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For almost a century, the Murdaugh family name was synonymous with the pursuit of justice in South Carolina. Starting in 1920, three generations of Murdaughs held the powerful position of 14th Circuit Solicitor, overseeing prosecution across five counties in the state’s low country for many decades.
Alex Murdaugh, a prominent figure in his own right, capitalized on this legacy of influence. He carved out a successful career at the prestigious law firm established by his family, leveraging their reputation and his considerable wealth to enjoy an opulent lifestyle, complete with a beach house, a boat, and a vast hunting estate in Colleton County.
However, the veneer of prosperity and respectability began to crumble in June 2021. The tragic shooting deaths of Alex’s wife and son set off a chain of events that would unravel a disturbing narrative of power, deception, and murder—a tale that captivated the nation.
The unraveling began on June 7, 2021, when Alex reported to authorities that he returned from visiting his sick mother to discover his wife Maggie, 52, and their son Paul, 22, had been violently slain near the dog kennels at their Islandton residence, located about 65 miles from Charleston.
Maggie and Paul Murdaugh’s 2021 Murders
It began on June 7, 2021 when Alex told authorities that he arrived home from visiting his ailing mother to find his wife Maggie, 52, and son Paul, 22, brutally murdered by the dog kennels at their Islandton home, about 65 miles outside of Charleston.
“I’ve been up to it now, it’s bad,” Alex told a 911 dispatcher in a harrowing call placed at 10:07 p.m.
The mother and son had been killed with two separate weapons. According to an indictment later released by authorities, Paul was shot several times with a shotgun, while Maggie was killed with an assault rifle.
“You have two different ammunitions used to kill them,” Senior Special Agent David Owen of the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division (SLED) would later tell Dateline: Secrets Uncovered. “So automatically, you’re gonna think, ‘OK, well, possibly have two shooters.’”
Alex told Owen just hours after the murders that he shared dinner with Maggie and Paul that night, then fell asleep on the couch watching television, while Maggie and Paul went down to the dog kennels.
According to his account, he woke up around 9 p.m. and went to visit his mother before coming home to discover the bodies.
Alex’s attorneys Dick Harpootlian and Jim Griffin insisted in a statement to on Oct. 31, 2025 that the charges against Smith were “still pending” and had not gone to trial.
Mounting Fraud Allegations Against Alex Murdaugh
Alex was indicted by a Hampton County Grand Jury in November of 2021 for conspiracy, false insurance claim payment of $10,000 or more, and filing a false police report in connection with the incident—but his legal troubles didn’t end there.
Authorities learned that just one day before the botched assisted suicide, Alex resigned from his law firm, then known as Peters Murdaugh Parker Eltzroth & Detrick (PMPED), after questions emerged about his financial dealings at the firm. The next month, the firm accused Alex in a civil suit of secretly stealing money from the firm and his legal clients and depositing the money into his own bank account, according to previous reporting by Oxygen.
“He lied and he stole from us,” the firm wrote on its website at the time. “No member of PMPED was aware of Alex’s scheme. When we learned he betrayed our trust, we requested his resignation immediately.”
In the months that followed, Alex—who was later disbarred by the South Carolina Supreme Court—was accused of stealing millions from his clients and the firm, including the family of his own housekeeper Gloria Satterfield.
Satterfield died after a trip-and-fall accident at the Murdaughs’ Colleton County home in February 2018, according to a statement from the Satterfield family’s attorneys Eric S. Bland and Ronnie Richter. After her death, Alex encouraged Satterfield’s sons to file a wrongful death suit against him, urging them to hire attorney Cory Fleming, Alex’s college friend.
According to The New York Times, Fleming reached a $4.3 million settlement for the family, but Satterfield’s sons would later say they were never notified of the agreement or received any money.
The siblings later reached a civil court settlement with Fleming, his law firm and their insurance provider to recoup the money, according to a statement from their attorneys.
Fleming pled guilty in 2023 to federal conspiracy charges in connection to the allegations that he “conspired” with Alex to defraud Satterfield’s estate, according to a statement from the District of South Carolina United States Attorney’s Office. He was sentenced to four years in prison.
By December of 2022, per NBC News, Alex was facing more than 100 charges—both on the federal and local level—for the financial schemes.
He pleaded guilty to 22 federal counts of financial fraud and money laundering in September of 2023 and agreed to a plea deal for dozens of state level charges two months later.
Who Killed Maggie and Paul Murdaugh?
Alex wasn’t only accused of financial crimes. Investigators also believed that Alex killed his wife and son as part of an attempt to keep the financial misdeeds hidden.
A grand jury indicted him for the murders in July of 2022 and he went on trial in January of the next year.
One of the most damaging pieces of evidence to come out at trial was a video taken by Paul on his cell phone at 8:44 p.m., just minutes before investigators believe he was killed. Paul was taking a video of a dog staying at the kennel, but Alex’s voice could be heard in background, placing him at the murder scene, according to Dateline: Secrets Uncovered.
“The aha moment for me was the kennel video,” State Attorney Alan Wilson said in the episode. “It showed that he was there within minutes of their murder and it gave me the comfort factor that I needed to be able to indict.”
Data from Alex’s Chevrolet Suburban also showed that he had slowed the vehicle’s speed on the way to his mother’s house in an area where Maggie’s phone was later recovered.
Alex took the stand himself during the high-profile trial to refute the prosecution’s claims, insisting that he did not kill his wife or son. He did admit to being at the dog kennels that night, adding that he initially lied to investigators because he “wasn’t thinking clearly” as a result of his drug addiction.
After deliberating for less than three hours, a jury found him guilty. He was sentenced to life in prison. He’s also serving concurrent sentences for his financial crimes, NBC News reported.
Alex’s attorneys have appealed his murder conviction.
To learn more about Alex’s crime spree, watch Oxygen’s special Alex Murdaugh: Death, Deception, Power, available now through the Oxygen app.