Murdaugh Murders Podcast - MMP #92 - ‘Enough is Enough': The Big Problem With The Justice System And How To Fix It
Episode Date: May 11, 2023On Tuesday, about 100 people gathered at the South Carolina statehouse to talk about something really important — victims and how they are often pushed aside in our justice system. Murdaugh Murde...rs Podcast host Mandy Matney and other victims advocates in South Carolina rallied on the Statehouse steps this week, calling for meaningful change at the legislative level. Victims of violent crime — and victims of Alex Murdaugh — have had enough of this system, which continues to ignore and harm them. In this episode, Mandy Matney and Co-Host Liz Farrell talk about victims rights, the need for judicial reform and how to solve the problem with legislator-lawyers. You can watch a full version of the rally here: https://fb.watch/ks53RmDmYl/ - And learn more about SC Bill 4183 Here: https://bit.ly/3BhM9NB Soak Up The Sun MMP Premium Members were able to reconvene as we broadcast today's hearing live and we'll share another link soon with complete audio. Consider joining our MMP Premium Membership community to help us SHINE THE SUNLIGHT! CLICK HERE to learn more: https://bit.ly/3BdUtOE Or you can watch the SC Supreme Court's original broadcast here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IAnfDa1nYSM We'll explore much more about the Jeroid Price and secret hearings in South Carolina on Monday's Cup of Justice - Listen with the links below or wherever you get your podcasts. Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/cup-of-justice/id1668668400 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/3Itp67SQTZEHQGgrX0TYTl?si=39ff6a0cc34140f3 We all want to drink from the same Cup Of Justice — and it starts with learning about our legal system. By popular demand, Cup of Justice has launched as its own weekly show. Go to cupofjusticepod.com to learn more or click the link in the episode description to get a hot cup of justice wherever you get your podcasts! You can still find a link to the Green Squares we are using here: MurdaughMurdersPodcast.com/stephen. We encourage you to share JusticeForStephen.com and Tips@sled.sc.gov in your twitter, facebook, instagram tik tok or posts on other platforms. To learn more about the Independent Exhumation, Autopsy and Investigation for Stephen, click here: http://bit.ly/3JGacec SUNscribe to our free email list to get alerts on bonus episodes, calls to action, new shows and updates. CLICK HERE to learn more: https://bit.ly/3KBMJcP And a special thank you to our sponsors: Microdose.com, PELOTON, Simplisafe, and others. Use promo code "MANDY" for a special offer! Find us on social media: Facebook.com/MurdaughPod/ Instagram.com/murdaughmurderspod/ Twitter.com/mandymatney Twitter.com/elizfarrell YouTube.com/c/MurdaughMurders Support Our Podcast at: https://murdaughmurderspodcast.com/support-the-show Please consider sharing your support by leaving a review for MMP on Apple at the following link: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/murdaugh-murders-podcast/id1573560247 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
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I don't know how long it will take to fix our justice system in South Carolina.
But after hearing from so many victims and advocates this week at the Statehouse Rally,
I am more hopeful than ever that change will happen, and I hope you are too.
My name is Mandy Matney.
I have been a reporter in South Carolina for more than seven years now.
This is the Murdoch Murders Podcast, produced by David Moses and written with journalist Liz Farrell.
On Tuesday, about a hundred people gathered at the South Carolina Statehouse to talk about
something really important—victims and how they are often pushed to the side in our
justice system.
A few weeks ago, when I was first asked to speak at the Victims Matter Rally by Attorney
Sarah Ford, who you might remember as the victim's attorney in the Bowen Turner case,
I hesitated to say yes.
I am an introvert, and I have always hated public speaking.
Honestly, when it comes to most events, I would rather be at home in my sweatpants next
to Luna and David.
The pandemic made me more of a recluse than I'd like to admit.
The Victims Matter Rally was on a Tuesday, which is typically our busiest workday of
the week, and it was in Columbia, which is about three hours from us.
This is what my inside voice was saying as I was trying to make up excuses for not facing
my fears and committing to a public event.
I knew this event mattered, and I knew it was at the core of everything we are trying
to do here at MMP.
Lucky for me, Sandy Smith snapped me right out of it.
She said, anything to get Steven's story out there, we should do it.
Then she said one of the sweetest things anyone has ever said to me when I asked her if she
wanted me to speak at the event.
She said I want you up there next to me because I feel like I can do more when I'm next
to you.
I can barely get through that sentence without shedding tears.
Why can't more people be like Sandy Smith?
I had no idea what to expect on Tuesday, but I took so much comfort knowing that our supporters
would show up.
And they did.
I was full of gratitude seeing over a hundred people in front of the Essie State House on
a Tuesday morning when I know most people have work.
I hugged so many fans who told me they rearranged their workdays just so they could show up
to support the mission.
And I met some amazing college students who are friends of the show and working as volunteers
for victim center charities that were there.
