Baltimore | A prosecutor asks to overturn the verdict at the heart of the Serial podcast

(Washington) A US prosecutor on Wednesday asked to overturn the conviction of a man detained for more than 20 years for the murder of his ex-girlfriend, which he has always denied, an unexpected twist in a case at the heart of the hit podcast Serial.

Posted yesterday at 4:33 p.m.

The prosecutor for the city of Baltimore, on the east coast of the United States, explained that she doubted the guilt of Adnan Syed, 42, following discovering the existence of “two alternative suspects”, his services said in a press release. .

In an appeal sent to a magistrate who will have the last word, Marilyn Mosby also asked for the release of the condemned man. “To keep Mr. Syed in detention while we continue our investigation, when we no longer have confidence in the conclusions of the first trial, would be unfair”, she pleaded.

This intervention revives the case opened in 1999 when the body of Hae Min Lee, an 18-year-old girl, was found half-buried in a wood in Baltimore.

A year later, her ex-boyfriend Adnan Syed was sentenced to life imprisonment. According to the prosecution, he had not supported that she left him for another and had strangled her. He has always proclaimed his innocence, claiming to be the victim of anti-Muslim prejudice.

In 2014, a team of journalists conducted a counter-investigation, told in twelve episodes in the first season of Serial. A precursor to the era of podcasts, this radio soap opera has, according to its producers, been downloaded more than 300 million times. It also inspired an HBO documentary.

The investigation by journalists from Serial had shown that Adnan Syed’s lawyer had neglected a mobile phone expertise favorable to the accused, as well as the testimony of a young girl who offered him a potential alibi.

Their work led to a reopening of the case and in March 2018, a Maryland appeals court ordered a new trial, finding that the lawyer had provided “ineffective assistance” to her client.

In March 2019, the Supreme Court of Maryland had recognized that the lawyer had been wrong not to present certain elements, but had estimated that “given the totality of the evidence”, the verdict would not have been different if she included them. She had therefore refused the organization of a new trial.

Adnan Syed’s defense then turned to the Supreme Court. In 2019, she refused to intervene, which seemed to put an end to her hopes of release.

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