Dateline NBC - Talking Dateline: In the Matter of Alex Murdaugh
Episode Date: May 20, 2026Andrea Canning sits down with Dateline producers Carol Gable and Haylee Barber to discuss Craig Melvin’s latest episode, “In the Matter of Alex Murdaugh.” In June of 2021, the wife and son of pr...ominent South Carolina attorney Alex Murdaugh were found shot to death in the back of their family estate. One year later, Murdaugh was indicted for their murders. He pleaded not guilty. His trial began in January 2023 and was labeled "the trial of the decade" by local news outlets. A jury found him guilty, and he was sentenced to serve life in prison. But last week, the South Carolina State Supreme Court overturned the convictions citing conduct on the part of court clerk Becky Hill that denied Murdaugh a fair trial. Haylee and Carol share what it was like to learn such major news on a case they’ve been covering for years. Andrea shares an extra clip of Craig discussing the overturned verdict with Murdaugh’s defense attorneys. Plus, Haylee and Carol answer your questions from social media. Have a question for Talking Dateline? DM us @DatelineNBC or leave a voicemail at (212) 413-5252 – your question could be featured in an upcoming episode. Listen to the full episode of “In the Matter of Alex Murdaugh” on Apple: https://apple.co/3Rn9uJ2 Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/6qkmoiTc6eoOVNO6mHyw24 Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey everyone, I am Andrea Canning, and we are talking Dateline. And today I'm joined by Dateline producers, Carol Gable, and Haley Barber. Thanks for joining us today.
Thanks. Thanks for having us. I feel like we'll never stop talking about this story. No, because we are talking about in the matter of Alec Murdoch. And ladies, the revelation that has gone around the world about this new trial is just incredible.
friend and colleague, Craig Melvin, is the correspondent on this episode, and he did some really
great interviews and reporting. Before we get to that, can you just give us a really quick recap
about this case? It started with a call to 911 with Alec Murdo, who is a very prominent
Hampton County attorney, and he's saying that his wife and son are dead, and he's found their
bodies and investigators rush in. It starts a very intensive investigation led by the state
law enforcement division. And we learned that, in fact, it's Alec, who is the chief suspect in
this case, that all of the information from his car put him at the scene. And then, of course,
we get to the trial and we had the verdict that was seemingly conclusive.
Alec had been sentenced to back-to-back life sentences and appealed the murder conviction.
Since then, a lot has happened, Andrea.
And a lot of the kind of drama surrounding this case has centered on the clerk of court, Rebecca Hill.
And after the trial, there were some allegations that she had maybe done some things with the jury that weren't above board.
Alec appeals his case to the state Supreme Court.
They agree to hear it.
And ultimately, that's how we ended up here with this kind of landmark breaking decision.
Yeah.
Wow.
Becky, Becky, Becky.
As the justices said, she put her finger on the scales of justice, which really just threw a grenade in all of this.
So at Dateline, we don't always get to watch every episode because, you know, we are very
busy. I would love to say I watch every single one. Wow. I mean, when I watched this,
it was incredible. I mean, first of all, all of you did such a good job, like putting this
story together. But, I mean, trying to fit all of this into a two-hour show was my head hurt,
just trying to imagine all the details that probably didn't even make it. Yeah, it's hard to summarize
these past years, Andrea, since this murder happened in 2021. But the other thing,
that we sometimes forget in light of the murder coverage is that Alec was also accused and ultimately
pled guilty to so many financial crimes. He was stealing from his clients who we have met some of them
and a lot of them don't have the means that he had. And people often ask what is it about this case
that has just so captivated the world. And I think the curtain was really lifted on this small
town where this family really was so trusted by such a group of people and the betrayal that is
still felt when you go there is really some foresounding. You could really sense just the power
that this man had, Alec, and just the family, you know. Well, they straddled two legal universes.
On the one hand, you had Alex's dad who'd been the district attorney for years and years and
years. And then the law firm that certainly made a name from themselves in so many product liability
and other personal liability cases, I mean, just have made a fortune. And there's so many courtroom
stories about Alex's dad. I mean, he would walk up to a jury. And while he was waiting for
things to go, he'd say, hey, Elaine, how's a baby? You know, he just knew everybody. And they all
knew him. So it's very deep. It's generational. And, you know, now books, movies. Yeah. Hodcast about this.
