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Don't Let Georgia Execute an Innocent Man: Join the Global Day of Action for Troy Davis

Troy Davis has faced execution three times in two years despite damning proof of his innocence. We can't allow this injustice to continue.
May 18, 2009  |  
 
 
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One wonders how many times this scenario has played out in the United States.  Like a classic crime movie, the details go something like this: A group of young men, usually African-American, get involved in an activity of questionable legality. A police officer (often off-duty) intervenes. Weapons are drawn by the officer and someone else. The officer ends up dead. One of the young men is accused of the crime even though the evidence (if there is any) offers no clear link between the accused and the crime.  Prosecutors rely on witnesses with minimal credibility to get a conviction. The accused young man is then sentenced to death. While he sits on death row, questions about the prosecution and conviction begin to appear in the press. The prosecution conspires with the judicial system to keep their conviction intact, refusing any motions for retrial based on new evidence. The convicted man grows old in prison, facing multiple execution dates that are only stayed by appeals that never lead to a new trial.

This is the case of Troy Davis in one paragraph. The bulk of the prosecutor's evidence presented at Davis 1991 trial in the murder of an off-duty policeman in Georgia was based primarily on that of prosecution witnesses who later recanted their testimony. In addition, most of them have claimed repeatedly that they were pressured by police to point to Davis as the perpetrator. No murder weapon was ever found and no physical evidence linked him to the crime.  One of the two main witnesses who has not recanted was the original suspect in the crime. 

Despite a bulk of new evidence, the state of Georgia has refused to grant a new trial.  As recently as April 16th, 2009, Davis’ appeal for a new trial was rejected by a federal appeals court in a 2-1 decision. The dissenting judge was unsparing in her criticism of the Georgia's legal case and his death sentence. She wrote: "To execute Davis, in the face of a significant amount of proffered evidence that may establish his actual innocence, is unconscionable and unconstitutional." Yet, the execution of Troy Davis looms in the distance.

Like almost every other case of this nature, the fundamental action that has kept Davis alive is a popular movement that spans the globe. From the streets of Atlanta to the chambers of the European Parliament, thousands have called for Davis's death sentence to be commuted, with many demanding a new trial based on the new evidence. I recently communicated with Marlene Martin, an organizer for the National Campaign to End the Death Penalty--one of the organizations spearheading the campaign around Troy. When I asked her about the Global Day of Action for Troy Davis on May 19th, she wrote me this:

The coming global day of Action for Troy Davis on May 19th -- which also happens to be Malcolm X’s birthday -- is really important. Troy Davis is alive today in spite of our legal system, not because of it. The fact that he hasn’t ever been allowed to present new and compelling evidence of his innocence to a jury -- and could be executed without ever having the opportunity to do so -- is mind-boggling.
The state of Georgia has already tried three times to kill Troy. They would rather kill him than admit wrongdoing. But they have been stopped in their tracks each and every time by the movement outside the courthouse, spearheaded by Troy’s sister Martina Correia. As a result of her efforts, and Amnesty International and many other organizations coming together to fight for Troy, people around the country and around the world know about his case. I get e-mails from all over -- England, Germany, France, New Zealand Canada -- all people that support Troy.
One thing that’s clear in this fight is we can’t rely on the courts. We need to build for the day of action to be as big as it can be, and to keep organizing.  Troy represents many, many others who are in prison today -- too poor to afford good representation at trial, and a person of color.

Also at issue in this case is the entire question of the death penalty. The United States is one of the few nations in the so-called free world that continues to practice this barbaric form of justice.  In addition, it also ranks near the top among nations that do execute some of their criminals. Add to that the well-documented racial disparity in these executions, especially when looking at the numbers of whites executed for killing blacks versus the number of blacks executed for killing whites and those executions seem even more barbaric. When one considers this, it becomes essential to challenge not only the execution of Troy Davis, but the political system that supports the practice of state-sanctioned murder. This challenge becomes even more necessary when that system also tortures those it has arrested in its "war on terror" and imprisons them indefinitely without trial. A land with such a system is closer to a police state than the land of the free. Unless those who live within its borders resist these authoritarian policies, there may come a time when such resistance will find them subject to them.

Not only is the movement to commute Troy Davis' execution and get him a new trial an effort to save a man's life, it is also part of an effort to prevent an increasingly authoritarian nation from becoming even more so. Please consider joining the

Global Day of Action for Troy Davis

on May 19, 2009.

 


Ron Jacobs is author of The Way the Wind Blew: a history of the Weather Underground, which is just republished by Verso. Jacobs' essay on Big Bill Broonzy is featured in CounterPunch's collection on music, art and sex, Serpents in the Garden. His first novel, Short Order Frame Up, is published by Mainstay Press. He can be reached at: rjacobs3625@charter.net
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Capital Crimes
Posted by: Tom Degan on May 18, 2009 4:01 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why did other civilized societies abandon this barbaric practice decades ago? Why are we the last holdouts? Why?? HELLO??? We're Americans! WE LOVE TO KILL!!! When states all over the country abandoned the electric chair a number of years ago for the seemingly more "humane" method of lethal injection, a lot of us got pretty upset. The only thing the needle did was make a victim go to sleep. But all you had to do was strap one of them onto ol' Sparky and those bastards suffered, baby! Oh yeah, we love to inflict pain, don't we? At this very moment your government is in the process of inflicting torture against men they deem as prisoners of war - in direct violation of the Geneva Conventions - and the overwhelming majority of us just don't seem to give a hoot in hell. We're Americans, dammit! We can do anything we want! The rest of the world doesn't dig it? The hell with 'em!
.
The main problem with capital punishment, in my opinion anyway, is the fact that it is so grotesquely unfair. It is always the poor and uneducated who are executed. Can you remember the last time a multi-millionaire Yale grad went to the death house? No, neither can I. Is it because the rich are above murder? Are you kidding me?? The rich kill other human beings all the time! They do it for fun and profit! More often than not, they're able to hire an army of high priced lawyers who then obtain a neat and hasty acquittal. Not long ago, one of the heirs to the Max Factor fortune was convicted of a particularly grizzly killing. Not only was he not even considered for the death penalty, he was able to escape for a time to Mexico (He could afford the bail). And if you're black??? Cast ye hope to the wind, brother. The reason so many Americans favor the Death Penalty is because so huge a percentage of its victims are African American. That is not merely my own opinion, that is an undeniable fact. If tomorrow, a federal law was passed that guaranteed that anyone convicted of murder would be executed - no exceptions - capital punishment in this country would cease to exist overnight.
.
And while we're on the subject, what living American is a more perfect candidate for the noose than our former commander-in-chief? You may find that to be an extreme example but think about it for a minute: The guy ordered the U.S. Military into the sovereign nation of Iraq in order to plunder the second or third largest oil reserves on the planet. As of today, over a million Iraqi men, women and little children (not to mention over four-thousand American troops) have died as a result of this hideous little guttersnipe's greed and incompetence. Sixty years ago, we were sending Nazis and Japanese war lords to the gallows for as much and - in some cases - much less! If and when George W. Bush is found guilty of serious capital offences and war crimes, I'm all in favor of sending the disgusting little twit to the Hague. He won't be put to death there. Then again, maybe we need to put him on trial in this country. The American people would never tolerate the execution of an ex-president - even so vile a cretin as Bush. Maybe his certain demise at the tip of a poisoned-laced syringe is just what this silly country needs to come to its senses. Maybe the very sight of the First Fool on the gallows would force the people to come face to face with the inhumanity that is capital punishment. On second thought, this could be a great test case. From this day on, all people who believe in justice should demand that George W. Bush and Dick Cheney pay with their lives for their crimes against humanity. What the hell! Let's see what happens.