I got choked up as I stood on stage between Dallas Stoller's family and Sandy Smith and
we looked into the crowd and read the signs.
Justice for Steven Smith.
Justice for Gloria Satterfield.
There was even a sign that said impeach Judge Carmen Mullen.
It was like staring into a sea of pesky people and it was a beautiful thing.
Sandy and I were both wearing green in honor of Steven, which is his favorite color.
And as we were making our way to the stage to speak, a woman who was also wearing green
stopped us.
Who are you all wearing green for?
She asked.
I pointed at Sandy and said her son, Steven Smith.
He was killed in 2015 and she still doesn't have answers.
Curious, who are you wearing green for?
I asked.
She said she was wearing green for her nephew, Damien Green, who was also killed in a rural
South Carolina county in 2015, like Steven.
The solicitor's office just dropped the case this year, she told me.
I almost couldn't believe it.
There were two victims who were murdered in South Carolina in 2015, whose supporters wear
green as they continue to fight for justice in 2023.
It reminded me of the enormity of the problem.
Sandy and I both wanted to learn more about Damien Green's story, but we were being shuffled
to the stage.
Minutes later, Damien Green's mother, Dolores Boyce, was called to the stage to talk about
her son.
Unfortunately, like the Bowen Turner case and the Jirad Price case, her son's story
is another painful reminder of everything broken within our system.
Here is Dolores.
Good morning.
As Sarah stated, my name is Dolores Boyce, and my son Damien Melvin Green was murdered
August the 6th, 2015.
I am a person of faith who worked my son's case alongside my family tirelessly.
The justice system as a whole failed me and my family.
We trusted a system who let us down to the point where, in the end, the faith in the
judicial system doesn't exist to me because it doesn't work for victims, only accused
criminals or high-profile victims.
It took Slade and the solicitor's office four years and three months to call me and my family
in to inform us that warrants would be issued in this case.
Damien was murdered one month after Stephen Smith was killed, and it took four years for
the solicitor's office and law enforcement to arrest his killers.
Like Stephen, Damien was young with a bright future ahead of him.
Damien was 24 when he was killed.
He was a senior at Voorhees College when he was murdered.
When I first looked into Damien's case, it reminded me of looking into Stephen's case
back in 2019.
There were very few articles written about Damien's murder.
In fact, one of the only articles I could find written on the case was by TV reporter
Sean Cabbage-Stock in 2019.
It was on the four-year anniversary of Damien's death.
The headline said, Mother Searching for Answers After Son Found Dead in Home in 2015.
And just three months after that article was written, two men were arrested in Damien's
murder.
I have to point this out because I have a hard time thinking that that's a coincidence,
that all of this time passed without any coverage, and suddenly, three months after an article
sparked renewed interest in the case, two arrests were made.
Victims should not need headlines for their cases to get justice.
But unfortunately, even after the arrest, the road to justice was a hard one for Greene's
family.
His alleged killers were let on on bond, an increasingly dangerous issue here in South
Carolina and across the country, and the trial, like so many others, was delayed for years
due to backlog.
Then things got worse.
In February 2023, we were notified of a bond hearing, the defendant's lawyer announced
that the state's primary witness was dead.
The bomb shell was dropped.
The solicitor's office said on this case, so long, not one, but two witnesses died
seven years apart.
I have never been given a legitimate answer on several things in this case, and it's sad.
We were called to the solicitor's office in February 2023 to let us know that without
the primary eyewitnesses, the case would be dismissed.
Greene's family went through all of those years searching for answers, and they'd been
left with nothing.
They didn't have the luxury of getting a high profile lawyer with connections.
But luckily, they had the South Carolina Coalition Against Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault,
the organization where Sarah Ford works that organized the event on Tuesday.
They helped her with not only legal work, but validation.
This is a common theme with victims who I've worked with.
They fight these battles alone, and after so many years of being ignored and gaslit
by those in power, they start to feel alone.
Dolores, like so many other victims who attended on Tuesday, knows that she isn't alone and
that her story is not over.
She wants to continue to fight for other victims and to change the system.
Things seem wrong early on during this case, so I sought help through SCVAN.
And I would like to take the opportunity at this moment to thank them for the countless
hours that they have helped me and given me confirmation that my thoughts were correct.
The judicial system is broken.
Victims are barely included in the process.
The system is designed for accused criminals or high profile victims.
I left broken and without even an apology.
It is my prayer that this system gets fixed.
It is my prayer that there needs to be no bond for accused murderers.
And also, when these murder trials come to court, that there are someone, a mutual party,
that's able to sit on these trials and make sure that victims are getting what they deserve,
making sure the judges are not violating our rights, ensuring that we get a fair chance
to allow our family members' legacies to live on.
Because at this point, we are failed.
We are being failed terribly through the justice system.
Thank you.
And she's right.
The justice system is failing victims every day in South Carolina.
