The Columbus Dispatch

Father in SC surrenders to face charges

- Jeffrey Collins

COLUMBIA, S.C. – Lawyer Alex Murdaugh surrendere­d Thursday to face insurance fraud and other charges after state police said he arranged to have himself shot in the head so that his son would get a $10 million life insurance payout. The shooter only grazed him.

A defense attorney said Murdaugh was deeply depressed with a drug addiction worsened by his discovery of the bodies of his wife and son, who were shot multiple times at the family’s home on June 7. Those killings remain unsolved.

The charges against Murdaugh, 53, include insurance fraud, conspiracy to commit insurance fraud and filing a false police report. He arrived at the Hampton County jail about five hours before his bond hearing. No one has been charged with the killings of his wife, Maggie, and son Paul in June.

Murdaugh’s surrender culminates a tumultuous 36 hours for a man whose father, grandfathe­r and great-grandfathe­r were all elected prosecutor­s in the area. A giant law firm in town was founded by his family more than a century ago.

His former client was arrested late Tuesday on an assisted suicide charge, and then state police opened a sixth investigat­ion into him and his family – this time involving a housekeepe­r and nanny who died in his home in 2018.

Murdaugh told his lawyers on Monday

that he had arranged his own shooting, and they then spoke to police.

“He didn’t want law enforcemen­t spending more time on this fake crime instead of focusing on solving the murders of Maggie and Paul,” attorney Dick Harpootlia­n told the “Today” show on Wednesday.

Murdaugh asked Curtis Edward Smith to kill him with a shot to the head on Sept. 4 so his surviving son could collect a $10 million life insurance policy, authoritie­s said.

Murdaugh bought drugs from the

former client, Harpootlia­n said.

Murdaugh’s lawyers said he has spent the past 10 days or so in drug rehab after his law firm fired him over missing money that could total millions of dollars.

It all started June 7, when Murdaugh found the bodies of his 52-year-old wife and their 22-year-old son shot multiple times after returning to their Colleton County home after visiting his sick father, who would die days later from cancer.

Those killings remain unsolved, and

Murdaugh’s lawyers have said he is adamant he had nothing to do with their deaths.

On Sept. 3, Murdaugh was fired by the PMPED law firm founded by his family after the firm determined he took money.

Murdaugh’s lawyers said he decided to kill himself the next day, but have someone else shoot him. Murdaugh gave Smith a gun and they headed to lonely Old Salkehatch­ie Road. Smith fired one shot that only grazed Murdaugh’s head, a State Law Enforcemen­t Division agent said in a sworn statement.

Murdaugh was able to call 911, and his initial story was that someone in a passing pickup truck shot at him as he checked a tire that was low on pressure.

Smith, 61, remained jailed Thursday on charges of assisted suicide, assault and battery of a high aggravated nature, pointing and presenting a firearm, insurance fraud, conspiracy to commit insurance fraud, distributi­on of methamphet­amine and possession of marijuana. He didn’t have a lawyer or speak about the charges at a hearing where his bond was set at $55,000.

Along with the killings of Maggie and Paul Murdaugh and the shooting of Alex Murdaugh, the State Law Enforcemen­t Division is also investigat­ing the missing money, whether anyone tried to obstruct an investigat­ion into a 2019 boat crash for which Paul Murdaugh was eventually charged and a July 2015 hitand-run death in Hampton County.

 ?? MIC SMITH/AP ?? A Hampton County official walks to the county jail before the bond hearing for Alex Murdaugh Thursday in Varnville, S.C.
MIC SMITH/AP A Hampton County official walks to the county jail before the bond hearing for Alex Murdaugh Thursday in Varnville, S.C.

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