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Jason C Woodson

I was recently described as an Anglo-austral-african-american, which is a hyphenated way of saying I was born in New York, raised in Australia and am now a citizen of the United Kingdom.

I studied Illustration at university and went on to publish various independent comic books and comic strips in the US.

I have exhibited my work in solo and group projects in the US, Australia, Europe and Asia. I have work in private collections around the world and have been featured in both print and digital magazines, such as LightLeaks, Pink Mince, Spank!, GT, Attitude, QX and Boyz.

This Tumblr is formed of my guilty pleasures, dark secrets and shameful self-promotion.

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Posts tagged Troy Davis

I'm asking for a favor, Tumblr

psydoctor8:

In repsonse to aatombomb’s and approachingsignificance’s post about Troy Davis, I propose we DO SOMETHING about it that takes 30 seconds.

We’ve all seen Tumblr do some amazing things ranging from donating thousands of dollars to friends in need, raising tens of thousands for countries who faced disaster to finding a place for friends to live, finding them a job or just giving moral support everyday. I’m not asking for money, but how about signing a petition that may save an innocent man from the death penalty?

From the Innocence Project:

Davis was convicted almost exclusively on the basis of eyewitness identification testimony, which has been shown through DNA exonerations and thousands of academic studies to be unreliable. Seven of the nine witnesses who testified at his trial have since recanted and strong evidence points to another person as the real perpetrator in the case. 

The only man that can stop the execution scheduled for tonightSeptember 21 at 7pm, is GA District Attorney Chisolm and he needs to hear from us asap.  And so does Mr. Davis.

Sign here. Reblog. Thanks.

Reblogged from onmyowntwohands

Troy Davis execution delayed while US supreme court considers stay

fuckyeahmarxismleninism:

The execution of Troy Davis was delayed temporarily by the US supreme court on Wednesday night in a dramatic intervention just as he was due to be put to death by lethal injection.

The last-minute decision caused confusion outside the prison in Jackson,Georgia, where family, supporters and civil rights campaigners broke into celebration as they believed the court had granted Davis a stay of execution.

But it quickly emerged that the delay was only temporary, while the justices considered whether to issue a stay.

 

Until that moment it seemed almost certain that Davis would be executed, as the Georgia supreme court had rejected a last-ditch appeal by Davis’s lawyers over the 1989 murder of off-duty policeman Mark MacPhail, for which Davis had been sentenced to death despite overwhelming evidence that the conviction is unreliable.

Tagged • troy davissupreme court
Reblogged from androphilia
androphilia:

