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U.S. court reinstates murder conviction for Serial podcast subject Adnan Syed

A Maryland appeals court on Tuesday reinstated the murder conviction of Adnan Syed, who was found guilty of the 1999 killing of his former girlfriend in a case that drew attention after the podcast Serial raised doubts about his guilt.

Maryland appeals court orders new hearing, saying lower court violated rights of victim's family

A man with a beard and wearing and tie and skull cap stands on the steps of a U.S. court building.
Adnan Syed speaks to reporters outside an Annapolis, Md., courthouse on Feb. 2. A Maryland appeals court on Tuesday reinstated his 1999 murder conviction, which had been vacated last year. (Barbara Haddock Taylor/The Baltimore Sun/The Associated Press)

A Maryland appeals court on Tuesday reinstated the murder conviction of Adnan Syed, who was found guilty of the 1999 killing of his former girlfriend in a case that drew attention after the podcast Serial raised doubts about his guilt.

After an investigation identified problems with the case, a circuit court judge last year vacated Syed's conviction in the murder of Hae Min Lee and ordered his release. He had served more than 20 years in prison.

The judge left it to prosecutors to decide whether to retry him and they decided to drop the case.

On Tuesday, a Maryland appellate court panel, in a 2-1 decision, ordered a new hearing into the matter, saying the lower court had violated the right of the victim's family to attend a critical hearing in the case.

The court ruled that giving her brother, Young Lee, only one business day before the hearing was "insufficient time to reasonably allow Mr. Lee, who lived in California, to attend the hearing in person," and required him to attend the hearing remotely.

The family's attorneys have argued that the Lees spent decades believing justice had been served, only to be treated as an afterthought when prosecutors decided their case was actually flawed from the beginning. The appellate court largely agreed.

"This Court has the power and obligation to remedy those violations, as long we can do so without violating Mr. Syed's right to be free from double jeopardy," the panel said in its ruling.

"Accordingly, we vacate the circuit court's order vacating Mr. Syed's convictions, which results in the reinstatement of the original convictions and sentence," it said.

Syed not ordered back to prison

The panel did not specifically order Syed back to prison, but allowed for a two-month delay in the "mandate" of its decision to allow the parties "time to assess how to proceed."

Syed has maintained he was innocent and did not kill Hae Min Lee, who was 18 when she was strangled and buried in a Baltimore park. The podcast Serial produced by Chicago public radio station WBEZ, drew international attention to the case in 2014.

WATCH | Adnan Syed, Serial podcast subject, free after judge overturns conviction: 

Adnan Syed, Serial podcast subject, free after judge overturns conviction

2 years ago
Duration 4:10
Adnan Syed, convicted in 2000 for murdering his 18-year-old ex-girlfriend, Hae Min Lee, was released on Monday in Baltimore. His case received widespread attention in 2014 when the debut season of the Serial podcast focused on Lee's murder and raised doubts about some of the evidence prosecutors had used.

An attorney for Syed said he remains free and the latest decision was not about Syed's innocence but more about proceedings. The attorney said Syed's team will seek a review in the Supreme Court of Maryland.

"The Appellate Court of Maryland has reinstated Adnan's convictions, not because the Motion to Vacate was erroneous, but because Ms. Lee's brother did not appear in person at the vacatur hearing," Erica Suter, Syed's counsel, told Reuters.

"There is no basis for re-traumatizing Adnan by returning him to the status of a convicted felon."

Prosecutors filed a motion last September to vacate the conviction after conducting a year-long investigation alongside a public defender representing Syed.

Baltimore Circuit Court Judge Melissa Phinn subsequently ordered Syed to be released from prison, where he was serving a life sentence.

With files from The Associated Press