The case of Adnan Syed, true crime trigger célèbre, has been unresolved for the final two years due to a fancy appeals course of over the query of victims’ rights. The state vacated his conviction for the homicide of Hae Min Lee in 2022, just for an appellate courtroom to reverse this determination and reinstate his conviction just a few months later. Now the Maryland Supreme Court docket, after listening to arguments on all sides, has upheld Syed’s reinstated conviction.
At problem was the query of whether or not Lee’s brother, Younger Lee, her household’s courtroom consultant within the proceedings, had been given ample discover earlier than the 2022 listening to on the movement to vacate Syed’s conviction — a listening to that lasted simply minutes and noticed Lee signing into the courtroom by way of Zoom. Pleas filed immediately by the victims or their households are uncommon, however this one was profitable, with two courts in a row discovering that Lee had not been afforded sufficient time to arrange for the listening to or attend it in individual.
In a 4-3 determination, the state Supreme Court docket discovered that the swift determination to vacate had “labored an injustice” in opposition to Lee.
As a result of the difficulty issues the correct of the sufferer’s household to be current, quite than the precise query of Syed’s guilt or innocence — which the courts appear to have in the end determined in his favor — the upholding of his conviction is especially procedural. Which means it doubtless received’t have an effect on the final word end result of Syed’s case. Prosecutors formally dropped fees in opposition to him through the transient interval in 2022 when his conviction had been overturned, citing new DNA testing of Hae Min’s clothes that returned outcomes for 4 totally different individuals — none of which was a match for Syed.
The back-and-forth debate over Younger Lee’s rights is necessary, nonetheless: It serves as a helpful reminder to the courtroom to prioritize victims’ rights — even in a case the place it seems a wrongful conviction might have occurred.
To the common onlooker, it might need appeared as if Syed’s launch from jail was a very long time coming. The topic of the revolutionary first season of Serial lastly had his conviction for the 1999 homicide of Lee, his ex-girlfriend, vacated in September 2022. The push to vacate, which was spearheaded partly by the Baltimore prosecutor’s workplace, arose after a particular case overview uncovered new proof, together with two new suspects, that forged affordable doubt on his trial and conviction. Prosecutors dropped all fees in opposition to Syed simply days later.
Nevertheless, the circumstances that led to Syed’s launch had been pretty uncommon, coming solely after years of exhausted appeals and, lastly, a brand new case overview that stemmed from a wider effort to deliver desperately wanted reform to Baltimore’s legal justice system and sentencing procedures. The state of affairs was so uncommon, in truth, that it appears to have led to a fairly uncommon exclusion: The sufferer’s household was given nearly no time to arrange for the listening to.
Hae Min’s brother, Younger Lee, who was performing as sufferer’s advocate, was solely given someday’s discover to arrange for the listening to, which included arranging for journey to and from Baltimore. In line with the appellate determination, the decrease courtroom initially assumed that Lee could be attending by way of a Zoom hyperlink — however Lee apparently solely agreed to attend the listening to by way of Zoom as a final resort, since he’d had no time to arrange to attend in individual.
“I’ve by no means heard of a sufferer’s household being contacted a day earlier than,” former Brooklyn prosecutor Julie Rendelman informed Vox. “We often allow them to know means upfront if any points are arising. They’d have been following alongside within the course of means earlier than a listening to had taken place.”
Lee “wished extra time, as a result of he wished a possibility to talk to his lawyer and to have a greater understanding of what the proof was” supporting Syed’s innocence, she stated. “However he couldn’t do this in a well timed vogue, and so as a substitute, final minute, he bought on a Zoom name. So the query was whether or not that was ample discover.”
The courtroom discovered that it was not. On Tuesday, March 28, the appellate panel, in a 2-1 determination, reversed the sooner determination to vacate, quickly reinstating Syed’s conviction. The courtroom stayed the brand new determination for 60 days, which means it doesn’t take impact for one more two months, with the intention to give the prosecution and the protection in Syed’s case time to regulate to the reinstated verdict.
