Murdaugh Murders Podcast - MMP #51 - "Overkill" : Incoming Call From Alex Murdaugh - Part Four
Episode Date: June 29, 2022Mandy, Liz, and the team dive deeper into the jailhouse phone calls with shocking revelations. After listening – and relistening – to hours upon hours of of tapes, we have a better understanding... of how Alex’s family sees this tangled web playing out in the media. You'll hear what Alex says, and doesn't say about Maggie and Paul in heart wrenching, but very telling conversations with Buster, John Marvin and Liz Murdaugh. Plus an update on Eddie Smith’s arrest, and the money laundering, drug and other charges he faces with alleged co-conspirator Alex Murdaugh. To learn more about Life After Loss: Adjusting To A New Reality, By Luge Hardman visit: https://amzn.to/3n8X8SD 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
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Hello, this is an Amtel operator calling from Albinus Glen Detention Center
with a prepaid collect call from...
Alex.
To accept this prepaid collect call, press 1.
All phone calls are subject to monitoring and recording.
Thank you for using Amtel.
I don't know if we will ever have answers
to all of the unsolved deaths allegedly tied to the Murdoch family.
But after listening and re-listening to hours upon hours of jailhouse phone call tapes,
I think we have a better understanding of how Ehrlich's family sees this tangled web playing out in the media
and a clearer picture of how Ehrlich has manipulated those close to him for years.
My name is Mandy Matney.
I have been investigating the Murdoch family for more than three years now.
This is the Murdoch Murdoch Murders podcast with David Moses and Liz Farrell.
Wow, so the last few weeks have been a whirlwind.
I feel like I've been in a fever dream since we got the phone calls a few weeks ago.
So I'm starting off today by saying that the MMP team is finally taking a real vacation,
and we will not have a podcast next week.
I've said this before and I'll say it again.
It's really important to take breaks and vacations and step away from this stuff
that can be so heavy and overbearing and downright depressing at times.
times. And I promise we will be back the second week of July, re-energized, and ready to take on
the good old boys again. I know Liz, David, and I have all hit walls in the last few weeks,
and I hope you all understand that we need the break. But in the meantime, please check out our
new YouTube channel. Our team has been working hard going through old episodes, adding visualizations,
photos, and graphics to each episode. And it's really a whole different way of experiencing the show.
Also, be sure to follow Murdoch Murder's podcast on Facebook and Instagram.
We will continue to post while we're gone.
Hey guys, this is Liz.
Before we get into the episode, I want to first update you on the shocking news we got late Tuesday
morning when Mandy and David were on their way to their vacation.
Elyke Murdoch now officially stands accused of dealing drugs.
On June 23rd, the state court jury indicted Ehrlich on two new counts,
one charge of criminal conspiracy, and one count of manufacturing
distributing or possessing oxycodone.
We've been reporting on Elex's alleged connections to drug trafficking for the better part
of the past year on the podcast, but it was still surprising to see it in black and white.
This definitely furthers our suspicion into Alex's claim that he has had an addiction to
oxycodone for more than 20 years.
It's hard to imagine that someone accused of dealing this highly destructive drug from 2013 through
September 2021 would be able to come out on the other end of it without anyone in his life
having noticed his addiction.
Also on Tuesday, we found out why Curtis Eddie Smith was arrested Friday evening.
The circumstances of his arrest were a mystery until 40 minutes before his bond hearing at noon
Tuesday.
The indictment implicating both him and Eleg wasn't sealed until then.
We were really concerned about this because of how differently Eddie's case was being handled
from Corey Fleming's and Russell the Feeds.
Eddie was arrested at his home, meaning the cops went and got him.
But Corey and Russell were both able to turn themselves in seemingly when it was
convenient for them. They both knew what was in their indictments in advance of their bond hearings.
Meanwhile, as of Monday evening, Eddie's attorney still hadn't been given the unsealed indictment.
It's hard to compare the cases because they're so different, but there are noticeable differences
in how the person with the least amount of power and resources in all of this, who isn't accused
of stealing millions from people, is being treated compared to those with significant power and
resources. So the indictment is interesting and offers a few new details about the checks Eddie
was allegedly cashing for ELEC. First, there were at least 437 checks cashed over an eight-year period.
437. The checks were almost always for less than $10,000. But starting in 2021, the amounts and
frequencies of the checks increased by a lot. So far, Eddie is accused of laundering more than $2.4 million
dollars for ELEC. He's also accused of engaging in a criminal conspiracy with him and charged with
forging his daughters and girlfriend's names on these checks. Eddie also faces new drug charges in this
indictment. At the hearing Tuesday, he seemed really restless and he told the judge that he didn't
have any money, that all that cash, quote, went to Eleg Murdoch. His lawyer advocated for a personal
reconnaissance bond, but Judge Newman decided to set his bond at $250,000. If Eddie postponed, he'll be
required to wear an ankle monitor and get drug tested.
Sources are telling us that this latest charge is one that's going to send shockwaves
throughout the state because a lot of, quote, big names in politics and in the legal community
could be implicated in ELEC's alleged drug dealing.