It's everywhere. Yeah. I was actually thinking as Alec is waiting for the police to arrive and you see the body cam,
and you know this history of this man and this family. And even though police, obviously,
law enforcement, you know, has to keep an open mind from the get-go.
right. But at the same time, you're thinking, I'm thinking, I wonder if their first instincts are like, no way could he have done this. You know, he's this lawyer, his family, you know, have such deep roots in this community.
Well, they did not seal off the house immediately for the crime scene.
They sealed off where the bodies were found, but friends and family were gathering already quickly because the news spread amongst their circle.
And people rushed to the house, and that was not cordoned off as part of the crime scene.
And I don't know if that was you could call it a mistake or you could call it sort of acknowledgement.
of who this family was and that they, you know, were definitely going to get together.
Yeah, I mean, and I was thinking to myself, all those guns in the house, wouldn't you want to
immediately secure that to, you know, for testing and like to see if maybe they were shot
by one of those weapons? I don't know. Just seems like it would have been a smart thing to do
for law enforcement. Yeah, and it says sprawling and confusing.
in crime scene in a lot of ways.
You know, Ehrlich is down at the kennels, but the house is actually a ways away.
This is a big property.
And the one thing I think that Colleton County really did well was they called in the South
Carolina Law Enforcement Division right away.
They said, we need backup.
We need help.
But by the time those agents arrived, you know, this was late into the night and it's pouring
rain.
The crime scene had been sitting out there for a long time.
You know, this lead sled investigator agent David Owen, he kind of reflected on the magnitude of arriving at that scene.
And a lot of people, even if they weren't familiar with Alec, they had heard about the boat accident in 2019 that had happened with Paul.
And even those first investigators that arrive, you can hear them on the body cam saying, did you hear what the name is?
This is the Murdox.
Wow.
And, yeah, and, you know, the boat accident is brought up immediately.
You know, it's...
Well, and I think, in fact, Alec says right there, he brought it up right there on the scene that, you know, he thought that perhaps this was revenge or some sort of get back at the family because of the boat accident when Mallory Beach was killed.
So I was wondering about the timing.
of all of this, you know, where he is supposed to appear in court to, you know, hand over his
financial documents, to disclose what's going on, and then his wife and son are murdered.
Well, I think one thing we've heard is that Alec had been delaying turning over this financial
information for a long time, kicking that can down the road, and that he was told by the Mallory Beach
legal team, that if you don't turn this over, then I will sue Paul and Maggie in Beaufort County.
Now, what that really means is, I will sue your family to get this money, but in a county where you don't hold this kind of influence.
And there's also an element, I think, that he was afraid that when he started turning over financial, somehow there's the strong.
suggestion that he thought this would be the string that would unravel all of these financial
misdeeds that he'd been doing for years. But, you know, you then have to, as a jury,
think that that thread that was unraveling led straight to motive. And boy, that is a jump
that you think because you're about to unravel completely financially, that your remedy
is killing your wife and son.
That's a big step to make.
And that was something else I wanted to talk about.
I mean, obviously, we unfortunately see too,
all too often husbands killing wives.
You know, I don't think that's any surprise
to a dateline viewer at this point or listener,
but to kill your own son,
that's the part that, I mean,
both are obviously horrific,
but that one is harder to wrap your brain around.
Yeah, and I think,
we should probably importantly say that the defense really disputes this motive that
ELEC would commit such a heinous crime to distract what was going on in his financial life.
They would tell you, and they say ELEC would tell you he was extremely close to Paul.
And by all accounts, there's a video of Ehrlich and Paul writing around the property in the evening hours
before this murder takes place, and they're looking at the sunflowers, and you can hear them laughing.
It just doesn't make sense.
It's very hard to fathom.
Well, which begs the question that when you've got them all being pretty jovial on that infamous video down on the dog kennels,
you know, you're then having, have to believe that that tenor of that conversation,
turned quickly because they're dead moments later. So then who did kill them? And that is something
that the defense has said that they've got some leads on who it possibly was. Now, they did not
present those at the trial where he was found guilty. So we'll see if they come up with more.
