Adnan Syed's Exoneration Shows How Hard It Is To Free Innocent People
Convincing evidence of his innocence has been available for years. But the criminal legal system prioritizes procedure and bureaucracy over liberty.

In 2016, Adnan Syed—the man who was convicted in 2000 of murdering his high school classmate Hae Min Lee—was offered a new trial. The podcast Serial had thrown much doubt on the levers pulled, and not pulled, that led to his conviction, including (but not limited to) the prosecution relying on shoddy evidence and his defense attorney failing to represent him adequately.
Syed's conviction was vacated last month, and today, prosecutors in Maryland dropped the charges. That's not a result of the new trial, which you would be forgiven for not knowing about, because it never happened.
But the trial-that-wasn't is still important to this story, as it says a lot about the lengths to which the U.S. criminal legal system goes to protect the integrity of wrongful convictions, despite that being an oxymoron.
A year and a half after Serial forced new life into Syed's case, a judge with the Baltimore City Circuit Court vacated his conviction—not to be confused with Syed's vacated conviction this past September—and, in June 2016, ordered a retrial, citing ineffective assistance of his defense counsel. That attorney, who was disbarred a year later, had failed to press the state's witness about the notorious unreliability of cellphone tower location "evidence."
In March 2018, the Maryland Court of Special Appeals confirmed that decision. "The criminal justice system places great value on finality, and there are a multitude of procedural hoops, unforgiving deadlines, and burdens of proof for inmates to meet when appealing a sentence," wrote Reason's C.J. Ciaramella after that ruling came down. "Add in recalcitrant district attorney's offices that often oppose DNA testing and introduction of new evidence that could lead to exonerations, and it's a small miracle when anyone succeeds."
The above was perversely prophetic in a way because, like the inmates who fail for the outlined reasons, Syed did not actually succeed. Another wasted year later, after yet another government appeal, Maryland's highest court revoked that new trial in 2019, acknowledging that Syed's counsel had not done her job but ruling he was out of luck anyway.
That the legal system can persist in withholding someone's liberty in the face of viable innocence claims may seem shocking. But it is the rule, not the exception, and Syed's release is the exception, not the rule.
Case in point: The overturning of Syed's conviction happened in spite of, not because of, his appeals to his innocence. Quoting a wise painter, it was a happy accident. Doomed to die in prison, he applied for mercy under a Maryland law that permits resentencing consideration after people convicted as minors serve at least two decades behind bars. But as Lara Bazelon notes in New York magazine, the chief of the Sentencing Review Unit for Baltimore City, Becky Feldman, found a lot more in his application than just a potential candidate for early release. In addition to the aforementioned holes in the case, it became clear that the prosecution had pinpointed two other potential suspects—one had threatened to murder Lee prior to her death—and had concealed at least one of those possible perpetrators from the defense, which is illegal.
More frustrating still is the why. Why is the Baltimore City State's Attorney's Office declining to retry Syed, as is often the case when convictions are overturned? DNA evidence from Lee's shoes, which were just recently tested, excluded him. That evidence did not just magically appear 23 years after the murder.
"The Adnan Syed case just goes to show you that there are many, many more [wrongful convictions] underneath," Bazelon, a professor of law at the University of San Francisco, tells Reason. "The only reason he got out was because of the sheer pressure of the media attention forcing prosecutors to revisit it over and over…. [Most] don't have any resources, and it's going to be really, really hard to ever find them, and then if we do find them, it's almost impossible to get them out because of these crazy procedural obstacles that we stick in their path."
Syed is indeed not alone. A recent example may be found in Charlie Vaughn, a man who is serving a life sentence for murder and whose case has been meticulously outlined by journalist Radley Balko, as the state continues to prioritize procedure over his claims of innocence. More pertinent still is that today, on the same day that prosecutors dropped the charges against Syed, the Supreme Court will hear a case centered around a man named Rodney Reed. The question before them: Should the state perform DNA testing before it executes Reed for a murder he says he didn't commit?
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In 2016, Adnan Syed—the man who was convicted in 2000 of murdering his high school classmate Hae Min Lee
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"The only reason he got out was because of the sheer pressure of the media attention forcing prosecutors to revisit it over and over…. [Most] don't have any resources, and it's going to be really, really hard to ever find them, and then if we do find them, it's almost impossible to get them out because of these crazy procedural obstacles that we stick in their path."
So what's the background here, why did Syed get so much media attention?