We'll be looking into this more after a much-needed break.
And speaking of needing a break, I want to be honest about something.
We missed a few things in the jailhouse phone calls, and I will take responsibility for that.
I say all of this because I'm sure.
we will play some of these calls on this episode, which is the third episode on this round of phone calls,
and y'all will probably think, why wasn't this the first thing you reported on while listening to the phone calls?
Well, as we've said, there was over 100 phone calls to listen to in over 13 hours of content in the CD-ROMs we've received.
In the first episode, we played various clips from those calls to give you all an idea of what we were working with,
But a majority of those calls were very boring and very painful to listen to and without news value.
I completely underestimated how mentally draining just the act of listening to these phone calls would be.
It's impossible to not feel for Elex family members who are clearly being manipulated by him.
And finding nuggets and news between the exhausting talk of exercise, life in jail, and canteens,
it's tedious and draining and really takes a lot of time.
But while dividing up the calls, one apparently slipped through the cracks, which makes sense considering we have a small team and we are working tirelessly, trying to crank out stories and podcasts about the bits of newsworthy information in the phone calls.
Before I play this particular call we missed, I want you to hear this clip from January 11th.
Now remember, on January 10th, Ehrlich had a bond hearing, where prosecutor Creighton Waters made it a point to say that they listened to Ehrlich's jailhouse.
phone calls and it was clear that he had access to his assets. Buster clearly took notice of this.
Um, but moving forward, I think that these conversations on this phone should be nothing more than
surface level. And if you have something of, you know, um, you're talking about that stuff they were
saying at the hearing yesterday? Yeah. I mean, I'll be honest, every single phone call I get on,
I know they're listening to it. I mean, you just,
I just thought, I just kind of thought it was more something that was said and wouldn't exactly be utilized, but I can see that I was wrong.
So if there's something of substance you want to talk to me about, just write me a letter and I'll write it back.
Well, I mean, all of that stuff is really just taking snippets and making it, you know, that's just advocating as lawyers, which...
I understand that, but not very much of my life as private.
the more I can keep out of it, the more I would like to.
I understand that totally for sure.
Like we've said before, this story requires constant conversation about how to cover it,
because we know that everything we report on has very specific and personal impacts.
Buster Murdoch is one of those people greatly affected obviously,
and every time we write about him or talk about him,
we consider the news value in doing so.
So hearing that loss call was really difficult for a couple of reasons.
One is obviously knowing the role we are playing in broadcasting his father's jailhouse calls.
And real quick, I just wanted to throw a little timeline note in here.
This conversation occurred before we foiled for the calls about a week later.
This means Buster was observant enough and wise enough to know that there are consequences to what they had been discussing.
The second reason is that we understand that Elex's alleged crimes
are not Buster's alleged crimes.
But he is inextricably linked to how Ellick has been behaving behind bars,
which is where our interest lies,
especially as we work to nudge this state and the 14th Circuit
toward a much-needed reckoning.
Buster appears to have been playing a role in hiding the family's assets.
He also sought to benefit from a special backroom deal
that would have allowed him to return to law school,
the law school he got kicked out of allegedly because of plagiarism.
and not just return to law school, but return on his terms.
This is in part why we continue to stand by the decision to publish and write about these calls.
They give us a look at how someone like Elyke Murdoch regards the system,
how he thinks and how he acts.
Buster is at a fork in the road.
If he bears left, he will continue on Murdoch Boulevard.
If he bears right, he has the opportunity to create a new legacy for the family,
one that doesn't wholly depend on the system they corrupted for their own benefit.
We thought this clip was important because it seems like ELEC made a lot less phone calls from this point forward.
But this also could be because the jail had more COVID lockdowns during this period, which ELEC does discuss.
But for this particular phone call on January 17th, so less than a week after the don't talk about things of substance chat,
Ehrlich and Buster were very much aware that their phone calls were being listened to by the AG's office.
After chatting about Buster's weekend, Ehrlich mentions that he's caught a glimpse of the 2020 episode,
The Fall of the House of Murdoch, which aired on January 14th, 2002.
What was on TV Friday, bus? I saw Jim Marvin on there for just a second.
Dad, it was something ABC 2020. I didn't watch it.
Did it was a new interview or was it from that old interview?
I'll assume if it had him on TV, it had to be the old one.
He has not gone on TV since.
He hasn't.
Tare for.
All right.
I mean, did they, was it the same old stuff with a bunch of innuendo and false stuff?
Or were they being semi-truthful?
Yeah, but I'd love to be able to give me some insight,
but I didn't watch it and I didn't seek out.
anything, any transcripts from it.
I don't know.
I know.
It ain't no big deal.
I would assume it's the same old thing.
Brooklyn published some stuff that was on it, and it was stuff that's wrong.
So, I mean, it's just that same old.
Stephen Smith and Glory and all that bullshit.
You know, I think it probably had to touch on that.
I think this is, I think this, I think this one hit maybe a little bit more on the
boat wreck.
I just know that there was some stuff that Brooklyn said that was said in the
little show.
