Despite the evidence of his innocence, despite the support by a former president, an FBI director and the Pope, despite the seemingly endless appeals, Troy Davis was doomed to die. His fate was sealed the moment Mark MacPhail was gunned down on that hot Savannah night in 1989. From the day he was arrested, Troy Davis had three strikes against him.
Strike one: Davis was black, MacPhail was white. In the past three decades, 255 blacks have been executed for killing whites, while only 17 whites have been put to death for killing blacks, according to the Death Penalty Information Center. During the same period, almost 80 percent of executions involved inmates convicted of murdering whites, even though half the murder victims in society were black. Troy Davis never had a chance.
Strike two: MacPhail was a police officer. Law enforcement, charged with protecting all citizens equally, protects some more equally than others. The murder of a police officer compels prosecutors to pull out all the stops to get a conviction and death sentence. State law makes the murder of an officer a capital offense. If MacPhail had been the mayor of Savannah, his murderer would not have been eligible for the death penalty. Troy Davis never had a chance.
Strike three: The crime happened in the South. Three Southern states (Texas, Virginia and Florida) account for the majority of all executions since 1976, according to a recent report by the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund. Georgia ranks seventh in the country in total executions, and its death row is one of the nation's largest. Troy Davis never had a chance.
22 yr serving the Dallas Community. We sell African Art, books about the black experience, health products, shea butter, black soap, african clothes, jewelry, prints, posters, and have meeting space for rental that seats about 150 people. Our objective is to educate African people scattered around the globe to learn more about their history and culture in order to advance themselves and all humanity.
Specialties
African Art, African Cultural education programs, Health, Pan-African Politcal education, Children's activitities, Book Signings, rental space for community events and Festivals. Our objective is the Forward Movement of African People around th world and the uplift of humanity.
Public Company; 51-200 employees; GEEK; Internet industry
June 1989 – Present (22 years 9 months)828 Fourth Ave. Dallas Texas 75226
Owners Bandele and Akwete Tyehimba. We sell African Art, Books on the African (Black) Experience in American and around the world, shea butter, raw black soap, African Clothes, Jewelry, and natural health care products. We also have a meeting space for events that seats about 150 people.
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