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Orgo-Life the new way to the future Advertising by AdpathwayAlex Murdaugh Found Guilty of Murdering Wife Maggie & Son Paul
Alex Murdaugh is going back to court.
Three years after the former lawyer was convicted of the double murders of his wife Margaret “Maggie” Murdaugh and his son Paul Murdaugh, the South Carolina Supreme Court overturned the ruling on May 13, and ordered a new trial.
Indeed, Murdaugh’s defense team had filed an appeal to his conviction in February, and the state Supreme Court ruled that specific allegations made in the filing—including accusing Colleton County Clerk of Court Rebecca “Becky” Hill improperly influencing jurors—warranted further proceedings, according to its decision viewed by E! News.
“Hill placed her fingers on the scales of justice,” the decision read, adding that her interference in the March 2023 double murder trial was “shocking,” and that she had "egregiously attacked Murdaugh’s credibility.”
Elsewhere in the decision, Hill denied any allegations that she attempted to influence the jury.
In a statement to E! News, Murdaugh’s defense team including lawyers Dick Harpootlian and Jim Griffin said the court’s decision “affirms that the rule of law remains strong in South Carolina.”
“We respect the decision that made clear that the retrial must look very different from the first,” the statement continued. “The initial jury heard more than twelve hours of testimony about Alex's financial crimes. The Court held that this evidence went far beyond what was necessary and gave rise to unfair prejudice. On retrial, that will not be permitted.”
The statement concluded, “Alex has said from day one that he did not kill his wife and son. We look forward to a new trial conducted consistent with the Constitution and the guidance this Court has provided.”
South Carolina Department of Corrections
Murdaugh’s legal team—who initially filed for a retrial in 2024—had slammed Hill’s participation in season two of the Netflix documentary Murdaugh Murders: A Southern Scandal in September 2023, where she said in an on-camera interview, “I do think Alex pulled the trigger.”
In response to the court clerk’s comments, Murdaugh’s lawyer Griffin said in a statement he was “flabbergasted.”
“I am reacting in real time to that,” Griffin said at the time. “There's a code of judicial ethics that applies to all court officials that says no judicial officer should give their opinion about someone's guilt or innocence while the case is pending and pending includes while the case is on appeal."
E! News has attempted to reach lawyers for Hill but has not yet heard back. Previously, Hill did not respond to requests for comment regarding Griffin's statements.
The overturning of Murdaugh’s conviction comes three years after the former lawyer—who is also dad to son Richard Alexander “Buster” Murdaugh, 30—was charged with two consecutive life sentences for the murder of his wife Maggie, 52, and son Paul, 22, at their family’s Moselle property in June 2021.
Throughout the trial, Murdaugh had maintained his innocence, continually testifying that he did “not shoot my wife or my son any time.”
Joshua Boucher/The State/Tribune News Service via Getty Images
Nevertheless, prosecutors proved Murdaugh—who later pleaded guilty to more than a hundred financial crimes including money laundering, breach of trust and tax evasion, involving 18 victims in November 2023—had been lying about his alibi leading up to the trial, which placed him at his mother’s home during the time of the murders.
“I did lie,” he said on the stand during his March 2023 trial. “As my addiction evolved over time, I would get in these situations or circumstances where I would get paranoid.”
Murdaugh’s 2023 murder trial and the events leading up to it were depicted in Hulu’s Murdaugh: Death in the Family series last year. To read up on everything the series covered—and whether it was real—keep reading…
Disney/Daniel Delgado Jr
Who Was Maggie Murdaugh?
The late Maggie Murdaugh, portrayed by Patricia Arquette in Murdaugh: Death in the Family, is a main character in the series but what was going on in her mind as her family was falling apart is unknowable.
So, the series' creators had to improvise.
"She owned a store in town, she got married when she was younger, she was being pursued by other people and Alex Murdaugh just sort of said, 'This is my wife,'" co-creator Erin Lee Carr told MovieWeb of crafting the Maggie character. "To be able to fictionalize the relationship between her and her sister, and what had previously potentially happened in her marriage, that just gives you so much more access to the story."
Disney/Daniel Delgado Jr.
Did Alex Murdaugh Try to Silence Witnesses of Son Paul Murdaugh's Fatal Boat Crash?
After a night of partying, Paul Murdaugh was drunk in the early morning hours of Feb. 24, 2019, when the boat he was driving slammed into Archers Creek Bridge with his girlfriend Morgan Doughty, Mallory Beach, Anthony Cook, Connor Cook and Miley Altman aboard.
Mallory was thrown overboard and died, while the others were injured.
Paul was charged two months later with one count of boating under the influence causing death and two counts of boating under the influence causing great bodily injury. He was awaiting trial in the felony case when his father Alex Murdaugh shot him and his mother Maggie Murdaugh to death at their Islandton, S.C., home.
