Murdaugh Murders Podcast - MMP #45 - What Happened To Gloria Satterfield? Part Six
Episode Date: May 18, 2022We received new information from the attorneys and insurance companies who investigated Gloria Satterfield’s death. Not only do these new details raise more questions about what happened at Moselle ...the day of her alleged “trip and fall,” the new information highlights one of the major problems in this state: lawyers helping lawyers. Also, on Friday the 13th, Charleston's Post and Courier published an opinion piece by the current and past presidents of the South Carolina Bar Association on behalf of the state’s 13,000 actively practicing lawyers saying that “recent news stories and commentaries have presented an inaccurate picture of our attorneys, judges and lawyer-legislators.” However, this week, we’ve found documents that show that this heist could have never taken place if every South Carolina lawyer and judge involved were doing their jobs. The culture in South Carolina is ripe for corruption and the corruption happens because of attorneys who pretend the problem doesn’t exist and attorneys who are too afraid to stand up to those around them. And a special thank you to our sponsors: Microdose.com, Priceline, Embark Vet, VOURI, Babbel, Article, and others. Use promo code "MANDY" for a special offer! Stay Tuned, Stay Pesky and Stay in the Sunlight...☀️ Please consider donating to the Justice For Stephen Go Fund Me. Premium Members also get access to ad-free listening, searchable case files, written articles with documents, case photos, episode videos and exclusive live experiences with our hosts on lunasharkmedia.com all in one place. CLICK HERE to learn more: https://bit.ly/3BdUtOE. Check out our LUNASHARK Merch 👕 What We're Buying... https://amzn.to/4cJ0eVn Advertising is curated by the talented team at AdLarge Media. *** ALERT: If you ever notice audio errors in the pod, email info@lunasharkmedia.com and we'll send fun merch to the first listener that finds something that needs to be adjusted! *** For current & accurate updates: bsky.app/profile/mandy-matney.com | bsky.app/profile/elizfarrell.com TrueSunlight.com instagram.com/mandy_matney facebook.com/TrueSunlightPodcast/ Instagram.com/TrueSunlightPod instagram.com/elizfarrell youtube.com/@LunaSharkMedia tiktok.com/@lunasharkmedia Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
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This is Alec Murdoch.
I need police and an ambulance immediately.
Murdoch, Death in the Family Official Podcast, is here.
I'm joining Patricia Arquette, Jason Clark, and the cast to uncover all things Murdoch.
Family first.
To unravel the story piece by piece was really surprising because you don't want to believe it.
Murdoch, Death in the Family Official Podcast, Wednesdays.
And stream Murdoch, Death in the Family on Hulu and Hulu on Disney Plus for bundle subscribers.
Terms apply.
I don't know if anyone killed Gloria Satterfield, but this week we have received new information
from the attorneys and insurance companies that investigated her death. Not only do these new
details raise more questions about what happened at Moselle that day of her alleged trip and fall,
they highlight one of the major problems in this state, lawyers helping lawyers. My name is Mandy
Matney. I have been investigating the Murdoch family for more than three years now. This is the
Murdoch Martyrs podcast with David Moses and Liz Farrell. On Friday, May 13th, the Charleston
Courier published an opinion piece by the current and past presidents of the South Carolina Bar Association
on behalf of the state's 13,000 actively practicing lawyers. The piece said that recent news stories
and commentaries have presented an inaccurate picture of our attorneys, judges, and lawyer legislators.
So the South Carolina Bar has been noticeably quiet since the details of Murdoch's alleged
legal malpractice started to emerge back in September. While we're happy that they've officially
acknowledged that this case is in fact happening, we were left shaking our heads at the
overall message on their opinion piece, which is basically, oh, pish-posh, goose feathers,
hogwash, y'all need to move on. The piece is utterly dismissive, putting the blame on
media because they think the issue is that we're not understanding the Murdoch or Bowen-Turner
cases and how the system is supposed to work in each. They mention neither of these cases
by name, by the way. They offer no specific examples of misrepresentation.
they say are occurring with the Murdoch and Turner cases.
Instead, they want us to simply trust them and trust the system.
Trust that the system takes care of the not-perfect attorneys, which this might be the most appalling part,
quote, attorneys and judges, like all human beings, aren't perfect.
They say this as though we've been criticizing them for typos and not meeting deadlines and not life-or-death issues.
They say this as if we're not showing them that this is a broken system, as if we're not telling them, we're not okay with how this is working, as if we're not explicitly saying Elyke Murdoch and Bowen-Turner would not have gotten where they were if the system worked the way that it's supposed to.
And nowhere in this piece do these lawyers talk about solutions to the problems.
problems. The ironic part of all this is that one of the writers of this opinion piece is Mary Sharp,
who in 2010 was allegedly found intoxicated and lying on a sidewalk in Beaufort with her legs
in the street. A passerby called the police to report this, and when a Beaufort police officer
questioned Sharp, the woman who wrote this piece dismissing the very valid criticism that has been
raised about our legal system in South Carolina, who wants us to simply trust the system. She
allegedly nudged the officer in the chest and kept saying, really, really, come on, you're joking.
Why would this police officer be joking? Well, one interpretation might be because Mary Sharp was and is
a municipal judge in the same city where this man was a police officer, and why would she, a judge,
be questioned by the police about something like this? Something that for anyone else would likely
result in a ticket or worse because Beaufort City is very serious about public drunkenness.
