This past week, New York City’s Comptroller approved a
settlement reportedly totaling $41 million to members of the “Central Park
Five.”
The five men were convicted in 1990 of the brutal rape and
bludgeoning of a woman jogging in Central Park in April of 1989. No one who was
living in New York at the time could ever forget it. The jogger was so badly
beaten that a friend had to identify her by a ring she was wearing on her
finger. There was no telling how many people took part in the assault. The five
who were convicted were part of a mob that numbered in the dozens.
Four of the five had confessed, and videos of their
confessions were shows on the news. They renounced their confessions, claiming
they were coerced, and went to trial.
Because several of the accused were juveniles, there was no
way they would serve enough time in jail. They were somehow acquitted of
attempted murder. They were convicted of several crimes committed that night,
including the rape and assaults on other people in the park, and were sent to
prison.
Years later, a serial rapist named Matias Reyes claimed that
he had attacked the jogger that night and had acted alone. DNA evidence showed
him to be guilty. The Manhattan District Attorney asked that the convictions of
the Central Park Five be vacated as a result.
Here’s the first big problem with the confession of the alleged
lone rapist Reyes: his tale of being the only attacker goes
against the medical evidence that indicates the Central Park
Jogger was attacked by multiple people. Part of this evidence includes bruising
on both legs of the victim indicating she was held down by more than one person
and cuts from a blade (Reyes said he only hit her with a rock and tree branch).
After the verdicts were vacated, the New York City Police
Department published a detailed examination of the case, the Armstrong Report,
which details evidence beyond the confessions that indicate that the defendants
were involved in the assault. This includes statements some of the defendants
made to police outside of the interrogation, things they said to family
members, and details of the crime some of them provided that were not known to
police at the time (for example, the NYPD did not know what property had been
taken from the victim but two of the five separately described her Walkman
being stolen).
The five sued the City and were helped along by filmmaker
Ken Burns, who declared them “exonerated” despite the significant
evidence of their guilt and made the documentary “The Central
Park Five.”
The Burns documentary is an interesting examination of the
case, but it is very one-sided and contains glaring
omissions.
Fans of the Burns film are buying into a narrative that lets
them feel righteous indignation at a supposed injustice, but the evidence in
the case does not gel with the idea the Central Park Five are victims of
injustice at all.
The documentary presents its case without any of the
skepticism required. It assumes that self-proclaimed lone rapist Matias Reyes
is some kind of born-again angel for confessing to a crime (after the statute
of limitations had expired, by the way), even though his story is full of
holes.
Part of the reason that there is a belief in the innocence
of the Central Park Five is what is known as the “CSI
effect.” People believe that there is always going to be a
mountain of DNA evidence with every case, though there often isn’t. Keep in
mind also that the use of DNA collection and examination was in its early
stages in 1989. Yes, DNA evidence proves Matias Reyes raped the Central Park
Jogger; the evidence shows he was not alone in doing so.
But the public wants to buy into the popular story. Earnest
and well-meaning New Yorkers are smitten with Ken Burns’ films and want to
believe that the violent
men about to become millionaires deserve it and are getting some
measure of justice. They are very wrong.
1 comment:
Except 1.) they DID have alibis; witnesses placed them in other sections of the park and based on the timeline there was NO way they could have made it in time to attack Meili.
2.) The police DID use dicey tactics. Most of the interrogations were done without their parents, including the police showing them the crime scene. If you honestly think the police didn't plant info or threaten them in that time I've got swampland in florida to sell you
3.) Given the lack of fingerprints hairs etc Reyes dna is telling
4.) NONE of their confessions match the facts in any real detail except for ways the police could have fed it
5.) Reyes confession is mostly accurate and IN LINE with a lot of what was said
In all likelihood the boys are deservedly rich and the officers involved all deserved to be fired and stripped of their pensions
Post a Comment