48 Hours - A Death in Murdaugh Country
Episode Date: November 26, 2023New evidence discovered after Murdaugh murders reignites a cold case. "48 Hours" obtains findings of independent forensic experts. CBS News national correspondent Nikki Battiste reports.See P...rivacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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In 2014, Laura Heavlin was in her home in Tennessee
when she received a call from California.
Her daughter, Erin Corwin, was missing.
The young wife of a Marine
had moved to the California desert
to a remote base near Joshua Tree National Park.
They have to alert the military.
And when they do, the NCIS gets involved.
From CBS Studios and CBS News, this is 48 Hours NCIS.
Listen to 48 Hours NCIS ad-free starting October 29th on Amazon Music.
You can now listen to 48 Hours ad-free on Apple Podcasts with a 48 Hours Plus subscription.
This has been a Hampton County story.
This has been a Hampton County scandal.
A jury found the disgraced South Carolina attorney guilty of murdering his wife and his
youngest son. This has been the downfall of a family dynasty. Today is not the end. It's the
next step in a long road to justice for every person who has been victimized by Alex Murdoch.
Justice for Stephen Smith, Alex. Stephen Smith was another body in this orbit of the Murdoch family.
Stephen was a gay young man in the low country of South Carolina.
That is courageous in and of itself.
I can't imagine the terror he was in that night.
In the early morning hours of July 8, 2015,
19-year-old Stephen Smith was found dead in the middle of a rural road.
There was an autopsy that basically said, it's a hit and run.
There was no vehicle debris, no broken headlight, paint scrapes or anything.
You never believed it?
No, not at all.
They never would have been walking in that road. Not voluntarily.
Do you believe Stephen was murdered?
I do.
An investigation of some sort took place that led nowhere.
And then it went cold.
I wanted a second opinion.
Sandy Smith is unique in this whole story.
She doesn't know who killed her son. She
doesn't know why. People in town really believed that it was connected to the Murdochs in some way.
The name Buster Murdoch kept coming up. I never had anything to do with his murder. I never had
anything to do with him on a physical level of any regard. The rumors also suggest a cover-up.
We are aware of no evidence today
that would suggest that any Murdahl
played any role in Stephen Smith's death
or played any role in trying to cover up
the investigation into his death.
All I want is peace and no one.
What happened to my son?
He's my world, and I'm going to fight to the end.
This is a woman that has fought this battle alone since 2015,
screaming as loud as she could with not a lot of people listening.
CBS News confirming that the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division
is now investigating Stephen Smith's death as a homicide.
The Murdoch case brought Stephen's cold case to life.
Somehow, someway in the Murdoch murder investigation, a new thread was opened up
into Stephen Smith. Our primary function right now is to have that body exhumed,
have a true independent set of eyes look at it and tell us once and for all what
really happened to Stephen Smith. The gash was from part of this eyebrow across here.
The injuries can tell us so much about what happened.
And in this case, they did.
They did.
Set the scene for me on July 8, 2015, here.
Stephen was somewhat right here in the road.
How confident are you that you know what happened to Stephen Smith that night?
I'm as close to a degree of scientific certainty as I've ever felt. ¶¶ ¶¶
¶¶ It was 1989 in Titusville, Florida.
Kim Halleck said she and her ex-boyfriend Chip Flynn were kidnapped and attacked at gunpoint.
Kim fled the scene, but Chip didn't make it out alive.
Did you kill Chip Flynn?
No, ma'am.
Crosley Green has lived more than half his life behind bars for a crime he says he didn't commit.
I'm Erin Moriarty of 48 Hours, and of all the cases I've covered,
this is the one that troubles me most, involving an eyewitness account that doesn't quite make sense.
A sister testifying against a brother.
They always say lies, you can't remember lies.
A lack of physical evidence and questions about whether Crosley Green was accused, arrested and convicted because he's black.
Just because a white female says a black man has committed a crime, we take that as gospel.
Listen to Murder in the Orange Grove, the troubled case against Crosley Green, early and ad-free on Wondery Plus and the Wondery app.
As a kid growing up in Chicago, there was one horror movie I was too scared to watch.
It was called Candyman.
The scary cult classic was set in the Chicago housing project.
It was about this supernatural killer who would attack his victims if they said his name five times into a bathroom mirror.
Candyman. Candyman?
