Alex Murdaugh found guilty of murdering wife, son in June 2021
A jury of seven men and five women took less than three hours before unanimously finding Murdaugh, 54, guilty of two murders on
The first was the execution-style slaying of his youngest son Paul, 22, with a shotgun inside the feed room at the family’s dog kennel, followed by the gunning down of his wife, Maggie, 52, with a high-powered rifle.
The jury’s verdict endorsed the prosecutors’ version of events: That hidden behind a facade of power and respectability, Murdaugh lived a unknown life of lies and betrayal, embezzling millions of dollars from law partners, clients, family and friends. Prosecutors argued it was the pressure created by the imminent exposure of his secret world that drove him to slaughter his wife and son.
The verdict is a vindication for the state’s investigating body, the
It was also a personal test for Attorney General
The jury verdict was won by “blood, sweat and tears,” Wilson, a Republican, told a crowd of media in front of the
The verdict was also a refutation of Murdaugh himself, a successful former lawyer and family man.
As the verdict was read Thursday, Murdaugh stood stoic in the same courtroom where his father, Randolph, and his grandfather, “Buster,” brought cases as the circuit solicitor against thousands of accused criminals over the years. Murdaugh’s great-grandfather, the original
After a poll of the jurors found the decision to be supported unanimously, Murdaugh’s defense team made one final move to have Judge
Newman refused.
“The evidence of guilt is overwhelming and I deny the motion,” he said. “All the evidence pointed to one conclusion, and that is the conclusion you all reached.”
Newman delayed sentencing until Friday morning, noting “many people will likely have something to say.”
Newman can sentence Murdaugh from 30 years to life in prison without parole for each count of murder. Newman is known to hand out tough sentences, and he often comments on the crimes committed by those found guilty before him.
After the verdict, deputies placed Murdaugh in handcuffs. A short burst of metallic clicks was heard around the courtroom.
Murdaugh was remanded to the custody of the Colleton County Sheriff’s Office, which has held Murdaugh in the county jail throughout the six-week trial. He has been in custody since
Unlike the prosecution, the defense did not hold a press conference outside the courthouse.
But defense attorney
The verdict in Murdaugh’s trial marked the closing of one chapter in a sprawling story that has encompassed major financial fraud, drug trafficking, tax evasion and the fall of the Murdaugh political and legal dynasty, which for four generations dominated the five counties of South Carolina’s 14th circuit.
Murdaugh’s story has also raised questions about how law firms take care of client money. And it exposed the inner workings of
The former CEO,
Prosecutors overcome missing weapons, DNA
For six weeks, in the 201-year-old
The state’s case against Murdaugh was almost entirely circumstantial.
Prosecutors had no evidence, such as fingerprints or DNA, that would have clearly linked the defendant to the crimes and allowed the state to conclusively prove Murdaugh’s guilt. Even the weapons used to kill Paul and Maggie were missing — hidden or destroyed by Murdaugh, prosecutors contended.
To overcome that hurdle, prosecutors introduced hundreds of pieces of evidence, ranging from police interrogation videos, gunshot residue tests, car and cellphone data and — most importantly — a cellphone video taken from Paul’s phone that showed Murdaugh at the dog kennels in the minutes just before his wife and son were murdered.
Murdaugh had repeatedly told investigators that he hadn’t seen Paul or Maggie for at least an hour before they were believed to have been killed. Murdaugh’s alibi was that he was napping at home, before he drove to his ailing mother’s house in a nearby unincorporated community, Almeda, where he visited 30 to 40 minutes.
He then told investigators he drove back to Moselle, where he found the bodies of Maggie and Paul and called 911.
However, the digital data, along with Paul’s video, showed Murdaugh to be a liar and shredded his claim that he was not at the kennels the night of the killings, prosecutors showed.
Prosecutors also had to overcome the apparent lack of a motive.
To show the jury why a seemingly happy family man might kill his wife and son, Waters introduced the “family annihilation” theory in hopes to show that an outwardly successful person who has lived a hidden life and suddenly faces exposure might suddenly kill those closest to him.
To prove this theory, Waters introduced some nine witnesses, who testified that Murdaugh for years had lived a secret life of fraud, stealing from friends, family, colleagues and his law firm, bilking them of millions of dollars. He also showed that Murdaugh, on the day of the murders, was on the verge of being exposed as a debt-ridden criminal instead of a prosperous, respected lawyer.
Evidence showed Murdaugh lured both Paul and Maggie to Moselle the night of the killings.
In hopes of countering that theory, defense attorneys Harpootlian,
Witnesses also gave undisputed testimony that the Murdaugh family had a seemingly idyllic life at Moselle, creating a kind of a Lowcountry Camelot, teeming with game that was a magnet for Paul and his older brother, Buster, and many of their friends.
