The victims of Alex Murdaugh’s financial fraud angrily confront him in court before his sentencing
For years, South Carolina attorney Alex Murdaugh looked his anguished clients in the eyes and promised to help them with their medical bills, their suffering or simply to survive. Then he stole some, if not all, of what he won for many of them.
At a hearing preceding his sentencing Tuesday, those clients got to look Murdaugh in the eye and tell him how he had destroyed their trust.
“I’m not crying for what he stole from me. I’m crying for what he did to everybody,” said Jordan Jinks, a friend of Murdaugh’s since childhood.
The emotional testimony came as the disgraced lawyer waited to see if a judge would accept a deal sentencing him to 27 years in prison for stealing about $12 million.
The courtroom drama marked yet another step in the fall of a powerful and respected attorney whose family name dominated the legal scene in a small Hampton County for generations, and whose alleged crimes have been a perennial topic of true crime podcasts and online chat groups.
Standing in court in an orange prison jumpsuit, Murdaugh listened as the victims recounted how the man with a commanding presence and seductive Southern charm had duped them.
Jinks went to Murdaugh after he hurt his neck when someone rear-ended his car and later incurred hundreds of thousands of dollars in medical bills. Jinks paid the bills in advance, having been assured by Murdaugh that he would obtain a settlement to pay him back. Murdaugh got the money, but kept it himself, financially ruining his friend.
“The money you stole from me, I would have gave it to you,” Jinks said. “Why bro? Why?”
State prosecutors and defense lawyers negotiated the 27-year prison sentence for Murdaugh, who is already serving a life term without parole after a jury found him guilty of killing his wife, Maggie, with a rifle, and younger son, Paul, with a shotgun in June 2021. Judge Clifton Newman, who also presided over the murder trial, took a 45-minute lunch break to decide whether to accept it.
Murdaugh adamantly denies killing his wife and son. His lawyers are seeking a new trial, citing allegations that the court clerk tampered with the jury. A different judge will decide whether to grant Murdaugh a hearing in which jurors, the clerk and maybe even Newman could be questioned under oath.
In contrast, Murdaugh fully admitted to the financial crimes. On Tuesday, he spent nearly 45 minutes apologizing to his family for bringing them shame and dishonor, and addressing all his victims, although he did not cry has he had when he testified in his own defense during his murder trial.
“I want each of you who spoke to know I listened to you. I heard you. Your pain and hurt is palpable. … I promise you it resonates with me,” Murdaugh said.
Prosecutor Creighton Waters of the state Attorney General’s Office opened Tuesday’s hearing with a detailed account of all of Murdaugh’s thefts and how he moved around the more than $12 million he stole to avoid detection for nearly 10 years.
He ended more than an hour later with the precise figure: $12,425,254.32.
His clients trusted Murdaugh and he used “the trust his family name and the law license on that wall” to keep stealing to pay off loans and credit card bills, never catching up to bad investments and heavy spending, Waters said.
The 27-year sentence would be an insurance policy for prosecutors in case his murder conviction is overturned on appeal. Under South Carolina law, Murdaugh will have to serve almost 23 years of the sentence, even if he is a model prisoner. He would be 76 before he could be released. Murdaugh had to give up his rights to appeal as part of the deal.
Prosecutors initially charged Murdaugh with 101 financial crimes, including breach of trust, money laundering and tax evasion, involving 18 victims.
Under the plea deal, the number was reduced to 22 crimes against each of his clients.
His victims include Gloria Satterfield, the longtime family maid who died in a fall at the Murdaugh home. Murdaugh put his arm around Satterfield’s son at her funeral and promised he would take care of her family. He got about $4 million from his insurers then later admitted to stealing every penny.
Satterfield’s son Tony said he prays for Murdaugh and forgives him, but can’t forget how he was treated.
“I really don’t have the words. You lied, you cheated, you stole,” he said.
Sandra Taylor was killed in a crash with a drunken driver, leaving behind three children. Murdaugh told her estate he could only get a $30,000 settlement. He took $150,000 himself, prosecutors said.
“They lost a mother. And you stole every dime from them. Do you not have a soul?” asked Satterfield’s sister Ginger Hadwin.
Tuesday’s hearing did not mark the end of Murdaugh’s legal problems. He also is awaiting sentencing on federal financial crime charges, and still faces insurance fraud and other local charges after asking a friend to kill him in September 2021 so his surviving son could get $10 million in life insurance.
The shot only grazed Murdaugh’s head.
In his speech Tuesday, Murdaugh again blamed his drug addiction to painkillers for all the thefts.
“I want to tell those suffering from addiction please get professional help. don’t let pride get in your way the way I did,” Murdaugh said, adding he was 812 days clean. “I tried to beat it many, many times. It’s just too hard.”
He gave detailed apologies to his surviving son, his family, his in-laws and his law partners. He told any of his victims they were welcome to visit him behind bars.
“I hope that in time that each of you will be willing to talk to me,” Murdaugh said. “I would like as time moves on to continue to reiterate just how sorry I am and how important it is to me that you know that.”