On any given weekend, you can see the people who have been arrested on that single misdemeanor
charge. People who had too much to drink on the waterfront and ended up having to pay for their
behavior. But not this woman. After nudging the officer, which again would likely be termed
assault if any other person had done that, sharp. The one who wrote this, Trust Us, Pete,
walked away and called her boyfriend at the time, who is now her husband.
His name is Ned Tupper.
He was and still is a Beaufort Municipal Judge.
He is also, incidentally, a lawyer who is a more recent addition to Greg Parker's legal team
in the Mallory Beach cases.
Sharp called Tupper, and that was the end of it.
The Island Packet and the Beaufort Gazette wrote a series of stories and two editorials about this
at the time, and they criticized Beefurt City Council for sure.
showing a complete lack of curiosity about the incident.
The police department insisted that Sharp didn't use her influence
and that she was granted no special favors by them.
The only record of this incident was a dispatcher's report apparently.
So this was 12 years ago.
Is it fair that we're bringing this up now?
Absolutely.
Because it speaks to the mindset of these particular lawyers
who wrote this opinion piece.
One of the signers of this piece, by the way,
is a former PMPD attorney.
He left the firm before the firm's downfall,
but nowhere in his bio on his new firm's page does he mention this connection.
So I guess this quote-unquote transparency,
they all say they support, means something different to them.
That said, we know that not all lawyers are bad.
We don't even like saying it that way because it's obvious.
Most attorneys in this state are not Ehrlich Murdoch or Corey Fleming.
But, and this is a big but,
we have a system in which lawyers seem to look out for themselves first.
and each other second. It's called lawyers helping lawyers. They tend to take it easy on each other.
And that's why we're here and why we're talking about this. In 2018, the Office of Disciplinary
Council received 1,384 complaints about attorneys. At that time, they had two investigators,
eight lawyers, and no paralegals. This is just one tiny aspect of the broken system
the state bar attorneys are defending in this opinion piece as fine and dandy.
While we fully believe in the system that the bar attorneys are describing,
however idyllic it might be, we think they're missing the point completely.
The system we're saying is broken is the one that allows attorneys and judges in
South Carolina to police themselves, that allows legislator attorneys to use their outsized
power to influence cases just with their mere attachment to a case,
and that allows legislators to choose our judges, effectively creating a dynamic in which some
attorneys hold real influence over the judges in their cases. A friend of ours who is an attorney
in South Carolina told us about the considerations that go into deciding whether to take a case.
And a lot of those considerations have to do with who they know, who likes them, and which
juries will be deciding the case. I don't remember those factors being in Mary Sharpe's opinion
peace. The system that our friend describes is called reality. The culture in South Carolina is ripe
for corruption, and the corruption happens because of attorneys who pretend the problem doesn't exist,
and attorneys who are too afraid to stand up to those around them. Eric Bland is the system.
Creighton Waters is the system, our friend told us, meaning attorneys like Eric, who represents the
Satterfield family, and Creighton, who is the chief prosecutor on the Murdoch cases, operate according to
the oath they took and not according to South Carolina's iffy legal culture. There are many more
attorneys like them in the state, but not enough in our opinion. Mary Sharp wants us all to believe
that we in the media have it wrong and that you guys have it wrong when we all question that
system. We want you to remember this in a moment because what we're about to show you is proof
that we're not wrong and you're not wrong to think that this system is bananas. So before this
week, we never knew exactly how Ehrlich Murdoch and Corey Fleming were able to swing a multi-million
dollar settlement without a lawsuit in Gloria Satterfield's death. Our whole team at the Murdoch
Burders podcast has spent days pouring through every detail in these new documents that we found.
And here is the main thing that we have discovered. This heist could have never taken place
if every single South Carolina lawyer and judge involved were doing their jobs.
If every single South Carolina officer of the court involved in the Gloria
Satterfield case was doing their due diligence and serving their communities
instead of serving themselves and their buddies, attorneys would have seen major red flags
and they wouldn't have forked over millions of dollars to go, who knows,
where after it went to Corey and Elyke.
Let's pause here for a second, because what we're about to share might get confusing.
The Satterfield settlement involved two insurance companies.
The first one was Lloyds of London.
This was Elyke Murdoch's regular insurance.
We're going to call this Lloyds of London or the underlying insurance.
In December 2018, this company paid out the entire limits of ELEC's policy, which was $505,000.
The second insurance company was Nautilus.
Now this is important. Nautilus was a $5 million umbrella policy that Ehrlich held. It was extra insurance. A Nautilus ultimately paid out $3.8 million in this case. Like Mandy said, this is a stunning amount of money and many, many of our sources have repeatedly said they've seen nothing like it before. That said, Ehrlich would not have been able to access any of his umbrella policy unless his underlying policy agreed to pay the full limits.
So the easiest way to think about this is this. In order for Elic and Corey to get that $4.3 million,
they had to make sure that Lloyds of London agreed to pay out every penny because when they did,
well then they'd hit the mother load. First, we're going to talk about that second policy.
In April, Nautilus, again we're talking about the umbrella policy, filed a complaint in federal court
regarding a subpoena they had received from a federal grand jury related to the Gloria
Satterfield settlement. On Wednesday, May 11th, the same day our last podcast aired, Nautilus filed
an amended complaint and is now suing Elyke Murdoch, Corey Fleming, Fleming's former law firm
Mawson Coon, Chad Westendorf, and Palmetto State Bank. The lawsuit accuses Murdoch and his accomplices of
conspiracy to commit insurance fraud in the Gloria Satterfield case. The lawsuit is a doozy,
and quite frankly, it's been a long time coming. Insurance fraud, like tax evasion, is a whole other
chapter in this crazy saga, and will likely result in even more charges, but at the federal level
for Murdoch and Company. Nautilus Insurance Company paid $3.8 million of a secret $4.3 million,
million dollar settlement that was reached on the behalf of Gloria Satterfield's family in 2019.
