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    Alex Murdaugh: Who is the disgraced attorney and why is he on trial?

    Alex Murdaugh was accused of stealing a $4m settlement from his late housekeeper’s family at his murder trial on Friday.

    Tony Satterfield, son of Gloria Satterfield, testified in Colleton County Courthouse in Walterboro, South Carolina, on Friday where Mr Murdaugh is currently on trial for the June 2021 murders of his wife Maggie and son Paul.

    Satterfield worked as the Murdaughs’ housekeeper and nanny for more than 20 years, before she died in a mysterious trip and fall at the family home.

    Her son was a witness in a portion of the trial without the jury present to determine if Mr Murdaugh’s financial crimes can be included as evidence to establish a motive for the murders. The court has also heard on the subject from his former best friend, a bank CEO, and the CFO of his former law firm.

    In addition to murder, Mr Murdaugh is facing around 100 charges for stealing almost $8.5m from clients at his former firm.

    Friday also saw extensive testimony from a firearms specialist who determined from spent shell casings found on the property and at the crime scene that a gun owned by the family was used in the murder of Maggie.

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    Speculation over whether Murdaugh accidentally confessed

    Audio from Alex Murdaugh’s second interview with law enforcement was played in court on 30 January, revealing that the disgraced legal dynasty heir may have unwittingly slipped up and confessed to the murders of his wife and son.

    “I did him so bad,” a sobbing Mr Murdaugh appeared to say about his son in a police interview on 10 June 2021.

    Alex Murdaugh's shocking five words after alleged murders revealed

    SLED Special Agent Jeff Croft was asked by prosecutor Creighton Waters to clarify what he heard Mr Murdaugh saying.

    “It’s just so bad. I did him so bad,” he responded.

    While prosecutors sought to suggest that the 54-year-old father and husband slipped up during the police interview, Mr Murdaugh was seen shaking his head and appearing to mouth “I did not say that” to his attorneys in court.

    However, the audio of the interview has also raised doubts, being somewhat unclear as to whether Mr Murdaugh says “I” or “they”, with some inside and outside court believing he actually says: “They did him so bad.”

    During cross-examination on Tuesday, Mr Griffin grilled Agent Croft as to why – if Mr Murdaugh’s statement raised alarm bells – he didn’t follow up on it.

    The special agent testified that he “made a mental note” about Mr Murdaugh’s comment but said it was early in the investigation when officials were in more of an “information gathering” stage.

    The audio was played again in court – twice in real time and once at one-third speed.

    When asked by Mr Griffin if he heard “they” not “I” when the recording was slowed down, Agent Croft testified that he still heard “I”.

    Oliver O'Connell5 February 2023 07:30

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    Murdaugh tells wild story about Black Panthers

    Alex Murdaugh recounted a wild story about a farmhand claiming to “kill radical Black Panthers” when he was interviewed by law enforcement on the night of the double murder of his wife and son.

    In footage of the interview, Mr Murdaugh says he can’t think of anyone “overly suspicious” who could be responsible for the murders but suggests law enforcement speak to a farmhand he had recently hired to work at the 1,700-acre estate.

    Mr Murdaugh claims that the man had told Paul a “really weird” story just one week before the murders.

    “He told Paul a story the other day of how when he was in high school he got in a fight with some Black guys and an FBI undercover team observed him fighting those guys,” he says. “And they put him on an undercover team with three Navy Seals and their job was to kill radical Black Panthers.”

    He adds: “Paul was so taken aback by it that he recorded it on his phone”.

    Mr Murdaugh tells the officers that Paul had “been working with him a lot” and the story was “really weird”.

    However, he adds that he doesn’t believe the man could be behind the murders, saying that it’s “such a stupid” that he was “embarrassed” to even bring it up.

    Oliver O'Connell5 February 2023 05:30

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    911 call played at trial

    The unredacted 911 call placed by Mr Murdaugh on the night of the murders was played at the trial.

    In the dramatic audio, Mr Murdaugh cries and sobs down the phone as he tells the dispatcher “it’s bad” and “my wife and child have been shot badly”.

    He also the dispatcher about the 2019 boat crash involving Paul, saying that the 22-year-old had been getting threats “for months and months and months”.

    The attorney then says he is going back to his house to get a gun “just in case”. When officers arrived on the scene, Mr Murdaugh had a shotgun which he handed over.

    Oliver O'Connell5 February 2023 03:30

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    Bodycam shows Murdaugh’s ‘clean’ shirt after claiming to touch bloody bodies

    Bodycam footage from the night of the murders revealed Mr Murdaugh wearing a “clean” white shirt after he claimed he touched his wife and son’s bloodied bodies on finding them shot dead.

    In the footage, Mr Murdaugh is dressed in a white T-shirt and dark shorts with no obvious signs of blood.

    During courtroom testimony, multiple law enforcement officials described how Mr Murdaugh was “clean” and did not appear to have any blood on him when they arrived on the scene of the murders.

    Alex Murdaugh seen in bodycam footage on the scene of the murders

    (Colleton County Court)

    Yet, according to the 911 call made by Mr Murdaugh and bodycam footage from his first police interview on the night of the murders, Mr Murdaugh claims he touched his wife and son’s bodies when he found them by the kennels.

    In the interview footage, he is heard telling law enforcement twice that he “tried to turn over” his son’s bloodied body and that he had checked him and his wife for pulses.

    “I could see his brain ... I ran over to Maggie, actually I think I tried to turn Paul over first... um... you know, I tried to turn him over, I dunno, I figured it out,” he is heard saying.

    Mr Murdaugh said that his son’s cellphone fell from his pocket when he tried to move him and that he handled it briefly.

