Troy Anthony Davis of Georgia execution halted for now

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May 13, 2002
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www.socialistworld.net
#1
Make sure to read the third paragraph. Comprende?



Georgia death row prisoner faces execution following denial of clemency



The state of Georgia is intent on executing Troy Anthony Davis. Barring a last-minute intervention by the US Supreme Court, Davis will die by lethal injection Tuesday at 7 p.m. local time in the death chamber at the Georgia Diagnostic and Classification State Prison in Jackson. The Georgia State Board of Pardons and Paroles denied his clemency bid on September 12.

Troy Davis was sentenced to death in 1991 for the 1989 murder of an off-duty Savannah, Georgia police officer, 27-year-old Mark Allen MacPhail, who was working as a security guard. MacPhail was killed after responding to an altercation between a homeless man and an assailant in a Burger King parking lot near a Greyhound bus terminal.

No murder weapon has ever been produced by authorities, and there is no DNA or physical evidence linking Davis to the crime. Davis’s conviction was based wholly on the testimony of eyewitnesses, nine of whom testified at his trial. However, seven of these nine have now changed their testimony. Their recantations made clear that their statements were in many cases coerced, and that they were made out of fear of reprisals by police.




Typical was the statement of witness Monty Holmes, who wrote in an affidavit: “I told them I didn’t know anything about who shot the officer, but they kept questioning me. I was real young at the time and here they were questioning me about the murder of a police officer like I was in trouble or something. I was scared ... t seems like they wouldn’t stop questioning me until I told them what they wanted to hear... I signed a statement saying that Troy told me that he shot the cop.”

A prisoner who testified against Davis said he fabricated the story. And at least three witnesses who testified to Davis’s guilt at trial now say that another man—Sylvester “Redd” Coles—admitted that he fired the fatal shots that killed the police officer.


Troy, graduation

On July 16, 2007, less than 24 hours before Davis was scheduled to be executed, the Georgia State Board of Pardons and Paroles temporarily halted his execution, granting him a 90-day stay. The temporary reprieve was based on the board’s consideration of evidence presented by Davis’s defense at a nine-hour closed-door hearing, which heard numerous witnesses recant their testimony. (See “Georgia parole board issues 90-day stay of execution for death row inmate”)

The parole board stated at the time that it would “not allow an execution to proceed in this state unless and until its members are convinced that there is no doubt as to the guilt of the accused.” Board members said they would undertake an exhaustive examination of the case.



Earlier this month, on Friday, September 12, the board issued its final judgment: they ruled that the execution would proceed. The board issued its ruling denying clemency after a hearing that took testimony from a number of witnesses, including those who had recanted and apparently at least one who testified to Davis’s guilt.

The parole board’s deliberations are held in secret and they are not required to comment on their decisions. However, due to the extensive publicity surrounding the case, a spokesperson for the board felt compelled to issue the following statement: “After an exhaustive review of all available information regarding the Troy Davis case and after considering all possible reasons for granting clemency, the board has determined that clemency is not warranted.”

There was no explanation as to why they have decided to send Davis to his death in the face of testimony casting overwhelming doubt on his guilt. Georgia NAACP state president Edward DuBose commented: “Troy Anthony Davis is an innocent man and Georgia is on watch by the world. This is a modern-day lynching if it’s allowed to go forward.”

Davis’s only hope of evading execution now rests with the US Supreme Court. Currently, the high court is scheduled to hear an appeal by his attorneys on September 29—six days after his planned execution. In similar cases, the court has not moved up the date.

At every turn in his case, Troy Anthony Davis has come up against a judicial system hell-bent on denying him justice. It began with the actions of the police and prosecutors, extracting incriminating statements from witnesses on the basis of threats and coercion.

Due largely to measures contained in the Anti-terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA), signed into law under the Clinton administration in 1996, Davis’s defense has never been able to present new exculpatory evidence on appeal. Georgia courts have ruled that new evidence could not be presented in his case because five of the witnesses did not recant their testimony until after his state appeals had been exhausted.

The Georgia Supreme Court voted to hear a discretionary appeal of Davis’s conviction in August 2007, but denied the appeal on March 17, 2008. Georgia is one of three US states in which the governor has no power to grant clemency to condemned prisoners, so that route is not open to Davis.