And it's just stuff that it's not important, but it just shows that if they
are willing to state that, in fact, that they just don't know what they're saying.
Because it's just stuff that's not true.
Okay.
So this is the only conversation we have listened to that brings up Gloria's and
Stephen's deaths. Again, this is after Ehrlich became imminently aware that not only were the calls
being reviewed by the Attorney General's office, the content of the calls could be used against him.
It's hard to know why Ehrlich wanted to discuss this with Buster, not even a week after Buster was like,
Surface, stuff only please. But part of me suspects that he's decided he could use this phone
power to help his case. So maybe in the moment he thought it would be a good,
good idea for law enforcement to hear this conversation and that maybe they'd be like,
hey guys, guys, Ehrlich is saying there's nothing to the Gloria and Stephen Smith cases.
Crazy that we thought things weren't adding up there.
At any rate, it is surreal hearing him say their names, especially with such disdain.
I understand.
So are they still trying to say out there like if some mystery surrounding Gloria's death about how she died?
saying what now
about how she died are they still trying to make some innuendo there
um about Gloria
yeah I don't know
I have
also with Gloria
who was the woman who raised
Ehrlich's sons by the way
he is absolutely minimizing
the harm that was done to her and her family
and logically there is a lot
of mystery surrounding her death
think about it no one saw her trip over the dogs
Elyke is the only one who allegedly heard her say that she tripped over the dogs,
even though she was in and out of consciousness at the time.
There are several inconsistencies in the details surrounding her death,
enough inconsistencies to prompt a new investigation from Sled into her death
and the exhumation of her body.
And don't forget, Ehrlich admittedly stole millions of dollars from her death settlement.
So yes, that's a mystery.
and anyone who ever cared about Gloria would want those questions to be answered for the sake of her family.
But it's clear that Buster isn't paying attention to details here.
And again, I can't imagine how hard this must be on him,
especially on top of grieving the loss of his mother and brother.
But Ehrlich doesn't accept that Buster is trying to stay out of this.
He keeps pressing.
I always think about Stephen Smith, even though Andy Savage.
Yeah, I mean, I don't think anybody...
to us?
Yeah, I don't think anybody took the heart of him.
Did you ever come out and say there's no connection?
No.
They were never.
You didn't know that?
No.
The flood has not released anything.
Ah, Andy Savage.
If you'll remember, Andy Savage was Sandy Smith's attorney until Sandy
fired him last fall after he told a reporter that the Murdox weren't connected to the Stephen Smith case before talking to Sandy.
There still haven't been any arrests, and we still don't know what happened to Stephen.
But here, it sounds like Ehrlich was astonished that what Andy Savage told the press didn't work,
that it didn't solve the issue of people logically making the jump that the Murdox,
whose names are all over the case file, might have had something to do with Stephen's case.
I'm not sure if you caught this part, but Buster said back to him,
Yeah, I don't think anybody took to heart what Andy Savage was saying.
Andy Savage is a really well-known, expensive, high-profile, highly-connected defense attorney in Charleston.
We still have a lot of questions about whose interests ended up being served best during his time representing Sandy,
especially when a key component of his agreement with her seemed to be that she not publicly comment on the case,
at a time when she should have been encouraged to put Stephen's name in the headlines every day.
Okay, so that all was said.
And then, for the only time in all of these phone calls, Buster brings up the double homicide investigation.
They wouldn't even, they didn't even release a statement about what was this most recent thing.
There was something, something came out not long as you're talking about how there's been like a breakthrough and evidence to do with like the homicides.
And Swed wouldn't even come out and issue a statement.
saying that there has been no further evidence, like, gathered here and four.
So personally, I would not count on sled to help in any way.
So here, Buster is referring to our reporting on this podcast that published back in January
about physical evidence linking ELEC to the double homicide, according to our sources.
I was always curious if ELEC's family would at all change their behavior
toward him after hearing about this evidence. And it seems like from the calls they didn't change
at all, which shows that they're willing to accept Elyke's narrative, whether this is because they
actually believe it, or they want to believe it, or they need to believe him for their own sanity.
I don't know. Based on listening to hours of these phone calls, we think Elic is definitely
painting himself as a guy who made some mistakes, and that Sled and the AG's office are setting
him up and making an example out of him because they feel pressured to do so by the media.
We'll talk about those comments a little bit later.
But I also want to point out one more thing.
Buster commenting about SLED saying I would not count on SLED to help in any way.
It's telling because their reputation up until this past year is that they could rely on
law enforcement to help them in several ways.
This is an entirely new reality for them.
But more telling, is Alex's reaction to that statement.
He doesn't ask any follow-up questions like, what evidence?
Or, I don't understand how they haven't arrested anyone in your brother and mother's murders.
Instead, he quickly changes the subject.
I was just curious.
All right, my man, you get some rest.
And now, what time you get on the road tomorrow?
About 8 a.m.
I'll give you a call sometime when I can.
Buster, what's going on with coach?
COVID out there. Must be going crazy.
It's this new, it's this new variant.
