One of the most high-profile true crime cases in recent history is playing out in a South Carolina courtroom.
Testimony is underway in the double murder trial of disbarred attorney Richard “Alex” Murdaugh, who is charged with killing his wife and son.
Murdaugh, part of a South Carolina legal dynasty, was charged with murder in connection to the 2021 shooting deaths of his wife, Maggie, and son, Paul. Murdaugh has pleaded not guilty.
After the shootings in June 2021, police launched investigations into two other deaths connected to Murdaugh and alleged criminal acts dating back more than a decade.
Here are the details of the case:
Alex Murdaugh trial:Catch up on everything from the beginning.
Murdaugh takes the stand:Former South Carolina attorney Alex Murdaugh testifies in own defense in murder trial
Prosecutor paints Murdaugh as a self-made martyr, moves the trial to a character debate
Prosecutor Creighton Waters widened the scope of cross-examination late Friday afternoon, moving to broader questions about Murdaugh’s character.
Waters has made sweeping statements about Murdaugh’s character, evidently aiming to poke holes in Murdaugh’s projected image of a grief-stricken defendant. Throughout his time on the stand Murdaugh has remained fairly even-headed, obfuscating direct attacks on his character and expressing remorse over previous crimes.
Waters has been dogged in his attempts to puncture that image and to convince the jury that the defendant’s attitude is an act — that he is a man of great privilege and wealth who is once again trying to skirt accountability.
Murdaugh gave an unequivocal denial when Waters prompted, “Mr. Murdaugh are you a family annihilator?”
Prosecutor tries to poke holes in Murdaugh’s new story, needles about lying to SLED
In an exhaustive review of the events leading up to the murders of Paul and Maggie Murdaugh, Waters focused on revealing inconsistencies in the defendant’s story.
Waters focused on details including phone calls Murdaugh made before the killings and conversations he had with his wife in an apparent effort to poke holes in a new narrative of events Murdaugh recounted for the first time on the witness stand.
During yesterday’s testimony, Murdaugh admitted to lying to SLED officials the evening of the murder. Murdaugh blamed his lying on drug-induced paranoia. During extensive questioning, Water pressed Murdaugh on exactly when he decided to lie to SLED detective David Owens about seeing Maggie and Paul that night, playing clips from the interview and pausing at certain points to ask if he’d started lying yet.
Day 2 of Alex Murdaugh’s cross-examination begins with detailing of oxycodone addiction
The cross examination of accused murderer Alex Murdaugh continued for a second day Friday, as lead prosecutor Creighton Waters pressed the defendant on his drug dependency.
Murdaugh painted himself as a man at the mercy of his opioid addiction, attempting at kick the habit hundreds of times. He described the pain it inflicted on his family and the paranoia it elicited.
Before rehab, Murdaugh said he always kept the pills on him, afraid someone might discover them. He said he had a pocket full of pills when he was interviewed by law enforcement the day after the murders.
Murdaugh said the prosecution failed to respond to multiple requests from his lawyers talk about his other wrong-doings. He would have been willing to share about his drug addiction and financial crimes and how they related to the evidence, he said, but lawyers for the state did not respond to his attorney. The first contact with prosecu Murdaugh said he received was when he was charged with murder.
Waters balked at that assertion, noting that Murdaugh had never, before taking the stand Thursday, told prosecutors he had lied about being at the dog kennels the night of the murder. Waters said Murdaugh was simply coming up with a brand new story to match the facts of the case.
Tensions rose between Waters and Murdaugh over financial crimes
Tempers flared during the cross examination between the defendant and lawyer Creighton Waters on Murdaugh’s financial crimes. Waters described how Murdaugh sat across from one client, looking her in the eye and “talking fast” – a folksy way of saying lying.
Murdaugh equivocated on the eye contact, and said the details of his fraud was hazy.
The questioning appeared aimed at portraying Murdaugh as a man who lied easily, and had become quite good at it.