As you know, that money never went to the Satterfield family.
Now ever since we first reported on the secret settlement in September, several attorney sources
have told us that the settlement seemed unusually high.
I can't tell you how many texts I got from attorney friends of mine who said things like
you should look into how they got that settlement.
seems like insurance fraud to me. The insurance angle is important because it shows the systemic issues
we've been talking about that allowed an attorney like Elyke Murdoch to steal millions of dollars from his
very vulnerable clients. And remember, the charges in the Satterfield case are what landed Murdoch
in jail back in October. For a reminder, Elyke Murdoch has been jailed at the Alvin's Glen
detention center in Richland County, South Carolina for more than 215 days now.
And before we get into this lawsuit with the Gloria Satterfield settlement, I want to tell
you about the complaint filed by Nautilus in late April. According to the complaint, Murdoch
made a claim under the policy involving Gloria Satterfield's death. Nautilus, according to the
complaint, paid in excess of $75,000 for defense
counsel to represent Murdoch in the claim. Now let's stop and think about that for a second.
This insurance company paid $75,000 to fight this claim and they wound up paying out $3.8 million
that ultimately went into the pockets of Corey Fleming, Elic Murdoch, and Chad Westendorf.
According to the complaint, Nautilus started to find out about the quote-unquote
of regularities in the Gloria Satterfield case in July of 2021.
July.
Hmm.
Let's think about that for a second.
That would be a month after the double homicide and a month after I broke the story
connecting three other mysterious deaths, including Gloria's, to the Murdoch family.
So did they have to read about the case in the media to figure out that something went
wrong?
Or were authorities already looking into the settlement in July?
Remember, we recently found out that the grand jury was investigating Elyke Murdoch's finances before the double homicide in June.
So it's possible that they were investigating the Satterfield case earlier than when SLED announced its investigation in September.
I say this because it's important.
It took so many different twists and turns and strange events in order to get Nautilus to even take a second look at this multi-million dollar settlement, which should have raised so many red flags back in 2018.
To no one's surprise when Nautilus took a peek at the case back in July, they said they found several irregularities that looked a whole lot like insurance fraud.
So a question we have is why did they not file this lawsuit sooner?
So according to the complaint, the heat really cranked up on Nautilus in February
when federal agents served the insurance company as subpoena for their files in the case.
It's nearly impossible to tell what's going on in a federal investigation until charges are filed,
but it's reassuring to know that the feds are looking into insurance fraud for Ehrlich Murdoch,
and this complaint confirmed it. Nautilus provided some documents to the federal grand jury,
including notes and communications with counsel, according to the complaint. The complaint is basically
saying, look, we try to get the files. But it's interesting when you look at the emails
they chose to show proof of their effort. I'm going to have David read these emails from
Charleston attorney Drew Epting of Epting and Ranick, who is representing Nautilus.
to Murdoch's quote-unquote bulldog attorneys, Dick Harputlian and Jim Griffin.
Dear Dick, first of all, congratulations to you and your wife on the ambassadorship to Slovenia.
What a beauty country and a rich culture. On more mundane matters, the U.S. Attorney's Office wants the file that you authorized be released to the Office of Disciplinary Counsel.
I have inquired several times about it and asked that your client, Mr. Murdoch,
wave whatever, if any, privilege he may have in the materials previously provided to you.
I am wearing out the patience of the U.S. Attorney's Office with my continued refrain of,
I do not think producing the file will be a problem.
The next day, Harpoolian wrote back,
Let me check with Jim.
And about an hour later, Jim Griffin wrote,
Drew, we cannot consent on behalf of Alec
waive any privilege he may have pertaining to these files
so that they can be used in a criminal investigation against him.
Epstein responded.
Understood, and we'll advise USA.
Will you prepare a log as many of these documents do not contain privileged material?
We wouldn't expect Dick or Jim to hand over documents that could incriminate their
client, obviously. But again, what we see here is a dance. One lawyer is being paid to get
information from other lawyers about another lawyer. This might be how it's done, but to outsiders,
it looks polite to a fault. Like, hey, can I have those documents? No? Cool. Didn't think so.
Slovenia though, am I right? And we'll be right back. Okay, so a couple weeks after that
complaint was filed, Nautilus amended their complaint. The
lawsuit, as well as the Lloyds of London documents obtained this week, provide new details
about what happened in the days before and after Gloria Satterfield's mysterious death.
Here are the biggest takeaways in Nautilus's amended complaint. First, they call Ehrlich a liar
for saying the dogs made Gloria a trip. They flat out say that Ehrlich's account of how he discovered
that it was the dogs simply didn't happen. We're not sure how they know this
for certain, but they don't mince words, and frankly, we get it, and you'll get it too.
