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EXCLUSIVE Alex Murdaugh's son Buster's 'bitter' life in isolation and the source of fury at his father that has nothing to do with the murders
EXCLUSIVE Alex Murdaugh's son Buster's 'bitter' life in isolation and the source of fury at his father that has nothing to do with the murders

Daily Mail​

time12 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

EXCLUSIVE Alex Murdaugh's son Buster's 'bitter' life in isolation and the source of fury at his father that has nothing to do with the murders

Double murderer Alex Murdaugh 's only surviving son is bitter and struggling to escape the stain of his killer father's legacy, the Daily Mail can reveal. Four years after his mother Maggie, 52, and brother Paul, 22, were shot and killed by the disgraced legal scion, the 32-year-old still hasn't adapted to his bleak new reality. Buster Murdaugh grew up as a member of one of South Carolina's most distinguished families but the gruesome slayings carried out by his father and the publicity of the trial that followed have left him without many career opportunities. A source close to him has told the Daily Mail that, though he believes his father to be innocent of the murders, Buster is 'really angry' at the sweeping financial crimes that Murdaugh was subsequently convicted of. 'He's living his life but he doesn't really have too much going on,' a member of his inner circle said. 'He's pretty directionless, but he's figuring it out.' Buster and his family found themselves in the middle of a media firestorm in June 2021 when the elder Murdaugh, a high-profile attorney in South Carolina's Low Country, called 911 to report that he had found the bodies of his wife and son on their sprawling Moselle estate in rural Colleton County. Police arrived to find Maggie and Paul shot dead. Investigators determined that two firearms had been used. Although Murdaugh initially denied involvement, officers soon began to unravel a web of financial mismanagement, embezzlement, fraud and drug abuse. Three months later, Murdaugh - while under suspension for the alleged murders - was shot in the head as he changed a tire on his black Mercedes-Benz SUV. Authorities soon alleged that he had arranged the shooting himself by hiring distant relative Curtis Edward Smith in a failed suicide-for-hire plot so that Buster could receive a $10 million life insurance payout. 'That was a really stressful time for Buster,' the source said. 'He felt like things went from s*** to s***tier. And they keep getting worse.' The ensuing scandal ended one of South Carolina's most dominant family dynasties. A member of the Murdaugh family had served as solicitor of the 14th Judicial Circuit for 86 years, and most family members were prominent attorneys and judges. Murdaugh was ultimately charged with more than 90 financial crimes, ranging from embezzlement to money laundering - and two counts of murder. In March 2023, he was convicted after a highly publicized trial to two consecutive life terms without possibility of parole for killing his wife and son by the dog kennels of the family's hunting lodge in Islandton. He was also sentenced in federal court in April 2024 to 40 years for financial crimes involving millions stolen from clients and colleagues - a sentence that was to run concurrently with his state prison terms. He is being held in protective custody at McCormick Correctional Institution, a maximum security prison where it's likely that he will die. He continues to deny responsibility for the murders. The deaths have spawned multiple documentaries and a motion picture film is in production, with actor Jason Clarke playing Murdaugh. Buster has been trying to get back on his feet with his former long-term girlfriend and now new wife Brooklynn White, an attorney, after he dropped out of law school. The couple moved into a modest three-bedroom home in Bluffton, an hour away from the South Carolina low country estate where Buster was raised. The fallout in the two years since what local media called the 'trial of the century' has taken its toll on Buster, who is frequently confronted by angry members of the public whenever he goes near his hometown. 'You don't run into any of these people in public,' Buster once told his father on a jailhouse phone call. 'But I get stopped and yelled at all the time. I got cussed at in the gas station the other day.' Still, Buster stands by his father, insisting that he would never have murdered his wife and son. In his first and only interview since the murder trial, Buster told the Fox Nation documentary The Fall of the House of Murdaugh: 'I do not think that he could be affiliated with endangering my mother and brother. 'I think that I hold a very unique perspective that nobody else in that courtroom ever held. And I know the love that I have witnessed.' Despite this, the two rarely speak. When they do, the calls are always short and initiated by the elder Murdaugh, now 57, from behind bars. 'I don't think he's got a lot to say to his dad at the moment,' the source added. 'I mean, what's there to talk about'.