Dick Cheney's Tortured Logice

Tom Degan
Goshen, NY
.

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» I like that Idea Posted by: Honky the Nihilist VI
» RE: I like that Idea Posted by: rinthy
» RE: Capital Crimes Posted by: Jennie

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Never, ever, give the government the right to murder anyone!!!
Posted by: JohnTruth2001 on May 18, 2009 5:44 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is yet another despicable case demonstrating why we must end the death penalty now!!!

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When will this 'country' arrise from the Dark Ages.
Posted by: IRIQUOIS227 on May 18, 2009 6:15 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am certainly grateful to have seen this country for what it REALLY is before the hour of my death. Not the mythical conjuring by parents, church, government and etc. When a state decides to kill innocent people, it becomes a rogue. In the case of America, whilst hypocritically denouncing other states for horrific departures from just basic human rights. This seems to be the fate of Troy Davis, but it is hardly anything new. We lost a President in this same fashion. The powers that be for inane reasons decided to kill someone to avoid detection of their criminal acts, or to stop them from committing these criminal acts. This is no democracy. Not even by the loosest of definitions. America is a hateful country of shallow, unsophisticated, largely uneducated, and certainly unaware people. How many more will die by the hand of the 'state?" Whether by murder as with Mr. Davis, or slow starvation and lack of a safe warm environment to live in. How many more thousands of billions of dollars will be wasted on rich garbage people? Or corrupt politicians. How much more useless military hardware will be dragged out of the pockets of every average American, and written off the taxes of the rich via an unbelievable arsenal of loopholes. I just watched the Short documentary detailing Ms. Farrah Fawcett's efforts to beat cancer. With all this wasted money by the US Government I wonder how many lives such as hers could have been saved. For Mr. Davis, though, it's only a matter of looking at truth, fact! That the state could still imagine killing this man is beyond the comprehension of the most mentally advanced. Is it the lack of homogeneity that keeps this country in turmoil? I, for one, believe that this country should take it's well earned, rightful place at the top of the list of countries that sponsor and enact terrorism at home and abroad. A country that has no redeeming values. A country with no soul.

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How Disingenuous and biased!
Posted by: mlee on May 18, 2009 6:39 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Their is certainly NO damning proof of Troy's innocence. At best there are witness recantations of doubt, Nothing more.

From previous commentators on the issue:
Myth # 1
Seven of the nine non-police witnesses against Davis have recanted their testimony or contradicted the story they told in court.
Truth #1
None of the recantations listed by Davis supporters state that Davis did not murder Officer MacPhail.
All but one of the "recants" state that the statements they gave at the time of the murder were typed up by the investigating officers after and during their interviews and that they signed them without reading them.
What they fail to mention is that TWO YEARS later they testified in court that their statements were true.
It has only happened several years after the conviction that they have spoken to members of Davis' legal team, family and supporters that they NOW claim to have given false statements. It is transparently clear that the convicted murder's supporters have manipulated these witnesses into saying they did not understand what they were saying during the investigation OR during the trial.
Two of the original witnesses HAVE NOT RECANTED their testimony that named Troy Davis as the murderer. This has so angered Davis' supporters that they are trying to name one of these witnesses (Coles) as the shooter.
Coles was standing behind Officer MacPhail when MacPhail ran by chasing Davis. Davis turned and shot Officer from the front.
Coles came back to the scene of the shooting with a female after police arrived.
Davis changed clothes (even asking Coles for a shirt later) and fled to Atlanta with his sister.
Myth #2
There was never any physical evidence tying Davis to the murder for which he was convicted and sentenced to death.
Truth #2
A bullet that was removed from the jaw of a man who was shot by Troy Davis earlier in the day was compared to a bullet removed from Officer MacPhail. The ballistics matched!
During the latest Pardons and Parole Board hearing a Georgia Bureau of Investigation ballistics expert was present to testify about this evidence.
Bloody "spotted" clothing was removed from Davis' house after he was named as a suspect. Because of the way Troy was standing above Officer MacPhail when he executed the officer he would have received a faint splatter of blood (because Officer MacPhail was on the ground most of the splatter would have been dispersed out along the ground and not upward).
A DNA test was performed on this evidence several years after the shooting because this technology did not exist at the time of the murder. The blood was so degraded (due to time) and the spots so small that the test "consumed" the sample without results. The Prosecutors NOT Troy Davis asked for this test.
The U.S.upreme Court reviewed the case, they looked at EVERYTHING the "Davis Camp"had, reviewed EVERYTHING the D.A. had.. people need to remember that the U.S. Supreme Court ALSO looked at the interviews the pardons and parole board had with the "witnesses" that recanted... there was nothing new from the Davis side as they would like the public to believe, that would have persuaded the decision, I ASSURE YOU if there was Davis would have either got clemency, life in prison or even a new trial if he had NEW EVIDENCE..they didn't have any... ALSO IT was the Pardons and Parole board, "NOT DAVIS CAMP" THAT issued DNA sample.....(did I mention they found blood on troy's shorts??, in HIS mother's washing machine???)

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When will this 'country' arrise from the Dark Ages.
Posted by: IRIQUOIS227 on May 18, 2009 6:21 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am certainly grateful to have seen this country for what it REALLY is before the hour of my death. Not the mythical conjuring by parents, church, government and etc. When a state decides to kill innocent people, it becomes a rogue. In the case of America, whilst hypocritically denouncing other states for horrific departures from just basic human rights. This seems to be the fate of Troy Davis, but it is hardly anything new. We lost a President in this same fashion. The powers that be for inane reasons decided to kill someone to avoid detection of their criminal acts, or to stop them from committing these criminal acts. This is no democracy. Not even by the loosest of definitions. America is a hateful country of shallow, unsophisticated, largely uneducated, and certainly unaware people. How many more will die by the hand of the 'state?" Whether by murder as with Mr. Davis, or slow starvation and lack of a safe warm environment to live in. How many more thousands of billions of dollars will be wasted on rich garbage people? Or corrupt politicians. How much more useless military hardware will be dragged out of the pockets of every average American, and written off the taxes of the rich via an unbelievable arsenal of loopholes. I just watched the Short documentary detailing Ms. Farrah Fawcett's efforts to beat cancer. With all this wasted money by the US Government I wonder how many lives such as hers could have been saved. For Mr. Davis, though, it's only a matter of looking at truth, fact! That the state could still imagine killing this man is beyond the comprehension of the most mentally advanced. Is it the lack of homogeneity that keeps this country in turmoil? I, for one, believe that this country should take it's well earned, rightful place at the top of the list of countries that sponsor and enact terrorism at home and abroad. A country that has no redeeming values. A country with no soul.

