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<font size=3><br><br>
</font><font face="Verdana" size=3>Patrick Dyer is a Campaign to End the
Death Penalty (CEDP) activist and teaches at Kennesaw State
University in Georgia. When the CEDP send Illinois’ first
exonerated prisoner to Atlanta for Troy’s demonstration on Sept 11th,
Patrick arranged to have Darby come and speak to students at his
University. Darby, as always, was pointed and powerful with his
remarks and urged students to get involved to end the death
penalty.<br><br>
Yesterday Patrick was able to visit Troy Davis and he
gives tells us of this visit below. Please feel free to<b> post
this far and wide</b> — it is both heartfelt and somber. <br><br>
Following is the school newspapers report of Darby’s visit to the
University.<br><br>
Marlene<br><br>
Patrick can be reached at: patrickdyer3@gmail.com<br><br>
<br><br>
</font><h3><b>A Death Row visit with Troy A.
Davis</b></h3><font face="Times New Roman, Times" size=4>Sunday September
21, 2008<br>
By Patrick Dyer<br>
<br>
Today I visited Troy Anthony Davis on Georgia's death row, a little over
48 hours before the state plans to put him to death for a crime he didn't
commit. As I traveled the highway, through the red clay and green pine
trees of Georgia this mild autumn Sunday morning listening to Bob Marley,
I pondered what it might be like as an innocent man facing an execution
in two days. Soon enough I arrived at the front wall of the Georgia
Diagnostic and Classification Prison, located in Butts County, GA. The
scenery just inside the front gate on Prison Boulevard, with pond, trees,
flowers, and chirping birds belies the heinousness of what lies at the
end of the road - a massive penitentiary housing the state's death
chamber for it's ritual execution of prisoners. <br><br>
After parking, I stood outside the entrance area with a small group of
people who were waiting to visit other prisoners. One of those waiting
referred me to the sign-in sheet, then added, "they'll get you when
they feel like it". While I waited for the next 20 minutes I
conversed with the group awaiting entrance, all of them upset and shocked
that Troy was denied clemency. Biding my time, I stared at the words
"wisdom", "justice", and "moderation"
etched on Georgia's state seal. <br><br>
One of the first couple of his visitors to arrive, I met Troy Davis for
the first time. Thanks to the relentless campaign waged by Troy, his
family, and supporters, the name Troy Davis is known around the planet.
Yet the person I met was humble and down-to-earth, quick to begin talking
about the help that other death row prisoners need. Troy struck me
immediately as a warm and compassionate person. He spent almost as much
time talking about the injustice of other cases as he did about his own,
repeatedly saying "this is much larger than Troy Davis."
<br><br>
Troy told me that he wanted me to tell people that it's time to say
"enough is enough!" and to "demand a complete change in
the system". We talked about all the support he has on the outside,
with people around the world fighting for his life. Troy then spent time
talking about some of the many injustices of his case, a legal lynching
to be sure. He said that he, like so many others stuck on death row, were
legally incapacitated by "procedural defaults" from their
attorneys, many of them the fault of the Georgia Resource Center. Once an
attorney with his legal team returned to court after lunch so intoxicated
that her eyes were bloodshot and she reeked of alcohol. <br><br>
At his habeas hearing held in a prison shack-turned-into-a-courtroom just
off death row, Troy anxiously awaited the arrival of his family, who had
spent their own money to rent vans to transport witnesses from Savannah.
But as Troy walked into the shack-courtroom, his attorney was saying that
neither his family nor his witnesses would be allowed to appear, given
that it was "too expensive" to transport the witnesses.
