Docket 24-7351
Pitchford
DecidedMay 28, 2026
5-4decision
Source: CourtListener.
Court rules Mississippi death row inmate did not waive his right to challenge racially biased jury selection
What it does
The Court holds that the Mississippi Supreme Court unreasonably concluded that Pitchford waived his opportunity to argue that the prosecutor's race-neutral reasons for striking four Black jurors were pretextual. Because the trial court never conducted the required third step of the Batson process — and in fact cut off defense counsel when he tried to raise it — no valid waiver occurred. The case is sent back to lower courts for further proceedings.
Who benefits
Death row inmates and other criminal defendants in federal habeas proceedings who were denied a full Batson hearing at trial due to trial court error or omission.
Who is affected
State prosecutors and state courts whose jury-selection rulings may be subject to federal habeas review when the full three-step Batson process was not completed at trial.
Practical impact
Pitchford's conviction and death sentence are not immediately overturned; the case is sent back to lower courts for further proceedings to determine what relief, if any, is appropriate under AEDPA. More broadly, the ruling signals that federal courts may grant habeas relief when a state court finds waiver of a Batson claim in circumstances where the trial court itself failed to complete the required three-step process and cut off defense counsel's attempts to be heard.
Majority — Kavanaugh
Joined by: Roberts, Sotomayor, Kagan, Jackson
The majority held that the Mississippi trial court made a critical error by stopping the Batson process after step two — accepting the prosecutor's race-neutral explanations — without ever giving defense counsel a chance to argue those explanations were pretextual, and without making any finding on pretext itself. The Court reasoned that the trial court's own statement to defense counsel — "I think you already made those, and they are clear in the record" — was an explicit assurance that the Batson objection was preserved, making it unreasonable for the Mississippi Supreme Court to later call it waived. The majority rejected the State's argument that Pitchford preserved a general Batson objection but separately waived a pretext argument, calling that distinction illogical: once the prosecutor has offered race-neutral reasons, the only remaining Batson argument is a pretext argument, so the two cannot be separated. The Court acknowledged that federal habeas review under AEDPA (the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996, a law that sets a high bar for federal courts to overturn state convictions) is highly deferential to state courts, but emphasized that deference does not mean automatic denial of relief. In light of the full record, the Court agreed with the federal district court that the Mississippi Supreme Court's waiver ruling was unreasonable under both the legal and factual standards of AEDPA.
Dissent reasoning
The dissent argued that the majority failed to respect AEDPA's demanding standard, which requires a federal habeas petitioner to show not merely that the state court was wrong, but that no fair-minded jurist could have reached its conclusion. Justice Gorsuch wrote that the Mississippi Supreme Court reasonably applied a legitimate state preservation rule — that arguments not raised at trial are waived — and that nothing in the Court's clearly established precedents forbids states from enforcing such rules in the Batson context. The dissent contended that the record does not compel the conclusion that Pitchford's counsel was trying to make a step-three comparative juror argument (comparing similarly situated white and Black jurors) at the end of jury selection; instead, counsel appeared only to be re-stating the same statistical argument made at step one. The dissent pointed to a significant piece of evidence: one of Pitchford's own trial attorneys later stated in post-conviction proceedings that she had "failed to challenge the prosecution's reasons as pretextual at trial" and had not done anything to preserve that argument. The dissent concluded that while Pitchford's reading of the record is possible, AEDPA requires that his version be the only reasonable reading — a standard the dissent said he plainly cannot meet — and that both the Mississippi Supreme Court and the Fifth Circuit had reasonably read the record the other way.
Constitutional question
Did the Mississippi Supreme Court unreasonably apply the Batson framework — which bars prosecutors from striking jurors based on race — when it ruled that Terry Pitchford waived his right to challenge the prosecutor's race-neutral explanations as pretextual at step three of the Batson inquiry?