Crawford v. Mississippi

CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedOctober 15, 2025
Docket25A378
StatusRelating-to

This text of Crawford v. Mississippi (Crawford v. Mississippi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crawford v. Mississippi, (U.S. 2025).

Opinion

SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting

SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES _________________

No. 25–385 (25A378) _________________

CHARLES RAY CRAWFORD v. MISSISSIPPI ON APPLICATION FOR STAY AND ON PETITION FOR A WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI [October 15, 2025]

The application for stay of execution of sentence of death presented to JUSTICE ALITO and by him referred to the Court is denied. The petition for a writ of certiorari is de- nied. JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR, with whom JUSTICE KAGAN and JUSTICE JACKSON join, dissenting from the denial of appli- cation for stay and denial of certiorari. Charles Ray Crawford will be executed tonight for a crime that his own lawyers told the jury he committed, de- spite his express instructions not to do so. Had this case come to this Court on direct appeal, Crawford could have proved that his Sixth Amendment rights were violated un- der our decision in McCoy v. Louisiana, 584 U. S. 414 (2018), in which we held that lawyers may not override a defendant’s explicit and unequivocal decision not to concede guilt at trial. He would also likely be entitled to a new trial, as a McCoy violation is a structural error that mandates reversal. Because Crawford’s convictions became final before McCoy was decided, however, this case raises a threshold issue that this Court has not squarely resolved: Whether McCoy applies to cases on collateral review because it merely applied existing law, or whether McCoy announced a nonretroactive “new” rule of constitutional law. This question has divided lower courts. It is also undoubtedly important, and is even more so in this case because its 2 CRAWFORD v. MISSISSIPPI

answer determines whether Crawford will be executed. I would therefore grant Crawford’s application for a stay of execution and petition for certiorari. As the Court aban- dons its duty to resolve this important question, I respect- fully dissent. I In September 1993, Crawford was indicted for murdering Kristy Ray. See Crawford v. State, 716 So. 2d 1028, 1031 (Miss. 1998). The State alleged that Crawford kidnapped, raped, and stabbed Ray. Id., at 1031–1037. Crawford dis- puted these allegations and pleaded not guilty. The trial court appointed two attorneys to assist Craw- ford in his defense. Crawford grew upset with his lawyers because he did not believe that they were adequately inves- tigating the charges against him. He sent them several let- ters from jail urging them to do more. He described in de- tail the pretrial motions he wanted them to file, the lines of attack he wanted them to pursue, and the evidence he wanted them to put on, all in pursuit of showing at trial that the State did not prove each element of its case against him. See Exhs. F, J.1 Simply put, Crawford had one goal: to be found “not guilty.” He instructed his counsel: “Any mistake, no matter how great or small, made by the prosecution in preparing its case against me must be brought before the court and put on record!” Exh. F, p. 12 (spelling corrected, emphasis in original). He also reminded his counsel: “Until all 12 members of a jury find me guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of every element of the crimes I’ve been charged with? I am still innocent!!” Id., at 13 (spelling corrected, emphasis in original).

—————— 1 Citations to exhibits are to the exhibits attached to Crawford’s Peti-

tion for Post-Conviction Relief before the Mississippi Supreme Court, No. 2024–DR–01386–SCT (filed Dec. 12, 2024). Cite as: 607 U. S. ____ (2025) 3

Crawford’s lawyers did not listen. Not because they mis- understood Crawford, but because they chose not to. As one of the lawyers later attested, they knew full well that Craw- ford had “objected to the concession of his guilt and the pur- suit of an insanity defense before and during trial.” Exh. A, at 1. Even so, they did the exact opposite of what Crawford asked of them: They conceded to the jury that Crawford had killed Ray and pursued an insanity defense. Crawford’s lawyers’ first concession came before the jury was even seated. During voir dire, they told potential ju- rors that “the State . . . will be primarily concerned almost exclusively with the ‘what’ of this case. What happened? . . . What did [Crawford] do?” Exh. M, at 309. They clari- fied, however, that the jurors should not “anticipate a de- fense or that the defense is going to be able to . . . prevent [the State] from showing that [Crawford] did in fact commit the acts that he is charged with. The ‘what’ is not going to be very much in question here.” Id., at 310. Crawford’s lawyers repeated these points during opening arguments. See id., at 415–416. During closing arguments, counsel again told the jury that “[t]he what of this case is not in question,” because “[n]o one” other than Crawford “is le- gally responsible for what happened here.” Id., at 1179. Counsel also told the jury there was “certainly not” “any question” that he “is still dangerous to the community” and that he understood if the jurors thought Crawford was a “monster” who should not be “turn[ed] . . . loose.” Id., at 1189–1190. Crawford vigorously objected to these concessions throughout trial. He told the judge: “I have got copies of letters here that I sent my attorneys and things that I wanted them to do . . . . They have not done them. They came here yesterday [and] told the jury that I was already guilty before the trial started and I do not recognize them as my attorneys any more.” Id., at 409. He also moved for a mistrial on the ground that “the jury was tainted from the 4 CRAWFORD v. MISSISSIPPI

beginning” and had been further tainted by his counsel’s repeated admissions of guilt. Id., at 819–820. In his view, his lawyers “might as well [have] been sitting over there with the prosecution.” Id., at 820. The trial judge overruled Crawford’s objections and de- nied his motion for a mistrial. The jury convicted Crawford and sentenced him to death. The Mississippi Supreme Court affirmed Crawford’s conviction and sentence in 1998. Crawford has continued to challenge his convictions and death sentence in both state and federal postconviction pro- ceedings. See, e.g., Crawford v. State, 867 So. 2d 196 (2003); Crawford v. Epps, 353 Fed. Appx. 977 (CA5 2009); Crawford v. State, 218 So. 3d 1142 (Miss. 2016); see also Crawford v. Cain, 122 F. 4th 158 (CA5 2024). After the State moved for a death warrant, Crawford filed this postconviction motion before the Mississippi Supreme Court in December 2024. He claimed that, under McCoy v. Louisiana, 584 U. S. 414, his conviction must be vacated be- cause his Sixth Amendment right to maintain his innocence was violated by his counsel’s concessions of guilt at trial. The Mississippi Supreme Court did not act on the motion for eight months. It then issued a death warrant for Craw- ford and a short order denying relief on the ground that Crawford’s McCoy claim was barred. ___ So. 3d ___, ___, 2025 WL 2675597, *1 (Sept. 12, 2025); Pet. App. 5a–6a. It began by noting that Crawford’s petition was subject to Mississippi’s timeliness and successive-writ bars unless he could show that McCoy qualified as an “intervening deci- sion” that exempted him from them. 2025 WL 2675597, *1; see Miss. Code Ann. §§99–39–5(2)(a)(i), 99–39–27(9) (1973– 2020). It declined to apply that exception. It first explained that Crawford had “waited seven years to file this claim af- ter the decision in McCoy was issued.” 2025 WL 2675597, *1. It then held that “Crawford [had] not shown that McCoy should be given retroactive effect.” Ibid. This petition for Cite as: 607 U. S. ____ (2025) 5

a stay and petition for writ of certiorari followed less than three weeks later.

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