Now, we all know chanting a name won't make a killer magically appear,
but did you know that the movie Candyman was partly inspired by an actual murder?
I was struck by both how spooky it was, but also how outrageous it was.
We're going to talk to the people who were there,
and we're also going to uncover the larger story. My architect was shocked when he saw how this was created.
Literally shocked.
And we'll look at what the story tells us about injustice in America.
If you really believed in tough on crime, then you wouldn't make it easy to crawl into medicine cabinets and kill our women.
Listen to Candyman, the true story behind the bathroom mirror murder.
Early and ad-free on Wondery Plus and the Wondery app.
Like his mother Sandy, Stephen Smith was born a fighter.
He was a preemie. He weighed 2 pounds 12 ounces.
A twin?
Yeah, a twin.
Born at 27 weeks with his sister Stephanie, Sandy says Stephen couldn't breathe on his own.
After several months, she was told he might not make it,
and she was finally allowed to hold her baby for the first time.
How was that moment? Oh my gosh, it was amazing. It was finally allowed to hold her baby for the first time. How was that moment?
Oh my gosh. It was amazing. It was supposed to be my goodbye, but he started breathing on his own.
Because he felt you? Yeah. That's why he was my heart.
Sandy never dreamed she'd one day be fighting for answers in her son's death.
How would you describe the journey that you've been on for justice?
It's been a hard journey, just living day by day and fighting day by day.
On July 8, 2015, Stephen was found dead on a country road in Hampton County,
the same county where three generations of Murdahl men
had held the top prosecutor job for nearly a century.
The Murdahls still loomed large over small-town life.
Alec Murdahl coached Stephen's baseball team at one point.
When they were little. I think Stephen was like seven or eight.
Stephen and Stephanie were also classmates of Murdahl's older son Buster
before Stephen went to nursing school with dreams of one day becoming a doctor.
He wanted to be a doctor, but it was more expensive,
so he just started with nursing school.
He loved dealing with medicine, and he just loved it.
You must have been so proud.
Oh, I was.
But instead, Sandy says those dreams were buried with her son.
You decided to bury him in his scrubs?
Dr. Stephen Smith.
He had everything he needed in his pocket.
He had a stethoscope and everything he needed.
Stephen had just completed a semester of school and was taking summer classes,
shuttling back and forth between his parents, who lived apart.
He had visited Sandy a week before he
was killed. A storm started brewing. I told him that he needed to hurry up and get back to his
dad's house. So when he made it, he texts me and says, I made it safe, mom. Mama, I love you.
Sandy says those were Stephen's last words to her. Days later, she would hear the news that
would alter the course of her life. July 8th, I was on my way
to work, and I was listening to a local radio station, and I heard that they had found a body.
Sandy called her daughter Stephanie right away. She said, Mama, did Stephen stay with you last
night? Because he didn't come home last night. Then my stomach dropped, and I knew it was him.
because he didn't come home last night.
Then my stomach dropped, and I knew it was him.
Sandy says Stephen's father, Joel, went to the sheriff's office for confirmation that it was Stephen.
That's when she says they received a call.
I was on the phone with Joel the whole time
while we were waiting for the sheriff to come out,
and that's when Joel asked me to hold on
because Randy Murdch was calling. Randy
Murdoch is Alec Murdoch's older brother and had been representing Joel Smith in a workers' comp
case. But now he was calling about Steven. When Joel got back on the phone, he said Randy had
asked if that was our Steven and that he wanted to help pro bono. Did you think it was strange that Randy offered to help pro bono?
Well, I did, but Joel thought it was a nice gesture.
Later that morning, Sandy says she was surprised again
as she drove past the scene where Stephen's body had reportedly been found.
There was Alex and Randy standing on the opposite side of the road.
Murdoch. Murdoch.
Murdoch.
A few minutes later, Sandy says Randy Murdoch called again.
And asked if that was me that passed by.
He said, I wish you'd have stopped so I could have met you.
Randy Murdoch declined our request for an interview,
but through his attorney, he provided a written statement of 48 hours in which he said,
I was not aware of Stephen's death until Joel told me.
They wanted my involvement and I contacted law enforcement on their behalf.
Murdahl said he went to the scene with a private investigator after meeting with Joel and Stephanie, adding,
Claims that I visited the scene of Stephen's death with my brother Alec are false.
Joel Smith passed away three months after Stephen.
But Stephanie and Sandy told us they never asked the Murdals for help.