That was so apparent on Tuesday.
It seemed like every time I turned around, I met another person with another heartbreaking
story as a reason why they were there.
But out of all of the stories, a systemic failure in South Carolina, besides the Murdoch
story that is, there is one that always will stick with me, the Bowen Turner case.
The case that propelled victims' advocates to hold the first ever victims' rally last
year.
I know y'all have heard Dallas Stoller's story, but I want you to hear it again through
her father's beautiful words.
Good morning.
Before I begin, I would like to thank Sarah Ford and her staff at SCVN for having me here
today to speak.
More importantly, I would like to thank you all for being here this morning.
Your presence gives me hope, hope that the majority of my fellow South Carolinians are
ready for change and ready to fight for victims.
Our family's story begins on a fall night in October of 2018.
On that night, our daughter, Dallas Hay Stoller, attended a party in Bamberg County, South
Carolina.
On that night, she became a victim of sexual assault.
Little did I know this would be the beginning of the end of our beautiful daughter.
As a little over three years later, she would succumb to a self-inflicted injury.
Dallas was a beautiful young lady with loads of potential, a bright future and a heart as
big as the world itself.
After that fateful night, I watched a system, a system I so strongly believed in, aid in
destroying our child's life and severely injuring the lives of two other young ladies who are
also victims in this case.
I watched the good old boy system start its engines and work its magic for a well-connected
defendant.
I watched as a third young lady became a victim exactly 41 days later at the hands of this
defendant while he was out on unmonitored bond for the sexual assault of our daughter.
I watched as a sitting South Carolina state senator stood in a courtroom in Orangeburg
County, South Carolina and publicly slut shamed this young lady.
What would be state senator Brad Hutto, who appeared to use his position of power to strike
a secret and slimy plea deal with the solicitor to help his client, Owen Turner, avoid prison?
It was a reckless act endorsed by a judge who relies on legislators like Hutto to remain
on the bench.
Surprising to no one, Brad Hutto was not one of the few lawmakers to show up at the
event Tuesday.
We'll talk more about how problematic our lawyer-legislator system is when it comes
to victims' rights, but the Stoller case is the example of how rotten that system is
and with horrifying consequences.
I watched the deputy solicitor of the Second Judicial Circuit drop our daughter's case
because she was no longer here to face her attacker.
Lastly, in April of 2022, I watched a circuit court judge allow this defendant to walk away
with a five-year probationary sentence for assault and battery first degree, no sex
offender registry, and an ability to have his record fully exposed once he completed
the terms of his probation.
That my friends is what justice for victims looks like here in South Carolina.
Out front in the public eye, our courts, some solicitors, some attorneys, etc., say openly
victims matter.
They argue this whole lawyer-legislator thing and the way we appoint our judges has no impact
on justice for our victims.
They argue we are only making noise because things didn't work out for our daughter and
other victims.
I say they are very wrong.
We have been silent for exactly a year now.
We have been silent because we were asked to be.
We were told our silence would allow the Second Judicial Circuit's solicitor's office to take
his second look at Dallas' case, admitting privately to a degree they had made mistakes
regarding her case.
Well, folks, this is what our Ask for Silence has earned us so far.
To date, we have received one call from their office and it appears, based on that conversation,
we are no further along than we were a year ago.
That conversation has left us with even less hope anything will ever be done.
So one year ago today, Bowen Turner was arrested for violating his probation and was charged
with public disorderly conduct.
He was sentenced to 10 to 14 months in prison and will have to register as a sex offender
when he's released.
I checked on this and Turner could get out any day now and we will be on the lookout
for that.
I want to say publicly how very proud I am of Dallas' sisters, Brett and Carly, for
taking on this fight on behalf of not only their late sister, but also fighting for all
victims in our state.
Their passion for this fight has ignited a flame in me and I pray has done the same
for you all.
I pray their courage has given you the courage to say publicly enough is enough that you
are no longer willing to accept things as they are and stand ready to fight alongside
us to ensure victims are no longer victimized by our system.
I implore each and every one of you to fight for real change.
Remember, evil knows no boundaries.
Evil cares nothing about the balance in your bank account, where you live, how well you
were raised, who you know or what you believe your social standing is.
I'm saying no one is exempt from becoming a victim when evil comes knocking.
I pray evil never comes to visit you.
I pray none of you have to feel or live with what we have to.
However, if you do become a victim, I pray together we have made positive change and
future victims will be treated with compassion and understanding.
Not be treated the way many victims are today and not have your rights violated.
In closing, I want all our representatives and senators to know we are fighters and no
longer will accept things as they are.
I've taught my girls to stand up for those who cannot stand up for themselves.
I've taught them to stand up for what is right.
Always remember a strong person's fights for themselves, a stronger person fights for others.
We as a family are stronger people and will continue to fight for our late daughter, Dallas,
and all victims.