Where Is Buster Murdaugh Now? What to Know About His Life After Dad Alex Murdaugh's Conviction
Where Is Buster Murdaugh Now? What to Know About His Life After Dad Alex Murdaugh's Conviction

Yahoo

time5 days ago

  • Yahoo

Where Is Buster Murdaugh Now? What to Know About His Life After Dad Alex Murdaugh's Conviction

Buster Murdaugh was born to parents Alex and Maggie Murdaugh Buster was thrust into the spotlight when his dad was convicted of murdering Maggie and their other son, Paul Buster has also dealt with his own legal troubles, including a 2019 wrongful death lawsuit concerning Mallory BeachBuster Murdaugh and his family were prominent members of their South Carolina community — but the Murdaughs gained national notoriety in the summer of 2021, after the murders of Buster's mother, Margaret 'Maggie' Murdaugh, and brother, Paul Murdaugh. Maggie, 52, and Paul, 22, were shot and killed on June 7, 2021, at Moselle, their family's 1,770-acre property in the low country of South Carolina. At the time of their deaths, Paul was awaiting trial in connection with the 2019 boating death of 19-year-old Mallory Beach. The double murder sent shockwaves through their small South Carolina town of Hampton, where the powerful Murdaugh family had been practicing law since 1910. Adding to the local drama was the fact that Buster's father, South Carolina attorney Alex Murdaugh, found himself at the epicenter of the shocking slayings. Alex's attorney, Jim Griffin, revealed that the grieving husband and father was considered a person of interest from the onset of the authorities' investigation into the murders. The charges against Alex continued to mount throughout early 2022, but he wasn't officially linked to the killings of his wife and son until July 2022 — when a South Carolina grand jury indicted the disgraced attorney in the double murder. Prosecutors alleged that, on the evening of June 7, 2021, Alex lured his estranged wife Maggie from their family's beach house (where she had been staying) to their hunting estate, where he then shot and killed her and Paul execution style near the dog kennels on the property. Despite the 'mountain of evidence' presented against Alex during his 2023 murder trial, Buster stood by his father's side, maintaining his innocence and testifying in his defense. But the fallout from the deaths of his mother and brother — and his father's March 2023 double murder conviction — was devastating for Buster. 'Buster is collateral damage to his father's situation,' a childhood friend of Buster's told PEOPLE in 2022. 'I think he's developed this attitude of 'I'm gonna shut people out before they shut me out.' His circle of friends got really small really fast.' So where is Buster Murdaugh today? Here is a look at Buster's life before, during and after the tragic deaths of his mother and brother — and his father's conviction. Richard Alexander Murdaugh Jr., otherwise known as Buster, was the eldest son of Alex Murdaugh and his wife, Margaret 'Maggie' Murdaugh. Buster and his younger brother Paul were born into one of the most prominent families in Hampton County, South Carolina. They earned recognition from the family law firm, Peters Murdaugh Parker Eltzroth & Detrick (or PMPED), which was founded in 1910 by Buster's great-great-grandfather, Randolph Murdaugh Sr., The Greenville News reported. Over the next century, the law firm grew into a multimillion-dollar practice that employed several generations of Murdaughs — including Buster's father, Alex. Randolph Sr. was also the first member of the family to serve as Solicitor in the 14th Judicial Circuit, where he prosecuted criminal cases in four South Carolina counties, according to its website. The Murdaugh family would go on to hold the office continuously from 1920 to 2006. 'For over a century, the Murdaughs were law and order here in the 14th circuit,' The Hampton County Guardian reporter Michael Dewitt said in the Netflix docuseries Murdaugh Murders: A Southern Scandal. 'They ran both sides of the legal ledger, from civil cases to criminal cases.' Dewitt continued, 'They were the law in this area — and, at times, they were above the law.' Buster and his family first made national news after his mother, Maggie, and younger brother Paul were found shot to death at Moselle, the family's 1,770-acre hunting estate in South Carolina. The headlines following their murders primarily centered on Buster's father, Alex. The once-wealthy and powerful attorney quickly became disgraced in the months following the murders, as a result of his alleged involvement in illegal drug distribution, money laundering, theft, embezzlement and perjury, PEOPLE previously confirmed. In addition to the almost 90 charges brought against Alex, he was also charged with murdering Maggie and Paul after a grand jury indictment in July 2022. Buster found his name entangled in his father's legal turmoil in September 2021, when Alex was reportedly 'shot in the head while changing a tire' in Hampton County, South Carolina. However, less than two weeks later, South Carolina law enforcement revealed that Alex allegedly arranged the shooting himself — hiring Curtis Edward Smith to shoot him in the head so that Buster could receive $10 million in a life insurance payout after his death. Buster also made headlines when he testified for the defense at his father's double murder trial. Buster told the jury he 'knew a little bit' about his father's drug use (which at one point had Alex allegedly spending $50,000 a week on opioids and taking up to 60 pills a day). Buster also claimed on the stand that his father was 'heartbroken' following the deaths of Maggie and Paul. After a highly publicized six-week trial in early 2023, Buster's father, Alex, was found guilty of murdering his wife and son. Buster, Alex's only surviving child, was in the courtroom as the verdicts were read. Alex's defense team moved for a mistrial after the guilty verdicts were handed down, but the motion was quickly denied by the judge. 