Linda Fairstein has been dropped by her publisher as the fallout continues for the former Central Park Five prosecutor over the wrongful conviction of five teens in the 1989 rape and beating of a female jogger.

On Friday, Dutton spokeswoman Amanda Walker confirmed a statement that the publisher’s customer service line has been giving to inquiring callers, saying that it had “terminated its relationship” with the bestselling crime novelist. The publicist declined further comment.

Fairstein’s most recent book, Blood Oath, came out in March. Her other books, many featuring the sexual crimes prosecutor Alex Cooper, include Deadfall, Killer Look and Devil’s Bridge.

There has been renewed outcry over Fairstein’s role in the racially divisive case following the release last month of Netflix’s When They See Us, a miniseries directed by Ava DuVernay that dramatizes the events surrounding the trial.

Fairstein had already resigned from at least two not-for-profit boards as backlash intensified and a #CancelLindaFairstein movement spread on social media.

Last year, the Mystery Writers of America took the rare step of withdrawing a lifetime achievement after other authors protested, citing Fairstein’s role in the Central Park case.

Linda Fairstein, district attorney Robert Morgenthau and Ellen Levin, whose daughter was murdered in 1986, appear at a news conference in 1988. Photograph: Charles Wenzelberg/AP

Fairstein was the top Manhattan sexual crimes prosecutor when five black and Latino teenagers were charged with the attack on the white jogger, which became a symbol of the city’s soaring crime in the late 1980s. Donald Trump, then known as a real estate developer, took out full-page newspaper ads calling for the death penalty.

The teens said their confessions were coerced and their convictions were overturned in 2002 after convicted murderer and serial rapist Matias Reyes confessed to committing the crime alone. DNA linked him to it.

Fairstein observed the boys’ 1989 interrogation, conducted by another prosecutor and police. She didn’t personally try the case.

Since its collapse, she has denied the teens were coerced and has defended authorities’ conduct in the case, explored in a 2013 documentary by Ken Burns. The city reached a roughly $41m settlement with the five the next year, while not admitting any wrongdoing.