The prospect of his state killing has provoked revulsion among significant sections of the US population, where opposition to the death penalty is on the rise. Hundreds marched in downtown Atlanta, Georgia last Thursday in a demonstration organized by Amnesty International and the NAACP. Protesters held signs proclaiming “Innocence Matters” and called for a new hearing in Davis’s case. Protests have taken place in Paris and other cities internationally.

Davis’s case provides a graphic exposé of the death penalty as practiced in the US. His entire case serves as a grim indictment of the barbarity of capital punishment and of those forces in the political establishment that work to promote and perpetuate it. source
 
May 13, 2002
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www.socialistworld.net
#2
This article was from yesterday. This from today:

JACKSON, Georgia (CNN) -- The U.S. Supreme Court granted a last-minute reprieve to a Georgia man fewer than two hours before he was to be executed for the 1989 slaying of an off-duty police officer.

Troy Anthony Davis learned that his execution had been stayed when he saw it on television, he told CNN via telephone in his first interview after the stay was announced.

He said he was "thankful to God" for the news that came during an emergency session the U.S. Supreme Court convened.

Davis said "everyone should pray" for the slain officer's family.

The 39-year-old also said that he is "very grateful for everything that everyone is doing" for him and that he would "accept" whatever decision the Supreme Court rendered in the coming days about his case.

At the Diagnostic and Classification Prison in Jackson, a crowd of Davis' supporters, led by the Rev. Al Sharpton, erupted in cheers when Sharpton announced the stay. Some shouted "Hallelujah!"

Davis has long said he didn't kill Mark MacPhail, a Savannah, Georgia, police officer, and the U.S. Supreme Court was the last option for Davis to have his execution postponed. It was scheduled to move forward at 7 p.m. ET.

Seven of the nine witnesses who initially testified that Davis was the killer have recanted. There was no physical evidence presented at his trial, and no weapon was found. But Davis' petitions for a new trial have been denied. Learn more about capital punishment in the United States »

The MacPhail family said they were angry about the stay.

"I am angry as can be. I'm disgusted. It should have been over by now," MacPhail's mother, Anneliese MacPhail, told CNN. "Nobody thinks about what the victims' family has gone through again and again.
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"I was hoping it would be over today," she said.

Earlier, she said, "There is no possibility he's innocent, not according to what's been said in court."

MacPhail's sister Anneli Reaves was outside the prison. She said that if witnesses now say that they lied when they testified that Davis was the killer, they should be charged with perjury.

"It should have happened today," she said of the execution.

Davis, 39, was convicted in 1991 of killing the officer as he responded to an altercation in a Burger King parking lot.

Earlier Tuesday, Davis refused his last meal, according to the Georgia Department of Corrections, which will still provide him with macaroni and cheese, pinto beans, green beans, lettuce and tomato salad, corn bread, fruit cobbler and tea.

Prison officials said that he was offered ativan, a mild sedative. But Davis refused to take the drug, he said.

Many had asked Georgia to grant Davis a new trial: celebrities like Susan Sarandon, Harry Belafonte and the Indigo Girls; world leaders such as former President Carter, Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Pope Benedict XVI; and former and current U.S. lawmakers like Bob Barr, Carolyn Moseley Braun and John Lewis.

Amnesty International has issued a 39-page report questioning his conviction, and protesters have been gathering at the Georgia Capitol in Atlanta this week. .

Davis' sister, Martina Correia, said she was sleepless Monday night and was spending Tuesday at his side. She said she planned to stay until prison officials told her to leave at 3 p.m.

Before the stay was announced, she said, "We still hope the U.S. Supreme Court will look into my brother's case and give some relief. We will have a lot of family time with him and recall old times and pray together."

The Georgia Supreme Court turned down the plea for a stay in Davis' execution Monday, saying the U.S. Supreme Court "properly has jurisdiction over Davis' pending petition."

Davis was convicted of MacPhail's 1989 murder largely on the testimony of nine witnesses.

"When you only have eyewitness testimony and you have no physical evidence, people have fallacies and people make mistakes," Correia said.

Davis' lawyers and supporters say this is a case of mistaken identity. Seven of the nine trial witnesses have changed their statements, saying they were mistaken, they feared retribution from the man they say actually killed MacPhail or that police pressured them into fingering Davis.

During the trial, witnesses said Davis and two other men were harassing a homeless man and followed him across the street from a parking lot at the Greyhound bus station in Savannah.

