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This 1991 file photo shows Troy Anthony Davis entering Chatham County Superior Court in Savannah, Ga. Savannah Morning News/AP/Press Association Images

Troy Davis' final appeal denied, execution to go ahead

After spending more than two decades on death row, Georgia inmate Troy Davis is to be killed by lethal injection today – despite Amnesty International insisting that the evidence against him has “fallen apart”.

THE FINAL APPEAL of US death row inmate Tory Davis was denied by a Georgia judge yesterday, paving the way for his execution today.

Davis has spent more than two decades in prison after being convicted of the 1989 murder of off-duty police officer Mark MacPhail, but has always insisted that he is not guilty.

After losing his appeal for clemency yesterday, Davis requested that he be allowed to undergo a polygraph test before he is killed by lethal injection, CBS reports.

Davis’ campaign has attracted the support of many high-profile figures, including former US president Jimmy Carter and Pope Benedict XVI. Amnesty International has also campaigned intensely on Davis’ behalf, pointing out that much of the evidence presented in Davis’ original trial was based on testimony that has since been withdrawn.

No physical evidence has ever linked Davis to the crime.
Colm O’Gorman, Executive Director of Amnesty International Ireland, said: “The case against Troy Davis has collapsed. Almost all of the witnesses against him have retracted their statements.

“Jury members who convicted him have sworn they would not have done so had they seen the new evidence uncovered by his legal team. No physical evidence has ever connected him to the death of off-duty police officer Mark McPhail in Savannagh, Georgia in 1989.

“Despite this, the state of Georgia is determined to kill Troy Davis,” he said.
On the night of 27-year-old McPhail’s death, he had been working the night shift as a security guard in Savannagh, Georgia. He rushed to help a homeless man who was being attacked in the parking lot of a Burger King and was shot in the chest and head at point-blank range.

MacPhail’s family have long maintained that Davis is guilty of murder, reports AFP, with the victim’s 23-year-old daughter, Madison, saying on Monday: “The death penalty is the correct source of justice”.

However Amnesty International insists that Davis should be granted clemency, and has appealed for the public pressure to be maintained – even at the eleventh hour: “The death penalty is wrong. It is a violation of the most fundamental human right of all, the right to life,”  said O’Gorman. “But there is something profoundly sickening about the determination of so many to kill a man when the evidence against him has fallen apart”.

Last night, Davis issued a short statement through Amnesty USA, saying: “The struggle for justice doesn’t end with me. This struggle is for all the Troy Davises who came before me and all the ones who will come after me. I’m in good spirits and I’m prayerful and at peace. But I will not stop fighting until I’ve taken my last breath.”

An vigil for Troy Davis and his family will take place at the Unitarian church on Dublin’s Stephen’s Green at midnight tonight – at the same time he is due to be executed.

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33 Comments
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    Mute Ben Fede
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    Feb 1st 2013, 7:06 AM

    Yes, marriage is truly good for the heart- which is why this joy needs to be extended to same-sex couples as well.

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    Mute Con O' Rourke
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    Feb 1st 2013, 7:11 AM

    Agreed Ben

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    Mute Keith Kelly
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    Feb 1st 2013, 8:12 AM

    Surely it depends on who you marry!!! :p

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    Mute Patitas
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    Feb 1st 2013, 7:04 AM

    Yet another washed down analysis…they are even missing a significant variable: the mother-in-law factor…

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    Mute somethingodd
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    Feb 1st 2013, 6:58 AM

    I don’t bother caring to listen to these research things. For example one report will say bottled water is healthier than tap, a while later another will appear saying the opposite. Same with coffee, the Sun, about how much chocolate we consume etc etc….everything in moderation and u will b just fine

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    Mute Con O' Rourke
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    Feb 1st 2013, 7:00 AM

    That would be an ecumenical matter

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    Mute Itiswhatitis
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    Feb 1st 2013, 9:16 AM

    Jasus been married nearly killed me. My ex was as close as possible to the shining.

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    Mute ponythegringo
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    Feb 1st 2013, 9:24 AM

    Agreed , your physical and mental health will go downhill if your married to a controlling , nagging , short tempered tyrannical bitch ( or bastard ).

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    Mute Loughlin Suzanne
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    Feb 1st 2013, 7:27 AM

    Not always the case. Certainly not in my case

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    Mute Doreen Savage
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    Feb 1st 2013, 9:53 AM

    @Somethingodd R u suggesting one could have marriage in moderation – reckon that’s something my hubby would appreciate…

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    Mute Tom Newnewman
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    Feb 1st 2013, 7:49 AM

    Darwin’s laws point at probable outcomes for human lifestyles single, single parent, married, married parent.

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    Mute shay o'reilly
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    Feb 1st 2013, 10:46 PM

    Follow up study, how many of the singletons lived alone , is it marriage or company that gives benefit

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    Mute Gerard
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    Feb 1st 2013, 10:05 AM

    That’s great tho till they take you to the cleaners relax peeps it’s Friday chill :)

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    Mute Sinabhfuil
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    Feb 1st 2013, 11:40 AM

    But surely, Gerard, by the time they take you to the cleaners you’re no longer married, your new unhappiness thus proving the case?

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