We will be silent no longer.
Justice for her, justice for Dallas, justice for Chloe, justice for all.
Thank you.
Dallas' story is one that weighs heavily on our hearts and on the hearts of our listeners
and everyone who understands the why of this.
Why did it end up this way?
Because the system is built to protect those who can afford to pay the powerful for help.
In the system protects the powerful in general.
The corruption in our justice system is the result of people seeking personal gains financially
and professionally.
And while the problems aren't always related to lawyer legislators directly, the system
that rewards them is where the rot starts.
That's why it was so refreshing to hear from an unlikely ally in this.
South Carolina Representative Joe White, who represents part of Lexington and Newbury counties.
Rep White spoke during the victims rally about a bill that he is sponsoring in the house
that is seeking to change the way judges are elected in our state and essentially decentralizing
lawyer legislators influence in the process.
Here is Rep White.
First, I'd just like to thank you for the opportunity to speak this morning.
When I decided to run for a state house, by the way, I am the oldest freshman ever elected
to the South Carolina state house.
I was 76 when I ran and I'm 77 now.
My number one issue was judicial reform.
And I'll say this about judicial reform.
Judges will never be treated fairly by any bill that's passed to help victims until judges
are selected properly and they are fair judges.
We are the only state in America that elects our judges the way we do.
That should tell you that we're not doing it the right way.
We have a Judicial Merit Selection Commission consisting of 10 people.
Five of them are appointed by the Speaker of the House, five of them are appointed by
the Senate.
Out of that 10, eight of them are criminal defense attorneys.
You have to go through that committee to get approved to be a judge in South Carolina.
That means that those eight criminal defense attorneys have to approve who their judges
are going to be, who they will plead cases in front of.
That is a wrong system.
Out of those eight criminal defense attorneys, six of them are also lawyer legislators who
sit either in the Senate or in the House.
They have more power than any of us will ever have.
Six out of the 10 people who decide who our judges are in South Carolina are lawyer lawmakers.
In one of those lawyer lawmakers is Todd Rutherford.
You know, the defense attorney who managed to get his client a convicted killer out of
prison 15 years early with the help of Judge Casey Manning and Solicitor Byron Gibson.
Have I mentioned that price is still on the loose and there is now a $30,000 reward for
tips leading to price's arrest?
SEDC says that the money is technically not from taxpayer money, wink, wink, but is from
seized asset funds, a.k.a. public funds that could have been used elsewhere.
Meanwhile, none of the public officials who helped with his release have faced any consequences.
But like White said, the problem is that we need more people, not just those who have
been victimized by the system, to care about this and make noise.
When I ran for office, I told everybody, we the people can.
What I've learned, a reporter asked me about a month ago, what have you learned in your
first month at the state house?
I said, well, you know, we're taught when we're kids that America is government of the
people by the people and for the people.
What I've learned in a month is that government here is of the powerful by the powerful and
for the powerful.
It is up to us and I'm not Trump, but I like to address the media, because if the media
would bring attention to how we do this in South Carolina, the media could get it stopped.
Unless and until we as the people raise enough cane, we're not going to get this thing stopped.
Here's the problem.
I was really glad White said this about the media.
It's like he took the words from my mouth.
We will talk about this more in a minute.
When you go campaigning, you want everybody complains about, they complain about the roads.
Some of them complain about education.
Very few of them complain about the judicial system, because until your daughter is raped
and ends up committing suicide, until your son is murdered, until a lady out here, your
brother is murdered and the murder is put out on bond for $250,000, until that happens,
you don't care.
This time that we started caring about these victims, and we put people in, first of all,
election people that will stand up to this JMSC mess, secondly, stop the mess of the
JMSC.
We got the governor saying he wants to change it.
We got the attorney general saying he wants to change it.
My bill H4183 isn't the complete answer, but it says that lawyer legislators cannot serve
on the JMSC anymore, and it says the governor would have the right to appoint some people
not just the head of the Senate and not just the head of the House.
I ask you to look at H4183, I've got 34 sponsors.
It's never coming out of committee until we, the people, say it's got to come out of committee.
I thank you, I apologize to all the victims this morning for the fact that our judicial
system has failed you, and I just want all of us to pray together and work together to
change this injustice system.
Thank you.
We'll be right back.
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It's worth noting that Representative White is not a lawyer and he is not from South Carolina.
According to his official bio, he is a retired CEO of a medical equipment company.
He was born in Tennessee and graduated from the University of Tennessee in Knoxville.
In other words, he hasn't been baked inside that kiln that is the University of South
Carolina School of Law, and he hasn't been glazed over by the years of benefiting from
a broken system.
So a few things here.
First, we applaud Representative White for speaking out about judicial reform.
His point about victims is 100% correct.
Victims will never be treated fairly by any bill in South Carolina until judges are selected
properly.
This bill needs to pass.