One gets the impression that the facts are so well-known that they only need be referenced as the basis for hating the State prosecutors and judges.
I don't doubt that there are far more false convictions than most people suspect. Some of the one you read about make your blood boil -- murder convictions based on a jailhouse snitch who gets out 20 years sooner, or an eyewitness at night from 50 feet away.
But Good God Almighty, Binion, give us some real facts, not just your outrage, or outrage from others. Walk us through the basics. What was the actual crime, what led them to this guy, why did they decide he was worthy of the misdirected sledge hammer?
I suspect Binion assumed a greater degree of familiarity than was warranted.
I don’t doubt that there are far more false convictions than most people suspect.
And considerable resistance to investigating this. Recall Cameron Todd Willingham, who was executed after being convicted of murder by arson where it's highly doubtful that there was arson. The Texas body responsible for investigating the case was effectively stopped from so doing thanks to that brainless sumbitch Perry.
Facts? In a Reason article?
I know you're not new here - - - - - - - -
I'm from Baltimore and this case has been prominent for 20 years now. In my opinion, this was a case where the prosecutor wanted a conviction no matter what. He said Syed had motive with being a jilted ex-boyfriend and had a convicted snitch willing to say whatever was necessary to benefit himself. Exculpatory evidence be damned!
Thanks, I was just genuinely curious. There are a number of people whose legal trials become sensational for various reasons, and are heavily litigated in the media. Mumia Jamal, Leonard Peltier etc. I know why those cases get media attention, but I didn't know what drew the media to this one.
Here's a video going over the case and why the guys guilty.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p84pl22kCms&t=3s
And a follow up: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zfHzg10rwQw&t=1s
But there was the cell phone location data pointing him to the seen of the crime.
An expert witness AT&T testified in one of the appeal hearings that the data sent to police contained a disclaimer said that the incoming calls to Syed's phone cannot be considered reliable information for location.
Yeah, no. What the disclaimer said was cell phone location data was not as reliable on incoming vs outgoing phone calls. Problem is that no one knows who wrote it and during Syed's appeal, an expert testified that their it was bupkis.
Here's my source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zfHzg10rwQw&t=609s
One part was the Serial podcast, another was the out going DA, and a third was Kim Kardashian.
The incentives for prosecution is what needs correcting. The goal is to win, not seek justice or truth.
We have an adversarial system of justice, that's how it is supposed to work.
FAPP there is no US justice system. There’s a US conviction system.
Once it has been determined by a jury that a defendant is guilty, rather than being viewed as a contingent fact, the verdict is viewed as an absolute fact, which means it's far more difficult to overturn.
There's a case today at SCOTUS denying cert, Thomas v Lumpkin - Sotomayor's dissent demonstrating the moral bankruptcy of the justice system. It's fortunate, in a way, that the appellant is guilty, because there is NFW that the trial or sentencing could have been fair. FWIW the defendant is clearly nutso by this point, but that doesn't make a difference in practice.
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But the criminal legal system prioritizes procedure and bureaucracy over liberty.
And we should be extremely careful about killing off that procedure. We have it for a reason. And the high-line here is that it's difficult to overturn a jury trial, which I think is not that crazy.
Our system has a lot of process, and it's built up over a long period of time, and includes many obvious and unobvious little systems that ultimately seem to work okay.
Which is not to deny reform, but process matters a lot in the court system.
The big problem is not just that the criminal legal system prioritizes procedure and bureaucracy over liberty. It prioritizes procedure and bureaucracy over truth. And liberty would be best protected if truth was the ultimate priority.
Exposing truth means exposing lies and ignorance. That just doesn't work when the goal is to win. If the truth means you lose, or your lies are exposed, or it's shown that you were talking out your ass, you ain't gonna like it very much. Good thing is, when you run the system you set the rules. And the rules are going to make sure you don't get embarrassed, and if you do someone gets punished.
Truth be damned.
The antagonistic system of jury, defense. and prosecution is very much put in place for that. Getting a council of people together and saying "find the truth" is even more prone to internal bias and systemic issues.
I think we downplay this system too much because we like to highlight cases where it didn't work, rather than myriad where it did. It also doesn't help that we, on average, don't have any understanding of alternative legal systems. Go read up on how Japan runs its trials and feel better about our own.
Which is, once again, not a statement that no reform is needed. We can always reform and try to improve. I just think you two are doing that thing where you express a super simplified worldview of an extremely complex system and then don't even begin to suggest how to get there.
