Victor Colon appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York entered on February 23, 1979, after an evidentiary hearing before Gerard L. Goettel, Judge, dismissing Colon’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Appellant’s sole claim on appeal is that he was denied effеctive assistance of counsel at his state trial because he and his co-defendant were jointly represented by the same counsel. We agree and reverse.
Colon and his co-defendant, Mariano Salomon, were convicted in June, 1974, in New York state court after a jury trial for possession and salе of cocaine. The evidence at trial consisted primarily of the testimony of *405 an undercover police officer. The officer had arranged for the purchase of the cocaine in a series of telephone calls to appellant Colon, some of which were recorded аnd the tapes admitted into evidence at trial. Colon and the officer then met in a Bronx hardware store and waited for the arrival of Salomon, who eventually appeared carrying a bag containing cocaine. Salomon set the bag down and announced “I have nothing to do with this deal.” The officer сhecked the powder to be sure it was cocaine and weighed it in the hardware store. Then the officer suggested that Colon accompany him to his car to get the money, which Colon did. Colon was arrested after the two men had left the store; Salomon was subsequently arrested in the hardware store.
At trial, both Salomon and Colon were represented by the same retained attorney, who was being paid solely by Salomon. Neither defendant called any witnesses, and defense counsel waived an opening statement. Through cross-examination of the State’s witnesses and summation to the jury, defense counsel urged that Colon was acting solely as an agent of the buyer, which under New York law is a valid defense to a charge of the illegal sale of narcotics. See
People v. Roche,
The jury found both defendants guilty. Both convictions were affirmed by the Appellate Division without opinion,
People v. Salomon,
In early 1976 Salomon filed his pro se petition for a writ of habeas corpus, in the District Court for the Southern District of New York, raising a Sixth Amendment claim along with other issues. In July 1976 his petition was denied, without an evidentiary hearing, by Judge Pollack of that court, who found that Salomon had failed to show any prejudice from the joint representation. Salomon then petitioned this court for a certificate of probable cause under 28 U.S.C. § 2253, for leave to proceed in
forma pauperis
on appeal, and for appointment of counsel. In March, 1977, we vacated the judgment of the district court and remanded for consideration of the question of waiver. The district court then appointed counsel for Salomon and held an evidentiary hearing. Judge Pollack again denied the petition for a writ of habeas corpus, finding that Salоmon had failed to demonstrate that the joint representation was “conducive to or created or resulted in any conflict of interest or prejudice.”
Salomon v. LaVallee,
Appellant Colon filed his pro se petition for a writ of habeas corpus in October, 1976, whilе Salomon’s first appeal to this court was still pending. 1 Colon did not expressly assert a claim that the joint representation had denied him effective assistance of counsel. Judge Goettel appointed counsel for Colon, and on August 5, 1977, with the State’s express consent, an amended peti *406 tion on behalf of Colon was filed clearly asserting the claim now before us on appeal. Judge Goettel held Colon’s amended petition in abeyance since at that time Salomon’s second appeal to this court was pending. Following our second remand, the Salomon and Colon petitions were joined for аn evidentiary hearing before Judge Goettel.
At the evidentiary hearing, the State called former Assistant District Attorney Scotto (the prosecutor at the original trial), A. Matthew Broughton (an associate of the defense counsel at trial), Colon and Salomon. In addition, the State submitted an affidavit from the state trial judge, trаnscripts of the pre-trial proceedings in the state court, and the testimony of the defense counsel as given at the initial evidentiary hearing held before Judge Pollack on Salomon’s petition. The State argued that Colon and Salomon had waived the joint representation claim prior to trial and that there had been no prejudice to either petitioner from the joint representation. After the evidentiary hearing had concluded, in October 1978 the State moved to dismiss Colon’s petition for failure to exhaust state remedies on the claim of ineffective assistance of counsel.
Judge Goettel denied the State’s motion to dismiss, which he noted was made “somewhat incredibly after over two years of reluctant litigation.” Colon had not explicitly raised the ineffective assistance of counsel claim in his state appeal, although he had challenged his joint trial on constitutional grounds. However, co-defendant Sаlomon, whose state appeal had been decided first, had explicitly raised the joint representation issue in his state appeal, and the Appellate Division had affirmed his conviction without opinion. Judge Goettel concluded that “there is no reason to expect that the state courts would hаve altered their view of the case for Colon’s benefit.” In addition, Judge Goettel found that “the State’s extensive delay in asserting the exhaustion ground would itself be sufficient to support a discretionary decision not to dismiss on that ground.” Judge Goettel concluded that in light of the State’s prior consent to the amendment of Colon’s petition to assert the ineffective assistance of counsel claim, “the State’s motion must be considered close to frivolous.”
