Adnan Syed: Conviction overturned in Serial podcast murder case

2 years ago 18
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By Sam Cabral
BBC News, Washington

Image shows Adnan Syed leaving court in 2016Image source, Reuters

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Adnan Syed was convicted in 2000 of killing his ex-girlfriend

A judge has quashed a Baltimore man's murder conviction in a case that spawned hit true crime podcast Serial.

Adnan Syed was 19 when he was sentenced to life in prison for the death of his ex-girlfriend, Hae Min Lee, whose body was found buried in the woods in 1999.

Prosecutors last week asked the court to throw out his conviction, saying a year-long re-investigation had turned up two "alternative suspects".

Syed will be released into home detention.

Now 41, his shackles were taken off in the courtroom after Baltimore Circuit Judge Melissa Phinn vacated his 22-year conviction.

Monday's decision does not mean Syed is innocent. Judge Phinn has ordered a new trial.

A jury in 2000 found Syed guilty of premeditated murder, kidnapping, robbery and false imprisonment.

Prosecutors argued he was a scorned lover who strangled Lee, his classmate at Woodlawn High School, and - with the help of a friend - hid her body in Baltimore's Leakin Park.

Despite denying any involvement in her death, every appeal Syed has filed over the past two decades has been denied.

It was the 2014 podcast Serial that focused worldwide attention on the case and cast doubt on Syed's guilt. Episodes of the show have been downloaded more than 340m times. The case has also spawned other works, including a HBO docuseries in 2019.

The Baltimore State's Attorney's Office, which studied the case over the past year alongside Syed's latest defence attorney, said on Wednesday it lacked "confidence in the integrity of the conviction".

Prosecutors identified two new potential suspects - neither of whom has yet been named - that were known to police since the 1999 murder.

One of the two had previously threatened "to make her [Lee] disappear" or kill her. Lee's car was also found behind the home of one of the suspects, information not discovered until 2022, according to officials.

"After a nearly year-long investigation reviewing the facts of this case, Syed deserves a new trial where he is adequately represented and the latest evidence can be presented," lead prosecutor Marilyn Mosby said in a statement last week.

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