Hae Min Lee was murdered 15 years ago, and as far as the justice system is concerned, her killer is behind bars for life. But on social media in 2014, the jury’s still out.
“Serial,” the blockbuster nonfiction podcast produced by This American Life, has unofficially reopened the murder case against Adnan Syed. And that’s left devoted listeners — 1.5 million worldwide and counting — unpacking the details and swapping theories on whether Syed is guilty or not.
The podcast, which explores the real 1999 murder case in weekly episodes, tells the story of high school student Hae Min Lee, then 18, whose body was discovered in a park in Baltimore County, Maryland, apparently strangled. Syed, Lee’s Pakistani-American ex-boyfriend, was arrested six weeks after the girl’s murder, and prosecutors argued he killed her out of jealousy after the couple broke up and Lee started a new relationship. Syed was convicted of first-degree murder, robbery, and false imprisonment in 2000, and is serving life in prison in a Western Maryland state prison.
The verdict will come under renewed scrutiny in January, when a Maryland appeals court is set to re-hear one aspect of the case; Syed, now 34, has argued his innocence for years, arguing lawyer Christina Gutierrez fumbled his defense when she didn’t look into a letter from an alibi witness who claimed to see him in a library at the time of the murder. Syed’s current attorney, C. Justin Brown, told the Associated Press it’s his client’s “last best chance” at freedom.
“Serial” doesn’t claim the case against Syed was wrongly decided, but it has raised legitimate questions about whether he — or someone else — committed the murder. And while the trial ended with a guilty verdict, executive producer and host Sarah Koenig insists she doesn’t know how the podcast will conclude since the show is recorded in real time, and she is continuing to interview Syed. But without a sudden and unexpected twist, listeners may not get the “big reveal” they are craving.
So next season of @Serial will be about the murder of Sarah Koenig by listeners when this season has no resolution: http://t.co/rLU9Jiy7tp
— Jeremy Cohen, esq. (@citylifejc) December 2, 2014
Catching up with Serial. Utterly gripping stuff. Keeping my fingers crossed for a Hollywood ending but think I might be disappointed
— johnathan (@jcilott) December 1, 2014
The concern on social media, along with questions on the ending raised by The New York Times and The Guardian, have forced Koenig to defend the podcast’s intentions.
“I said it’s not my responsibility to make a perfect ending. I do want a solid ending that is based in my reporting. But I don’t feel a responsibility to make it the kind of entertainment that you would get on some TV drama. No way. That would be crazy,” Koenig told the Times in an interview ahead of the final episodes.
I love this panic over whether Serial will have a "satisfying ending." http://t.co/rtmNLtbI0U Like we have a right to that. In non-fiction!
— Jay Rosen (@jayrosen_nyu) December 1, 2014
Still, Koenig, a former Baltimore Sun reporter, and her team continue to try to figure out the piece of the puzzle that’s stumped lawyers: What exactly happened in the 21 unaccounted for minutes when Lee was killed between 2:15 and 2:36 p.m. One of the key suspects was Adnan’s “friend” Jay, but he later paved the way to Adnan’s conviction, testifying that he helped to bury Lee after Adnan killed her. His story changed throughout the investigation.
There are wild conspiracy theories. A subreddit has become extremely popular, filled with topics like “Now that we have discussed 374 theories, some more out than than others…” and “Why I think I want Adnan to be innocent.”
Remember the last time the Internet attempted to solve a murder on Reddit?









