Alex Murdaugh murder trial enters week three
Murdaugh is accused of killing his wife Margaret and youngest son Paul at their family property in June of 2021.
ALEX MURDAUGH MURDER TRIAL: DAY 10 RECAP
Get caught up on the Alex Murdaugh investigations
Newman said the evidence could be heard only to further explain the state's theory of motive, and that the jury should not use it as evidence of bad character or as an indication that Murdaugh is somehow more likely to commit murder based on having committed financial crimes.
The state is hoping to draw a line between Murdaugh's impending financial doom and the murders of his wife and son. Attorney
The jury also heard from
She also said days after the murders, she saw him carrying a blue tarp into the home. State prosecutors claimed that the tarp could've been a blue raincoat, which SLED agents later seized from the property along with the tarp. The state plans to introduce evidence that gunshot residue was found on the raincoat, while Murdaugh's defense team is arguing the raincoat should not be admitted into evidence at all since it has never been tied to Murdaugh.
Defense attorney
Other witnesses in court Monday included a SLED gunshot residue technician, a Bank of America representative, Murdaugh's former law partner
Court is expected to resume at
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Prosecution says that Smith said a picture of the balled-up jacket resembled what she saw Murdaugh carrying.
Defense suggests reviewing the transcript to see what Smith actually said.
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They discuss the process for collecting GSR evidence.
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Hall is an evidence custodian at the
She assisted with processing items collected from the crime scene, including the clothes Murdaugh was wearing the night of the murders.
In her notes, Hall listed that the shirt smelled of laundry detergent. She also examined his shoes and shorts.
Months later, Hall examined the blue raincoat. They collected particles from the coat in a controlled environment for GSR testing.
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Moodie reviewed Murdaugh's records for the case. Moodie is the first witness testifying about financial crimes that is being allowed before the jury.
Newman advises the jury that the testimony being presented should not be used to judge Murdaugh's character or as an indication that he is somehow more likely of committing a murder, but that it is being presented as part of the state's theory of motive.
Three bank statements are admitted into evidence.
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Newman says the evidence will be admitted.
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Paul had a puppy named Goose that McElveen took when Paul died.
Griffin asks what Murdaugh's demeanor was when McElveens saw him at Moselle the day after the murders. McElveen said he was crying and hugging Paul's friends. He said the same was true after the funeral.
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McElveen says he also got to know the Murdaugh family well. He said Paul's parents took everyone in and treated them as their own.
They talk about the Moselle property and family dogs. Prosecutors ask if it was normal for firearms to be stored at the dog kennels. McElveen says no.
McElveen said that he and Paul shared locations with each other via Find my Friends on their iPhones.
McElveen estimates the last time he saw Paul was
He found out about the murders on
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Griffin asks if the tarp was tested for blood. Moore says she is unaware of any testing done on the blue tarp.
Griffin asks what size the raincoat is. Moore says she doesn't recall. Moore opens the box containing the raincoat to see what size it is.
The coat does not have a tag. Griffin asks Moore to stand in front of the jury and show them how large it is.
Griffin asks if any SLED agent showed
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They found a blue tarp in the closet of a second-floor bedroom.
They also found a blue raincoat in the coat closet on the second floor, which was seized as evidence.
Moore also assisted with testing the raincoat. They tested it for blood and it came back negative.
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They ask again about the blue item Murdaugh was carrying.
Defense shows a photo of a blue rain jacket. They ask if Smith has ever seen it before. She says no. They ask if Murdaugh was carrying it the morning he came into the home. She says no.
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They then present a blue tarp. They ask if that is the kind of tarp he was carrying. She says yes. They ask if it looked like he was carrying a shovel handle or gun in it. She says no.
Defense asks how many times Smith had been upstairs in the house. She says twice in three years.
They move on to the timeline of the murders. They ask if her estimation of the 20 minutes Murdaugh spent on the property the night of the murders includes the around five minutes it took her to let him in. She says yes.
Griffin asks if Murdaugh had blood on his shoes, clothes, hair, or anywhere. Smith says no.
He asks if it is normal for Murdaugh to act "fidgety." She says yes.
Griffin references a June SLED interview in which Smith told SLED Murdaugh was there for around 35 minutes. She says yes.
He asks why she never told anybody at SLED anything about the blue tarp until September. The first mention of it was apparently to a law enforcement officer unconnected to the crime after she had a car accident on
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Smith got to the home around
Smith says that
Prosecution asks about whether she took care of Murdaugh's father, Randolph, as well. She says sometimes she helped out, but her primary responsibility was
They ask about
Smith says that she sat in a recliner in
Smith says that Murdaugh did come over sometime around
When Murdaugh arrived, Smith says he called the house phone and told her he was outside and asked to be let inside. He was wearing shorts, a t-shirt, and cloth shoes like Sperry's without socks.