And as we as we get towards, I want to talk about the next step in all of this. But I'm so curious what
you thought what people, you know, who are watching the trial, covering the trial,
Halleck really is emotional or appears to be very emotional on the stand to the point where
like actual snot, pardon my language, that's not a bad word, but it's kind of gross, but
it's coming out of his nose. And I mean, I just thought to myself, oh, wow, like that, you know,
normally, let's say he wasn't, you know, being looked at for these murders, I probably would buy it, you know, because he did look very emotional. But given that he's on trial for a double murder, what were people's thoughts about his, these tears and his nose and all of it?
I just think they didn't believe it.
Okay.
You know.
But during the trial, I think Haley and I observed that, you know, he sometimes would rock back and forth.
He would sometimes, I mean, I think he had, I think the blow your nose thing, frankly, was something we had seen during the trial.
I sent you, I sent you ladies the screen grab as I was watching in this weekend because I kept to see.
seeing you in the gallery. And of course, that led Carol to our text conversation about those
horrible benches in courthouses across America, and they are the most painful thing to sit on
for hours on end. If we're headed for another six weeks trial, chiropractically, I'm not sure
I can survive. Well, why don't, I mean, I've seen this in trials before where some people will
bring in like, you know, almost like the little baseball pads, they bring to baseball games or they
give out of baseball games?
I have a stadium.
I have a stadium seat.
He has all of that.
Oh, so you have that.
I have tools.
I bring my tools and I share.
Yeah, absolutely.
It's awful.
Haley and I, though, have learned the hard way through this trial is you can stay home and watch it on a live feed and your bunny slippers.
But you learn.
so much more about what's going on if you're there and there's no substitute for being there.
When we come back, we'll have an extra clip from Craig's interview with Murdoch's attorneys.
I want to know you two lived and breed this case so much. And Craig, take us to that moment where
you find out that Alec is getting a new trial. Where were you? Do you just immediately call each other?
How does this all come about?
Another one of our colleagues started calling me again and again.
And I was on one of our associate producers on this case, who are our legs of the operation.
And I thought, that's strange that continues calling me.
Oh, give them a shout out.
Who is it?
Oh, it's hobby.
Oh, we love our hobby.
He is calling me.
And I was on another work call, and I see that he's calling my personal phone again.
Yeah.
In my head, I thought he's got a new trial.
Murdoch, yeah.
And I called Carol right away, and I said, and Carol answered like she, you know, Carol and I are very close in real life.
Yes.
Besties.
And he said, hey.
And I said, Carol, she said what?
He said, Ellick got a new trial.
And I don't think I should repeat here what she said.
Can you give us the mild version?
Oh.
Oh, no.
Okay.
Oh, boy.
Well, and we just know what's coming.
You know what's coming.
And that's the big part of this, right, is that it was such a long trial, so many witnesses to do all the pre-trial hearings.
I mean, to do all of this all over again is just daunting.
There's another lay of drama here because we're in the middle of an election in South Carolina.
The attorney general.
He's running for governor.
He's running for governor.
And we have a wholly new person that's not really on the radar of what we know about the Murdoch case, who's, well, several people running for the AG's job.
And that's why in our interview last week with the Attorney General Alan Wilson, he says he would, you know, is doing all he can to make this.
case be retried before he leaves office in January. And maybe Carol as death penalty this time,
is they're saying. Death penalty, he said, is on the table.
It was on Friday, yeah. What was so wild for me was watching the episode when you go back in time,
because now you know what you know, and Becky obviously, you know, made some major mistakes here,
the court clerk. You go back and you hear Alan giving this press conference. You go back and you hear Alan giving this press conference.
I call her Becky Booth. That's her nickname, but Madam Clerk, wherever you are tonight.
I hear you.
I want to be careful here because the defense lawyers were talking about this last week.
There was a very rare camaraderie that the media had at this trial because it was six full weeks and we sat in the same seats together.
And I will say that at the time, Becky, it's not unusual for us. And you know this well, Andrea,
that a clerk of court is a very integral part of the report.
Absolutely. Absolutely.
They are providing us during times. They are helping us understand what's going to go in the courtroom.
We get exhibits from them. And there have been so many allegations. And Becky has ultimately pleaded guilty by.
I think before we point any fingers, we were all just kind of getting through this trial in the best way that we knew how, which was to do our jobs and work with the clerk in a professional way.
