Brodner's Cartoon du Jour: Barr's Mitzvah

Bob Barr on Troy Davis. A death penalty supporter, ex-Congressman Barr lives to regret a bill he cowrote that blocks appeals and gets down to the killing. Under this law, courts are refusing to hear witnesses who now recant their testimony. In this recent Times column he mourns the foolish application of this bill in the rush to execution of Davis, very probably an innocent man. As a result, the state of Georgia can schedule his execution at any time now.
By BOB BARR
Published: May 31, 2009
THERE is no abuse of government power more egregious than executing an innocent man. But that is exactly what may happen if the United States Supreme Court fails to intervene on behalf of Troy Davis.
Mr. Davis is facing execution for the 1989 murder of an off-duty police officer in Savannah, Ga., even though seven of the nine witnesses have recanted their testimony against him. Many of these witnesses now say they were pressured into testifying falsely against him by police officers who were understandably eager to convict someone for killing a comrade. No court has ever heard the evidence of Mr. Davis's innocence.
After the United States Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit barred Mr. Davis from raising his claims of innocence, his attorneys last month petitioned the Supreme Court for an original writ of habeas corpus. This would be an extraordinary procedure — provided for by the Constitution but granted only a handful of times since 1900. However, absent this, Mr. Davis faces an extraordinary and obviously final injustice.
This threat of injustice has come about because the lower courts have misread the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996, a law I helped write when I was in Congress. As a member of the House Judiciary Committee in the 1990s, I wanted to stop the unfounded and abusive delays in capital cases that tend to undermine our criminal justice system.
With the effective death penalty act, Congress limited the number of habeas corpus petitions that a defendant could file, and set a time after which those petitions could no longer be filed. But nothing in the statute should have left the courts with the impression that they were barred from hearing claims of actual innocence like Troy Davis's.
It would seem in everyone's interest to find out as best we can what really happened that night 20 years ago in a dim parking lot where Officer Mark MacPhail was shot dead. With no murder weapon, surveillance videotape or DNA evidence left behind, the jury that judged Mr. Davis had to weigh the conflicting testimony of several eyewitnesses to sift out the gunman from the onlookers who had nothing to do with the heinous crime.
A litany of affidavits from prosecution witnesses now tell of an investigation that was focused not on scrutinizing all suspects, but on building a case against Mr. Davis. One witness, for instance, has said she testified against Mr. Davis because she was on parole and was afraid the police would send her back to prison if she did not cooperate.
So far, the federal courts have said it is enough that the state courts reviewed the affidavits of the witnesses who recanted their testimony. This reasoning is misplaced in a capital case. Reading an affidavit is a far cry from seeing a witness testify in open court.
Because Mr. Davis's claim of innocence has never been heard in a court, the Supreme Court should remand his case to a federal district court and order an evidentiary hearing. (I was among those who signed an amicus brief in support of Mr. Davis.) Only a hearing where witnesses are subject to cross-examination will put this case to rest.
Although the Supreme Court issued a stay of execution last fall, the court declined to review the case itself, and its intervention still has not provided an opportunity for Mr. Davis to have a hearing on new evidence. This has become a matter of no small urgency: Georgia could set an execution date at any time.
I am a firm believer in the death penalty, but I am an equally firm believer in the rights and protections guaranteed by the Constitution. To execute Troy Davis without having a court hear the evidence of his innocence would be unconscionable and unconstitutional.
Another Death Row Inmate AEDPA Act is affecting
Dear Mr. Barr,
Troy Davis is among several death row inmates affected by the AEDPA Act. My father is being denied DNA testing that could conclusively prove his innocence. He is on Alabama's death row and death row inmates are " not entitled to attorneys" during post conviction appeals. He did not have an atttorney nor was he entitled to one and his appeal was late. ( another lethal part of the AEDPA Act) He was recently allowed DNA testing, but only to see if another inmate that pleaded guilty to the crime was telling the truth. Even if my fathers DNA is not found, it will not be allowed to be heard as grounds for a new trial, based on time limits in the AEDPA Act. I have been trying for several years to bring this to the publics attention. The media would not even listen to me. DO THE RIGHT THING AND GET THIS LAW AMMENDED. We are legally murdering innocent people. When in the United States, men and women can be denied their constitutional right to Habeas Corpus is wrong and illegal. When a person is not allowed the right to an attorney is wrong and only happens in Alabama. When there is evidence that a person may actually be innocent and this law allows them to be executed, that is called legal murder. You are a part of that and every time one of these people are legally murdered, that is on your hands. Personally, I think every one of you that helped get that law passed should spend 20+ years on death row and come within hours of excution to fully understand the AEDPA's deadly effect. Not to mention what these inmates familys are going through. Sincerely, Daughter of death row inmate, Thomas Arthur. I hope you remeber his name and Troy Davis's name. They will be legally murdered in your name and everyone else that helped sign that law into effect in 1996. For you to make statements now that is was a mistake is not good enough. The United States Supreme Court cannot even help these men. But you knew that when the law was written.....





















