The Central Park Five — five innocent teenagers convicted, then cleared by the real rapist
In New York City in 1989, five Black and Latino teenagers — Antron McCray, Kevin Richardson, Yusef Salaam, Raymond Santana, and Korey Wise, then aged fourteen to sixteen — were wrongly convicted of the brutal assault and rape of a jogger in Central Park, and were exonerated in 2002 after serial rapist Matias Reyes confessed and DNA confirmed that he, acting alone, was the attacker. The convictions rested almost entirely on videotaped statements the boys gave after long, unrecorded interrogations; those statements contradicted one another and the physical evidence, and no forensic evidence ever connected any of the five to the crime. The case is now studied as a definitive example of how coerced juvenile confessions, amplified by public and political pressure, can override exculpatory evidence and convict the innocent.
The outcome is not in dispute. On December 19, 2002, after a reinvestigation by Manhattan District Attorney Robert Morgenthau, Justice Charles J. Tejada of the New York Supreme Court vacated all convictions. By then four had already completed sentences of roughly six to eight years in juvenile custody, and Korey Wise — the only one tried and sentenced as an adult, because he was sixteen — had served the longest, approximately thirteen years, and was released that same year.
In 2003 the five sued the City of New York for malicious prosecution and civil-rights violations. The city settled in 2014 for approximately 41 million dollars — roughly one million dollars for each year of wrongful incarceration: about 7.1 million dollars each to McCray, Richardson, Salaam, and Santana, and about 12.25 million dollars to Wise. The city admitted no wrongdoing.
This dossier centers the five men as the wronged parties. The system failures — deceptive interrogation of children, confessions credited over forensic exclusion, a rush to judgment under media scrutiny, and reluctance to revisit a closed case — are the mechanism of the wrong. Matias Reyes is named as the perpetrator only because the record, anchored by his confession and a DNA match of roughly one in six billion, establishes it.