Well, and to be fair, she was the first term clerk of court, and this was by any measure a huge, would be a lifetime huge trial.
And Haley and I met with her months before the trial because logistically, you know, journalists need a place to sit.
We need to know what do you want us to do about parking?
We want to know how are you, just the logistics of covering a trial.
And I think while we were living it, you know, she did a very good job of wrangling a lot of things.
She seemed really personable too.
She seemed like the right person to be handled.
a trial like that? It seemed organized and...
Yeah, I was reading because actually we found out this morning, Andrea, that
Ella Kermudok is now suing Becky herself.
In civil court.
In civil court today, he's kind of, you know, demanding that some of his attorney's fees be
paid due to the suffering that he's, you know, been under because of everything that has
happened. But in the complaint, it states how Becky's election was in 2020.
And this crime happened in 2021.
And we went to trial very quickly.
And I just thought, wow, imagine this being, you know, one of the first trials that you ever do as a clerk.
And I've been at a deadline a long time.
Carol's been at a deadline a little bit longer.
I would say even for us, the media attention on this case has been unprecedented.
Yeah, it really has.
I mean, and what did the justices say?
The South Carolina justice is something about stardom with Becky?
It was Justice Jean Toll who said that she was called by the sion of celebrity.
And the justices ultimately agreed.
The defense team, Alex's defense team, has really hit the ground running with this.
And we have an extra clip from Craig's interview with the defense team that we can take a listen to.
All 12 jurors are called in to testify.
They're asked if they were, in fact, coerced.
They're asked if they felt pressured, influenced to vote guilty.
What did they say?
Most of them said no.
Only takes one, though.
I mean, there's Supreme Court case directly on point.
If one, she attempted to influence one juror, that's enough because you're entitled
under the Sixth Amendment to a fair trial, not a pretty fair trial, a fair trial,
12 jurors who are not being influenced by extraneous influences.
And one juror said that it did influence her, but what's important is our Supreme Court
followed the law that says you don't get to ask jurors, you know, what went into the mix
to make up your mind.
That's an unanswerable question after the fact.
And so one of the things that the opinion does is says, you don't go there.
What you have to do is you have to look at the conduct, the comments, the context in which they were made, and would that affect, you know, a reasonable juror, not how it affected those individual jurors?
The hypothetical reasonable juror.
You know, that is a really interesting quote because ultimately the Supreme Court decided, you know, even though you had 11 people say I was not influenced, how can you unhear that for the ones that all of them did not hear?
Becky say any of those things. But for the ones that did, even though they said it didn't influence
me, I think the feeling is, should you be forced to unhear that? No. How would you know?
Well, yeah, I mean, what I said to you guys that day when the decision came out, I said,
Becky is having a very bad day. You know, this is, this is her worst nightmare that this happened.
Well, and I think this trial was so long and so arduous and so pain.
for so many people that even if you're glad that the Supreme Court has remedied a problem they see with what Becky did, the prospect of doing it again, even if you think that's the fair thing is still exhausting.
It's exhausting, yes.
We should say that we have attempted to contact Becky, as well as her lawyers in this case, and I have not received anything.
back. Well, you, you too have a lot of work ahead of you. I will say that area is beautiful.
It is. I saw that the, it was, I saw the Beaufort hospital after the boat crash. And I, I went there for a
changing of command, a change of command at the base there. And it's just the most stunning area. So,
I think that's why Pat Conroy wrote the Prince of Tides and said it right there.
That was there?
Yeah.
Oh, I love that book and I love that movie.
Nick Nolte.
I think it's so fortuitous to, Andrew, actually, that you brought that up.
And I was talking to a few people over the weekend that we're close with the family and close to the situation.
And we should just bring up that, you know, Mallory Beach's death in 2019.
And the other victims in this case, you know, there's just Maggie's family and the Murdoch family.
And there's just so much pain.
So much pain.
It goes back to that night in 2019 in that original lawsuit and, you know, Mallory's death.
So you just brought up Harris Island and they were out there on the boat and how beautiful it is.
And she was really a beautiful person.
and, you know, it kind of all goes back to that.
She was just, yeah, I mean, she was gorgeous.
Absolutely gorgeous, Mallory.
And you just look at her and you're like, this is a girl who had her whole life ahead of her.
Yeah.