Elek is the only one other than maybe Paul, who allegedly heard Gloria, someone who, by Paul's
and Maggie's accounts, couldn't form words at that time, say that it was a dog responsible
for her fall. We'll talk more about all this in a bit, because this account is so cartoonish
and so suspicious that it is unbelievable Nautilus relied on it in its decision to pay out
millions of dollars. Which brings me to the second takeaway. The lawsuit says Ehrlich bullied the adjuster
by threatening to file a bad faith case against Nautilus. This is important and we'll revisit it as we
talk about the Lloyds of London documents. When you consider both depictions from the insurance companies
of Ehrlich's threats and his influence over the Hampton County juries, it sounds like they're
talking about a mafia boss or a drug kingpin and it's like they just accepted that this was reality.
They talk about this guy like they're negotiating the dismantling of a bomb.
The next takeaway is that Elex's rendition of what happened to Gloria is so carefully crafted
that it would not be a stretch to wonder if this was the play the whole time.
If he had his own insurance money on his mind from the beginning.
He tells us the insurance adjusters that Gloria was at his house that day, not to work, no, no.
She was there to simply pick up a check for work performed for, quote, someone else.
Why this weird detail?
Because according to the Nautilus suit,
Ehrlich was trying to avoid
a workers' compensation defense.
The last takeaway is this.
Between the details laid out in the lawsuit
and the Lloyds of London documents,
there were so many inconsistencies
and easy to disprove narratives,
had someone just said,
enough is enough,
this is weird,
were done being bullied by Hampton County lawyers.
Because guess who pays
for these outsized insurance payments
that seem to have been
negotiated at imaginary gunpoint. You do. Now we're going to walk you through every detail
involving Gloria Satterfield's death, which were revealed in these documents, the two documents
showing what led to Lloyds of London's decision to pay out the full limits of Elic Murdoch's policy.
Remember what we said earlier. This had to happen in order for the Nautilus money to become
available. This is complex and can be hard to track, so here's what you need to know right
now. First is the timeline. Just over a week after
after Gloria died at the end of February 2018,
Corey Fleming sent Elek Murdoch a letter of intent to sue.
Immediately, they kicked into action.
By May 24th, Eleg had his assistant send a letter
to Gloria's healthcare provider, quibbling over,
and I cannot make this up, a $13.65 charge
that the provider wanted to collect
for providing them with Gloria's records.
The assistant tells the provider,
we'll pay $6.50, okay?
And also, you know, you have 30 days
to provide this information. Apparently, Gloria Sun had tried to get the information to no avail,
so PMPED sent a fax on May 7th trying to help get this expedited. Remember, this is not Elyke's case.
So why are we mentioning this? Because it's one of many details that shows how ridiculous the
situation is and how fast it seems Ehrlich and Corey were trying to make this money happen for them.
So one, the statute of limitations in South Carolina for a case like this is three years.
Several sources have said that Elyke Murdoch often ran up against those limits in other cases.
We have also been told that he might have missed a few of those deadlines in other cases.
But not this one.
They sprinted right out of the gate with this one.
On October 30th, 2018, Corey sent a policy limits demand to Lloyds of London.
London, giving them a November 12th deadline. If they didn't have a satisfactory settlement offer
by November 12th, then they would sue for damages and access of the policy limits. Loids of London
tried to get this deadline extended by a week, and Corey ultimately declined. Lloyds of London
was represented by T. David Rini of the Gallivan, White, and Boyd law firm, the same law firm
of John T. Lay, who is one of the co-receivers combing through Ellick's finances in the Mallory Beach case.
So on November 12, 2018, Raney sent a letter to Nautilus, explaining how they ended up deciding
to settle for the full amount of the Lloyd's in London policy, noting that in exchange for paying
out the policy limits, Corey told Lloyds that his clients would be willing to defer filing a lawsuit
against the Murdox so they could then negotiate with Nautilus.
Basically, it seems like he is saying to Lloyd's,
give us the money by November 12th or we'll sue you and it won't be pretty.
And Lloyd's is saying to Nautilus, look, we're going to have to agree to these terms.
Leading up to this, the lawyer hired by Lloyds of London to represent Ehrlich Murdoch.
Remember, Ehrlich is supposed to be on the same side as these guys.
put together two reports outlining the case for Lloyds.
That lawyer's name is Scott Wallinger.
And the copy of the second report he put together,
which is dated November 6, 2018.
It's truly unbelievable.
If it could be summed up by a line in a movie,
it would be,
pay the money, Lloyds, pay it now and no one gets hurt.
Because Ehrlich has admitted fault,
it is really hard to remember
that this is Eleg's attorney
defending him in a wrongful death claim.
Wallinger's report outlined so much
many new details of what allegedly happened on February 2, 2018. And something interesting that we
noticed, a lot of this report appears to be almost solely based on Elyck's account. Nowhere does it say
that he talked to Glorious family. According to this report, it doesn't seem like he put much
effort at all in defending Ehrlich against having to pay out this claim. Among the most shocking,
Talking of the new revelations, the report said that an insurance claim was filed for a car accident that Gloria was in on February 1st, 2018, the day before Gloria allegedly fell.
Now, according to the report, Satterfield's vehicle struck a parked car. The report said,
We do not have details about that event yet, and Mr. Murdoch was not aware of it until I mentioned it.
He believes that would have been a low-impact accident, else Ms. Satterfield would have mentioned it to him
and would have called him for legal guidance.
So why wasn't that mentioned before? It makes us wonder if Gloria had a stroke or some kind of
medical issue at the time that maybe caused both the car accident and the fall,
you would think that an insurance company would want to investigate this car accident further
to see exactly what happened. You would think the insurance
company that is trying to get out of paying hundreds of thousands of dollars wouldn't just
mention that and casually move on. Wallinger's report also mentioned some details about Gloria's
employment with the Murdoch family. The reports that the Gloria Satterfield worked for the family
for 20 years as a housekeeper and personal assistant to Alec Murdoch's mother, and Alec and Maggie.