MacPhail was off-duty. He saw the skirmish and ran over to break up the fight. MacPhail was shot, and witnesses told police Davis fired the two shots that killed him.

A manhunt ensued. Davis surrendered nine days later.

Monty Holmes is one of the witnesses who said Davis was the culprit. He has changed his story and alleges that police coerced him.

"They were trying to get to me to say that he did it, but I know he didn't do it," Holmes said last year at a rally for Davis.

Savannah police Maj. Everett Ragan headed the MacPhail investigation. He denies allegations of coercion and said he doesn't believe the witnesses who have changed their stories.

Shortly before Davis was scheduled to be executed last year, Ragan told CNN, "There is no doubt in my mind we arrested the right man."

The Georgia Supreme Court also was unimpressed with the witnesses' new stories. In affirming the trial court's judgment in a 4-3 decision, the majority said that the witnesses' new testimony failed to meet the necessary benchmark: that their original testimony "in every material part is purest fabrication."

The court also was unconvinced by allegations that one of the men Davis was with that night, Sylvester "Red" Coles, killed MacPhail.

In a telephone interview in 2007, Davis acknowledged that he never told police that Coles killed MacPhail.

"I didn't because I didn't want to be a snitch," Davis said. "Yes, I know that's stupid."

Coles has never been charged with the murder and, according to court documents, has testified at least twice that he was not the killer.

Davis' lawyers claim that there are other people who saw what happened that night. Those witnesses have never testified in court but have submitted affidavits, the attorneys say.
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On Monday, the Georgia Board of Pardons and Paroles said it typically does not comment on clemency appeals but defended itself because Davis' case has received such widespread attention. The statement noted that the board postponed Davis' execution last year and has studied the case for a year.

"After an exhaustive review of all available information regarding the Troy Davis case and after considering all possible reasons for granting clemency, the board has determined that clemency is not warranted," the statement said.
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Jul 10, 2002
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Oct. 27th, only his Gov. or Mr. Bush can save him now....

See the following two impassioned letters in support of Troy Davis. The first is to the pope from Troy's nephew,
Antone Correia. The second is from Kenneth Foster Jr., who also faced an unjust execution date but whose sentenced
was commuted at the last minute last year by Texas Governor Rick Perry.

__________________________________________________________

A Letter from Troy Davis’s nephew, Antone Correia

Dear His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI,

My name is Antone’ De’Jaun Correia and I am writing to Your Holiness
with a special request for my Uncle Troy Anthony Davis, who is
scheduled to be executed by the state of Georgia on Monday, October
27, 2008. I know Your Holiness sent a letter to the Georgia Parole
Board on my uncle’s behalf and I thank him but my prayer is that he
makes a special call to Governor Sonny Perdue, who has the executive
power to save my uncle’s life.

Your holiness, I cannot explain the gift of joy that my Uncle Troy has
given to me, I have never known him in as a free man. All my life, he
has been in prison, on death row, yet he has been the best person I
have ever known and I am proud to be related to him. I am so sorry for
the death of Officer MacPhail and for the hardships his family has had
to endure, but no matter how people feel about my Uncle Troy’s guilt,
nothing will bring him back,, But how can the State of Georgia, in a
case with far more than just a “reasonable doubt”, still want to kill
my uncle?

My Uncle Troy wants me to be his legacy if he is killed by the state
and I promise to make him proud of me. I have had a terrible time in
the last year; My mother has been battling cancer for almost 8 years,
and my uncle has been in the death holding cell three times since last
July. This has been torture to ur family, but even more so for Uncle
Troy. You can’t imagine the thoughts that are in my head. I feel so
many emotions during this very stressful time in my life and I find
myself not being able to concentrate in school. I try to keep up a
good front for my friends and family but deep down inside I am
hurting. To be waiting for someone to be killed, to know-how and when
they will be killed- these are things I never thought I would have to
face as a child I have had to tell my uncle goodbye two times before,
and each time it gets harder to say.

I have been raised by wonderful parents to be a good citizen, with a
great education. But then I think “Why do I want to be a adult, they
do not care about human rights, about compassion, about forgiveness?”
I wonder what God they pray to when they pray for the death of other
people. I am trying my best to be strong, to keep praying, but I see
so much love in some and so much hate in others. So many people listen
to Your Holiness, and I know Your Holiness is very busy, but I am
begging Your Holiness to call the Governor of Georgia and ask him to
spare the life of my uncle, Troy Anthony Davis.

