[Ppnews] Troy Davis gets last-minute execution reprieve
Political Prisoner News
ppnews at freedomarchives.org
Tue Sep 23 18:37:10 EDT 2008
Ga. cop killer gets last-minute execution reprieve
http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5jhQApEoEL-uLsrCXRQzPN5FmpNXgD93CMF5G0
By GREG BLUESTEIN 36 minutes ago
ATLANTA (AP) The U.S. Supreme Court gave a
reprieve to a Georgia inmate less than two hours
before he was to be executed Tuesday for the 1989
slaying of an off-duty police officer.
Supporters of 39-year-old Troy Davis have called
for a new trial as seven of the nine witnesses
who helped put him on death row recanted their
testimony. Protesters had arrived by the busload
to protest the execution, carrying signs with
slogans like "Justice for Troy Davis" and wearing
blue T-shirts emblazoned with "I am Troy Davis."
A crowd of about 50 erupted in cheers when the
stay, granted around 5:20 p.m., was announced.
The Rev. Al Sharpton had accompanied members of
Davis' family to the protest, including Davis' mother, Virginia.
Prosecutors have labeled the witness statements
"suspect," and courts had previously refused requests for a new trial.
The execution had been scheduled for 7 p.m. EDT.
The stay will remain in effect while the court
considers Davis' appeal. Davis wants the high
court to order a judge to hear from the witnesses
who recanted their testimony and others who say
another man confessed to the crime.
Influential advocates, including former President
Jimmy Carter and South Africa Archbishop Desmond
Tutu, insist that there's enough doubt about his guilt to merit a new trial.
A divided Georgia Supreme Court has twice
rejected his request for a new trial, and had
rejected his appeal to delay the execution Monday
afternoon. The Georgia Board of Pardons and
Paroles also turned down his bid for clemency.
Davis was convicted of the murder of 27-year-old
officer Mark MacPhail, who was working off-duty
as a security guard at a bus station.
MacPhail had rushed to help a homeless man who
had been pistol-whipped at a nearby parking lot,
and was shot twice when he approached Davis and two other men.
Witnesses identified Davis as the shooter, and at
the 1991 trial, prosecutors said he 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
Chatham County court appearance and has no listed phone number.
Prosecutors have contended in court hearings the
case is closed. They also say some of the witness
affidavits simply repeat what a trial jury has
already heard, while others are irrelevant
because they come from witnesses who never testified.
Meanwhile, a man was set to be executed Tuesday
in Florida barring a last-minute intervention by
the U.S. Supreme Court. Richard "Ric Ric"
Henyard, 34, was convicted of the 1993 shooting
deaths of two sisters 7-year-old Jamilya Lewis and Jasmine Lewis, 3.
Their mother, Dorothy Lewis, survived after she
was raped and shot several times during a
carjacking. Both girls, with their mother when
they were seized by Henyard and an accomplice,
were shot in the head when they cried out for her.
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