We have never heard before that Gloria worked as a personal assistant of a family.
any kind and we've never heard that he worked for Alec Murdoch's mother and we thought that that was
weird that it was mentioned. The report went on to say, there was no written employment agreement
and Satterfield could be considered an at-will independent contractor of Mr. and Mrs. Murdoch.
The Murdox paid Satterfield $10 per hour. Satterfield was not considered a full-time employee of the
Murdox and no taxes were deducted from her paycheck. Satterfield would do household chores,
babysitting of their children, run errands, and act as a server at parties hosted by the Murdox.
Satterfield spent considerable time with the Murdoch family and, as is common in South Carolina,
was considered, quote, part of the family in a loose sense.
Even back in 2019, when Mandy and I still knew very little about this case,
we saw Gloria's obituary and saw that I had said that she was considered to be part of the Murdoch family.
That is one of the main reasons we're like,
hmm, something isn't right here.
Guess what they paid their family member
to clean up after them.
$10 an hour.
Now, that is above minimum wage
and possibly a good hourly rate for Hampton County
where there is widespread poverty.
But remember, this quote-unquote member
of the Murdoch family was left homeless several times.
Conversely, and we do not like pointing this out
because Gloria's life was invaluable.
But a $4.3 million settlement was reached,
which in part considers the potential earnings that Gloria, who was 57, would have made over her lifetime had she continued to live.
$10 an hour puts that into perspective.
But also, some of this document included information we know is wrong.
For instance, the report said that Satterfield did not work for anybody else besides the Murdox,
but we know that Gloria worked for at least one other family.
The report also stated that Gloria's son is an RN.
which he is not, nor has he ever been, according to Eric Bland.
He did work at the hospital but he was never a registered nurse, which makes us wonder,
did Wallinger just take Ehrlich at his word?
It wouldn't be the first time an attorney did that.
But perhaps the most important part of this report is that Wallinger interviewed Maggie,
Paul, and Ehrlich about what happened on February 2, 2018 at Moselle.
Ehrlich told Wallinger he had left the house that morning.
morning at about 745 to go to work at PMPED in Hampton.
This is new.
We have never heard anything about whether or not Ehrlich was at Moselle when the incident occurred.
Sometime after Ehrlich left, he claims that Gloria apparently drove alone to Moselle to see
Maggie and to pick up a check.
This was not questioned by Wallinger in his investigative report.
However, Nautilus, the other insurance company, claims that Gloria was there to collect a check
for work performed for someone else, thus avoiding a workers' compensation defense.
Which is it? This is one of many contradictions. According to Wallinger's report, Maggie said
she was in bed asleep at the time Gloria fell, which would have been likely some time after 9 a.m.
She said her son Paul was asleep in his bedroom. Maggie said she expected Gloria to arrive
at the house at some point that day. According to Maggie, their chocolate lab bourbon,
who she described as just horrible, seeking attention, and always whining,
just had been picked up from obedience training a few days before.
Maggie said their four dogs, Bubba, Bourbon, Blue, and Sassy, were roaming free.
The dog's photos were blacked out of the report, by the way.
Maggie said the two of their employees, Ronnie Freeman and Travis Martin,
were on the property working at the time, but were not near the house when Gloria got there.
The report doesn't say whether either man had been interviewed in the investigation.
Maggie said that she suddenly heard the dogs barking in an unusual tone that morning,
which alerted her to go outside. She said she went out the front door and found Satterfield
lying on her back, head toward the bottom of the steps, with a bleeding head wound.
Satterfield's eyes were open. She was conscious and mumbling gibberish, apparently.
According to Maggie, Satterfield did not know what happened.
And Maggie shouted, oh my God, when she saw her.
Maggie called 911 around 9.24 a.m.
924 a.m. 38 seconds. February 2, 2018.
What's your emergency?
4147, Mosedale Road.
Okay, can you give me the address?
Okay, can you get me the address?
I'm going to make sure I got it right.
Yes, 4147, Bozell Road.
Okay, what's going on with there?
I'm sorry?
What's going on out there?
My housekeeper has fallen and her head is bleeding.
I cannot get her up.
Okay, you said she's fallen and she's bleeding from the head?
Yes.
Okay.
How old is she?
I'm not sure, like 58 maybe.
Gloria was 57 at the time.
Maggie's voice is very matter of fact in this scenario,
which sources have told us was normal for Maggie,
who was calm and pragmatic in situation.
like this. We're not going to play the whole 911 call, but just parts of it that are relevant.
You know if she saw from standing or not?
No. No.
Where she saw from?
She fell going up the steps, up the bridge steps.
Okay, so she outside or inside?
Outside.
Okay.
How many steps is there?
Eight.
Okay, is she on the ground or is she up near the top?
She's on the ground. She's on the ground. She's conscious?
No, not really.
Is she awake at all?
Yes.
It's important to note that in Maggie's interview with Wallinger, she said that Gloria's eyes were open, that she was conscious and she was mumbling gibberish, which matches up with a 911 call.
Is she just not responding appropriately, but she is awake?
Man, she's not, no, she's not responding.
Okay, I just, I've already got.
got them on the way and he asking questions, does not fill them down, ma'am?
Knowing if she's conscious is one of the things that the medic needs to know, she's responding at all to you?