It's Omni-CoVID or whatever?
Omicron. It's Omicron. That's it. Omicron. That's it. Omicron. Whatever. Yeah.
And we'll be right back.
This is Alec Murdoch. I need police and an ambulance immediately.
Murdoch death in the family official podcast is here.
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Ever since Richland County released the latest batch of jailhouse phone calls, a lot of you have sent me messages asking the same thing.
Does he ever mention the investigation into the murders of his wife and son?
Aside from the phone call that we just played where Buster mentions my reporting on the physical evidence linking Elyke to the double homicide, which they both completely brushed off, there was no mention of the actual status of the investigation.
Nor did Ehrlich ever mention a concern for Buster's safety or the safety of his family members.
However, and we have to consider this, we were not given about half of the phone calls that ELEC placed during this time period.
From October through December, more than a third of the phone calls we requested were held back by Richland County.
We're not sure yet what was held back from this latest batch, but should know soon.
Some of these calls Ehrlich had with his attorney, but others were with family members.
According to the county, the family calls were held back because they contained personal information,
and the county had no way to redact those parts.
So they held back the whole call, which is not the way the FOIA law is intended to work, so we will be looking into that more.
One thing we learn from this latest batch of calls is that Ehrlich clearly loves a three-way call
and thinks nothing of ordering one up whenever he feels like it, which again is against the jail's rules.
We've definitely detected in several phone calls references to conversations we haven't heard,
and we get the sense that Ehrlich might be using his Jim Griffin calls and meetings
as a shield for his more controversial conversations.
There were some roundabout mentions of Maggie and Paul in the
murders at Moselle. In this call on October 30th, Eleg suggests that Buster go hunting
at Moselle, the property where his mother and brother were murdered just a few months
before this phone call.
Y'all hunting?
We're going to this afternoon.
Let me tell you what you ought to do, Buster.
I think the damn, um, feeders were full over there at Moselle, if you felt like going right
there, I bet with nothing going on, I bet there's deer all over them, but there.
I mean back. What's that going to be for me? What's that going to be for me?
Kill a deer?
I'm not going hunting out there.
And here, Buster is like, no, dad, that's weird. And his dad is saying, okay, but, and he keeps pressing him.
I just made you know, um, Buster. Also, I wanted to tell you this. I just remember this.
You know, they replanted those sunflowers. Do you have any interest in hunting that field?
No.
Do you care if I let Jim do it?
No.
You sure?
Yes.
Right, you'll be coming to call you if we hunt?
Well, I should be out by then.
Jim who?
Jim Griffin.
Let them hunt deer out there, or what are you talking about?
No, I'm talking about.
I didn't know if you wanted to hunt dubs out there.
If you do, then I want you to do it.
If not, then I'm going to let him do it.
He knows how to facilitate a dove hunt?
What?
I said he knows how to facilitate a dove hunt.
Well, I mean, you know, I don't think it would be, I hadn't really, I don't know.
Did you just do you want a dove hunt out there?
No.
Not at all.
Uh-uh.
But what was even weirder was what Elyke suggested to Buster around Christmas time.
In this December 9th, 2021 phone call,
Buster told his father that he was almost done with his Christmas shopping, and Elyke made a strange suggestion.
Yeah, having a good day. I've been spending so much money, and it hurts me.
On what? People's Christmas presents.
Huh, well.
I mean, I got to buy a present for everybody.
Well.
It's a lot of people.
I'll tell you this, bus.
What?
Damn.
He'll have people, something that was mom or pot.
And I think people really like that.
Well, I mean, I wasn't going to do, I ain't going to do that.
We'll see.
If I get out of here, which, like I say, I'm not optimistic.
But we'll see.
They seem to be optimistic.
But they were optimistic the first time, too.
Right.
Anyway.
Well, I mean, I've already bought everybody something to.
Now, we'll talk about finances when I get out of here.
but I'm going to make sure you're okay.
Well, I mean, I make money.
I know.
And if I don't go back in the spring,
then I'll continue to make more effectively.
I know.
Talking about, anyway,
we'll get all that square up to you
when we're not on this phone being reported.
Okay.
All right, everything else is good.
So there have been a few times
while listening to these phone calls
where Alex's behavior has left us,
speechless. This was one of them. And then this call, which was around the same time when they talked
about Maggie's belongings and the mysterious Blanca, who comes up a lot, came up again.
Did you talk to Blanca?
No, I haven't talked to Blanca.
All right.
What am I supposed to tell her again?
Just tell her that I want to give her a call and explain to her what she had.
has to do and that's okay with her.
What is, uh, yeah, with the account?
Yeah, and will you do that today?
I'd like to call her over the holidays.
Yeah, I'll do that today, man.
Me and Block A's been rubbing on the same cylinder.
What?
I said, me and Block up.
Thank you.
I've got some serious problems the way Block has done some things.
Like what?
You know what?
You know what I went out to Mozel the other day.
She didn't tell anybody.
I mean, she's packed up everything at Mozel.
I don't know where anything is.
so I can't find anything that I want.