    “His cell phone popped out of his pocket, I started trying to do something with it but I put it back down really quickly, and then I went to my wife,” he says.

    Detective Laura Rutland of Colleton County Sheriff’s Office contradicted his version of events as she said that Mr Murdaugh was “clean from head to toe” with no signs of blood on his body, shirt, shorts or shoes.

    She said she didn’t say where he checked for a pulse but, in a gripping reenactment, agreed that if Mr Murdaugh had touched pulse points on Paul’s neck or wrists he would have been covered in blood.

    As jurors have previously heard, the crime scene was especially violent and bloody, with Paul’s brain shot out of his skull and both he and Maggie lying in pools of their own blood.

    Oliver O'Connell5 February 2023 01:30

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    Suspect shed ‘no tears’ after finding wife and son’s bodies

    Colleton County Sheriff’s Office Sgt Daniel Greene testified that Mr Murdaugh appeared to shed “no tears” after he claimed to have found his wife and son’s bodies.

    Sgt Greene told the court that Mr Murdaugh seemed “upset” and repeatedly asked if his wife and son were dead but did not appear to have any physical tears in his eyes.

    “Did you ever see any physical tears?” the prosecutor asked.

    “I did not,” the officer said.

    As bodycam footage from the night of the murders was played in court, Mr Murdaugh was seen breaking down in tears.

    Oliver O'Connell4 February 2023 23:30

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    Murdaugh ‘immediately’ told police murders were tied to 2019 boat crash

    Mr Murdaugh “immediately” suggested that his wife and son had been murdered because of a 2019 fatal boat crash as soon as the first law enforcement officer arrived on the scene of the grisly slayings, bodycam footage played in court revealed.

    In the footage, taken from the bodyworn camera of Colleton County Sheriff’s Sgt Daniel Greene when he was the first officer to respond to the scene, Mr Murdaugh says he believes the murders are connected to the boating incident.

    “This is a long story. My son was in a boat wreck,” Mr Murdaugh says. “I know that’s what this is.”

    At the time of Paul’s death, he was awaiting trial over the death of 19-year-old Mallory Beach.

    Paul was allegedly drunk driving a boat of his friends including Beach in 2019 when it crashed and they were thrown overboard. The rest of the group survived but Beach’s body washed up days later.

    Paul was charged with boating under the influence and faced up to 25 years in prison.

    Mr Murdaugh is also heard mentioning the boat crash in the 911 call alerting law enforcement to the scene and in his first interview with law enforcement on the night of the murders.

    Oliver O'Connell4 February 2023 21:30

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    Defence details horrorific injuries of victims in opening statement

    In the defence’s opening statement, Mr Murdaugh was seen breaking down in tears as his attorney Dick Harpootlian described the fatal shot which killed his son Paul, saying it “exploded his brain, like a watermelon”.

    Mr Murdaugh then arrived home and found his son’s brains by his feet, he said.

    Mr Harpootlian insisted Mr Murdaugh is an innocent man, saying that jurors will see a Snapchat of him and Paul happily spending father-and-son time together less than two hours before the murders.

    “Paul, the apple of his eye. You are going to see a video from the night of the murders of Paul and Alex riding around looking at trees they planted, a Snapchat sent to other people. They were laughing, having a good time,” he said.

    He also argued that cellphone records from that night are “incomplete” and that Maggie’s phone was thrown on the side of a road half a mile from the family estate at the same time that Mr Murdaugh was at the property.

    The suspect would “have to be Houdini to be in both places”, he said.

    Oliver O'Connell4 February 2023 19:30

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    Prosecutor’s opening statement reveals Snapchat video will be key to trial

    Opening arguments kicked off the trial on 25 January, with the prosecution telling jurors that cellphone records and a Snapchat video taken by Paul minutes before he died are “critical” in proving Mr Murdaugh’s guilt.

    Attorney Creighton Waters gave a timeline for the murders, saying that Paul was shot at the dog kennels first at 8.50pm and Maggie minutes later.

    Cellphone records allegedly place Mr Murdaugh at the dog kennels minutes earlier – when the suspect had “told everyone he was never there”.

    Mr Waters also described a video Paul made at the kennels minutes before his murder as he was filming a dog to send to a friend. According to the prosecution, three voices – Paul, Maggie and Mr Murdaugh – can be heard.

    Other evidence the prosecution promised to show jurors included gunshot residue found in both Mr Murdaugh’s car, on him and on a raincoat that he allegedly left at his parents’ home a week after the murders.

    Oliver O'Connell4 February 2023 17:30

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    The trial’s dramatic revelations to date

    It’s a dramatic saga that now includes murder, a botched hitman plot, multi-million-dollar fraud schemes, and a series of unexplained deaths.

    Now-disbarred attorney Alex Murdaugh denies the allegations and has pleaded not guilty.

    The trial got underway at Colleton County Courthouse in Walterboro, South Carolina on 23 January.

    Here are the key revelations from the trial so far:

    Oliver O'Connell4 February 2023 15:30

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    Recap: The story of Alex Murdaugh’s spectacular fall from grace

    He was a high-powered attorney who ran both his own law firm and worked in the local prosecutor’s office.

    He was the son of a powerful legal dynasty that dominated the local South Carolina community for almost a century.

    And he was a family man who lived with his wife and two adult sons on their sprawling country estate.

    Alex Murdaugh trial: Story of the legal scion’s spectacular fall from grace

    The ‘trial of the century’ is now under way in a courtroom in South Carolina where powerful legal scion Alex Murdaugh is charged with the brutal double murder of his wife and son. But this is far from the only twist in a bizarre and sprawling tale of unexplained deaths, hitman plots and multi-million-dollar fraud schemes, writes Rachel Sharp

    Oliver O'Connell4 February 2023 13:30

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