All I'm saying is that the incentive structure is fucked up.
Not sure how to create a system where the incentive is to find the truth. I do know that this one ain't it.
It's not that the system needs wholesale reforming. It needs reinforcing according to the Constitution
1. Zero tolerance for police committing perjury.
2. Zero tolerance for Brady violations
3. Eliminate "harmless error" findings of fact on appeal. It makes it too easy for appellate courts to usurp the role of a jury and avoid acquittal or retrial.
4. Repeal AEDPA and replace it with something less tyrannical. It was never intended to function the way it does. (See the Balko article referred to above.)
5. Make the punishment on conviction of an innocent person a due process violation - and fuck Rehnquist.
6. Remove all immunity from prosecutors or police from suit where their conduct leading to conviction rose to the level of illegality.
Almost nothing in the actual process would change - the government would just be held to a higher standard than at present.
"Getting a council of people together and saying “find the truth” is even more prone to internal bias and systemic issues."
What is the evidence for this?
You know who else made it hard to free innocent people?
You?
Shhhhhh!!!!!!!!!
No, the absence of touch DNA on her shoes does not, remotely, exclude him. There are any number of reasons, other than his innocence, for touch DNA to not have been detected by the lab on her shoes.
There's a not-remotely-subtle difference between the proposition "Adnan Syed is innocent" and "Under current conditions, with currently-available evidence, trying to re-convict Adnan Syed of the murder he committed is too much trouble for the Baltimore DA to want to bother with".
Particularly after 20+ years of prison time, in the current political climate, on top of the caseload Baltimore is already dealing with. Do nothing and he's already gotten over 20 years-spend at least tens of thousands of dollars (more likely hundreds of thousands) and you might or might not send him away for another 10
Syed is about to be declared wholly innocent by said DA. So yes, there's a difference, and it's clear he's innocent.
Said DA is an activist who just got sent packing by the electorate.
It's not at all clear to me that he's innocent. There isn't an atom of speculation, much less actual evidence, that points to any other possible perpetrator on the face of the map.
He has been proven beyond reasonable doubt to be innocent. Your racist moronic comments notwithstanding. It is beyond any reasonable dispute that he is innocent and you are a racist scumbag.
The absence of Syed's DNA on the victim's shoes does not prove his innocence. Why would his DNA be expected to be found on her shoes at all? His fingerprints weren't found there either. There was also an absence of a confession. None of these three absences are exculpatory. The prosecution's case would have been stronger had there been a confession or had his DNA or fingerprints been found on her shoes, but the absence of these items does not exculpate any more than they incriminate.
He hasn't been exonerated as far as anything I have read. The eyewitness who saw him with the dead body in his trunk (and then helped him bury it) hasn't withdrawn his testimony, and as far as I have seen the state is not claiming the eyewitness is guilty of murder.
Except Adnan Syed is guilty.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p84pl22kCms
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zfHzg10rwQw
Here's kind of a funny one from my local newspaper:
I've always found it interesting how any GOP party internal strife is immediately seized upon by the media with fine-toothed-comb analysis.
Yet someone else "bucked the Democratic party" today of national importance, no above-the-fold mention of that.
But this guy is absolutely guilty beyond a shadow of a doubt. How do so many people get sucked into these ridiculous cases from "the innocence project" where they take people for whom there is overwhelming evidence of their guilt, pretend none of that exists, and when anyone points to the overwhelming evidence of guilt that just call that person a racist as though that's a valid argument. When I first became an attorney I spent the first 5 years working for the public defenders office because I recognize we have a fucked up legal system and a lot of people get screwed over and I think its imperative we do what we can to effect criminal justice reform, but when I see the type of people who are getting mainstream popular support like adnan syed or a rodney reed or julius jones, when there is clearly proof beyond a reasonable doubt that they are guilty, and kim kardashians dumb ass and the innocence project ignore ALL THAT EVIDENCE and paint anyone who simply speaks to the facts of the case as being a racist I really lose faith we will have have a more just system.... Whats perhaps worst of all is that they are doing this for a noble cause. They think the death penalty is wrong. So do I. But the way to fix that is to raise awareness and support to getting rid of the death penalty, not taking people on death row who are obviously guilty, and getting them off death row by lying about the person and by victim blaming what they are doing is far more immoral than if we just let the death penalty stand and did nothing substantive to get rid of it.
Well, I guess we'll have to wait and see if he murders some more women like so much Jack Unterweger.