You know, and she doesn't, you know, she calls Grandma
and looks for permission to go out there
and take Mom's clothes with her and stuff like that.
And I was like, you know what, Grandma, you need to tell her,
she needs to call me.
Yeah, she's just trying to help, don't remember that.
But just tell her.
I mean, tell Blanca to call you.
She's just trying to help.
Here again is the Mysterious Blanca,
who we believe is the assistant for Russell Lafitte,
the former CEO of Palmetto State Bank. We do not at all blame Buster for having a problem here,
because at some point in the weeks after this call, Blanca put several items of Maggie's clothing
on sale on Poshmark. And these were not Maggie's back of the closet clothes in Blanca's closet either.
These were items of clothing that the people in her life remember well and closely associate with her,
such as a $260-clatured jacket Maggie wore often that Blanca sold for 60.
and a pair of $500 golden goose sneakers that she sold for $200.
Elyke says Blanca just wanted to help and maybe that is the case,
but it's an incredibly strange thing to go online and sell items of clothing
that belonged to one of the victims in one of the nation's most talked about and still unsolved murder cases.
Like with everything else in Elek Murdoch's realm, there are so many questions here.
Was Blanca authorized by the Murdoch family to do this?
If so, did she keep the money for herself?
Does this have anything to do with a mysterious account Blanca was setting up that is referenced in Call with Buster?
Did Elyke tell her to sell the clothes as a way of circumventing the receivership?
I have to say, in a case that features several horrifying and inhumane details,
this sale of Maggie's clothing ranks pretty high.
Blanca is selling the clothes of a murdered mom,
potentially as a way to help the only publicly named person of interest in her death.
Why not sell Elyke's clothing?
We highly doubt he's going to need them again.
Now, another bizarre thing we learned in these latest calls is how obsessed Elyke seems with
getting Buster to connect him with Maggie's parents, Terry and Kennedy Branstetter, whom
Elyke refers to repeatedly as Grandmar and Papatee.
Not only does he pester Buster about whether Buster thinks they would be okay with talking
to Ehrlich, he continues to nag him about getting an inmate calling card set up for them, without
ever being told to our knowledge that, yes, in fact, they would like to speak with him.
There are a few times in the calls when Ehrlich gets emotional about Maggie and Paul, which he should be,
and they do seem like genuine moments of grief to the point he is unable to talk.
But there's also a very performative nature to the grief, and this isn't a characterization.
More than a dozen times during these calls,
Ehrlich asked Liz Murdoch and Lynn Murdoch, or asked Buster to ask Liz Murdoch,
to place flowers at the still unmarked grave sites of Maggie and Paul,
which is really nice.
super appropriate, very thoughtful, and emotional, especially around some of the holiday calls.
Except every time Ehrlich asked for that to be done, he also wanted something else from it.
We'll share a few of those phone calls with you. Here's one from December 19th.
Hey, did you remember to ask Liz, did he get flowers?
You never told me anything like that.
Yeah, I did the other night. You get flowers?
It doesn't matter. Will you ask her right now?
To do what?
Get flowers?
For what? For what?
Thank you, boss. From Mother Paul.
Okay. I mean, buddy. I mean, this is the first time I'm hearing of this.
I know. I'm sorry.
Yeah, I'll tell him.
Will you tell her right now?
Yeah. What do you want me to tell her? Do you get flowers sitting over there?
Yeah.
All right. I just told her.
Thank you so much. She said she'd do it?
Yeah.
Good. Is Brooklyn with you two?
And Liz said she put them out?
Yes.
All right. And will you ask if she'll let Grandma and Marion know she put them out?
Yes.
You do that right now before you forget?
Yeah, I'm going to do it as soon as we go off the time.
Almost every request for flowers ends with a request to make sure Maggie's mom and dad
and sister Marion know that he made this happen.
Here's a call from November 24th with Liz Murdoch.
Will you do me in favor?
Will you make sure that Grandma,
and Mary, no, you're putting out flowers, so they won't worry about it?
Okay.
From December 22nd.
And all that stuff was taken care of with the flowers and the grid sites, so just a heads up on that.
Right there.
Hello.
I'm here.
So all that's been done.
I think Lynn did it.
All right.
So did they tell Grandma?
Yes.
I believe that, I believe Liz did.
I asked her to her, and I think she did.
and December 23rd.
Sorry to bug you back real quick.
Hey, Buzz.
It's very important for me for you to let
Grandma and Papa Key, Marion and Bart,
all the properties know that it worries me to death
how much I know this has made it hard on them,
like I've told on you, too, you know.
Make sure they know that I worry about them.
Okay.
Will you do that?
Yes.
It makes sure Mary knows we put flowers out.
She already missed.
There are a couple of things sources have told us about Elyke's relationship with Maggie's family.
They weren't especially tight, though Maggie was fully immersed in the world of Murdoch.
Ehrlich was only a sometimes participant in his in-laws' lives.
We've been told that Ehrlich seemed jealous of Maggie's brother-in-law, who is very successful and wealthy.
