On August 24, 2010, the conviction was upheld, with the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Georgia declaring, “Davis is not innocent.” The judge did not say that Davis is guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, implying that the standard for exoneration had been lifted unreasonably high.
The Supreme Court refused to hear his final appeal -- even though many of us feel that Troy Davis is innocent of all charges.
Georgia's Board of Pardons & Paroles will hold a final clemency hearing in the next week or so -- a final chance to prevent the execution of Troy Davis. The Board of Pardons claims that the execution would only take place if there is “no doubt” about the guilt of the man they are killing.
Many villagers think that there is 'plenty of doubt':
- Of the nine original witnesses in the case, seven have either recanted or contradicted their original stories. One witness said in a CNN news interview "If I knew then, what I know now, Troy Davis would not be on death row."
- Of the two witnesses who have not recanted, one of them (Sylvester Coles) was a suspect in the murder. A witness even claimed that Coles bragged at a party about having killed an off-duty police officer.
- Nine individuals have signed affidavits indicting that the murder was committed by Sylvester Coles
- Request clemency from the Board of Pardons
- Sign Amnesty International petition to the Board of Pardons
- Sign Your Black World petition to the Georgia Governor Nathan Deal and President Barack Obama
- Organize locally for Troy. Sign up now to rally in the coming days to stop the execution of Troy Davis.
- Tell everyone you know! Spread the word about this injustice on Twitter by using the hashtag #TooMuchDoubt. Be sure to tell your Facebook friends as well.
Please take action to help us save the life of Troy Davis.