I am no lawyer, but having 7 out of 9 witnesses recanting their
testimonies and a prosecutor waving them aside is upsetting. I am
trying to understand the world we live in, and I am not sure I want to
be a part of a world that is so bent on violence and vengeance while
ate the same time praying to God. That is a scary world.

I love my Uncle Troy and this death sentence feels like a death
sentence for me and my family and no matter how much I pray for
strength, guidance and understanding, I am dying a little bit on the
inside everyday. I wonder if people realize I am a victim in this
too, or maybe they just don’t care.

Sincerely,
Antone’ De’Jaun Correia

________________________________________________________

I sit here today totally enraged about the news regarding my brother in the struggle Troy Davis. No matter if we've
never met nor spoke I know his struggle as clear as I know the lines that cross my hand. His path has been my own,
his pain is still mine and the fight we share is ongoing.

What the state has planned for October 27th is an abomination. It's an abomination to anything sensible, moral or
just. And in truth. it's flat out sickening. But, even more so it's a statement! It's a statement that says the system
doesn't care and is intent on ruling with the iron claw. We are no more than rubbish to these politicians-expendable
pawns in nothing more than a sadistic chess game called 'amerikan politics'.

What Troy Davis' scheduled state-sanctioned murder is is an alarm ringing loudly in our ears. It's one that's saying
WAKE UP!!! In any other country around the globe when a government lines its people up and systematically kills
them, they call it genocide (ESPECIALLY if you leave it to the voice of the amerikan government). In amerika they call
it Justice. What's wrong with this picture? Is it them. or is it really us?

For those that are missing this, this is a gauge. This is a test for what you will do in other similar circumstances. Like
whom you may ask? Like Mumia Abu-Jamal who's in a similar situation. And although not on death row, for people
like Leonard Peltier and Sundiata Acoli. It's a gauge for what you will do. Do we, the people, still have the fire and
drive and willingness of sacrifice to the levels needed?

You may not think Troy Davis is in the same boat as the above-mentioned politicalprisoners, but he's in the EXACT
same boat, because when the state's actions are a political message against you, you have just been drafted into
thepolitical prisoner boat. And YOU havebeen drafted into the political citizen boat, because when you can be
targeted because of your views and oppressed because you express them then you have beenpoliticalized.

The point is - we are in the same boat whether you recognize it or not. Any of you could be on death row tomorrow
ifthe wrong finger pointed at you and you'd be guilty until proven innocent - so says the law of this land.

What you do for Troy Davis needs to make a loud statement! If we act hard from the beginning then these injustices
won't be repeated. This is what's meant by the philosophical saying - 'The first cut is the deepest!'

We have a VERY LONG way to go where we can give all death row inmates support like this. We understand what
people think and feel when dealing with ALL death row cases, but we must look at the bigger picture of what we
open the door to and then what actually walks through that door.

If we can't save Troy Davis then we can't save ourselves. And this is the truth!!! Our lives are already dominated by
the iron claw - look at the economy, gas prices, poverty rates, incarceration rates, rise in political corruption. Why
do we allow it? WHY!?!?!?

Rise up and be heard, and if needed. rise up and be FELT (there is adifference). Rise up for TroyDavis. Rise up like
it's your first an dlast fight, because when we do. the last will finally be first. FIGHT!!!

In Struggle with StiffResistance

Kenneth 'Haramia'Foster

Kenneth Foster Jr.
#1451768
McConnell Unit
3001 S. Emily Dr.
Beeville, TX 78102
 
Jul 10, 2002
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No one with an honest face can say he's guilty. The reason for no new trial is his statute of limitations for appeal expired (technicality as a result of being a poor black male in the deep south).

His death is not about guilt or innocence, it's about principle. Letting him off is another huge blow against the state, as it'd be an admission to the flaws within the capital punishment death machine.
 
Jul 10, 2002
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Another STAY for Troy Davis!!!‏
From: [email protected] on behalf of [email protected] ([email protected])
Sent: Fri 10/24/08 11:28 AM
To: [email protected]; [email protected]

http://www.newsday.com/news/nationworld/nation/wire/sns-ap-georgia-execution,0,3444098.story

Federal appeals court stays execution of Ga. man convicted of killing officer in 1989
By GREG BLUESTEIN | Associated Press Writer
12:54 PM EDT, October 24, 2008
ATLANTA (AP) _ A federal appeals court gave a last-minute reprieve Friday to a Georgia man set to be executed for the
1989 killing of an off-duty police officer even though several witnesses have changed their accounts of the crime.

