This is an appeal by an incarcerated New York State prisoner from the dismissal by Judge Port of the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus. Thirteen years after his 1948 conviction for attempted robbery had been affirmed, People v. Olshen,
The court below found, and this finding is presently uncontested, that appellant “received a full and fair state court evidentiary hearing resulting in reliable findings.” As we must also consider the case in the light of the state court findings, Townsend v. Sain,
Unlike • the situation in Glasser v. United States,
Also, under the circumstances existing here, the failure of the New York trial court to inquire into the possibility of a conflict of interest does not entitle appellant to have his state conviction set aside. Although some judicial initiative is probably advisable when the possibility of a prejudicial conflict is apparent to the trial court, none is required where, as here, the record is barren of both prejudice and any possible conflict. See United States v. Paz-Sierra,
In sum, inasmuch as appellant has failed to make a showing that would require that a federally obtained conviction be reversed, it goes without saying that appellant has certainly failed to show the complete inadequacy of representation by retained counsel 2 necessary to justify a collateral attack on a state conviction.
Accordingly the judgment below is affirmed. 3
Notes
. Of course appellant could not complain if he
knowingly
retained counsel who represented a prosecution witness in another case. District of Columbia v. Scott, 94 TJ.S.App.D.C. 227,
. Appellant’s representation would not be constitutionally inadequate even under the more exacting standards applicable to court-appointed counsel. See Tucker v. United States,
. After this case on appeal was su6 judice we learned that appellant has pending in the New York courts another cor am nobis proceeding. Our affirmance is of course without prejudice to the institution of a new habeas corpus petition to an applicable federal court following the final determination of that proceeding, provided such a habeas corpus petition raises an issue as to the deprivation or impairment of the petitioner’s federal constitutional rights which, for some reason beyond petitioner’s control, he has not previously been able to present to the federal courts.
