Murdaugh Murders Podcast - MMP Remastered #26 - Who Killed Maggie And Paul? Part Two
Episode Date: November 5, 2025Originally released in January 2022, Who Killed Maggie & Paul? Part Two captures the moment when the investigation into the Murdaugh murders turned another corner.Journalists Liz Farrell and Mand...y Matney dig into what their trusted sources were saying about key evidence placing Alex Murdaugh at the Moselle crime scene—and the pressure building around law enforcement to act.We dissect conflicting timelines, question the Colleton County coroner’s findings, and trace how Alex’s shifting alibis exposed deep cracks in South Carolina’s justice system.This remastered edition revisits the reporting with new clarity in light of Alex Murdaugh’s later conviction, offering listeners a gripping look at how truth slowly breaks through layers of privilege, power, and corruption that once seemed impenetrable in the Lowcountry. Lots to cover, so let's dive in... 🥽🦈 Episode Resources: “FOX Carolina's exclusive interview with Murdaugh attorney Jim Griffin: Part One” - Fox Carolina, Oct 12, 2021“Family of slain South Carolina mother and son break silence l GMA” - Good Morning America, June 17, 2021 🔗 Watch Murdaugh: Death in the Family — now streaming on Hulu and Disney+ 🔗 Watch the MDITF Official Companion Podcast featuring interviews with the cast, crew, and creators behind the series on Hulu and Hulu on Disney+ or listen to extended audio episodes wherever you get your podcasts. hulumurdaughpod.com. LUNASHARK Premium Members are also getting access to a wealth of additional content matched to each Hulu series episode… We’re calling it LUNA VISION! Soak up The Sun Members get to explore the case documents, new case videos, ad-free video episodes, invitations to live events and so much more. Visit lunashark.supercast.com to learn more. Premium Members also get bonus episodes like our Premium Dives, Corruption Watchlist, Girl Talk, and Soundbites that help you Stay Pesky and Stay in the Sunlight. lunashark.supercast.com Here's a link to some of our favorite things: https://amzn.to/4cJ0eVn *** 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: lunashark.supercast.com Instagram.com/mandy_matney | Instagram.com/elizfarrell bsky.app/profile/mandy-matney.com | bsky.app/profile/elizfarrell.com TrueSunlight.com facebook.com/TrueSunlightPodcast/ Instagram.com/TrueSunlightPod youtube.com/@LunaSharkMedia tiktok.com/@lunasharkmedia Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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off promising. I got a call from one of my best sources in the case who had been heavily
hinting at Ehrlich Murdoch's involvement in Maggie and Paul's murders from week one. He said
he had good news that there was physical evidence that placed Elyke Murdoch at the scene of the
double homicide. Before we got this news, we really only had evidence pointing toward Elyke
Murdoch's involvement in the murders, not actually putting him there at the scene of the crime.
At that time, I couldn't say what the evidence was.
We had to be careful and protect the integrity of the reporting.
We knew that Ehrlich was a person of interest.
We knew that he sounded suspicious on that 911 call reporting the double homicide.
We knew that he was yucking it up all around South Carolina without his wedding ring on weeks after the murders.
And at this point in the story, SLED was under enormous pressure to make an arrest.
but law enforcement and prosecutors were proceeding with caution.
Behind the scenes, our sources were saying that indictments would come within weeks,
but it was actually many months later.
At the time, agents were building a timeline
and cross-checking digital data to corroborate the physical evidence they had collected.
Perhaps the most important evidence pointing to Ehrlich's guilt
was his roadside shooting debacle in September 2021.
Why would a man fake a stage suicide event?
to get people to feel sorry for him when his wife and son were just murdered.
The act in itself felt like an omission of guilt.
And then there was the aftermath of the roadside shooting,
the dark, twisted, unraveling of Ellick's crooked finances
and the millions of dollars that he stole from his clients and law firm
that was exposed shortly after the roadside debacle.
Looking back, this episode feels like a time capsule,
a moment when our team was pulling together dozens of disparate threads
to show that this was not random violence, but a system of lies unraveling in real time.
