昨天晚上,Davis, 42, was declared dead at 11:08 p.m., but his execution did not put to rest widespread doubts about whether he committed the crime for whic
时间:2011年09月22日 03:53 查看全文
游客IP:143.112.32.*发布于 2011-09-22 07:421 楼#
<h3>COP-KILLER IS MEDIA'S LATEST BABY SEAL</h3><div class="dateline">September 21, 2011</div><br> <br>
For decades, liberals tried persuading Americans to abolish the
death penalty, using their usual argument: hysterical sobbing.
<br>
<br> Only when the media began lying about innocent people being
executed did support for the death penalty begin to waver, falling from
80 percent to about 60 percent in a little more than a decade. (Silver
lining: That's still more Americans than believe in man-made global
warming.)
<br>
<br> Fifty-nine percent of Americans now believe that an innocent
man has been executed in the last five years. There is more credible
evidence that space aliens have walked among us than that an innocent
person has been executed in this country in the past 60 years, much less
the past five years.
<br>
<br> But unless members of the public are going to personally review
trial transcripts in every death penalty case, they have no way of
knowing the truth. The media certainly won't tell them.
<br>
<br> It's nearly impossible to receive a death sentence these days
-- unless you do something completely crazy like shoot a cop in full
view of dozens of witnesses in a Burger King parking lot, only a few
hours after shooting at a passing car while exiting a party.
<br>
<br> That's what Troy Davis did in August 1989. Davis is the media's current baby seal of death row.
<br>
<br> After a two-week trial with 34 witnesses for the state and six
witnesses for the defense, the jury of seven blacks and five whites took
less than two hours to convict Davis of Officer Mark MacPhail's murder,
as well as various other crimes. Two days later, the jury sentenced
Davis to death.
<br>
<br> Now, a brisk 22 years after Davis murdered Officer MacPhail,
his sentence will finally be administered this week -- barring any more
of the legal shenanigans that have kept taxpayers on the hook for Davis'
room and board for the past two decades.
<br>
<br> (The average time on death row is 14 years. Then liberals turn
around and triumphantly claim the death penalty doesn't have any
noticeable deterrent effect. As the kids say: Duh.)
<br>
<br> It has been claimed -- in The New York Times and Time magazine,
for example -- that there was no "physical evidence" connecting Davis
to the crimes that night.
<br>
<br> Davis pulled out a gun and shot two strangers in public. What
"physical evidence" were they expecting? No houses were broken into, no
cars stolen, no rapes or fistfights accompanied the shootings. Where
exactly would you look for DNA? And to prove what?
<br>
<br> I suppose it would be nice if the shell casings from both
shootings that night matched. Oh wait -- they did. That's "physical
evidence."
<br>
<br> It's true that the bulk of the evidence against Davis was
eyewitness testimony. That tends to happen when you shoot someone in a
busy Burger King parking lot.
<br>
<br> Eyewitness testimony, like all evidence tending to show guilt,
has gotten a bad name recently, but the "eyewitness" testimony in this
case did not consist simply of strangers trying to distinguish one tall
black man from another. For one thing, several of the eyewitnesses knew
Davis personally.
<br>
<br> The bulk of the eyewitness testimony established the following:
<br>
<br> Two tall, young black men were harassing a vagrant in the
Burger King parking lot, one in a yellow shirt and the other in a white
Batman shirt. The one in the white shirt used a brown revolver to
pistol-whip the vagrant. When a cop yelled at them to stop, the man in
the white shirt ran, then wheeled around and shot the cop, walked over
to his body and shot him again, smiling.
<br>
<br> Some eyewitnesses described the shooter as wearing a white
shirt, some said it was a white shirt with writing, and some identified
it specifically as a white Batman shirt. Not one witness said the man in
the yellow shirt pistol-whipped the vagrant or shot the cop.
<br>
<br> Several of Davis' friends testified -- without recantation --
that he was the one in a white shirt. Several eyewitnesses, both
acquaintances and strangers, specifically identified Davis as the one
who shot Officer MacPhail.
<br>
<br> Now the media claim that seven of the nine witnesses against Davis at trial have recanted.
<br>
<br> First of all, the state presented 34 witnesses against Davis --
not nine -- which should give you some idea of how punctilious the
media are about their facts in death penalty cases.
<br>
<br> Among the witnesses who did not recant a word of their
testimony against Davis were three members of the Air Force, who saw the
shooting from their van in the Burger King drive-in lane. The airman
who saw events clearly enough to positively identify Davis as the
shooter explained on cross-examination, "You don't forget someone that
stands over and shoots someone."
<br>
<br> Recanted testimony is the least believable evidence since it
proves only that defense lawyers managed to pressure some witnesses to
alter their testimony, conveniently after the trial has ended. Even
criminal lobbyist Justice William Brennan ridiculed post-trial
recantations.
<br>
<br> Three recantations were from friends of Davis, making minor or
completely unbelievable modifications to their trial testimony. For
example, one said he was no longer <i>sure</i> he saw Davis shoot the cop, even though he was five feet away at the time. His remaining testimony still implicated Davis.
<br>
<br> One alleged recantation, from the vagrant's girlfriend (since
deceased), wasn't a recantation at all, but rather reiterated all
relevant parts of her trial testimony, which included a direct
identification of Davis as the shooter.
<br>
<br> Only two of the seven alleged "recantations" (out of 34
witnesses) actually recanted anything of value -- and those two
affidavits were discounted by the court because Davis refused to allow
the affiants to testify at the post-trial evidentiary hearing, even
though one was seated right outside the courtroom, waiting to appear.
<br>
<br> The court specifically warned Davis that his refusal to call
his only two genuinely recanting witnesses would make their affidavits
worthless. But Davis still refused to call them -- suggesting, as the
court said, that their lawyer-drafted affidavits would not have held up
under cross-examination.
<br>
<br> With death penalty opponents so fixated on Davis' race -- he's
black -- it ought to be noted that all the above witnesses are
themselves African-American. The first man Davis shot in the car that
night was African-American.
<br>
<br> I notice that the people so anxious to return this sociopathic cop-killer to the street don't live in his neighborhood.
<br>
<br> There's a reason more than a dozen courts have looked at Davis'
case and refused to overturn his death sentence. He is as innocent as
every other executed man since at least 1950, which is to say, guilty as
hell.
<br>
<br> COPYRIGHT 2011 ANN COULTER
<br> DISTRIBUTED BY UNIVERSAL UCLICK
<br> 1130 Walnut, Kansas City, MO 64106
时间:2011年09月22日 03:53 查看全文