Murdaugh, expressed exasperation, telling Waters he had been forced to sit through weeks of testimony about financial crimes he has admitted to and is embarrassed about, bit is on trial for the murder of his wife and son.
“I stole money that was not my money, I misled people I shouldn’t have misled and I did wrong I can tell you that,” Murdaugh conceded.
Cross examination begins, Creighton Waters draws on Murdaugh family legacy
Creighton Waters began an aggressive cross-examination of Murdaugh, taking a combative tone with the defendant.
Delving into the history of the Murdaugh legal dynasty, Waters peppered him with questions about his family tree and his own success as a lawyer.
Waters and Murdaugh sparred over the definition of success, with Waters pointing out the cases Murdaugh won and the millions of dollars in legal fees he collected. Murdaugh, however, seemed hesitant to paint himself in too favorable a light. “Do I feel like I was successful? No sir not sitting here today I don’t,” Murdaugh said.
Waters line of questioning sought to portray a cozy relationship Murdaugh had with law enforcement based on family connections.
Murdaugh confesses to orchestrating assisted suicide plot, gushes about wife Maggie and son Paul
Murdaugh told jurors about an assisted suicide plot he hatched, paying Curtis Edward Smith to shoot him to escape his addiction.
“At the time in the bad place that I was, it seemed like the better thing to do,” he said, saying that now he is grateful to have survived.
When asked about his wife, Murdaugh lovingly described her as a wonderful woman whose laugh would light up a room. Very feminine, she did her best as the mother of two sons, he said, taking to their interests. She could hob-nob with the affluent at the governor’s mansion and then take a shift at a soup kitchen.
“I would never hurt Maggie – ever,” Murdaugh insisted.
Murdaugh described his son Paul as a good man, who had been misrepresented in the media. He challenged everyone in the courtroom, and anyone listening – nodding to the trial’s wide digital audience – to find anyone who knew Paul “without an ulterior motive” who had something negative to say about him.
“He was a man’s man,” Murdaugh said, a true country boy with a soft and sweet side, often checking in on his grandparents.
“Did I love him?” Murdaugh said, choking back tears “Like no other.”
Murdaugh admits to stealing client funds, talks about his opioid addiction
Alex Murdaugh returned to the witness stand Thursday afternoon after a lunch break to answer question about his alleged financial crimes. He downplayed his feelings about a confrontation by his former law firm CFO about his stealing that occurred the day of the murders
“It wasn’t anything that was a big deal,” Murdaugh said, noting he was not worried at the time about anyone looking into the missing legal fee which prompted the conversation.
Murdaugh later admitted to stealing legal fees from the family law firm. Asked by lawyers how he got himself into such a predicament he said, “I’m not quite sure how I let myself get where I got.”
Murdaugh said he was addicted to opioids, in particular oxycodone, after knee surgery for a college football injury sustained during his time at University of South Carolina. The addiction was expensive he said. After various detox attempts and a trip to rehab, Murdaugh shared he has been sober for 353 days and is “very proud of that.”
Murdaugh details threats against his son Paul after boat accident, walks lawyers through moments after murders
At one point in his 911 call, Murdaugh can be heard saying, “I should have known.” He explained he was referring to “the most vile threats” that had been levied against his son Paul after he was implicated in a 2019 boat crash. Murdaugh said the threats were so extreme that a counselor at Paul’s college had reached out to him.
His lawyers also asked Murdaugh why he traveled back to his home to get a firearm after discovering his wife and son. Murdaugh, appearing slightly flustered repeated “I don’t know” a number of times on the stand before indicating he thought the killer might be at large.
Murdaugh also offered an explanation for suspicious phone activity presented by the prosecution that showed he made google searches for a restaurant and called a wedding photographer in the moments after the murder. In the rush to call family members, Murdaugh said the search must have happened by accident.
