The court in Maryland found Adnan Syed guilty and ordered a new hearing

 A Maryland court did not provide blood for the homicide death in the case told on Megahit's podcast "The Patrol" enough time for the in-person court hearing that led to Adnan Syed's release, and a Maryland appeals court ruled on Tuesday, arguing that a new response would be held.



Although Reza Syed was reinstated, he would not be taken into regency before then.


In a 2-to-1 decision, the Maryland Court of Appeals overruled the country's law providing deaths with a birthright in prior notice of hail on fanfare to melt convictions, and that birthright was violated in the case of Blood Hae Min Lee, the sex master's girlfriend and high school classmate who failed the most. of two decades.


The court ruled that abandoning her family, Young Lee, just one working day before the cold was "insufficient time to get Mr. Lee, who lives in California, to attend the cold in person," and he needed him to attend the cold at all. .


“Allowing a death entitled to attend the court hearing to be present in person, when the death has made this request and all other dismissed persons appear in the hail in person, is consistent with the demand of the indigenous people to treat deaths with quality and reference,” the court controls.

ANNAPOLIS, Md. — A Maryland court did not provide blood for the homicide death in the case told in Megahit's "Patrol" podcast enough time for the in-person court hearing that led to Adnan Syed's release, and a Maryland appeals court ruled on Tuesday that ranged between the new cold to be held.


Although Reza Syed was reinstated, he would not be taken into regency before then.


In a 2-to-1 decision, the Maryland Court of Appeals overruled the country's law providing deaths with a birthright in prior notice of hail on fanfare to melt convictions, and that birthright was violated in the case of Blood Hae Min Lee, the sex master's girlfriend and high school classmate who failed the most. of two decades.


The court ruled that abandoning her family, Young Lee, just one working day before the cold was "insufficient time to get Mr. Lee, who lives in California, to attend the cold in person," and he needed him to attend the cold at all. .


“Allowing a death entitled to attend court proceedings to be present in person, when the death has made such a request and all other persons involved in the hail appear in person, is in keeping with the demand of Aboriginal people to treat deaths with quality and reference,” the court controlled.

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