Troy Davis, 40, was scheduled to be executed Monday. But the three-judge panel of the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals ordered defense attorneys and prosecutors to draft briefs that address whether Davis can meet "stringent
requirements" to pursue the next round of appeals.

Davis' supporters have called for a new trial because seven of the nine key witnesses against him have recanted their
testimony, and the doubts about his guilt have won him the support of former President Jimmy Carter and other
prominent advocates.

"I'm ecstatic. This movement is building and building and building," said Martina Correia, Davis' sister. "This is going
to crumble the justice system in Georgia if they don't do the right thing."

Savannah Officer Mark MacPhail was working off-duty as a security guard at a bus station when he rushed to help a
homeless man who had been pistol-whipped at a nearby parking lot. He was shot twice when he approached Davis
and two other men.

Witnesses identified Davis as the shooter, and prosecutors at the 1991 trial said Davis wore a "smirk on his face" as he
fired the gun.

But Davis' lawyers say new evidence proves their client was a victim of mistaken identity. Besides those who have
recanted their testimony, three others who did not testify have said Sylvester "Red" Coles — who testified against
Davis at his trial — confessed to the killing.

Coles refused to talk about the case when contacted by The Associated Press during a 2007 court appearance and has
no listed phone number.

Prosecutors have said the case is closed. In court hearings, they said some of the affidavits repeat what a jury trial
already has heard, while others are irrelevant because they came from witnesses who never testified.

Savannah District Attorney Spencer Lawton also said he doubts the new testimony meets the legal standards for a new
trial. And while the recantations may seem persuasive to some, Lawton said, "to others of us it invites a suggestion of
manipulation, making it very difficult to believe."

Georgia's pardons board postponed Davis' execution in 2007 less than 24 hours before it was to be carried out.

Over the next few months, a divided Georgia Supreme Court twice rejected Davis' request for a new trial, and the
pardons board turned down another bid for clemency after considering the case again.

Then, two hours before his scheduled Sept. 23 execution, the Supreme Court issued a stay, sparking a celebration
among Davis' supporters gathered outside the state prison. But the court cleared the way for the execution this month
when it decided against giving Davis another hearing.

His supporters have tried to ratchet up the public relations campaign by holding rallies in Paris, Montreal, Brussels,
London and Milan. The European Union's legislature issued a statement this week warning that Davis' execution is a
"great risk of miscarriage of justice."

Lawton, though, contended the real victim of the high-profile campaign has been MacPhail's family. They have lived
through a succession of legal challenges that have also tested "their faith and hope" since Davis' conviction 17 years
ago, he said.

"For every minute of that time," he said, "Officer MacPhail's family has suffered the agony of uncertainty."
 
Jul 10, 2002
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#8
Yesterday, the Supreme Court held a conference to decide whether to allow Troy Davis’ appeal to go forward. It is likely that they won’t announce a decision until Monday. Meanwhile, attention on the case is continuing to mount as Chatham County District Attorney Larry Chisolm, thanks to all of you, has been receiving pressure to reopen the case. You can still call him at (912) 652-7308.

Here are a number of op-eds, articles and videos circulating news sources and the internet:


1. Youtube video of Martina Correia, Troy’s sister: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dxg3KTsc4q4
2. From thegrio.com: Martina on Death Row’s Invisible Victims
3. Guest column in the Atlanta Journal Constitution by Congressman John Lewis: Give Troy Anthony Davis a New Trial
4. A couple of pieces on the NAACP’s activities to win justice for Troy

For more on Troy’s case, to download a petition or fact sheet, or to make a donation to assist the efforts of the Campaign to End the Death Penalty, visit http://www.nodeathpenalty.org
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

http://www.thegrio.com/2009/06/death-rows-invisible-victims.php

Opinion
Troy Davis' sister speaks: Death row's invisible victims
By Martina Correia
8:54 AM on 06/25/2009

My name is Martina Correia and I am on Death Row in Georgia.

No I have not murdered anybody, never even been on trial. I am on death row because that is where my brother lives.

