Central Park 5 Part 2
Central Park
Five Part 2.
Matias Reyes
He was already serving 33.5-year sentence for an unrelated
crime when he admitted to being behind the Central Park Jogger case.
A first-generation Puerto Rican, Matias Reyes was living out
of his van when he attacked Meili. A Harlem bodega clerk by day, Reyes was a
serial rapist by night. He was eventually convicted of an unrelated murder, and
while serving life in prison, confessed to the rape of Meili, exonerating the
Central Park Five after some of them had served over a decade behind bars.
Netflix’s When They See Us docuseries chronicles how the
standardization of DNA evidence and the confession of Matias Reyes paved the
way for the 2002 exoneration of those five boys.
When asked why he finally came clean, Reyes responded, “It
was the right thing to do.”
The life of Matias Reyes was fraught with trauma from the
very beginning. According to an interview between him and a prison
psychologist, he was born in Puerto Rico in 1971, and he moved to New York City
with his mother as an infant.
He was then allegedly sold to his father for $400 when he
was two years old. When he was seven, he claimed two older kids sexually
molested him and threw him into a river.
“Even as a child growing up in the school system, he
exhibited violent behaviour,” said Richard Siracusa, Reyes’ attorney. “To the
average person, he would seem perfectly normal, but he was far from normal.”
Matias Reyes was barely 17 years old when he first attempted
to rape someone. He was talked out of it by his 27-year-old target, Jackie
Herbach, who he was holding at knifepoint. His next known rape attempt fell on
April 17, 1989 — two days before Trisha Meili’s fateful jog — and in the same
park.
Reyes attacked an unsuspecting 26-year-old woman and beat
her into a prone position to sexually assault her, but he fled when a passerby
spotted him. Then, he attacked Meili that April night in 1989.
The Central Park Five, meanwhile, were brought to two
separate trials that culminated in their imprisonment in October 1990.
Determined to lay low as a result of the enormous spectacle
his attack on Meili had caused, Reyes didn’t assault anyone again until June
when he resumed his spree with a vengeance.
This was his only known murder victim, a 24-year-old mother
of three named Lourdes Gonzalez. Reyes invaded her apartment, forced her into
the bedroom, and shut the door behind them. She was pregnant when he raped her
and stabbed her in the belly.
The woman’s three children listened to the entire ordeal
through the bedroom door before Reyes fled. Lourdes called 911 but died on the
way to the elevator. She had been stabbed nine times, once in the face. One of
her sons later recalled hearing Reyes say:
“I’ll take your eyes or your kids.”
On August 5 of that year, four months after he assaulted
Meili, Reyes attacked a woman known only as “Meg” by invading her apartment on
East 91st Street. Fortunately, she managed to escape to the building lobby in
nothing but a towel and receive help.
At last, Matias Reyes was apprehended after two Good
Samaritans held him down in the hallway as they waited for the police.
While booked for the attempted rape and murder of “Meg,”
Matias Reyes confessed to the murder of Lourdes Gonzalez.
According to the detective who interrogated him for six
hours, Mike Sheehan, Reyes denied raping Gonzalez and instead chillingly
claimed that “We made love.” Later, two other victims came forward and
confirmed that Reyes had stabbed them superficially in the face before letting
them go.
Though Sheehan had more than 20 years of homicide interviews
under his belt by this point, he described Reyes as one of the “top five
lunatics” he ever sat across from.
Reyes was offered a plea bargain of 33.5 years to life with
parole eligibility in December 2002, which he accepted. He was sentenced on
Nov. 7, 1991.
Miraculously, he met the Central Park Five’s Korey Wise
while incarcerated at two different prisons. They had even gotten into a fight
over a prison TV set once.
Though Reyes had kept silent about assaulting Meili during
his confession with Sheehan, it appeared as though his encounters with Wise had
nudged his conscience. Finally, after 12 years of harboring his secret — Reyes
provided investigators with the truth.
“I know it’s hard for people to understand, after 12 years
why a person would actually come forward to take responsibility for a crime,”
he said. “At first I was afraid, but at the end of the day I felt it was
definitely the right thing to do.”
Following Reyes’ confession in January 2002, his DNA was
tested against that of the semen collected at the scene. It was a match and
finally identified Meili’s attacker for good. Unfortunately, however, the
statute of limitations had expired on that crime, so he was never formally
charged with it.
With his confession and DNA, New York Supreme Court Justice
Charles J. Tejada exonerated the Central Park Five on Dec. 19, 2002. Because
they had all already served their sentences, Wise having spent the longest time
behind bars at 12 years, the only upside was having their criminal record
expunged.
Additionally, the Central Park Five successfully sued the city of New York for malicious prosecution, racial discrimination, and emotional distress for a $41 million settlement. bringing a just ending to the otherwise harrowing story of Matias Reyes and the Central Park Jogger case.
What is your thoughts of this? Leave a comment on what you think about the Central Park 4 and Reyes. Make sure to stay tuned for the next blog.
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