At Moselle, the sons and their friends had limitless ammunition to hunt turkeys, ducks, hogs and deer at any of the many game stands and duck blinds dotting the property.
Maggie, although not enamored with life in the country, enjoyed being with her two sons and their friends at Moselle, and going on trips with Murdaugh and the boys, witnesses said.
Murdaugh’s lawyers also attacked purported flaws in the prosecution’s case.
In a jury argument Thursday morning, Griffin criticized SLED for alleged numerous errors, including “manufactured” evidence.
Griffin called the jury’s attention especially to a SLED agent’s testimony before a grand jury that Murdaugh had a shirt stained with blood spatter, ostensibly from the back spray of a shotgun blast to Paul. But the spatter evidence turned out not to be true.
In the end, what may have been Murdaugh’s Achilles heel was himself, and his admitted lies on the witness stand.
Murdaugh takes the stand
In testimony that was in turn tearful, defiant and litigious, the disbarred attorney denied killing his wife and son.
But in five hours of cross-examination by Waters, Murdaugh offered a stunning series of admissions.
He confessed, for the first time, to lying about his alibi and to a decade’s worth of thefts from his clients and his law firm, which he said was driven by a need to cover a
Even before he took the stand, Murdaugh’s defense team had little room to maneuver.
Newman granted the prosecution’s wish list of motions.
He allowed them to introduce a landslide of witnesses who testified about Murdaugh’s financial crimes, leading Harpootlian to protest that it was more of a “Madoff trial than a murder trial.”
While not required to prove motive, Waters repeatedly accused Murdaugh of being a “family annihilator,” driven to commit a biblical act of destruction when the facade of his successful life began to crack.
Ballistics experts also matched a family gun to the weapon that killed Maggie, and the state used family’s phones and data from Murdaugh’s car to map out a minute-by-minute timeline of events, casting doubt on the defense’s improbable claim that Murdaugh missed the killings by mere minutes.
Many of the witnesses were drawn from the inner circle of the Murdaughs’ close knit and clannish world, among them Murdaugh’s surviving son, 26-year-old Buster, who testified in his father’s defense.
Their testimony threw back the curtain on an insular world of privilege and power.
Since the 2019 boat crash allegedly caused by Paul that killed
Crusading lawyers, including
In court, the 6-foot-4 Murdaugh often appeared gaunt, his once red hair turned almost white.
He frequently rocked back-and-forth and openly wept during testimony.
It was hard to connect the man at the defense table with the image of well-fed, affluent contentment, who beamed out from family pictures that have been featured heavily in nearly four years of coverage of the case.
“It doesn’t matter who your family is, it doesn’t how much money people think you have, it doesn’t matter how prominent you are,” Waters told reporters Thursday. “If you break the law, if you do wrong, if you commit murder, the state of
Murdaugh faces financial, drug charges
At the heart of the widespread media interest in the latest generation Murdaugh was a long-running “whodunit” mystery that quickly attracted international attention because of the brutality of the Maggie and Paul’s killings, the prominence of the victims’ family and the seeming helplessness of SLED to identify a suspect for more than a year.
For 14 months — until Murdaugh’s indictment on murder charges in
Interest in what became known as the “Murdaugh murders” case was heightened when, three months after the killings, in early
At the murder trial, one of Murdaugh’s law partners revealed the Murdaugh had embezzled more than
A day after he was fired by his law firm, Murdaugh staged what SLED later called a fake suicide in a botched attempt to have his life insurance pay
In late 2021 and into 2022, Murdaugh was repeatedly indicted on multiple counts of financial fraud by the state grand jury.
Members of his former law firm, formerly known shortly as PMPED, created a new firm and rebranded themselves as the
The full extent of Murdaugh’s alleged financial frauds still are not known.
He also faces charges of evading some
No one ‘is above the law’
Standing in front of the
He thanks Waters, prosecutor
He thanked the media, the
He special mention of SLED, its agents who worked the case, and its leader, Chief
“Our criminal justice system worked tonight. It gave a voice to Maggie and
“They couldn’t be here to testify for themselves tonight,” Wilson added. “We can’t bring them back, but we can bring them justice.”
As Wilson spoke, it started to rain, in an echo of the rain that has fallen throughout this case: The night of
The verdict, Wilson said, underscored that in America “no one, no matter who you are in society, is above the law.”
Wilson — he is the heir to his own
The case was transferred to his office after 14th Circuit Solicitor
Stone occupied the same office that had been held by Murdaugh’s father, grandfather and great-grandfather.
“The only way a jury could return a verdict that fast was they thought Alex was full of crap an lying to them,” he said.
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