Smith says Murdaugh was acting "fidgety" that night. He sat on the bed, talked to his mother, and held her hand, but she was asleep off and on. She said Murdaugh said he came to check up on his mother because his father was in the hospital.
The prosecution asks if Smith thinks Murdaugh's mother even knew he was there. Smith says no.
He stayed around 20 minutes, she estimates.
Smith was told the next morning about the murders. She said she heard first from another caregiver, then she got a call from
Randy told her that
Smith said that after the murders and the death of Randolph, she was asked to help out more around the house.
After Randolph's funeral, people came back to
Smith is visibly emotional and is asked why she is crying. She says that the Murdaughs are good people and she is sorry that all this happened.
The day after the conversation, Smith says Murdaugh mentioned her upcoming wedding. He said to let him know what he could do because weddings are expensive. She said he offered to help because that's the type of person he is — a good person.
Days after the funeral, Smith said that Murdaugh came to the house around
He came back downstairs and said he was leaving, but then she saw him again later. He returned in a white truck and got in a black truck. She also says an ATV vehicle appeared to be moved at some point while Murdaugh was there.
She says that morning, she saw the blue item unfolded in one of the bedrooms. When she came back the next day, the item was gone.
Prosecutors present photos of the home, one of them with a blue object in one of the rooms. Smith says it appears to be the same object Murdaugh was holding when he came over that morning.
The morning Murdaugh came over, Smith said it looked like he had a little bruise on his forehead.
Smith says there was a video monitoring system in
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Newman said he thinks the jury should be able to consider whether Murdaugh's dire financial situation led him to commit the crimes. He said the evidence is not prejudiced because it does not suggest to the jury that Murdaugh frequently commits murders, and he believes the jury will be able to separate the other crimes and reach a verdict based only on the crimes for which he is charged in this case.
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Crosby recalls that Murdaugh's ailing father stopped by as well, just hours before his death.
Griffin asks if anyone there made clear to Murdaugh that they were there as his friends, not his lawyers, and that anything said in front of them to his lawyer would void attorney-client privilege. Crosby says that basically everyone there was a lawyer, including Murdaugh, and he didn't see any need to clarify that.
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Waters asks Crosby who was at the
Crosby says they were all there as friends and they had been with Murdaugh every day since the murders.
During the meeting, Crosby says Murduagh went over the timeline the night of the murders. Waters asks if the statements were being made quietly to Griffin or to everyone in the room. Crosby says the two did have private conversations, but that specific conversation was not private.
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Griffin says they have attorney-client privilege conversations every day in the courtroom, but there are 200 other people in the courtroom.
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Tinsley said that when COVID happens and things shut down, he got his case together and was ready to try it.
Defense presents an order from the court saying that the motion to compel Murdaugh's funds will be granted if the court deems it necessary, implying that the motion may not have ever been granted. Tinsley disagrees, saying if the judge was going to outright deny the motion, he would've done that.
Tinsley says that Murdaugh and his lawyers both knew what was coming, especially because one of his lawyers (
He says that he didn't really need the financial statements because he knew Murdaugh had money; he wanted them because Murdaugh so adamantly did not want him to have them. He said he didn't need a full financial audit "to see something a five-year-old could see."
Defense continues on their theory that the judge had not ruled in favor of the motion to compel, so maybe Murdaugh's finances would never have been audited. Tinsley says he thinks they would have, but Murdaugh's finances would've come out either way.
Defense says they can both agree on one thing – even if the hearing had gone forward on
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Tinsley says he has known Murduagh and all of the other partners at PMPED for years.
He describes an experience
Tinsley also says he reviewed Murdaugh's insurance policies shortly after the boat crash and determined that none of the policies were applicable.
State prosecutor
Tinsley says in August of 2019, he saw Murdaugh at a lawyer's conference either at a fundraiser for either
The case was brought before a mock jury and Tinsley said that the results were very favorable to the Beach family. He says he shared that information with Murdaugh.
In
Tinsley said when Murdaugh said he was broke, he offered Murduagh a payment plan and offered to take some of the Murdaugh family properties.
Tinsley said that he began looking into Murdaugh's accounts because the only way that he believed Murdaugh could be broke, was if money had been hidden. He wanted to try and find that money. He also said that looking into the accounts was also a way to put pressure on Murdaugh to settle.
In 2021, Tinsley found out he had stage 4 cancer. He went to
Around that time, Tinsley said that one of the defendants —
Meanwhile, a State Grand Jury reached out to Tinsley as part of an investigation into how law enforcement initially handled the investigation into the boat crash.
Waters asks what Murdaugh's skills were as a lawyer. Tinsley says Murdaugh was particularly good at reading people, knowing what made people tick, making people feel like they were the only person in the room, and surprising the defense.
On
Tinsley said that he was contacted by the Satterfields about their settlement. Tinsley referred the family to
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