After the murders, it struck several people who knew Maggie and Ehrlich as peculiar that Ehrlich would spend so much time with his in-laws.
Maybe he did it for Buster.
Maybe it was to get away from home.
Some have suggested that it was a way for Elek to monitor what Maggie's family knew about the situation
and to monitor what they might tell law enforcement.
Though we have no doubt that his grief is real,
Ehrlich's seeming obsession with the Brandsteaders knowing about his act of kindness
seems like another one of his manipulations,
like he was priming Maggie's parents to be on his side.
Oh, and another thing we noticed.
Around the time of Ehrlich's first bond reduction hearing,
When his lawyers were trying to argue that he deserved a lower bond,
Eleg started asking about reaching out to Paul's friends, a lot.
10-4.
I was getting ready to ask you something.
Buster.
Yeah.
I know I put a lot on you, and I don't want to keep adding stuff to you,
but...
What?
I want to get somebody to reach out to a couple of Paul's friends.
Okay.
Who would you like to reach out to?
Do you want to do that or you'll
get somebody else to?
I mean, I can do it.
You just tell me who.
I thought the Will Love him the other day.
What's he up to?
Nothing, man.
He just called and said he was checking in.
We talked for a minute.
That was good.
I'll let you know.
What?
Who are the people you want me to talk to?
I'll get you a list.
I'll let you know.
Why don't you just write me another letter
and put the people in that,
unless writing letters are too difficult to get sent out.
Well, I'll let you know, I'll either do that,
or I'll let you know in here where you have time
and have a pen to write it down.
But I don't want to bother you with it
if you aren't going to have time to do it.
And I'm not fussing at you,
but it was important to me to let Lynn and Randy know
and they told me you didn't call them or text them.
And I know you don't have time.
You just got to let me know when you don't have time to do something I ask you to do.
Okay.
I mean, it's not a matter of time.
I just, you know, just forget sometimes.
Well, and I understand that, too.
I definitely do.
So, I mean, don't let it worry, you know, you know how much you've done.
When we watched Ehrlich's December bond hearing,
Mandy and I both felt pretty strongly that Ehrlich was using his statement to send messages to people on the outside,
that he still had their backs.
Ehrlich mentioned Corey Fleming and Chris Wilson in an effort to vouch for their innocence in his alleged schemes.
Corey, as you know, has since been indicted for his alleged role in stealing money from Ehrlich's clients.
And Chris Wilson has been working hard in the media to separate himself from Ehrlich.
Interesting to note, by the way, that Ehrlich did not mention Russell Lefeet's name to the judge during his statement.
Remember when we reported in episode 37 that prior to his October arrest on the Satterfield charges,
Ehrlich had texted Corey from rehab to really guilt-trippy texts, neither of which offered an apology.
Three days after his first round of indictments in November, which included more serious Satterfield charges,
Ehrlich wrote to Corey from jail, apologizing and lamenting all the harm he had caused Corey and his family.
He also told Corey to let him know whether he could help him in any way at all.
Why did he do this? Maybe he's just that kind of nice guy. Or maybe he knew he was going to have to
fight harder than ever to get on a bond and needed all the support he could get from the outside.
We think there's a reason for everything Eleg does or doesn't do.
As it relates to this last phone call, we remember thinking it was really strange that during
that same courtroom statement, Ehrlich made it a point to mention Paul's friends and tell the
judge how he was afraid his detention was, quote, alienating them.
We know that the Murdox were generally close to their son's friends.
Many of their friends called Ehrlich Big Red.
But the word alienating is a peculiar one to use in this scenario.
Why would his detention be alienating to the friends of his deceased son?
Are they depending on him for something he can no longer provide because of his detention?
Or do they know certain things about the Murdoch family?
And now that Ehrlich is behind bars, he can't quite manage keeping the door shut on that dark library of knowledge.
We obviously don't know the answers.
But these are questions worth asking.
Why is it so important for Elek to maintain a relationship with his son's friends?
Maybe this has to do with his grief.
Maybe it's his loneliness in jail.
Maybe he wants more pen pals or people to ask favors of.
Or maybe it's about good old-fashioned control.
Another thing about that statement Alex gave in his December bond hearing,
it seems like he really wanted the public to hear it.
Buster, what kind of, what media was out there about this last bond hearing?
Dad, I hate to tell you, but I've blocked all the outlets that produce articles about this stuff
because I just got tired of seeing it, so I don't see it a whole lot anymore.
So I don't blame you.
I was just curious, if, you know, they asked me to say something, Judge Lee.
I was curious if they printed any of that or they just didn't.
you don't know?
Yeah, I mean, they had very, very little excerpts about it,
but, I mean, it was like two, three sentences.
It just mentioned that you spoke about me,
and I think that you mentioned...
Hang on.
That you and what else?
I think the exact quote that circulated was the part
where you're talking about, you know,
that you apologize and want to be able to, you know,
get released and to, you know, start to mend things.
and, you know, kind of that little portion of it.
It was very, very brief.
