Adnan Syed, the focus of the popular crime mystery podcast “Serial,” was summarily released after 23 years in prison Monday. But without help from the Innocence Project at the University of Virginia School of Law, his story might never have reached millions and inspired so many to assist his cause.
The clinic first became involved when “Serial” creator and host Sarah Koenig asked for help investigating and researching Syed’s case for an episode of the public radio show “This American Life.” Syed had been convicted of murdering his ex-girlfriend Hae Min Lee when he was 17.
Former Innocence Project director Deirdre Enright, a 1992 UVA Law alumna, convened a team of clinic students and together they waded through the facts. What they discovered was so compelling that Koenig’s potential single episode instead launched a 12-episode podcast named “Serial” – and the public was riveted.
“It just seems like everywhere you looked, there was a reason to have doubt,” Enright said. “The motive seemed absurd – it wasn’t like he had explosive anger. Her body was found in a park where dead bodies abound, deals were made with a key witness, there was a mistrial – these are some of the red flags in innocence cases.”
Though “Serial” was downloaded 300 million times, and the clinic helped find potentially exculpatory evidence, it still took eight more years for prosecutors to move to vacate Syed’s conviction. A new Maryland law and the fresh eyes of a former public defender who had recently joined the state’s attorney’s office, Becky Feldman, gave Syed another try at asserting his innocence.