I remember a similar litany from activists claiming Mumia Abu Jamal was innocent. I don’t know whether this guy is innocent or not. But I do know people invested in finding people innocent are every bit as biased as people invested in finding them guilty.
So was he innocent, or guilty with some problems with his trial?
Gonna be funny when Syed says, “Yeah, I did it. Double jeopardy, suckers.”
Maybe he'll get all O.J and go looking for the real killer(s). He's gotta be hot on their trail by now.
OJ has combed America’s golf courses for decades, and found nothing.
Double jeopardy laws don't apply where significant new facts emerge, obviously.
He's not been found not-guilty, his conviction was vacated, so if the DA wanted to hold a new trial, they absolutely could. The reason they aren't doing so is because he's already served 20 years and it would be very difficult to put forth evidence so long after the fact.
No, the reason they're not doing it is that there is overwhelming evidence he is innocent. You or I are significantly more likely to be guilty here than he is, since it's established beyond reasonable doubt that he is innocent based on the affirmative evidence to that effect.
I have no idea what racist scumbags like you think you're achieving by lying about publicly available facts. No-one is going to believe you, and you're destroying any credibility you might otherwise have.
It's obvious you're virulently racist, and have nothing to add to this discussion beyond your hatred.
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Good god, what a confused mess the article is.
Syed chose his own defense attorney, who represented him in two trials. When Syed was found guilty, he turned around and claimed that his defense attorney had been incompetent. The justice system couldn't function if you could retroactively claim incompetent representation after found guilty.
Syed's conviction was eventually vacated because media got interested in the case and found Brady violations. That still doesn't mean Syed is innocent, it just means that the issue became enough of a political hot potato that prosecutors wanted to make it go away.
Sorry, nothing to see here. If Syed was innocent, then his incarceration was unfortunate, but you know, he had two trials and he picked his defense attorney. If Syed is guilty, then he got off on a technicality.
I’ve spent the evening listening to bowf sidez.
I’m leaning significantly towards the ‘guilty’ column.
And the DNA evidence is the least convincing part of the case. I agree with one analyst: this isn’t a ‘dna’ case. Syed had nothing to lose by bringing DNA into the case. He was her boyfriend (former, jilted, angry, displaying concerning behavior– but that’s another story). If DNA of his had been discovered, hey, he was her former boyfriend, of course there’s gonna be his DNA all over the place. But if they didn’t find it where they wanted to look… hey, see, there’s no DNA. It was a heads that-doesn’t-prove-I’m-guilty, tails this-proves-I’m-innocent equation.
What is wrong with you people? He was her ex boyfriend and hadn't seen her in months. Why would his DNA have been there if he wasn't the murderer? And considering DNA of the murderer was found, how do you square that with it not being his?
We know beyond any reasonable doubt that he's innocent.
Failure to detect someone's DNA is not exculpatory since there are many reasons for not finding someone's DNA. Likewise, finding someone else's DNA is not exculpatory, since there are many innocent reasons why DNA can be present at a scene.
Every single person on the planet other than the perp did not have their DNA at the crime scene. You're literally insane.
DNA can no longer even tell if a sample came from a man or a woman; how can it even be admissible anymore?
Whut? Short bus much?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Y_chromosome
So, you're saying you're a transphobe.
Syed is probably guilty, unless the man who testified that he helped Syed bury the body entirely fabricated his account and that is pretty unbelievable.
Why is it unbelievable? People lie on the stand for any number of reasons, from ego to threats from the police or DA.
But he sticks to his story 20+ years later, when the threats to him are gone. And his then-girlfriend sticks to saying he told her crime details the day Hae disappeared.
Syed's trial clearly had Brady violations, so reversal is right. And 23 years is more than most countries would give a juvenile.
That said, thinking him innocent requires a significant police conspiracy. Jay Wilds, the witness who said he helped Adnan bury the body, led police to the victim's car. Could police have found the car themselves, and then fed its location to Jay so he can "tell" them? Detectives don't go looking for cars, so beat coups would have to be in on the conspiracy.
Syed has not been exonerated, his conviction has merely been vacated on technical violations by prosecutors.
Why bother repeating your racist lie after it's been thoroughly debunked? Sounds like you're worried the investigation is going to be re-opened. Now why would that be?
The reason it is made difficult to exonerate is largely because of the expense. Some towns have gone bankrupt paying exoneration settlements. Much heaper to keep innocent people in prison until they die.