On that note, we are going to take a break and come back with questions from our viewers, our listeners, social media questions.
Are you guys up for that?
We sure are.
Wonderful.
Welcome back.
And now we have some very cute.
curious viewers and listeners who have some observations and comments that they would like to ask you
guys about. So we will start with Bambi Workman. She is from Facebook. And she says, I'm watching
Dateline NBC. What a crazy turnaround. I was thinking that too. How you guys got that on the air
so fast for Friday with all that new information and new interviews. And with Craig's schedule on the
Today Show. We should really give all kudos where kudos are due, which is to
Craig because he, to your point, wakes up at 3.30 in the morning. And by the way,
manages to keep all of this stuff in his head. And he's from South Carolina. So he knows these
people. It's very personal to him. But it was a very tight turnaround. Haley's so right about Craig.
Even with his regular day job, he was still a very important reporter on our story Friday night.
He was making calls.
He was checking facts.
You know, he just didn't stop.
Yeah.
Because we had all of you on Dateline True Crime Weekly.
And Craig was working the phones, as were you guys.
And he really knows the story inside and out, just like you do.
Rebecca Todd on Facebook, she said, how many other trials has this happened to, I wonder?
Oh, wow.
That's a good question.
There was not a lot of case law present in South Carolina.
There's another case cited in the order that was about a bailiff who had made some comments to a jury,
but dating back years and years.
And even some of the lawyers that we've spoken to and our expert lawyer at NBC Laura Jarrett said,
this is truly unprecedented to see this kind of conviction overturned.
It feels that way.
Yeah.
Anecdotally, anyway, it feels that way.
Yeah.
Donna Perry on Facebook, Craig Melvin is going to solve this.
Well, some people don't think it needs solving.
I guess some people maybe do.
If Craig can find those missing guns, that would be a big step forward.
And then we have a missing, what, Haley, $6 million still accounted for that was part of what money stolen from clients.
This question is on to some.
thing with Craig because there are two things that he has never forgotten. Where is the money and where are the
guns? Well, you know, some people are really good at hiding money, right? With offshore accounts,
I'm not saying that's the case here, but there are ways to hide money if you're savvy enough.
And if you believe the prosecution, you know, did Alec have enough time to, you know, hide those
weapons, right? When you look at the area around
Mosel, you are right near the Sakahatchi River. So you have that. You've got miles and miles and
miles of marshes and woods. There are just no shortage of places to put guns. Yeah. Jennifer Blair
Martin says after the first trial and the millions of shows about it, how will they find any jurors for number two?
I guess jurors who don't have preconceived.
We asked that repeatedly to everyone that's key in this case last week.
I mean, my first instinct was you'd have to go to Zanzibar to find a jury of people that didn't know about it.
But, you know, I think we asked Alan Wilson that very question.
He said, look, we have got a structure, as every state does, for how to question jurors and ferret out the ones that can understand a case and can set aside.
their previous convictions.
And the other issue with a new trial and change of venue,
which is the other issue people ask about,
is to get a change of venue,
you not only have to get approval,
but you've also got to find a county whose demographics line up
to be very similar from Collison County.
That's true.
And so you can't just say, we're going to move it to the upstate.
because you've got to have a county that matches demographically.
So I don't.
It would not surprise me if change a venue doesn't really come up.
Linda LeBlanc on Facebook asks, did they say an approximate trial date?
I've just heard so far that they want to do this quickly, but have we heard anything beyond that?
No.
So what we know next, at least what the defense has told us is that they will have to appoint a judge
because the trial judge, Judge Newman from the first trial, recused himself.
And there will have to be a new judge.
And then there will likely be a hearing that there's just going to be a lot of factors,
not to mention if the death penalty comes into play,
that puts this case in a whole different category.
And then you have to seat a death penalty jury,
which is even more difficult than seating a jury that doesn't know about this case potentially.
So Haley and Carol, thank you so much.
for joining us today. And you guys are just so up on this case. Both of you and Craig,
it's, you're the experts. So thank you for doing this. Thank you, Andrea, for having us.
Thanks for having us. Yeah. That is Talking Dateline for this week. Thank you all for listening.
And remember, if you have any questions about our stories, you can DM us, your audio or video on our
socials at Dateline NBC or leave us a voicemail at 212-413-252 for a chance.
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