Troy Davis: Clemency Denied
Posted: September 20, 2011 Filed under: Action Memo, Breaking News, Civil Liberties | Tags: Amnesty International, clemency, death penalty, Georgia, Troy Davis 7 CommentsI just got an e-mail from Amnesty International, and I’m copying it here:
It is with a very heavy heart and a deep sense of outrage that I let you know that the Georgia Board of Pardons and Paroles voted to deny clemency to Troy Davis.
This means that very little is standing in the way of the state of Georgia executing a potentially innocent man this Wednesday, September 21 st at 7pm.
The actions of the Board are astounding in the face of so much doubt in the case against Troy Davis. However, we are not prepared to accept the decision and let anyone with the power to stop the execution off the hook.
Join us in calling on the Board to reconsider its decision, and on the Chatham County (Savannah) District Attorney Larry Chisolm to do the right thing. They have until the final moments before Troy’s scheduled execution to put the brakes on this runaway justice system.
We have seen an unprecedented level of support from our members, coalition partners and all sorts of concerned individuals across the political spectrum.
I was blown away as I carried one of the many boxes containing your petition signatures up to the Parole Board office last Thursday. Close to a million signatures have been collected from the many organizations working with us. I looked back as we were marching down Auburn Avenue in Atlanta Friday night and I could not see an end to the crowd. About 3,500 people came out!
The movement here is very alive. It is electric. And I have no doubt that we will raise the volume together against what could be an unthinkable injustice.
Join your voices with us – we will not allow Troy Davis to be executed, not in our names! Troy Davis and his family have counted on us for many years now and we will not let them down. Please take action – human rights and a human life are on the line. Please contact Georgia’s District Attorney and urge him to stop the execution of Troy Davis.
Make the state of Georgia hear you! Tell them that executing Troy Davis will only deepen the cycle of violence and injustice.
In Solidarity,
Laura Moye
Director, Death Penalty Abolition Campaign
Amnesty International USAP.S. We’ll be organizing a Day of Protest today to express our outrage at the recent decision to deny Troy Davis clemency. And on Wednesday (Sept. 21), we’re calling for a Day of Vigil on Troy’s impending execution date. If you are able to organize locally for either of these events, please tell us about your plans.
Minkoff Minx is very passionate about the Troy Davis case, and has written several excellent posts about it. She’s involved in family business today, but perhaps she will still find time to comment on this terrible decision.
Davis, 42, was put on death row 20 years ago for the 1989 murder of a police officer, Mark MacPhail, in Savannah following a fight with a homeless man over a bottle of beer. Since then seven out of the nine key witnesses who implicated him have recanted their evidence, several saying they were cajoled by police into giving false eye-witness statements.
Another 10 have come forward to point the finger at a separate man present at the scene of the murder, Sylvester Coles.
Meanwhile, no forensic or DNA evidence linking Davis to the shooting has ever been found, and nor has the murder weapon.
The denial of clemency by the parole board prompted an outpouring of anger and despair from hundreds of Twitter users and several celebrity supporters of Davis’s campaign. The prisoner’s lawyer, Brian Kammer, said he was “shocked and disappointed at the failure of our justice system at all levels to correct a miscarriage of justice”.
Amnesty International’s US branch, that has championed the case, said: “Allowing a man to be sent to death under an enormous cloud of doubt about his guilt is an outrageous affront to justice. The case against Davis unraveled long ago.”






Good article in the Atlanta Journal-Constution with quotes from families and attorneys.
http://www.ajc.com/news/parole-board-denies-clemency-1184524.html
Depressing……………..
We’re such a barbaric nation. This happens mostly in bible belt states too. That’s telling.
It’s so clear that the death penalty is applied more to Blacks and Hispanics. In this case, the guy may be innocent. But the victim’s family wants him dead, and they apparently convinced the parole board.
Barbaric nation — yep.
Executions in Jesus loving states — yep.
So sad — it costs a lot of money for these poor bible belt states to execute so many people.
Life in prison is cheaper — and if the proof is found that the person is innocent . . . . .
What I don’t get is the family of the murder victim. If it takes another death to give them some semblance of “peace” they are really sick people. This is especially true since the evidence is so weak. I couldn’t live with myself. Again, I thought christianity was supposed to be based on forgiveness not vengeance to make yourself feel better. As a Buddhist,I believe this just compounds the karma of a bad situation and will only bring worse to them. They need to find a better way of finding peace than through another murder.
Way back in high school I researched the Sacco and Vanzetti case — there is still no agreement to the guilt or innocence of these two.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacco_and_Vanzetti
“Sacco and Vanzetti were accused of the murders of Frederick Parmenter, a paymaster, and Alessandro Berardelli, a security guard, at the Slater-Morrill Shoe Company, on Pearl Street in Braintree, Massachusetts, during the afternoon of April 15, 1920. Vanzetti was further charged with the theft of $15,776.73 from the company.”
These men were not sterling characters by any means. But their guilt wasn’t proven.
The death penalty is barbaric for many reasons — but mostly because more people become murderers in order to carry out the judgment.