Villarreal v. Texas | Case No. 24-557 | Oral Argument Date: 10/6/25 | Date Decided: 2/25/26
Overview
- David Villarreal took the witness stand as the sole defense witness in his Texas murder trial, testifying he stabbed the victim in self-defense.
- During his testimony, a scheduling conflict forced a 24-hour recess mid-direct examination.
- Before breaking, the trial judge ordered defense counsel not to "manage" Villarreal's ongoing testimony overnight while expressly permitting all other consultation, including strategy, sentencing, and plea discussions.
- The jury convicted Villarreal, and he received a 60-year sentence.
- The Supreme Court unanimously upheld the judge's order as a permissible balance between the Sixth Amendment right to counsel and the truth-seeking function of trial.
Question Presented: Whether a trial judge may order defense counsel not to discuss a testifying defendant's ongoing testimony during a mid testimony overnight recess without violating the Sixth Amendment right to counsel.
Holding: A qualified conferral order prohibiting only testimony management during a midtestimony overnight recess permissibly balances the Sixth Amendment right to counsel against the truth-seeking function of trial.
Voting Breakdown: 9-0. Justice Jackson wrote the majority opinion joined by Chief Justice Roberts and Justices Alito, Sotomayor, Kagan, Kavanaugh, and Barrett. Justice Alito filed a concurring opinion. Justice Thomas filed an opinion concurring in the judgment joined by Justice Gorsuch.
Result: Affirmed.
Majority's Rationale:
The constitutional line separating Geders and Perry runs on subject matter, not time — testimony coaching loses Sixth Amendment protection once a defendant takes the stand. Courts may restrict discussion of testimony for its own sake while leaving all other attorney-client consultation — strategy, plea negotiations, witness decisions — fully protected. The judge's order targeted only testimony management and left every other protected topic available to Villarreal and his counsel overnight.
Alito Concurrence:
A recess should not alter the baseline rule that juries hear a defendant's testimony in his own words without counsel's real-time coaching. Indirect attempts to shape testimony carry the same constitutional infirmity as direct ones, regardless of strategic framing. Counsel may advise a client to consider a plea because the trial looks rough, but may not tell the client to clean up specific mistakes from the stand.
Thomas Concurrence in Judgment:
The trial judge's order plainly survived under Geders and Perry without any need for new rules or expanded doctrine. The majority announced a new "incidental testimony" carve-out that Perry never recognized and that these facts never required. Perry endorsed orders categorically forbidding testimony discussion — the majority created a protection Perry specifically declined to establish.
Oral Advocates:
- For Petitioner: Stuart Banner, Los Angeles, Cal.
- For Respondent: Andrew N. Warthen, Assistant Criminal District Attorney, San Antonio, Tex.; and Kevin J. Barber, Assistant to the Solicitor General, Department of Justice, Washington, D. C. (for United States, as amicus curiae.)
Link to Opinion: Here.
Link to Docket: Here
Preview Episode: Here
Timestamps:
[00:00:00] Case Overview
[00:01:59] Trial Scene Setup
[00:03:15] Geders vs Perry
[00:04:34] Content Based Line
[00:07:36] Applying to Villarreal
[00:08:13] Concurrences Split
[00:08:32] Alito Sharpens Rule
[00:10:34] Thomas Pushes Back
[00:12:24] Nationwide Impact
[00:13:43] Final Takeaways
[00:14:37] Wrap Up and Subscribe