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Why Alex Murdaugh’s Second Murder Trial Could Look Very Different From the First (5/21/26)

Why Alex Murdaugh’s Second Murder Trial Could Look Very Different From the First (5/21/26)

Published 10 hours ago
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Alex Murdaugh’s second murder trial is already shaping up to be dramatically different from the first, after the South Carolina Supreme Court overturned his convictions in the killings of his wife, Maggie, and son, Paul, because of improper conduct by former Colleton County Clerk of Court Becky Hill. Prosecutors are now treating the retrial as a reset, with South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson saying all legal options are back on the table, including the death penalty, which was not pursued during the original trial. Murdaugh’s defense, led by Dick Harpootlian and Jim Griffin, is attacking that possibility as political and unnecessary, arguing that prosecutors have not identified any new facts that would justify escalating the case. The defense also plans to seek a change of venue, arguing that the original nationally watched trial made it nearly impossible to seat a fair jury in the same community, while also pushing for lawyer-led jury questioning, possible sequestration, and deeper scrutiny of jurors’ social media activity.

The evidentiary battle may be just as important as the venue and death penalty fight. The South Carolina Supreme Court allowed prosecutors to use some of Murdaugh’s financial-crimes evidence as motive, but criticized how much time the state spent on those details during the first trial, meaning the second trial could feature a much narrower presentation of his thefts and fraud. The defense is also expected to press an alternative-suspect theory more aggressively, including questions about unknown male DNA reportedly found under Maggie Murdaugh’s fingernails and whether investigators developed tunnel vision too early. Murdaugh may or may not testify again, with his lawyers calling that a game-day decision, but the shadow of Becky Hill will loom over everything. His attorneys have sued Hill in federal court and say they intend to use civil discovery, subpoenas, and depositions to determine whether her alleged jury influence was isolated or part of something broader.



to contact me:


bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



source:


Alex Murdaugh retrial takes shape as prosecutors weigh death penalty | Fox News
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