Current:Home > StocksTradeEdge-Alex Murdaugh’s lawyers want to make public statements about stolen money. FBI says Murdaugh lied -EquityExchange
TradeEdge-Alex Murdaugh’s lawyers want to make public statements about stolen money. FBI says Murdaugh lied
TrendPulse Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-09 04:35:45
COLUMBIA,TradeEdge S.C. (AP) — Lawyers for convicted killer Alex Murdaugh want to release to the public statements he made to the FBI about what happened to million of dollars he stole from clients and his South Carolina law firm and who might have helped him steal the money.
Murdaugh’s attorneys made the request in a court filing Thursday after federal prosecutors asked a judge earlier this week to keep the statements secret. They argued that Murdaugh wasn’t telling the truth and that his plea deal on theft and other charges should be thrown out at a sentencing hearing scheduled for Monday.
Prosecutors think Murdaugh is trying to protect an attorney who helped him steal and that his assertion that more than $6 million in the stolen money went to his drug habit is not true. Releasing the statements could damage an ongoing investigation, the U.S. Attorney’s Office said.
But Murdaugh’s attorneys said FBI agents can just black out any information they don’t want to make public while leaving the bulk of the statements available so people can judge the allegations themselves.
“To allow the Government to publicly accuse Murdaugh of breaching his plea agreement while also allowing the Government to hide all purported evidence supporting that accusation from the public would violate the public’s right to the truth,” attorneys Jim Griffin and Dick Harpootlian wrote.
Murdaugh, 55, is already serving life without parole in state prison after a jury found him guilty of murder in the shootings of his wife and younger son. He later pleaded guilty to stealing money from clients and his law firm in state court and was sentenced to 27 years, which South Carolina prosecutors said is an insurance policy to keep him behind bars in case his murder conviction was ever overturned.
The federal case was supposed to be even more insurance, with Murdaugh agreeing to a plea deal so his federal sentence would run at the same time as his state sentences.
Murdaugh’s lawyers said if prosecutors can keep the FBI statements secret, Monday’s court hearing in Charleston would have to be held behind closed doors, denying Murdaugh’s rights to have his case heard in public.
The FBI said it interviewed Murdaugh three times last year. After agents concluded he wasn’t telling the whole truth about his schemes to steal from clients and his law partners, they gave him a polygraph in October.
Agents said Murdaugh failed the test and federal prosecutors said that voided the plea deal reached in September where he promised to fully cooperate with investigators.
Prosecutors now want Murdaugh to face the stiffest sentence possible since the plea agreement was breached and serve his federal sentence at the end of any state sentences.
Each of the 22 counts Murdaugh pleaded guilty to in federal court carries a maximum of 20 years in prison. Some carry a 30-year maximum.
State prosecutors estimated Murdaugh stole more than $12 million from clients by diverting settlement money into his own accounts or stealing from his family law firm. Federal investigators estimate at least $6 million of that has not been accounted for, although Murdaugh has said he spent extravagantly on illegal drugs after becoming hooked on opioids.
Investigators said that as Murdaugh’s financial schemes were about to be exposed in June 2021, he decided to kill his wife and son in hopes it would make him a sympathetic figure and draw attention away from the missing money. Paul Murdaugh was shot several times with a shotgun and Maggie Murdaugh was shot several times with a rifle outside the family’s home in Colleton County.
Murdaugh has adamantly denied killing them, even testifying in his own defense against his lawyers’ advice.
Federal prosecutors said Murdaugh did appear to tell the truth about the roles banker Russell Laffitte and attorney and old college friend Cory Fleming played in helping him steal.
Laffitte was convicted and sentenced to seven years in prison, while Fleming is serving nearly four years behind bars after pleading guilty.
veryGood! (95784)
Related
- What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
- Pentagon rushes defenses and advisers to Middle East as Israel’s ground assault in Gaza looms
- Trapped in Gaza for 2 weeks, hundreds of American citizens still not able to leave
- Dolphins, explosive offense will be featured on in-season edition of HBO's 'Hard Knocks'
- California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
- Eagles vs. Dolphins Sunday Night Football highlights: Jalen Hurts, A.J. Brown power Philly
- US Forest Service sued over flooding deaths in the wake of New Mexico’s largest recorded wildfire
- Grizzlies' Steven Adams to undergo season-ending surgery for knee injury
- Federal court filings allege official committed perjury in lawsuit tied to Louisiana grain terminal
- Bill Belichick finally gets 300th career regular-season win as Patriots upset Bills
Ranking
- Mets have visions of grandeur, and a dynasty, with Juan Soto as major catalyst
- Washington Commanders' Jonathan Allen sounds off after defeat to New York Giants
- In 'I Must Be Dreaming,' Roz Chast succeeds in engaging us with her dreams
- 2 years after fuel leak at Hawaiian naval base, symptoms and fears persist
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- Drivers of Jeep, Kia plug-in hybrids take charging seriously. Here's why that matters.
- Drake is giving out free Dave's Hot Chicken sliders or tenders to celebrate 37th birthday
- Football provides a homecoming and hope in Lahaina, where thousands of homes are gone after wildfire
Recommendation
Average rate on 30
EPA proposes banning cancer-causing chemical used in automotive care and other products
Turkey’s president submits protocol for Sweden’s admission into NATO to parliament for ratification
Shot fired, protesters pepper sprayed outside pro-Israel rally in Chicago suburbs
Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
No fighting! NFL issues memo warning of 'significant' punishment for scuffles
Is California censoring Elon Musk's X? What lawsuit could mean for social media regulation.
Australians’ rejection of the Indigenous Voice in constitutional vote is shameful, supporters say