Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Murdaugh’s law partner describes chaotic crime scene

- By Jeffrey Collins

A law partner of Alex Murdaugh testified Wednesday at his double murder trial that more than a dozen people who weren’t first responders or law enforcemen­t walked around the scene of the killings before South Carolina agents arrived to investigat­e.

Then, when state agents arrived, Mr. Murdaugh, his law partners and friends were all sent back to the family home, which authoritie­s had not entered since arriving after Mr. Murdaugh called 911 to say his wife and son were shot.

“This is a pretty big farm and I don’t know who is over there. Two people have been gunned down,” attorney Mark Ball testified. “Safety is one concern. And is that house part of what has gone on here? Where does the crime scene start and stop?”

While the defense had Mr. Ball highlight what he saw as problems at the crime scene and Mr. Murdaugh’s devotion to his family, prosecutor­s on cross examinatio­n used Mr. Ball to walk through Mr. Murdaugh’s apparent lies to police. Those allegedly include where he was just before the killings, his lack of concern for his safety or the safety of his son after the shootings and stealing millions of dollars from the family law firm.

Mr. Murdaugh, 54, is standing trial in the murders of his wife Maggie, 52, who was killed by four or five rifle shots; and their 22year-old son Paul, who died from two shotgun blasts. Both were killed near kennels on the family’s sprawling property in Colleton County on June 7, 2021. Mr. Murdaugh faces 30 years to life in prison if he is convicted.

Mr. Murdaugh may testify. Defense attorney Jim Griffin asked the judge Wednesday if he would allow Mr. Murdaugh to take his Fifth Amendment right against incriminat­ing himself in the 100 or so other crimes he faces — including stealing from clients, money laundering, tax evasion and insurance fraud.

Judge Clifton Newman said prosecutor­s generally get wide latitude in cross examinatio­n.

The judge has agreed with prosecutor­s to allow evidence of the other crimes to show Mr. Murdaugh killed his family to gain sympathy and buy time to hide his financial misdeeds. Prosecutor­s also want to show Mr. Murdaugh lied to police three months after the killing about a shooting. He initially said he was shot by a stranger, but later said he asked a friend to shoot him in the head so Mr. Murdaugh’s surviving son could collect $12 million in life insurance.

Mr. Newman said he will advise both sides if Mr. Murdaugh takes the stand. The defense said if he chooses to testify, it could be as early as Thursday.

Mr. Ball was a compelling witness for both sides Wednesday.

He arrived about 45 minutes after Mr. Murdaugh called 911 and described a chaotic scene. Police hadn’t blocked the entrance to the property and more than a dozen people not with law enforcemen­t were walking around by shell casings and pools of blood near the kennels where the shooting happened. A light rain was intermitte­ntly falling and the runoff from a roof was hitting Paul Murdaugh’s body.

“It’s a crime scene. You don’t want water dripping all over the place but more importantl­y, I thought it was pretty disrespect­ful. Paul was a good young man and quite frankly it just pissed me off,” Mr. Ball testified.

On cross-examinatio­n, prosecutor­s used Mr. Ball to review much of their case. They had Mr. Ball read a list of several clients he had to call on behalf of the law firm to tell them Mr. Murdaugh lied and stole their money. Those clients have been repaid, with millions of dollars coming out of the pockets of the other attorneys at the firm, Mr. Ball said.

 ?? Jeff Blake/The State via AP ?? Alex Murdaugh cries while listening to testimony during his trial for murder Tuesday at the Colleton County Courthouse in Walterboro, S.C.
Jeff Blake/The State via AP Alex Murdaugh cries while listening to testimony during his trial for murder Tuesday at the Colleton County Courthouse in Walterboro, S.C.

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