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Tag: Live updates: Alex Murdaugh testifies in murder trial

  • Live updates: Alex Murdaugh testifies in murder trial

    Live updates: Alex Murdaugh testifies in murder trial

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    Prosecutor Creighton Waters, left, asks Alex Murdaugh if he recognizes two solicitors badges during Murdaugh’s murder trial in Walterboro, South Carolina, on Thursday. (Joshua Boucher/The State via AP)

    The prosecution began its cross-examination of disgraced lawyer Alex Murdaugh on Thursday afternoon, pressing him about his financial trouble, his theft of clients’ money and his relationship with law enforcement in the area where he lived.

    Murdaugh took the stand in his own self-defense after he pleaded not guilty to the murder of his wife and son.

    Use of badges: Prosecutor Creighton Waters presented two badges into evidence, one that was Murdaugh’s grandfather’s badge after he retired and another that he said he considered to be his badge. Murdaugh testified that he usually keeps it in his car and that while he did not consider himself law enforcement, he carried a badge as a “volunteer assistant solicitor” for two decades.

    The prosecutor pressed Murdaugh on how he used the presence of the badge to influence a desired outcome with law enforcement. He presented a photo of Murdaugh with the badge hanging out of his pocket at the hospital on the night of a fatal boat crash involving his son Paul, even when he testified he was not acting in an official capacity.

    “I guess I would want… as I said, a badge has a warming effect with other law enforcement,” Murdaugh said. “If I was seeking any advantage, as you say, then I guess that would be what it was.”

    Murdaugh testified that he also installed blue lights installed in the law firm’s vehicle that he drove.

    Stealing from clients: Murdaugh admitted to stealing millions of dollars from clients and his law firm, which ultimately led to his resignation from the firm, then known as PMPED and since renamed Parker Law Group. Several members of the firm have testified in-depth about discovering Murdaugh’s alleged misdeeds.

    The prosecution spent a lot of time going through these allegations because they accuse Murdaugh of killing his wife and son to distract from an array of alleged financial crimes, for which Murdaugh separately faces another 99 charges.

    “I admit candidly in all of these cases, Mr. Waters, that I took money that was not mine and I shouldn’t have done it. I hate the fact that I did it. I’m embarrassed by it. I’m embarrassed for my son. I’m embarrassed for my family,” he said.

    Before he took the stand, Judge Clifton Newman denied a defense request to limit the scope of questioning Murdaugh will face, specifically in regard to alleged financial crimes.

    Pill addiction: Muraugh testified that he was addicted to pills for about 20 years. Despite the addiction, he said he was still able to maintain his practice and was “certain none of my partners knew I had an addiction.”

    Murdaugh testified that his opioid use was “certainly a cause” of his financial problems, but not the only cause. He said that he was using some of the money he stole from clients to buy pills, but not all of it. Some money was being used to fund what the prosecution called a “wealthy lifestyle,” a term Murdaugh said he would not take issue with.

    The cross-examination is set to resume Friday at 9:30 a.m. ET.

    CNN’s Dakin Andone, Dianne Gallagher, Randi Kaye and Alta Spells contributed reporting to this post.

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  • Live updates: Alex Murdaugh testifies in murder trial

    Live updates: Alex Murdaugh testifies in murder trial

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    Alex Murdaugh answers a question during his testimony on Thursday. (Pool)

    As Alex Murdaugh testified in his defense on Thursday, he gave details about his movements on the night that his son and wife were murdered.

    He stepped out of his house after dinner to attend to the dogs in the kennels, after which he went back inside his house, he said. After that, he laid on the couch, and decided to go visit his mother, an Alzheimer patient, whom his wife, Margaret, didn’t like to visit, he noted later in the testimony.

    Murdaugh said he saw his mom in the bedroom, where he said he talked to her for a minute as she was awake.

    His wife, Margaret, who he also called Maggie, was not there with him, he said.

    “She wasn’t planning to go with me that night. In fact, Maggie didn’t really like to visit my mom. She loved to visit my dad, and she loved to spend time with my dad. And she spent a lot of time with my mom when my mom was healthy. But you know, by this point, my mom, she was a shell of her old self. And I mean, it was kind of sad to go and visit her any time. I mean, she just wasn’t healthy. And Maggie didn’t like to go and just visit my mom,” he told the court. 

    Murdaugh told the court that on his way back from his mother’s house, he tried to call his wife twice, but she did not answer. He said he also left her a text. However, he said he did not find that unusual, because she was with their son Paul and because there is sometimes spotty cell service.

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