Crime & Safety
Adnan Syed, Focus of 'Serial' Podcast, Wins Murder Appeal
The Maryland Special Court of Appeals will allow a circuit court to consider an alibi witness and new trial request for Syed.

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A Baltimore man serving a life sentence for murder β whose case was scrutinized on the popular βSerialβ podcast β can argue for a new trial based on an alibi witness who hasnβt been heard in court previouly.
An attorney for Adnan Syed, 34, persuaded the Maryland Court of Special Appeals, which considered his appeal, to send his case back to circuit court.
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Syed was convicted of strangling his former high school girlfriend in 1999 after the couple broke up and she began dating someone else. Syed has been in prison since 2000.
He has maintained his innocence throughout his incarceration. Following Mondayβs ruling, Syedβs attorney will seek to call an alibi witness who has never before testified and include her testimony in his request for a new trial, reports NBC Washington.
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Syedβs conviction and life sentence was the focus of βSerial,ββ a podcast from the creators of βThis American Lifeβ on public radio, and is hosted by former Baltimore Sun reporter Sarah Koenig. The series on Syed launched in October and finished in December 2014.
After two failed attempts to appeal his sentence, the Court of Special Appeals agreed in February to hear Syedβs case.
In court papers, the Sun reports that Syedβs current attorney, C. Justin Brown, argued that his clientβs attorney in 2000, M. Christina Gutierrez, failed to investigate Asia McClain as an alibi witness who could have cleared Syed, a failure in her representation. The appeal also says Gutierrez didnβt explore a plea deal. Guitierrez died in 2003.
Syed was convicted of strangling his ex-girlfriend Hae Min Lee in 1999. His appeal effort was helped this time by a written statement from McClain, who says Syed was with her when Lee died. Gutierrez never asked McClain to testify in his trial, attorneys now say.
Defense attorneys asked the appeals court to give Syed a new trial, according to an interview with PBS News Hour.
Hereβs how Koenig describes whatβs next in the case, on the Serial website:
β¦ a panel of judges will hear oral arguments from Adnanβs side, and also from the state. Neither side can bring in new evidence or witnesses. Then the court will either deny or grant Adnan further relief. That relief could be a whole new trial in the circuit court, or it could be that the circuit court just has to allow Adnan to present new evidence, such as Asia McClainβs testimony.
No matter what the Court of Special Appeals rules, itβs quite possible the whole megillah ends up in Marylandβs highest court, the Court of Appeals. Because if this current panel of judges grants Adnan relief, the state is likely to appeal to the highest court; and likewise, if it denies Adnan relief, Adnanβs attorney will probably do the same. So itβs bound to grind on for a long while yet.
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