James Greer and two of his brothers, Ed Greer and Larry Scott, were convicted by a jury after a joint trial on charges of robbery and use of a firearm in the commission of a felony in Nebraska state court. James Greer and Larry Scott were represented at trial by the same attorney. In his petition for habeas corpus, James Greer contends that the joint representation denied him effective assistance of counsel in violation of the sixth amendment by subjecting his attorney to a conflict of interests. We find no merit in Greer’s claim and affirm the district court’s dismissal of the petition.
On May 19, 1980, at approximately 10:30 p.m., two armed, masked men robbed a Kwik Shop store in Omaha, Nebraska. Within minutes, police officers a few blocks from the store stopped a car based on descriptions from other similar, contemporaneous robberies. The police found James Greer behind the wheel. James Greer’s two brothers, two handguns, a wad of money, and masks were also found inside the car. Witnesses from the Kwik Shop were brought immediately to the arrest site where they identified Ed Greer and Larry Scott as the robbers by their clothing and build and by the masks. At trial, witnesses again identified the clothing, masks, and guns. No one identified the car or James Greer. All three brothers were convicted and sentenced to approximately equal terms of imprisonment. James Greer now claims that his attorney was ineffective because a conflict of interests precluded adequate representation of both himself and Scott at the same time.
In
Cuyler v. Sullivan,
Without an objection or other signal to the trial judge that a potential conflict exists, a habeas petitioner must demonstrate that his attorney’s performance was
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adversely affected by an actual conflict of interest.
Id.
at 348,
Although we have previously stated that “there is no litmus test to determine whether an actual conflict exists,” we have also recognized that a “conflict of interests exists where the factual circumstances require counsel to offer evidence which assists one codefendant but adversely affects others.”
Parker,
Next, Greer points out that his attorney said little more at the sentencing hearing than that he had nothing to add to the presentence investigation report. Greer contends that independent counsel unafraid to highlight Scott’s role in the robbery would have stressed Greer’s purportedly lesser degree of culpability as the mere driver of the getaway car. This contention was not raised in Greer’s petition in the district court, so we need not consider it now.
See United States v. Samuelson,
Even if this contention were properly before us, we would reject it. If there was some question over whether James Greer instead of Scott had actually entered the store, we would face a more difficult problem.
Compare Turnquest v. Wainwright,
Because we find no indication that James Greer’s attorney was adversely affected by an actual conflict of interest, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
