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Supreme Court

A Death Row Case That Divided Kavanaugh and Gorsuch

Plus: Gordon Wood, RIP

Damon Root | 6.9.2026 7:00 AM

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Pitchford-v-Cain-6-8 | Illustration: Adani Samat. Photo: CNP / AdMedia/Newscom/Brian Cahn/ZUMAPRESS
(Illustration: Adani Samat. Photo: CNP / AdMedia/Newscom/Brian Cahn/ZUMAPRESS)

On the surface, Justices Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh share much in common. They are both judicial conservatives, both self-professed originalists, both former federal appellate court judges with respected records, and both were appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court by the same president.

Yet there are certain legal issues that have brought out notable differences between them. The Supreme Court's recent 5–4 decision in Pitchford v. Cain offers a fascinating case in point.

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Pitchford v. Cain centered on the reach of a 1986 SCOTUS precedent called Batson v. Kentucky. In Batson, the Court reaffirmed that it was unconstitutional for a prosecutor to exclude prospective jurors on account of race. In Pitchford, the Supreme Court was tasked with deciding whether Terry Pitchford's rights were violated when a lower court decided that his defense lawyer had waived the right under Batson to challenge the prosecution's supposedly race-neutral rationales for peremptorily excluding four out of five prospective black jurors in the case.

Writing for the majority, Kavanaugh, joined by Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, and Ketanji Brown Jackson, held that Pitchford's constitutional rights had indeed been violated.

"After a prosecutor asserts race-neutral reasons for a peremptory strike, the defense counsel must at least have an opportunity to argue that the asserted race-neutral reasons were not the actual reasons—that is, the reasons were pretextual," Kavanaugh wrote. "Then, the trial court can determine whether those asserted reasons were the actual reasons or instead were pretextual." But "in this case," Kavanaugh continued, "whether due to confusion, oversight, an overly hurried jury selection process, or some other cause, things broke down, and the ordinary trial-court procedure for resolving Batson claims at step three never occurred—notwithstanding the repeated efforts of Pitchford's counsel to pursue and preserve the Batson objection."

Writing in dissent, Gorsuch, joined by Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, and Amy Coney Barrett, denied that any such injustice had occurred. "Nothing in the record indicates a trial court seeking to thwart defense counsel's ability to represent their client," Gorsuch argued.

Normally, when it comes to matters of criminal justice, Gorsuch is the one with the reputation for being more sympathetic to criminal defendants. Kavanaugh, meanwhile, generally has a reputation for being the more reliable vote in favor of law enforcement.

But this case flipped the script. Here, thanks to an opinion by Kavanaugh, written over Gorsuch's dissent, a death row inmate's conviction and death sentence were tossed out. This time around, it was Kavanaugh, not Gorsuch, who gave the civil liberties side the win.


Gordon Wood, RIP

I just learned the sad news that Gordon Wood, the towering historian of the American Revolution, was struck and killed by a car on Sunday. He was 92.

I first encountered Wood's work as an undergraduate history major and have been reading or rereading him ever since. Probably my favorite among Wood's acclaimed books is The Radicalism of the American Revolution, which earned him a justly deserved Pulitzer Prize. For those of us who write regularly about early American intellectual, political, and legal history, Wood is one of those scholars whose influence is ever present. RIP.

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NEXT: Brickbat: ReTired

Damon Root is a senior editor at Reason and the author of A Glorious Liberty: Frederick Douglass and the Fight for an Antislavery Constitution (Potomac Books). His next book, Emancipation War: The Fall of Slavery and the Coming of the Thirteenth Amendment (Potomac Books), will be published in June 2026.

Supreme CourtConstitutionCriminal JusticeCivil LibertiesDeath PenaltyLaw & Government
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  1. Mickey Rat   2 days ago

    "Normally, when it comes to matters of criminal justice, Gorsuch is the one with the reputation for being more sympathetic to criminal defendants."

    One does get the impression that Root's judgement on the Justices is more results based than reasoning based.

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    1. DesigNate   2 days ago

      Definitely.

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  2. LIBtranslator   2 days ago

    My 1952 ex-Lampasas Library copy of Herbert Hoover memoirs bears printed on the cardholder: "All white residents of the city are entitled to use the Library." In Austin, even after Nixon was replaced by "Lone Magic Bullet Gunman" and GOP presidential pardoner Ford, citizens were required to appear for impaneling as jurors. The end of every such session was summarized by a bailiff walking into the waiting room and announcing: "All naygurs and hippies--take a hike!"

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  3. LIBtranslator   2 days ago

    The lineup is unsurprising. The jury is still out on whether KKKavanaugh was the fratboy in blackface or the one wearing the Klan hood before Donnie elevated him. Palito, of course, is still the séance channeler of Anthony "Burn-them-Books" Comstock. Mutterkreuz Coney fumes at being passed over for White House Spokesmadchen since the other blonde--with a bigger swastika--landed the peach job. Long Dong is doubtless embarrassed by his casting as Clayton Bigsby in Dave Chappelle's unauthorized biography. I imagine Gorby must've been reading Holy Inquisition proceedings instead of the 2-foot stack of briefs by mistake.

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  4. LIBtranslator   2 days ago

    Wait! Is there an election coming up?

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  5. Uomo Del Ghiaccio   2 days ago

    Justices Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh are not even remotely the same. Justice Neil Gorsuch in a reliable consistent thinker and Justice Brett Kavanaugh is an inconsistent mess and mental lightweight in comparison.

    In Pitchford v. Cain the majority were incorrect and Justice Neil Gorsuch was correct and entirely consistent with his previous opinions.

    There is a fine line of balance that needs to be maintained. While I'm not a supporter of the death penalty, its very clear that Pitchford deserves to be in prison and the excluded jurors really deserved to be excluded.

    There was no deliberate attempt to be unfair even if the math does not match the quotas that the majority desires. In a just world Pickford will have another trial and will be sentenced to life in prison. (I'm against the death penalty).

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