And there were other things about Stephen's case that didn't sit well with Sandy
from the moment the sheriff confirmed the body was Stephen's.
At first, he told them Stephen
had been shot. What were you thinking? Who would shoot him? It made no sense. I lost it then. I
left my job and just drove back to Hampton, and we just mourned together. We just couldn't
understand why or who. It was just the biggest shock of our life. Within hours, Stephen's cause of death was
suddenly changed to a hit and run. Toward the evening time, we were contacted by the sheriff's
office. After his autopsy, there was not any type of bullet or bullet fragment found in his head.
Because his body was in the roadway, it was being ruled a hit and run. Retired South Carolina Highway Patrol Lieutenant Thomas Moore was the on-scene supervisor.
I was told that the medical examiner made that ruling.
When I reached out to her, it became a little bit heated.
Give me an answer medically that would lead you to believe he was hit by a car.
There was no medical reason.
Did you see any signs of a hit and run?
No, ma'am, none.
Any type of debris, any kind of glass, car parts,
piece of plastic, anything that looks like it may be related to a vehicle.
Also unusual for a hit and run,
Stephen's clothing was intact and his shoes,
which were loosely tied, were still on.
Generally, clothes are torn or unraveled, and shoes have come off.
And Stephen's car keys and cell phone were in his front pocket, unharmed.
And, Moore says, Stephen's body appeared staged.
His body was laying, like, it had been placed in a certain position,
not what you would typically see.
And it looked like somebody had hit him in the head with some kind of object. Meanwhile, Stephen's wallet was still in his car, which
investigators found three miles away with the doors locked and the gas cap hanging open.
In all the years I've worked, a car sitting on the side of the road with a gas cap off
is not normal. I thought it was staged like his body was staged in the roadway.
Sandy says she wondered if Stephen might have been the victim of a hate crime.
Did you think that it was possibly because of his sexuality?
I did think that. I know he was teased a lot at school, but he still held his head high.
But Sandy says in the days leading up to his death, Stephen was worried about his safety.
He'd called his sister Stephanie for help the day before he was killed.
Stephanie said the battery cable was loosened on his car, so she had met him and then she
tightened the battery cable. And she asked him to get out of the car and help her, and
he said, no, I'm not getting out.
Like he was scared.
Right.
But he never said why.
Despite what Lieutenant Moore felt were suspicious circumstances,
he says once Stephen's death was ruled a hit and run,
it became the Highway Patrol's job to solve the case
instead of the Hampton County Sheriff's Office or SLED,
the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division.
I felt like the case, for lack of a better word, was being pawned off on us.
No matter what we said, we were going to be the ones investigating that case.
As we were getting started, certain names started coming up.
Which names?
Murdahl.
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In the Pacific Ocean,
halfway between Peru and New Zealand, lies a tiny volcanic island.
It's a little-known British territory called Pitcairn, and it harboured a deep, dark scandal.
There wouldn't be a girl on Pitcairn once they reach the age of 10 that would still avert it.
It just happens to all of them.
Once they reach the age of 10, they're still a virgin.
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I'm journalist Luke Jones, and for almost two years,
I've been investigating a shocking story that has left deep scars on generations of women and girls from Pitcairn.
When there's nobody watching, nobody going to report it,
people will get away with what they can get away with.
In the Pitcairn trials, I'll be uncovering a story of abuse
and the fight for
justice that has brought a unique, lonely Pacific island to the brink of extinction.
Listen to the Pitcairn Trials exclusively on Wondery Plus.
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Soon after Stephen Smith was killed, Hampton County Guardian managing editor Michael DeWitt says he began hearing persistent rumors all over town.
What are the rumors? That at least one Murdoch child was in a vehicle with other boys and allegedly somebody in the vehicle struck the young man with a baseball bat and killed him.
Sandy says those same rumors hit her doorstep as soon as Stephen's body was taken for an autopsy.
It made no sense to me. At any point did you think that someone in the Murdoch family was involved?
Well, the longer it went on, the more I was asking myself questions.
But I just couldn't find the connection.
Powerful family, and then you got Stephen, who was just Stephen.
Sandy couldn't help but think back to her last conversation with Stephen
a week before he was killed.
Somebody was messaging him a lot.
