Troy Davis has been granted a 90-day stay of execution. Davis was convicted in 1991 of murdering a Savannah Police officer. His execution had been scheduled for 7 PM tonight.
The order from Georgia's Board of Pardons and Paroles suspends Davis' execution until October 14th. Between now and then, his lawyers will try to convince the Board to remove Davis from death row altogether.
His older sister, Martina Correia talked to Davis as soon as she heard the news.
"He was sitting alone in a room, and they actually had already moved him to the death chamber, and when he said 90 days, he said all the guards started coming down there, thanking him, and telling him they were getting ready to move him out of there and put him back in his
cell," she said.
Correia is elated, but she is ready to hit the pavement to galvanize support for full clemency. Since reinstating the death penalty in 1973, 47 cases have come before Georgia's parole board. Clemency was granted in eight.
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Tuesday, July 17, 2007
Convicted cop killer's execution suspended
Posted by
Andrea Dixon
at
7/17/2007 06:00:00 PM
Labels: clemency, execution, Savannah, Troy Davis