Alex Murdaugh breaks down on the stand describing crime scene
Following a detailed play-by-play of his day leading up to the murders, Murdaugh became emotional on the stand, breaking down in tears and asking for water, before describing the moment he discovered the bodies of his wife and son.
Through tears, Murdaugh recalled his shock and desperation at the scene, saying he touched both bodies to check for signs of life and to return his son Paul’s phone to his pocket after it had fallen out.
Defense attorneys played back the 911 call from the evening of the murders as Murdaugh listened in to his own voice, often looking downward and shaking.
Alex Murdaugh admits to lying to SLED the night of the murders, blames addiction
Speaking to crowded courtroom pews, Murdaugh admitted to lying to South Carolina Law Enforcement agents, but vehemently denied ever shooting his wife Maggie or son Paul, who he referred to by nicknames ‘Mags’ and “Pau-Pau’ on the stand.
Murdaugh, appearing at times emotional and at a loss for words, told defense attorney Jim Griffin that he had lied to SLED agents about the last time he had seen his wife and son the night of the murders, blaming it partially on his distrust for the agency, and on a paranoia induced by drug addiction. Mr. Murdaugh entered rehab previously for oxycodone dependence.
Asked why he continued to lie to law enforcement after the murders, Murdaugh lamented: “What a tangled web we weave.”
What is SLED?
SLED stands for South Carolina Law Enforcement Division, the state agency which has run point on the investigation into the killing of Paul and Maggie Murdaugh.
SLED agents arrived on scene after the killings, and conducted interviews with father and husband, Alex Murdaugh, who was charged with their murders.
On Thursday, Murdaugh took the stand and admitted lying to SLED agents in the aftermath of the crime, attributing his dishonesty to a general distrust in the agency and the advice of former law partners not to speak to agents without an attorney present.
Alex Murdaugh takes the stand for highly anticipated testimony
After some back and forth, defendant Alex Murdaugh confirmed Thursday he will take the stand in his own murder trial, opening himself up to questioning from his lawyers, and a potentially brutal cross-examination.
Murdaugh, a former attorney, will provide testimony aimed at rebutting claims by the state that he murdered his wife and son to distract from his financial crimes.
Defense attorney Jim Griffin asked Judge Clifton Newman Wednesday if Murdaugh could use his Fifth Amendment rights against incriminating himself in the nearly 100 other allegations he faces including stealing from clients, money laundering, tax evasion and insurance fraud. Newman said prosecutors generally get wide latitude in cross examination.
Alex Murdaugh’s lawyers present a defense, Buster Murdaugh testifies
Week five of the Murdaugh trial kicked off Tuesday with the defense team at the helm. Lawyers for Alex Murdaugh began making their case Friday afternoon, calling two officials whose testimony they view as crucial to poking holes in the state’s presented evidence: Colleton County Coroner Richard Harvey, and Sheriff’s Office Public Information Officer Shalane Tindal.
Tuesday morning Buster Murdaugh, Alex Murdaugh’s surviving son, took the stand detailing how guns were stored at the family property ‘Moselle.’
Murdaugh’s high profile defense team will need to provide the jury reasonable doubt that their client committed the murders and paint the evidence presented by the prosecution as circumstantial and too week to bring such a serious charge.
State rests, but Murdaugh defense team asks for case to be tossed
Over the course of the past month, lawyers for the State of South Carolina have called over 50 witnesses, presenting a case against disgraced lawyer Richard “Alex” Murdaugh. On Friday, they rested their case. Shortly after, Jim Griffin, one of Murdaugh’s attorneys, requested a “directed verdict,” alleging the prosecution had failed to provide sufficient evidence for the jury to deliver a guilty verdict.
In a hearing without the jury present Griffin claimed the evidence was “exclusively circumstantial” and “merely suspicious.” Judge Clifton Newman shot down these assertions, saying the court and S.C. law makes no distinction between direct evidence and circumstantial evidence.
“Their is evidence to derive at a guilty verdict, if the jury agrees,” Newman commented.
Read a full recap of Day 20’s trial proceedings.