He told me that he was going
deep sea fishing and he said Key West and I said well who are you going with? He said well I can't
tell you. Did that make you pause? Yeah he said you'd be surprised. It's kind of like a prominent
person and then all I could say was well I hope you have fun. Sandy says Stephen had become more secretive the last couple
weeks, but it never crossed her mind he might be talking about a Murdoch. The original rumor was
that Stephen was planning to go away with Buster Murdoch and his family, that they were together
romantically. Liz Farrell is the writer and co-host of the Murdoch Murders podcast. There's
no evidence of that that we know of. And 48 Hours found no evidence to support the rumors.
Retired Highway Patrol Lieutenant Thomas Moore
says the mere mention of the Murdahls
made it difficult to get help from local agencies.
We tried to hand that case file over to the sheriff's office
and they physically would not take it from our hand.
The Murdahl name was still very powerful, very well-connected in law enforcement,
and the rumors suggested, well, the local cops aren't going to dig into it.
Instead, the case was handled solely by the Highway Patrol's multidisciplinary
accident investigation team called MATE, which specializes in complex vehicle crashes. The MATE team was from out of town, and we wanted outside eyes involved in this.
The Murdahl name appears dozens of times in MATE's 2015 case file,
which we obtained through a Freedom of Information request.
In his audio notes, Corporal Michael Duncan makes it clear he doesn't think Stephen's
death is a hit and run. There is no body trauma other than to the head area. It does not appear
to be, in my opinion, struck by a vehicle. Another investigator, Todd Proctor, goes further.
Typically, you don't see the highway patrol working a murder, and that's what this is.
He hints at a conflict of interest for the local sheriff's department.
There's a reason why Hampton County Sheriff's Department is not handling this.
And I'll leave it at that.
In this interview with Proctor, local teen Taylor Dobson shares a detailed version of that story about several young men in a truck.
I heard that these two, maybe three young men were in a
vehicle. They were riding down 601, saw the car on the side of the road. I guess saw the boy walking.
They turned back around, then stuck something out the window. He offers a name reluctantly.
He goes by Buster Murdoch. Dobson says he grew up with Buster. Kind of out of character to who I knew.
It was just strictly hearsay from all I know.
Proctor reassures him the Murdolls are already aware authorities want to speak with Buster.
They know that he's on our radar.
Matter of fact, I talked to one of their guys yesterday and told them,
you know, I'm going to talk to Buster here soon.
You know, and they said, okay, that's fine. But according to the case file, a call to Buster
Myrdal in October 2015 was never returned. And in December, following a front page story in the
Hampton County Guardian, Mate received a tip called in at the direction of Randy Myrdal,
Buster's uncle. A man named Daryl Williams called a Hampton police officer to report the tip,
which involved two teens, Sean Connolly and Patrick Wilson.
In a recorded phone call, the officer relays to Corporal Duncan what Williams told him.
Daryl called me and he said, Patrick, come over here to the house.
He said that Sean Connolly was drunk and hit something.
He went back the next day to see what it was he had hit,
and he seen a lot of police out there.
Patrick was crying, telling him,
and after he got finished telling the story,
he walked outside his house and threw up.
Did he go into any detail about how it happened?
Supposedly, he had fixed his mirror, wanted to mirror us up on the truck.
The side mirror story matched Stephen's original death certificate.
For reasons that are unclear, there is no record of Duncan or Proctor ever speaking to Connelly or Wilson.
Wilson had no comment to 48 Hours.
Messages to the Hampton County Sheriff's Office,
Williams and Connelly have not been answered.
Sandy Smith says she asked Sean Connelly point blank if he killed Stephen.
And he said?
He said, no, ma'am, I did not.
I give you my word, I promise you, I never killed your son.
Do you believe him?
Yeah. If he lied to you, if that killed your son. Do you believe him? Yeah.
If he lied to you, if that turns out to be the case...
It won't be the first time I'm lied to, but, you know, if you did it, you need to pay.
In September 2016, fed up with what she calls the lack of an investigation,
Sandy began a letter-writing campaign that included the FBI. What did your
letter say? I was just letting them know that my son was murdered and there's no progress being
done. And I think it had something to do with the Murdoch family. And please help. Just please help
me. Sandy also told the FBI she believed someone was deliberately trying to derail the investigation.
Did you ever get a response from the FBI?
I did, and I had two agents come to my house.
She asked them to unlock Stephen's phone, and they did.
Do you know if anyone actually was able to read Stephen's text messages
or see where he might have been based on cell phone evidence?