Death Row has been for me and my family a living nightmare. As the eldest of five children I have always been responsible for protecting my siblings, and I keep wondering what I could have done to go back in time or change past history.

My father died of pure depression and grief, my mother prays and prays and prays and cries and cries and cries. Late night phone calls terrify us, prison visits elate us, and death is always upon us. They say we are on the side of the murderer; we have been treated at times like criminals.

We temporarily lost our place of worship, we lost friends, we lost jobs but we never lost faith or the unconditional love of Troy, my brother.

We became the invisible victims, the tormented, the shamed; we became the enemy of the state.

I once believed in Justice, I don't anymore. My life is a constant battle, I fight to save my brother, I fight to save myself from cancer, I fight to protect and educate my son and I fight to see my mother smile. It is a terrible thing to know someone you love will be killed, the day, the hour, with years of constant torment and fear.

On death row you see the other families awaiting execution and you don't know what to say: you wonder if their pain and suffering will be over or just added to.

My greatest fear is that in the judicial system no one really cares and my brother will be killed by the State of Georgia. I look at my son who is old enough to ask the question, "Why do they want to kill my Uncle Troy?" I don't have a good answer.

I feel at times, it would be better to die of cancer than to live and see my brother executed for a crime he did not commit. I live day to day thinking of death and dying, I think to myself, "What can I do to save Troy?" or even, "Will I be alive to see him walk free?"

My name is Martina and I am on Death Row.
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Opinion <http://www.ajc.com/opinion/content/opinion/index.html>
Click-2-Listen <http://www.ajc.com/opinion/content/opinion/stories/2009/06/26/lewised_0626.html#>
GUEST COLUMN
Give Troy Anthony Davis a new trial
By John Lewis

Friday, June 26, 2009

The clock is ticking for death row inmate Troy Anthony Davis. The U.S. Supreme Court is considering his final appeal and could decide any day whether to hear the case.

The state of Georgia claims Davis committed murder almost 20 years ago, but no physical evidence links him to the crime. No gun was ever found.

No DNA evidence was ever discovered. Without any physical evidence, eyewitness testimony is the foundation of his conviction.

However, seven of the nine central witnesses have now either changed or contradicted their testimony. Several say they were coerced.

One witness says she signed a statement swearing to Davis&#8217; guilt, even though she could not read. Some evidence points to one of the witnesses as the murderer.

Davis constantly maintains his innocence.

We know our criminal justice system is not perfect. There is nothing new about that.

In recent years, many states have suspended executions due to DNA evidence that suggested they could be executing a significant number of innocent people.

Recent research by a University of Virginia law professor, Brandon Garrett, reveals the inaccurate testimony of eyewitnesses can lead to wrongful conviction in almost 80 percent of cases where people are later exonerated.

What should be of great concern to most Americans is that in this nation which sees justice as one of its primary goals, in the Davis case where so much evidence points to the real possibility of a faulty conviction, this man cannot get a new trial.

It is possible Davis will be sent to his death without ever having a judge or jury examine whether this new evidence proves his innocence.

A technicality that limits the number of appeals a death row inmate can make has made it lawful for federal and Georgia appeals judges to refuse ordering a new hearing or a new trial.

Respected world citizens have voiced their concerns &#8212; Pope Benedict XVI, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, President Jimmy Carter <http://g.ajc.com/r/Dn/> , former Congressman Bob Barr, U.S. attorneys, attorneys general.

His sister, Martina Correia, has traveled the country, even addressed the European Union on his behalf.

Amnesty International has waged an international campaign, and the NAACP has issued a call to action.

There are even death penalty advocates, like former FBI Director William Sessions, who say that in the name of justice we owe Davis another day in court.

There is one more relevant factor to consider. Should the fact that a police officer was the victim in this case, that his family had suffered endlessly due to these appeals, alter any of our conclusions?

My heart goes out to the family of Officer Mark McPhail who has suffered, not only due to the wrongful death of a devoted father and husband, but also due to the inability of government to resolve this case justly.

I share the deepest concern for police officers who are cut down by violence everyday trying to defend the law. Yet, their sacrifice can only be honored by our highest integrity.

Because government has determined to defend itself, instead of defending what is right, no one can find peace and the call for a new trial has only gotten louder.

Justice could silence all opposition. Injustice has prolonged this debate.

