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I hate women like this, we all like girls but once in a while you get the drama queen smart slvts that deserve death.
A man behind bars for nearly four years for a gang rape that never happened has been cleared after his accuser admitted she lied to make her friends feel sorry for her.
William McCaffrey hugged his lawyer after the same judge who had sentenced him to 20 years in prison threw out the case and apologised on Thursday.
"I've been waiting for this for a long time," the soft-spoken McCaffrey, 32, said outside a Manhattan court.
"I'm just glad it's over."
New DNA tests played a part, but his exoneration largely hinged on his accuser's recantation - a rarity after rape convictions, the head of a national prosecutors' group said.
State Supreme Court Justice Richard Carruthers called the case "a catastrophe" for both the criminal justice system and McCaffrey, who was in jail from his 2005 arrest to his release on $5,000 bail in September.
"I convey to you my personal regrets for having participated, though unknowingly, in the injustice," said Justice Carruthers, who had called the purported attack "disgusting" during McCaffrey's 2006 sentencing.
Biurny Peguero, then 22, originally said three men, led by McCaffrey, raped her at knifepoint after luring her into their car after a night out in 2005.
McCaffrey said she had agreed to go with them to a party, and they dropped her off unharmed after she changed her mind.
Peguero told her story to a grand jury, took the stand again McCaffery's trial and said at his 2006 sentencing that the "tragedy changed my life forever".
He was convicted of charges including rape and kidnapping and got a 20-year prison term. No one else was convicted.
Defence lawyer Glenn Garber of the Exoneration Initiative, a New York-based group that provides free legal help challenging convictions, later persuaded prosecutors to use new technology to retest DNA samples from an apparent bite mark on Peguero's arm.
The initial tests were inconclusive. The new ones showed the genetic material not only wasn't McCaffrey's but came from at least two women, apparently friends of Peguero's who fought with her.
Separately, Peguero confessed her lie to a priest and then to authorities this year. She claimed she was raped because she wanted her friends "to feel badly" for her, and then was afraid to back down from her story as the case continued, prosecutors said in court filings this fall.
A man behind bars for nearly four years for a gang rape that never happened has been cleared after his accuser admitted she lied to make her friends feel sorry for her.
William McCaffrey hugged his lawyer after the same judge who had sentenced him to 20 years in prison threw out the case and apologised on Thursday.
"I've been waiting for this for a long time," the soft-spoken McCaffrey, 32, said outside a Manhattan court.
"I'm just glad it's over."
New DNA tests played a part, but his exoneration largely hinged on his accuser's recantation - a rarity after rape convictions, the head of a national prosecutors' group said.
State Supreme Court Justice Richard Carruthers called the case "a catastrophe" for both the criminal justice system and McCaffrey, who was in jail from his 2005 arrest to his release on $5,000 bail in September.
"I convey to you my personal regrets for having participated, though unknowingly, in the injustice," said Justice Carruthers, who had called the purported attack "disgusting" during McCaffrey's 2006 sentencing.
Biurny Peguero, then 22, originally said three men, led by McCaffrey, raped her at knifepoint after luring her into their car after a night out in 2005.
McCaffrey said she had agreed to go with them to a party, and they dropped her off unharmed after she changed her mind.
Peguero told her story to a grand jury, took the stand again McCaffery's trial and said at his 2006 sentencing that the "tragedy changed my life forever".
He was convicted of charges including rape and kidnapping and got a 20-year prison term. No one else was convicted.
Defence lawyer Glenn Garber of the Exoneration Initiative, a New York-based group that provides free legal help challenging convictions, later persuaded prosecutors to use new technology to retest DNA samples from an apparent bite mark on Peguero's arm.
The initial tests were inconclusive. The new ones showed the genetic material not only wasn't McCaffrey's but came from at least two women, apparently friends of Peguero's who fought with her.
Separately, Peguero confessed her lie to a priest and then to authorities this year. She claimed she was raped because she wanted her friends "to feel badly" for her, and then was afraid to back down from her story as the case continued, prosecutors said in court filings this fall.