Talking about, like, the love and support that you get,
and then people went off on tangent,
talking about, you know,
none of his family's ever at the bond hearings,
like he's clearly got no love and support.
Don't know what the hell he's talking about.
Simple stuff like that.
I need people who talk shit.
But, you know, I'm way past worrying about what people that don't matter
say, you know, there's so many people now.
A shit that they don't have a freaking clue.
It's easier for you, you don't run into these people in public.
Which people?
Any people that have a negative outlook on this thing.
Do you know who they are?
We have noticed a recurring theme after listening to hours and hours of Elix conversations,
and that's on top of years of reporting on this family.
The word narcissist comes up a lot.
when people describe what is going on with Elek Murdoch.
The Mayo Clinic describes narcissistic personality disorder as a mental condition of persons
who, quote, have an inflated sense of their own importance, a deep need for excessive attention
and admiration, troubled relationships, and a lack of empathy for others.
According to the Mayo Clinic, people with narcissistic personality disorder have,
quote, an exaggerated sense of self-importance. They believe that they believe that, they believe that,
they are quote superior and can only associate with equally special people.
They expect, quote, special favors and unquestioning compliance with their expectations,
and they take advantage of others to, quote, get what they want.
Multiple studies have found that a common defense among narcissists is victim mentality or blame shifting.
It is apparent in these phone calls that ELEC has a victim mentality and uses it as a
primary manipulation tactic to maintain control over his family members.
Like in this November 23rd phone call, days after he was indicted on 27 charges for
allegedly stealing millions of dollars from several clients, including the
Satterfield family and an injured law enforcement officer, Elek is very clear with Buster
about how he should be feeling about this.
Jim and them told me they, the grand jury,
indicted a bunch more things on last Friday, but you know that's just overkill, right?
Yeah.
I mean, they're just trying to pile it on me now.
You know that, right?
Yeah, I'm aware.
But I can take it.
So don't let it worry you.
He wants his son to feel bad for him, and he wants his son to believe that the system is making an example of him.
He does this with John Marvin, too.
Any news or anything?
You know, they told me about the new indictments,
but I think all that was to be expected.
Yeah, they told me about that.
I mean, truthfully, they know, I understand what they're doing, and I get it.
But, I mean, you know, they just, he's, you know, he's making it.
They're just sacking it on.
He's making it as many charges as he can.
Just say he ain't taking it easy.
on me.
That's right.
But it is what it is.
It's important to note that Eleg's family members do not push back when he attempts to
elicit sympathy.
They just comply and follow his script.
After his December bond hearing, there were multiple calls in which Eleg joked with family
members about paying his $7 million bond.
Another kick he was on.
He suddenly became an expert on how unfairly he was being treated in the grand scheme of
the nation's worst white-collar criminals.
Josh?
John Marvin got my bond posted yet?
Yeah.
I think he's writing the check tomorrow.
That's the fucking Jim Kidman.
Well, yeah, I just don't know how they?
I don't know.
I don't know what goes under that.
Bernie Madoff had a $10 million bond.
He took $10 billion.
That dude from Sun Gold that sold $380 million.
$2,400 investors?
$100,000.
Yeah.
That lawyer that stole money from clients where he told them,
if he didn't, they didn't turn over their retirement system,
their retirement monies to him, they were going to lose it and took it.
$100,000 bond.
Six and a half million dollars.
Anyway, it is what it is.
Are you okay?
In fact, he compared himself to Bernie Madoff several times.
What's that?
You got my bomb purse a jet?
Yeah, I'm writing them a check as we see.
Huh?
I didn't have some shit.
That's crazy, man.
Fucking Bernie Madoff got a $10 million a dollar.
Yeah, I'm just crazy.
The homego, you did what you tell you?
No.
old guy that stole 340 million dollars twenty eight twenty eight hundred clients no i hadn't heard
hundred thousand the lawyer in lexington stole six and a half million from people from their
retirement accounts not not money he made in cases i'm not saying there's any big difference but
there's a little bit of difference hundred thousand not long that boy i hadn't that's crazy yeah
Anyway, what I'm calling about.
Did you come, did?
I'll ask Buster to text, Jim, and he said you did.
So this is another moment during the phone calls that really struck me as especially significant
because it gives such insight into how Elek thinks about what he allegedly did to his clients.
He's literally putting himself in a different category, a better category, from these other bad guys.
Because the thing he is accused of is not.
not taking money that his clients already had, but rather money that he had acquired for them.
We definitely theorized for a while that this was how he was able to justify his actions to himself
and maybe others. Because of his family name, the work his forefathers and their law partners did
to secure the loyalty of Hampton County judges and juries, and because of the family's
connections and power and the litany of favors they collected over the years,
Ehrlich was able to win his clients these settlements that were far larger than they would have gotten somewhere else, like lottery winnings.
To his mind, it seems, some of that money going back to the house, meaning to him, maybe wasn't stealing so much as it was secretly taking back some of what he felt was owed to him for loaning his family name to a case.
Think of it this way.
The Murdoch family, over generations, created an industry.
And at the heart of that industry, there was a very effective judicial machine that they built and continued to pass onto their sons.