No.
Okay, so she's not responsive at all?
Well, I mean, she's mumbling.
Okay, so she is somewhat conscious.
Is she breathing, okay?
Yes.
Is she bleeding from anywhere?
Yes, her head.
Hey, are you guys able to control the bleeding?
Maggie said that no one rendered first aid before EMS arrived, which also lines up with an N1-1 call.
But what's odd is that there is no mention of the dogs in the 911 call, nor can you hear any barking
from these apparently rambunctious dogs in the backyard, which is interesting because in the report
Maggie said that she saw these dogs around Gloria when she was outside.
During the call, Maggie said that Gloria fell back down.
Oh, thank you.
What happened? She just fell back down. Can I get off this phone and go down there?
Can I have your name and phone number? Are you able to bring the phone down by her?
What? Are you on a cell phone where you can walk down there and talk?
Okay, can you bring it with you? So we can ask her some questions about what kind of pain she's having?
So according to his interview with Wallinger, Paul was asleep in his downstairs bedroom at the time of the incident.
Paul told Wallinger he heard dogs barking and then heard his mother call to him and he knew something was wrong.
He said that Satterfield's feet were on the second or third step from the bottom and she was lying on her back.
He said that she was bleeding from her head wound and blood was on the brick landing.
He said that Satterfield was awake, making weird noises, and not making any sense.
Hello?
Yeah, can you ask the patient what kind of change she's having?
Then she can't call.
Okay.
Do you know...
She's cracked her head and there's blood on the concrete and she's bleeding out of her left ear.
Okay, she's bleeding out of her ear?
And out of her head.
She's criss in the skull.
Okay.
All right.
Did other ladies say that she had tried to stand up and sell down again?
No.
I was holding her up.
Okay.
She told me to turn her list and she was trying to use her arm, but then she fell back over.
So Paul says here that he tried to get Gloria to sit up,
and either Maggie or Gloria,
we don't know, said apparently to turn her loose, whatever that means.
Apparently, after this, Gloria fell back over.
In that same breath, Paul is saying that Gloria had cracked her head open,
was bleeding from her ears and skull, and could not talk.
Remember that.
So according to Paul's interview and the report,
Elic, who claimed that Maggie had called him around 9.45 at work,
claims that he left work immediately and was able to get there before he.
There are two issues with that one.
The EMS report indicates that they arrived at Moselle at 941.
Also, we did a quick Google search on this and found that if Ehrlich was at PMPED when he allegedly
got this call, it would have taken him around 18 or 20 minutes to reach Moselle.
In the meantime, the EMTs, according to the dispatcher, were coming from a station about 15 minutes
away at normal speed, and we can assume that they were driving a lot faster than that.
How was ELEC able to get there before EMS?
Great question.
Another question might be, was he already there?
Given the inconsistencies and the nature of this case, we have to ask that question.
Ehrlich and Paul have different accounts of how Gloria was positioned when Ehrlich arrived.
This could be important, so listen carefully.
According to his interview with Wallinger, Paul said that Satterfield started throwing up,
And Elyke and Paul sat her up while they waited for EMS to arrive.
But according to Ehrlich, when he arrived at Moselle, he found Gloria sitting on the brick
landing at the base of the steps.
Maybe this is nothing, but remember during the 911 call when Paul said that he had just
sat Gloria up and that's when she fell back down?
Is it possible that Ehrlich was actually there at the time the 911 call was placed?
And that's not the only strange thing here.
Lick, Maggie, and Paul all describe Gloria's cognitive abilities after the fall.
And they all slightly differ.
But remember, the devil's in the details.
Maggie said that Gloria was able to tell EMS her name, but then said that the current president
was Bill Clinton.
Paul said that Gloria was awake, making weird noises, and not making any sense.
Paul told Wallinger, he remembers Elyke asking Gloria what happened and Satterfield said something
about the dogs.
But just moments before, remember.
remember, Paul said that Gloria couldn't talk. And yet, Ehrlich described Gloria as
semi-conscious and sitting not laying and, quote, indicated something to him about the
dogs tripped her up. The report even notes that Satterfield made no other statement to
any witness about the involvement of any dogs. The report says,
There is no reference in any medical record of how and why Satterfield fell, only that she
fell from standing height down a few stairs. There is no reference to dogs causing her fall.
The admitting emergency doctor's note states, she does not know why she fell. Maggie and Ehrlich
both told Wallinger that they heard Satterfield's relatives say that the dogs trip Gloria up. This is
weird because one, neither one of them could say which relatives said that, and Wallinger never
bothered to interview any one of Gloria's family members. Instead, he wrote a summary of Tony
Satterfield's Facebook post, which we read in a previous episode. So on both the 911 call and their
statements, Paul and Maggie said Gloria wasn't making sense, was hardly conscious, and was in really
bad shape. Yet Elyke, who appears to be a master manipulator, claims that when he magically
arrived at the scene before EMS, Gloria was sitting up and suddenly
speaking in words that did make sense and she happened to blame the incident on something that would
fall under his homeowner's insurance policy. Interesting. Now this Lloyd's of London investigation
also provided new details of Gloria's medical records from both Care Flight reports and the Trident
hospital records. We should note that Wallinger makes a point to say that Corey Fleming did not
provide some of the records he had requested, including Colleton County EMS records,
This is interesting because in all of this time, only a single page of the 8-page EMS report has been seen, from what we understand.
What happened to the other seven pages?
