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Troy Davis Denied Clemency By Georgia Pardons Board

Troy Davis

GREG BLUESTEIN   09/21/11 12:37 AM ET   AP

ATLANTA — Yet another appeal denied, Troy Davis was left with little to do Tuesday but wait to be executed for a murder he insists he did not commit.

He lost his most realistic chance to avoid lethal injection on Tuesday, when Georgia's pardons board rejected his appeal for clemency. As his scheduled 7 p.m. Wednesday execution neared, his backers resorted to far-fetched measures. They asked prisons officials to let him to take a polygraph test; urged prison workers to strike or call in sick; asked prosecutors to block the execution and they even considered a desperate appeal for White House intervention.

He has gotten support from hundreds of thousands of people, including a former FBI director, former President Jimmy Carter and Pope Benedict XVI, and a U.S. Supreme Court ruling gave him an unusual opportunity to prove his innocence last year. State and federal courts, however, repeatedly upheld his conviction for the 1989 killing of Mark MacPhail, an off-duty police officer who was working as a security guard in Savannah when he was shot dead rushing to help a homeless man who was being attacked.

Davis' attorneys say he was convicted based on flawed testimony that has been largely recanted by witnesses, but prosecutors and MacPhail's relatives say they have no doubt the right man is being punished.

"Justice was finally served for my father," said Mark MacPhail Jr., who was an infant when his father was gunned down. "The truth was finally heard."

As Davis' attorneys considered filing another appeal, his supporters planned vigils and rallies around the world. Nearly 1 million signed a petition seeking clemency, according to Amnesty International.

"We've been praying about it and with God on our side anything can happen," DeJaun Correia-Davis, the condemned man's 17-year-old nephew, told a rally of hundreds in front of the Georgia Capitol late Tuesday. "Let this be a case that not only highlights the death penalty but will hopefully be a big part in bringing it to an end."

Later Tuesday, Davis attorney Stephen Marsh told The Associated Press they had asked state prison officials and the pardons board to allow Davis to take a polygraph test.

Marsh hopes the pardons board will agree to consider results of the test. The machines aren't reliable measures of guilt but they "may tell you something about innocence," he said.

A prisons spokeswoman said she was unaware of the request and the pardons board didn't immediately respond.

Georgia initially planned to execute Davis in July 2007, but the pardons board granted him a stay less than 24 hours before he was to die. The U.S. Supreme Court stepped in a year later and halted the lethal injection just two hours before he was to be executed. And a federal appeals court halted another planned execution a few months later.

This time, state officials are confident this lethal injection will be carried out. Georgia's governor does not have the power to grant condemned inmates clemency. Davis supporters are calling on Chatham County District Attorney Larry Chisolm to block the execution. But the prosecutor said in a statement Tuesday he's powerless to withdraw an execution order for Davis issued by a state Superior Court judge.

"We appreciate the outpouring of interest in this case; however, this matter is beyond our control," Chisolm said.

Spencer Lawton, the prosecutor who secured Davis' conviction in 1991, said he has no doubt he is guilty.

"What we have had is a manufactured appearance of doubt which has taken on the quality of legitimate doubt itself. And all of it is exquisitely unfair," Lawton said.

MacPhail was shot to death Aug. 19, 1989, after coming to the aid of Larry Young, a homeless man who was pistol-whipped in a Burger King parking lot. Prosecutors say Davis was with another man who was demanding that Young give him a beer when Davis pulled out a handgun and bashed Young with it. When MacPhail arrived to help, prosecutors say Davis had a smirk on his face when he shot the officer to death.

Witnesses placed Davis at the crime scene and identified him as the shooter. Shell casings were linked to a shooting hours earlier that Davis was convicted of. There was no other physical evidence. No blood or DNA tied Davis to the crime and the weapon was never located.

Davis' attorneys say seven of nine key witnesses who testified at his trial have disputed all or parts of their testimony.

Quiana Glover, who did not testify at the original trial, said one of the witnesses who did not recant told her he was the real shooter. That man, who was with Davis that night, could not be reached for comment on Monday and Tuesday, and did not answer his door this week when a reporter visited.

