Day 17: Alex Murdaugh's sister-in-law says he told her Maggie 'didn't suffer'
Feb. 14—WALTERBORO, S.C. —
Murdaugh has pleaded not guilty. He faces life in prison without parole if found guilty. The trial started
Prior to stepping down, she said
Proctor said Paul earned the nickname because "if there were pills (
The state then called
After asking Proctor to identify Murdaugh's voice on the video clip, lead prosecutor
Griffin asked if
With no more witnesses from the state available today due to a scheduling conflict, Judge
Before legal teams left the courthouse, Waters said the state intends to argue evidence related to Murdaugh's shooting on
Waters countered the roadside shooting is part of a long chain of events that began around
"'Oh my God, the real killers are back,'" Waters said, "I believe that's the exact effect the defendant intended."
Defense attorney
"Unfortunately
After the shooting, Waters said Murdaugh had investigators create a composite drawing of the alleged gunman and later admitted his account of the shooting was not true. That detail lends more credence to the state's theory, Waters argued.
"If
Harpootlian said his team wasn't anticipating the hearing today and isn't yet prepared.
The hearing will take place at 9:30 Wednesday. Waters did not say Smith will testify. The jury will return at
Judge
However, Newman ruled Proctor can't testify about Alex and
The debate began when lead prosecutor
Maggie made Murdaugh leave the house for a time when the incident happened, Proctor said.
With the jury excused, a brief hearing was held on the state's push to ask
Lead prosecutor
During that time, Proctor said Maggie made Murdaugh leave the house for a period of time.
"Maggie thought it was an affair that happened many years ago," Proctor testified without the jury present. "But Maggie still brought it up."
Maggie didn't think "any thing was going on" at the time, Proctor clarified, but it still bothered her.
"I'm not trying to make it bigger than it is, but ... the state's entitled at least in a limited fashion to offer some testimony in this regard that everything was not perfect as the defense has repeatedly elicited," Waters explained to Judge
Defense attorney
Newman sent the court into a break while he considers his decision.
On the stand,
"It was good," Proctor testified. "It wasn't perfect, but Maggie was happy."
The family was tight-knit, Proctor said, and would attend sporting events and fish together often.
During defense attorney
"You're not critical of Alex wanting to clear Paul's name after he was murdered, are you?" Griffin asked.
Proctor confirmed she wasn't criticizing Murdaugh, but felt he should've put more effort into finding the killer.
"How do you know that wasn't a priority?" Griffin asked.
"We never talked about it," Proctor said. "It was just odd. We were sort of living in fear because we thought this horrible person was out there, but we didn't know the motive behind the killings."
When
"Bart (her husband) had just gotten a text from
Proctor's husband stepped outside to take the call. He came back in soon after to share the news of Maggie and Paul's deaths.
"I just couldn't believe it," Proctor said, finishing her sentence in tears. "I didn't think it was them. ... I said, 'There has to be a mistake. There's got to be some explanation.'"
When she saw
"He assured me that she had not," Proctor said. "Now I don't know that I think that was true."
Proctor said he wasn't sure who committed the murders, but whoever had must have "thought about it for a really long time."
"Did that strike you as odd?" lead prosecutor
"I just didn't know what that meant," Proctor said.
"Not at all. ... They had a comfortable life. Maggie was happy," Proctor testified. "It wasn't a lavish life, but it was a comfortable life. Money, just, it was never an issue for her that she knew about."
Last week, the Murdaughs' former housekeeper,
During their talk, Turrubiate-Simpson shared Maggie was concerned about the family's declining finances, especially in the wake of
"She was worried because the lawsuit was presented, saying they wanted
Turrubiate-Simpson also said Maggie felt
"She said, 'He doesn't tell me everything,'" Turrubiate-Simpson testified.
Proctor is Maggie's older sibling by five years, she said.
On cross-examination, defense attorney
Throughout the trial, evidence of Murdaugh's alleged financial crimes has emerged. On
Later that year, Murdaugh had also accumulated millions in debt to
But at the time of the murders, Griffin said, the situation wasn't so dire.
"On
Griffin added the audit didn't consider Murdaugh's non-liquid assets like property, his 401k, and his ownership stake in the PMPED law firm.
Burney responded he was only "looking at the accounts," rather than making a financial assessment.
The jury has returned to the courtroom with
Burney is a forensic auditor with the
Burney is being cross-examined by defense attorney
Judge
During his four years of employment — which included feeding Moselle's dogs and cleaning the kennels — Davis said water wouldn't usually pool around the feed room, where
Paul's body also had a pool of water around it.
The water was contentious in earlier testimony, and the defense repeatedly objected when prosecutors attempted to ask if the water had blood streaks in it.
During cross-examination of Dr.
On Monday, Riemer testified she believed Paul was killed by two shotgun blasts. The first one, she said, was to the upper left side of his chest but was not fatal. The second shot moved across his left shoulder, into his neck and up through his skull.
The second shot, Riemer concluded, was immediately fatal.
Harpootlian posited the head wound may have instead been the entrance wound, and further asked if Riemer had searched thoroughly for soot around that wound.
Riemer confirmed she hadn't, since she wouldn't look for soot around an exit wound. Soot is deposited around a gunshot wound if the gun is within 6 inches of someone's skin when it's fired, a "contact" wound often seen in people who die by suicide. Soot would only accumulate around entrance wounds.
The presence of shotgun pellet entrance wounds on the shoulder indicated the shot originated from that direction, Riemer concluded, and no soot or stippling was found around those wounds. Riemer said that indicated the shooter was likely more than 3 feet away.
"People can disagree, but that doesn't change the truth," Riemer said, responding to Harpootlian's suggestion Paul was killed by a contact-distance shotgun blast.
Dr.
On Monday, lead prosecutor
Much of Riemer's testimony was used to establish a likely sequence for Maggie and Paul's deaths. Paul was killed by two shotgun blasts — the second of which was fatal — and Maggie died from "four or five" .300 Blackout shots, Riemer testified.
The uncertainty stems from the potential for one of the shots to have caused two wounds, she said.
Monday's session also included testimony from SLED DNA analyst
Defense attorney
This story was originally published
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