'The evidence of guilt is overwhelming, and I deny the motion,' state Circuit Judge Clifton Newman said, per Good Morning America. The following day, Alex was sentenced to two life sentences for the murders of Maggie and Paul. Alex, however, maintained his innocence when he addressed the judge at his sentencing hearing. 'I'm innocent. I would never hurt my wife Maggie. And I would never hurt my son 'Paul Paul,' ' he told Judge Newman. Buster has stood by his father, maintaining his innocence during and after his trial. In an interview with Fox Nation in August 2023, Buster doubled down on his stance that his father was innocent and did not belong in prison. 'I do not think that he could be affiliated with endangering my mother and brother,' Buster said in Fox Nation's The Fall of the House of Murdaugh. 'We have been here for a while now and that's been my stance.' Buster added that he believed his father's trial was 'not fair' and that pretrial publicity led the jury to form predetermined opinions about the former South Carolina attorney. 'I think that I hold a very unique perspective that nobody else in that courtroom ever held. And I know the love that I have witnessed,' Buster said, referencing his father's 'loving' relationship with his family. Buster also told Fox Nation that he believes the killer is still on the loose — and that his safety is at risk as a result. 'I think I set myself up to be safe but yes, when I go to bed at night I have a fear that there is somebody that is still out there,' he shared. Though Buster faced no charges in relation to the deaths of his mother and brother, he was not without his own legal troubles. Buster's name was mentioned more than 40 times during the investigation into the mysterious 2015 death of 19-year-old nursing student Stephen Smith. Smith — who was a classmate of Buster's — was found dead on a dark Hampton County road not far from the Murdaugh family estate during the early morning hours of July 8, 2015. Authorities initially ruled Smith's death a hit-and-run — before reopening the case in June 2021, following the murders of Maggie and Paul. Authorities revealed that, while investigating the murders of Maggie and Paul, new evidence connected to Smith's death surfaced, which led to them reopening the case. Shortly after Alex's conviction in March 2023, Smith's death was officially ruled a homicide. Buster has never been charged — or even questioned — in connection with Smith's death, however. He vehemently denied any involvement in a public statement released shortly after his father's conviction in March 2023. 'I have tried my best to ignore the vicious rumors about my involvement in Stephen Smith's tragic death that continue to be published in the media as I grieve over the brutal murders of my mother and brother,' the statement read. 'I haven't spoken up until now because I want to live in private while I cope with their deaths and my father's incarceration ... This has gone on far too long.' It continued, 'These baseless rumors of my involvement with Stephen and his death are false. I unequivocally deny any involvement in his death, and my heart goes out to the Smith family. I am requesting that the media immediately stop publishing these defamatory comments and rumors about me.' Buster was also named in a wrongful death lawsuit filed in 2019 by the mother of Mallory Beach, a 19-year-old who was killed in February 2019 after a boat driven by an allegedly intoxicated Paul crashed into a bridge. Alex, Maggie and Buster were all named in the lawsuit, as Alex was the owner of the boat and Maggie's credit card and Buster's ID were allegedly used by Paul to illegally purchase alcohol prior to the crash, Fox News reports. Beach's family and three of the other boat crash victims settled with Buster and the estate of Maggie in January 2023 for an undisclosed but 'significant' amount, an ABC affiliate station in South Carolina reported. Buster went from being a member of one of South Carolina's most well-known families to living a life in near isolation — cutting off contact from most of his social circle following his mother and brother's deaths. 'He really withdrew after everything happened,' a former college classmate told PEOPLE in 2022. 'He has really closed off and built walls around himself.' Buster has never returned to Moselle, his family's estate where his mother and brother were murdered, or his family's beach house on Edisto Island, S.C., where his mother was staying before her death. He also avoids his hometown of Hampton, where his family went from revered to reviled. 'I get stopped and yelled at all the time. I got cussed at in the gas station the other day,' Buster told his father in a taped jailhouse phone call, according to the University of South Carolina's newspaper The State. To escape, Buster moved into his girlfriend, Brooklynn White's, Hilton Head Island, S.C. condo, FITS News reported. The longtime couple went on to purchase a home together in Bluffton, S.C., in May 2023. They also share a golden retriever named Miller. White is currently an attorney at Olivetti McCray & Withrow, an all-female law firm in Hilton Head. She graduated from the University of South Carolina School of Law — the same law school Buster attended before he was kicked out in 2019 for low grades and alleged plagiarism, according to The State. Jailhouse recordings revealed that Alex paid $60,000 to prominent lawyer Butch Bowers to help get Buster back into law school. Buster was reportedly readmitted and due to resume classes in January 2022, but 'it was mutually agreed that delaying readmission to law school would be best for him and for the law school,' Alex's attorney Jim Griffin told The State. Buster has yet to return to law school. It is not known whether he is currently employed. Read the original article on People

