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Alex Murdaugh’s murder appeal cites biased clerk and prejudicial evidence | Alex Murdaugh

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Alex Murdaugh’s lawyers are appealing his murder convictions for killing his wife and son on two grounds. They argue that a court clerk influenced jurors with guilty verdict suggestions to sell books, and that the trial judge allowed improper evidence, including financial crimes, to be presented. The 132-page appeal was filed before the South Carolina supreme court, with prosecutors yet to respond. The defense claims that Murdaugh did not receive a fair trial and that the evidence linking him to the crime was weak. The appeal also addresses issues related to the court clerk’s influence on jurors and the introduction of evidence related to Murdaugh’s financial crimes. Despite the appeal, Murdaugh is currently serving a life sentence for the murders, along with a separate 40-year sentence for financial crimes.
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Kaynak: www.theguardian.com

Lawyers for Alex Murdaugh are taking two paths to appeal his murder convictions for killing his wife and son, saying that a court clerk pushed a guilty verdict to jurors to sell books and that the trial judge allowed improper evidence such as the disgraced South Carolina lawyer’s financial crimes.

The 132-page appeal was filed this week before the South Carolina supreme court. Prosecutors will have time to respond, and the justices have to read all material around the six-week 2023 trial, meaning a hearing is probably months away.

The appeal extensively details arguments that have already been made, either through objections during the trial or a hearing this year at which jurors were questioned about comments made by then Colleton county clerk Becky Hill during the trial.

Murdaugh lawyers wrote that his murder convictions need to be overturned because the public needs more than just “social-media-fed ideas about the details of a crime they did not witness.

“Providing Murdaugh with the fair trial that every citizen of South Carolina would expect for himself is necessary to assure all that no one – powerful or humble, innocent or guilty, hated or beloved – is proscribed from due process and the equal protection of the law,” said the appeal signed by both of Murdaugh’s chief lawyers at his trial, Jim Griffin and Dick Harpootlian.

Murdaugh, 56, is serving life in prison for the shootings of his wife, Maggie, and younger son, Paul, outside their home in 2021. He continues to adamantly deny killing them, including from the stand at his trial.

Murdaugh and his family dominated the legal system and life in nearby Hampton county for generations, and prosecutors during his trial laid out how he used his power and prestige to get away with stealing from clients and his law firm and out of other jams all his life.

In their appeal, the defense pointed out how little physical evidence connected Murdaugh to the crime. Investigators never found the rifle used to kill his wife and a shotgun whose blast sent blood and tissue all around the small room where his son was found dead.

Only tiny amounts of blood were found on the clothes Murdaugh was wearing when he found the bodies, and no bloody clothes were found elsewhere.

Murdaugh’s defense said a state investigator should not have been allowed to testify that markings on cartridges found at a shooting range on the family property matched those found at the killings, because he never proved the markings were unique to one gun.

They said a blue raincoat with a tiny amount of gunshot residue should not have been put into evidence because a witness testified about seeing Murdaugh with a blue tarp, not a raincoat.

The defense lawyers also said the judge should not have allowed evidence from an investigator who said he spent a weekend tossing an iPhone around his office to determine whether the screen, which comes on with a light touch, might not come on with a more violent motion. The expert witness kept no data and did not record his experiments.

Prosecutors suggested Murdaugh threw his wife’s phone from his moving car as he drove away, but data from his SUV’s computer showed the phone screen turned on two minutes before Murdaugh’s vehicle passed the spot where the phone was found.

About half of the appeal deals with Hill, the court clerk. In January, Judge Jean Toal ruled that while she couldn’t believe Hill’s testimony that she did not talk to jurors about the case during the trial, she also could not overturn the verdict based “on the strength of some fleeting and foolish comments by a publicity-seeking clerk of court” because they did not actively change the jurors’ minds.

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At least three jurors said Hill told them to watch Murdaugh’s testimony in his own defense carefully, and one said the suggestion appeared to indicate he was guilty and could not be trusted.

A clerk of court from a neighboring county testified that Hill told her she was going to write a book about Murdaugh’s trial and that a guilty verdict would probably sell more copies.

The rest of the appeal dealt with trial problems, including the decision by the judge to allow six days of evidence about Murdaugh stealing from clients and his law firm after prosecutors successfully argued a possible motive for the killings was Murdaugh seeking sympathy to stop further investigations into missing money.

The trial judge, Clifton Newman, said that the jury was entitled to consider whether Murdaugh’s “apparent desperation” and “dire financial situation” resulted in the killings of his family and that he did not think the financial crime evidence alone would persuade the jury to convict Murdaugh of murder.

Defense attorneys strenuously objected at the time and in the appeal. In the court records filed this week, they cited cases in which appeals courts overturned murder convictions because evidence of infidelity or spousal abuse were allowed in trials but prosecutors could not directly link them to the killings.

“Here, the state was improperly permitted to introduce evidence of Murdaugh’s alleged financial crimes solely to impugn his character to bolster its otherwise weak case,” his lawyers wrote.

Even if Murdaugh gets a new murder trial, he won’t walk out free. He has been sentenced to 40 years for pleading guilty to stealing millions from his law firm and from settlements he gained for clients on wrongful-death and serious-injury lawsuits. Murdaugh promised not to appeal that sentence as part of plea deals.

Alex Murdaugh’s murder appeal cites biased clerk and prejudicial evidence | Alex Murdaugh
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