What I heard from the FBI agent,
there was a lot of interesting information in the phone that needed to be looked at. But she says that didn't prompt local or state authorities to pursue the case further.
There's something in that phone that nobody wants out there.
By late 2016, the investigation into Stephen Smith's death went cold. What do
you think it took for Stephen's case to finally get the attention it deserves that you wanted?
Somebody else had to die.
What information do you think was found on Stephen's phone?
Chat now with the 48 Hours team on Facebook and X.
Hot shot Australian attorney Nicola Gaba was born into legal royalty.
Her specialty? Representing some of the city's most infamous gangland criminals.
However, while Nicola held the underworld's darkest secrets, the most dangerous secret was her own.
She's going to all the major groups within Melbourne's underworld, and she's informing on them all.
I'm Marcia Clark, host of the new podcast, Informants Lawyer X.
In my long career in criminal justice as a prosecutor and defense attorney, I've seen some crazy cases.
And this one belongs right at the top of the list.
She was addicted to the game she had created. She just didn't know how to stop.
Now, through dramatic interviews and access, I'll reveal the truth behind one of the world's most shocking legal scandals. Listen to Informant's Lawyer X exclusively on Wondery Plus.
Join Wondery Plus in the Wondery app, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify,
and listen to more Exhibit C true crime shows early and ad-free right now.
The murders of Paul and Maggie Murdahl in June of 2021
caused a seismic shift in small-town Hampton
and gave Sandy Smith a lifeline she desperately needed.
It took this to get Stephen's name back out there so somebody would start paying attention.
In a strange twist of fate, while investigating the murders of Paula Maggie Murdahl,
SLED announced it had stumbled on a new lead in Stephen's death and would be taking over the case.
They did not say what that evidence was.
It seems like all roads lead to the Murdahl family around here.
Yes.
Is that coincidence or is there a reason for that?
Around here, it's natural.
It would be another two years while authorities focused
on getting a conviction against Alec Murdoch.
But Sandy now has a high-octane legal team in her corner.
After eight years of waiting for your turn, Sandy Smith finally just had enough.
Ronnie and I are like arsonists. We started the fire.
Ronnie Richter and Eric Bland are representing Sandy pro bono.
Our sole goal was to rekindle the interest in Stephen's death.
And they turned up the heat on SLED. In March of 2023, SLED publicly acknowledged it was treating
Stephen's case as a homicide. The same week, Buster Murdahl released a statement through
his father's attorney saying, quote, 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.
Those words are now in cement.
I take them in his word that he had nothing at all to do with Stephen's death.
Rather than old rumors, Bland and Richter say they're focusing on a new investigation
made possible by $130,000 in GoFundMe donations from Sandy's supporters.
The resources were made available for us to do some private investigative work
that's going to start with hiring a pathology team.
They were also able to have Stephen's body exhumed, something Sandy had wanted for years.
Our primary function right now is to have a true independent set of eyes look at it and tell us
once and for all what really happened to Stephen Smith. In April of 2023, Dr. Michelle Dupree,
a former investigator and forensic pathologist who's performed more than 3,000 autopsies,
oversaw the examination of Stephen's body.
The injuries can tell us so much about what happened.
And in this case, they did.
They did.
Dupree says the autopsy confirmed Stephen died from a single blow to his forehead,
severely fracturing his skull.
That's a big gash.
That's seven and a half inches almost.
That's a big gash.
That's seven and a half inches almost. There would be another gash in this posterior area from hitting the pavement so hard.
It literally split his skull.
It split his skull.
They were also able to put to rest some rumors,
including the one that Stephen had been beaten with a baseball bat.
It wasn't a baseball bat.
Those type of injuries would cause something that we call pattern injuries,. It wasn't a baseball bat. No. Those type of injuries
would cause something that we call pattern injuries, and we don't see that here. This is a
linear fracture, as well as this is here. Just as important as what they found, Dupree says,
is what they didn't find. We didn't find fractures of any part of the body except for the head.
There was a little road rash, which you would expect. Any signs of a struggle? No. Any signs of a beating? No. Any injuries below his
head other than the road rash? None whatsoever.
She says that eliminates the possibility Stephen was hit by a car head-on. Dupree says the findings
also refute early theories that
Stephen's body might have been staged. Were you able to determine whether Stephen was struck and
fell or he might have been struck and then placed there? We don't believe that he was placed there.