"Justice should be served, but it should be served to the right man," said Glover, who urged the pardons board to grant clemency Monday. "There's no evidence against this young man."

As advocacy groups highlighted the case, a growing number of dignitaries became involved. A host of conservative figures are among those who have advocated on his behalf, including former U.S. Rep. Bob Barr, ex-Justice Department official Larry Thompson and one-time FBI Director William Sessions.

Their concerns helped prod the U.S. Supreme Court to grant Davis a hearing in Savannah to prove his innocence, a nearly unprecedented move. Two witnesses at the June 2010 hearing testified that they falsely incriminated Davis at his trial, and two others told the judge that the man with Davis that night later said he shot MacPhail.

Prosecutors, though, argued that Davis' lawyers were simply rehashing old testimony that had already been rejected by a jury. And they said no trial court could ever consider the hearsay from the other witnesses who blamed the other man for the crime.

U.S. District Judge William T. Moore Jr. sided with prosecutors and rejected Davis' request for a new trial. He said that while "new evidence casts some additional, minimal doubt on his conviction, it is largely smoke and mirrors."

On Tuesday, Davis was spending his last quiet hours with friends, family and supporters, said Wende Gozan Brown, an Amnesty International staffer who visited him.

"He said he's in good spirits, he's prayerful and he's at peace. But he said he will not stop fighting until he's taken his last breath. And he said Georgia is about to snuff out the life of an innocent man," she said.

His supporters are exploring other options. State Sen. Vincent Fort called on all but a skeleton staff of prison workers to strike on Wednesday.

The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People said it was considering asking President Barack Obama to intervene, a move that legal experts considered unlikely.

MacPhail's family, which urged the pardons board on Monday to reject Davis' clemency bid, said his execution will bring them peace.

"That's what we wanted, and that's what we got," said MacPhail's mother, Anneliese MacPhail. "We wanted to get it over with, and for him to get his punishment."

___

Follow Bluestein at . Associated Press writers Kate Brumback in Atlanta and Russ Bynum in Savannah contributed to this story. http://www.twitter.com/bluestein

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ATLANTA — Yet another appeal denied, Troy Davis was left with little to do Tuesday but wait to be executed for a murder he insists he did not commit. He lost his most realistic chance to avoid ...
ATLANTA — Yet another appeal denied, Troy Davis was left with little to do Tuesday but wait to be executed for a murder he insists he did not commit. He lost his most realistic chance to avoid ...
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10:29 PM on 09/23/2011
That poor guy has most certainly paid with more than a pound of flesh after all these years trying to get a new trial; but, to no avail.

With what little I know, I looked into his face and saw a good person with a good heart. Sorry we are so barbaric in denying him a new trial when many worthy people stood up and said that he should have a chance to again prove his innocence. Said he would take a lie-detector test. No. Not on the table.

He happened to be at the wrong place at the wrong time, just like that officer. In a parking lot, let's see. Probably some drug dealing going down. Others who ratted him in to save their own hides.

I hope he has peace.

We are going to be remembered for what we do to one another while we are here.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ezio
How can we win when fools can be kings?
02:37 PM on 09/22/2011
'Support from former President Jimmy Carter'. LoL, what does Jimmy not support? Not only was he one of our worst Presidents of all time, he refuses to stay out of the spotlight. What a joke.
10:56 AM on 09/22/2011
I know that this case is going to bring outrage in the black community...I am avoiding facebook right now because news reports say they just executed him about 15min ago... I had been saying to myself, "Please, please, please, don't kill that man!"

I've been writing about American Society and how Blacks are viewed in my blog but I have been feeling like my words are falling on deaf ears... Please check it out! I think you will like it. http://meeshe011.blogspot.com

What can we do to improve the state of Black America? How do we combat discrimination, prejudice, and racism within and outside of the Black community?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ezio
How can we win when fools can be kings?
02:39 PM on 09/22/2011
Start by calling yourselves Americans instead of African Americans. I'm an American, not an English American. My parents were born in America, my grandparents were born in America, and their parents were born in America. I'm American, and you're American.

