Maryland’s highest court has issued an order to prevent Adnan Syed's murder conviction from being reinstated by a lower court, as the court decides whether to hear his appeal of the lower court’s decision
ByBRIAN WITTE Associated Press
FILE - Adnan Syed, center, leaves the Elijah E. Cummings Courthouse on Sept. 19, 2022, in Baltimore. Syed’s lawyer has asked Maryland’s highest court Wednesday, May 24, 2023, to overturn a lower court’s ruling that reinstated his murder conviction from more than two decades ago - after he was freed last year in a legal case that gained international attention from the hit podcast “Serial.” (AP Photo/Brian Witte, File)
The Associated Press
ANNAPOLIS, Md. -- Maryland's highest court issued an order on Thursday that prevents the reinstatement of Adnan Syed's murder conviction by a lower court, while the Supreme Court of Maryland decides whether to hear his appeal.
Syed, whose legal case that began more than two decades ago gained international attention from the hit podcast “Serial," regained his freedom in September from a judge after Baltimore prosecutors moved to vacate his conviction, saying they reviewed the case and found alternative suspects as well as unreliable evidence used at trial.
But the victim’s family said they received insufficient notice to attend the September hearing before the judge in person, which violated their right to be “treated with dignity and respect,” and the state’s intermediate appellate court agreed. In a 2-1 decision in March that was stayed for 60 days, the judges reinstated Syed’s conviction and ordered a redo of the hearing in question.
With the 60 days nearing an end, Syed's lawyer, Erica Suter, asked the Supreme Court of Maryland on Wednesday to issue a stay in the case to prevent her client from potentially being incarcerated while the court considers whether to hear an appeal.
Justice Shirley Watts noted in her order, which was approved with a majority of the court's seven justices, that the victim's family and the office of the state's attorney general have consented to the stay of the lower court's mandate while the Supreme Court considers whether to hear the appeal and during the pendency of an appeal.
Suter is asking the court to review several legal issues, including whether former Baltimore State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby’s decision to dismiss the charges against Syed last year made the family’s court challenge moot.
Syed, who has always maintained his innocence, was 17 when his high school ex-girlfriend and classmate, Hae Min Lee, was found strangled to death and buried in a makeshift grave in 1999. He was arrested weeks later and ultimately convicted of murder in 2000.