Central Park Five: Innocence Lost to Injustice
How five teenagers became victims of a wrongful conviction that took 13 years to overturn

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Quick Facts
How five teenagers became victims of a wrongful conviction that took 13 years to overturn

Quick Facts
On April 19, 1989, investment banker Trisha Meili went jogging in Central Park, Manhattan, and never returned home that night. She was found severely beaten, raped, and left in a coma—dragged into the bushes where she had been attacked. The crime would shock New York City and trigger one of the most infamous wrongful conviction cases in American legal history.
The attack occurred during the crack epidemic, when crime in New York City was at its peak. That evening, dozens of teenagers entered Central Park, with reports of muggings and assaults on multiple victims, including male jogger John Loughlin. Within hours, five youths were arrested: Antron McCray (15), Kevin Richardson (14), Yusef Salaam (15), Raymond Santana (14), and Korey Wise (16). All were Black or Latino, part of a larger group of roughly 33 youths roaming the park.
What followed was a cascade of failures by the criminal justice system. Four of the five confessed to police after interrogations lasting 14 to 30 hours—confessions they would later recant, claiming coercion. The confessions were riddled with inconsistencies, contradicting each other and conflicting with physical evidence. Critically, DNA analysis of semen recovered from the victim matched none of the five defendants. No physical evidence—no blood on clothing, no forensic link—connected any of them to Meili's attack.
The Central Park Attack
A 28-year-old female jogger is raped and brutally attacked in Central Park, New York. Five young men are arrested the same night.
False Confessions Coerced
After 28+ hours of interrogation without parents present, all five boys confess. The confessions are filled with factual errors and contradictions.
Conviction of the Five
Antron McCray, Kevin Richardson, Yusef Salaam, Raymond Santana, and Korey Wise are all convicted of rape and assault despite lack of physical evidence.
The True Perpetrator Confesses
Matias Reyes, imprisoned for other rapes and murders, confesses that he alone was responsible for the Central Park attack. His DNA matches the evidence perfectly.
All Five Exonerated
Based on Matias Reyes' confession and DNA evidence, the Manhattan District Attorney exonerates all five men. They had each served between 6 and 13 years.
Yet in 1990, after a jury deliberated for 10 days, all five were convicted of assault and rape. A sixth defendant, Steven Lopez, had charges dropped after pleading guilty to assaulting John Loughlin. The five served between 7 and 13 years in prison and youth facilities.
Media coverage had been relentless and sensationalized. The teenagers were portrayed as a "wolf pack" engaged in "wilding"—language that dehumanized them and fueled public hysteria. The narrative of five guilty youths became cemented in the public mind, despite the absence of credible evidence.
The truth emerged in 2002 when serial rapist Matias Reyes confessed to attacking Meili alone. His DNA matched the semen found at the crime scene. Reyes had also attacked another woman in Central Park just two days earlier, on April 17, 1989, sustaining a distinctive chin wound requiring stitches. Hospital records could have identified him at the time, but the connection was never made. Reyes would later confess to multiple assaults, including the 1989 rape and murder of a pregnant woman.
The exoneration of the Central Park Five came too late to recover their lost years. The five men—now known as the Exonerated Five—had already served their sentences. In 2014, they settled a wrongful conviction lawsuit against New York City for $41 million, acknowledging the grave injustice they had suffered.
Even after exoneration, some officials refused to accept the verdict. The lead prosecutor controversially called Reyes an "unindicted co-ejaculator," suggesting the five were still somehow involved—a claim contradicted by DNA and Reyes's solo confession.
Historic Compensation
New York City settles and pays $41 million in compensation to the five men—approximately $1 million for each year spent in prison.
Netflix Revives the Case
The miniseries 'When They See Us' directed by Ava DuVernay causes millions to rediscover the case and focuses attention on justice system racism and false confessions.
The case stands as a stark reminder of how racial bias, coercive interrogation, media sensationalism, and investigative failures can destroy innocent lives. Five teenagers, guilty of nothing but being in the wrong place at the wrong time, paid a devastating price for a broken system.
**Sources:** https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_Park_jogger_case https://ethicsunwrapped.utexas.edu/case-study/the-central-park-five https://innocenceproject.org/news/central-park-five-tragedy-reframed-in-netflix-series-when-they-see-us-2/ https://www.hawaiiinnocenceproject.org/false-confessions