When was Alex Murdaugh’s roadside shooting?
The murders of Maggie and Paul Murdaugh are not the only shootings related to this case. In September 2021, Alex Murdaugh himself was hit in the head by a bullet during a drive-by shooting.
State police confirmed that the shooting was orchestrated by Murdaugh himself as an “assisted suicide” plot. He was charged in connection with the failed suicide-for-hire attempt from which he had hoped to secure a $10 million life insurance payout for his son.
Curtis Edward Smith, the shooter, was a former client of Murdaugh, and also faces a number of charges including insurance fraud, conspiracy, assisted suicide, aggravated assault and battery.
Murdaugh gave Smith the gun to kill him, police said. Smith then followed Murdaugh to Old Salkehatchie Road in Hampton County and fired the shot. It only grazed Murdaugh though, who was then able to call 911.
Following the incident, state agents confirmed both men confessed. Murdaugh’s lawyer later asserted his client had come up with the plan for a would-be-assassination amid a battle with oxycodone addiction and a depressive episode. He entered rehab shortly after and resigned from the family law firm following allegations he had misappropriated funds.
Murdaugh jurors test positive for COVID
Two of the jurors in the double-homicide trial tested positive for COVID-19 ahead of Monday’s court proceedings. The clerk of court also tested positive.
After the remaining 10 jurors and five alternates tested negative, Judge Clifton Newman decided to continue the trial despite requests from both the prosecution and defense for a delay. Another round of tests will be administered Wednesday.
The remaining jurors will wear masks, as will testifying witnesses and questioning attorneys. The courtroom will remain as packed as before, with 200-plus onlookers, who will not be required to don masks.
Newman, however, recommend safety measures. “At the moment, we are going to encourage everyone here to mask up for your own protection as well as the protection of these proceedings and each other,” he said.
Who is Claude ‘C.B. Rowe?
Claude “C.B.” Rowe is a former Murdaugh employee.
Colleton County Sheriff’s Office detective Laura Rutland, who served as a liaison to SLED for the investigation, testified earlier that Murdaugh offered up Rowe’s name as a possible suspect in the murders during an interview the night of the killings.
Cell phone records presented in court indicate Rowe’s phone was was not in the vicinity of the Murdaugh estate at the time of the murders.
Rowe, a groundskeeper for the Murdaugh estate, also is part of the defendant’s alibi. In court filings, Murdaugh says the night of the murders he drove to his mother’s house in nearby Vanville and called a number of people on the way, including C.B. Rowe.
During Monday’s court proceedings, SLED Forensic DNA analyst Sarah Zapata testified in tedious and inconclusive detail about DNA samples, including those found beneath Maggie Murdaugh’s fingernails. Rowe’s DNA couldn’t be ruled out but Zapata said it was only a “moderate likelihood” the mixture was his and Maggie’s.
The foreign DNA from a male found under Maggie’s nails was not her husband or son Paul.
Gloria Satterfield’s son testifies
Tony Satterfield, the son of Gloria Satterfield, a former housekeeper for the Murdaughs, who died as a result of a fall at the family property, took the stand Thursday.
Satterfield testified that after his mother died in 2018, Murdaugh approached him and his brother and promised to take care of them, telling them he would allow a friendly claim against his homeowner’s insurance.
Murdaugh promised to secure $100,000 for each of the grieving sons, Satterfield testified. However, according to indictments and civil lawsuits, Murdaugh, along with fellow attorney Cory Fleming carried out a scheme to coerce his insurance companies into paying roughly $4.3 million — all of which Murdaugh kept.
“Did he ever pay you one dime?” Creighton Waters, lead prosecutor Creighton Waters asked Satterfield. “No,” he responded.
Who is Chris Wilson? Alex Murdaugh’s friend takes the stand
Chris Wilson, a former close friend of Alex Murdaugh, took the stand midday Thursday. Wilson, a Bamberg lawyer, who has known Murdaugh since high school, appeared as a witness for the prosecution.
