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Sunday, Sept. 21, 2008
Dear
Abolitionists,
See "in person" action opportunities for
those in or near Georgia and DC below.
Other than Georgia's Board of Pardons
and Paroles, the U.S. Supreme Court can
stop the execution of Troy Davis. Troy
Davis is scheduled to be executed on
Tuesday, September 23 at 7:00 p.m. for
his alleged murder of Police Officer
Mark MacPhail in Georgia. Yet serious
doubts of his guilt remain and
compelling evidence of his innocence has
not been heard in court.
There is no physical evidence linking
Troy to the crime; no DNA, no murder
weapon. Seven out of 9 witnesses have
recanted their testimony implicating
Troy, and one of the two remaining
witnesses is the likely suspect. All
Troy Davis has ever asked for is the
chance to be tried in a court of law
with the actual evidence. Now more than
ever is the time for justice to be
served.
Troy
Davis and his family need your help!
Please see Bob Herbert's column in the
New York Times, also below, and note the
following, send the e-mail, send the
fax, and on Monday morning make yourself
heard again via telephone... The message
is simple: "I am calling to ask the
Georgia Board of Pardons and Paroles to
reconsider the case of Troy Davis and to
stop this execution."
A friend in California called me to say
that "...in reference to telephone
numbers, I discovered this morning that
for the State of Georgia Board of
Pardons and Paroles, the most accessible
- i. e., a real person answered and
spoke versus a series of recordings...
Get a real person at 404-656-5712...."
"...in reference to facsimile numbers,
404-651-8502 works...."
"...in reference to electronic messages.
clemency_information@pap.state.ga .us
will most likely work....
"...according to the individual with
whom this morning I spoke, more than
84,000 electronic messages, more than
20,000 facsimiles and an unquantified
number of telephone calls had in favor
of Mister Davis been received....
"...THE STATE OF GEORGIA BOARD OF
PARDONS AND PAROLES IS COUNTING....
"...PLEASE CONTINUE TO MAKE YOUR VOICE
COUNT....
Click here to read about last week's
protests in Atlanta, including a fast
going on now that you can join in
solidarity...
In the New York Times....
September 20, 2008
Op-Ed Columnist
What*s the Rush?
By BOB HERBERT
Troy Davis, who was convicted of
shooting a police officer to death in
the parking lot of a Burger King in
Savannah, Ga., is scheduled to be
executed on Tuesday.
There is some question as to his guilt
(even the pope has weighed in on this
case), but the odds of Mr. Davis
escaping the death penalty are very
slim. Putting someone to death whose
guilt is uncertain is always perverted,
but there*s an extra dose of perversion
in this case.
The United States Supreme Court is
scheduled to make a decision on whether
to hear a last-ditch appeal by Mr. Davis
on Sept. 29. That's six days after the
state of Georgia plans to kill him.
Mr. Davis's lawyers have tried
desperately to have the execution
postponed for those few days, but so far
to no avail. Georgia is among the most
cold-blooded of states when it comes to
dispatching prisoners into eternity.
So the lawyers are now trying to get the
Supreme Court to issue a stay, or decide
before Tuesday on whether it will
consider the appeal.
No one anywhere would benefit from
killing Mr. Davis on Tuesday, as opposed
to waiting a week to see how the Supreme
Court rules. So why the rush? The murder
happened in 1989, and Mr. Davis has been
on death row for 17 years. Six or seven
more days will hardly matter.
Most of the time, the court declines to
hear such cases.
If that's the decision this time,
Georgia can get on with the dirty
business of taking a human life. If the
court agrees to hear the appeal, it
would have an opportunity to get a
little closer to the truth of what
actually happened on the terrible night
of Aug. 19, 1989, when Officer Mark
Allen MacPhail was murdered.
He was shot as he went to the aid of a
homeless man who was being
pistol-whipped in the parking lot.
Nine witnesses testified against Mr.
Davis at his trial in 1991, but seven of
the nine have since changed their
stories. One of the recanting witnesses,
Dorothy Ferrell, said she was on parole
when she testified and was afraid that
she*d be sent back to prison if she
didn*t agree to finger Mr. Davis.
She said in an affidavit: "I told the
detective that Troy Davis was the
shooter, even though the truth was that
I didn't know who shot the officer."
Another witness, Darrell Collins, a
teenager at the time of the murder, said
the police had 'scared' him into falsely
testifying by threatening to charge him
as an accessory to the crime. He said
they told him that he might never get
out of prison.
"I didn't want to go to jail because I
didn't do nothing wrong," he said.
At least three witnesses who testified
against Mr. Davis (and a number of
others who were not part of the trial)
have since said that a man named
Sylvester "Redd" Coles admitted that he
was the one who had killed the officer.
Mr. Coles, who was at the scene, and
who, according to authorities, later
ditched a gun of the same caliber as the
murder weapon, is one of the two
witnesses who have not recanted.
The other is a man who initially told
investigators that he could not identify
the killer. Nearly two years later, at
the trial, he testified that the killer
was Mr. Davis.
So we have here a mess that is
difficult, perhaps impossible, to sort
through in a way that will yield
reliable answers. (The jury also
convicted Mr. Davis of a nonfatal
shooting earlier that same evening on
testimony that was even more dubious.)
There was no physical evidence against
Mr. Davis, and the murder weapon was
never found. As for the witnesses, their
testimony was obviously shaky in the
extreme * not the sort of evidence you
want to rely upon when putting someone
to death.
In March, the State Supreme Court in
Georgia, in a 4-to-3 decision, denied
Mr. Davis*s request for a new trial. The
chief justice, Leah Ward Sears, writing
for the minority, said: "In this case,
nearly every witness who identified
Davis as the shooter at trial has now
disclaimed his or her ability to do so
reliably."
Amnesty International conducted an
extensive examination of the case,
documenting the many recantations,
inconsistencies, contradictions and
unanswered questions. Its report on the
case drew widespread attention, both in
the U.S. and overseas.
William Sessions, a former director of
the F.B.I., has said that a closer look
at the case is warranted. And Pope
Benedict XVI has urged authorities in
Georgia to re-sentence Mr. Davis to life
in prison.
Rushing to execute Mr. Davis on Tuesday
makes no sense at all.
***
IN PERSON ACTION OPPORTUNITIES
GEORGIA
If you are in or near Georgia, see the
web page of Georgians for Alternatives
to the Death Penalty at
http://www.GFADP.org for information
on protest opportunities.
WASHINGTON, DC
WHAT: Emergency Rally at Supreme Court:
Save Troy Davis
WHEN: Monday, September 22 @ noon
WHERE: One First ST, NE (Sidewalk in
front of US Supreme Court Building)
For more info, contact
cedp_dc@hotmail.com, or call 202 492
0441.
_____________________________________________________
SENT BY:
Abraham J. Bonowitz
Director of Affiliate Support
National Coalition to Abolish the Death
Penalty
www.NCADP.org
abe@ncadp.org
202-331-4090
561-371-5204 (Mobile)
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