Linda Fairstein | |
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Period | 1996–present |
Genre | Crime |
Jun 11, 2019 · After they were exonerated, the men sued New York City for malicious prosecution, racial discrimination, and emotional distress in 2014, winning a …
The full page newspaper ad Donald Trump took out calling for the executions of the Central Park Five. The five men would go on to file a suit against New York State for …
May 25, 2019 · In 2002, District Attorney Robert Morgenthau withdrew all charges against the Central Park Five, and their convictions were vacated. Wise, who was still in prison at the time, was released early.
Jun 03, 2019 · Clements left the Manhattan D.A.’s office in 1991 and hasn’t been able to speak about the Central Park Five because he was advised not to as their civil suit moved forward. The outcome of which was...
The five men, who have erroneously coined the “Central Park Five,” Antron McCray, Kevin Richardson, Yusef Salaam, Raymond Santana, and Korey Wise, were awarded a $41 million settlement for the false imprisonment, slander, family separation, loss of employment and all of the other life-changing occurrences that these ...Feb 9, 2022
The five men sued the city for discrimination and emotional distress; the city settled in 2014 for $41 million.
Raymond Santana Jr., 45 Like Kevin, Raymond was also only 14 years old when he was arrested in connection to the Central Park Jogger case. After submitting a false confession, he was wrongfully convicted and sentenced to five to 10 years in a youth correctional facility. He served six years before he was released.Apr 7, 2021
David Kreizer, an experienced litigation attorney in New York and New Jersey, served, along with co-counsel, as attorney to Korey Wise in the Central Park Five case.
The Central Park Five, now known as the Exonerated Five, were a group of Black and Latinx boys between the ages of 14 and 16 who were wrongfully accused of raping and beating a woman known as the Central Park Jogger in 1989.Jun 16, 2020
$500,000The state settlement gives plaintiffs Raymond Santana $500,000, Antron McCray $600,000, and Yusef Salaam and Kevin Richardson $650,000 each. Korey Wise received $1.5 million, as he served the most prison time.Jun 9, 2019
And Chandra "Deelishis" Davis Divorcing After 20 Months Of Marriage. The couple is calling it quits just a few months shy of two years of marriage, with Santana claiming their union is "irretrievably broken."Mar 3, 2022
Mrs. Meili became known as the “Central Park Jogger” and Korey Wise, along with four other men, became known as the “Central Park Five.” The five boys, then teenagers, happened to be in the park around the same time when Meili was brutally attacked.Nov 29, 2020
Raymond Santana and Flavor of Love Alum Deelishis Tie the Knot in Georgia Ceremony. Meet the Santanas! On Saturday, Raymond Santana Jr. — famously known as one of the exonerated “Central Park Five” men — and Flavor of Love star Deelishis tied the knot in Duluth, Georgia, six months after they got engaged.Jun 7, 2020
In 1996, while the majority of the Central Park Five were still in prison, Linda began a second career as an author of crime novels. She was still working at the Manhattan D.A.'s office when she published her first novel, Final Jeopardy, which follows fictional New York prosecutor Alexandra Cooper.Mar 19, 2020
Each soon recanted, insisting they had admitted to the crime under coercion from police officers. But they all were convicted and served prison terms of six to 13 years. A judge vacated their convictions in 2002 after another man confessed to the crime and DNA tests confirmed his guilt.Jun 12, 2019
Because of the great publicity surrounding the case, the exoneration of the Central Park Five highlighted the issue of false confession. The issue of false confessions has become a major topic of study and efforts at criminal justice reform, particularly for juveniles. Juveniles have been found to make false confessions and guilty pleas at a much higher rate than adults.
Following these events, in 2002, New York City Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly commissioned a panel to review the case, "To determine whether the new evidence [from the Reyes affidavit and related evidence, and Morgenthau's investigation] indicated that police supervisors or officers acted improperly or incorrectly, and to determine whether police policy or procedures needed to be changed as a result of the Central Park jogger case." The panel was chaired by attorney Michael F. Armstrong, the former chief counsel to the Knapp Commission, which in 1972 had documented widespread corruption in the NYPD. Two other attorneys were included: Jules Martin, a former police officer and now New York University Vice President; and Stephen Hammerman, deputy police commissioner for legal affairs. The panel issued a 43-page report in January 2003.
The Central Park jogger case (events also referenced as the Central Park Five case) was a criminal case in the United States over the aggravated assault and rape of a white woman in Manhattan 's Central Park on April 19, 1989, occurring during a string of other attacks in the park the same night.
The jury deliberated for 10 days before rendering its verdict on August 18. Each of the three youths was acquitted of attempted murder, but convicted of assault and rape of the female jogger, and convicted of assault and robbery of John Loughlin, a male jogger who was badly beaten that night in Central Park.