And why would Corey hold that back?
It also appears that Corey Fleming failed to produce other important medical records, including her personal physician's records, records from earlier and unrelated treatments at local hospitals and pharmacy records.
Didn't these attorneys have the right to subpoena for these records themselves?
According to Wallinger's report, Gloria had significant history of chronic kidney disease and high blood sugar.
She also had low sodium levels in her blood.
He wrote in his report that hyponetremia conceivably could have been a cause of Satterfield's fall.
According to the report, Gloria's injuries included a right-sided head laceration, a right-sided subdural hematoma, a traumatic brain injury,
multiple left side posterior rib fractures, a partially collapsed lung, and a pulmonary contusion.
I'll have David read this part of the report because it's important.
Basically, she had several severe injuries being managed, which together created a greater risk of a downward decline.
After a few days, she was moved out of the ICU.
She appeared by nurse observation to be doing better than she declined,
and was returning to the ICU and eventually.
placed on a ventilator. She developed a pneumonia of unknown origin, although doctors were aware of
sinusitis, they never diagnosed the source of pneumonia. She developed fluid in her lungs and had a
heart attack and coated. She appears to have sustained anoxic brain injury and went into a deep coma.
Her brain activity was evaluated by EEG and the family was told she had a slim chance of survival.
Gloria died on February 26, 2018, after it was clear her life could no longer be saved.
Ehrlich never once visited Gloria in the hospital.
And we'll be right back.
This is where we should point out the obvious.
Think about all of your experiences with insurance companies, trying to get legitimate claims fairly paid.
Think about how different those experiences are.
Think about how rigorous the questioning is and the investigations are.
They look for the tiniest.
of reasons not to cover incidents, right? If Gloria had fallen in any other location, in any
other part of this country, it would have been, oh, she had a band-aid on her knee when she fell
down the stairs? Obviously, we need to look at what was under the band-aid and conduct an analysis
on whether that boo-boo contributed to her fall before the dogs came. Likely, there would have been a
battle. Not only would all of our experiences be vastly different from what happened here,
We are paying for this.
Our premiums are affected by payouts like these.
Insurance companies' willingness to pay claims are affected by payouts like these.
And in Hampton County, by the way, yes, Elic Murdoch and PMPED have made a lot of people a lot of money,
but everyone there is paying for that in the form of higher insurance rates.
Clearly, we understand that it might actually have been in Lloyds of London's best interest
to pay out the maximum amount of its policy.
We also have to acknowledge that we have only seen these two pieces of correspondence in connection to whatever led to Lloyds of London's final decision on the settlement.
There's just one little wisp of hesitation on Wallinger's part expressed in two sentences toward the end of the report.
I would characterize liability based on what is known at this point as probable but not clear and convincing.
I think a medical review to verify Satterfield did not fall for.
from a medical symptom would be very useful.
You think?
So remember, this was sent to the Lloyd's team on November 6th, 2018.
That's a week after Corey sent his threat and less than a week before Corey's deadline.
When did they think this medical review was going to happen?
When were they going to have time to question the facts?
It's like, tick, tick, tick, tick, the bomb is about to go off,
Elyke Murdoch is going to use his jury power to blow us all up.
Check out this part of the report.
venue of any filed lawsuit is a key issue. If suit were to be filed, it may be filed in Colleton County,
where the incident and Satterfield's injury occurred, or in Hampton County where the Murdox reside.
It is highly likely we could get a suit venue transferred from Colleton County to Hampton County.
Both of these counties sit within the 14th Judicial Circuit in South Carolina.
The 14th Judicial Circuit is known to be a plaintiff-friendly circuit.
Hampton County is among the most pro-plaintive trial venues in South Carolina,
largely because of the influence of Mr. Murdoch's law firm in pursuing cases there.
Colleton County is not considered quite as plaintiff-friendly as Hampton County.
Given Mr. Murdoch's involvement as a party, not as an attorney for a party,
I tend to think Mr. Murdoch would be very favorably viewed by a jury in Hampton County or Colleton County.
Remember all those times we wondered if ELEC and PMPED's influence over Hampton's juries
intimidated the insurance companies into these large payouts? Well, there's our answer. And then there's this.
Absent a case being designated complex, cases are not assigned to particular judges in South Carolina.
The 14th Circuit has two resident judges, Judge Perry Buckner and Judge Carmen Mullen.
These judges know Mr. Murdoch and Mr. Flemingwell.
Yeah, it kind of gives you chills, right?
Because here's the thing.
On Friday the 13th, the state bar's past and current president,
speaking on behalf of the state's 13,000 actively practicing attorneys,
told us that they don't appreciate any insinuation
that anything is wrong in their precious, occasionally,
imperfect world, that the system, which has benefited them this entire time, was built to work.
So it works. And that's that. Stop looking at us. But here, one of those 13,000 attorneys, in this
report that he wrote in 2018, long before the world knew about Alec Murdoch and South Carolina's
rotten system, he is all but telling Lloyds of London to run. In black and white, he is saying
exactly what we have been saying this entire time. But I guess it sounds different coming from us,
right? Beyond the attorney's opinion piece in the posting courier, there are a number of
social media posts that have questioned whether our characterization of the Murdoch influence is hyperbole,
whether we're seeing conspiracy behind every rock by talking about Judge Buckner and Judge Mullen.
But look at this report. The Murdoch influence was noteworthy enough for this attorney to make mention
of it to two people on the Lloyd's team.