Black America? That's racist, I don't go around toting White America.
12:55 AM on 09/23/2011
@ Ezio, please feel free to check out my article about cultural diversity: http://meeshe011.blogspot.com/2011/06/cultural-diversity-curriculum.html

Black people are not White people...You might as well be saying that we are all humans. Well of course we are!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
OSCPJ
Want it? Work 4 it. No 1 has ever drown in sweat.
09:44 AM on 09/22/2011
Typical Liberal posting. 22 Years ago convicted. Instead of writing a coherent story with facts about this particular story, instead play on emotions. Cite how innocents get killed. But no where in the story actually put something together and show how this man is innocent. 1.5 Million people sign a petition? Really? One has to look at what others outside their circle see of them. It plays good on the HP. Don't you think the President could have a study done, charts, graphs, committees to show how his plan works? But yet he gives a speech? Please.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
noteaforme
The Tea Party parties like it's 1399.
09:19 AM on 09/22/2011
I am ashamed to be a citizen of America. And before you right wing nationalist f@c*sts tell me to just "leave", I am not. I am not leaving the rest of the vulnerable to you to execute.
05:00 AM on 09/22/2011
two wrongs don't make a right. How is civilized for our society to condone murder to resolve murder. The MacPhail's blood thirst was quenched, but how many more innocent people will die before we realize we cannot judge whether human beings are fit to live or die.
07:27 PM on 09/22/2011
Agreed. It's sad.
12:24 PM on 09/24/2011
Santos, our names are written in the Book of Life when God created the Heavens and the Earth. He created our souls and gave us our name.

He gets to decide our coming in and our going out. Only Him. When man begins to act in their arrogance of now deciding who can live and who can die, you have crossed way over the line.

This man more than paid a thousand fold hoping for a chance to bring forth evidence. He was never allowed to. End of story. His goose was cooked from the beginning even though testimony was brought forth of coersion on the part of the witnesses who testified against him. They recanted. Nope,. Didn't count.

Tragic ending to this man's life. I beieve that you are going to come clean at the very end because there is you with your guilt and nothing going to be changing it because you are going to be dying and soon. But, he implored that they keep searching to find the real killer. Poor man. May God Grant Him Peace.
11:13 PM on 09/21/2011
I just can't believe ths! Devastating news just in - the US Supreme Court will not stop the execution of #TroyDavis
10:40 PM on 09/21/2011
Hmmmmmmmmm......... I anwered a post about an hour ago, and it's still not posted. What's up?
08:49 PM on 09/21/2011
Go see!! :-D

http://www.facebook.com/pfadp
08:48 PM on 09/21/2011
I'm so glad they didn't do it!! :)
08:42 PM on 09/21/2011
For those who oppose the death penalty, I would like to ask a question. What punishment do you feel is "just" for an individual who tortures and murders another? They caused their victims to be terrified while enduring horrific pain and torture, and no doubt the victims begged for their lives. Life in prison is still a life that the murderer continues to get to live and enjoy to some extent.
09:25 PM on 09/21/2011
Alright, I'll try to explain how it is for me. My son was murdered. All I could feel was dispair, hate and grief. My only child who was 30 and way too young to die. I got very ill from it all, and then the stress killed my husband. I got even more ill. Actually, I wanted to die. I can't tell you about the months that I endured because now, they are a blur to me. But I can tell you that at first I wanted the guy that killed my son dead too!! I mean DEAD. The more I hated, the sicker I got. My body began to shut down. I was literally dying. I began to have dreams. My son was in them speaking to me as if he were right here. He hated to see me that way was the messages that I got. I had dreams that made me feel like I was holding him here by my grief and that he needed me to have peace so he could go on to better places. One night I heard, "Pray for the Bast....d. I thought, what???? But I understood what that meant.I found a good Dr. and I did many things to help myself afterwards.... too too long to go into, but they were spiritual things. Continued.....
09:07 AM on 09/22/2011
Thank you for your response. I still am undecided on the death penalty, but there are people who need to be stopped and punished extensively. I think as it is, convicted criminals have it way too easy at the expense of those who choose to follow the law.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ron Weaver
Whatever it takes
09:34 PM on 09/21/2011
Why not let your god handle it. Seems to me everything is gods will according to people whom choose to believe that Looks like there is going to be a big crowd at the big burn according to your ten commandments. I dont see an an * beside any of them. Murderers and those that murdered them and those that agreed with this barbaric act could well be in attendance. Only your god knows what is actually the truth so he should in fact make that decesion. Murder is murder is murder. Don't forget your sun tan lotion.

