A ‘Central Park Five’ Survivor’s Tear-Filled Plea: ‘Trump Put a Bounty On Our Heads’

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A ‘Central Park Five’ Survivor’s Tear-Filled Plea:
‘Trump Put a Bounty On Our Heads’


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LOS ANGELES, California—The five men who were arrested as teenagers, falsely convicted, sentenced to years in prison, and eventually exonerated for the rape and assault of a white jogger in Central Park in 1989, have never been keen on the name “Central Park Five.”

They avoid the phrase when possible.

It was not a moniker they chose, but one given to them by the press:

* by outlets that regularly printed their legal names,


* though all five were underage;

* by tabloids that often failed to write “allegedly” when describing their charges;

* by papers that ran full-page ads from a playboy real estate developer with latent political ambitions, attacking them in huge black font: “BRING BACK THE DEATH PENALTY.”

Friday afternoon, at the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California’s 25th Annual Luncheon, where the five men were being honored, much care was taken to orient the celebration away from that phrase, and toward the five people it had obscured: Korey Wise, Antron McCray, Yusef Salaam, Kevin Richardson, and Raymond Santana.


As actor Michael B. Jordan introduced the five honorees, he retold the famous story for the crowd. “It was East Coast news, but a familiar story to anyone growing up black in America,” Jordan said. “We didn’t know their names, but we knew their ages: 15, 14, 16—the same ages we were. They could be us.”

“In 1989, police found the body of a young white woman in Central Park, covered in blood, and left for dead after a sexual assault. Weeks later, Trisha Meili awakened from a coma. She was unable to recall her attack. But the police had already been rounding up suspects, questioning black and brown teenagers who had been in Central Park that night. They focused their interrogation tactics on five boys in particular. Four of those teenagers did not know each other when they were arrested. I repeat, four of those boys did not know each other when they were arrested.”

The men had come to receive the inaugural Roger Baldwin Courage Award, and to accept another on behalf of director Ava DuVernay, whose recent Netflix series When They See Us retold their decades-long legal battle. DuVernay had won the ACLU’s annual Social Responsibility in Media Award—an irony lost on no one, least of all Yusef Salaam. When Salaam took the stage to accept her award, he introduced himself with a new name: “I am one of the Exonerated Five.”

“After decades of being known as the Central Park Five, we thank Ava for acknowledging our humanity and telling our story with honesty and factual representation,” Salaam said, during his speech accepting her award. “We had to struggle to break the label that the media gave us. We stumbled forward, falling on our face at times.”

It was almost as if they were trying to find
someone from the darkest enclaves of society to
come into our homes, drag us from our beds, and

hang us from trees in Central Park.


During his speech, Salaam recalled when the media had been less humane: when columnists called them a “wolf pack,” and when Pat Buchanan insisted that if only “the eldest of that wolf pack were tried, convicted and hanged in Central Park, by June 1, and the 13- and 14-year-olds were stripped, horsewhipped, and sent to prison, the park might soon be safe again for women.”

Salaam lingered on the full-page ad taken out by the man currently occupying the White House.

“Korey [Wise] said it so well,” Salaam said. “He said, when Donald Trump took out that full-page ad, and put them in all of New York City’s newspapers, calling for our execution, he placed a bounty on our head.”

“They had published our names, our phone numbers, and our addresses in New York City’s newspapers. Imagine the horror of that. Just step backwards once, to the 1950s—we would become modern-day Emmett Tills. It was almost as if they were trying to find someone from the darkest enclaves of society to come into our homes, drag us from our beds, and hang us from trees in Central Park.”

As he spoke, Salaam took long pauses. At one point, an aide emerged with a fistful of tissues. “I’m not ashamed to cry in front of you,” he said. “These are tears of pain. These are tears of joy. We are the heroes of this story.”


https://www.thedailybeast.com/micha...ld-trump-put-a-bounty-on-our-heads?ref=scroll
 

New Netflix series brings attention to Trump's call for
death penalty in 1989 during Central Park Five case



By Devan Cole, CNN
Fri June 7, 2019

Washington (CNN)A recently released Netflix series about the Central Park Five brings attention to Donald Trump's controversial role in pushing for the death penalty in 1989. That push came after group of five teenagers were accused and wrongfully convicted of beating and raping a woman in New York City.

The new series, "When They See Us," highlights the police and prosecutorial abuse experienced by the teens in the case, along with the struggles they face as adults. The series includes a reference to Trump's comments about the case.

In an interview with Larry King in 1989 from CNN's archives, Trump, then a real estate and business mogul, defended his purchasing of full-page ads that ran in several New York City newspapers that read in all caps,"BRING BACK THE DEATH PENALTY. BRING BACK OUR POLICE!"

"I don't see anything inciteful, I am strongly in favor of the death penalty," Trump told King. "I am also in favor of bringing back police forces that can do something instead of just turning their back because every quality lawyer that represents people that are trouble said the first thing they do is start shouting police brutality,
etc."


Trump also told King that when he was asked by a reporter about his views toward the five teenage boys, he responded, "'Of course I hate these people and let's all hate these people because maybe hate is what we need if we're gonna get something done.'"

The group of five teenagers of color were later exonerated in 2002, after another man confessed to the crime and DNA evidence backed up his confession.
In October 2016, then-candidate Trump stood by his actions during the time of the case, telling CNN, "They admitted they were guilty."


The teenagers initially confessed to the crime, but later recanted saying that they were coerced.
In 2014, Trump wrote in an op-ed in the New York Daily News that New York City's $41 million settlement with the five men was "a disgrace." CNN's Lisa Respers France, Andrew Kaczynski and Jon Sarlin contributed to this report.
 
It reminded me of the response to 9/11 or race riots where the white community holds accountable everybody for the acts of one person. You have to be careful with cross racial attacks or crimes because it can lead to somebody else being held accountable. If you are that thirsty, attack a black jogger.

I also don't like women walk around in tights when they jog or the gym, it is equivalent to me walking with a sixpack abs with a big bulge sticking out, getting them worked up. The lack of genitalia is erotic to men even though nothing is sticking out. Especially, if they are in shape, and you see the front is flat. Just because a camel toe is not being exposed does not mean anything. It should be covered up the same way as a man would do by wearing loose clothes.

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