USA TODAY US Edition

Prosecutor presses Murdaugh on story’s inconsiste­ncies

Murder defendant is at times combative

- N’dea Yancey-Bragg Contributi­ng: Anna Kaufman, USA TODAY; Michael Dewitt, Jr., Greenville News

Disbarred South Carolina attorney Richard “Alex” Murdaugh returned to the stand Friday to continue testifying in his double murder trial about his financial misconduct, drug addiction and his actions the day his wife and son were killed.

Lead prosecutor Creighton Waters pressed Murdaugh on inconsiste­ncies in his “fuzzy” memory and his “new story” of what happened, a day after he revealed for the first time he was at the scene where his wife and son were shot.

Murdaugh, 54, admitted Thursday to lying to investigat­ors about the last time he saw 52-year-old Maggie Murdaugh and 22-year-old Paul Murdaugh on June 7, 2021. Murdaugh broke down several times Thursday while being questioned by his defense attorney Jim Griffin about finding their bodies at the family’s property in Colleton County and denied killing them.

Waters continued to question Murdaugh about alleged theft from clients as his drug addiction escalated and what he was doing the moments before the killings during a sometimes combative cross-examinatio­n. Prosecutor­s allege Murdaugh killed his wife and son to gain sympathy and buy time to cover up financial crimes that were about to be discovered.

Waters finished questionin­g Murdaugh Friday afternoon. Defense attorneys may call at least two more witnesses after Murdaugh’s testimony is finished.

Murdaugh again denies killing his family

Waters questioned Murdaugh about what prosecutor­s allege is his motive for murder: gaining sympathy when he is about to be held accountabl­e.

“When accountabi­lity is at your door Mr. Murdaugh, bad things happen, isn’t that true?” Waters asked, pointing to both the killing of his family and Sept. 4, 2021, when Murdaugh claimed he was attacked.

Curtis Edward Smith was charged with shooting Murdaugh in what state police described as a failed life insurance scheme. Murdaugh wanted Smith to kill him so his surviving son, Buster, would get his $10 million life insurance policy, but the bullet only grazed his head, according to authoritie­s. Murdaugh was later charged with insurance fraud, conspiracy to commit insurance fraud and filing a false police report in the shooting.

“I do believe in September, that I tried to get a man to help me kill myself because issues were at my doorstep,” Murdaugh said. “There were no accountabi­lity issues on my doorstep on June 7.”

Waters wrapped up by questionin­g Murdaugh about repeatedly lying to his loved ones, clients and law enforcemen­t. Murdaugh said that he lied for “well over a decade.”

“And you want this jury to believe a story manufactur­ed to fit the evidence that you brought forth just yesterday after hearing this trial’s worth of testimony?” Waters asked.

“No sir that’s not correct,” Murdaugh replied.

Murdaugh blames killings on 2019 boat crash

Murdaugh said he believes a 2019 boat crash is the reason Paul and Maggie were killed, but insisted he did not believe anyone connected to the wreck was involved.

Paul Murdaugh allegedly crashed his family’s boat into a bridge at more than 30 mph, killing 19-year-old Mallory Beach and injuring two other people onboard. He pleaded not guilty to three felony counts of boating under the influences and was awaiting trial when he and his mother were killed.

Court documents filed in July 2021 alleged a civil conspiracy possibly connecting law enforcemen­t and members of the Murdaugh family following the wreck.

“The social media response that came from that was vile,” Murdaugh said. “I believed then and I believe today that the wrong person saw and read that.”

“You don’t have any evidence of that,” Waters said. “What you’re telling this jury is that it’s random vigilantes.”

Murdaugh details actions the day of the killings

Waters questioned Murdaugh about a timeline of the family’s movements on the day of the killings constructe­d by the prosecutio­n based on cellphone data.

Murdaugh said he quickly left the kennels where his wife and son’s bodies were later found and may have taken a nap before getting ready to drive to his mother’s home.

In the minutes after the prosecutio­n estimates Maggie and Paul were killed, Murdaugh said he was “preparing to leave” for his mother’s house but did not elaborate on what he was doing. When Waters asked why his cellphone recorded hundreds of steps in a four-minute period, Murdaugh denied that he was moving around making phone calls to manufactur­e an alibi.

“I never manufactur­ed any alibi in any way shape or form because I did not and would not hurt my wife and child,” Murdaugh said.

Murdaugh began to cry again as he described finding the bodies of his wife and son. He denied checking Maggie and Paul’s bodies before calling 911, appearing to contradict what he initially told law enforcemen­t, according to a video of an interview Waters played in court.

 ?? GRACE BEAHM ALFORD/POOL ?? Alex Murdaugh testifies in his murder trial in Walterboro, S.C. on Thursday.
GRACE BEAHM ALFORD/POOL Alex Murdaugh testifies in his murder trial in Walterboro, S.C. on Thursday.

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