QUOTE 1: Anti-death penalty activists, who also claim Davis was wrongly
convicted, chanted and held banners through Atlanta on Friday - but Mr
MacPhail’s mother Anneliese remains convinced Davis is guilty.
‘I will never have closure,’ Ms
MacPhail told CNN. ‘But I may have some peace when he
is executed.’
QUOTE 2: Prosecutors
and MacPhail's family said justice had finally been served.
"I'm
kind of numb. I can't believe that it's really happened,"
MacPhail's mother, Anneliese MacPhail, said in a telephone interview from her
home in Columbus, Ga. "All the feelings of relief
and peace I've been waiting for all these years, they will come later. I
certainly do want some peace."
She dismissed Davis'
claims of innocence.
"He's
been telling himself that for 22 years. You know how it is, he can talk himself
into anything."
QUOTE 3: Officer
MacPhail's widow, Joan MacPhail-Harris, said it was "a
time for healing for all families."
"I
will grieve for the Davis family because now they're going to understand our
pain and our hurt," she said in a telephone interview from
Jackson. "My prayers go out to them. I have been
praying for them all these years. And I pray there will be some peace along the
way for them."
QUOTE 4: "Justice was finally served for my
father," said Mark MacPhail Jr., who was an infant when his father
was gunned down. "The truth was finally
heard."
QUOTE 5: MacPhail's relatives said they were relieved by the decision. "That's what we wanted, and that's what we got," said
Anneliese MacPhail, the victim's mother. "We
wanted to get it over with, and for him to get his punishment."
AUTHOR: Family members of Officer Mark Allen
MacPhail - Troy Anthony Davis
(October 9, 1968 – September 21, 2011) was an American man convicted of
and executed for the August 19, 1989, murder of police officer Mark MacPhail in
Savannah, Georgia. MacPhail was working as a security guard at a Burger King
restaurant when he intervened to defend a man being assaulted in a nearby
parking lot. During Davis's 1991 trial, seven witnesses testified they had seen
Davis shoot MacPhail, and two others testified that Davis had confessed the
murder to them among 34 witnesses that testified for the prosecution, and six
others for the defense, including Davis. Although the murder weapon was not
recovered, ballistic evidence presented at trial linked bullets recovered at or
near the scene to those at another shooting in which Davis was also charged. He
was convicted of murder and various lesser charges, including the earlier
shooting, and was sentenced to death in August 1991. Davis maintained his
innocence until his execution. In the 20 years between his conviction and
execution, Davis and his defenders secured support from the public,
celebrities, and human rights groups. Amnesty International and other groups
such as National Association for the Advancement of Colored People took up
Davis's cause. Prominent politicians and leaders, including former President
Jimmy Carter, Rev. Al Sharpton, Pope Benedict XVI, Archbishop Desmond Tutu,
former U.S. Congressman from Georgia and presidential candidate Bob Barr, and
former FBI Director and judge William S. Sessions called upon the courts to
grant Davis a new trial or evidentiary hearing. In July 2007, September 2008,
and October 2008, execution dates were scheduled, but each execution was stayed
shortly before it was to take place. In 2009, the Supreme Court of the United
States ordered the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Georgia to
consider whether new evidence "that could not have been obtained at the
time of trial clearly establishes [Davis's] innocence". The evidentiary
hearing was held in June 2010. The defense presented affidavits from seven of
the nine trial witnesses whose original testimony had identified Davis as the
murderer, but who it contended had changed or recanted their previous
testimony. Some of these writings disavowed parts of prior testimony, or
implicated Sylvester "Redd" Coles, whom Davis contended was the
actual triggerman. The state presented witnesses, including the police
investigators and original prosecutors, who described a careful investigation
of the crime, without any coercion. Davis did not call some of the witnesses
who had supposedly recanted, despite their presence in the courthouse;
accordingly their affidavits were given little weight by the judge. Evidence
that Coles had confessed to the killing was excluded as hearsay because Coles
was not subpoenaed by the defense to rebut it. In an August 2010 decision, the
conviction was upheld. The court described defense efforts to upset the
conviction as "largely smoke and mirrors" and found that several of
the proffered affidavits were not recantations at all. Subsequent appeals,
including to the Supreme Court, were rejected, and a fourth execution date was
set for September 21, 2011. Nearly one million people signed petitions urging
the Georgia Board of Pardons and Paroles to grant clemency. The Board denied
clemencyand, on September 21, it refused to reconsider its decision. After a
last minute appeal to the United States Supreme Court was denied, the sentence
was carried out through lethal injection on September 21, 2011.
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