The “Serial” Podcast: Final Thoughts

Serial Podcast logo

The Serial Podcast: An audio investigation of a man named Adnan Syed who murdered his girlfriend in high school. Narrator Sarah Koenig takes a closer look at Adnan’s case, over a decade after his conviction.

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The weighty choice: innocence or guilt?

In this investigation, there are two possibilities: Adnan is innocent, or he is guilty. At the beginning of the podcast, Adnan has been in prison for fifteen years, under the assumption that he is guilty of murdering Hae Min Lee. As the podcast progresses, the listener learns more about the characters, their relationship with one another, and their motives. Adnan is not the only murder suspect, and it’s very possible that the jury ruled incorrectly back in 1999.

 

 

After listening to the podcast and doing some of my own research, I believe that Adnan is innocent.

First of all, Jay Wilds, a former friend of Adnan, stated that he helped Adnan bury Hae in Leakin Park approximately four and a half hours after Adnan strangled her. This doesn’t add up, because “Several medical experts … said Hae’s lividity indicates that she was placed face down and stretched out soon after her death and remained in that position for at least eight to 12 hours before being buried” (Everett).

That isn’t the only forensic evidence pointing to Adnan’s innocence. Jay also specified that Adnan’s car was used in the process of burying Hae in Leakin Park, however there are no traces of soil from Leakin Lark anywhere on or in Adnan’s car (Herbst). 

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Soil being collected and examined from a suspect’s boot. In Adnan’s case, the soil would be collected from a car (ex. the tires).

There is also a suspicious lack of DNA evidence in the case. According to attorney Rabia Chaudry, the police DID gather DNA swabs from Hae’s body, but never got them tested. This is extremely odd, and “Chaudry suspects they didn’t do this and other DNA testing because the results would show Syed had no involvement with Lee’s murder” (Herbst).

Jay’s story not only had inconsistencies with the facts, but when he was interviewed for podcast Undisclosed (which was co-hosted by Rabia and also documented Adnan’s case), there were suspicions that his answers were being guided. Entertainment Weekly  author Everett writes: “Several times during the meetings, Wilds seems to transpose events in his narrative or pause for significant periods of time. It is during these moments when a tapping sound is heard and Wilds then corrects his statement or suddenly remembers an answer, followed by an apology to the detectives. “There’s a ‘tap tap,’ and then Jay says, ‘Oh, okay’,” Simpson explains in one episode. “And suddenly a moment later — he knows the answer.” According to Undisclosed, the tapping infers that the detectives were doing so in an attempt to guide Wilds to what they believed to be the correct answer.”

 

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Diagram of  a cell phone ping.

Another piece of evidence is the cell phone pings. The calls on Adnan’s phone were used to put a time stamp and location on Adnan. This was originally used against Adnan in court, but was later found to be unreliable. Both calls on Adnan’s phone were incoming calls, and due to an AT&T glitch, incoming calls would ping the cell tower closest to the caller, not the receiver (Everett, McDonell-Parry).

 

Finally, what I consider the most important point in the case for Adnan’s innocence: alibi witness, Asia McClain. Asia “testified at his 2016 post-conviction hearing that she was in the library with Syed after school during the time prosecutors said he killed Lee at 2:36 p.m” (Herbst). Soon after he was arrested, Asia sent letters to Adnan reminding him of their interaction, however Adnan’s defense lawyer from the original trial chose not to contact Asia, and she did not testify until Rabia called her, sixteen years later. 

Together, these pieces of evidence build a strong case around Adnan’s innocence. 

AFP. “‘Serial’ hero Adnan Syed gets second chance in US court.”
    The Express Tribune. N.p., 10 June 2017. Web. 28 July 2017.
Everett, Cristina. “5 key findings from ‘Undisclosed’ that ‘Serial’
    missed.” EW.com. Time Inc, 24 Aug. 2015. Web. 28 July 2017.
Herbst, Diane. “Adnan Syed is Innocent and I Can Prove It:
    Lawyer Rabia Chaudry.” PEOPLE.com. Time Inc,
    03 Aug. 2016. Web. 28 July 2017.
McDonell-Parry, Amelia. “‘Serial’ Subject Adnan Syed: 4 Key
    Pieces of Evidence.” Rolling Stone. Rolling Stone, 01 July
    2016. Web. 28 July 2017.
“Season One.” Serial. N.p., n.d. Web. 28 July 2017.