Successfully, the stayed ruling retains Syed from heading again to jail. As a substitute, it requires a redo of the unique September listening to on the movement to vacate — a redo the appellate courtroom discovered vital in order that the sufferer’s household could possibly be current in individual for the listening to.
Rendelman informed Vox it’s uncommon for one of these attraction by a sufferer’s household to be introduced ahead, and uncommon for such a ruling to be granted. “On the identical time,” she careworn, “it’s additionally uncommon [not to] present the sufferer’s household with discover.”
“If a prosecutor didn’t attain out to the household letting them know means upfront {that a} listening to was coming down the pike through which the potential was that the person who allegedly killed their beloved one was going to get out of jail, that’s preposterous.”
She identified that though the courtroom’s movement is mainly a technicality, it does increase questions in regards to the function of expertise in a contemporary legal justice setting. “It’s attention-grabbing,” Rendelman stated, “as a result of we actually are in a distinct time than we had been three years in the past, the place Zoom has develop into an appropriate type of taking part in a courtroom continuing.” The appellate courtroom, nonetheless, famous that not solely was Lee’s household given brief discover, however all the opposite related events had been capable of attend in individual, which created an unfair state of affairs.
“The exception right here is that he didn’t need to be on Zoom and he wasn’t given any time to look,” she stated of Lee.
Nonetheless, the truth that the sufferer’s household introduced the attraction on to the state appears to be a sticking level for some within the legal justice group. “This can be a case through which the victims rights proponents need to increase the rights that they have already got in our legal justice system,” College of Maryland professor Doug Colbert, who was considered one of Syed’s unique attorneys, informed WMAR previous to a February listening to on the attraction. “They’re saying {that a} crime sufferer ought to have mainly the identical rights and function as a prosecuting lawyer.” He described any ruling in favor of Lee’s household as “extraordinary.”
However Rendelman factors out that Lee’s household isn’t really asking for extra energy — simply to train their proper to be current. “They’re not asking for any management over the choice; they only need to be current for it, which is what they’ve a proper to do. The regulation doesn’t require them to have a say in what occurs. The regulation simply requires them to have the ability to attend.
“Those that have points with the ruling query whether or not the victims ought to have such a giant say in what goes on in a legal process. However these on the opposite aspect are fairly victorious as a result of their place is that victims’ rights ought to be revered, notably in a case like this, the place they’ve been residing with the lack of a member of the family for 20 years and would love some transparency in how the listening to proceeds.”
As a result of the prosecution has already determined to drop all fees in opposition to Syed, it could be extremely unlikely for something to vary the final word end result of a brand new listening to to vacate his conviction. Certainly, it’s unlikely this listening to, as uncommon as it’s, would even make the information had the households concerned not been so high-profile.
“This wouldn’t have made the paper had it not been [related to] Adnan Syed,” Rendelman stated. “It doesn’t matter what the case is, every sufferer’s household deserves the identical respect regardless.”
The choice to accede to Younger Lee’s request to be current on the listening to wasn’t unanimous; the appellate courtroom was divided 2-1 over the difficulty, and the Maryland Supreme Court docket was divided 4-3, with dissenting Justice Michele D. Hotten writing, “this case exists as a procedural zombie” and that the “doctrine of mootness” — a procedural dedication in regards to the precise relevance of the attraction — “was designed to forestall such judicial necromancy.” Successfully, Hotten was arguing that for the reason that determination to vacate Syed’s conviction had already been determined, the back-and-forth within the larger courts over Lee’s proper to attend was all superfluous.
What occurs subsequent? For now, Syed will doubtless stay out of jail till the 2022 listening to that freed him might be redone, this time with Younger Lee within the courtroom room. All in all, though Syed’s conviction stays reinstated, nothing means that Lee’s skill to attend and take part in a brand new listening to on the movement to vacate will change the already established end result. If that occurred, it could be an completely extraordinary and unprecedented second in an already extraordinary case.
Replace, August 30, 12:45 pm ET: This text was initially revealed on March 29, 2023. It has been up to date to replicate the latest courtroom determination in Syed’s case.