We especially like the part where no legislator attorney can serve on the selection committee.
But how about this?
How about no attorney whatsoever?
How about no one who stands to benefit personally from the outcome?
The problem as it stands is threefold.
One, lawyers should not be in a position where judges feel beholden to them politically.
Two, every judge put on the bench should be there because they are qualified and because
they would make a good judge for the people and not just for lawyer McLoyer face from
Lawyerville and his lawyer friends.
And three, there needs to be a robust system of accountability that is transparent end
of story.
At any rate, if this bill passes and we hope it does, the future process will still be corrupted
by politics.
It is inevitable.
Judges are in the most consequential role in our legal system, which means that that
dynamic will always be corruptible to a certain degree.
There's just too much at stake for the players involved.
Also, malleable and controllable judges are a critical part to whatever greasy revenue
stream lawyers like Alec Murdoch have depended on for generations.
But a good first step would be eliminating that humiliating and degrading process, that
annual begfest that happens on the steps of the state house, wherein wannabe judges essentially
put on their best-brown necklaces and rush the legislature like it's the Zeta House
at University of Alabama.
Oh, and Representative White's point about the media is also 100% correct.
Nothing will change if the media is a complicit partner in this corruption.
One or two investigative pieces a year that shed light on various problems within the
system is just not enough.
It's also not enough to write a few editorials a year calling out the behavior of judges.
How do we know this isn't enough?
Because this state's media views itself as avid watchdogs of public corruption.
And to a degree, they are.
But look at where we're at.
We are here, in this place, still.
The problem is this.
After the media calls out the egregious behavior of judges or legislators, after the reports
that expose the corruption and editorials that condemn the behavior, reporters seem
to reset the clock on them.
The next time they cover that judge or that legislator or whoever, they don't always
include the context from earlier incidents.
They don't always point out that, hey, this person was caught lying before, or you should
also know that this judge was involved in XYZ.
Like we say over and over, context is critical.
Like Representative White said on Tuesday, for change to happen, the public needs to
make some noise.
They need to make noise.
But for the public to make that noise, they need to understand what's happening first,
to see things for what they are.
And those in media need to help connect the dots in an honest, but unforgiving way.
Instead, we have a system where judges get away with bad behavior, because they simply
wait the media out.
Because that's the name of the game in South Carolina.
Wait until the bad press passes, and then one day you too will have a bridge or a road
named after you, no matter what you were accused of doing during your career.
We get so much flak for calling out the media.
People see it as sour grapes or unprofessional, and we've seen so many lies told about us
online when it comes to the why of us calling out our colleagues sometimes.
But it's simple.
The system is broken in part because of people looking the other way, when it comes to the
people they personally like.
The state's judicial system is so corrupt that it has good people defending it for that
reason alone sometimes.
In fact, it's how ELIC became ELIC.
And we can't keep doing that if we want things to change.
This weekend you might have seen a profile piece that the New York Times ran about Elizabeth
Holmes, the convicted federal felon who is heading to prison for defrauding investors
out of millions of dollars in her scheme.
The Times has been correctly called out for giving Holmes the space to downplay and normalize
her crimes.
That is the kind of thing that needs to be called out.
White collar criminals should not be normalized.
Their crimes should not be explained away simply because the people involved don't
look like they could have done anything wrong.
And I have to mention Washington Post columnist Kathleen Parker again.
Kathleen, or Mrs. Parker, wrote a column this week about ELIC Murdoch's latest nonsense
in which he confessed that dogs didn't trip Gloria Satterfield at Moselle.
In her column, Mrs. Parker wrote one of the funniest criticisms I have ever read about
us.
Quote,
Our names are Liz and Mandy, Mrs. Parker, it's okay to say our names, that's a normal
thing to do.
But you see what we mean, right?
Dick and Jim are so precious to some members of the media that our use of their first
names is seen as some sort of insult to them.
When really, it's all the stuff that can be said in conjunction with their first names
that ought to be seen as the problem there.
Also, the name Richard has at least a thousand nickname variations.
Dick picked the one that best fits him.
How is that our fault?
Anyway, we also need to call out the pseudo media, the trade publications that want to
act like they care, but actually are just another agent of trying to normalize that
which should not be normalized, such as the South Carolina bar's bi-monthly publication
SC Lawyers Magazine.
You might remember the occasions when the South Carolina bar has attempted to retire
their shoelaces, so to speak, after the Alec Murdoch situation, and how they act like nothing
bad had happened there.
You might remember how we've repeatedly called them out for that.
Here's a clip from episode 45, which aired in May of last year.
On Friday, May 13, the Charleston 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.
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
a Pishposh 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 Bow and 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 misrepresentations 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 Ellick Murdoch and Bow and Turner would not have gotten where they were if the system
worked the way that it's supposed to.
In nowhere, in this piece, do these lawyers talk about solutions to the problems?
Not much has changed since then.