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BA
Posted by: mnstra on May 18, 2009 7:39 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
this subject is a non starter for me.

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I have no knowledge of my own whether or not Davis
Posted by: AMERICAN VETERAN on May 18, 2009 7:53 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
actually did this, HOWEVER, the following is PROOF of the corruption of ALL in LE:

PROOF LAW ENFORCEMENT IS CORRUPT

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You DO realize this is Georgia, right?
Posted by: Daito on May 18, 2009 8:48 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Come on, the reason the movies always protray this shit happening in the deep south is because it happens in the deep south. Move to Jersey for crying out loud.

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EVEN IN GEORGIA
Posted by: VZEQICVA on May 18, 2009 8:59 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If Davis were on trial today there wouldn't be enough evidence to convict him. There wasn't enough back then, just intimidated jurors a lack of physical evidence and that's not enough to get a conviction. ANNA

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AFFIDAVITS RECANTING TESTIMONY OR STATEMENTS GIVEN IN THE TROY DAVIS CASE:
Posted by: Defenestrator on May 18, 2009 10:49 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
AFFIDAVITS RECANTING TESTIMONY OR STATEMENTS GIVEN IN THE TROY DAVIS CASE:

Kevin McQueen
The truth is that Troy never confessed to me or talked to me about the shooting of the police officer. I made up the confession from information I had heard on T.V. and from other inmates about the crimes. Troy did not tell me any of this... I have now realized what I did to Troy so I have decided to tell the truth... I need to set the record straight.

Monty Holmes
I told them I didn't know anything about who shot the officer, but they kept questioning me. I was real young at that time and here they were questioning me about the murder of a police officer like I was in trouble or something. I was scared... [I]t seemed like they wouldn't stop questioning me until I told them what they wanted to hear. So I did. I signed a statement saying that Troy told me that he shot the cop.

Jeffrey Sapp
I got tired of them harassing me, and they made it clear that the only way they would leave me alone is if I told them what they wanted to hear. I told them that Troy told me he did it, but it wasn't true. Troy never said that or anything like it. When it came time for Troy's trial, the police made it clear to me that I needed to stick to my original statement; that is, what they wanted me to say. I didn't want to have any more problems with the cops, so I testified against Troy.

Dorothy Ferrell
From the way the officer was talking, he gave me the impression that I should say that Troy Davis was the one who shot the officer like the other witness [sic] had ...I felt like I was just following the rest of the witnesses. I also felt like I had to cooperate with the officer because of my being on parole ... I told the detective that Troy Davis was the shooter, even though the truth was that I didn't see who shot the officer.

Darrell "D.D." Collins
After a couple of hours of the detectives yelling at me and threatening me, I finally broke down and told them what they wanted to hear. They would tell me things that they said had happened and I would repeat whatever they said. ...It is time that I told the truth about what happened that night, and what is written here is the truth. I am not proud for lying at Troy's trial, but the police had me so messed up that I felt that's all I could do or else I would go to jail.

Larry Young
I couldn't honestly remember what anyone looked like or what different people were wearing. Plus, I had been drinking that day, so I just couldn't tell who did what. The cops didn't want to hear that and kept pressing me to give them answers. They made it clear that we weren't leaving until I told them what they wanted to hear. They suggested answers and I would give them what they wanted. They put typed papers in my face and told me to sign them. I did sign them without reading them.

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Gimmie that ol' time rel, er I mean
Posted by: willymack on May 18, 2009 11:32 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Lynching party. Now, where's my torch and white sheet?

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Republicans: Hate government intrusion into private lives?
Posted by: UnEasyOne on May 18, 2009 11:36 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You are liars.

Your Republican supreme Courts have eviscerated the Bill of Rights to such a degree that if armed thugs come crashing through your door shouting "POLICE!", you can be instantly, legally shot dead for exercising that Second Amendment right you are so proud of. If your 9-year-old gets caught in the crossfire, too bad. If they got the wrong address - so what? Doesn't change anything. These things happen.

But what if they are just thugs who bought some black windbreakers at WalMart? You have about a tenth of a second to decide. Do you protect your family from these potential thieves, murderers and rapists? Isn't that what the gun is for? This happens too - and it could not happen without "No Knock" drug laws. If the cops still had to knock on your door and present a warrant, you would know that is was criminals and not Stormtroopers who were breaking down your door.

Most of the time this is over the most innocuous of private behavior - marijuana.

We won't bother with freedom of choice, gay rights, etc. More "moral necessity" to regulate private behavior.

But the ultimate intrusion is judicial murder - the death penalty - which like the other repressive policies the civilized world finds barbaric, virtually all "conservatives" support maniacally.

This despite the fact that it cheaper to incarcerate permanently and that it is not possible to correct a wrongful execution. "But we never MAKE a mistake," they cry, "we never have!"

Bullshit.

The poor are executed because:
A) Once arrested, most jurisdictions have a 95% or better conviction rate.
B) Defendants are almost invariably (the ones who get convicted at any rate) completely reliant on their chief accuser - the state - to provide all the funds for their defense. Police work for the prosecution; they made the accusation in the first place. It costs big bucks to fight a capital case if you are innocent. Chasing down leads, gathering evidence, making independent tests, interviewing witnesses; these are expensive - and "Get tough on crime" legislatures are notoriously penurious when it comes to that part of the funding. And I haven't even mentioned the lawyers and their direct expenses even if they are pro bono. Usually they are just the only lawyers who will work for what the state for the pittance it pays. The ones nobody else wants to hire IOW. The ones willing to cut corners because every expenditure is approved by a judge.

Prosecutors have discretion in charges and plea bargains. They don't often charge the rich and well-connected with a capital offense. When they do, they generally lose. They don't get the death penalty. Much easier to shoot fish in a barrel. Go for the buy with no resources and a criminal record. Scare up some "eyewitnesses." It isn't hard.

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» Part II Posted by: UnEasyOne

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capital punishment
Posted by: vasumurti on May 18, 2009 12:29 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In a pamphlet entitled The Death Penalty: Cruel & Inhuman Punishment, Amnesty International USA reports that "the United States is the only western industrial nation which still practices capital punishment."