Wilson testified to his family’s shock and grief at the death of both Maggie and Paul, and described traveling to Moselle, the family property, to comfort Murdaugh the night of the murders.
In his testimony Wilson suggested that both he and other lawyer friends of Murdaugh did not want him speaking to South Carolina Law Enforcement Division (SLED) officers alone because he was so distraught. “We felt that Alex wasn’t in a position that he needed to, or was even able to, talk to SLED without someone being with him,” Wilson said.
In a previous in-camera testimony, without the jury present, Wilson described how close he and his family were to the Murdaughs, and how he felt truly betrayed by Murdaugh’s financial crimes.
“He was one of my best friends, and I thought that he felt that way about me,” Wilson said, his voice thick with emotion on Thursday.
As questions continued, Murdaugh hung his head and wiped away tears.
Colleton County Courthouse evacuated due to bomb threat
On Wednesday, a Colleton County Sheriff’s Office deputy was reported to be sprinting across the grounds of the Courthouse, yelling in a panic for people to clear the area.
At 12:27 p.m., Judge Clifton Newman ordered the courtroom to be evacuated until as late as 2:30 p.m. Newman did not cite a specific reason for the evacuation, but the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division confirmed that a bomb threat was reported.
Several student groups were in attendance today at the trial today as well as Murdaugh family members.
Jason Ryan on the ground at the courthouse on behalf of the The Hampton County Guardian described significant police presence at the scene, reporting that law enforcement had formed a perimeter around the courthouse square and cleared the block.
Shortly after 3 p.m. the court reconvened and proceedings resumed.
Jeanne Seckinger testifies to Alex Murdaugh’s alleged stealing
Jeanne Seckinger, CFO of the Murdaugh family law firm PMPED (now Parker Law Group) took the stand Tuesday, painting Alex Murdaugh as a thief and manipulator.
Seckinger alleged Murdaugh used his prominent name and the chummy culture of the law firm to pull off a years-long con, stealing millions from clients, partners and other close associates.
Seckinger characterized Murdaugh as a sloppy thief, stealing the same funds twice and leaving incriminating checks and bank statements on his desk at the office.
His success as a lawyer, she alleged, was not the result of skill but manipulation. “Alex was successful, not because of his work ethic, because of his ability to manipulate people into a settlement,” Seckinger told the courtroom, “He did it through the art of (expletive) , basically.”
An important ruling from Judge Newman
Judge Clifton Newman ruled on Monday that evidence pertaining to Alex Murdaugh’s other alleged crimes would be permitted in the trial. The ruling is a big win for the prosecution, which filed documents indicating lawyers plan to paint Murdaugh as a man out of options, desperate to distract from his financial crimes.
“I find that the jury is entitled to consider the apparent desperation of Mr. Murdaugh because of his dire financial situation and the treat of being exposed. … possibly resulting in the commission of the alleged crimes,” Newman said.
Murdaugh is the subject of a number of state investigations and has been indicted on nearly 100 different charges including fraud and drug trafficking. The admission of evidence related to these alleged crimes is expected to prolong what was already anticipated to be a three-week trial.
Alex Murdaugh murder trial updates:Judge rules financial crimes admissible; caregiver testifies
Caretaker for Libby Murdaugh, Alex Mudaugh’s mother testifies
The prosecution called Mushelle “Shelley” Smith to the stand as Monday. Smith is the caretaker for Alex Murdaugh’s elderly mother, Libby Murdaugh.
Smith testified that Murdaugh came to visit his mother the night of the murders at about 9 or 9:30 p.m. and stayed 15 to 20 minutes. Smith testified that days later, at the funeral of his father, Randolph Murdaugh III Alex made a point of telling her he was at the house that night for longer — 30 to 40 minutes.
She also testified that Murdaugh offered financial support for her upcoming wedding and to use his connections to help with her second job at the local school district .