<br><br>
By the time effective legal counsel got on board with his defense, Troy's
case was too far gone. In fact, one attorney with his private Washington,
DC law firm told him that had they gotten the case five years earlier,
Troy would be home by now.<br><br>
"And even if none of those witnesses recanted", Troy emphasized
with his southern drawl as he leaned closer to me, "my fingerprints
still don't match". <br><br>
Troy also gave his analysis of why the Parole Board refused to grant
clemency. Given that the board, appointed by Gov. Sonny Perdue, is
stacked with "ex"-law enforcement and prosecution types, it's
no surprise. "The police and prosecution tactics used in my case are
the same ones they used and that are used all over. If they stop my
execution because of the police interrogation methods and prosecutor
misconduct, it exposes their entire system."<br><br>
Over the course of the next hour, Troy's mother, sisters, brother, niece,
nephew, and numerous supporters joined us in the caged visiting room. The
six hour visitation flew by with a positive atmosphere of love and
support. Most of the time was spent laughing, joking, and telling family
stories that included childhood nicknames, teenage dating escapades, high
school prom dates, and more. <br><br>
Eventually visiting hours wound down, and Troy was handcuffed then taken
inside the entrance to one of the prison corridors, where we were allowed
to join him for photographs. As a fellow prisoner snapped pictures, Troy
arranged different combinations of his family and supporters for each
picture, as prison guards observed from the perimeter. <br><br>
When the photo session ended, it was time for us to hug Troy goodbye. In
a stirring and emotion-packed series of hugs, we all took turns saying
goodbye. Two prisoners began printing the pictures as guards led Troy
away. "Troy is such a good guy" one of them commented while we
waited. Then suddenly someone yelled, "He's waving", and family
members all strained to look through the prison bars down the long
hallway to death row, seeing Troy's smiling face as his handcuffed hands
waved goodbye.<br><br>
<br>
</font><font face="Georgia" size=4>Official Student Newspaper of Kennesaw
State University<br>
Written by Dominique Richmond, Staff Writer <br><br>
Tuesday, 16 September 2008 <br><br>
With the execution date for Troy Davis nearing, Darby Tillis made a guest
appearance at KSU. He told his story of how he was exonerated in 1987
after spending nine years on death row, to a room full of First-Year
Seminar students. <br><br>
Tillis rode a Greyhound bus for 21 hours from Chicago in order to support
the ‘Rally to Save Troy Davis’ at the Georgia State Capital, sponsored by
Amnesty International and the NAACP, held on Sept. 11. Davis is a man on
Georgia’s death row who was given an execution date of Sept. 23.<br><br>
After serving two years, Tillis was convicted on Oct. 15, 1979 of
murdering two men. Although there was never any evidence that linked him
to those killings, he was imprisoned, tried and sentenced to death. It
took not one, but five trials to set him free. Three of the trials ended
in a hung jury, one was guilty and the last one set him free. <br><br>
A self-proclaimed "urban guerilla street preacher," Tillis sang
and smiled as he told the students how he was just "a number on a
legal brief." He talked about the joy of living and how he wants to
build a better system to eliminate the killings of death row inmates.
"Realize that we have a system that is far from good and go after
change and make changes," said Tillis.<br><br>
When asked what would he like the students to learn from his lecture, his
response was, "look deep into the justice system; look at the flaws.
The death penalty makes no purpose; take a stand and make it
better." <br><br>
When asked what would he like the students to learn from his lecture, his
response was, "look deep into the justice system; look at the flaws.
The death penalty makes no purpose; take a stand and make it
better." <br><br>
Patrick Dyer, professor of the 1101 class, said, "I hope that the
students who attended will think about the role of capital punishment in
society, and critically examine this practice." <br><br>
Tillis was the first to be exonerated; since then at least 129 innocent
people have walked off of death row. <br><br>
According to Dyer, this topic relates to one of KSU 1101’s major learning
objectives--that of developing the foundations for global learning. As
part of global learning, the class engages in educational discussion on
ethics, <br>
leaders hip, citizenship, global perspectives, diversity, inclusiveness
and critical thinking. <br><br>
Dyer said, "Since Tillis had a couple of hours free Thursday
morning, we scrambled to arrange for him to speak at KSU." <br><br>
Immediately after his talk, Tillis was shuttled downtown to be part of a
contingent that hand delivered over 23,000 petition signatures to the
Board of Pardons and Parole, asking that Troy Davis not be executed.
<br><br>
<br>
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