
    GRAY v. KELLY, WARDEN
    No. 11A210 (11-5545).
    Decided August 25, 2011
   Chief Justice Roberts, Circuit Justice.

Ricky Gray was convicted of five counts of capital murder in Virginia. He was sentenced to death on two of the counts and life imprisonment on the remaining three. After his convictions and sentences were affirmed on direct appeal, Gray filed a petition for state postconviction relief. The Virginia Supreme Court granted the petition in part, ordering vacatur of one of the convictions for which Gray was sentenced to life imprisonment. Gray v. Warden of Sussex I State Prison, 281 Va. 308, 304, 707 S. E. 2d 275, 280-281 (2011). But the court denied relief in all other respects, ibid., and the Commonwealth of Virginia set a date of execution of June 16, 2011.

Meanwhile, Gray applied for appointment of counsel in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, where he planned to file a petition for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U. S. C. §2254. On June 14, 2011, the District Court appointed counsel for Gray and stayed the execution of his death sentence for 90 days pursuant to § 2251(a)(3). In a separate order issued the same day, the District Court set a briefing schedule requiring Gray to file his federal ha-beas petition within 45 days, no later than July 29. In a subsequent order on June 29, the District Court extended Gray’s deadline for filing a habeas petition to August 29.

On July 25, Gray filed with this Court a petition for a writ of certiorari, seeking review of the decision of the Virginia Supreme Court. He claimed that the procedures followed by that court in adjudicating his postconviction claims violated his federal constitutional rights to due process and equal protection of the laws. Gray then asked the District Court to stay its June 29 scheduling order pending this Court’s disposition of his petition for certiorari to the Virginia Supreme Court. After the District Court denied the request, Gray did not seek a stay from the Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, but rather filed an application for a stay with me as Circuit Justice.

Gray’s application accompanies his petition for certiorari to the Virginia Supreme Court, but does not seek a stay of that court’s judgment. Nor does his application seek a stay of his date of execution, which has not been reset. His application instead requests only a stay of the District Court’s order requiring him to file a federal habeas petition by August 29.

Although Gray’s application invokes the familiar standard for securing a stay of a judgment subject to this Court’s review, see Application for Stay 4 (citing Barefoot v. Estelle, 463 U. S. 880, 895 (1983)), that standard is inapplicable here because Gray does not seek a stay of such a judgment. Gray’s request that this Court exercise its “supervisory authority” over the District Court, Reply to Opposition to Application for Stay 2, implicates a standard even more daunting than that applicable to á stay of a judgment subject to this Court’s review. See Ehrlichman v. Sirica, 419 U. S. 1310, 1311-1312 (1974) (Burger, C. J., in chambers). Gray clearly has not established his entitlement to relief from the District Court’s scheduling order.

The application for a stay is denied.

It is so ordered. 
      
      Gray’s application specifically requests a stay of the District Court’s June 29 scheduling order. Application for Stay 14. That order extended the deadline for filing a federal habeas petition to August 29. A stay of that order would therefore serve only to restore the original deadline of July 29. The substance of Gray’s application makes clear, however, that the relief he actually seeks is a stay of the District Court’s briefing schedule in its entirety until this Court acts on his petition for a writ of certiorari to the Virginia Supreme Court.
     