Brad Friedman Byon 9/19/2011, 7:05pm PT

UPDATE 9/20/11, 9:48am PT: Despite all that we have detailed below --- including witnesses who've recanted their testimony, jurors who've retracted their 'guilty' verdicts, scores of luminaries, former Presidents, current Popes, prosecutors, elected officials (both Republican and Democratic), judges, and law-enforcement officials who've called for Troy Anthony Davis to be spared, along with Amnesty International's description of the state's decision today as "unconscionable" --- the Georgia Board of Pardons and Paroles has denied Davis' final appeal for clemency this morning.

Barring a last minute intervention from someone, somehow, somewhere (please see and sign this), the Big Government lethal injection killing of Georgia's citizen Davis will proceed at 7pm local time Wednesday night.

The "Tea Party" protests over the outrage are scheduled to begin never.

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In August of 2007, Troy Anthony Davis was just weeks away from his then scheduled execution in the state of Georgia when The BRAD BLOG ran the following article, including an exclusive interview with Larry Young, the "forgotten victim" in the Davis case who now, like 7 of the 9 witnesses in the case, has recanted his testimony. Young says, as you'll read, that he was left to bleed while the police coerced him into identifying Davis as the assailant, even though he had never seen him before.

One of the only witnesses to not retract his testimony is Sylvester "Redd" Coles, who was with Davis before the 1989 murder of Savannah Police Officer Mark Allen MacPhail, whom Davis has been convicted of killing. During a party in June of 2009, Coles reportedly claimed to have been the actual assailant.

Davis' execution was delayed in 2007 as new evidence was presented, but he is now, once again, scheduled to be killed at 7pm local time on Wednesday, pending a grant of clemency by the Georgia Board of Pardons and Paroles (BPP), the sole authority able to commute his death sentence to life in prison with or without the possibility of parole.

Since Emily Levy's exclusive article below ran on August 3rd, 2007, citing both the Indigo Girls and the Pope in calling for Davis to be spared, a host of dignitaries, such as President Jimmy Carter, former FBI Director William Sessions, former far-right Republican U.S. Congressman Bob Barr of Georgia, and former Georgia Supreme Court Chief Justice Norman Fletcher, have all asked the BPP to grant clemency to Davis.

Moreover, among witnesses heard during today's impassioned hearing before the board was Brenda Forrest, a juror who voted to sentence Davis to death at his 1991 trial. According to to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution tonight, Forrest "now says she has doubt about her verdict and is asking the board to grant clemency. Two other jurors who voted to sentence Davis to death have signed affidavits asking the board to spare Davis from execution."

In her affidavit, Forrest says "she learned information that makes her no longer believe the case against Davis was ironclad. 'I feel, emphatically, that Mr. Davis cannot be executed under these circumstances,' she said."

The BPP has adjourned for the evening, having postponed deliberation until tomorrow on the fate of the man who has maintained his innocence without fail for 20 years now. (It had been only 17 years at the time of Levy's original article for The BRAD BLOG). In light of the possibility of the ultimate Big Government abuse of power being exercised against a citizen on Wednesday, it seems an appropriate moment to revisit Levy's original, and disturbing, exclusive...

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The Indigo Girls and The Pope Agree: Troy Davis Should Not Be Executed

After 17 Years on Death Row, Davis Will Have Opportunity To Present New Evidence

The 'Forgotten Victim' Speaks in a BRAD BLOG Exclusive... Special to The BRAD BLOG by Emily Levy - Originally published 8/3/2007 "The part what really makes me mad is the part that I don't know who hit me. You know, it might sound weird, but that'd be a little bit of closure for me to know who done it. You know, because when I got hit, and I hearin' somebody clicking a gun by my head about three, four times, and that gun not going off. You know, for a lot of years I've been hearing that click and I've been hearing that gun going off. Jumping up out of my sleep."

--Larry Young, July 2007, 18 years after he was attacked in the parking lot of a Savannah, Georgia Burger King. You might think Larry Young would know who hit him, because two weeks ago the man who was convicted in the case came within 24 hours of being executed by the State of Georgia. But Larry Young doesn't know because he, like nearly all the witnesses whose testimony originally convicted Troy Anthony Davis of the assault on Young and the murder of a white police officer that night, doesn't believe Davis is guilty. Next week, the testimony these witnesses want to give, testimony that will show their original "witness statements" were coerced by police, will finally be heard...