I am hoping that the Supreme Court, the governor of Georgia or the Chatham County district attorney will have the courage to follow the lead of Attorney General Eric Holder. When he believed the government had fostered injustice in Sen. Ted Stevens&#8217; case, he took action.

We the people through our representatives in government still have the opportunity to do what is right.

I hope we will not allow ourselves to believe that adherence to the letter of the law is sufficient moral cover for the execution of a man who may be innocent.

I hope we will not convince ourselves as a nation that two wrongs will finally make this right.

As a citizen of this nation and a believer that justice can prevail, I hope someone with the power will have the courage to stand up.

If we fail to act, if we allow Davis to be executed without ever granting him a new trial, the state of Georgia and we as a nation will be complicit in a violation of human rights we can never, ever repair.

Without justice, there is no peace.

U.S. Rep. John Lewis, a Democrat, represents the 5th District.

___________________________________________________________________________________________________________


http://www.bvblackspin.com/2009/06/25/naacp-fights-to-save-troy-davis/
NAACP Fights to Save Troy Davis As Time Runs Out
Posted by Sheryl H. Salomon on Jun 25th 2009 12:08AM

Troy Davis has been at death's door before. On Georgia's death row for nearly 18 years now for the murder of a police officer, the former sports coach has received several stays of execution -- including one last fall just an hour before he was scheduled to die. Now, despite the fact that there was no physical evidence linking him to Mark Allen MacPhail's death; despite the fact that seven of nine witnesses have recanted or contradicted their original testimony; and, despite the fact that the NAACP, former president Jimmy Carter, Pope Benedict XVI, Nobel Laureate archbishop Desmond Tutu; conservative former Georgia congressman Bob Barr, and former FBI director William Sessions have all have called for a new trial, Davis may have finally run out of options.

A motion before the Supreme Court to reopen the case due to new evidence was to have been heard today, but chances that the justices will grant the necessary writ of Habeas Corpus aren't great. The high court has not granted a writ of Habeas Corpus since 1925. Should the Court deny the motion, the countdown to Davis' death begins again, and his execution date could be set within weeks.

Calling this case "the most compelling case of innocence in decades," NAACP president Benjamin Todd Jealous has waged a no-holds-barred media campaign to get the condemned man a new trial. Many of the witnesses now say they were pressured by police or prosecutors to finger Davis, and several have identified another witness, Sylvester "Redd" Coles, as the true culprit. Meanwhile, Davis has reportedly been a model prisoner.

Said Jealous in a recent essay:
I met with Troy a few weeks ago. I watched the eyes of the guards who are clearly touched by Troy's plight, the stony masks that guards are supposed to wear crack as Troy told his story. I met a woman in the parking lot who said her next door neighbor, a former guard, quit rather than have to oversee Troy's march to the death chamber.

I was moved talking with his sister, diagnosed with breast cancer and given months to live in 2001. I had a chance to hug her son &#8211; who I had met almost a decade ago as a NAACP youth member -who visits Troy once a week and looks to him as a mentor.

The NAACP, which filed a friend-of-the-court brief in the case, is urging Georgia governor Sonny Perdue to intervene. Larry Chisolm, the new African American district attorney for Savannah, also has the power to reopen the case. With the clock ticking, the NAACP is also calling on us to appeal to these men to spare Davis' life.
Will you help? It's as easy as visiting IAMTROY.com.


http://www.ledger-enquirer.com/news/story/760267.html
News

Friday, Jun. 26, 2009
NAACP rallies for death row inmate Troy Davis

By Tim Chitwood - [email protected]

About 10 people supporting convicted killer Troy Anthony Davis gathered on the Columbus Government Center&#8217;s north side Thursday for a rally organized by the NAACP.
There to speak were Georgia State Conference NAACP President Edward DuBose and Columbus NAACP Branch President Marcus Hunter.
DuBose said seven of nine people who testified against Davis when he was tried for killing a Savannah police officer in 1989 have recanted their testimony. The officer, Mark Allen MacPhail, 27, a former Army Ranger and a graduate of Columbus High School, was working as a security guard at a Savannah bus station when he came to the aid of a homeless man who was being assaulted. MacPhail was shot three times before he could draw his gun.
Davis was convicted in 1991. Doubts about his guilt have prompted world leaders such as former President Jimmy Carter and South Africa Archbishop Desmond Tutu to support the inmate&#8217;s cause.
With Davis&#8217; appeals running out, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People wants supporters to ask Georgia Gov. Sonny Perdue to intervene, and to urge Savannah District Attorney Larry Chisholm to reopen the case. It also has a new Web site, www.iamtroy.com.
Davis&#8217; scheduled execution twice has been stayed. He again has appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court, which had yet to rule as of Thursday.
Among those opposed to further delay in Davis&#8217; execution is Randy Robertson, vice president of the Georgia Fraternal Order of Police. He said the case against Davis relies on more than witness testimony. For example, shell casings showed a gun used in an earlier shooting to which Davis was connected matched casings found at the scene of MacPhail&#8217;s murder, he said.
Robertson noted numerous judges have reviewed the evidence and found no reason to overturn his conviction
 
