 |
 |
 |
Editorials | Issues | July 2007  
Campaign Grows to Halt Execution of US Inmate
Matthew Bigg - Reuters go to original

 |  | I don't think you could look at the facts of this case and feel safe going forward with the execution. - Laura Moye, Amnesty USA |  |  | Atlanta, GA - U.S. authorities should halt the execution next Tuesday of a man for killing an off-duty police officer in 1989 because of growing indications he might not be guilty, campaigners said on Friday.
 The Georgia Board of Pardons and Paroles is due to rule on Monday on whether it should grant clemency to Troy Davis, 38, who is due to be executed by lethal injection at a prison in Jackson, Georgia.
 Davis was convicted of killing officer Mark McPhail in the parking lot of a Burger King restaurant in Savannah, Georgia.
 Pleas for a stay of execution are common, but campaigners including Amnesty International and South African Nobel Peace Prize laureate Desmond Tutu argue Davis could be innocent.
 No DNA evidence linked Davis to the crime, no murder weapon was found and seven of nine witnesses central to the prosecution case have recanted or changed their testimony, according to activists.
 Some witnesses also have said they testified under duress and two of them, plus four new witnesses, have identified a man they said was the actual murderer, according to evidence that Davis' lawyers intend to present to the parole board.
 "We are not saying he is innocent," said Laura Moye, deputy regional director of Amnesty USA. "(But) if you look at the facts we don't believe he got a fair trial or a fair appeal. The new facts should be reviewed."
 "I don't think you could look at the facts of this case and feel safe going forward with the execution," said Moye, whose organization opposes the death penalty.
 Davis's case was weakened by a 1996 law that narrowed the avenues of appeal for death row inmates, and his lawyers were hampered by a refusal of the courts to look at evidence that emerged after the initial trial, Moye said.
 In an opinion piece in the Atlanta-Journal Constitution newspaper, former FBI director William Sessions said of Davis' case: "It would be intolerable to execute a man without his claims of innocence ever being considered by the courts or by the executive," referring to the state governor.
 Since 1976, 124 people have been freed from death row in the United States after their convictions were overturned and they were acquitted at retrial or had charges against them dropped, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.
 At least 1,086 people have been executed in the United States since 1976, of whom 34 percent were black, 57 percent were white and 7 percent Hispanic. In at least eight executions there was "strong evidence of innocence," the center said.
 Davis' sister said race played a part in the conviction of her brother, who is black.
 "They (the police) really dishonored the memory of their comrade by trying to get any black man for the crime. Troy was convicted on rage and outrage," Martina Correra said in an interview. | 
 | |
 |