Smith also said a week after the murders she saw Murdaugh at his mother’s home carrying what looked to be a blue tarp.
In his cross-examination, defense team lawyer Jim Griffin sought to undermine Smith’s account by pointing to a conflicting report she gave police about whether Murdaugh had a tarp or a raincoat.
When were the Murdaugh murders?
Maggie and Paul Murdaugh were shot and killed the evening of June 7, 2021, on the family’s property in Islandton, South Carolina.
It wasn’t until July 14, 2022, more than a year later, that authorities pointed to Alex Murdaugh as the killer, indicting him on two counts of murder.
Where is the Murdaugh trial being held?
The trial is taking place in Walterboro, South Carolina at the Colleton Country Courthouse.
Judge Clifton Newman is pred
Where did the Murdaugh murders happen?
Both Maggie and Paul were killed at the Murdaugbh estate, called ‘Moselle’ in Islandton, South Carolina.
This is also the home where Gloria Ann Satterfield, long-time housekeeper for the Murdaugh family, died following a fall down the stairs.
Alex Murdaugh was later investigated by the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division (SLED) in connection with Satterfield’s death over allegations he stole insurance settlement funds from her heirs. Murdaugh also faced a civil suit from Satterfield’s sons in connection with those allegations.
Who is Rogan Gibson?
Rogan Gibson, a friend of Paul Murdaugh’s, was named a number of times in day six of the trial.
Gibson’s communications via text and call with Paul were presented as evidence to help establish a timeline of the murders.
SLED Senior Special Agent Jeff Croft shared cell phone snapshots of text exchanges between Gibson and both victims, as well as a call log showing Gibson attempted to call Paul numerous times without answer.
Logs also showed that Gibson missed a number of calls from the defendant Alex Murdaugh.
What is the significance of the 300 Blackout rifle?
During week one of the trial, prosecutors said markings, model and brand information for the 300 Blackout rifle cartridges found at the crime scene matched other ammunition found throughout the Murdaugh estate.
The defendant Alex Murdaugh purchased a 300 Blackout style rifle for his son Paul in 2017, which could not be found. Murdaugh’s attorney Richard Harpootlian maintains it was stolen.
What are the charges against Alex Murdaugh charged?
Murdaugh is facing double-homicide charges, accused of killing his son Paul, 22, and wife Maggie, 52.
Murdaugh also is the subject of other state investigations and has been indicted on roughly 100 additional charges. Those charges include tax evasion, drug trafficking and fraud.
His cases have thrust the small town of Walterboro and Colleton County, South Carolina, into the national spotlight.
The criminal saga of Alex Murdaugh, whose family had control over a local prosecutor’s office in Hampton County for over 80 years, stretches back nearly a decade. Following the June 2021 shootings, law enforcement began to investigate two other deaths in connection with Murdaugh. He himself survived a gunshot during a drive-by shooting prosecutors allege was part of a failed insurance fraud scheme.
Take an in-depth look at the timeline: What we know about Alex Murdaugh’s crime saga.
Who is Alex Murdaugh?:Behind the man who wrecked a South Carolina legal dynasty
How is the PMPED law firm/Parker Law Group related?
PMPED (now called Parker Law group) is the family law firm where Alex Murdaugh was formerly employed. The name stands for the initials of Peters, Murdaugh, Parker Eltzroth and Detrick.
Murdaugh resigned from the firm after being accused of stealing funds. Judge Newman ruled on Monday that evidence of Murdaugh’s alleged financial crimes will be admissible in the case. On Thursday Jeannie Seckinger, the CFO of Parker Law Group, testified she had confronted Murdaugh about missing legal fees the day of the murder. The jury was not present for this testimony.
Filings from the prosecution indicate they allege Murdaugh carried out the murders to distract PMPED from his financial crimes. The state also plans to call Annette Griswald, Murdaugh’s former paralegal who first sounded the alarm bell on the alleged finacial crimes .