Like we told you before, right after Ellick Murdoch was found guilty, State Senator Dick
Harpootian took to the Senate floor to talk about the Murdoch loss as some great example
of how legislator lawyers don't get any favorable treatment from the judges they elect.
They try to paint that like it's a myth.
Literally, right out of the gate, the broken system was looking for ways to convince the
public that it is not broken.
Then, in the Supreme Court hearing two weeks ago to address convicted murderer Gerard
Price's early release, one of the justices, Justice George C. James, made it a point to
do the very same thing by putting the State Attorney General, Allen Wilson, on the spot
by asking him for the record whether he thought the Fifth Circuit Solicitor, whose actions
led to Price's release, had been unduly pressured by Price's attorney, longtime State Representative
Todd Rutherford.
The answer, of course, was no, because in what world is Allen Wilson saying yes to that?
Allen Wilson has shown some courage over the last year in his willingness to prosecute
Murdoch and Murdoch's alleged co-conspirators, but he is one of the many lumps of clay who
was taken off the pottery wheel, baked in that University of South Carolina School of Law
Kiln that I was referring to earlier, then glazed and baked again.
In other words, he, too, is a product of the system whether or not he wants to be.
By the way, have you ever seen those videos on InstaReals or TikTok?
When a TV reporter does a live interview outside of a McDonald's where the employees got
caught dealing drugs by, I don't know, slipping them in with the quarter pounders with cheese.
And the reporter interviews a bystander in the parking lot who, in their best attempt
at a casual, there's nothing to see here voiced, is like, drugs in the quarter pounders
at a McDonald's?
No, no, never heard of anything like that.
That's how Allen Wilson sounded to us in that hearing when Justice James asked him about
undue influence.
A legislator lawyer using his positional power to pressure a solicitor into doing something
shady for his client that ultimately hurts victims?
What?
At a McDonald's?
No, no, never heard of anything like that.
Back to the South Carolina Bar Association, guess who their May 2023 cover girl was?
The 54 lawyer legislators standing on the statehouse steps with the headline, Thank
You to South Carolina's lawyer legislators with an exclamation point.
Here's David with their cover story.
Lawyers bring a number of innate strengths to the lawmaking process, including training
in substantive law, constitutional issues, and expertise in the rule of law.
Further, their legal education and instruction in oral advocacy are well suited to the task
of crafting laws that benefit our state and its citizens.
Lawyers created the very freedoms that citizens across the United States strive to uphold.
Despite this, of the 46 members of the Senate, only 12 are lawyers, and of the 124 members
of the House of Representatives, only 34 are lawyers.
Only.
You guys, 54 lawyer legislators is almost a third of our entire legislature, and they
say only.
Let me do some math here.
The South Carolina Bar Association says it represents about 17,000 lawyers, according
to an American Bar Association survey from 2021, though, South Carolina apparently has
more like 11,000 attorneys.
We're not sure how to account for that difference.
That said, and I'm about to shock you given what these past two years have been like here,
South Carolina ranks the lowest in the country for the number of attorneys we have per capita,
meaning of all the states in this country, South Carolina actually has fewer lawyers
per 1000 residents than even North and South Dakotas do.
And yet look at the power there.
Look at how much power the small demographic holds in this one state.
Lawyers make up two tenths of a percent of our state's population, and yet one third
of our legislature is made up of attorneys.
For comparison, 51 and a half percent of South Carolina's population is made up of women,
but there are only five women in the state Senate five, they make up less than 11 percent
of our most powerful lawmakers in this state.
And the South Carolina Bar Association has the audacity to say only about the representation
of attorney lawmakers.
This would be really funny if it weren't yet another attempt by this tiny group of
professionals to trick our state into believing this is the way it should be.
Here is David again with the State Bars Cover Story.
The Bars Lawyer Legislator Committee works tirelessly to strengthen ties with the General
Assembly and advocate for more important legislation for the betterment of all South Carolinians.
We recognize that it is not without sacrifice that our lawyer legislators serve in the General
Assembly.
Their service requires a substantial amount of time away from their law practice and their
families.
The Bar extends its support and heartfelt thanks to these public servants for their
unwavering commitment to the citizens of our state.
We'll be right back.
The Bar wants us to only see the good side of having lawyers as lawmakers.
And there is a good side.
People trained in the law in its use are perhaps ideally suited to writing laws.
But are legislators actually writing the laws or is it done by lobbyists and other special
interest groups?
Hmm, ponder that one.
The Bar is conflating the issue and once again ignoring the problem.
They are making it seem like the criticism is related to lawyers in the legislature
full stop as opposed to lawyers in the legislature who use that position to their apparently
financial advantage.
They want us to believe that these lawyers are breaking their backs for the public because
these lawyers love public service.
They want us to focus on the sacrifice that they're making.
By the way, y'all remember a little thing called legislative immunity, right?
