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3 years into a life sentence, Alex Murdaugh to get his day before the South Carolina Supreme Court

The appeals are just beginning for Alex Murdaugh

Jeffrey Collins
Wednesday 14 August 2024 13:06 EDT

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The appeals are just beginning for disgraced former South Carolina attorney Alex Murdaugh, who is almost three years into a life sentence without parole for killing his wife and son.

The South Carolina Supreme Court has agreed to hear Murdaugh's appeal of his murder convictions. His lawyers said they resulted from jury tampering by the clerk of court who watched over jurors during his six-week trial.

And in federal court, Murdaugh is appealing the 40-year sentence he was given after pleading guilty to stealing nearly $11 million from clients and his law firm.

Defense attorneys said that punishment ā€” 10 years longer than the maximum recommended by sentencing guidelines ā€” is too harsh under the U.S. Constitution. Prosecutors said it is a backstop in case Murdaugh, now 56, ever manages to get his murder conviction overturned.

His appeals will continue for years. Courts haven't even begun hearing the meat of Murdaugh's argument that the judge in his murder trial made mistakes, for example by allowing his money thefts into evidence. That was critical to the prosecution's argument that the killings were meant to buy sympathy and time to keep the thefts from being discovered.

The defense said that evidence unfairly made jurors angry, when all they were supposed to consider was the killings.

Jury tampering appeal

The state court appeal on jury tampering is fairly straightforward.

A lower court judge refused to toss out Murdaugh conviction after his lawyers argued that as Colleton County Clerk of Court, Becky Hill told jurors at his murder trial not to trust Murdaugh when he testified, had private discussions with the jury foreperson and pressured jurors to come to a quick verdict. Hill later resigned amid an ethics investigation.

Judge Jean Toal, a retired state Supreme Court Chief Justice assigned to this appeal, cited the standard set by a previous South Carolina high court ruling, that to overturn a verdict on jury tampering, there has to be a determination that a juror changed their mind as a result of the improper influence.

Murdaugh's lawyers argued that instead, a federal judge's ruling in an unrelated case should apply ā€” that defendant must only prove the conduct had the potential to influence a juror.

The state Supreme Court's one-paragraph order Tuesday accepting the appeal gave Murdaugh's lawyers 30 days to file arguments, and set no date for a hearing.

Federal appeal on 40-year theft sentence

In the federal case, Murdaugh's lawyers said his right against cruel and unusual punishment under the U.S. Constitution was violated because Judge Richard Gergel ignored the 17 1/2 years to just under 22 years in prison recommended by federal agents and sentenced Murdaugh to 40 years.

The trial prosecutors had asked for 30 years, so that Murdaugh would be in prison for the rest of his life no matter what happened to his murder conviction.

In response to his appeal, federal prosecutors noted simply that when Murdaugh agreed to plead guilty, he signed a document saying he wouldn't appeal unless prosecutors lied or his defense attorneys were inadequate.

Murdaugh stole from his clients in wrongful death and injury cases. In handing down the stiff sentence, Gergel said Murdaugh stole from ā€œthe most needy, vulnerable people,ā€ including a client who became a quadriplegic after a crash, a state trooper who was injured on the job, and a trust fund intended for children whose parents were killed in a wreck.

And those people ā€œplaced all their problems and all their hopesā€ with their lawyer, Gergel said.

In arguing for a lighter sentence, Murdaugh's attorneys compared his case to the 25 years in prison for crypto entrepreneur Sam Bankman-Fried or the 11-year sentence handed down to Theranos CEO Elizabeth Holmes, saying they stole billions while Murdaughā€™s thefts were in millions.

But the victims in those cases were investors, whereas Murdaugh stole from vulnerable people who trusted him to protect their legal interests.

Murdaugh's lawyers want the sentence overturned and a new judge to thoroughly review the case to decide if the 40-year sentence is fair.

Prosecutors said that has almost never happened in the U.S. They said the only relevant review they could find involved a life sentence for passing a $100 bad check.

The U.S. 4th Circuit of Appeals in Richmond, Virginia, has randomly assigned a three-judge panel to hear the case.

The Murdaugh case in brief

Investigators said Murdaugh was addicted to opioids and his complex schemes to steal money from clients and his family's law firm were starting to unravel when he shot his younger son, Paul, with a shotgun and his wife, Maggie, with a rifle, at their home in Colleton County in 2021.

Murdaugh told investigators he hadn't seen them for an hour or so before he discovered their bodies, but his voice was recorded in a video on his son's phone made about five minutes before the killing. Testifying in his own defense during his six-week trial, Murdaugh said he was scared and lied to police about some details because he was a drug addict, but he adamantly denied killing his wife and son.

The weapons used in the killings have not been found and prosecutors did not present any clothes with DNA or blood evidence.

Murdaughā€™s family controlled much of the legal system in tiny Hampton County. His father, grandfather and great-grandfather were elected prosecutors for 87 straight years. The family also founded the countyā€™s biggest private law firm.

Murdaugh paid his lawyers $600,000 at the beginning of his legal troubles, and while itā€™s unclear whether they have been given any additional money, he has vowed to fight the convictions as long as he can.

Meanwhile, his case remains an obsession in the true crime world. In their appeal of the theft sentence, Murdaugh's lawyers cited the trade publication NextTV, a trade publication that covers streaming, which reported that CourtTV set a record with nearly 5 million hours of viewing of his trial.

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