Podcasts

'Serial' releases new episode after Adnan Syed's murder conviction overturn

NPR host Sarah Koenig reports from the courtroom eight years after the podcast and 23 years after the crime.
By Meera Navlakha  on 
A man walks out of the court house surrounded by police and media.
Adnan Syed walks out of the the Baltimore Circuit Court after a judge vacated his murder conviction. Credit: JIM LO SCALZO/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

True crime podcast Serial(opens in a new tab) podcast has released a new episode(opens in a new tab) after a judge overturned the murder conviction of Adnan Syed, the subject of the famed podcast series.

The podcast, from the creators of This American Life, first aired eight years ago and quickly became a sensation. The 12-episode arc of the first season(opens in a new tab) examined a case from 1999, when Syed, then a Baltimore high school senior, was convicted(opens in a new tab) of the murder of fellow student Hae Min Lee.

Serial host Sarah Koenig was on the ground in Baltimore on Monday(opens in a new tab), where Judge Melissa M. Phinn of Baltimore City Circuit Court vacated the conviction. Prosecutors(opens in a new tab) (State's Attorney Marilyn Mosby and Sentencing Review Unit chief Becky Feldman) had filed a motion for the judge to overturn it(opens in a new tab) last Wednesday. After a year-long investigation, Feldman and Syed's defense team (led by Erica J. Suter of the Office of the Public Defender and the University of Baltimore's Innocence Project), found evidence pointing to "alternative suspects."

According to the New York Times, Phinn declared prosecutors had failed to hand over existing evidence and had found new evidence that could have affected the outcome of Syed's trial. Prosecutors said, "The state no longer has confidence in the integrity of the conviction." They now reportedly have 30 days to decide to proceed with a new trial or not.

The much-awaited reversal of his conviction comes after Syed spent 23 years in prison — serving a life sentence — for a crime he said he did not commit.

The Innocence Project, an organization working to prevent wrongful convictions, welcomed the news in a statement(opens in a new tab), writing, "The integrity of the legal system requires accountability for not only Mr. Syed’s wrongful conviction but also the pain the State’s unlawful conduct caused to Hae Min Lee’s family."

The latest episode(opens in a new tab), running at around 16 minutes, features recordings from inside and outside the courtroom, including endless cheers from Syed's supporters. Koenig reports from the scene, also explaining the legal history of the conviction, the state's motion, and Syed's journey.

"I do know that the chances of the State ever trying to prosecute Adnan again are remote at best."
- Sarah Koenig

"Adnan's case was a mess. Is a mess. That’s pretty much where we were when we stopped reporting in 2014," says Keonig in the episode.

"Baltimore City Police have told the prosecutor’s office they’re going to put someone back on the case. Someone will try to talk to the two suspects Becky [Feldman] identified in the motion. I have zero predictions about what would come of that. But I do know that the chances of the State ever trying to prosecute Adnan again are remote at best."

Serial's new episode is now streaming Apple Podcasts(opens in a new tab), Google Podcasts(opens in a new tab), Spotify(opens in a new tab), Pandora or wherever you listen to podcasts.(opens in a new tab)

Meera is a Culture Reporter at Mashable, joining the UK team in 2021. She writes about digital culture, mental health, big tech, entertainment, and more. Her work has also been published in The New York Times, Vice, Vogue India, and others.


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