Moreover, the death penalty does not deter violent crime:

"Most people who murder do not see beyond their action; they kill quickly in moments of great fear or emotional stress and under the influence of drugs or alcohol. When the crime is premeditated, the individual rarely believes he or she will be apprehended or executed…in 1976, the United States Supreme Court found no conclusive evidence that the death penalty deters violent crime. The United Nations came to similar conclusions."

According to Amnesty International USA, capital punishment tends to discriminate against minorities and the poor. In the United States since 1972, over 65 percent of the people on death row have been unskilled, service, or domestic workers, while 60 percent were unemployed at the time of their crimes.

"In the United States," reports Amnesty International USA, "blacks and other minorities face a much greater likelihood of execution than whites similarly charged...The victim’s race still factors heavily in determining the offender’s punishment. In Texas, blacks who kill whites are six times more likely to receive the death sentence than those with black victims. In Florida, black offenders who murder whites are forty times more likely than whites who kill blacks to end up on death row."

Responding to the concept of "an eye for an eye," Amnesty International USA asks, "If capital punishment is appropriate because it takes a life for a life, why doesn’t the government also burn the arsonist’s home and rape the rapist? Because justice does not mean punishment that imitates the crime." Amnesty International USA states further that the death penalty costs more than life imprisonment.

United States Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall once observed: "The death penalty is no more effective a deterrent than life imprisonment… While police and law enforcement officials are the strongest advocates of capital punishment, the evidence is overwhelming that police are no safer in communities that retain the sanction than in those that have abolished it. It also is evident that the burden of capital punishment falls upon the poor, the ignorant, and the underprivileged members of society."

United States Supreme Court Justice William Brennan once argued against capital punishment, saying, "The calculated killing of a human being involves, by its very nature, an absolute denial of the executed person's humanity."

Justice Brennan claimed the 8th Amendment bans "cruel and unusual punishment." Yet the 5th Amendment refers to "capital or otherwise infamous crime" and says no person "shall be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law."

This clearly implies that persons can be deprived of their right to life, but only under due process of law. Capital punishment, therefore, is constitutional, and, ultimately, the only way death penalty opponents can correct this apparent injustice is through a Constitutional Amendment.

Attacking capital punishment, the early church father Cyprian, Bishop of Carthage, wrote: "Christians are not allowed to kill, it is not permitted for the guiltless to put even the guilty to death."

Religious leaders throughout the world have taken a stand against capital punishment. Leading Jewish organizations, Protestant denominations, and the United States Catholic Bishops Conference all oppose the death penalty.

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This comment has been removed from the site due to non-compliance with AlterNet's community policies.

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rs
Posted by: anuo on May 18, 2009 6:41 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Well, that's good. Very good. You know, I happened to be here, just by chance, you see.no runescape money means no runescape power leveling.so it is easy to get enough runescape powerleveling and now It’s cheap runescape gold time to have runescape accounts

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New contact for Gov. Perdue
Posted by: Dankhank on May 18, 2009 9:11 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I tried the link to contact Gov. Perdue and got 404 error.
I searched and found this one

http://tinyurl.com/PurdueContact

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Fact check links
Posted by: mlee on May 19, 2009 6:52 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
(1) Davis v Georgia, Georgia Supreme Court, March 17, 2008
Full ruling linked text
Summary linked text

linked text

(3) read the PDF statement released by Chatham County District Attorney Spencer Lawton on the case facts at: linked text

The family of murdered Officer MacPhail fully believes that Troy Davis murdered their loved one and that the evidence is supportive of that opinion.
linked text

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Incredible
Posted by: krock on May 20, 2009 3:10 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You say something like 9 witnesses have recanted and in fact alleged coercion? And there is no other evidence linking the man to the murder? And STILL the eleventh circuit thinks that innocence has to be established before guilt has been?

Thanks for showing once again the flat out corruption in the system. I'm going to have to actually get involved in this one.

While we're at it... Free the West Memphis 3, pretty please.

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PRESIDENT OBAMA DID NOT CREATE THIS JUDICIAL MESS,BUT LETS ALL SEND A PRAYER FOR HIS SUCCESS !!!
Posted by: DOUGLASFIELD on May 20, 2009 6:13 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
ISN'T IT A LITTLE ODD THAT WE AS AMERICANS CAN DEMAND JUSTICE AND FAIR TRIALS WITH THE INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY, AND AT THE SAME TIME WHEN IT COMES FOR US AS THE LEADERS OF THE FREE WORLD TO OFFER NEW AND FAIR TRIALS FOR OUR OWN POSSIBLE INNOCENT AMERICAN CITIZENS IN GEORGIA & PENNSYLVANIA , WE CAN SOMEHOW ACCEPT THE EASIER ROUTE OF ALLOWING TWO POSSIBLE INNOCENT AMERICAN CITIZENS TO BE FALSELY EXECUTED ?

IF OUR CIVILIZED COUNTRY ALLOWS THESE CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY STATE MURDERS TO TAKE PLACE IN THE NEAR FUTURE, OUR FAIR AND JUST SOCIETY HERE IN AMERICA NOT ONLY LOSES TWO POSSIBLE INNOCENT BLACK AMERICANS, BUT WE ALSO LOSE OUR INNOCENCE AS A PEOPLE WHO ALL KNOW BETTER !!!

OUR IVORY TOWER U.S. CONGRESSIONAL LEADERS OF THE FREE WORLD HAVE HAD PLENTY OF TIME TO CHANGE OUR UNDERFUNDED U.S. JUDICIAL SYSTEM FROM CONTINUING TO BE UNDERFINANCED !

THE DECADES OF NEGLECT AND ABUSE THAT OUR U.S. JUDICIAL SYSTEM CONTINUES TO INFLICT ON POORER AMERICANS ALL ACROSS AMERICA IS NOT ONLY VERY OBVIOUS TO MOST EVERYONE OUTSIDE OF OUR COUNTRY BY NOW ,BUT ALSO TO MILLIONS AND MILLIONS OF SILENT AND HORRIFIED FELLOW AMERICAN CITIZENS WHO FEEL HELPLESS LIVING IN THIS THE WEALTHIEST COUNTRY IN THE WORLD !

FOR OUR CURRENT LEADERS IN OUR U.S. GOVERNMENT TO CONTINUE PRETENDING THAT WE AS AMERICANS ARE A CIVILIZED LOT WHO KNOW AND RESPECT FREEDOM AND JUSTICE FOR ALL AMERICANS, ONLY BRINGS HOME THE SAD REALITY OF WHY WERE WHERE WE ARE IN ALLOWING THESE BARBARIC FUTURE EXECUTIONS OF MR. TROY DAVIS OF GEORGIA AND MUMIA ABU - JAMAL OF PENNSYLVANIA TO EVER TAKE PLACE WITHOUT NEW AND FAIR TRIALS.!

