Thе question in this case is whether the petitioner knowingly and intelligently waived his Sixth Amendment right to counsel free from a conflict of interest. The district court answered the question in the negative and ordered the petitioner released from custody. Noting jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 2253, we reverse.
I.
In 1979, the petitioner’s car was stopped for proceeding through a red light. A police officer approached the car, which contained the petitioner and two passengers, and viewed a dark-colored vinyl bag on the front seat. The officer also saw a clear-plastic bag of white powder protruding from the dark bag. After the powder was analyzed, all three persons in the car were indicted for the unlawful possession of cocaine.
The petitioner and his two co-defendants all retained the same counsel. Given the nature of the case and certain evidence introduced at the preliminary hearing, the assistant State’s attorney doubted whether one attorney could adequately represent all three defendants. Before the trial began, therefore, the assistant State’s attorney initiated a colloquy with the court, the defense attorney, and the defendants. The relevant portions of that exchange are:
[Assistant State’s Attorney]: Your Honor, in .. . the Preliminary Hearing we feel that the testimony of the passengers is different from the driver’s, and because of that—
The Court: Different in what sense, so [the defense attorney] will know what we’re talking about.
[Assistant State’s Attorney]: Well, your Honor, with respect to the knowledge of contraband, how it got there in the car, and we feel that to protect the record they should be made aware that there’s, what the State fеels is a possible conflict for their own interests, and if they want to waive having separate attorneys we feel it’s required to protect the record.
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The Court: Well, I’m aware of the fact that if there is a conflict the defendants are entitled to separate counsel, and it’s up to them to — it’s really up to their *433 attorney to be able to determine whether or not there’s some conflict. I really don’t know.
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You see, I can’t tell them that there may be a possible conflict without knowing what it is. In other words, they don’t know what they’re waiving.
[Assistant State’s Attorney]: Your Honor, that their testimony in some ways might conflict one another and might bring harm to their interest.
The Court: Well, that would be to their disadvantage, no doubt about that.
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The Court: It certainly is a serious problem when defendants are represented by a single lawyer who is torn between his obligation to those defendants by evidence that might — coming from one defendant that might harm the other’s position here .... Well, do you have any objection if I make inquiry of your clients?
[Defense Attorney]: No.
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The Court: Mr. Tonaldi [the petitioner] —and I speak to you first because the procedure followed in all cases, whether criminal or civil, whoever is named first in the pleading he goes first, so that is why I speak to you first. And it’s not that I regard you as any less important or more important than any other of the defendants.
Mr. Tonaldi, the State is genuinely concerned because it would be unfair to you and your co-defendants that there might be some conflict between the three of you that would make it improper for you to have one lawyer.
In other words, your attorney has to be concerned with your interest exclusively, and it would be very difficult for your attorney if he represents two defendants where the defеnse might be inconsistent and I don’t know whether anybody is going to testify here, because you don’t have to testify, but if some defendants or all defendants should testify and say something that was harmful to the other defendant that would be a conflict in the testimony probably, and it would be difficult for one lawyer to fairly represent all defendants when that occurs.
Knowing that do you have any objection to Mr. Solomon [the defense attorney] representing you and the other two defendants at the same time?
Defendant Tonaldi: No sir.
At trial, the difficult situation that the court discussed did transpire. One of the petitioner’s co-defendants testified that she first saw the dark vinyl bag “on the floor of the front of the car” when the petitioner, then alone in the ear, picked her up at her home. The trial judge, who sat as the trier-of-fact, credited this testimony and found only the petitioner guilty of possessing cocaine.
On appeal the petitioner contended that a conflict of interest rendered his attorney’s assistance constitutionally defective. The conflict of interest manifested itself, according to the petitioner, when the defense attorney called the petitiоner’s co-defendant to the stand and elicited testimony inculpating the petitioner.
See generally Cuyler v. Sullivan,
The Appellate Court of Illinois agreed with the petitioner that “an actual conflict did manifest itself at trial.”
People v. Tonaldi,
Unsatisfied with the disposition of his constitutional claim, the petitioner brought this action seeking a writ of habeas corpus. The petitioner claimed, as he did in the Appellate Court of Illinois, that he was denied his Sixth Amendment right to counsel untrammeled by a conflict of interest. Anticipating that the respondents would assert waiver as a defense, the petition stated that the trial court’s “inquiry wаs couched in vague generalities and was insufficient to allow petitioner to make a knowing and intelligent waiver of his 6th amendment right to separate counsel.”
The respondents did, in fact, move for summary judgment on the ground that the petitioner waived his right to an attorney unaffected by a conflict of interest. The district court denied the motion because it could not “conclude as a matter of law that the trial court’s warnings and [the petitioner’s] acquiescence constitute a valid waiver of the right to effective assistance of counsel.”
The district court subsequently entered judgment in favor of the petitioner and ordered his release from custody. In his thoughtful Memorandum Opinion the district judge wrote:
Although the trial court attempted to explain to [the petitioner] the danger of joint reprеsentation, this explanation was constitutionally defective because the court itself was not in a position to know the specific dangers and could not reasonably predict them so as to intelligently advise the petitioner .... The abstract and hypothetical admonishment delivered to [the petitioner] in this case was simply insufficient to inform him of the fundamental nature of the right he was purporting to waive.
