Mccarthy v. Hernandez - Annotated Opinion

Per Curiam
Per curiam.
The per curiam opinion holds that AEDPA barred habeas relief because no clearly established federal law required the jury attenuation instruction ordered by the Second Circuit.

Per Curiam

Per curiam.
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 The Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA) imposes strict limits on federal courts’ power to grant habeas relief to a prisoner convicted in state court. District courts and courts of appeals have sometimes chafed under these restraints, and when they have strayed too far from the modest role that AEDPA prescribes, we have summarily reversed their decisions. See, e.g., Klein v. Martin, 607 U. S. 213 (2026) (per curiam). We must do the same today.

AEDPA sharply limits federal habeas relief and permits it only when the state decision unreasonably conflicts with clearly established Supreme Court law.
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 The Second Circuit ordered habeas relief in this case based on its holding that a state-court decision was “contrary to” and “involved an unreasonable application” of Missouri v. Seibert, 542 U. S. 600 (2004), because the decision approved a trial judge’s refusal to tell a jury how to apply Seibert—or, more precisely, how to apply what the Second Circuit understood to be the holding in that case. 28 U. S. C. §2254(d)(1). But Seibert said nothing about jury instructions. For this reason and others, the Second Circuit exceeded the role that AEDPA prescribes.

The Second Circuit ordered habeas relief by treating Seibert as requiring an attenuation instruction, but the Court holds that AEDPA forbids that result.
Part I
Part I traces the Patz investigation, Hernandez's repeated confessions, the New York trial proceedings, and the federal habeas ruling based on Seibert.
Part I.A
Part I.A recounts the decades-old Patz disappearance, renewed investigation, Miranda warnings, and Hernandez's repeated confessions.
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 This case concerns a tragic event that once captured the Nation’s attention. On May 25, 1979, 6-year-old Etan Patz left his family’s apartment in lower Manhattan to take a bus to school. Before boarding the bus, he stopped to buy a  drink at a bodega where respondent Pedro Hernandez, then 18 years old, was working. Patz never got on the bus and was never seen alive again. Despite a vigorous search, law enforcement could not locate him or find evidence of his fate. For the next 20 years, authorities investigated several suspects, but they were never prosecuted, and the case went cold.

The case arises from Etan Patz's 1979 disappearance, which remained unsolved for decades despite an extensive search.
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 It was revived in 2012, when Hernandez’s brother-in-law reported that Hernandez had made statements about his involvement in Patz’s disappearance and suspected murder. At that time, Hernandez was living in southern New Jersey, and detectives took him to the Camden County (New Jersey) Prosecutor’s Office (CCPO). They began questioning him there without first administering a Miranda warning, see Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U. S. 436 (1966), and Hernandez, a man with a low IQ and a history of mental illness, eventually confessed to strangling Patz and dumping his body in an alley behind the bodega.

The investigation reopened after Hernandez's brother-in-law reported statements linking Hernandez to Patz's disappearance and murder.
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 The detectives then read Hernandez his Miranda rights. He waived them and made a second, videotaped confession. While still at the CCPO, Hernandez also confessed to his wife, Rosemary, and his daughter, Becky.

After Miranda warnings, Hernandez waived his rights and gave a videotaped confession.
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 Detectives drove Hernandez to the New York County District Attorney’s Office, where he received another Miranda warning, waived his rights, and gave a second videotaped confession, this time to an assistant district attorney.

Hernandez later received another Miranda warning at the district attorney's office and gave a further videotaped confession.
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 Hernandez continued for years to confess to Patz’s murder. While in pretrial custody, for example, he confessed to a psychiatrist. He also told this psychiatrist that he had confessed to the crime in 1979 at a prayer meeting and in the 1980s to his ex-wife. And he confessed the crime repeatedly to a second psychiatrist while awaiting trial.

Hernandez continued to confess to Patz's murder in several later settings, including to a psychiatrist.
Part I.B
Part I.B describes the New York trials, the jury's attenuation question, the trial court's answer, conviction, and state appellate affirmance.
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 New York charged Hernandez with intentional murder, kidnapping, and felony murder. The first trial ended in a hung jury, and a second trial began in 2016. Hernandez moved to suppress his statements to the detectives and the assistant district attorney, but the trial court denied the motion. It ruled that Hernandez was not in custody at the CCPO before he received his Miranda warning and that he had knowingly and voluntarily waived his Miranda rights at the CCPO and the district attorney’s office before he made his later videotaped confessions.