On August 19, 1989, Larry Young, an African American man who was then homeless, was assaulted in a Burger King parking lot by two or three men. He was hit in the head by what is believed to be a gun. As Young described to The BRAD BLOG in a phone interview, he fell to the ground, bleeding. Someone held a gun to his head and tried to shoot him, but the gun didn't fire. Young's friend dragged him away from the assailants. Before they got far, they heard two gunshots. Police officer Mark Allen McPhail had been killed. Young himself was detained that night, he told The BRAD BLOG. "The blood was just steady fallin', sort of fallin' … The police grabbed me, threw me on the car, handcuffed me and threw me in the police car. And I was back there for about a hour and a half, maybe about a hour and a half. And I kept telling 'em, you know, I needed some medical attention." The police took him in for questioning, refusing him medical care until he signed a statement implicating Troy Davis, a man he says he never saw that night, in his attack and the killing of Officer McPhail. Young told The BRAD BLOG, "So whatever statements that they made me take, I mean, it was just a lot of statements made like, 'Well, you give me a statement of what you need, what we need, and then you'll go to the hospital.' So therefore whatever the statements were that was given was not accurate statements. ... I'm concerned ... about my health, you know. And I'm hearing these clicks in my head still, you know what I'm saying, sitting up there, I'm pretty much kinda scared. So I just pretty much signed what they wanted me to sign and whatever went on the courtroom, you know, I mean it was all pretty much like coerced." On evidence like this, the State of Georgia may send Troy Davis to his death?... There was no physical evidence linking Troy Anthony Davis, an African American man, to the crimes; the entire case was based solely on witness testimony. Now seven of the nine non-police witnesses have recanted or contradicted their testimony. While Young was the only one bleeding and denied needed hospital care, the police apparently used similar powers of persuasion to get statements out of the others. Amnesty International's report on the case, "Where Is the Justice for Me?" presents witness after witness detailing how the police used threats to get them to sign statements implicating Davis. One was pregnant and on parole; she was afraid she'd be locked up again if she didn't tell police what they wanted to hear. Another reports that he signed the statement the police gave him without reading it, "because I cannot read." Another said the police told him he was "going to the electric chair" if he didn't cooperate. One witness who has not revoked his statement is Sylvester "Red" Coles, identified by several witnesses scheduled to testify on August 9 as the true culprit in the crimes. Troy Davis' sister, Martina Correia, has fought for years to exonerate her brother. Amnesty International USA and the Georgians for Alternatives to the Death Penalty (GFADP) have intervened on behalf of Davis as well. Thousands of letters in support of Davis have been delivered to the Georgia Board of Pardons and Paroles (BPP), including from The Indigo Girls and Pope Benedict. Sam D. Millsap, Jr., former District Attorney from San Antonio, TX, wrote: I write to urge you to commute the death sentence of Troy Davis. I’m no wild-eyed, pointy-headed liberal; I am the former elected District Attorney from San Antonio, Texas, the 8th largest city in America. As Bexar County District Attorney, I oversaw the successful prosecution of several capital murder cases, each of which resulted in the execution of the defendant. I have been a strong supporter of the death penalty throughout my adult life. In 2005, a major Texas newspaper presented evidence that one of my prosecutions (Ruben Cantu) may have resulted in the execution of an innocent man. I fervently hope that there are only a few prosecutors and former prosecutors in America today who find themselves, as I do, in the position of having to admit an error in judgment that may have produced an unfortunate result in a criminal prosecution. I believe that prosecutors whose very best efforts may have produced unintended results in capital murder cases have a moral and ethical duty to accept responsibility for their mistakes. Without going into greater detail than is necessary, it is clear that there are haunting similarities between the Cantu and Davis cases: the absence of physical evidence, recanting witnesses, witnesses alleging police coercion; the implication of another man in the crime. ... Some suggest that it's good enough if we get it right most of the time--that good intentions, strong procedural safeguards, and a fair trial provide sufficient protection. If you believe that we MUST ALWAYS GET IT RIGHT in capital murder cases, that the system MUST do what is intended—guarantee the protection of the innocent—you will commute the death sentence that has been imposed in this case. It is deeply troubling to me that Georgia might proceed with this execution given the strong claims of innocence in this case. It has been repeatedly demonstrated that our criminal justice system makes mistakes. ... On July 16, just 24 hours prior to his scheduled execution by lethal injection, the BPP issued a 90-day stay of execution. They have now scheduled a hearing in the case for August 9, where witnesses will be able to tell their stories. The Board has the power to commute Troy Davis's death sentence to life in prison with the possibility of parole or life without the possibility of parole. Either of these actions would give Davis time for success in his appeal to the Georgia Supreme Court, which could result in a new trial. Meanwhile, the stay of execution could be lifted at any time. Public pressure has been instrumental in creating the opportunity for witnesses to testify on behalf of Davis. If public pressure falls off, it is more likely the BPP will execute Troy Davis. Surely even those who believe in the death penalty don't want to see a prisoner executed who seems likely to be innocent. Amnesty International has set up a webform to make it easy to send letters to the Georgia Board of Pardons and Paroles. Let them know what you think. And please help spread the word. * * * Additional Resources:

Amnesty International USA's Call to Action: http://takeaction.amnestyusa.org

Background on the case: WaPo: "Execution Of Ga. Man Near Despite Recantations"

Media links and related coverage: http://www.savetroydavis.net/

Troy Anthony Davis's website, including letters from The Indigo Girls, Pope Benedict, Archbishop Desmond Tutu and others: http://www.troyanthonydavis.org