The thing that allows legislators lawyers to put off their court appearances during the
legislative session.
The little trick they all get to use when it suits them.
But sure, sacrifice.
Let's talk about the culture here.
Publicly, we're told that there's no problem whatsoever with legislators attorneys.
But they do not misuse their positions of power for personal gain in their cases.
They do not misuse their role as electors of the judges.
That everything is great.
And yet, we see things like what happened in the Jarod Price case, where $30,000 of
the public's money is now being used as reward money to clean up a mess made by a lawyer
legislator.
And we see things like what happened in the Bowen Turner case, when Judge Markley Dennis,
who is apparently known as a defendant friendly judge, who, according to the archives, hadn't
presided over criminal court in Orangeburg County for almost 10 years, was suddenly there
in the courtroom able to sign off on a dangerously weak plea deal, basically behind closed doors,
for the client of State Senator Brad Hutto.
There are legislator lawyers, but there are also liberator lawyers in South Carolina,
or at least that's what we're going to call them.
Good attorneys who want the current system to be philosophically burned to the ground
and get rebuilt for the benefit of everyone, instead of the few.
These liberator lawyers have repeatedly told us about how, in this state, it is unfortunately
an important strategy to associate their cases with legislator lawyers.
Why?
Because legislator lawyers are fun at parties?
No.
Because they use their positional power to influence the outcome of their cases.
The very thing that they all deny doing, but we know many of them do.
And to us, and to most people it would seem, that is a monumental conflict of interest.
So yes, we want a bill that kicks legislator lawyers off the selection committee.
That's great.
But if that's a sum total of change, then all that they're doing is placating us and
the people of South Carolina, hoping for this to die down and go away.
But we are not going away.
And the victims are not going away.
In fact, their voices are going to get stronger and louder.
Here's what change we want to see.
Change that will radicalize the legislature and root out corruption at all levels in the
judicial system.
Legislator lawyers should be barred from representing any clients who are suing state
agencies.
And they should be barred from representing any clients who are being prosecuted by the
state.
Yep, we said what we said.
If lawyers want to be legislators because they want to help and serve the public as
they say that they do, if that's the reason they're doing this for $10,000 annually and
58 cents a mile and $140 per diem during the legislative session, then that is cool.
They just need to remove all conflicts of interest first.
In representing clients who are suing the state is a conflict of interest.
Laws is representing people who are being prosecuted by the state.
It seems pretty simple to us.
I'm sure there are lawyer lawmakers who aren't happy to hear us say this.
Like Justin Bamberg is a good person and a good lawmaker.
But unfortunately for him, other lawyer lawmakers have done too much damage to erode public
trust.
They lost that privilege because of cases like Jarod Price and Bowen Turner.
The public deserves better and victims deserve better.
This shouldn't be hard to understand because as it stands, this judicial system, this legal
system in South Carolina is shameful.
And no matter how many quote good aspects of the system to which the bar and other self-interested
people can point out, it will never make up for the stone cold fact that the system is
built to benefit two-tenths of a percent of the state's population over the rest of us.
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Okay, now let's quickly talk about the latest with the Nautilus case.
The federal case in which Alec Murdoch has decided to confess to more lies.
Another case in which the victims are treated as pawns and not as human beings who have
been through enough.
On Monday, Eric Bland and Ronnie Richter of Bland Richter, who represent the Satterfield
family, held a press conference to address Alec's latest nonsense.
During it, they reiterated what we've been saying ever since Alec confessed to lying
about the dog's trip in Gloria.
Ever since Alec, the guy being sued by Nautilus for insurance fraud, suggested that Nautilus
get money from the Satterfields instead.
The Satterfields, who didn't receive a dime from Nautilus because Alec stole their settlement
and frankly was only able to do so because the insurance company lawyers allowed him
to do things secretly and outside the normal process.
Over the past week, we've been looking at our notes from the beginning of our Nautilus
coverage and we were reminded of the company's legal trajectory of when they entered the
arena.
We touched on this last week and in cup of justice, but it's important to say it again.
It's well established that the legal circles in South Carolina are tiny, right?
And now we know just how tiny.
The attorneys who helped broker the insurance settlements in the state are often in those
circles.
It's hard to believe that no one knew there was something strange going on with the Satterfields
settlement before the murders when we did.
We knew it was weird.
As we've since learned, attorneys close to Alec knew it was weird.
People in the community knew it was weird, but somehow Nautilus, the company that doled
out millions of dollars to him, was shocked.
This case in our opinion has always been about Nautilus saving face because they couldn't
just stand there, right?
And here's the thing.
What are they actually trying to accomplish?
Alec lied to you.
Well, get in line, Nautilus.
We see them as no different from Randy Murdock and Johnny Parker filing complaints against
Alec to get their money back before the victims can.
