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Guilty verdict in cult murder trial
Alex Taylor, left, is seen in court on Wednesday after being convicted of first degree murder in the death of George Davis. At right is Taylor's attorney, public defender Jess Raphael. J.L. Sousa/Register | Buy photos
Thursday, May 01, 2008
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Twenty-six year old Alex Taylor has been found guilty of first degree murder in the slaying of a Napa man last spring.

Jurors reached a verdict late Wednesday morning, on the fourth day of deliberations after a five-week trial before Napa County Superior Court Judge Ray Guadagni.
Taylor was on trial for shooting George Davis, 62, last April in the bedroom of Davis’ Redwood Road apartment. Part of Taylor’s defense focused on Davis’ study of black magic and his efforts to bring young people, including Taylor, into a cult based on his teachings.

Taylor, who said he suffers from schizophrenia, twitched, drummed his fingers on his face, squirmed in his chair and very softly talked to himself as the court clerk read the verdict. The jury also found Taylor guilty of three special allegations.
However, the jury still has more work to do.

Defense attorney Jess Raphael has entered a motion to determine whether his client should be deemed not guilty by reason of insanity. The same jury will convene Monday morning to begin this phase of the trial.
If they find Taylor to be sane at the time he shot Davis five times in the head, he could be sentenced to 25 years to life in state prison. If they find he was insane, Taylor will be committed to a state mental hospital.

Several people on the jury, which included nine women and three men, cried as the clerk read the verdicts.

Raphael said he was “disappointed” in the verdict and that when he heard it read, “It was chilling.”

“Now we will go on to the insanity phase of the trial, which is what this has been about all along,” said Raphael.

Napa County Deputy District Attorney Gary Van Camp, who prosecuted the case, said he was “pleased the jury came up with that verdict. But we still have another phase to go and more decisions to make.”

During the trial, witnesses testified that Davis worshipped the devil and practiced black magic and witchcraft. Davis met Taylor when he was 16, and was teaching him magic and how to cast spells.

Raphael argued self-defense for his client saying that Taylor believed Davis had special powers over him and the demons inside Taylor’s head had taken on the identity of Davis. He argued that Taylor was engaged in a mental and physical battle to rid his body of Davis’ spirit, which led to the shooting.

If the jury would have agreed with that portrayal, they were instructed to find Taylor guilty of voluntary manslaughter.

The jury also had the option to find Taylor guilty of second-degree murder, which carries a punishment of 15 years to life in state prison.

Van Camp argued that the night of the murder, Taylor intentionally and with premeditation armed himself with a rifle, went to Davis’  apartment and talked him into going into the bedroom, where he shot him first in the back, then four more times in the head.

Van Camp said Taylor had several motives, including that he owed Davis $6,000 and believed Davis was the man who raped him when he was 4.

During the next phase of the trial, jurors will hear testimony from medical experts who will testify to Taylor’s state of mind when he pulled the trigger.
10 comment(s)

sammy wrote on Apr 30, 2008 12:14 PM:

" I wonder why we didn't have day to day coverage on this trial like we did the Posey trial. I think it is interesting that this trial was so quiet in the paper. "

vonhelga wrote on Apr 30, 2008 12:39 PM:

" Posey was a public figure and health care provider to many of us. This poor guys here is just an idirected young man who became involved with the wrong people. "

vocal-de-local wrote on Apr 30, 2008 8:25 PM:

" vonhelga, that "poor guy" is a cold blooded killer no matter which way you look at it. How would you like it if someone owed you $6,000, murdered you, and then made allegations that you molested them at age 4? There's no proof. And having different beliefs than the norm and sharing them with an unstable teen is not justification for murder. If the young man was really troubled, he should have notified the police that an adult was trying to exert too much control over him and it didn't feel right. But he chose to take $6,000 instead and kill the person he owed it to. The jurors made the right decision. "

vonhelga wrote on Apr 30, 2008 9:41 PM:

" I never said he wasn't guilty! Yes, he's a murderer and he should be punished! I was referring to sammy's comment below! "

NVR Moderator wrote on Apr 30, 2008 9:56 PM:

" sammy:
As you see in the related links, there were 11 separate articles written about this trial, and yes, there was a large amount of interest in this case.
We chose to not do an article every day based on how the trial, the questioning of investigators and those called to testify was progressing.
We felt the 11 articles gave our readers a very thorough overview of how the trial was progressing. "

sammy wrote on Apr 30, 2008 10:30 PM:

" Thanks for taking the time to respond NVR. I appreciate it and I had seen the other articles. I was just surprised it wasn't more . Thank you for clearing it up for me. "

starling wrote on May 1, 2008 5:22 AM:

" Although this guy is very obviously guilty of murder, even admitted it, I can't help but feel that he is very mentally disturbed. Though Davis didn't deserve to die, I do believe he contributed to Taylor's state of mind and ultimately to his own death. This guy has some serious mental problems and a "friend" should of helped him to get medical care, not teach him witchcraft and satanic rituals which quite obviously disturbed him even more. He definately needs a mental institution to try and help him, not put him in with the general prison population where he will be hurt or hurt someone else. Just my opinion... "

Baraki wrote on May 1, 2008 8:08 AM:

" sammy, never fear, this sounds like one of those murders that someone will write a book about :) Either that or there's going to be an A&E / History Channel / etc. special about it! "

vocal-de-local wrote on May 1, 2008 11:27 AM:

" starling, a lot of criminals are mentally disturbed. Where do we draw the line? This sounds premeditated. If it had been an old lady who befriended him but didn't have the same background as Davis (into devil worship etc), we'd be looking at capital punishment for this young man. "

sammy wrote on May 1, 2008 11:47 AM:

" aww Baraki..... i wouldn't read the book,..... just commenting on how different the local paper covered one murder trial verses this one. just an observation. "

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