... [I]t may very well be the better procedure for a court to err on the side of precluding joint representation rather than be vulnerable on rеview to the kind of contentions raised by petitioner in this case.
II.
Although the respondents, in their motion for sqmmary judgment, stated that the petitioner’s Sixth Amendment claim was “raised, argued extensively, and disposed of in the state court system,” they have changed their position and now contend that the petition should have been dismissed as unexhausted. A petition for a writ of habeas corpus must be dismissed as unexhausted, of course, if there exists a meaningful and presently available state court remedy. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b). The respondents' contend that pursuant to the Illinois post-conviction statute, Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 38, § 122-1, the petitioner may take his constitutional claim to a state court for a ruling on the merits.
As we have noted on several occasions, however, post-conviction relief is not available in Illinois with respect to claims made on direct appeal.
See Perry
v.
Fair-man,
The respondents, nevertheless, do contradict this conclusion and maintain that the petition for a writ of habeas corpus was based on “new facts,” which were outside of the trial court record and were not before the Appellate Court of Illinois. Citing
People v. Thomas,
We question whether an Illinois court would relax the res judicata doctrine and reconsider thе petitioner’s constitutional claim on the merits.
See, e.g., People
v.
Edwards,
In any event, we need not direct a petitioner to pursue state remedies if the pursuit would be futile in the sense that we know that the state court would reject the claim.
See Zelenka
v.
Israel,
The first “new fact” raised in the federal proceеdings is that the petitioner purportedly did not understand the concept of conflict of interest as it related to his case. This assertion, however, is a legal conclusion masquerading as a factual allegation. In saying that he did not understand the problems of joint representation, the petitioner is essentially asserting that the state trial court provided insufficient information and advice to permit the petitioner to make a knowing and intelligent waiver of his right to an attorney unaffected by a conflict of interest. But whether the state trial court adequately alerted the petitioner to the problems of joint representation is a legal issue — indeed the very issue on which the Appellate Court of Illinois and the federal district court disagreed.
The second and related “new fact” is that the petitioner relied on the advice of his attorney in choosing not to retain separate counsel. However, in deciding whether a waiver is knowing and intelligent, a court is concerned not with why the person made a certain choice, but with whether the trial judge (or someone else) provided sufficient information or advice to permit a choice between meaningful options.
See, e.g., United States v. Davis,
The respondents might agree with us to this point. An exhaustion-type problem only appeared after the federal district court disagreed with the Appellate Court of Illinois on a point of law. The district court held that the state trial court’s warnings and inquiry were insufficient, by themselves, to establish a valid waiver. After reaching this conclusion the district court did not immediately issue the writ; rаther the court properly held an evidentiary hearing to resolve whether, in light of other circumstances, the petitioner’s waiver was knowing and intelligent.
See Zuck v. Alabama,
We bеlieve that the respondents’ view of the exhaustion doctrine is inconsistent with the habeas corpus statute, 28 U.S.C. § 2254, and is not compelled by the interests of comity. The habeas corpus statute clearly contemplates that a federal court may hear and consider evidence concerning factual matters not resolved by a state court. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d); Rule 8 of Rules Governing § 2254 cases. In this case the state-court system perceived no need to consider evidence beyond the original trial court record. The federal district court disagreed and thus othеr matters, all of the facts surrounding the waiver, became relevant to the district court’s resolution of the case. Once a disagreement over a precursory issue arose, however, the district court was not required to dismiss the case as unexhausted. The Appellate Court of Illinois decided, in effect, that further evidence is not needed to resolve the petitioner’s claim, and comity would not be served by attempting to induce a state court to hold a hearing that it deems unnecessary.
Before we end our discussion of the exhaustion question, it is important to distinguish between two Sixth Amendment claims — one that was raised in the petition and one that was not. The petitioner asserts that a conflict of interest adversely affected his attorney’s performance. He did not claim in his petition for a writ of habeas corpus that his attorney’s decision to represent co-defendants was inconsistent with the minimum standards of competent representation,
2
see, e.g., United States ex rel. McClindon
v.
Warden, Illinois State Penitentiary,
III.
We now reach the merits and decide whether the state trial court’s statements and inquiry were sufficient to permit the petitioner, a man who is able to understand the ordinary meaning of words,
3
to execute a knowing and intelligent waiver of his Sixth Amendment right to counsel free from a conflict of interest. Whether the petitioner effectively waived this constitutional right is not, of course, a question of fact, but an issue оf federal law.
See Brewer v. Williams,
As abstract as a trial judge’s warnings about joint representation may be, so is the Supreme Court’s description of a knowing and intelligent waiver. The Court has stated that a waiver is effective if the record demonstrates that the рerson “knows what he is doing and his choice is made with eyes open.”
