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(AP) - The creator of a true-crime podcast that helped free a Maryland man imprisoned for two decades said Tuesday that she feels a mix of emotions over how long it took authorities to act on evidence that’s long been available.
The judge’s
order to release Adnan Syed and vacate his murder conviction Monday came after
the local prosecutor started a unit to review sentencing and a new Maryland law
relating to juvenile sentencing provided a mechanism for reexamining the case,
all after the “Serial” podcast in 2014 turned the details of the case into an
obsession for countless amateur sleuths.
Baltimore
State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby immediately applauded the judge’s decision as a
victory for justice, but Syed’s win came as a bittersweet reminder to those who
had been aware of the gaps in the case for years. In a new episode of “Serial”
released Tuesday, host Sarah Koenig noted that most or all of the evidence
cited in prosecutors’ motion to overturn the conviction was available since
1999.
“Yesterday, there was a lot of talk about
fairness, but most of what the state put in that motion to vacate, all the
actual evidence, was either known or knowable to cops and prosecutors back in
1999,” Koenig said. “So even on a day when the government publicly recognizes
its own mistakes, it’s hard to feel cheered about a triumph of fairness. Because
we’ve built a system that takes more than 20 years to self-correct. And that’s
just this one case.”
Koenig
argued that the case against Syed involved “just about every chronic problem”
in the system, including unreliable witness testimony and evidence that was
never shared with Syed’s defense team.
On Monday,
Circuit Court Judge Melissa Phinn in Baltimore ordered Syed’s release after
overturning his conviction for the 1999 murder of high school student Hae Min
Lee, Syed’s ex-girlfriend. Syed, 41, has always maintained his innocence but in
2019 the state’s highest court had rejected his appeal for a new trial.
At the
behest of prosecutors who said they had recently uncovered new evidence, Phinn
ruled that the state violated its legal obligation to share evidence that could
have bolstered Syed’s defense. The judge said the state must decide whether to
seek a new trial date or dismiss the case within 30 days.
Mosby, who
entered office in 2015, filed a motion last week to vacate Syed’s conviction, a
filing that Koenig described as a “firework” coming from the same office that
asked a jury to convict Syed years ago.
In the
“Serial” episode posted Tuesday, Koenig broke down prosecutors’ motion and
described how some evidence they cited was featured in the podcast, while other
evidence – including the evidence of other possible suspects – became public
more recently.
Key to
Monday’s outcome was evidence uncovered by a unit that Mosby’s office launched
to reexamine cases in which juvenile defendants were given life sentences. That
worked in tandem with a 2021 Maryland law that enables someone convicted as a
juvenile to seek a reduced sentence after serving at least 20 years. Syed was
17 when Lee was killed.
Prosecutor
Becky Feldman led the unit and found notes written by one of her predecessors
describing two phone calls in which people gave them information before Syed’s
trial about someone with a motive to harm Lee. That information wasn’t given to
the defense at the time, according prosecutors, an omission that Phinn said
violated Syed’s rights.
Koenig noted
that she knew who these two new potential suspects were – and so did detectives
who investigated Syed two decades ago – but declined to name them because they
haven’t been charged.
“One of (the
suspects) was investigated at the time, submitted to a couple of polygraphs.
The other was investigated also, but not with much vigor, as far as I can
tell,” she said.
Other
supporting evidence on the unreliability of a key witness and questions about
cellphone data was previously featured on “Serial,” Koenig said.
“If you’ve
listened to our show you probably remember all of this,” Koenig said.
Koenig said
the show delved into questions about cellphone data that prosecutors used to
bolster the witness’s testimony. But she acknowledged that expert analysis used
by prosecutors to arrive at their current motion wasn’t fully explored on the
show.
“We didn’t get
to the bottom of this incoming call problem back when we were reporting this
story,” she said.
In the years
since “Serial” chronicled Syed’s case and transformed the true-crime genre, a
number of breakthroughs have come in other cases examined by like-minded
podcasters.
In Sydney,
Australia, last month, a 74-year-old man was convicted of killing his wife in
1982, charges brought after police launched a renewed investigation based on a
circumstantial case made against him in the popular podcast “The Teacher’s
Pet.”
A lengthy
murder trial is also underway in Salinas, California, against a man for the
death of Kirstin Smart, a freshman who vanished from California Polytechnic
State University in San Luis Obispo in 1996. The sheriff has said the “Your Own
Backyard” podcast helped produce new information and prompted witnesses to
speak with detectives.
And the
podcast “In the Dark” obtained a recorded recantation from a jailhouse
informant that, together with an analysis of racial bias by a Mississippi
prosecutor in jury selection, preceded the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2019 decision
to overturn the murder conviction and death sentence of Curtis Flowers.
Flowers, a Black man, had been convicted in the shooting death of four people
in a furniture store in 1996. Mississippi prosecutors later dropped charges
against him.
Associated
Press Writer Mark Scolforo in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, contributed to this
report.
