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Convicted murderer wants pardon from governor
Sanity phase of trial underway
Tuesday, May 06, 2008
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2:30 p.m.Just days after his arrest for the murder of a Napa man, Alex Taylor was making telephone calls from county jail instructing his mother to contact the governor for a pardon.

Taylor, 26, was convicted last week of the first-degree murder of George Davis, 62, last April in the bedroom of Davis’ Redwood Road apartment.
Taylor’s attorney Jess Raphael filed a motion to determine whether his client should be deemed not guilty by reason of insanity.

The sanity phase of the trial started Monday. They same jury that found Taylor guilty of murder will now decide if he was sane at the time he shot Davis five times in the head.
Raphael played the recorded telephone conversations between Taylor and his mother Cheri Taylor. The collect calls were made from the jail in the first week following Taylor’s arrest.

In the conversation, Taylor asks his mother if she had called the governor.
Taylor said he believed Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger could give him a reprieve “and that would be good for the governor’s career.”

Taylor, who said he suffers from schizophrenia, admitted to shooting Davis during an interview with detectives the night Davis’ body was discovered in his apartment.

He gave two motives, one being Davis wanted to die and Taylor assisted in his suicide. Taylor also told investigators that he believed Davis was the man who raped him when he was 4. The alleged rape has never been substantiated, and Davis did not live in Napa when Taylor was a youngster.

During other conversations, Taylor’s mother told him he needed to plead insanity and turn over his medical records to authorities, which upset Taylor.

While talking about Davis’ death, Taylor told his mother, “I just snapped.”

Raphael is hoping to convince the jury Taylor did not believe killing Davis was morally wrong.

During the murder trial, Raphael argued that Davis practiced witchcraft and black magic. He said Taylor believed the demons in his body had taken on Davis’ identity, and the only way to rid himself of the demons was to kill Davis.

Prosecutor Gary Van Camp was able to convince the jury by winning a first-degree murder verdict that Taylor planned and with premeditation, intentionally armed himself with a rifle, went to Davis’ apartment and gunned him down in cold blood.

In the sanity phase of the trial, unlike the criminal phase, the burden of proof lies on the shoulders of the defense.

Also unlike the murder trial where the jurors must believe that Taylor killed Davis beyond a reasonable doubt, they only need to be convinced by more than 50 percent he was insane when he pulled the trigger. The vote must be unanimous.

If Taylor is found not guilty by reason of insanity he will be committed to a state mental hospital where he will be treated for his mental illness. He will remain at the hospital until medical experts deem him sane. However, Taylor cannot be kept at the hospital any longer than the punishment for first-degree murder which is 25 years to life.

The sanity phase of the trial expected to last into next week. During that time, the defense and prosecution will call expert medical witnesses who will testify to Taylor’s state of mind when he killed Davis.
3 comment(s)

db76 wrote on May 6, 2008 6:49 PM:

" The article is incorrect: People found Not Guilty by Reason of Insanity CAN be kept longer than their DSL date if they are still deemed mentally ill and dangerous. This is why people who are found NGRI for minor crimes like burglary are often kept in state hospitals for 10 to 30 years. "

NapaNana wrote on May 7, 2008 9:56 AM:

" This "kid" has been way off balance for a very long time. He has "scared" the kids he has grown up around for years with his crazy talk. He knows he has "issues" yet he willfully refused to take his medications. Insane? It depends on how you dice it up. Anyone that could/would/does kill someone in the manner in which he killed his victim......and justified it.....IS INSANE! Yet he knew FULL WELL what he was doing and planned it out very carefully. That makes it 1st degree.
I do hope that he gets sent to a State Hospital. They will give him his meds and he will feel better...... then he will have to face his crimes and the full reality of it.
Let him out? Ever? I think not. He has proved that he does not care about being a productive person in society. Would any of you trust that he will not go off his medication again? Maybe next time the "voices" that tell him to do bad will be talking about one of you that may be feeling sorry for him right now. Reprieve? Pardon? I think not. "

reality1 wrote on May 7, 2008 10:35 AM:

" db76 is right. Some people think the "Not Guilty by Reason of Insanity" plea will get them off. "Gee, if I can prove I'm nuts, I'll get off". They focus on the "Not Guilty" part. Far from true. To even use that plea, you have to convince the jury that you did not know what you did was wrong. so you at least heve to tacitly admit to doing the crime. You can't very well say "I'm insane, but I didn't do the crime anyway" in a court plea. Some lawyers actually used to do that, pleading "Not Guilty" AND not Guilty By Reason of Insanity". Didn't work well. If you're found "insane" according to the legal definition, you go to a disgusting state hospital with no "getting out" date. San Quentin is nicer. If you're found to be not "insane", you go to prison. Very few juries actually make the finding of "insane". This plea is rarely used by defense attorneys any more. Wonder why.... Their job has become nothing more than to get their clients off, and this doesn't do it. "

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