Faretta v. California,
The state trial judge did more than state that there may be a conflict of interest in this case. The phrase “conflict of interest” might very well be meaningless to a layman. If a judge only referred to a possible conflict of interest, a criminal defendant might believe that the reference was to a conflict between co-defendants or between the defendant and his attorney. In reality, the conflict is within the attorney’s loyalty; the problem is that the attorney might not be able to represent one client fully without damaging the interests of the other client. The state trial judge in this case, in fact, did not just utter the phrase “conflict of interest,” but explained the potential problem in terms of the attorney’s ability to represent all defendants fairly and completely. (See, e.g., “your attorney has to be concerned with your interest exclusively, and it would be very difficult for your attorney if he represents two defendants where the defense might be inconsistent.”) The petitioner was therefore aware, if he chose to listen to the judge, that his representation might be adversely affected if he and his co-defendants went to trial with the same attorney.
Moreover, the state trial judge explained the potential problem by giving a particular example of an event that could adversely affect the attorney’s performance. The judge told the petitioner that “if some defendants or all defendants should testify and say something that was harmful to the other defendant that would be a conflict in th'e testimony probably, and it would be difficult for one lawyer to fairly represent all defendants when that occurs.” The petitioner was in a position to further particularize this example because at the preliminary hearing he heard his co-defendant testify that the dark-colored vinyl bag did not belong to her and that the bag was in the petitioner’s car when he picked her up. As it turns out, this very example of a possible *438 conflict of interest — one co-defendant’s testimony implicating another — did transpire at trial and forms the basis of the petitioner’s present complaint that a conflict adversely impaired his counsel’s performance.
The case law clearly supports our conclusion that the petitioner knowingly and intelligently waived his right to representation unaffected by a conflict. In
United States v. Cox,
The able district judge stated that the petitioner’s waiver would have been effective if the state trial court had warned the petitioner “of the specific nature of the conflict and the implications of that conflict on his attorney’s effectiveness.”
First, waivers of constitutional rights are, in general, effective without such specific knowledge of the implications of the waiver. For instance, a waiver of a jury trial is knowing and intelligent even though the defendant does not know how the trial judge will find. And a defendant’s waiver of the right to remain silent after an arrest is effective even if the defendant is not told how his statements will be used against him at trial.
Second, it is usually difficult and sometimes impossible for a trial court to know how a conflict of interest will manifest itself at trial. A court is not free to inquire deeply into the attorney-client relationship nor is it free to elicit in advance the substance of a defendant’s testimony. However, we reject the adoption of a per se rule that because a conflict may manifest itself in unforeseeable ways, no defendant may make a knowing and intelligent waiver of his right to an attorney unhindered by a conflict.
See United States
v.
Curdo,
The district court was aware that a court may be unable to foresee how a conflict will appear, but the court believed that it would “be the better procedure to err on the side of precluding joint representation rather than be vulnerable on review to the kind of contentions raised by petitioner in this case.”
At the same time, however, the disqualification of a defendant’s retained counsel is an invitation to make a different constitutional claim — the deprivation of “the right to counsel of one’s choice.”
United States v. Gaines,
We hasten to add that we are not holding that the statements of the trial court in this case will always be sufficient to establish a valid waiver. We merely hold that in this case, where there is no hint that the petitioner is incompetent, where a preliminary hearing helped to focus the conflict of interest, and where the petitioner expressed no reservations, a knowing and intelligent waiver was effected.
See generally United States
v.
Donahue,
It would always be good procedure to speak directly to a defendant and advise him of his right to retain separate counsel. While addressing the assistant State’s attorney and while the petitioner was listening, the state trial court did state that “the defendants are entitled to separate counsel.” Furthermore, because the petitioner knew how tо hire an attorney, we may assume that he also knew how to fire one.
See United States v. Gaines,
In closing we note that this case does not require us to exercise our supervisory powers over the district courts nor to interpret Rule of Criminal Procedure 44 concerning a federal judge’s duty to “promptly inquire with respect to ... joint representation.” We were asked to apply constitutional principles and decide whether the petitioner validly waived his right to an attorney without a conflict of interest. We have concluded that he did, yet we do not want to leave the impression that it is a defendant’s primary duty to discern and avoid the problems of joint representation. On the contrary, as we have repeatedly stated,
attorneys
must always remain alert to avoid
*440
unnecessary and unwise conflicts of interest.
4
See United States v. Kidding,
IV.
For the reasons expressed in this opinion, the judgment of the district court is reversed.
Notes
. There is no suggestion that the petitioner does not enjoy the mental cаpability to make an intelligent choice.
. Although the petitioner, in his brief in opposition to the respondent’s motion for summary judgment, hinted that counsel acted incompetently in deciding to represent co-defendants, that claim was not raised in the petition and was not disposed of by the district court.
. The petitioner is a high-school graduate and for the past six years has been in the building-management business.
. The petitioner also contends that the district court erred in granting summary judgment to the respondents on the claim that there was insufficient evidence to convict. We will not consider this argument because the petitioner did not cross-appeal. See Fed.R.App.P. 4(a)(3).
