This court en banc has disposed of petitioner’s assertion that his sentence violated the eighth amendment. The responsibility for determining Rummel’s second contention that he was denied effective assistance of counsel for his defense has been remanded to the panel.
Two attorneys represented Rummel in connection with the state charges. The first was appointed approximately one month prior to the trial, and the second, whose effectiveness is not challenged, was appointed on the date of thé trial to assist the first. Rummel asserts that his first appointed attorney failed to conduct an independent pre-trial investigation into the factual basis of the state’s charges and neglected to seek out and interview witnesses whose testimony the petitioner had informed him would buttress his defense. These allegations are not contradicted in the record, and it cannot be said that, assuming they are true, the petitioner is entitled to no relief as a matter of law.
A criminal defendant has the right to be represented by counsel “reasonably likely to render and rendering reasonably effective assistance.”
Herring v. Estelle,
As we noted in
King v. Beto,
VACATED IN PART AND REMANDED.
