death penalty news

August 10, 2005


LOUISIANA:

Killer cop gets death penalty - New Orleans officer ordered woman shot

For a second time, a jury chose the death penalty for Len Davis, a 
former New Orleans police officer convicted of ordering the murder of 
a woman who filed a brutality complaint against him.

The verdict was handed up Tuesday by a federal court jury that 
rejected a defense call for a life sentence.

Davis had been convicted in 1996 on a charge that he violated the 
civil rights of New Orleans resident Kim Groves "under color of law" 
when he ordered her death in 1994. But, although the conviction held 
up on appeal, the death sentence was thrown out because one possible 
factor in the jury's decision to call for execution - a charge of 
witness tampering - was thrown out.

A new sentencing phase with a new jury was ordered. That jury was 
selected July 25 and it heard nearly two weeks of testimony and 
arguments, including presentations from Davis himself, acting as 
co-counsel on his own defense team.

Among Davis' arguments was his claim that he was merely trying to 
trap Groves in a drug deal when she was killed coincidentally. He 
also claimed that he was suffering from stress because of his 
dangerous job as a police officer.

But the jury in the complicated hearing rejected both arguments in 
its first votes on crucial issues last week. They found that Davis 
had specific intent to kill Groves and that he was involved in 
substantial planning and premeditation, said U.S. Attorney Jim Letten.

Davis refused to attend the proceedings after those key votes, which 
were followed by more evidence and more arguments on whether a death 
sentence was warranted.

"Death should be for the worst of the worst. It should be for the 
incorrigible. For someone who's never done any good in his life. It 
doesn't fit here,' " defense attorney Julian Murray had argued to the jury.

But the jury opted for death. A federal judge will impose the 
sentence later. A sentencing date had not been set Tuesday. Letten 
noted that appeals are automatic in death penalty cases so it 
remained unclear when, if ever, Davis will be executed.

(source: Biloxi Sun-Herald / AP)

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