PROPER LEGAL REPRESENTATION FOR ALL MIDDLE CLASS AND WORKING POOR AMERICANS IN OUR U.S. CIVIL,CRIMINAL AND FAMILY COURTS OF LAW IS NOT JUST A POSSIBLE DISTANT FUTURE GOAL FOR OUR COUNTRY TO CONTEMPLATE !

OUR CURRENT AND FUTURE REPUTATION AS AMERICA BEING THE LAND OF GRACE AND EQUALITY IS VERY MUCH AT STAKE SINCE THE INTERNATIONAL WORLD CAN NOW BE INSTANTLY ENLIGHTENED TO THESE SAD TRUTHS IN OUR SOCIETY !

YES OUR COUNTRY CAN AFFORD HEALTH CARE FOR ALL AMERICANS,AND YES OUR COUNTRY CAN EASILY AFFORD PROPER LEGAL REPRESENTATION FOR ALL OUR POORER AMERICANS ! ** THE ONLY THING THAT WE AS AMERICANS CAN NOT AFFORD IS TO KEEP PRETENDING THAT WE ARE SOMETHING THAT THE REST OF THE CIVILIZED WORLD KNOWS WERE NOT **

LAWYERS FOR POOR AMERICANS IS A VOLUNTEER WWW LOBBY THAT FIGHTS FOR EVERY AMERICANS RIGHT TO HAVE PROPER LEGAL REPRESENTATION AFFORDED THEM IN ALL OUR U.S. COURTS OF LAW ! lawyersforpooramericans@yahoo.com 424-247-2013

LAWYERS FOR POOR AMERICANS CAN BE ENTERED INTO ANY WWW SEARCH ENGINE BY OUR NAME OR TELEPHONE NUMBER TO FIND OTHER WRITTEN ARTICLES THAT INTEREST YOU.

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bologna
Posted by: my3littlewishes on May 27, 2009 7:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There have been many proven innocent people sentenced to death in the United States in the past.

The awesome claim to be presumed innocent until proven guilty isn't always true, as we've seen.

There are so many new technologies to help us prove innocence or guilt that seem to bi pass many simple minded people.

If there is NO proof linking a person to a crime, shouldn't that person be let out? If there is a lot of hearsay, keep a good watch on that person. Make them wear an ankle bracelet.

We mere people shouldn't condemn the person to death. It's MURDER!

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Capital Crimes
Posted by: Tom Degan on May 18, 2009 4:01 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why did other civilized societies abandon this barbaric practice decades ago? Why are we the last holdouts? Why?? HELLO??? We're Americans! WE LOVE TO KILL!!! When states all over the country abandoned the electric chair a number of years ago for the seemingly more "humane" method of lethal injection, a lot of us got pretty upset. The only thing the needle did was make a victim go to sleep. But all you had to do was strap one of them onto ol' Sparky and those bastards suffered, baby! Oh yeah, we love to inflict pain, don't we? At this very moment your government is in the process of inflicting torture against men they deem as prisoners of war - in direct violation of the Geneva Conventions - and the overwhelming majority of us just don't seem to give a hoot in hell. We're Americans, dammit! We can do anything we want! The rest of the world doesn't dig it? The hell with 'em!
.
The main problem with capital punishment, in my opinion anyway, is the fact that it is so grotesquely unfair. It is always the poor and uneducated who are executed. Can you remember the last time a multi-millionaire Yale grad went to the death house? No, neither can I. Is it because the rich are above murder? Are you kidding me?? The rich kill other human beings all the time! They do it for fun and profit! More often than not, they're able to hire an army of high priced lawyers who then obtain a neat and hasty acquittal. Not long ago, one of the heirs to the Max Factor fortune was convicted of a particularly grizzly killing. Not only was he not even considered for the death penalty, he was able to escape for a time to Mexico (He could afford the bail). And if you're black??? Cast ye hope to the wind, brother. The reason so many Americans favor the Death Penalty is because so huge a percentage of its victims are African American. That is not merely my own opinion, that is an undeniable fact. If tomorrow, a federal law was passed that guaranteed that anyone convicted of murder would be executed - no exceptions - capital punishment in this country would cease to exist overnight.
.
And while we're on the subject, what living American is a more perfect candidate for the noose than our former commander-in-chief? You may find that to be an extreme example but think about it for a minute: The guy ordered the U.S. Military into the sovereign nation of Iraq in order to plunder the second or third largest oil reserves on the planet. As of today, over a million Iraqi men, women and little children (not to mention over four-thousand American troops) have died as a result of this hideous little guttersnipe's greed and incompetence. Sixty years ago, we were sending Nazis and Japanese war lords to the gallows for as much and - in some cases - much less! If and when George W. Bush is found guilty of serious capital offences and war crimes, I'm all in favor of sending the disgusting little twit to the Hague. He won't be put to death there. Then again, maybe we need to put him on trial in this country. The American people would never tolerate the execution of an ex-president - even so vile a cretin as Bush. Maybe his certain demise at the tip of a poisoned-laced syringe is just what this silly country needs to come to its senses. Maybe the very sight of the First Fool on the gallows would force the people to come face to face with the inhumanity that is capital punishment. On second thought, this could be a great test case. From this day on, all people who believe in justice should demand that George W. Bush and Dick Cheney pay with their lives for their crimes against humanity. What the hell! Let's see what happens.

Dick Cheney's Tortured Logice

Tom Degan
Goshen, NY
.

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» I like that Idea Posted by: Honky the Nihilist VI
» RE: I like that Idea Posted by: rinthy
» RE: Capital Crimes Posted by: Jennie

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Never, ever, give the government the right to murder anyone!!!
Posted by: JohnTruth2001 on May 18, 2009 5:44 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is yet another despicable case demonstrating why we must end the death penalty now!!!

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When will this 'country' arrise from the Dark Ages.
Posted by: IRIQUOIS227 on May 18, 2009 6:15 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am certainly grateful to have seen this country for what it REALLY is before the hour of my death. Not the mythical conjuring by parents, church, government and etc. When a state decides to kill innocent people, it becomes a rogue. In the case of America, whilst hypocritically denouncing other states for horrific departures from just basic human rights. This seems to be the fate of Troy Davis, but it is hardly anything new. We lost a President in this same fashion. The powers that be for inane reasons decided to kill someone to avoid detection of their criminal acts, or to stop them from committing these criminal acts. This is no democracy. Not even by the loosest of definitions. America is a hateful country of shallow, unsophisticated, largely uneducated, and certainly unaware people. How many more will die by the hand of the 'state?" Whether by murder as with Mr. Davis, or slow starvation and lack of a safe warm environment to live in. How many more thousands of billions of dollars will be wasted on rich garbage people? Or corrupt politicians. How much more useless military hardware will be dragged out of the pockets of every average American, and written off the taxes of the rich via an unbelievable arsenal of loopholes. I just watched the Short documentary detailing Ms. Farrah Fawcett's efforts to beat cancer. With all this wasted money by the US Government I wonder how many lives such as hers could have been saved. For Mr. Davis, though, it's only a matter of looking at truth, fact! That the state could still imagine killing this man is beyond the comprehension of the most mentally advanced. Is it the lack of homogeneity that keeps this country in turmoil? I, for one, believe that this country should take it's well earned, rightful place at the top of the list of countries that sponsor and enact terrorism at home and abroad. A country that has no redeeming values. A country with no soul.

