Adnan Syed: Innocent Or Guilty

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The case of Adnan Syed, a high school student who was arrested for the murder of his ex-girlfriend Hae Min Lee, has been a topic of much debate and controversy. The prosecution built its case on circumstantial evidence, and Syed was convicted in 2000. However, the Serial podcast and the HBO docuseries, The Case Against Adnan Syed, have raised doubts about his guilt, and many people, including The Innocence Project, believe that he is innocent. Matt Hayward examines the evidence revealed in the Serial podcast and highlights the contradictions in the prosecution's case against Adnan Syed in his piece "Adnan Syed: Innocent or Guilty?" "There was no physical evidence linking Adnan to the crime scene," he claims. "The prosecution claimed that Adnan …show more content…

The series contains interviews with essential witnesses, including Syed, and looks closely at the prosecution's case against him. However, the series also highlights the case's anomalies and raises doubts about Syed's guilt. In the "The Case Against Adnan Syed: A Timeline of Key Events and Evidence," article, Jessica Chou gives a timeline of the events leading up to Syed's conviction as well as the evidence presented at trial. According to Chou, "Syed's cell phone records were used to place him near the crime scene, but the reliability of cell phone records has been questioned" (Chou). Furthermore, Chou points out that many pieces of evidence, including testimony from Syed's classmate Asia McClain, who claimed to have seen him at the library at the time of the murder, may have offered an alibi for Syed. The Innocence Project, an organization that tries to justify wrongfully convicted people, has also expressed interest in Adnan Syed's case. They claim that "the evidence against Syed was extremely weak, consisting of testimony from one person who has since recanted, and cell phone records that have since been discredited" (see "Adnan Syed Case"). Furthermore, according to the Innocence Project, there was no physical evidence linking Syed to the crime scene, and several pieces of evidence, such as Asia McClain's testimony, were not introduced at