Later after the Central Park rape, when public attention was on the theory of a gang of young suspects, a brutal attack took place in Brooklyn on May 3, 1989. A 30-year-old black woman was robbed, raped and thrown from the roof of a four-story building by three young men.
Jermaine Robinson, 15, was indicted on multiple counts of robbery and assault in the attacks on Lewis and John Loughlin, another jogger near the reservoir. In a plea deal, he pleaded guilty on October 5, 1989, to the robbery of Loughlin and was sentenced to a year in a juvenile facility.
The second trial, of Kevin Richardson and Korey Wise, began October 22, 1990 and also lasted about two months, ending in December. Kevin Richardson, 14 years old at the time of the crime, had been free on $25,000 bail before the trial.
In Chicago, they started putting public defenders in police precincts for this very reason because that’s where violations of constitutional rights begins.
There was a rush to find out who committed this crime because of the media attention, but the political climate always plays a significant role in how they choose to proceed with a case.
“The key lesson here is that when you’re dealing with children as defendants, you can’t interrogate them them as you would adults. Young people will lie if they are afraid or forced. Prosecutors should know that.”—
Korey Wise, who was the only one tried as an adult and spent the longest in prison with 12 years behind bars, received $1.5 million.
Newsweek Newsletter sign-up >. The five were only exonerated in 2002 when serial rapist and murderer Matias Reyes confessed to being the one who attacked Meili all those years ago. The five would go on to sue New York City, but did not receive a settlement until 2014.
The four-part miniseries focuses on the five black teenagers who were wrongfully prosecuted and convicted for the rape and assault of 28-year-old investment banker Trisha Meili in New York's Central Park in 1989.
The five youths; Antron McCray, Kevin Richardson, Yusef Salaam, Raymond Santana and Korey Wise, were all coerced into giving false confessions by a prosecution spearheaded by Assistant District Attorney Linda Fairstein, before serving time behind bars for a crime they did not commit.
When Bill de Blasio became mayor, the city finally settled with the Central Park Five in 2014. Most of the defendants received $7 million apiece. Wise received $13 million. The city of New York, however, stuck by its police and prosecutors, not admitting to any wrongdoing by either.
By April 20, 1989, of the approximately 50 teenagers questioned in the Central Park attacks, Richardson, Salaam, Santana, McCray and Wise were in police custody and being questioned in the Meili case.
On the night of April 19, 1989, police were scrambling to respond to calls about 30 to 40 teens who were harassing people in the park. "Basically we took over that whole park, just walked down the street and beat people up," said Tony Montalvo, who said he was in the group that night.
A woman’s body is found. As some of the teenagers were being questioned by police, the body of a white woman was found in the park by two men making their way from the west side to the east side. "They thought it was a man's body, and then they heard moaning," recalled Mike Sheehan, a former New York City detective.
Trisha Meili known as The Central Park Jogger is seen here in this April 8, 2009 file photo. Eric Reynolds, a former New York City detective who was on duty in the park that night, called the night "chaotic" with all the 911 calls.
Thirteen years after the Central Park attack, in 2002, with four of the Central Park Five out of prison, a convicted serial rapist by the name of Matias Reyes came forward to say that he was Meili's sole attacker. I wished to God I had just hung the jury on that.
The lawsuit dragged on for a decade. In 2003, Sarah Burns, a filmmaker, joined forces with her father, documentarian Ken Burns, and David McMahon, to produce a film on the Central Park Five. It was released in 2013. D Dipasupil/Getty Images, FILE.
Eric Reynolds, NYPD Central Park Precinct. WHAT HE DID: Back in 1989, Officer Eric Reynolds was a 29-year-old cop, raised in the Bronx and was already an eight-year NYPD veteran when the arrests were made in connection with the youths believed to be linked to Meili’s rape.
Back in 1989, the Big Apple was an open, bubbly pot of hell …. April 19, 1989 was the height of the crack epidemic and the city was a hotbed of violence. In the first half of the year, 837 murders were reported, as were 1,600 rapes, more than 43,000 robberies and 34,000 assaults, according to The New York Times.
Director Ava DuVernay center with the central park 5 Raymond Santana left, Kevin Richardson, Korey Wise, Anthony McCray and Yuesf Salaam attend the world premiere of “When They See Us” at the Apollo Theater on Monday, May 20, 2019, in New York.
WHAT HE DID: No surprise here that former NYPD Det. Michael Sheehan believes the investigation was handled correctly by experienced detectives. However, he also agrees with the others that Reyes’ confession turned the entire case on its head despite the work done by the department to place the five teens at the scene of the crime and that their own words should have prevented their full exoneration.
The Central Park Five case has been mostly seen through the eyes of the wrongly convicted, but it took the operatives of the criminal justice system to incarcerate them. They still maintain their stance, despite being proven wrong.