On the issue of waiver, Judge Goettel noted that this court had already held in
Salomon v. LaVallee, supra,
DISCUSSION
We agree with the district court that appellee’s motion to dismiss Colоn’s petition for failure to exhaust state remedies, an argument also pressed before this court, is “close to frivolous.” The summary rejection of co-defendant Salomon’s identical ineffective assistance of counsel claim by the Appellate Division prior to Colon’s state appeal demonstrates that it would have been futile for Colon to have raised the claim on his direct appeal, which relieved him of the necessity of pursuing state remedies.
Stubbs v. Smith,
Judge Goettel’s finding that Colon and Salomon were not explicitly and directly advised by the state trial judge of the inherent potential for conflict in joint representation and of the possibility of appоintment of separate counsel, and that therefore neither defendant knowingly consented to joint representation, is adequately supported by the record. Although it appears that the state trial judge did discuss the possibility of a conflict of interest in the joint representation with an associate of dеfense counsel, there was conflicting evidence on whether the potential hazards were ever discussed with Colon and Salomon personally. Judge Goettel’s resolution of that conflicting testimony after seeing and hearing the witnesses is not clearly erroneous. See also
Salomon v. LaVallee, supra,
In order to assure a jointly-represented defendant of the effective assistance of counsel guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment a trial judge must explore with him personally the inherent potential for a conflict of interest in the joint representation.
Salomon v. LaVallee, supra,
The State has failed completely to sustain its burden in this case. Colon’s claim is not based upon a speculative, hypothetical or far-fetched strategy that might have been adopted by separate counsel without any possible chance of success in the face of overwhelming proof, see e. g.,
United States v. DeFillipo,
The conflict of interest was quite specific arising out of the presentation of plainly conflicting defenses. The defense theory urged at the trial for Colon was that he was the agent of the buyer; 3 the defense urged for Salomon was that he was an innocent bystander. For counsel to press Colon’s argument vigorously it would be necessary *408 to portray Salomon as the seller or at least the representativе of the seller, but that would plainly conflict with Salomon’s contention that he was an innocent bystander. On the other hand, a vigorous presentation of Salomon as an innocent bystander would have required emphasis on Salomon’s limited participation, which would necessarily have accented Colon’s participation as the likely seller; in fact, in summation defense counsel did draw the jury’s attention to the fact that it was Colon, not Salomon, who accompanied the agent to his car to get the money. In addition, if Salomon was an innocent bystander, the only person left at the scene of the crime to reprеsent the seller was Colon; such an assertion is in direct conflict with Colon’s defense theory.
Colon was entitled to “zealous and independent counsel.”
United States v. Carrigan, supra,
Accordingly, we reverse the judgment below and remand to the district court for entry of аn order to the effect that Colon be released from custody pursuant to a writ of habeas corpus unless he is retried by the State within a reasonable period of time.
Notes
. The State permitted three successive deadlines to pass without filing an answer to the original petition for a writ of habeas corpus. On Fеbruary 3, 1977, Judge Goettel found the respondent to be in default and directed the clerk of the court to issue the writ of habeas corpus. The State moved to vacate its default in February, 1977, and the motion was granted in April, 1977.
. Salomon’s appeal has not yet been scheduled, pending appointment of new counsel on appeal.
. Under N.Y. law only the seller and those acting for him may be convicted of unlawfully selling narcotics. See
People
v.
Lindsey,
. The district court acknowledged that “viewed from an overall perspective, joint counsel was identifiably compromised in arguing these inconsistent factual positions to the jury.” That defense counsel attempted to take a “middle” road, raising both defense theories but not pressing either to its logical extent, is demonstrated by Judge Goettel’s remark that the “ ‘possible prejudice’ from the theoretically conflicting factual positions now purportedly seen in trial counsel’s tactics were not stressed or even articulated well." (emphasis supplied).
. In addition, defеnse counsel testified at the evidentiary hearing before Judge Pollack that Colon had wished to plead guilty but Salomon had wanted to go to trial. Here, too, Colon was specifically prejudiced by the joint representation. Although the defense counsel testified at the hearing before Judge Pollack that the State was unwilling to accept a guilty plea from only one defendant, this was not a case like
Smith
v.
Regan, supra,