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How Disingenuous and biased!
Posted by: mlee on May 18, 2009 6:39 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Their is certainly NO damning proof of Troy's innocence. At best there are witness recantations of doubt, Nothing more.

From previous commentators on the issue:
Myth # 1
Seven of the nine non-police witnesses against Davis have recanted their testimony or contradicted the story they told in court.
Truth #1
None of the recantations listed by Davis supporters state that Davis did not murder Officer MacPhail.
All but one of the "recants" state that the statements they gave at the time of the murder were typed up by the investigating officers after and during their interviews and that they signed them without reading them.
What they fail to mention is that TWO YEARS later they testified in court that their statements were true.
It has only happened several years after the conviction that they have spoken to members of Davis' legal team, family and supporters that they NOW claim to have given false statements. It is transparently clear that the convicted murder's supporters have manipulated these witnesses into saying they did not understand what they were saying during the investigation OR during the trial.
Two of the original witnesses HAVE NOT RECANTED their testimony that named Troy Davis as the murderer. This has so angered Davis' supporters that they are trying to name one of these witnesses (Coles) as the shooter.
Coles was standing behind Officer MacPhail when MacPhail ran by chasing Davis. Davis turned and shot Officer from the front.
Coles came back to the scene of the shooting with a female after police arrived.
Davis changed clothes (even asking Coles for a shirt later) and fled to Atlanta with his sister.
Myth #2
There was never any physical evidence tying Davis to the murder for which he was convicted and sentenced to death.
Truth #2
A bullet that was removed from the jaw of a man who was shot by Troy Davis earlier in the day was compared to a bullet removed from Officer MacPhail. The ballistics matched!
During the latest Pardons and Parole Board hearing a Georgia Bureau of Investigation ballistics expert was present to testify about this evidence.
Bloody "spotted" clothing was removed from Davis' house after he was named as a suspect. Because of the way Troy was standing above Officer MacPhail when he executed the officer he would have received a faint splatter of blood (because Officer MacPhail was on the ground most of the splatter would have been dispersed out along the ground and not upward).
A DNA test was performed on this evidence several years after the shooting because this technology did not exist at the time of the murder. The blood was so degraded (due to time) and the spots so small that the test "consumed" the sample without results. The Prosecutors NOT Troy Davis asked for this test.
The U.S.upreme Court reviewed the case, they looked at EVERYTHING the "Davis Camp"had, reviewed EVERYTHING the D.A. had.. people need to remember that the U.S. Supreme Court ALSO looked at the interviews the pardons and parole board had with the "witnesses" that recanted... there was nothing new from the Davis side as they would like the public to believe, that would have persuaded the decision, I ASSURE YOU if there was Davis would have either got clemency, life in prison or even a new trial if he had NEW EVIDENCE..they didn't have any... ALSO IT was the Pardons and Parole board, "NOT DAVIS CAMP" THAT issued DNA sample.....(did I mention they found blood on troy's shorts??, in HIS mother's washing machine???)

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When will this 'country' arrise from the Dark Ages.
Posted by: IRIQUOIS227 on May 18, 2009 6:21 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am certainly grateful to have seen this country for what it REALLY is before the hour of my death. Not the mythical conjuring by parents, church, government and etc. When a state decides to kill innocent people, it becomes a rogue. In the case of America, whilst hypocritically denouncing other states for horrific departures from just basic human rights. This seems to be the fate of Troy Davis, but it is hardly anything new. We lost a President in this same fashion. The powers that be for inane reasons decided to kill someone to avoid detection of their criminal acts, or to stop them from committing these criminal acts. This is no democracy. Not even by the loosest of definitions. America is a hateful country of shallow, unsophisticated, largely uneducated, and certainly unaware people. How many more will die by the hand of the 'state?" Whether by murder as with Mr. Davis, or slow starvation and lack of a safe warm environment to live in. How many more thousands of billions of dollars will be wasted on rich garbage people? Or corrupt politicians. How much more useless military hardware will be dragged out of the pockets of every average American, and written off the taxes of the rich via an unbelievable arsenal of loopholes. I just watched the Short documentary detailing Ms. Farrah Fawcett's efforts to beat cancer. With all this wasted money by the US Government I wonder how many lives such as hers could have been saved. For Mr. Davis, though, it's only a matter of looking at truth, fact! That the state could still imagine killing this man is beyond the comprehension of the most mentally advanced. Is it the lack of homogeneity that keeps this country in turmoil? I, for one, believe that this country should take it's well earned, rightful place at the top of the list of countries that sponsor and enact terrorism at home and abroad. A country that has no redeeming values. A country with no soul.

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BA
Posted by: mnstra on May 18, 2009 7:39 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
this subject is a non starter for me.

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I have no knowledge of my own whether or not Davis
Posted by: AMERICAN VETERAN on May 18, 2009 7:53 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
actually did this, HOWEVER, the following is PROOF of the corruption of ALL in LE:

PROOF LAW ENFORCEMENT IS CORRUPT

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You DO realize this is Georgia, right?
Posted by: Daito on May 18, 2009 8:48 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Come on, the reason the movies always protray this shit happening in the deep south is because it happens in the deep south. Move to Jersey for crying out loud.

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EVEN IN GEORGIA
Posted by: VZEQICVA on May 18, 2009 8:59 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If Davis were on trial today there wouldn't be enough evidence to convict him. There wasn't enough back then, just intimidated jurors a lack of physical evidence and that's not enough to get a conviction. ANNA

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AFFIDAVITS RECANTING TESTIMONY OR STATEMENTS GIVEN IN THE TROY DAVIS CASE:
Posted by: Defenestrator on May 18, 2009 10:49 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
AFFIDAVITS RECANTING TESTIMONY OR STATEMENTS GIVEN IN THE TROY DAVIS CASE:

Kevin McQueen
The truth is that Troy never confessed to me or talked to me about the shooting of the police officer. I made up the confession from information I had heard on T.V. and from other inmates about the crimes. Troy did not tell me any of this... I have now realized what I did to Troy so I have decided to tell the truth... I need to set the record straight.