Alex Murdaugh's defense attorney explains why he thinks the disgraced lawyer is innocent, will get a new trial
Alex Murdaugh's defense attorney explains why he thinks the disgraced lawyer is innocent, will get a new trial

Fox News

time10-05-2025

  • Fox News

Alex Murdaugh's defense attorney explains why he thinks the disgraced lawyer is innocent, will get a new trial

Two years after Alex Murdaugh's murder conviction, defense attorney Dick Harpootlian still believes the disgraced lawyer is innocent in the murders of his wife and youngest 56, is serving a life sentence for fatally shooting his wife, Maggie, and youngest son, Paul, in June 2021 on their family's hunting estate in Colleton County, South Carolina."Do I believe he did it? No," Harpootlian told Fox News Digital. "I got hired when Paul was charged with the boat case a year before the murders. And in the office I'm sitting in right now, at least once every two weeks, Alex and Maggie and Paul would come and we'd meet and talk about the case and what was going on and what we needed. Every time Maggie and Alex left this office, they were holding hands. Paul was the apple of his eye. There's no way in hell that he would have executed that kid."Prosecutors argued that their murders were an attempt to distract from Murdaugh's mounting financial crimes, which were beginning to come to light around that time, and which Harpootlian wholeheartedly believes Alex is guilty of committing. The disgraced South Carolina lawyer was also sentenced to 27 years for his financial crimes in a state case in November MURDAUGH'S SURVIVING SON, BUSTER MURDAUGH, GETS MARRIED IN LAVISH LOWCOUNTRY WEDDING"Remember, the state says he concocted this plan to distract from the money he stole. Alex would … confess it if he thought it would protect Paul anyway and Maggie," Harpootlian said. "Whoever shot Paul, and this is public testimony, put a shotgun to the top of his head and literally blew his brains out. His brains hit the ceiling. The head exploded. There's no way in hell, in my opinion, Alex would have done that. Now, his knowledge of who may have done it, that's another matter altogether."There are still a number of lingering questions in the case, Harpootlian said, number one being: "Who killed them?"WATCH 'FALL OF THE HOUSE OF MURDAUGH' ONLINE"I think…we've learned some things since the trial that perhaps will help us lead to — we don't have to prove who killed them," he said. "We just need to give the jury a reasonable doubt as to [Murdaugh] killing [Maggie and Paul], and there are plenty of them. I mean, forensically, before you ever get to any testimony, whoever killed Paul would have been covered in blood and brains from head to foot. There's no evidence whatsoever that was a single drop of blood on Alex Murdoch. And he is with other people … within an hour of the time that the prosecutor said Maggie and Paul were killed."Harpootlian is optimistic that they will get a new trial based on the "misconduct of the clerk of court," he said. He still talks to Murdaugh once a week, he THE FOX TRUE CRIME TEAM ON X"He really takes everything in stride and when you consider where he was and how far he's fallen," Harpootlian said of Murdaugh. "I mean most folks would be curled up in a fetal position in their cell refusing to come out. That ain't Alex."While Harpootlian is known for defending Murdaugh in the double murder trial, his professional experience in the courtroom dates back to the 1980s. When he graduated from Clemson University in 1975, Harpootlian said he was a "sort of a long-haired hippie" who opposed the death penalty and the Vietnam he began his career as a prosecutor in the Fifth Circuit Solicitor's