“Death Row Marv” is a battery-powered toy electric chair
that produces an electric buzzing sound with Marv’s eyes glowing red under a
helmet attached to electrodes. After his “electrocution,” Marv asks, “That the
best you can do, you pansies?”
Because the toy was on display in District Attorney Layla
Zon’s office, it now figures prominently in a recently filed court motion that
seeks to overturn a Newton County death sentence, reported the Atlanta Journal Constitution.
The motion contends Zon is “pathologically enthralled” with
the death penalty and has pursued it with a fervor and zeal unmatched by any
other district attorney in the state. Zon is DA of the Alcovy Judicial Circuit, which consists of Walton and
Newton counties.
On Wednesday, Zon said she seeks the death
penalty only in cases that warrant it. As for “Death Row Marv,” it was
already in her office when she became district attorney in 2010 and she
recently removed it.
“It was not something I purchased to decorate my office,”
she said. “It was a left-behind trinket that became part of the woodwork. … I
never sat and looked and fixated on it, like it was part of some medieval
mindset.”
Marv was a fictional character created by comic book legend
Frank Miller for the “Sin City” graphic novel series. Actor Mickey Rourke
portrayed Marv in a 2005 movie adaptation. In “The Hard Goodbye,” Marv is
sentenced to die in the electric chair and survives the first jolt — prompting
the “you pansies” retort. His executioners then pull the switch again to finish
the job.
The toy did not define her philosophy on capital punishment,
Zon said. “But when the evidence and the law are not on their side, they launch
ad hominem attacks.”
State capital defender Josh Moore, who filed the motion on behalf of condemned inmate Rodney Young, declined to
comment. In 2012, Young was condemned to die by lethal injection for killing his
ex-fiancée’s son.
An estimated 1,400 murder cases that were eligible for the
death penalty have been closed statewide since Zon took office and fewer than 1
percent of them resulted in death sentences, the motion said. Young’s case was
“considerably less aggravated” than the other death cases, the motion said, but
his crime occurred in Newton County, where Zon turned down his offer to plead
guilty in exchange for a sentence of life in prison without parole.
Since 2011, there have been 13 death-penalty trials
statewide and four of them took place in Newton County, the motion said. During
that same time frame, Georgia juries imposed five death sentences and two of
them came from Newton.
“These statistics resoundingly confirm what Ms. Zon’s toy
electric chair perhaps only suggests: that her fixation with the death penalty
is completely out of step with the sensibilities and evolving standards of
decency in this state,” the motion said.
The motion notes that the Georgia Supreme Court in 2001
found that death by electrocution caused excruciating pain with a certainty of
“cooked brains and blistered bodies.”
“The idea of any elected state official memorializing such a
barbaric (and unconstitutional) practice with an office ornament would be
surprising and troubling,” the motion said. “The fact that the elected official
at issue here is a constitutional officer entrusted with virtually unfettered
discretion in deciding which defendants under her jurisdiction will be singled
out for execution, and which will be spared, is cause for real concern.”
Zon said she now wishes she had “trashed” the toy when she
first saw it.
As for the two death sentences she obtained, Zon said,
jurors from both trials unanimously agreed the ultimate punishment was
necessary. And the case involving Young was particularly heinous, she said.
Young killed Gary Lamar Jones because his mother had ended
her relationship with Young, Zon said. On a Sunday in March 2008, Jones
returned home from church and was overtaken by Young, who tied him to a chair.
Young bludgeoned Jones with a hammer, sliced open his throat
with a knife and beat him so viciously he was found dead with an eyeball
hanging out of his face, Zon said. “I think if confronted with those same
facts, DAs in other counties would have sought death too.”
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