Monty Holmes
I told them I didn't know anything about who shot the officer, but they kept questioning me. I was real young at that time and here they were questioning me about the murder of a police officer like I was in trouble or something. I was scared... [I]t seemed like they wouldn't stop questioning me until I told them what they wanted to hear. So I did. I signed a statement saying that Troy told me that he shot the cop.

Jeffrey Sapp
I got tired of them harassing me, and they made it clear that the only way they would leave me alone is if I told them what they wanted to hear. I told them that Troy told me he did it, but it wasn't true. Troy never said that or anything like it. When it came time for Troy's trial, the police made it clear to me that I needed to stick to my original statement; that is, what they wanted me to say. I didn't want to have any more problems with the cops, so I testified against Troy.

Dorothy Ferrell
From the way the officer was talking, he gave me the impression that I should say that Troy Davis was the one who shot the officer like the other witness [sic] had ...I felt like I was just following the rest of the witnesses. I also felt like I had to cooperate with the officer because of my being on parole ... I told the detective that Troy Davis was the shooter, even though the truth was that I didn't see who shot the officer.

Darrell "D.D." Collins
After a couple of hours of the detectives yelling at me and threatening me, I finally broke down and told them what they wanted to hear. They would tell me things that they said had happened and I would repeat whatever they said. ...It is time that I told the truth about what happened that night, and what is written here is the truth. I am not proud for lying at Troy's trial, but the police had me so messed up that I felt that's all I could do or else I would go to jail.

Larry Young
I couldn't honestly remember what anyone looked like or what different people were wearing. Plus, I had been drinking that day, so I just couldn't tell who did what. The cops didn't want to hear that and kept pressing me to give them answers. They made it clear that we weren't leaving until I told them what they wanted to hear. They suggested answers and I would give them what they wanted. They put typed papers in my face and told me to sign them. I did sign them without reading them.

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Gimmie that ol' time rel, er I mean
Posted by: willymack on May 18, 2009 11:32 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Lynching party. Now, where's my torch and white sheet?

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Republicans: Hate government intrusion into private lives?
Posted by: UnEasyOne on May 18, 2009 11:36 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You are liars.

Your Republican supreme Courts have eviscerated the Bill of Rights to such a degree that if armed thugs come crashing through your door shouting "POLICE!", you can be instantly, legally shot dead for exercising that Second Amendment right you are so proud of. If your 9-year-old gets caught in the crossfire, too bad. If they got the wrong address - so what? Doesn't change anything. These things happen.

But what if they are just thugs who bought some black windbreakers at WalMart? You have about a tenth of a second to decide. Do you protect your family from these potential thieves, murderers and rapists? Isn't that what the gun is for? This happens too - and it could not happen without "No Knock" drug laws. If the cops still had to knock on your door and present a warrant, you would know that is was criminals and not Stormtroopers who were breaking down your door.

Most of the time this is over the most innocuous of private behavior - marijuana.

We won't bother with freedom of choice, gay rights, etc. More "moral necessity" to regulate private behavior.

But the ultimate intrusion is judicial murder - the death penalty - which like the other repressive policies the civilized world finds barbaric, virtually all "conservatives" support maniacally.

This despite the fact that it cheaper to incarcerate permanently and that it is not possible to correct a wrongful execution. "But we never MAKE a mistake," they cry, "we never have!"

Bullshit.

The poor are executed because:
A) Once arrested, most jurisdictions have a 95% or better conviction rate.
B) Defendants are almost invariably (the ones who get convicted at any rate) completely reliant on their chief accuser - the state - to provide all the funds for their defense. Police work for the prosecution; they made the accusation in the first place. It costs big bucks to fight a capital case if you are innocent. Chasing down leads, gathering evidence, making independent tests, interviewing witnesses; these are expensive - and "Get tough on crime" legislatures are notoriously penurious when it comes to that part of the funding. And I haven't even mentioned the lawyers and their direct expenses even if they are pro bono. Usually they are just the only lawyers who will work for what the state for the pittance it pays. The ones nobody else wants to hire IOW. The ones willing to cut corners because every expenditure is approved by a judge.

Prosecutors have discretion in charges and plea bargains. They don't often charge the rich and well-connected with a capital offense. When they do, they generally lose. They don't get the death penalty. Much easier to shoot fish in a barrel. Go for the buy with no resources and a criminal record. Scare up some "eyewitnesses." It isn't hard.

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» Part II Posted by: UnEasyOne

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capital punishment
Posted by: vasumurti on May 18, 2009 12:29 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In a pamphlet entitled The Death Penalty: Cruel & Inhuman Punishment, Amnesty International USA reports that "the United States is the only western industrial nation which still practices capital punishment."

Moreover, the death penalty does not deter violent crime:

"Most people who murder do not see beyond their action; they kill quickly in moments of great fear or emotional stress and under the influence of drugs or alcohol. When the crime is premeditated, the individual rarely believes he or she will be apprehended or executed…in 1976, the United States Supreme Court found no conclusive evidence that the death penalty deters violent crime. The United Nations came to similar conclusions."

According to Amnesty International USA, capital punishment tends to discriminate against minorities and the poor. In the United States since 1972, over 65 percent of the people on death row have been unskilled, service, or domestic workers, while 60 percent were unemployed at the time of their crimes.

"In the United States," reports Amnesty International USA, "blacks and other minorities face a much greater likelihood of execution than whites similarly charged...The victim’s race still factors heavily in determining the offender’s punishment. In Texas, blacks who kill whites are six times more likely to receive the death sentence than those with black victims. In Florida, black offenders who murder whites are forty times more likely than whites who kill blacks to end up on death row."

Responding to the concept of "an eye for an eye," Amnesty International USA asks, "If capital punishment is appropriate because it takes a life for a life, why doesn’t the government also burn the arsonist’s home and rape the rapist? Because justice does not mean punishment that imitates the crime." Amnesty International USA states further that the death penalty costs more than life imprisonment.

United States Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall once observed: "The death penalty is no more effective a deterrent than life imprisonment… While police and law enforcement officials are the strongest advocates of capital punishment, the evidence is overwhelming that police are no safer in communities that retain the sanction than in those that have abolished it. It also is evident that the burden of capital punishment falls upon the poor, the ignorant, and the underprivileged members of society."

United States Supreme Court Justice William Brennan once argued against capital punishment, saying, "The calculated killing of a human being involves, by its very nature, an absolute denial of the executed person's humanity."

Justice Brennan claimed the 8th Amendment bans "cruel and unusual punishment." Yet the 5th Amendment refers to "capital or otherwise infamous crime" and says no person "shall be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law."

This clearly implies that persons can be deprived of their right to life, but only under due process of law. Capital punishment, therefore, is constitutional, and, ultimately, the only way death penalty opponents can correct this apparent injustice is through a Constitutional Amendment.

Attacking capital punishment, the early church father Cyprian, Bishop of Carthage, wrote: "Christians are not allowed to kill, it is not permitted for the guiltless to put even the guilty to death."