Troy Davis : 10 reasons why he should not be executed | guardian.co.uk
With just a few hours to go until Troy Davis is executed in Georgia,  despite serious doubts about his guilt, here are 10 reasons why the  death sentence should not be carried out
• Troy Davis polygraph test refused by Georgia officials• Audio: ‘I’m sitting on death row for a crime I didn’t commit’• Georgia pardons board denies plea for clemency
By Ed Pilkington in Jackson, Georgia
Wednesday, September 21, 2011
In 2007 the Georgia Board of Pardons and Paroles, the body which  has the final say in the state on whether executions should go ahead,  made a solemn promise. Troy Davis,  the prisoner who is scheduled to die by lethal injection at 7pm local  time on Wednesday, would never be put to death unless there was “no  doubt” about his guilt.
Here are 10 reasons why the board – which  decided on Tuesday to allow the execution to go ahead – has failed to  deliver on its promise and why a man who is very possibly innocent will  be killed in the name of American justice.
1. Of  the nine witnesses who appeared at Davis’s 1991 trial who said they had  seen Davis beating up a homeless man in a dispute over a bottle of beer  and then shooting to death a police officer, Mark MacPhail, who was  acting as a good samaritan, seven have since recanted their evidence.
2. One of those who recanted, Antoine Williams, subsequently revealed they  had no idea who shot the officer and that they were illiterate –  meaning they could not read the police statements that they had signed  at the time of the murder in 1989. Others said they had falsely  testified that they had overheard Davis confess to the murder.
3. Many of those who retracted their evidence said that they had been  cajoled by police into testifying against Davis. Some said they had been  threatened with being put on trial themselves if they did not  co-operate.
4. Of the two of the nine key  witnesses who have not changed their story publicly, one has kept silent  for the past 20 years and refuses to talk, and the other is Sylvester  Coles. Coles was the man who first came forward to police and implicated  Davis as the killer. But over the past 20 years evidence has grown that  Coles himself may be the gunman and that he was fingering Davis to save  his own skin.
5. In total, nine people have come  forward with evidence that implicates Coles. Most recently, on Monday  the George Board of Pardons and Paroles heard from Quiana Glover who  told the panel that in June 2009 she had heard Coles, who had been  drinking heavily, confess to the murder of MacPhail.
6. Apart from the witness evidence, most of which has since been cast into  doubt, there was no forensic evidence gathered that links Davis to the  killing.
7. In particular, there is no DNA evidence of any sort. The human rights group the Constitution Project points out that three-quarters of those  prisoners who have been exonerated and declared innocent in the US were  convicted at least in part on the basis of faulty eyewitness testimony.
8. No gun was ever found connected to the murder. Coles later admitted  that he owned the same type of .38-calibre gun that had delivered the  fatal bullets, but that he had given it away to another man earlier on  the night of the shooting.
9. Higher courts in  the US have repeatedly refused to grant Davis a retrial on the grounds  that he had failed to “prove his innocence”. His supporters counter that  where the ultimate penalty is at stake, it should be for the courts to  be beyond any reasonable doubt of his guilt.
10. Even if you set aside the issue of Davis’s innocence or guilt, the  manner of his execution tonight is cruel and unnatural. If the execution  goes ahead as expected, it would be the fourth scheduled execution date  for this prisoner. In 2008 he was given a stay just 90 minutes before  he was set to die. Experts in death row say such multiple experiences  with imminent death is tantamount to torture.
Images: Troy Davis on death row in Georgia, where he faces execution by lethal injection. (Gettty Images)

androphilia:

Troy Davis : 10 reasons why he should not be executed | guardian.co.uk

With just a few hours to go until Troy Davis is executed in Georgia, despite serious doubts about his guilt, here are 10 reasons why the death sentence should not be carried out

Troy Davis polygraph test refused by Georgia officials
Audio: ‘I’m sitting on death row for a crime I didn’t commit’
Georgia pardons board denies plea for clemency

By Ed Pilkington in Jackson, Georgia

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

In 2007 the Georgia Board of Pardons and Paroles, the body which has the final say in the state on whether executions should go ahead, made a solemn promise. Troy Davis, the prisoner who is scheduled to die by lethal injection at 7pm local time on Wednesday, would never be put to death unless there was “no doubt” about his guilt.

Here are 10 reasons why the board – which decided on Tuesday to allow the execution to go ahead – has failed to deliver on its promise and why a man who is very possibly innocent will be killed in the name of American justice.

1. Of the nine witnesses who appeared at Davis’s 1991 trial who said they had seen Davis beating up a homeless man in a dispute over a bottle of beer and then shooting to death a police officer, Mark MacPhail, who was acting as a good samaritan, seven have since recanted their evidence.

2. One of those who recanted, Antoine Williams, subsequently revealed they had no idea who shot the officer and that they were illiterate – meaning they could not read the police statements that they had signed at the time of the murder in 1989. Others said they had falsely testified that they had overheard Davis confess to the murder.

3. Many of those who retracted their evidence said that they had been cajoled by police into testifying against Davis. Some said they had been threatened with being put on trial themselves if they did not co-operate.

4. Of the two of the nine key witnesses who have not changed their story publicly, one has kept silent for the past 20 years and refuses to talk, and the other is Sylvester Coles. Coles was the man who first came forward to police and implicated Davis as the killer. But over the past 20 years evidence has grown that Coles himself may be the gunman and that he was fingering Davis to save his own skin.

5. In total, nine people have come forward with evidence that implicates Coles. Most recently, on Monday the George Board of Pardons and Paroles heard from Quiana Glover who told the panel that in June 2009 she had heard Coles, who had been drinking heavily, confess to the murder of MacPhail.

