The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Brutality detailed in Alex Murdaugh case; 2 jurors get COVID

- By Jeffrey Collins

A pathologis­t detailed the close-range shots that killed Alex Murdaugh’s wife and son as prosecutor­s on Monday started winding up their case in the South Carolina attorney’s double murder trial.

But the future of the trial could be in jeopardy. Two jurors were dismissed Monday morning after contractin­g COVID-19, leaving just three alternates available as the trial’s fourth week started. Both sides suggested delaying the trial in case the coronaviru­s might be spreading though the jury and others in court, but Judge Clifton Newman decided to continue.

“At the moment, we are going to encourage everyone here to mask up for your own protection as well as the protection of these proceeding­s and each other,” Newman told the courtroom, which has been packed with more than 200 people for the past two weeks.

Murdaugh, 54, faces 30 years to life in prison if convicted of murdering his wife, 52-year-old Maggie, and their 22-year-old son Paul near kennels at the family’s Colleton County home on June 7, 2021. Prosecutor­s have said he killed his family in order to buy time to cover up other crimes for which he is accused, including stealing money from clients and insurance fraud.

Alex Murdaugh has adamantly denied killing his wife and son.

Pathologis­t Dr. Ellen Riemer gave some of the most graphic testimony of the trial as she detailed what she found during the autopsies of the victims.

Paul Mudaugh was shot twice with a shotgun. The first wound skirted his chest with pellets. The second shot was to his head and was so violent it left his skull nearly empty, Riemer said. Maggie Murdaugh was hit by four or five bullets. The first two wounds happened as she faced the shooter and weren’t fatal, but a bullet did hit her kidney, the pathologis­t said.

“She had projectile­s, ammunition going through her left kidney, you can imagine that was a very painful wound and could have caused her to fold over in pain,” Riemer said.

While bent over facing away from the shooter, the fatal shot then went into and out of her chest and into her face. “It basically destroyed her brain,” Riemer said.

While the pathologis­t stood in front of the jury, drawing on diagrams and detailing her autopsy photograph­s, Alex Murdaugh sat at the defense table, distraught or crying at times. He fidgeted with a yellow highlighte­r and the disbarred attorney seemed so distracted that it took him several seconds to stand when the bailiff said “All rise!” as the judge left the bench at the end of the day.

The defense will start its cross examinatio­n of Riemer on Tuesday.

Earlier Monday, state agents testified about DNA.

Genetic material from all three Murdaughs were found on the shirt Alex Murdaugh was wearing when he found the bodies after returning home from visiting his ailing mother. State Law Enforcemen­t Division agent Sara Zapata testified But Zapata said it wasn’t blood and the defense said it isn’t unusual for people who spend time together to get their DNA on clothes and other items and Alex Murdaugh said he checked on the bodies after he found them.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States