In Hulu's Murdaugh: Death in the Family, Alex (Jason Clarke) and his father Randolph Murdaugh III (Gerald McRaney) go to the hospital to encourage the kids not to speak to authorities—which, by multiple accounts, did happen.
Alex later denied in a legal filing attempting to influence Connor, but the young man said in the 2023 Netflix documentary Murdaugh Murders that Paul's dad approached him in the hall at the hospital and whispered to him not to say anything, that he would take care of everything.
And Paul was just starting to give a statement to police when his grandfather Randolph came in and, per law enforcement records, said, "I am his lawyer starting now. He isn’t giving any statements."
Disney/Daniel Delgado Jr
Did the Murdaugh Family Go on Vacation After the Boat Crash?
In Murdaugh: Death in the Family, Alex, Maggie, elder son Buster Murdaugh (Will Harrison) and Paul (Johnny Berchtold) head to the Bahamas—where a still-reeling Paul gets into a drunken fight with a couple of British tourists.
In the copious accounting of the Murdaughs' actions starting with the days after the crash, there's no mention of them going on vacation.
Paul and then-girlfriend Morgan were in the Bahamas in 2017, according to two Brits they struck up a friendship with, who told Fox News in 2023 that they had no idea about the subsequent Murdaugh drama—including the boat crash—until they saw the Netflix documentary.
Max Burton told the outlet that, after he posted a throwback video in August 2019 from the trip and tagged Paul and Morgan, the Murdaugh scion DM'd him on Instagram to ask him to take it down, writing, "Me and that girl are no longer dating and are not supposed to have any contact."
Disney/Daniel Delgado Jr.
Did Murdaugh Family Housekeeper Glorida Satterfield Comfort Paul After the Boat Crash?
The tender moment in Death in the Family in which Gloria Satterfield (Kathleen Wilhoite) assures Paul that everything's going to be alright after the boat crash is one of the more obvious bits of fiction in the series—since Glorida had been dead for a year when the accident occurred.
The 57-year-old died Feb. 26, 2018, four weeks after she was hospitalized following, according to Alex, a fall at the Murdaughs' home on Moselle Road. The patriarch told police that she tripped over the family dogs and fell down the outside steps.
"We chose to keep Gloria," series co-creator Michael D. Fuller explained on the official Murdaugh: Death in the Family companion podcast. "We decided that in order to show her relationship with the family, with Paul in particular, it made story truth sense to have her be alive and see how that plays out in the current timeline of our show."
Disney/Daniel Delgado Jr.
Did Murdaugh Murders Podcaster Mandy Matney Really Stare Down Alex Murdaugh at the Hospital in 2019?
In Death in the Family, which is based on Mandy Matney's Murdaugh Murders podcast, the journalist (played by Brittany Snow) sees Alex at the hospital in the wake of the 2019 boat crash and there's a dramatic I-see-you moment where she stares him down.
Though her podcast didn't start until 2021, Mandy did see Alex as early as 2019, but it was in court.
"I did a stare-off with him in Paul Murdaugh’s court hearing in 2019," Mandy said on the show's companion podcast. I saw him for the first time, and we did a stare-off, and he looked like he was about to approach me. And then court started."
She had another "face-off" with Alex during his own trials, when, she recalled, "I was trying to leave the building, and for some reason, he was leaving at the same time, in cuffs and everything."
Disney/Daniel Delgado Jr.
Did the Governor of South Carolina Pull Strings for Alex Murdaugh?
To paint a picture of how Alex was able to grease the wheels of local power to further his own interests, Death in the Family features the patriarch introducing an official from the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control to the state's governor—at a party at the Murdaughs' home.
In the show, Alex is seeking a permit for a jellyfish harvesting business and is dangling the prospect of research money from the governor for the SCDHEC.
Alex did try to start that jellyfish business, but it was shut down due to permitting and environmental issues in 2014—five years before the boat crash—and there's no record of him seeking assistance from then-South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley.
"What he was involved in, in truth-truth, was a lot of land deals, a lot of other types of side businesses," Fuller explained to MovieWeb, but they included this one for atmosphere, as it "felt like a very Southern business endeavor to undertake."
Disney/Daniel Delgado Jr
Was Alex Murdaugh's Father Honored by the Governor of South Carolina?
As portrayed in the series, Randolph III—who like his father and grandfather before him served as 14th Circuit Solicitor—was honored with the Order of the Palmetto, the governor's highest civilian honor, on Sept. 20, 2018.
The ceremony took place in front of the Hampton County Courthouse with Randolph's sprawling family, including Alex and Maggie, in attendance.
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