitnesses with the fact that the report allegedly states 1 that no weapon was used was not error. The contents of a police report based on whatever after-the-fact investigations and interviews the police might have conducted are of minor significance compared to the in-court, unequivocal statements of two eyewitnesses. Even if counsel were able to prove that the report was based upon the statements of these witnesses, a possibility unsupported by any evidence before us, we are left with the testimony of those witnesses, unshaken by counsel’s cross-examination.
As for his counsel’s failure to call four police officers to testify, we agree with the district court that the claim is so conclusory as to fall short of meeting Adams’ burden of proving a constitutional deprivation.
Allen v. Perini,
As it turns out, the state did not call the officers. However, we have said before that a defendant “has not been denied effective assistance by erroneous tactical decisions if, at the time, the decisions would have seemed reasonable to the competent trial ' attorney.
See Beasley v. United States,
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. Although Adams appends an illegible photocopy of the police report to his brief filed with this court, the district court opinion makes it clear that neither it nor the state courts were ever provided with a copy of the report.