Murdaugh trial witness list
More than 250 people are on the potential witness list for the defense and prosecution.
The list includes agents from the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division (SLED), forensic experts, Murdaugh family members and medical professionals.
Here’s who has been called so far:
- Tinish Bryson-Smith: Hampton County 911 Dispatch
- Angela Stallings: Colleton County Dispatch/Colleton County Sheriff’s Office
- Barry McRoy: Colleton County Fire Rescue
- Jason Chapman: Colleton County Sheriff’s Office Captain
- Laura Rutland: Colleton County Sheriff’s Office Detective
- Sgt. Daniel Greene: Colleton County Sheriff’s Office
- Corp. Chad McDowell: Colleton County Sheriff’s Office
- Dalila Cirencione: SLED agent
- Melinda Worley: SLED forensic agent
- Jeff Croft: SLED Senior Special Agent
- Michael Anthony Knecht: Verizon records custodian
- Paul McManigle: cell phone forensic expert with U.S. Secret Service
- Jonathan VanHouten: cell phone forensic expert with U.S. Secret Service
- Lt. Britt Dove: SLED cell phone forensic expert
- Rogan Gibson: Paul Murdaugh’s friend
- Will Loving: Paul Murdaugh’s friend
- Paul Greer: SLED Firearms Examiner
- John Bedingfield: S.C. Department of Natural Resources officer and custom gunmaker
- Mushelle “Shelley” Smith: caregiver for Alex Murdaugh’s mother
- Jeannie Seckinger: CFO of Parker Law Group (formerly known as PMPED)
- Megan Fletcher: SLED Trace Evidence Analyst and forensics expert
- Ronnie Crosby: managing partner at Parker Law Group (formerly known as PMPED)
- Michael “Tony” Satterfield: Gloria Satterfield’s son
- Chris Wilson: Alex Murdaugh’s former friend, law partner
- Dwight Falkofske: FBI electronics engineer and automotive forensic specialist
- Brian Hudak: SLED forensics expert
- Mark Tinsley: Attorney representing the estate of Mallory Beach
- Mathew Wilde: FBI Supervisory Special Agent, expert on historical call data analysis and cellular location analysis
- Nathan Tuten: Paul Murdaugh’s childhood friend
- Blanca Turrubiate-Simpson: Murdaugh household employee
- Sarah Zapata: SLED Forensic DNA analyst
- Ryan Kelly: SLED Sr. Special Agent
- Rachel Nguyen: DNA forensic analyst at SLED
- Marion Proctor: Maggie Murdaugh’s sister
- Bart Proctor: Alex Murdaugh’s brother-in-law
- Carson Burney: forensic accountant with the State Grand Jury Division of the S.C. Attorney General’s Office
- Dr. Ellen Riemer: forensic pathologist who autopsied Paul and Maggie
- Devin Newell: fuel performance and data analyst with General Motors
- Roger Dale Davis Jr.: Murdaugh family pet caretaker
- Mike Sutton: forensic engineer
- Mark Ball: former law partner of Murdaugh
- Kenneth Zercie: crime scene reconstruction expert
- Alex Murdaugh: defendant
Alex Murdaugh murder trial:First officers on scene of murders offer revealing testimony.
Who are Alex Murdaugh’s attorneys? Richard “Dick” Harpootlian leads defense team
Judge Clifton Newman is presiding over the trial and Murdaugh’s defense team is headed by attorneys Richard Harpootlian and Jim Griffin.
Harpootlian is a trial lawyer with decades of experience, having worked as a prosecutor, defense attorney and civil litigator. He is no stranger to high-profile cases. Notably, in 1983, Harpootlian sealed a death-row conviction for the prosecution of Donald “Pee Wee” Gaskins — a notorious serial killer.
Griffin is both a trial lawyer and health care attorney and has extensive experience in representing clients charged with federal crimes, including various classifications of fraud, public corruption, and criminal tax charges.