We believe that whatever happened, it happened right there. Dr. Kenny Kinsey agrees. You think
he was killed right here? Right there. A crime scene expert and star
prosecution witness in the Myrdal murder trial, Kinsey worked with Dupree to analyze Stephen's
case. He says the evidence at the scene is clear. That's a massive amount of blood and if he had
that kind of injury somewhere else, it wouldn't be that uniform. Due to their sensitive nature,
else it wouldn't be that uniform. Due to their sensitive nature, we created versions of the crime scene photos in which the blood and body are shown as graphics. The quantity of blood,
the direction of the flow in the road, and then the direction of all the blood on his person
led me to the only conclusion. Kinsey's convinced an object attached to a vehicle traveling at high speed
caused the single fatal blow to Stephen's head. But whatever hit him was fast and it was large.
So a hit and run, but an atypical hit and run. Yeah, very atypical. A hit and run with no vehicle
debris at the scene. It's a conclusion no one was expecting. How confident are you that you know what happened to Stephen Smith that night?
I'm as close to a degree of scientific certainty as I've ever felt.
What no one can say with certainty is whether Stephen's death was accidental or not.
But still, Richter points out, he was left there to die.
Someone left him in that condition in the roadway and that is a very
serious felony. Stephen's body was found about three miles from his car. Kinsey tried to retrace
his steps. I wanted to walk every possible path that Mr. Smith may have taken. Stephen's family
has always insisted if Stephen had car trouble, he would have felt safer walking through the woods.
So where was Stephen's car?
Stephen's car was located, if you look at this gate here, it was not grown up then.
You could access that gate, but in this area, really close to the woods.
But to cut through the woods, Stephen would have had to scale a fence that was eight feet tall.
And from what I understand from interviewing neighbors, it's been there for well over a decade.
Kinsey theorizes Stephen was walking along the road trying to flag someone down for help.
He is walking this direction in the lane facing traffic.
Whatever was attached to the vehicle or hanging off of the vehicle,
whenever it struck Stephen, he went down in this area,
somewhat on this line here.
The vehicle that struck Stephen was coming toward him,
just like that vehicle in the photograph.
Like this?
Yes, going that direction.
Kinsey says the evidence suggests the driver saw something in the road and changed lanes.
And sometime before it struck Stephen, I believe it changed into the oncoming lane.
That's when he says an object from the passenger side struck Stephen.
What kind of object could it be?
It could be anything.
It could be a ladder hanging off the back of a work truck.
It could be an extended side mirror,
the metal type that you see on some farm vehicles or some larger vehicles.
That scenario matches up with the tip from 2015 involving Patrick Wilson and Sean Connolly, which Kinsey calls plausible.
That certainly would be possible. That would be one of the places I would start.
SLED has kept its investigation close to the vest, but Bland and Richter say a grand jury was impaneled and is issuing subpoenas. They're honing in on specific individuals, and I think there's about five or less
that SLED believes has information regarding Stephen's death.
We don't know who those individuals are.
In an interview on Fox Nation in August of 2023,
Buster Myrdal again denied the rumors of his involvement.
I never had anything to do with his murder,
and I never had anything to do with him on a physical level of any regard.
He also provided an alibi.
The night Stephen was killed, I was at our Edisto Beach house.
With your family?
With my mom and my brother.
Sandy's team says it's turned over all of its findings to SLED.
McKenzie says it's still going to take someone coming forward.
Somebody knows.
Oh, they know. Yes, ma'am.
Do you think Stephen's death was an accident or intentional?
See a timeline of the case at 48hours.com.
As a grand jury zeroes in on potential suspects in Stephen Smith's death,
the legal wrangling hasn't slowed down for Alec Murdoch.
You've got local charges, you've got state charges.
The legal civil cases are going to go on for years.
On November 17th, 2023, Murdahl agreed to a plea deal encompassing all of the state financial charges he faced for defrauding and stealing millions from clients and law partners.
He had previously pleaded guilty to 22 federal conspiracy, wire fraud, and money laundering charges.
Alex preyed on the vulnerable, whom he also thought would never figure out his schemes.
Correct. It's people that are at the worst times of their lives,
where you need a lawyer to be the best for you, not the worst for you.
Perhaps none more so than Elena and Hannah Plyler, who are now represented by Blandon Richter.
