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- <text id=90TT2257>
- <title>
- Aug. 27, 1990: Guilty, Guilty, Guilty
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Aug. 27, 1990 Talk Of War
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 40
- Guilty, Guilty, Guilty
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Three defendants in the notorious Central Park Jogger case are
- convicted of rape but not attempted murder
- </p>
- <p> Jurors on the case of three black youths charged with raping
- and beating the young woman known as the Central Park Jogger
- had spun the deliberations out for 10 days. It was enough to
- make the prosecution fret about the outcome of its trial in
- what prosecutor Elizabeth Lederer called "one of the most
- vicious and brutal crimes in the history of New York." And
- enough to inspire a futile defense motion for a mistrial on the
- ground that jurors as fatigued as these could not arrive at a
- fair verdict. Coming after a two-month-long trial conducted in
- Manhattan amid sputtering racial tensions, the unexpectedly
- long pause provoked the tabloid New York Post to fill its front
- page with a boldface question that probably spoke for a great
- many New Yorkers: WHERE'S THE VERDICT?
- </p>
- <p> When at last the jury of 10 men and two women handed it up
- at 6:50 p.m. Saturday, it triggered emotional outbursts in the
- jam-packed state supreme court. Relatives of the defendants
- cheered at the first words of "not guilty" but grew solemn as
- a stream of guilty verdicts followed. The jury reached
- identical verdicts on each of the three defendants alleged to
- have been part of a band of perhaps 30 youths whose maraudings
- on the night of April 19, 1989, reached a hideous climax in the
- raping and beating of a 5-ft. 5-in., 100-lb. 30-year-old
- investment banker accosted while on one of her nightly runs.
- </p>
- <p> Antron McCray, 16, Raymond Santana, 15, and Yusef Salaam,
- 16, were found not guilty of attempted murder and sodomy but
- guilty of all the other major charges--rape, assault and
- riot. Salaam had given the trial its most surprising twist when
- he became the only defendant to take the stand; he was also the
- only one of six youths indicted in the case who did not sign
- a written confession or make incriminating admissions on
- videotape. Each of the three, as a youthful offender, faces a
- prison term of five to 10 years.
- </p>
- <p> As jury foreman Earle Fisher read the verdicts, the sitting
- defendants displayed little emotion except for a couple of
- sighs and conspicuous slumping. But there were shocked
- mutterings of "Oh, my God!" and head shaking among families and
- friends. The jogger herself made only one appearance at the
- trial, testifying for 12 minutes and telling jurors she
- remembered nothing about what had happened to her. Doctors
- considered it "miraculous" that she recovered at all from the
- bashings with a rock, a brick and a 12-in. metal pipe. Indeed,
- her assailants had left her for dead, naked in a mud puddle and
- gagged with her bloody shirt. When found, her skull badly
- fractured, she had lost two-thirds of her blood, had a body
- temperature of only 80 degrees and, doctors said, seemed close
- to death. Though the victim returned to work on Wall Street
- this year, she suffers a visibly scarred face as well as
- lingering disabilities--double vision, a lost sense of smell,
- an unsteady gait from a damaged sense of balance.
- </p>
- <p> The courtroom had barely emptied before the postmortems
- began. Two jurors confided that the attempted-murder charge
- gave the panel the most trouble, leading to "shouting and
- screaming." One juror, they said, had been holding out for a
- not-guilty verdict on the rape and first-degree-assault charges
- until the very last phase of the deliberations. Roy Innis,
- director of the Congress of Racial Equality, commended the
- verdicts as "intelligent," adding that it was "reasonable" that
- the defendants were not found guilty of attempted murder,
- since they had shown no premeditation. Speaking through a
- friend, the jogger refused comment on the ground that other
- defendants are still awaiting trial.
- </p>
- <p>By Frank Trippett. Reported by Barbara Goldberg/New York.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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