Religious leaders throughout the world have taken a stand against capital punishment. Leading Jewish organizations, Protestant denominations, and the United States Catholic Bishops Conference all oppose the death penalty.

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rs
Posted by: anuo on May 18, 2009 6:41 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Well, that's good. Very good. You know, I happened to be here, just by chance, you see.no runescape money means no runescape power leveling.so it is easy to get enough runescape powerleveling and now It’s cheap runescape gold time to have runescape accounts

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New contact for Gov. Perdue
Posted by: Dankhank on May 18, 2009 9:11 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I tried the link to contact Gov. Perdue and got 404 error.
I searched and found this one

http://tinyurl.com/PurdueContact

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Fact check links
Posted by: mlee on May 19, 2009 6:52 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
(1) Davis v Georgia, Georgia Supreme Court, March 17, 2008
Full ruling linked text
Summary linked text

linked text

(3) read the PDF statement released by Chatham County District Attorney Spencer Lawton on the case facts at: linked text

The family of murdered Officer MacPhail fully believes that Troy Davis murdered their loved one and that the evidence is supportive of that opinion.
linked text

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Incredible
Posted by: krock on May 20, 2009 3:10 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You say something like 9 witnesses have recanted and in fact alleged coercion? And there is no other evidence linking the man to the murder? And STILL the eleventh circuit thinks that innocence has to be established before guilt has been?

Thanks for showing once again the flat out corruption in the system. I'm going to have to actually get involved in this one.

While we're at it... Free the West Memphis 3, pretty please.

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PRESIDENT OBAMA DID NOT CREATE THIS JUDICIAL MESS,BUT LETS ALL SEND A PRAYER FOR HIS SUCCESS !!!
Posted by: DOUGLASFIELD on May 20, 2009 6:13 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
ISN'T IT A LITTLE ODD THAT WE AS AMERICANS CAN DEMAND JUSTICE AND FAIR TRIALS WITH THE INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY, AND AT THE SAME TIME WHEN IT COMES FOR US AS THE LEADERS OF THE FREE WORLD TO OFFER NEW AND FAIR TRIALS FOR OUR OWN POSSIBLE INNOCENT AMERICAN CITIZENS IN GEORGIA & PENNSYLVANIA , WE CAN SOMEHOW ACCEPT THE EASIER ROUTE OF ALLOWING TWO POSSIBLE INNOCENT AMERICAN CITIZENS TO BE FALSELY EXECUTED ?

IF OUR CIVILIZED COUNTRY ALLOWS THESE CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY STATE MURDERS TO TAKE PLACE IN THE NEAR FUTURE, OUR FAIR AND JUST SOCIETY HERE IN AMERICA NOT ONLY LOSES TWO POSSIBLE INNOCENT BLACK AMERICANS, BUT WE ALSO LOSE OUR INNOCENCE AS A PEOPLE WHO ALL KNOW BETTER !!!

OUR IVORY TOWER U.S. CONGRESSIONAL LEADERS OF THE FREE WORLD HAVE HAD PLENTY OF TIME TO CHANGE OUR UNDERFUNDED U.S. JUDICIAL SYSTEM FROM CONTINUING TO BE UNDERFINANCED !

THE DECADES OF NEGLECT AND ABUSE THAT OUR U.S. JUDICIAL SYSTEM CONTINUES TO INFLICT ON POORER AMERICANS ALL ACROSS AMERICA IS NOT ONLY VERY OBVIOUS TO MOST EVERYONE OUTSIDE OF OUR COUNTRY BY NOW ,BUT ALSO TO MILLIONS AND MILLIONS OF SILENT AND HORRIFIED FELLOW AMERICAN CITIZENS WHO FEEL HELPLESS LIVING IN THIS THE WEALTHIEST COUNTRY IN THE WORLD !

FOR OUR CURRENT LEADERS IN OUR U.S. GOVERNMENT TO CONTINUE PRETENDING THAT WE AS AMERICANS ARE A CIVILIZED LOT WHO KNOW AND RESPECT FREEDOM AND JUSTICE FOR ALL AMERICANS, ONLY BRINGS HOME THE SAD REALITY OF WHY WERE WHERE WE ARE IN ALLOWING THESE BARBARIC FUTURE EXECUTIONS OF MR. TROY DAVIS OF GEORGIA AND MUMIA ABU - JAMAL OF PENNSYLVANIA TO EVER TAKE PLACE WITHOUT NEW AND FAIR TRIALS.!

PROPER LEGAL REPRESENTATION FOR ALL MIDDLE CLASS AND WORKING POOR AMERICANS IN OUR U.S. CIVIL,CRIMINAL AND FAMILY COURTS OF LAW IS NOT JUST A POSSIBLE DISTANT FUTURE GOAL FOR OUR COUNTRY TO CONTEMPLATE !

OUR CURRENT AND FUTURE REPUTATION AS AMERICA BEING THE LAND OF GRACE AND EQUALITY IS VERY MUCH AT STAKE SINCE THE INTERNATIONAL WORLD CAN NOW BE INSTANTLY ENLIGHTENED TO THESE SAD TRUTHS IN OUR SOCIETY !

YES OUR COUNTRY CAN AFFORD HEALTH CARE FOR ALL AMERICANS,AND YES OUR COUNTRY CAN EASILY AFFORD PROPER LEGAL REPRESENTATION FOR ALL OUR POORER AMERICANS ! ** THE ONLY THING THAT WE AS AMERICANS CAN NOT AFFORD IS TO KEEP PRETENDING THAT WE ARE SOMETHING THAT THE REST OF THE CIVILIZED WORLD KNOWS WERE NOT **

LAWYERS FOR POOR AMERICANS IS A VOLUNTEER WWW LOBBY THAT FIGHTS FOR EVERY AMERICANS RIGHT TO HAVE PROPER LEGAL REPRESENTATION AFFORDED THEM IN ALL OUR U.S. COURTS OF LAW ! lawyersforpooramericans@yahoo.com 424-247-2013

LAWYERS FOR POOR AMERICANS CAN BE ENTERED INTO ANY WWW SEARCH ENGINE BY OUR NAME OR TELEPHONE NUMBER TO FIND OTHER WRITTEN ARTICLES THAT INTEREST YOU.

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bologna
Posted by: my3littlewishes on May 27, 2009 7:11 AM   
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There have been many proven innocent people sentenced to death in the United States in the past.

The awesome claim to be presumed innocent until proven guilty isn't always true, as we've seen.

There are so many new technologies to help us prove innocence or guilt that seem to bi pass many simple minded people.

If there is NO proof linking a person to a crime, shouldn't that person be let out? If there is a lot of hearsay, keep a good watch on that person. Make them wear an ankle bracelet.

We mere people shouldn't condemn the person to death. It's MURDER!

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