Who were the Plylers? They were two young girls from Columbia. They were just 12 and 8 when they
survived a deadly crash due to a faulty tire that killed their mother and 14-year-old brother in
2005 and became the youngest of the financial victims to whom Myrtle admitted he lied and stole from
when questioned at his murder trial.
What loss did they suffer? Who died?
Their mother. Their mother did.
He only mentioned her mom.
Yeah, that bothered me.
Because you don't remember that a 14-year-old was killed in that wreck.
Alec got a very good paycheck off of my brother's death.
Both women are now mothers, and Elena is a detective with the Lexington County Sheriff's
Office. Since all of this has come out, there's a lot of pain that's still there.
Elena was old enough to remember the details of the last road trip
she and her sister would ever take with their mom and brother. My brother and I had gotten into an
argument. I wanted to start sitting in the front seat. So we fought about it and fought about it.
And finally, mom was like, you know what? Justin's going to ride on the way to Columbia.
And on the way back home, Alina gets to ride up front. And I was so happy.
Elena and Hannah, who were still sitting in the back seat, survived the crash.
So you must think about that all the time. I do. I actually had a lot of guilt for several years.
That guilt is something she says she's learned to let go as she recounts her and her little
sister's harrowing survival.
We hadn't been on the road too long. Hannah was sleeping and I was listening to Usher.
And I remember mom saying, Laney, you awake? And so I remember pulling my headphones down and said,
yeah, mom. Within seconds, I heard this loud pop. And then I immediately heard my mom scream.
I looked out the window and my Usher cd was spinning on a train limb
their mother angela and brother justin died instantly elena realized she was trapped and
couldn't move and had to send hannah for help i said i need you to get out of the car and I need you to go to the top of the hill
to the interstate. And you're only 12. I'm 12, right. So many things could have went worse.
Eight-year-old Hannah climbed up to the interstate. There was an 18-wheeler and I was able to flag him
down. And I think by that point, an ambulance came in and they had taken me to the hospital.
Elena waited alone until a fire rescue team arrived and cut her out of the wreckage.
She watched as they removed her mother and brother.
And so I watched them put them in a black body bag.
She was then airlifted to a hospital and would need numerous surgeries.
What was the moment like when you were able to see each other again after that?
I remember it. I remember hugging her and thanking her for not dying, for not leaving me.
And then from there, I was just in the hospital bed with you. You couldn't keep us apart.
The sisters say they were passed around to live with family members.
We didn't have a bedroom.
Just had each other.
Just each other, yeah.
We lived at a little plastic bin.
When a family friend referred the Plylers to Alec Murdoch, he promised to change all of that.
Do you remember the first time you met Alec Murdoch?
Yeah.
I remember when
he walked in, he seemed really arrogant, like a bulldog, just tall, almost intimidating in a sense.
He told us, they took your family from you and we're going to make this right. They're going to
pay. To two young girls who had lost everything, Murdoch seemed larger than life. I always felt
at peace when I got to talk to
Alec. People listened to him. You could tell there was a lot of control there.
How did he earn your trust? Really, with his words, he was a smooth talker,
and he made you feel special. But once the case settled, the special treatment stopped.
But once the case settled, the special treatment stopped.
He pretty much checked out.
He had explained that the case had settled.
We won big money.
Elenia's case settled for $4.7 million.
You know, Hannah's for right at $3 million.
That money was then entrusted to Russell Lafitte.
Lafitte was the CEO of Palmetto State Bank in Hampton and a close friend of Myrdal, who'd handpicked Lafitte to manage the funds as conservator until the girls turned 18.
So these two very wealthy, prominent men basically helped themselves to these kids' piggy bank.
Any money they needed had to be approved by Lafitte and a judge.
Even if it was a dollar, we had to have a receipt for it. When you and Eric
took on their case, what did you discover? Russell was making loans to Alex. Alex would be overdrawn
$50,000, $100,000, $300,000 in his personal account, and he needed money to cover those
shorts. Richter says that at Murdahl's direction, Lafitte transferred nearly $1.5
million from the Plyler's money to Alec Murdahl and himself. When it came time for these young
ladies to turn 18, the money was supposed to be there. So Alex had to go out and steal new money
from different clients and put that money back. Murdugh was never charged for Hannah and Elena's case,
but Lafitte was convicted on federal charges for his role. But still, there's that toll of
how do you trust going forward? People were put in a position of trust on their behalf when they
were just children. And then to learn as an adult that the entire time they saw you as nothing more than a
checkbook. While the Plilers can begin to heal, Sandy Smith still waits for her day of reckoning.