Dig deeper:Learn more about Alex Murdaugh’s media-savvy defense team
Who is the prosecutor in the Murdaugh trial? Creighton Waters leads the team
Creighton Waters is the chief attorney for the State Grand Jury division of the South Carolina Attorney General’s Office and is the lead prosecutor in all of the criminal cases involving Murdaugh.
Waters, 52, has worked for the Attorney General’s Office for more than 24 years. He has won State Grand Jury indictments on corrupt law enforcement officers, as well as school district and county officials. His work has earned indictments on more than 100 suspects following investigations into drug operations in the state prison system.
Since 2019, Waters’ primary focus has been on unraveling Murdaugh’s alleged web of financial and drug-related crimes, and leveling indictment after indictment against the disbarred attorney and several of his alleged accomplices.
Welcome to Walterboro, South Carolina:Food trucks serve influx of visitors amid Murdaugh murders trial
Paul Murdaugh boat crash
In July 2021 court documents were filed alleging a civil conspiracy that would have connected law enforcement with members of the Murdaugh family after a 2019 Beaufort County boat crash killed Mallory Beach, 19.
Paul Murdaugh, Alex Murdaugh’s late son, was allegedly driving the boat when he crashed into a bridge, resulting in Beach’s death and injuries to the two other passengers on board. He was awaiting trial after pleading not guilty to three felony counts of boating under the influence. The boat was owned by Alex Murdaugh.
In court proceedings Sgt. Daniel Greene of the Colleton County Sheriff’s Office testified that Murdaugh, moments after officers arrived on the scene the night of Maggie and Paul’s death, told them that the shootings were likely related to the 2019 boat crash and threats his son had been receiving.
Who is Buster Murdaugh?
Alex and Maggie Murdaugh had two children: Paul, who is the subject of the murder trial and one other surviving son Richard “Buster” Murdaugh.
Buster is on the witness list for the trial. He attended law school at University of South Carolina before being kicked out over accusations of plagiarism, according to the Wall Street Journal.
Buster and Maggie Murdaugh were both named in the wrongful death lawsuit brought by Mallory Beach’s family following the 2019 boat crash, but their names were eventually dropped in the settlement. Buster was charged originally because his ID was used by younger brother Paul to buy the alcohol in his system at the time of the crash.
Alex Murdaugh trial jury selection
Jury selection began Monday, Jan. 23 in a Walterboro, South Carolina, courtroom for the highly anticipated trial.
Attorneys narrowed down a list of 900 residents to a potential jury pool of roughly 150 in open court and made further cuts in judge’s chambers. On Wednesday, Jan. 25, they settled on a final jury of four white men, six white women and two Black women. The alternates include two white men, one white woman, one Black man and two Black women.
The South Carolina Attorney General’s Office is seeking life in prison for Murdaugh if he is convicted.
A deep dive:Learn more about jury selection in the Alex Murdaugh trial.
Alex Murdaugh murder trial begins:What could happen in this historic case?
Alex Murdaugh trial opening statements
Opening statements were given by state prosecutors and defense attorneys on Wednesday, Jan. 25.
Lead prosecutor Creighton Waters asserted evidence would show a “perfect storm” was brewing that led Murdaugh, 54, to kill his wife and son in June 2021. Dick Harpootlian, Murdaugh’s defense attorney, reminded the jury his client is innocent until proven guilty and dismissed the state’s evidence and mere “theories.”
Waters detailed a precise timeline of the crime in his opening statement, drawing on ballistic and forensic evidence, cell phone data and video footage of the crime scene. He alleged Murdaugh used a family gun, which is now missing, to commit the murders, then drove to his mother’s house before returning home later and phoning 911.
“You are going to see what he did to Maggie and Paul, and it is going to be gruesome,” Waters said.
Murdaugh trial kicks off:Opening statements given in former attorney Alex Murdaugh’s double murder trial
Contributing: Michael M. DeWitt Jr. and N’dea Yancy-Bragg