NYTimes Exiled from New York, his hometown, Mr. McCray was last seen in public
two decades ago as a skinny 16-year-old, practically drowning in a suit
that he wore to the Manhattan courthouse where he was tried on charges
that he was part of a mob that raped a jogger in Central Park and beat
her nearly to death in April 1989. In the television news footage, he
often held his mother’s hand as he walked past screaming demonstrators.
With four other Harlem boys, all of whom refused plea bargains, he was
convicted of attacking the jogger and sent to prison. More than a decade
later, the convictions of all five were overturned. Another man — a
serial rapist and killer who was unknown to any of the five — had
convincingly implicated himself as the sole attacker of the jogger. DNA
evidence backed his story.[....]
The film lays out the intricacies of the case, the sights and sounds of a
brittle era; it will be full of revelations for those who never knew
about the crime and how its life-bending effects were multiplied as the
wrong people were prosecuted while the right man continued to maim,
murder and rape on the Upper East Side.
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