All this sweeping drama, there's answers and there's closure for everybody else,
but not for Sandy Smith. It's time to put the spotlight on Stephen Smith.
Months after his blockbuster trial... Alex Murdoch!
Verdict guilty.
Convicted double murderer Alec Murdoch
and the crime of the century
are still Hampton's biggest attractions.
Almost every day somebody's coming by taking a picture of the law firm or riding out to Moselle taking pictures.
They just can't get enough.
The Murdahl craze was on full display at an auction for the family's personal items from their Moselle property.
personal items from their Moselle property. The infamous leather couch set where Alec testified he took a catnap while his wife and son were murdered sold for $30,000. And Maggie's dog,
Bubba, who helped prosecutors prove Alec was actually at the crime scene, has become a local
folk hero. If that rambunctious yellow lab hadn't have been doing what labs like to do,
chase birds,
we might not have solved this case and we might not have gotten the conviction. Come here, Bubba. Bubba.
Alec's voice calling Bubba was caught in the background of phone video Paul took minutes before he was killed.
Bubba and the other dogs at the kennels, they were witnesses to a very horrific event.
Bubba now lives a quiet life with the Murdahl's housekeeper.
Meanwhile, Alec Murdahl is serving two life terms in a maximum security prison.
Do you think Alec Murdahl still thinks he can try to play the system?
A hundred percent.
Now, Murdahl's attorneys are hoping their latest motion will be a get-out-of-jail-free
card. We're focused on getting him a new trial. In September 2023, Dick Harpootlian and Jim Griffin
announced their motion for a new trial based on allegations of jury tampering by the Colleton
County Clerk of Court, Becky Hill. What we had filed today, supported by sworn testimony
of jurors, is that the clerk of court had improper private communications with the jurors.
The state versus Richard Alexander Murdoch. They argued that Hill violated Murdoch's right to a
fair trial when she allegedly told jurors not to be fooled by his testimony and to watch his body language as Alec was about to take the stand.
I'm Alec Murdoch.
In a signed affidavit, Hill denies all of the defense allegations and voluntary statements from a majority of the jury support Hill's account.
Richter and Bland say even a new trial can save Alec Murdoch.
If the motor conviction is overturned, then you have the financial crimes.
According to the plea deal with prosecutors on the state crimes,
Murdoch could be sentenced to nearly 30 years for those charges alone.
So, yes, there's a theoretical universe in which Alex Murdoch could see the sun again,
but it's theoretical only.
It's like rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic.
It's futile.
If you were to write a made-for-TV Southern legal drama,
you couldn't have done a better job than this.
DeWitt writes about it in his book, The Fall of the House of Myrdal, which he ends with Stephen Smith.
It's kind of interesting and tragic that the oldest story remains unsolved.
Solving his murder, I think this will be the end of this sweeping saga.
As SLED continues its investigation of the Smith case behind closed doors,
what investigators found after the Murdahl murders remains the subject of intense speculation.
Do you have any idea what the new evidence that may be presented to the grand jury is?
No. I do know that SLED has Stephen's phone. I know that they have Stephen's tablet.
Could Stephen's phone reveal the identity of the prominent person with whom he told Sandy he'd planned to go deep sea fishing? That'll be interesting what SLED has found out and what the
grand jury is going to determine whether the person that he was going to go away with, deep sea fishing, had anything to do with his death or has knowledge of his death.
How has this fight for justice been?
It has been a long road, but it's worth it.
Sandy is keeping the faith and keeping Stephen's memory alive.
She recently established a college scholarship in his name.
We are starting this scholarship fund so other children won't have it as hard as Stephen did.
And she's offering a $30,000 reward for information leading to an arrest.
And now it's your turn that if you know something, that you say something.
What do you miss most about Steven?
Just, I miss everything about him.
What do you think Steven would think of your fight,
where we are today in his case?
He said, oh, mama, you would do that for me? Yep.
Yep, I would.
Over and over.
Over and over.
Join me Tuesday for Postmortem from 48 Hours,
where we'll dive even deeper into today's episode and answer your questions about the case.
If you like this podcast, you can listen ad-free right now by joining Wondery Plus in the Wondery app. questions about the case.