New York tried Hernandez for murder, kidnapping, and felony murder after an initial hung jury.
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 Under New York law, however, the trial court’s decision not to suppress those confessions did not prevent the defense from asking the jury to disregard them. New York law requires a trial court to instruct a jury to disregard a pretrial statement if the jury finds it to have been “involuntarily made.” N. Y. Crim. Proc. Law Ann. §710.70(3) (West 2026). And a statement is “involuntarily made” within the meaning of this provision if it was obtained in violation of the defendant’s state or federal constitutional rights, §60.45(2)(b)(ii), or the right established in Miranda, see People v. Graham, 55 N. Y. 2d 144, 149–150, 432 N. E. 2d 790, 793 (Ct. App. 1982). The trial court accordingly instructed the jury on voluntariness, custodial interrogation, Miranda warnings, and Miranda waiver. App. to Pet. for Cert. 73a–78a, n. 2 (App.).

New York law allowed Hernandez to ask the jury to disregard the confessions even though the trial court had declined to suppress them.
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 But New York law does not require a trial court to instruct a jury on whether an initial involuntary confession taints later confessions and thus imposes an obligation to disregard them. See People v. Smith, 209 App. Div. 2d 1005, 1006, 619 N. Y. S. 2d 990, 991 (1994); People v. Rabady, 28 App. Div. 3d 794, 795, 812 N. Y. S. 2d 884, 884–885 (2006); People v. Martinez, 63 App. Div. 3d 859, 860, 880 N. Y. S. 2d 492, 493 (2009); People v. Medina, 146 App. Div. 2d 344, 350–351, 541 N. Y. S. 2d 355, 358–359 (1989). The trial court therefore did not instruct the jury to decide whether Hernandez’s post-warning confessions were sufficiently attenuated from his first, pre-warning confession. App. 192a (noting that the court did not instruct the jury “how to consider Hernandez’s post-Miranda confessions depending on what the jury determined with respect to the pre-Miranda confession” given at the CCPO).

New York law required a jury instruction on voluntariness, but not on whether an earlier involuntary confession tainted later confessions.
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 Nonetheless, after the jury retired to decide on a verdict, it sent the trial court a note seeking guidance on attenuation:

During deliberations, the jury asked whether an involuntary pre-Miranda confession required it to disregard later videotaped confessions.
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 “We the jury request that the Judge explain to us whether if we find that the confession at CCPO before the Miranda rights was not voluntary, we must disregard the two later videotaped confessions at CCPO and the DA’s office, the confessions to Rosemary and Becky Hernandez, and the confessions to the various doctors.” Id., at 281a.

The jury specifically asked whether finding the pre-Miranda confession involuntary required disregarding the two later Miranda-waived confessions.
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The parties disagreed on the correct response. The State argued that the answer should be “no,” while the defense maintained that the correct answer was “yes.” The trial judge agreed with the State and succinctly advised the jury that the answer to its question was “no.” Id., at 307a.

The State said no, the defense said yes, and the trial judge answered the jury in line with the State's view.
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 In an exchange with counsel outside the presence of the jury, the trial court explained that although New York law requires a jury to disregard confessions that it finds were “involuntarily made” in the sense noted above, state law does not empower a jury to assess whether a later confession is fatally tainted by an earlier, “involuntary” confession. So the trial court did not think it proper to “instruc[t]” the jury “on attenuation” when it was “not their function” to consider that issue. Id., at 301a–302a.

The trial court distinguished New York's voluntariness instruction from the separate attenuation question and concluded the jury need not decide attenuation.
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 The jury found Hernandez guilty of kidnapping and felony murder, and the trial court sentenced him to imprisonment for 25-years-to-life.