Jul 10, 2002
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#9
25 June 2010
Posted by Suzanne Ito, ACLU at 4:55pm
Innocence
Davis Hearing Wraps Up With Stunning Admission by Witness
This week, for the first time a court heard evidence of Troy Davis's innocence of a crime he was convicted of almost 20 years ago. Davis was convicted of the 1989 murder of off-duty Savannah police officer Mark MacPhail.
Since his conviction in 1991, seven of the nine witnesses who testified against him at trial have recanted their statements. Of those seven, five testified this week that the police coerced them into lying and testifying against Davis. (The remaining two witnesses who had also recanted their testimony have died.) Among the testimony:

&#8220;I was scared,&#8221; [Darrell "D.D." Collins] said, adding that police threatened to charge him as an accessory. &#8220;That&#8217;s what they wanted me to say. I thought that was the only way I could get out of it.&#8221;

&#8220;I was so scared I told them anything they wanted to hear,&#8221; [Jeffrey Sapp] testified, saying he gave false testimony because irate police officers pressured him on what to say and he was worried he'd be charged for dealing drugs if he didn't.

One of the remaining two witnesses who had not recanted is Sylvester "Redd" Coles, who was with Davis the night of the murder. At this week's hearing, one eyewitness said he saw Coles murder Officer MacPhail:

Davis' legal team also summoned Benjamin Gordon, who testified that he saw Sylvester "Redd" Coles shoot and kill the officer.

Gordon, who is incarcerated and has at least six prior felony convictions, said he never came forward because he did not trust the police and feared what Coles might do to him or his family in retaliation.

"Is there any doubt in your mind that Redd Coles fired that shot?" [Davis's lawyer] asked. "No, sir," Gordon replied.

Since 1973, 138 men have been exonerated from death row. Hopefully this week's hearing is the first step towards making Troy Davis the 139th

source: CEPD
 
Jul 10, 2002
2,180
18
0
45
#10
25 June 2010
Posted by Suzanne Ito, ACLU at 4:55pm
Innocence
Davis Hearing Wraps Up With Stunning Admission by Witness
This week, for the first time a court heard evidence of Troy Davis's innocence of a crime he was convicted of almost 20 years ago. Davis was convicted of the 1989 murder of off-duty Savannah police officer Mark MacPhail.
Since his conviction in 1991, seven of the nine witnesses who testified against him at trial have recanted their statements. Of those seven, five testified this week that the police coerced them into lying and testifying against Davis. (The remaining two witnesses who had also recanted their testimony have died.) Among the testimony:

“I was scared,” [Darrell "D.D." Collins] said, adding that police threatened to charge him as an accessory. “That’s what they wanted me to say. I thought that was the only way I could get out of it.”

“I was so scared I told them anything they wanted to hear,” [Jeffrey Sapp] testified, saying he gave false testimony because irate police officers pressured him on what to say and he was worried he'd be charged for dealing drugs if he didn't.

One of the remaining two witnesses who had not recanted is Sylvester "Redd" Coles, who was with Davis the night of the murder. At this week's hearing, one eyewitness said he saw Coles murder Officer MacPhail:

Davis' legal team also summoned Benjamin Gordon, who testified that he saw Sylvester "Redd" Coles shoot and kill the officer.

Gordon, who is incarcerated and has at least six prior felony convictions, said he never came forward because he did not trust the police and feared what Coles might do to him or his family in retaliation.

"Is there any doubt in your mind that Redd Coles fired that shot?" [Davis's lawyer] asked. "No, sir," Gordon replied.

Since 1973, 138 men have been exonerated from death row. Hopefully this week's hearing is the first step towards making Troy Davis the 139th

source: CEPD