This
time last week, the world was in shock that the United States
of America had put to death Troy Davis, a man convicted
of killing a Georgia cop in 1989. Troy Davis maintained
his innocence the entire 22 years he was on death row. America
maintains a mentality that once convicted - innocence no
longer matters. America acts like its criminal justice system
is perfect. It goes without saying that it is not, but what
should be said, or posed as a question is, when does the
system repent for its mistakes? It never does. Or rarely
does. But not in Troy Davis� case. America readily admits
the flaws of its criminal justice system, but continues
to kill anyway.
Arch
conservative , Anton Scalia, stated �The law doesn�t allow
for claims of innocence after a conviction.� Innocence is
no defense after a conviction has been rendered. So the
state of Georgia and the U.S. Supreme Court complicate the
mistake by continuing to make mistakes based on flawed law.
Two wrongs have never made a right�unless you�re the United
States government assessing the death penalty. The U.S.
won�t do what it knows is right. The execution of Troy Davis
was more than a mistake. It was a national travesty.
The
real mistake in the Troy Davis case was not giving him a
new trial after seven of the witnesses who testified against
him recanted their testimony. The same testimony that convicted
Troy Davis. Where is the sense here? What does recant mean?
It means they took back what they said. Now, what credible
evidence did the state have against Davis when two-thirds
of the witnesses that testified against him perjured themselves.
�Beyond a reasonable doubt� evaporated, and reasonable doubt
replaced it.� The state didn�t have a case against Troy
Davis. But that was alright�because they had a conviction
and that�s all they needed to put him to death. So, they
did. Even with too much doubt. Doubt is now the scar on
our national conscience. It�s there to stay.��
There
were a lot of variables in this case that made Troy Davis
�an example.� A black man killing a white man in the South,
a convicted cop killer (who almost never goes free in any
state), a cause c�l�bre runs out of chances (Troy Davis
had three previous stays of execution), a death row inmate
runs out of time. But this is a chance to make an example
of America�s flaw death penalty system. We know Troy Davis
is not the first innocent man put to death�nor will he be
the last. We can only hope that Georgia and other death
penalty states follow the lead of Illinois, who banned the
death penalty this year and commuted 15 death row inmates
to life sentences without the possibility of parole. Illinois
banned the death penalty after a decade of controversial
executions that turned up some innocent victims after they
had been put to death. More than 130 death row inmates around
the nation have been cleared of execution as DNA and other
more modern discoveries bring cold cases to life. Illinois
got it right, recognizing that if even one innocent men
was put to death that was one too many. Georgia got it wrong.
It was more important for them to make an example of bad
law than to reconsider good law.
Troy
Davis asked that God bless the souls of those corrections
personnel who were about to kill him, and that God save
their souls after they kill him. In the aftermath of the
execution, the media played this off as it was some kind
of sporting event. And it was on to the next thing. It was
an ugly, sad commentary on American society. Troy Davis
was as close to a televised execution as we�ve seen recently.
The next step is the camera in the death chamber. I hope
America bans the death penalty before we start to kill for
�ratings.� Cable television is the modern day Rome Coliseum.
We saw how Republican supporters cheered Texas Governor
Rick Perry when he acknowledged signing more death warrants
than all the states of the nation combined. Have we become
that blood thirsty as a society that we will ignore the
flaws in the law? Obviously so.
There�s
only one thing left to kill in American society. Let�s kill
the death penalty. God bless the soul of Troy Davis. God
save the soul of America.
BlackCommentator.com
Columnist,
Dr. Anthony Asadullah Samad, is a national columnist, managing
director of the
Urban Issues Forum
and author of
Saving The Race: Empowerment Through Wisdom. His Website is AnthonySamad.com. Click
here
to contact Dr. Samad.
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