The Guardian (USA)

Alex Murdaugh shines a true light on privilege in the US

- Emma Brockes

There have been bigger trials with splashier consequenc­es, but for pure drama – and a window on the way entrenched privilege works in the US south – the events unfolding this week at the Colleton county courthouse in Walterboro, South Carolina, are hard to match. In the dock: the 54-year-old Alex Murdaugh, scion of a legal dynasty stretching back 100 years, who has been found guilty of murdering his wife and son. That is the matter at hand and it is lurid enough: 22-year-old Paul Murdaugh and his mother, Maggie, found shot to death in 2021 in the grounds of the family’s hunting lodge, 65 miles west of Charleston – killed by Alex, say prosecutor­s, to distract attention from his financial crimes.

Behind the double murder, however, lies layer upon layer of further alleged criminal activity, from vast embezzleme­nt from the family law firm, to cover-up, to the involvemen­t of Paul in a drunken boat crash in which a 19-year-old died, and for which the 22year-old was facing trial at the time of his murder. Three months after the killings, someone shot Alex Murdaugh in the head – an act, it is alleged, that Murdaugh commission­ed himself, paying a gunman to kill him so his surviving son could collect on insurance. Meanwhile, the death of the family housekeepe­r in 2018 has been the subject of renewed police interest.

The story, currently the subject of

Netflix and HBO multi-part documentar­ies, would seem so wild and convoluted as to illuminate nothing beyond itself, were it not for the influence of the Murdaugh family. Going back to the 1920s, Alex Murdaugh’s greatgrand­father, grandfathe­r and father – respective­ly, Randolph Murdaugh, Randolph Murdaugh Jr, and Randolph Murdaugh III (Alex Murdaugh’s older brother is Randolph Murdaugh IV) – all served as top prosecutor­s across a fivecounty district, an area of about 8,300 square kilometres (3,200 square miles) over which they had responsibi­lity for all criminal prosecutio­ns.

So great and far-reaching was the power of the Murdaugh name that locals in that part of South Carolina refer to it as “Murdaugh country”. Alex Murdaugh, a lawyer at the family firm he is charged with defrauding, stands accusedof being the embodiment of what happens when people are cushioned over generation­s from the consequenc­es of their own actions.

That this story unfolds in the south, cradle of the good-old-boy network of near-oligarchic­al governance, is no coincidenc­e. I happened to be in South Carolina last week and it’s very beautiful, but woo, to an outsider, it’s intensely weird. White tour guides lead white tour groups around downtown Charleston, cheerfully pointing out where enslaved people were sold, before pulling up at the gift shop. Plantation houses, mindful of how times have changed, invite visitors to consider a single slave dwelling on their properties, while advertisin­g the grounds as the “most beautiful gardens in America”. Use of the passive voice – these houses are “witness to history”, according to the marketing bumf, which is certainly one way of putting it – is rampant. Many of the people Alex Murdaugh is accused of defrauding were poor, Black clients seeking personal injury compensati­on through his family’s law firm.

Two of these alleged victims were the sons of the Murdaugh family’s longtime housekeepe­r and nanny, Gloria Satterfiel­d, who died after an accident in the Murdaugh home in 2018. It was believed Satterfiel­d was tripped by the family dogs while walking up the brick front steps, hitting her head and dying a few weeks later of her injuries. When the Murdaugh family’s insurers awarded a $4.3m settlement to Satterfiel­d’s sons, they never saw a penny. In October 2021, four months after the murder of his wife and child but before Alex Murdaugh was charged with their killings, he was arrested in connection with the missing money. He later admitted he owed the Satterfiel­ds the full settlement.

So it goes on. At an earlier hearing, one of Alex Murdaugh’s lawyers used as mitigation his addiction to painkiller­s, inviting the judge to look upon Murdaugh’s sorry face as the encapsulat­ion of what the opioid epidemic has done to the US. This was, surely, an accurate statement, just not in the way the lawyer intended. If Murdaugh represents some aspect of American life, it is one that is as old as the country itself.

Emma Brockes is a Guardian columnist

Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publicatio­n in our letters section, please click here.

 ?? Beahm Alford/Reuters ?? Alex Murdaugh gives testimony in his murder trial at the Colleton county courthouse in Walterboro, South Carolina. Photograph: Grace
Beahm Alford/Reuters Alex Murdaugh gives testimony in his murder trial at the Colleton county courthouse in Walterboro, South Carolina. Photograph: Grace

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States