My Thoughts on “Serial” the Podcast

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Episode One of “Serial” the Podcast

The season of “Serial” the Podcast tells the story of Adnan Syed, who was convicted for murdering his girlfriend by strangulation in high school. Narrator Sarah Koenig is asked to take another look at Adnan’s case from over a decade prior, and this podcast details her investigation. I listened to the first episode of this podcast: “The Alibi.”

In Episode One, Sarah attempts to find an alibi for Adnan on the day that his girlfriend, Hae Min Lee, went missing. The responses she gets are all over the place. Some people remember the day in vivid detail, while others think that they were probably doing this or maybe doing that. One person, Jay, actually describes Adnan planning and executing the brutal murder of Hae. Later, Sarah discovers a girl named Asia who claimed to have spoken to Adnan in the library at the same time Hae went missing. Asia made this claim at the time of Adnan’s trial, but when Sarah tries to question Asia, 10+ years later, Asia denies her claim. I found this suspicious. It doesn’t make sense to me that Asia would have written the letters, then denied the verity of her own letters if she had written the truth in the first place. I also found it strange that these two people in particular had vivid memories of opposite events. Obviously at least one account is false, although I can’t help but wonder if both stories are untrue. In order to remember the details of a specific day in the not-so-recent-past, one would have to have an amazing memory.

According to scientific research, “At last count, at least 33 people in the world could tell you what they ate for breakfast, lunch and dinner, on February 20, 1998. Or who they talked to on October 28, 1986” (Rieland). These people have a condition called hyperthymesia, or Superior Autobiographical Memory. Hyperthymesia translates from Greek to mean “excessive remembering” (“People with Potential”). There’s a very slim chance that Jay or Asia is one of these people.

Most people I know wouldn’t be able to answer the questions “What were you doing on this exact Day?” “Who did you talk to?” and so on. The majority of the population (myself included) can’t recall such details about an uneventful day, especially not it that day was many years ago. 

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Diagram of the memory and perception

As someone who enjoys reading, I rarely find myself listening to podcasts or audio books. Generally, I prefer reading to listening because I can see the words for myself and easily flip back at any time to reread something. I didn’t expect to enjoy the podcast very much, but having the element of multiple voices kept my attention for longer than I’d expected. I think that hearing other voices in the podcast makes the whole story seem more like an actual event, as opposed to some fictional story. I don’t think reading investigative journalism as text has quite the same effect as listening to it, but I think the story would be more engaging if it had visuals, like in a television series.

 

To me, the “Serial” the Podcast seems like an invasion of privacy for both Adnan and Hae’s families. It might feel like the world is judging their children and nosing into family matters. I think Adnan himself – if he knows about the podcast – would find the whole investigation disruptive and pointless, since he’s already come to terms with being in prison. When Sarah talks to Adnan, he says, “from a legal perspective, it’s like, I wish she would have came to this realization maybe like a year and a half ago, you know what I mean? Because it’s kind of like, it’s too late” (Transcript).

Adnan behind bars*

*Don’t click on the photo unless you’re okay with spoilers for the podcast

Works Cited
“People With Potential.” Hyperthymesia | People With Potential. N.p., n.d. Web.
     21 July 2017.
Rieland, Randy. “Rare People Who Remember Everything.” Smithsonian.com.
     Smithsonian Institution, 04 Sept. 2012. Web. 21 July 2017.
“Season One.” Serial. N.p., n.d. Web. 21 July 2017.
“Transcript.” Transcript | This American Life. N.p., n.d. Web. 21 July 2017.