Bernie Madoff is just a guy who outright stole from people.
Totally different from Big Red.
We'll be right back.
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Ah, Bernie Madoff,
a textbook narcissist who Alec loves comparing himself to.
But one more thing you need to know about narcissists.
They often get angry when things don't go their way.
And all of us agreed, after listening to hours and hours of these phone calls,
anger isn't really a feeling we sense from Ehrlich throughout a majority of these conversations.
But in this December 22nd conversation with Liz Murdoch,
I hear some anger and resentment in his voice when he's talking about media coverage of the case.
And I really could give a fine shit less what anybody who doesn't know me or us says.
but it, you know, I quit listening to it
when they started printing all that thoughtship about the boat wreck
or, you know, handpicking what they print,
only printing negative stuff without putting it in context
with other stuff, you know, taking a snippet
that when you look at it in its totality, there's nothing to it.
But if you take a little blur, you know, it sounds bad in the media.
I mean, it did out all the time.
But anyway, the only thing that worries me about it is, you know, I know it's hard for y'all, you know, and I know it's hard for Grandma and Papa T.
Yeah.
And it worries me a little bit for Buster.
I'm not sure he quite knows how to deal with it yet.
Well, I don't really ask him, but I feel like she doesn't read it.
that much.
No, he told me he was locked most of the stuff, but, you know, he's still, there's nothing.
I worry about my grandma and pop a tea because, you know.
Well, um, yeah, I do think, Marians told me that they read it, but I think they only
read the Popes and Courier, so that's good that they got laid, you know, the more tabloid-y kind of one.
Throughout this entire case, the Murdoch camp has tried time and time again to frame Elyke as a victim.
After the suicide for hire incident in September, Ehrlich and his attorneys wanted us to believe that he was the targeted victim of a roadside shooting.
When that narrative quickly began to crumble, they switched gears and framed him as a drug addict.
We haven't seen any evidence that Ehrlich was actually addicted to.
opioids, but we find it very interesting that this was the drug that the Murdoch team seems to
have chosen for him. It is the one drug whose addicts America has collectively decided to look
upon sympathetically. His lawyers wanted us to believe that he stole millions of dollars from
his clients simply because he had a drug addiction that was out of control. His lawyers wanted
us to believe that he was impecunious and his financial state was ruinous, but in reality,
these jailhouse phone calls reveal the exact opposite. All along, Ehrlich has wanted our sympathy,
sympathy for losing his wife and son, sympathy for his drug addiction, and sympathy for his poor
financial state. When he didn't get that sympathy he wanted from the public and a lot of the media,
he made sure he got it from his family. In the 14 hours of tapes we have,
listened to, we never heard the voice of a man who was truly sorry for letting down those
who loved him. We didn't hear the voice of a man who recognized the damage that he's caused
so many. We heard the voice of a narcissist clinging to the little control he still has left
over his own family members. Being an investigative journalist is sometimes exciting,
but following a trail until you reach the full story of something, meaning the truth, the
360 degrees of truth, that is, is not for the faint of heart. Because along these trails, you meet
people who are hurting. You encounter complex issues that are frustrating to untangle, and you deal with
unsavory characters who will suck the joy out of you if you let them. While you're on these
trails, you have onlookers lining both sides, most of whom are cheering you on. Some are shouting out
insults at you, and others are throwing obstacles in the way. When it came to these jail tapes,
We did not have the support of our fellow South Carolina journalists, some of whom seemed to be cool with regarding the calls as private and therefore inaccessible.
And I'm not bringing this up to school those journalists, but rather to explain why their position on this was dangerous.
Ehrlich Murdoch is Elyke Murdoch, because he could be, right?
The ecosystem in the state was made for him.
We all know that now.
We only knew what it looked like from the outside.
These tapes have given us amazing insight into the
the man Ehrlich is, not the man he wants us to believe he is. The guy who is hyper aware
he's being recorded, but also in an environment that makes him vulnerable by its very definition.
By listening to his phone calls and sharing them with our listeners on this podcast, we are
arming you with insight of how the powerful operate and how they will try to cling to whatever
modicum of control they can as their house of cards starts to fall. With your support, we were
able to catch the system off guard. The system did not expect us to ask for a listen. And here we are.
We hope these calls, particularly the latest ones that we've shared, not only give you better
insight into how things work for certain families in South Carolina, but also empower you in your
own lives if you were dealing with narcissists or sociopaths, whether in friendships, at home,
work, or even in your community. Remember, it's about control. Ellick has his narrative and based on
how our fellow journalist reacted to the jailhouse phone calls and based on their histories of
constantly accepting these pre-packaged narratives from the Murdoch team over and over again,
we feel it's more important now than ever, not just to shine up.
light on all angles of this, but to hold up a mirror. This is the man at the center of the story.
He is telling us who he is. And we are choosing to believe him on that.
The Murdoch Murder's podcast is created by me, Mandy Matney, and my fiance, David Moses.
Our executive editor is Liz Farrell. Produced by Luna Shark Productions.
