
ANNAPOLIS, Md. — A Maryland judge formally sentenced Adnan Syed on Friday to the time he’s already served in prison, appearing to finally bring to a close a long-running case with numerous legal twists and turns that received worldwide attention from the true-crime podcast “Serial.” Limited time: Save 25% on NBC News subscription Get exclusive reporting, live Q&As and ad-free reading.
Main Idea: A Maryland judge formally sentenced Adnan Syed to time served, keeping him free but under five years of supervised probation in the long-running case tied to the “Serial” podcast.
Key Points:
The long case keeps public doubt alive about murder convictions and can deepen pain for the victim’s family and community.
Maryland’s new law and the judge’s sentence show a path to review old cases and free people when courts find lower public risk.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
Central ব্যক্তি in the sentencing decision; the article focuses on his time-served sentence and ongoing legal status.
State jurisdiction whose courts and laws are central to the sentencing and appeals in this case.
Named judge who formally imposed the time-served sentence and modified probation conditions.
Current local prosecutorial body whose stance on the conviction is cited.
Syed’s attorney, quoted requesting unsupervised probation and involved in the hearing.
The victim at the center of the underlying murder case that the article discusses.
Baltimore state’s attorney whose office’s position on the conviction is mentioned as part of the case’s current status.
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Sign in to commentSyed’s current employer, included as relevant background to his post-release circumstances.