Judge weighs continued freedom for Adnan Syed in 'Serial' murder case

More than a decade after Adnan Syed's murder case attracted massive interest through the hit podcast ''Serial,'' a Baltimore judge was weighing testimony Wednesday for and against his request to reduce his sentence to the time he's served.

By LEA SKENE and BRIAN WITTE

The Associated Press
February 26, 2025 at 8:01PM
Adnan Syed, who was released from prison after his murder conviction was overturned, has been hired by Georgetown University as a program associate for the university’s Prisons and Justice Initiative. (Lloyd Fox/Baltimore Sun/Tribune News Service)

BALTIMORE — More than a decade after Adnan Syed’s murder case attracted massive interest through the hit podcast ‘’Serial,‘’ a Baltimore judge was weighing testimony Wednesday for and against his request to reduce his sentence to the time he’s served.

Judge Jennifer Schiffer heard from both prosecutors and Syed’s defense attorneys, who said he doesn’t pose a risk to public safety. Released from prison in 2022, Syed has been working at Georgetown University’s Prisons and Justice Initiative and caring for aging relatives, according to court filings. His father died in October.

Schiffer also heard from the victim’s family, who urged her uphold Syed’s sentence, before announcing that she’ll issue a written order, as required. ‘’It not my intention to leave everyone waiting for too long,‘’ she said.

Syed, now 43, was released after Baltimore prosecutors uncovered problems with the case and asked a judge to overturn his murder conviction in the 1999 slaying of his high school ex-girlfriend, Hae Min Lee, who was found strangled to death and buried in a makeshift grave.

But challenges from Lee’s family led to his conviction being reinstated by the Maryland Supreme Court for a procedural reason — so that the victim’s family could get proper notice of the hearing that freed him from prison.

During a hearing that lasted several hours on Wednesday, the court heard emotional testimony addressing all sides of the case, including from character witnesses who described Syed as having an even temper, strong communication skills, loving relationships and an impressive ability to remain hopeful during 23 years behind bars.

Eric Simmons, an exoneree who was incarcerated with Syed for many years, said he demonstrated a level of humanity and compassion from the very beginning of his prison term.

‘‘In a place that is referred to as the belly of the beast, Syed showed people, including myself, that you don’t have to act like an animal even though you’re incarcerated,‘’ he said.

The court then heard from the victim’s family and their attorney, who urged the judge to honor Syed’s conviction and uphold his sentence. They said the recent proceedings — starting in 2022 when they were shocked to learn of Syed’s abrupt release — have ripped open old wounds.

Lee’s younger brother, Young Lee, said he endured the pain of sitting through Syed’s original trial. When it was finally over, he said, the guilty verdict meant his sister ‘’could finally rest in peace.‘’ Learning of the state’s efforts to throw out Syed’s conviction left him in shock, wondering if prosecutors were still on the family’s side, he said through tears.

When he was finished speaking, the judge offered an apology: ‘’I am so sorry for what you’ve been through, and all I can say is that your words are not lost on me, and my heart goes out to you,‘’ she told him.

In a videotaped statement speaking in Korean, Lee’s mother questioned the integrity of the American criminal justice system that she believed had solved her daughter’s murder 25 years ago. She said she took comfort in Syed’s conviction even as she struggled to maintain her will to live.

‘‘Those who commit a crime should pay the price,‘’ she said.

Syed has maintained his innocence from the beginning, but many questions remain unanswered even after the ‘’Serial'' podcast combed through the evidence, reexamined legal arguments and interviewed witnesses. The series debuted in 2014 and drew millions of listeners who became armchair detectives.

Rife with legal twists and turns, the case has recently pitted criminal justice reform efforts against the rights of crime victims and their families, whose voices are often at odds with a growing movement to acknowledge and correct systemic racism, police misconduct and prosecutorial missteps.

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LEA SKENE and BRIAN WITTE

The Associated Press

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