Before all of this, Alec literally tried to steal $250,000 in PMPD, $125,000 of which was
from Randy, his brother, and yet both Randy and Johnny continued to trust Alec enough
to loan him ungodly amounts of money.
That feels like betting, and they lost.
But whose fault is that?
Nautilus took the deal with Alec because it was a good deal for them.
They didn't want to risk going to trial and owing even more money.
No matter that Alec was threatening them, they still chose to bet on Alec.
And whose fault is that?
I know who's fault it isn't, and that's the Satterfield families.
By the way, Judge Richard Gurgle issued an order in this case this week, disallowing
the co-receivership to represent Alec's interest in the Nautilus case.
The co-receivers were attempting to enter the case on Alec's behalf since they're in
charge of his assets.
It was an attempt to protect the money that has been earmarked for Alec's creditors,
most of whom are his victims.
But the judge denied this, saying that the co-receivers have no standing in this case,
so that was a bummer.
But also, Alec's admission that he had lied made it all but impossible for the co-receivership
to have had any effect on protecting those assets to begin with.
It's almost like Alec and Dick and Jim, and Nautilus, and Randy Murdock, and Johnny Parker
would rather see anyone but the actual victims in these cases get any money.
It becomes that perverse, and that means spirited.
It goes back to that insular Murdock economy we always talk about, about all the attempts
that have been made to keep money circulating among the family and their friends.
They say they want to make victims whole, but their actions speak louder than those words,
and that brings us back to the court issue.
How this system is built to relentlessly protect the powerful at all costs, whether it's finding
ways to keep money intended for victims for themselves, or helping friends at the expense
of public safety, or letting criminal cases linger in the system because dropping the
charges when no one is looking helps pad prosecution numbers, the victims are always an afterthought
in South Carolina.
More needs to be said about that.
More people need to do the important work.
We need more people, like Sarah A. Ford, who gives us hope.
We cannot change what we don't understand or acknowledge.
I challenge us, I see that there is hope today for victims in South Carolina.
We will accept nothing less.
While power and privilege seem to reign supreme in South Carolina, to those of us who stand
beside victims in a courtroom or those lobbying for change here at the State House, we know
that eventually that power will cease to exert that same influence, because the people will
not allow it.
We will not stand for it.
The people will choose to protect and advocate for victims and survivors.
That's why we're here.
As a victim of sexual assault myself, that's why I'm here.
I hope that hearing from all of these incredible speakers today will push us all, particularly
those here in the State House, to acknowledge the inequities that victims face, demand accountability,
and commit to changing and making South Carolina a better place for all victims.
Those in power have taken notice of this movement.
This is a movement.
And the only movement we can make is for, for Dallas, for Steven, for Damien, for Gavin,
for all victims.
We will not back down.
And I hope that all of you will join in that very important movement, which is why we rearrange
plans for today's episode to focus on these issues with victims at the center.
Because like I said, this is at the very core of what we do and why we are doing it.
Change like this can be overwhelming and all-consuming, hearing heartbreaking stories about not only
what happened to Dallas and Damien and Steven, but what the system did to their families
after the tragedy, how the system made it so much worse.
It is gut-wrenching, but it is important.
We have come a long way in the last two years, but the mission is far from over.
Like Sarah said, we need to demand accountability now, or nothing will change.
Think about it.
Not a single public official has been held accountable for what happened in the Bow and
Turner case, nor the Jarod Price case, nor the Steven Smith case.
Solicitor Deffie Stone has faced no consequences for his involvement in the Murdoch murders
investigation.
He is still the solicitor where I live.
Ellick Murdoch's alleged tombstone buddy, Greg Alexander, is still the police chief
in Yemisee, South Carolina, and Judge Carmen Mullen is still ruling from the bench.
Like we've said before, South Carolina is the land of no consequences when it comes
to public officials.
And the truth is, we will be seeing more Bow and Turner and Jarod Price cases over and
over again until accountability happens and public officials learn that they cannot be
recklessly endangering the public for their own benefit without facing real consequences
beyond scrutiny.
That said, things will be changing here at Luna Shark for the better too.
Today was supposed to be the last episode of MMP, but we switched things around.
So next week, given nothing extremely chaotic or life changing happens, knock on wood, we
will have a special ode to MMP episode as our last episode of the Murdoch murders podcast.
Then the following week, we will change the name of the show and we will continue to expose
the truth, give a voice to the voiceless, and get the story straight on a number of cases,
including the ongoing cases that we have already covered.
You will meet new journalists who have been hired thanks to MMP premium members, and we
will be covering more cases outside of South Carolina where crime meets corruption.
MMP premium members look for some exciting announcements and big changes in the next
few weeks and thank you for helping us get here.
Stay tuned, stay pesky, and stay in the sunlight.
The Murdoch murders podcast is created and hosted by me, Manny Matney, produced by my
husband David Moses, and Liz Farrell is our executive editor.
From Luna Shark Productions.
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