Current:Home > ScamsAlex Murdaugh Found Guilty of Murdering Wife Maggie and Son Paul Murdaugh -GrowthInsight
Alex Murdaugh Found Guilty of Murdering Wife Maggie and Son Paul Murdaugh
EchoSense View
Date:2025-04-07 01:35:51
Alex Murdaugh's murder trial has come to an end.
On March 2, a jury gave the verdict and found the former personal injury lawyer guilty of murdering his wife Maggie Murdaugh, 52, and son Paul Murdaugh, 22. He had pleaded not guilty to two counts of murder and two counts of possession of a weapon during the commission of a violent crime, but was found guilty on all four counts, according to NBC News.
Circuit Court Judge Clifton Newman said Murdaugh's sentencing will begin on March 3, per the outlet. He faces 30 years to life in prison without parole.
Murdaugh's lawyers asked for a mistrial after the verdict was announced, which the judge denied. E! News has reached out to Murdaugh's lawyer and has not heard back.
The verdict concludes a six-week long trial that examined where Murdaugh was on June 7, 2021—the night that Maggie and Paul were shot and killed at the family's hunting estate in Islandton, S.C. The pair died near the lodge's dog kennels as a result of multiple gunshot wounds, a State Law Enforcement Division press release said at the time. Murdaugh was the one who called 9-1-1 and reported the deaths.
Initially, Murdaugh had told prosecutors that he was visiting his parents that night, and afterward came home to find Paul and Maggie dead. However, his voice could be heard in a Snapchat video—timestamped 8:44 p.m—recorded by the kennels on Paul's phone soon before their time of death.
During his trial testimony, Murdaugh confessed to lying because he said his longtime opioid abuse made him "paranoid," and that he was advised by law partners to not speak until Danny Henderson—his former fellow law firm partner—arrived at the scene. The pressure of being questioned by authorities from the State Law Enforcement Division also prompted him to lie, he said.
"All those things coupled together after finding them, coupled with my distrust for SLED, caused me to have paranoid thoughts," he explained during the trial. "On June 7, I wasn't thinking clearly, I don't think I was capable of reason and I lied about being down [by the kennels], and I'm so sorry that I did."
However, prosecutors alleged that Murdaugh killed his wife and son as a diversion from the financial investigation he was under, according to NBC News. His defense team denied the motive.
"Mr. Griffin, I didn't shoot my wife or my son any time," Murdaugh told his defense lawyer Jim Griffin. "Ever."
South Carolina prosecutor Creighton Waters also alleged that Maggie and Paul had no defensive wounds, noting it was "as if they didn't see a threat coming from their attacker." Waters said Paul—who suffered "devastating damage" that night—was shot with a shotgun in the chest, shoulder and head, while Maggie was shot with a rifle in the abdomen, leg and head, per NBC News.
Paul's death came after he was charged in connection to a 2019 boat crash that left 19-year-old Mallory Beach dead. He had pled not guilty and the case was pending when Paul died.
The murders were the subject of Netflix's Murdaugh Murders: A Southern Scandal, which premiered on Feb. 22, which gave further background into the Murdaugh family's influence amongst their local South Carolina community, considering their prominence in the area's legal sphere. After all, Murdaugh's great-grandfather founded the Hampton law firm in 1910, and a member of their family had occupied the 14th Circuit solicitor's chair for three generations.
The docuseries covered how Paul and Maggie's deaths shed a light on "a century of corruption, power, and cover-ups in the Low Country" and featured interviews with those closest to the Murdaugh family.
Read all the bombshells from the trial here.
For the latest breaking news updates, click here to download the E! News AppveryGood! (72)
Related
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Labor Day return to office mandates yearn for 'normal.' But the pre-COVID workplace is gone.
- Mississippi governor’s brother suggested that auditor praise Brett Favre during welfare scandal
- Police release body camera video showing officer fatally shooting pregnant woman
- Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
- Businessman Mohamed Al Fayed, father of Dodi Al Fayed, dead at 94
- Is this the last season of normal college football? | USA TODAY 5 Things podcast
- An Ode to Chris Evans' Cutest Moments With His Rescue Dog Dodger
- Juan Soto praise of Mets' future a tough sight for Yankees, but World Series goal remains
- Pope praises Mongolia’s tradition of religious freedom from times of Genghis Khan at start of visit
Ranking
- Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
- Gold Star mother on Biden at dignified transfer ceremony: 'Total disrespect'
- Kevin Costner breaks silence on 'Yellowstone' feud, says he fought for return to hit series
- Nick Saban takes Aflac commercials, relationship with Deion Sanders seriously
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- What Jalen Milroe earning starting QB job for season opener means for Alabama football
- Pentagon unveils new UFO website that will be a 'one-stop' shop for declassified info
- AI project imagines adult faces of children who disappeared during Argentina’s military dictatorship
Recommendation
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
5 former employees at Georgia juvenile detention facility indicted in 16-year-old girl’s 2022 death
Workplace safety officials slap Albuquerque, contractor with $1.1M fine for asbestos exposure
Inside Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood's Against-All-Odds Love Story
Small twin
Civil rights group wants independent probe into the record number of deaths in Alaska prisons
Typhoon Saola makes landfall in southern China after nearly 900,000 people moved to safety
Travis Kelce pleads to Chris Jones as Chiefs await contract holdout: 'We need you bad'