The Daily Telegraph

Judge overturns murder conviction in Serial case

- By Our Foreign Staff

A US judge yesterday threw out the conviction of a man who has served over 20 years in prison for his ex-girlfriend’s murder – a case that received worldwide attention thanks to the hit podcast Serial.

Baltimore City Circuit Court Judge Melissa Phinn vacated the case against Adnan Syed, 42, who has been serving a life sentence since 2000 for the 1999 murder of Hae Min Lee.

Judge Phinn ordered Syed, who appeared in court wearing a white shirt and a white skullcap, immediatel­y released “in the interests of justice and fairness”.

Lee’s body was found buried in February 1999 in a shallow grave in the woods of Baltimore, Maryland. The 18-year-old had been strangled.

Syed has steadfastl­y maintained his innocence, but his multiple appeals had been denied, including by the US Supreme Court which declined in 2019 to hear his case.

In a surprise move last week, the Baltimore City state’s attorney, Marilyn Mosby, announced that she had asked a judge to vacate Syed’s conviction while a further investigat­ion is carried out.

Assistant state’s attorney Becky Feldman

told the judge yesterday that the decision was prompted by the discovery of new informatio­n regarding two alternativ­e suspects and the unreliabil­ity of cell phone data used to convict Syed.

“The state has lost confidence in the integrity of his conviction,” Ms Feldman said. “We need to make sure we hold the correct person accountabl­e.

“We will be continuing our investigat­ion,” she added, while promising to “do everything we can to bring justice to the Lee family”.

Prosecutor­s have 30 days to either bring new charges or dismiss the case.

Syed’s case earned worldwide attention when it was taken up by Serial,a weekly podcast that saw a US journalist revisit his conviction and cast doubt on his guilt.

His case has also been the subject of a four-part HBO documentar­y called The Case Against Adnan Syed.

Syed and Lee were high school students and children from immigrant families – he Pakistani, she South Korean – who had concealed their relationsh­ip from their conservati­ve parents.

Prosecutor­s said during the trial that Syed was a scorned lover who felt humiliated after Lee broke up with him.

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