One of whom was in Orlando, Florida,
and the other of whom was in London,
literally not even in this country.
He told them the jury and the judges are friendly
to Murdoch and Fleming.
This report, written by one of the bars' attorneys,
says, our system isn't fair, Lloyds,
so pay your toll and keep moving.
How can that possibly be
when Mary Sharp just told us in the post-encourier
that, quote,
courts and judges are accountable to the Constitution
of laws rather than ideologies, special interests, or individuals. Unlike legislators, judges do not
have constituencies. Our fair and impartial justice system in the United States is respected and
admired through the world. South Carolinians should be assured that our judges are diligent public
servants who work conscientiously to ensure the judicial system operates with integrity. I would like to
also quote Mary Sharp when I say, really? Really? Come on. You're joking.
So even though Wallinger wrote in November 2018 that their liability was probable but not clear
and convincing, in December 2018, Lloyds of London ultimately paid out the entire limit of
Elick Murdoch's policy at $505,000. That was the only part of the entire settlement that was on
record. Remember, the insurance company found no evidence that the dogs caused Gloria to trip.
Elyke appeared to be the only one who pushed the dog theory from the get-go. And in the insurance
company's defense, because Ehrlich, the defendant, so readily admitted fault, and because his buddy,
Corey Fleming on the plaintiff's side, for the sake of intimidation, Lloyd's of London, was
really backed into a corner due to Ehrlich's plan.
There's one final line from Wallinger's report that he wrote in November 2018 that I have to point out.
Mr. Murdoch does not want to be sued over this matter if practical and possible to avoid that,
as he sees that a wrongful death lawsuit would be detrimental to him personally and professionally
in that small, rural community. Oh, the irony of that statement as we look back now. We get it.
Murdoch was Wallinger's client, and his job was to represent Murdoch's best interest.
But man, isn't it telling to see on paper how badly he wanted to keep things quiet in November 2018?
Just three months before this, he opened his second forge account at Bank of America, which we all know what was going on there.
And just three months after this statement was written, saying that a wrongful death lawsuit would be detrimental to him.
Mallory Beach died in a boat crash that his son Paul was ultimately charged in,
and that wrongful death settlement against him still looms to this day.
The problems were just starting to mount for Ehrlich,
but as always, reputation is at the forefront of his mind.
And the thing is, Ehrlich knew that he had the power to keep things quiet,
because that is what ultimately happened.
The paperwork for both the lawyers,
of London settlement and the Nautilus settlement were not filed properly. There's only one document
filed within both of those settlements, and that's the wrongful death petition that I found back in 2019.
And do not forget, the name judge in both of those settlements was Carmen Mullen. We have not forgotten
about her, and neither should you. Mullen, a South Carolina judge elected by the state legislature,
allegedly played a key role in this heist. Remember, Chad Wessendor said in his deposition that
Mullen knowingly signed off on the off-the-book settlement in 2019 and paved the way for Murdoch
to steal millions of dollars from the Satterfields. After that deposition, Bland and another
South Carolina solicitor reported Mullen to the South Carolina Supreme Court's Commission on Judicial
Conduct. This is important because
our justice system is broken, not only because lawyers are helping lawyers, it's broken because
South Carolina judges are helping lawyers too. And right there is the problem that the leaders
of the South Carolina Bar are not understanding. We have seen nothing from the Commission
on Judicial Conduct regarding Mullen. Are they investigating her at all? Why is she still on the
bench considering the serious accusations against her that are also backed by a paper trail.
How are we supposed to trust the system in charge of correcting everyone's behavior when they
clearly can't even correct their own behavior? If they investigated Mullen and found no wrongdoing,
they need to tell us that, the taxpayers, the people who pay for Mullen's lofty and powerful
position, the people that pay her to decide who gets their freedom taken away. The South Carolina
Supreme Court Commission on Judicial Conduct has got to say something about Mullen. And as we've said
so many times before, if a judge is corrupt, it's not the powerful movers and shakers who suffer.
It is society's most vulnerable. It is people like the Satterfields. Wrongful death lawsuits,
are supposed to give people like the Satterfields the ability to get justice for what happened
to them. These lawsuits not only help people get compensation for their suffering, but if done right,
they get people answers. And because the Satterfield case was so skewed from the beginning
due to Ehrlich and his plan, these documents ultimately tell us what the Murdox want us to think
happened to Gloria. And while SLED is still investigating Gloria's death, it's so much harder to get
answers in a case like this several years later. And attorneys know that. But the problem is when you
read between the lines of the statement that the leaders of the S.E. Bar issued on Friday, they're
ultimately saying they do not care about South Carolina's most vulnerable getting trampled by our
justice system because they are still benefiting from it.
South Carolina needs judicial reform desperately.
I wish those lawyers who signed that letter could take a peek at my email inbox.
I have literally hundreds of emails,
with heartbreaking stories waiting to be told about how the South Carolina justice system
left South Carolina citizens behind and no lawyers will help them.
We're at a crossroads right now in our legal system
and at the systemic corruption we've exposed in this podcast
does not serve as a catalyst for major change.
I don't know what will.
This is an election year.
And the good old boys and the good old gals who are helping them
have got to go.
Follow the Murdoch Murdox Podcast on Facebook and Instagram
to learn how you can help.
Thank you for listening and stay tuned.
The Murdoch Murdox Podcast is,
created by me, Mandy Matney, and my fiance, David Moses.
Our executive editor is Liz Farrell.
Produced by Luna Shark Productions.
