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Alex Murdaugh

How a prominent South Carolina attorney orchestrated the killing of his wife and son

Alex Murdaugh, a member of an influential South Carolina legal family, was convicted in March 2023 of murdering his wife Maggie and son Paul on the family's Moselle estate in June 2021. The case exposed decades of financial crimes and addiction that preceded the double homicide.

By
Susanne Sperling
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Quick Facts

On June 7, 2021, Alex Murdaugh shot and killed his wife Maggie, 52, and his youngest son Paul, 22, on the family's Moselle estate in South Carolina. The murders would unravel a carefully constructed life built on lies, theft, and addiction—and expose a man desperate enough to kill his own family.

Murdaugh came from privilege. As a member of an influential South Carolina legal family, he enjoyed status, wealth, and connections. Yet beneath the surface lay a secret that would eventually destroy everything: a crippling addiction to oxycodone that began in the early 2000s.

The addiction fed a hunger for money. Over the years, Murdaugh embezzled millions from clients and his own law firm, stealing from people who had trusted him. He lied to his family. He lied to his colleagues. He lied to anyone who might discover the truth.

But addiction and theft were not enough. In September 2021, just three months after the murders, Murdaugh conspired with Curtis "Eddie" Smith to have himself killed. His plan: stage his death, collect a $10 million insurance payout for his surviving son Buster. When the scheme fell apart, he confessed—initially claiming a drive-by shooting before admitting the conspiracy.

The murders themselves bore the hallmarks of someone with everything to lose. On the evening of June 7, a video taken on Paul's cellphone at 8:44 p.m. captured audio of Murdaugh's voice at the kennels minutes before the killings. Blood and biological matter were later found strewn across the ground and walls at that same location. According to the indictment, he shot his wife with a rifle and his son with a shotgun.

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Published
March 21, 2026 at 10:42 AM
Read Time
3 min

When confronted by investigators, Murdaugh lied. He denied being at the crime scene. He blamed his deception on opioid-induced paranoia. But the evidence was overwhelming.

On March 2, 2023, after a six-week trial in Walterboro, South Carolina, a jury deliberated for less than three hours before finding Murdaugh guilty on all four counts: two counts of murder and two counts of possession of a weapon during a violent crime. The judge sentenced him to two consecutive life sentences without parole. He filed an appeal on March 9, 2023.

The financial crimes followed. On November 17, 2023, Murdaugh pleaded guilty to 22 state charges including money laundering, wire fraud, bank fraud, and conspiracy. Two weeks later, he received a 27-year sentence as part of a plea deal. In April 2024, federal court added another 40 years for financial fraud and ordered him to pay $8.7 million in reparations to victims—including the family of Gloria Satterfield, one of the people he had stolen from.

Alex Murdaugh's story is a cautionary tale about the fragility of constructed reputations. For decades, he maintained an image of success and respectability while systematically stealing from clients, lying to loved ones, and feeding an addiction. When the walls began closing in, he did not seek help or redemption. Instead, he allegedly killed his wife and son—and then tried to profit from their deaths.

Today, Murdaugh sits in prison serving multiple life sentences, his name synonymous not with legal achievement but with calculated murder and betrayal.

**Sources**

https://www.cbsnews.com/pictures/alex-murdaugh-convicted-crime-scene-evidence/

https://www.britannica.com/biography/Alex-Murdaugh

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trial_of_Alex_Murdaugh

https://news.campbell.edu/articles/author-valerie-bauerlein-speaks-at-craven-everett-inn-of-court-about-alex-murdaugh-case/

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Susanne Sperling

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