Edwards v. Vannoy
Case Overview
Edwards v. Vannoy (2021) held 6-3 that the constitutional rule announced in Ramos v. Louisiana (2020) - requiring unanimous jury verdicts for serious criminal convictions - is not retroactive to final convictions on federal habeas corpus review under the Teague framework. The decision means thousands of prisoners convicted by non-unanimous juries in Louisiana and Oregon cannot benefit from Ramos unless their cases were still pending on direct appeal when Ramos was decided.
The Facts
Thedrick Edwards was convicted of rape and armed robbery in Louisiana by a non-unanimous jury. After Ramos held that the Sixth Amendment requires unanimous verdicts, Edwards sought federal habeas relief. Under Teague v. Lane (1989), new constitutional rules do not apply retroactively on collateral review unless they are substantive rules or 'watershed' rules of criminal procedure. The Fifth Circuit denied relief, finding Ramos was neither.
The Application
Under Teague's retroactivity framework, Edwards's non-unanimous jury conviction could only benefit from Ramos's rule if Ramos qualified as either a substantive rule or a watershed procedural rule. The Court found Ramos was neither: it did not decriminalize conduct or prohibit a category of punishment, and while jury unanimity safeguards against inaccuracy, the rule did not meet the stringent watershed standard - which the majority suggested may now be functionally impossible to satisfy. Because Edwards's conviction was final before Ramos was decided, and Ramos failed both prongs of the Teague test, he remained bound by his non-unanimous verdict and could not obtain federal habeas relief. The decision left thousands of similarly situated prisoners in Louisiana and Oregon without recourse, illustrating the practical consequence of Teague's bar on retroactive application of new constitutional rules.
The Conclusion
The 2021 ruling foreclosed retroactive application of Ramos and, notably, Justice Kavanaugh's majority opinion questioned whether the watershed exception to Teague's non-retroactivity rule remains viable at all, suggesting the exception exists in theory but may never apply in practice.
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