6. Apart from the witness evidence, most of which has since been cast into doubt, there was no forensic evidence gathered that links Davis to the killing.

7. In particular, there is no DNA evidence of any sort. The human rights group the Constitution Project points out that three-quarters of those prisoners who have been exonerated and declared innocent in the US were convicted at least in part on the basis of faulty eyewitness testimony.

8. No gun was ever found connected to the murder. Coles later admitted that he owned the same type of .38-calibre gun that had delivered the fatal bullets, but that he had given it away to another man earlier on the night of the shooting.

9. Higher courts in the US have repeatedly refused to grant Davis a retrial on the grounds that he had failed to “prove his innocence”. His supporters counter that where the ultimate penalty is at stake, it should be for the courts to be beyond any reasonable doubt of his guilt.

10. Even if you set aside the issue of Davis’s innocence or guilt, the manner of his execution tonight is cruel and unnatural. If the execution goes ahead as expected, it would be the fourth scheduled execution date for this prisoner. In 2008 he was given a stay just 90 minutes before he was set to die. Experts in death row say such multiple experiences with imminent death is tantamount to torture.

Images: Troy Davis on death row in Georgia, where he faces execution by lethal injection. (Gettty Images)

Tagged • Troy Davisdeath penaltyGeorgiaUSA
Reblogged from onmyowntwohands

androphilia:

Why Are We Killing Troy Davis? | Kevin Powell Blogs

By Kevin Powell

September 20, 2011

“To take a life when a life has been lost is revenge, not justice.”—DESMOND TUTU

Unless something God-like and miraculous happens, Troy Davis, 42, is going to be executed tomorrow, Wednesday, September 21, 2011, at 7pm, by lethal injection at a state prison in Jackson, Georgia.

Let me say up front I feel great sorrow for the family of Mark MacPhail, the police officer who was shot and murdered on August 19, 1989. I cannot imagine the profound pain they’ve shouldered for 22 angst-filled years, hoping, waiting, and praying for some semblance of justice. Officer MacPhail will never come back to life, his wife, his two children, and his mother will never see him again. Under that sort of emotional and spiritual duress, I can imagine why they are convinced Troy Davis is the murderer of their beloved son, husband, and father.

But, likewise, I feel great sorrow for Troy Davis and his family. I don’t know if Mr. Davis murdered Officer MacPhail or not. What I do know is that there is no DNA evidence linking him to the crime, that seven of nine witnesses have either recanted or contradicted their original testimonies tying him to the act, and that a gentleman named Sylvester “Redd” Coles is widely believed to be the actual triggerman. But no real case against Mr. Coles has ever been pursued.

So a man is going to be executed, murdered, in fact, under a dark cloud of doubt in a nation, ours, that has come to practice executions as effortlessly as we breath.

Be it Republican presidential candidate Rick Perry, governor of Texas, and the 234 executions that have occurred under his watch (that fact was cheered loudly at a recent Republican debate), or the 152 executions when George W. Bush was governor of that state, we are a nation of an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth, a life for a life. Spiraling so far out of control that we are going to execute someone who may actually be innocent tomorrow.

I say we because the blood of Officer MacPhail and Troy Davis will be on the hands of us all. We Americans who fail to use our individual and collective voices to deal with the ugliness in our society that leads to violence in the first place, be they for economic crimes or because some of us have simply been driven mad by the pressures of trying to exist in a world that often marginalizes or rejects us. Thus our solution for many problems often becomes force, or violence. But it has long since been proven that the death penalty or capital punishment is not a deterrent, contrary to some folks’ beliefs. Murders continue to happen every single day in America, as commonplace as apple pie, football, and Ford trucks.

I also say we because it is startling to me that Troy Davis could be on death row for twenty years, have his guilt be under tremendous doubt, yet save a few dedicated souls and organizations, there has not been a mass movement of support to save his life, to end the death penalty, not by well-meaning Black folks, not by well-meaning White folks, not by well-meaning folks of any stripe, and certainly not by influential Black folks who represent the corridors of power in places like Atlanta, with the exception of, say, Congressman John Lewis.

