Reginald Country appeals from the district court’s 1 order denying his second 28 U.S.C. § 2254 (1982) petition. We affirm.
On December 13, 1974, Country pled nolo contendere to a forcible rape charge in Nebraska; in exchange, the prosecution dropped an habitual criminal charge. Country received a ten to thirty year sentence. His conviction was affirmed on appeal to the Nebraska Supreme Court, and his subsequent requests for post-conviction relief in the Nebraska state courts were denied.
The present section 2254 petition was filed October 24, 1984. Country alleged in his petition that his plea was coerced through the use of hypnotically refreshed testimony which is inadmissible in criminal trials under Nebraska law. He also alleged below that his counsel was ineffective for failing to challenge the victim’s testimony as inadmissible.
The district court denied Country’s petition, holding that the failure by counsel to inform Country of the victim’s hypnotically refreshed testimony did not render Country’s plea invalid or counsel ineffective. On appeal, Country challenges both of the district court’s findings.
A plea of
nolo contendere,
to be valid, must be voluntary and intelligent.
George v. Black,
Country claims that the prosecution’s case against him was based solely on the victim’s hypnotically refreshed testimony. He asserts that, had he known the testimony was hypnotically refreshed and the state’s case was therefore extremely weak, he would never have entered his plea. He relies heavily on the Nebraska Supreme Court’s holding, six years after his plea, that hypnotically refreshed testimony is inadmissible in criminal trials.
State v. Palmer,
We rely on
Brady
in rejecting Country’s claim. In
Brady,
the accused entered a plea of guilty under a federal kidnapping statute which imposed the death sentence when the defendant was convicted by a jury. The statute was later held to be unconstitutional. The Supreme Court held that “absent misrepresentation or other impermissible conduct by state agents, a voluntary plea of guilty intelligently made in the light of the then applicable law does not become vulnerable because later judicial decisions indicate that the plea rested on a faulty premise.”
Brady,
Other than the change in Nebraska law, there is every indication that Country’s plea was voluntarily made. Country had the opportunity to weigh his alternatives, and he entered his plea after his own assessment. The state was prepared to pursue two charges against Country, and Country had much to gain by pleading nolo contendere. The state dropped the habitual criminal charge, and Country did not risk conviction on two charges. Thus his plea, entered prior to the change in Nebraska law which ruled hypnotically enhanced testimony inadmissible, was not involuntary.
Country also challenges his counsel’s failure to inform him of the hypnotically refreshed testimony and to object to the admissibility of that testimony. While trial counsel’s advice must be within the range of competence demanded from criminal lawyers,
McMann,
Furthermore, an error by counsel, even if an unprofessional error, does not constitute ineffective assistance of counsel unless the defendant was prejudiced by the error.
Strickland v. Washington,
Country has failed to show with a reasonable probability that any objection at the time of his plea would have led to a ruling that the testimony was inadmissible. While Country’s counsel had the tools with which to develop an argument at the time of Country’s plea that the evidence was
*185
inadmissible,
e.g., Greenfield v. Commonwealth,
Affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable Warren K. Urbom, Chief Judge for the United States District Court for the District of Nebraska.
