George Davis is Innocent - St Paul's Way, Limehouse, London, UK
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member Master Mariner
N 51° 31.043 W 000° 01.932
30U E 705904 N 5711538
Whether George Davis was indeed innocent we will probably never know but this graffiti, on a railway bridge over St Paul's Way, says he is!
Waymark Code: WMEQ7Z
Location: London, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 06/25/2012
Published By:Groundspeak Regular Member Team Farkle 7
Views: 4

The song, by Sham 69 called 'George Davis is Innocent', was released on an album. The lyrics, from the Metro Lyrics website, are:

"Everything they want to pin on you
Everything you say and do
Looking through their photofits
See your face and your face fits

George Davis is innocent
George Davis is innocent
George Davis is innocent
Okay

All the world's gonna write about you
All the world's gonna know about you
They want to put you on News At Ten
If you don't talk it'll happen again

George Davis is innocent
George Davis is innocent
George Davis is innocent
Okay

I'm never gonna leave you alone
They're never gonna leave you alone
Everything you say and do
May be used against you

George Davis is innocent
George Davis is innocent
George Davis is innocent
Okay

They're never gonna leave you alone
They're never gonna leave you alone
They know where you bloody live
East London is your home

George Davis is innocent
George Davis is innocent
George Davis is innocent
Okay
"

Wikipedia website tells the story of George Davis:

"George Davis (born 1941) is an ex-armed robber in the United Kingdom, who became widely known through a very successful campaign by friends and supporters to free him from prison after his wrongful conviction in March 1975 for an armed payroll robbery at the London Electricity Board (LEB) offices in Ilford on 4 April 1974. The conviction was based solely on the unreliable use of identification evidence, in the absence of any other evidence connecting him with the crime. Following his release Davis went on to be jailed for two other cases of armed robbery.

The London Electricity Board robbery

The robbery for which Davis was convicted was very aggravated involving a long chase, with numerous vehicles commandeered and numbers of the robbers injured. Unusually the initial payroll attack was photographed by undercover police officers and eye witness descriptions, alleged identifications and individual robbery "roles" were predicated against those photographic records to further complicate and confound the subsequent identification evidence[clarification needed] on which the criminal prosecution relied.

The evidence

A number of blood samples (matching different blood groups) were recovered and formed part of the prosecution case. Of four accused, only Davis was convicted. At a number of very specific locations Davis was identified but the blood obtained from the location did not match his blood. Neither did the blood match any of his co-accused.

A further complication turned on the fact that Davis might never have been committed for trial from the lower courts (and therefore convicted) had the above blood test results been disclosed at that committal stage. Although it subsequently became clear that the evidence had by then become available to police it was suppressed and this abuse of due process became one of the core allegations heavily relied upon by those campaigning for Davis's release:

'The blood samples taken from ... Davis ... at Walthamstow on 18 May 1974 were passed on to the Yard's Senior Scientific Officer, Peter Martin, on 21 May and he reported his negative findings to the police officer in charge of the case on 20 June. At as late as November 1974 on a third bail application, this time before a judge in chambers, and after committals had been completed (28 October) the police were saying that they still awaited the blood results from forensic.'

Campaign for Release

Public activism

On 19 August 1975, while Davis was serving a 20 year prison sentence for the Ilford LEB robbery the pitch at the Headingley cricket ground was dug up by his supporters, preventing further play in the test match between England and Australia. This dramatic direct action protest by relatives and friends of George Davis was accompanied by typical Davis Campaign graffiti proclaiming "FREE GEORGE DAVIS ... JUSTICE FOR GEORGE DAVIS ... GEORGE DAVIS IS INNOCENT ... SORRY IT HAD TO (BE) DONE". Three men and one woman went on trial in relation to this incident, and one, Peter Chappell was eventually jailed for eighteen months. The Davis campaigners who were remanded to prison to await trial for the Headingley sabotage continued their campaigning in support of one another within the prison system. Geraldine Hughes, the female accused, refused to accept bail until it had also been granted to all of her co-accused.

Celebrity support

Roger Daltrey of The Who was seen onstage in 1975 wearing a T-shirt emblazoned with 'George Davis Is Innocent'. "George Davis is Innocent" was also a song on Sham 69's 1978 debut album Tell Us the Truth, and the song 'The Cockney Kids Are Innocent' ends with a namecheck. Patrik Fitzgerald also showed support with "George" on the 1979 EP The Paranoid Ward. Davis also received a name check in a Duran Duran song entitled 'Friends of Mine' on the album Duran Duran (1981): the chorus begins 'Georgie Davis is coming out'."

On 24th May, 2011 three Court of Appeal judges quashed Davis's conviction, after 36 years, as unsafe but they went on to say that they were unable to 'positively exonerate him'.

Musician: Sham 69

Name of Song: George Davis is Innocent

Relevant Verse:
George Davis is innocent George Davis is innocent George Davis is innocent Okay


Location website: [Web Link]

Visit Instructions:
There are no specific requirements for logging a waymark. You are, however, encouraged to include any funny or interesting pictures of your visit.
Search for...
Geocaching.com Google Map
Google Maps
MapQuest
Bing Maps
Nearest Waymarks
Nearest Immortalized in Lyrics
Nearest Geocaches
Create a scavenger hunt using this waymark as the center point
Recent Visits/Logs:
There are no logs for this waymark yet.