Office, his perspective on the death penalty began to shift. He has since prosecuted hundreds of murder cases and 12 death penalty cases, including the prosecution of Donald "Pee Wee" Gaskins, who was South Carolina's most notorious serial FIRST RESPONDER REVEALS NEW CRIME SCENE DETAILS AFTER GUILTY VERDICTHarpootlian discusses the case and his shifting perspective on the death penalty in his new book, "Dig Me a Grave: The Inside Story of the Serial Killer who Seduced the South," co-authored with Shaun — nicknamed Pee Wee because of his short stature at 5 ft. 2 in — confessed to 13 murders in an attempt to receive a life sentence rather than the death penalty in the 1980s,. He disposed of his victims' bodies in the swamplands of coastal South he was eventually sentenced to death after being hired to kill a man in prison. In 1982, a man named Tony Cimo of Murrells Inlet hired Gaskins to kill Rudolph Tyner, who was on death row for murdering Cimo's adoptive parents. However, the South Carolina Supreme Court reversed the decision to sentence Tyner to death, declaring "the death penalty statutory construct" prosecutors were using at the time to be "unconstitutional," Harpootlian said."The Department of Corrections knew that [Gaskins] had skills as an electrician, a plumber, and they made him the head trustee of the cell block to the most secure cell block at our central correctional institution, and death row was one of the tiers … in that cell," he explained. "Cimo was upset that Tyner had not been executed, and it had been almost a decade. And so he, through an intermediary, contacted Gaskins by phone, and arranged for Gaskins to poison him."ALEX MURDAUGH: TIMELINE OF ONCE-POWERFUL SOUTH CAROLINA LAWYER'S SPECTACULAR DOWNFALLThe poisoning did not work, so Gaskins arranged over the phone to get explosives smuggled into the prison where he was staying. In the call, which Harpootlian played from his phone for Fox News Digital, Gaskins can be heard asking in a heavy southern accent for "one electric cap," "as much of a stick of damn dynamite that you can get," and a "damn radio.""That son of a b---h will go off, and there won't be no damn coming back on that," Gaskins can be heard saying in the UP TO GET THE TRUE CRIME NEWSLETTER"The tapes obviously were damning, and the jury sentenced him to death, and he was executed in 1991," Harpootlian said. "By then, I was the DA, or the solicitor, and he had a plot to have his son kidnap my 4-year-old daughter, which was uncovered two weeks before his execution. When he said he liked killing, he really did, and the week that was discovered, and my family and I lived with armed guards for a couple of weeks until he was only executed in the electric chair."After Gaskins successfully executed Tyner, prosecutors again sought the death penalty for the serial HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APPHarpootlian recalled a moment he shared with Gaskins when the serial killer told him, "You like killing.""And I said what do you mean I like killing? And he said: 'You like killing me. I can tell that you're enjoying killing me,'" Harpootlian recalled. "It became clear to me, especially after he was executed, that I participated in and take responsibility for killing him. And then the question is, did I like it like he said? Was he right? Or was I just … doing my job that society, the community … hired me to do?" GET REAL-TIME UPDATES DIRECTLY ON THE TRUE CRIME HUBHarpootlian discusses what he described as that "moral dilemma" in his new book, which he said was "cathartic" to write. The book comes out on Dec. 16 but is currently available for pre-order.

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