Monday, September 22, 2008

LA Times:

By Richard Fausset, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
September 13, 2008
ATLANTA -- Georgia's parole board on Friday denied clemency for a man set to be put to death for killing a police officer, even though seven of the nine witnesses who testified against him have since changed their stories.

Troy Anthony Davis, 38, is set to be executed at 7 p.m. Sept. 23 at a prison in Jackson, Ga. The Supreme Court is scheduled to hear Davis' appeal Sept. 29.

His execution date is Sept 23. His appeal is Sept. 29.

Real Judge Jimbo genius at work in Jodga.
On Friday, Davis' attorney, Jason Ewart, said he would file an emergency stay with the high court, asking the justices to take up the case as soon as possible.

"It's probably the hardest thing I've ever had to hear," Ewart said of the parole board's decision.

"The hardest thing I've ever had to do was to tell Troy we're denied."

Davis was convicted of killing Mark MacPhail, a Savannah, Ga., police officer, in August 1989. At the time, MacPhail was working his second job, as a Burger King security guard. He was fatally shot after rushing to help a man who had been beaten outside a bus station.

Police did not recover a weapon, and prosecutors relied on witness testimony to convict Davis. Since then, most of the witnesses have altered or cast doubt on their versions of events sworn in affidavits. Some said they were pressured by police to make their original statements.

In March, the Georgia Supreme Court, in a 4-3 decision, rejected Davis' request for a new trial after reviewing the recantations.

See: TroyAnthonyDavis.org

2 comments:

DirtE said...

The best part about closing your eyelids is that the mind's eye sees everything so much clearer.

Witnesses, Shwitnesses. If we believe enough that something happened, then it happened!

Greco-Roman said...

We all know how pristine the judicial system is, even if 7 of 9 witnesses had the "memory" beaten into their heads.

But what I truly find bizarre is the fact that the defendant was a security guard at Burger King.

There's a Whopper joke in there somewhere. Must hidden under the pickle.