The American at the heart of the hit podcast “Serial” released after 23 years in prison – rts.ch

A US judge on Monday overturned the conviction of a man held for 23 years for a murder he has always denied. This file is at the heart of the planetary success podcast “Serial”.

Adnan Syed, 42, was sentenced to life imprisonment in 2000 for the murder of his former girlfriend in Baltimore, on the east coast of the United States. In an unexpected turnaround, city prosecutor Marilyn Mosby filed a motion last week to have the verdict set aside, saying she had doubts about Adnan Syed’s guilt, and asked for his release.

Marilyn Mosby explained that she had discovered the existence of “two alternative suspects”, crucial information that was poorly exploited at the time and which, above all, had not been communicated to the defense before the trial.

Counter-investigation launched in 2014

The case began in February 1999, when the police found the body of the victim, 18, half-buried in a wood in Baltimore. Arrested at the age of 17, Adnan Syed was sentenced to life imprisonment a year later.

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.

Reopening of the file

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.

New episode Tuesday

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

But the Baltimore prosecutor, who has a service dedicated to the correction of miscarriages of justice, reopened the file once again, ultimately causing this latest judicial reversal. A new episode of “Serial” aired Tuesday morning, the podcast announced on its Twitter account on Monday.

Liberation with electronic bracelet

The request for release was validated Monday during a hearing in a crowded room of a court in Baltimore. “In the interest of justice and fairness, the motion is granted and the defendant will be released” and fitted with an electronic bracelet, Judge Melissa Phinn said.

Agents then removed Adnan Syed’s shackles, while part of the room applauded before being called to order. “He finds it hard to believe that it’s true” and “now wants to spend time with his family”, confided his lawyer Erica Suter in front of the courthouse, while his client rushed into a car without doing anything. of declaration.

Not yet “declared innocent”

Prosecutor Marilyn Mosby insisted that the court had “not yet declared Adnan Syed innocent” and that she would await the results of additional DNA analysis before deciding whether to drop the charges against him or to organize a new trial.

She has 30 days to do so. Whatever her decision, she promised to continue the investigation “to ensure that the victim’s family knows with certainty the culprit”.

During the hearing, the brother of the young woman took the floor by telephone to explain his dismay. Saying “living a nightmare that never ends”, he confided to feeling “cheated” by the prosecutors who maintained for years to hold the good culprit, before finally changing his mind.

Radio Subject: Jordan Davis

Web text: hkr with afp

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