You wonder what the outcome of the parole board decision would have been if Black churches in Atlanta and other parts of Georgia, for example, had joined this cause to end the death penalty in America years back, if Black leaders had launched a sustained action much in the way their religious and spiritual foremothers and forefathers had done two generations before?

What could have been different if more Georgia ministers had the courage of Atlanta’s Rev. Dr. Raphael Gamaliel Warnock, pastor of the famed Ebenezer Baptist Church once helmed by Dr. King? Dr. Warnock has been steadfast and outspoken, yet seemingly out there alone in his support of Troy Davis. I mean if there is ever a time for Black churches to practice a relevant ministry, as Dr. King once urged, is it not when a seeming injustice like the Troy Davis matter is right in front of our faces? When so many Black males are locked up in America’s prisons? What is the point, really, of having a “men’s ministry” at your church if it is not addressing one of the major problems of the 21st century, that of the Black male behind bars? Especially in a society, America, that incarcerates more people than any other nation on earth.

And you wonder how the five-person Georgia State Board of Pardons and Parole that, paradoxically, includes two Black males, including the head of the board, must feel. Had it not been for past legal injustices, like the Scottsboro Boys case of the 1930s or the vicious killing of Emmett Till in the 1950s, there would not have been a Civil Rights Movement, nor the placement of Blacks in places to balance the scales of justice, like that Georgia Parole Board. While I certainly do not think any Black person should get a pass just because they are Black, I do think, if you are an aware Black man, somewhere in your psyche has to be some residual memory of Black males being lynched in America, of Black male after Black male being sent to jail, or given the death penalty, under often flimsy charges and evidence. If there is a reasonable doubt, keep the case open until there is ultimate certainty—

Finally, incredibly ironic and tragic that this is happening while our first Black president is sitting in the White House. We, America, like to pat ourselves on the back and say job well done whenever there is a shred of racial or social progress in our fair nation. But then we habitually figure out ways to take one, two, several steps back, with this Troy Davis execution, with the rise of the Tea Party and its thinly-veiled racial paranoia politics, to push America right back to the good old says of segregation, Jim Crow, brute hatred of those who are different, while social inequalities run rampant like rats in the night.

And if you think Troy Davis’ cause celebre has nothing to do with Jim Crow, then either you’ve not been to an American prison lately, or you simply are blind. I’ve been to many, across our country, and they are filled to the brim with mostly Black and Latino males (and some poor White males), including the majority of folks sitting on death row.

For sure, given my background of poverty, a single mother, an absent father, and violence and great economic despair in my childhood and teen years, but for the grace of God I could be one of those young Black or Latino males languishing in jail at this very moment. I could be, indeed, Troy Davis.

So I cannot simply view the Troy Davis case and execution as solely about the killing of Officer MacPhail. Yes, an injustice was done, a killing occurred, and I pray the truth really comes out one day.

But I am just as concerned about America’s soul, of the morality tales we are text-messaging to ourselves, to the world, as we move Troy Davis from his cell one last time, to that room where a needle will blast death into his veins, suck the air from his throat, snatch life from his eyes.

While the family of Mr. Davis and the family of Officer MacPhail converge, one final time, to witness a death in progress—

Now two men will be dead, Officer MacPhail and Troy Davis, linked, forever, by the misfortune of our confusion, stereotypes, finger-pointing, and history of passing judgment without having every shred of the facts. I am Officer MacPhail, I am Troy Davis, and so are you. And you. And you, too.

And as my mother would say, have mercy on us all, Lawd, for we know not what we do—

Kevin Powell is an activist and public speaker based in Brooklyn, New York. A nationally acclaimed writer, Kevin is also the author or editor of 10 books. His 11th, Barack Obama, Ronald Reagan, and The Ghost of Dr. King: And Other Blogs and Essays, will be published January 2012. Email him at kevin_powell, or follow him on Twitter @kevin_powell

Images: Troy Davis on death row in Georgia Diagnostic and Classification State Prison, near Jackson, Georgia. / The death chamber of Georgia Diagnostic and Classification State Prison.

[Troy Davis and the History of Injustice in America | Forbes - September 20, 2011]

Tagged • troy davisdeath penaltygeorgia
Reblogged from androphilia