Thankfully civilized Countries have abolished this uncivilized practice.
09:03 AM on 09/22/2011
You didn't answer the question. Instead I simply see an irrational post with you calling those who follow the law "barbaric" while not giving any reasonable alternative. FTR, I didn't bring any religion into this.
08:39 PM on 09/21/2011
OMG! OMG!!!! LOOK!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I just got this!

We are heartened to report that the US Supreme Court has issued a reprieve (or delay) to consider a stay of execution for Troy Davis. We will have more information to come, but for regular updates please follow us on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pfadp or Twitter @PFADP.



In solidarity,


Amanda, Beto, Steve and Steven
.............................

Yay!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Stephen B Kidde
Human Rights Rule!
08:01 PM on 09/21/2011
There is not enough evidence to maintain the conviction of murder for the death penalty. Davis is being punished for a lethal act that had been committed by someone else. An innocent party is being executed to protect the guilty.
01:18 AM on 09/22/2011
I agree, blame the police and the courts and the pardon board, They are nothing but a bunch of stupid HILLBILLIE'S!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
OSCPJ
Want it? Work 4 it. No 1 has ever drown in sweat.
09:46 AM on 09/22/2011
You guys are silly. You never sat on in the court and never were privy to the court details. But you read something on a liberal website and believe it 100%. Think about that for a minute. What proof do you have that he is innocent? And how come a lawyer with access to all that info can't prove that?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JustMyWords
02:22 AM on 09/25/2011
Before you start talking about silly, you might want to reconsider the idiocy of your own comments. First, you were no more 'privy to the court details' than anyone else here, so you hardly have some magical inside track of information. Second, under our legal system, no one has to prove that he/she is innocent - the state is required to prove guilt. You want to do it the other way around, move to France.

But 'how come a lawyer with access to all that info can't prove that?' Maybe you should be paying a little more attention. Davis' attorneys never got a chance to present the evidence that he is innocent, because the appeals court refused to grant a new trial. Unfortunately, proof of innocence isn't considered sufficient grounds to stop an execution - according to SCOTUS, innocence is irrelevant.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Stephen B Kidde
Human Rights Rule!
10:41 AM on 09/26/2011
The burden of proof belongs to the prosecution. They have to prove guilt of the charge. They did not prove guilt of murder in the Davis case. They did not have enough physical evidence. Seven out of nine of the witnesses recanted their testimony.

Defense does not have to prove innocence. That is where most of you arch-cons go wrong. You make statements that affirm the belief that the accused has to prove innocence.

According to your view, all the prosecution has to do is file a charge, go through the motions of an investigation and they should ge given the conviction! That is not due process of law.
07:15 PM on 09/21/2011
Not to change the subject, but the news just said that the copsin CA who killed Kelly Thomas by beating him to death have been to court now. I'm VERY happy about that, but the thing that really ticked me off was they said, "If they are found gulty, they will get 4 to I thnk 12 ? or 15? yrs. WHAT???? Why don't THEY get the death penalty??? Or even life????? Just goes to show you what goes on here in America.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rosebud678
Eva - Scarlett
04:38 PM on 09/23/2011
I agree. 2 cops beat and kill an innocent mentally ill man and they will only get a few years in prison maybe. Yet, god forbid anyone kill a cop, and they will get life or death.
07:03 PM on 09/21/2011
I feel sick inside. :( I made my calls today but only got to talk to machines. I sure let them know what I thought about this though.