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 New York’s intermediate appellate court (the Appellate Division, First Department) affirmed. People v. Hernandez, 181 App. Div. 3d 530, 122 N. Y. S. 3d 11 (2020). It agreed with the trial court that Hernandez had not been in custody before he received the first Miranda warning and that after receiving the warnings he had knowingly and voluntarily waived his Miranda rights. The appellate court also ruled that the trial judge had responded to the jury note in accord with state law. Hernandez, 181 App. Div. 3d, at 532–533, 122 N. Y. S. 3d, at 14–15 (holding that the response was “correct” and “meaningful . . . on the subject of the voluntariness of confessions”). And it concluded that the verdict would have been the same even if the trial judge had instructed the jury on attenuation.

The Appellate Division affirmed, holding the trial court's jury response was correct under New York law and did not violate due process.
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 The New York Court of Appeals denied leave to appeal, People v. Hernandez, 35 N. Y. 3d 1066, 152 N. E. 3d 1178 (2020) (Table), and we denied certiorari, Hernandez v. New York, 592 U. S. 1319 (2021).

The New York Court of Appeals denied leave, and the Supreme Court later denied certiorari from the state conviction.
Part I.C
Part I.C describes Hernandez's habeas petition and the Second Circuit's Seibert-based order granting relief.
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 Hernandez filed an application for a writ of habeas corpus in Federal District Court. He argued that the Appellate Division had violated clearly established federal law in rejecting his Miranda arguments and in its ruling on the trial court’s response to the jury note. That response, Hernandez maintained, itself violated clearly established federal law by failing to explain to the jury the rule that Justice Kennedy adopted in his opinion concurring in the judgment in Missouri v. Seibert, 542 U. S. 600.

Hernandez sought federal habeas relief by arguing the state appellate decision unreasonably applied Seibert and related confession precedents.
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 Seibert addressed the constitutionality of an interrogation tactic under which police question a suspect in custody without providing a Miranda warning and then, after eliciting a confession, provide a Miranda warning and ask the suspect to repeat the confession. The Court ruled that the use of this tactic in that case violated federal law. Writing for a four-Justice plurality, Justice Souter opined that the use of the tactic had undermined the protection that Miranda was designed to provide and that the confession given after the tardy Miranda warning was therefore inadmissible. Justice Kennedy concurred in the judgment, arguing that a post-warning confession obtained through a “deliberate” two-step strategy “predicated upon violating Miranda” is inadmissible unless law enforcement takes “specific, curative steps” to attenuate it from the pre-warning confession. 542 U. S., at 621.

Seibert addressed a two-step interrogation tactic in which officers question first without Miranda warnings and then repeat the confession after warnings.
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 The District Court referred Hernandez’s application to a Magistrate Judge, who issued a 130-page report recommending denial. The District Court adopted the report in full and denied Hernandez’s habeas application. The District Court saw no ground under AEDPA for granting relief based on Hernandez’s Miranda arguments. Yet the District Court was troubled by the trial judge’s response to the jury note. The District Court acknowledged that the response was “technically correct.” App. 80a. It also acknowledged that “[n]othing in Seibert discusses how trial courts should respond to jury notes of any sort,” id., at 88a, because Seibert concerned a judge’s resolution of a suppression motion, and “only a court can determine admissibility,” App. 92a. All the same, the District Court ruled that Seibert was “relevant” to juries, not only to judges, and that Seibert “required” the trial court to “t[ell the jury] about attenuation” in order to “protect [Hernandez’s] constitutional rights.” App. 89a, 92a. Still, the District Court, like the Appellate Division, concluded that the trial court’s failure to explain attenuation to the jury was harmless.

The District Court adopted a magistrate judge's recommendation and denied habeas relief after concluding Seibert did not require the jury instruction.
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 The District Court granted a certificate of appealability on the issue of the trial court’s response to the note, and a panel of the Second Circuit reversed based on Seibert. Hernandez v. McIntosh, 146 F. 4th 142 (2025). The panel stated that Justice Kennedy’s opinion in Seibert set out a binding rule of federal law and that the trial court needed to explain the rule and its consequences in its response to the jury’s note. Unlike the state courts, the Magistrate Judge, and the District Court, the panel found the trial court’s “no” answer to be “manifestly inaccurate.” 146 F. 4th, at 159. In the panel’s view, that error warranted habeas relief under 28 U. S. C. §2254(d)(1) because the response was contrary to and involved an unreasonable application of Seibert. 146 F. 4th, at 159–160. That was so, according to the panel, because the “rule laid out in Seibert is relevant not only to a court making admissibility determinations” under the Constitution but also to juries deciding voluntariness under New York’s code of criminal procedure. Id., at 158. The “thrust” of Seibert, the panel said, “is the same” in either context. 146 F. 4th, at 158. And the trial court’s misapplication of Seibert was “so erroneous,” the panel reasoned, “as to deny Hernandez due process.” 146 F. 4th, at 157. The panel then ruled that no fair-minded jurist could conclude that the error was harmless.

