BALTIMORE — Like more than 1 million other faithful listeners, the family of convicted killer Adnan Syed eagerly awaits the next episode of a podcast investigating his murder case.
For the family, though, this isn't entertainment. It's personal.
Ever since Syed, a smart, athletic, popular Baltimore County high school student, was convicted of killing his ex-girlfriend Hae Min Lee in 1999 and sent to prison for life, his family has been broken, said his mother, Shamim Rahman. Syed's father fell into a deep depression and his older brother became estranged. His younger brother, Yusuf, now 25, bounced from public school to public school before Rahman sent him to Pakistan to escape the harassment of fellow students.
"We had nothing left," Rahman said.
But things are beginning to change for the family, which has suddenly found itself at the center of Serial, a podcast that has revived Syed's case in weekly installments. It is hosted by veteran radio producer and former Baltimore Sun reporter Sarah Koenig, who unpacks and re-investigates the complex case in almost real-time.
The family said they are relieved the podcast has helped change public perception of Syed and thrust into the spotlight what had largely been their private crusade for justice.
"The whole community waits for Thursday," Rahman said. "After it's done, we call each other and talk about it."
Prosecutors said Syed, now 34, strangled Lee after becoming inconsolably jealous when the two broke up and she began dating someone else.