The Second Circuit reversed on a certificate limited to the trial court's response to the jury's attenuation question.
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 The panel stressed that its holding was based on the premise that the trial court had “misstate[d] or misappli[ed] . . . federal constitutional law in [the] jury instruction,” not on the premise that the trial court had “misstated state law.” Id., at 160, n. 9. Indeed, the panel acknowledged “[a]t the outset” that AEDPA does not empower federal courts to “ ‘reexamine state-court determinations on state-law questions.’ ” Id., at 157 (quoting Estelle v. McGuire, 502 U. S. 62, 67–68 (1991)).

The Second Circuit treated the trial court's answer as a misstatement of federal constitutional law, not merely a state-law ruling.
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 The panel remanded with instructions to grant the application and to order Hernandez’s release unless the State gave him a new trial.

The Second Circuit ordered Hernandez released unless New York retried him.
Part II
Part II explains that AEDPA permits relief only for unreasonable applications of clearly established Supreme Court holdings and that no such holding required Hernandez's requested jury instruction.
Part II.A
Part II.A sets out AEDPA's demanding limits on federal habeas review and its focus on clearly established Supreme Court holdings.
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 As relevant here, a federal court may grant habeas relief on a claim that a state court has resolved on the merits only if that decision was “contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law.” §2254(d)(1). Only the holdings of this Court clearly establish federal law. White v. Woodall, 572 U. S. 415, 419 (2014). “[S]tate-court determinations on state-law questions” are “no part of a federal court’s habeas review of a state conviction.” Estelle, 502 U. S., at 67–68. AEDPA instead allows a federal court to correct only “ ‘extreme malfunctions’ ” in the resolution of federal issues by the criminal justice systems of the sovereign States. Harrington v. Richter, 562 U. S. 86, 102 (2011). A decision is “contrary to” our holdings if it applies a rule that “ ‘contradicts’ ” them. Lafler v. Cooper, 566 U. S. 156, 173 (2012). And a decision “unreasonabl[y] appli[es]” our holdings when the state court “blunder[s] so badly” that no fair-minded jurist could agree with it. Mays v. Hines, 592 U. S. 385, 392 (2021) (per curiam).

AEDPA allows relief only when a merits adjudication contradicts or unreasonably applies clearly established Supreme Court holdings, not lower-court precedent.
Part II.B
Part II.B rejects habeas relief because federal law did not require jury review of confession attenuation under Seibert or due process.
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 The Appellate Division’s decision neither contravened nor unreasonably applied any holding of this Court.

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 First, Hernandez had no federal right to have the jury evaluate the lawfulness of his confessions after the trial court admitted them. Unlike New York law, the Federal Constitution does not “require that both judge and jury pass upon the admissibility” or voluntariness “of evidence when constitutional grounds are asserted for excluding it.” Lego v. Twomey, 404 U. S. 477, 490 (1972). So no federal law, much less any clearly established federal law, required the trial court to instruct the jury on the grounds for suppression set out in Miranda or Seibert.

Federal law did not require New York to let both judge and jury decide the constitutional admissibility of Hernandez's confessions.
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 Second, the rule embraced by Justice Kennedy in Seibert does not disturb that proposition. Although we have never held that Justice Kennedy’s opinion sets out the holding that courts must follow under Marks v. United States, 430 U. S. 188 (1977), we may assume without deciding—in line with the Second Circuit’s precedent, which the parties do not contest—that it does. See United States v. Capers, 627 F. 3d 470, 476 (CA2 2010).2* Even if Justice Kennedy’s opinion clearly established a rule of federal law cognizable under §2254(d), that opinion established nothing about a jury’s determination of a confession’s legality. Seibert concerned a trial court’s ruling on a suppression motion, not a jury’s assessment of attenuation. 542 U. S., at 604, 606 (opinion of Souter, J.). We have never applied Seibert in any other procedural context. See Bobby v. Dixon, 565 U. S. 23, 26, 29–32 (2011) (per curiam). And neither the courts below nor the parties have identified any decision of this Court holding that Seibert affects a jury’s consideration of a confession that a court has admitted.

Even assuming Justice Kennedy's Seibert concurrence controls, it governs judicial suppression analysis and does not require jury attenuation instructions.
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 Third, our case law does not support the Second Circuit’s conclusion that the trial judge’s response to the jury’s note violated Hernandez’s right to due process. See Estelle, 502 U. S., at 71–73; Cupp v. Naughten, 414 U. S. 141, 147 (1973). We have never held that the Due Process Clause, or any other provision of the Federal Constitution, requires a trial court to explain to a jury an issue that the jury is not required to decide.

No Supreme Court precedent requires a trial court to explain a legal issue to a jury that state law does not require the jury to decide.
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 Hernandez correctly declines to argue that Seibert required the trial court to instruct the jury on attenuation in its initial charge. App. 93a (“Hernandez does not argue that Seibert compelled the trial court to instruct the jury on attenuation in its initial charge”). As Hernandez concedes, Seibert did not require the trial court to instruct the jury on attenuation in its response to the jury note either. Brief in Opposition 22. That conclusion does not change merely because the jury “focused on this question” or because the legality of the confessions was “an issue central to the trial.” Hernandez, 146 F. 4th, at 157, 162. Those contingent features of Hernandez’s prosecution could not, as the panel seemed to think, turn Seibert’s discussion of circumstances in which a judge should suppress a confession into clearly established federal law about an issue that juries must “fully consider.” 146 F. 4th, at 161, n. 9.

Hernandez does not claim Seibert required an initial attenuation instruction, and a jury note did not create a federal constitutional duty to give one.
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 Hernandez counters that it is New York law, not federal law, that “vest[s] juries with th[e] responsibility” to assess attenuation, and that Seibert “must control the jury’s consideration” of the issue for that reason. Brief in Opposition 22. Yet the trial court ruled that New York law does not vest juries with the responsibility to assess attenuation, App. 301a–302a, the Appellate Division held that the trial court’s response was “correct” under and otherwise compliant with New York law, Hernandez, 181 App. Div. 3d, at 532–533, 122 N. Y. S. 3d, at 14–15, and a federal habeas court may not second-guess state-court interpretations of state law, Estelle, 502 U. S., at 67–68. In any event, Hernandez admits that a defendant “is not entitled to a freestanding jury instruction on attenuation” under New York law, Brief in Opposition 22, and neither he nor the Second Circuit has explained how a federal court could nonetheless grant habeas relief on the premise that due process turns attenuation into a jury issue simply because the jury asks about it.

New York courts held juries need not decide attenuation, so federal habeas courts could not recharacterize that state-law ruling as a federal defect.
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 The Second Circuit exceeded its authority in holding that Hernandez is entitled to relief under §2254(d). The panel’s opinion appears to reflect serious doubt about the reliability of Hernandez’s confessions, but AEDPA does not allow a federal habeas court to disturb a state-court conviction based on such an evaluation of the evidence.

The Second Circuit exceeded AEDPA by disturbing the conviction based on its doubts about confession reliability rather than clearly established federal law.
* * *
The disposition reverses the Second Circuit because clearly established federal law did not require the requested instruction.
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 No clearly established federal law required the trial court to instruct the jury about the rule that Justice Kennedy adopted in Seibert. Because the panel erred in holding otherwise, we grant the State’s petition for a writ of certiorari, reverse the judgment of the Second Circuit, and remand the case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

No clearly established law required the Seibert attenuation instruction, so the Court reverses the Second Circuit and remands.
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Justice Sotomayor, Justice Kagan, and Justice Jackson would deny the petition for a writ of certiorari.

Notes
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2 *Most Courts of Appeals agree with the Second Circuit on this score. But the Sixth Circuit holds that the Seibert plurality, not Justice Kennedy’s concurrence, supplies the controlling rule. United States v. Woolridge, 64 F. 4th 757, 762 (2023). We need take no side in that dispute today.

The note explains that circuits disagree over whether the Seibert plurality or Justice Kennedy's concurrence controls.