We were reporting through the fog without the benefit of trial evidence, and yet the story
was already there in plain sight. All roads really lead to Ehrlich Murdoch. All of the puzzle pieces
led to this moment, where we could finally say that we had a credible source with evidence
that Ehrlich Murdoch was at the scene of the crime.
I don't know who killed Paul or Maggie Murdoch, but it looks like we will be getting answers soon.
As I exclusively reported this morning, direct physical evidence links Elyke Murdoch to the double homicide of his wife and son.
And that is a big deal.
In the past seven months, we have learned a lot about the circumstances surrounding the Murdoch family,
around the time of the murders, and it's time that we put all of that into context.
Just like from the beginning, all roads lead to Ellick.
My name is Mandy Matney, and I've been investigating the Murdoch family for almost three years now.
This is the Murdoch Murdoch Murders podcast with David Moses and Liz Farrell.
Happy New Year, MMP fans.
With your support and encouragement, we were able to do amazing things in 2021.
We launched social media pages on Facebook and Instagram recently.
And just for a reminder, please follow us by searching Murdoch Murder's podcast on Facebook and Instagram or click the links in the episode description.
We have lots of exciting giveaways coming up and new announcements that you will not.
want to miss. So be sure to check out those social media pages. In 2021, we invested in equipment,
programs, and people so we can deliver a better listening experience to our audience. I am so
thankful to work with amazing people on this podcast. If you haven't already, please subscribe to
the latest news on this case and others. And finally, we're very proud that we connected with
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Good journalism is expensive.
It takes time and a lot of resources.
Please know that these products and services believe in our mission,
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We plan to continue this trend of delivering better episodes
with more in-depth coverage on all of these investigations
and plan on providing answers,
enclosure to victims in each case this year.
So keep listening and let us know what you think
so we can continue to get better.
And on that note, we are so grateful,
for our listeners and our supporters. We are grateful for you for listening to us right now. So thank you.
We want to start out this episode by saying that we heard you. Listeners told us they wanted an update
in the murder investigation of Maggie and Paul Murdoch. Well, we got one for you, and it is serious.
After seven months, we too were wondering what the holdup was at the South Carolina law enforcement
division. So Liz Farrell and I went back to our sources with some information that we've been
hearing for months, that there was direct physical evidence that placed Elyke-Mernock at
Moselle at the very moment his wife and son were murdered. Turns out this is absolutely true,
according to our sources. And that is a big deal. We can't say what that evidence is exactly,
but we have been told that it is substantial, and I would not be reporting it right now if it
However, direct physical evidence sometimes is it enough to hang a case on?
So in this episode, we're going to take you through everything that we know about the murders.
We're going to talk about the surrounding circumstances, possible motives, theories, and evidence.
So due to the unforeseen amount of crimes that we've uncovered during the course of this podcast,
it's been a long time since we've talked about the double homicide.
I figured we could all use a recap, so here we go.
52-year-old Maggie Murdoch and her 22-year-old son, Paul Murdoch, were found dead on their 1,700-acre hunting property in Collegon County, South Carolina, around 10 p.m., June 7, 2021.
Paul Murdoch was killed by two shotgun blast, one to the chest, and another through the arm and head.
Maggie Murdoch died of multiple gunshot wounds by a semi-automatic rifle.
The bodies were found near the dog kennels on the Moselle property by Alec Murdoch, who called 911 at 107 p.m.
Soon after they arrived on scene, the Colleton County Sheriff's Office asked the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division to take over the case due to both the complexity of the investigation and the agency's multiple ties to the Murdoch family.
Sled agents arrived on scene at 1147 p.m. more than an hour and a half after,
after Alec first called 911.
And remember, Maggie Murdoch's phone was discovered by law enforcement on a rule road outside
of Moselle on the day after the double homicide, according to our sources.
Elyke Murdoch was a person of interest in the murders, which was later confirmed by one
of Ehrlich's attorneys Jim Griffin in an interview with Fox Carolina News this past October.
During that same interview, Jim also told viewers that Ehrlich had no motive to kill Maggie or
Paul. We beg to differ, Jim. In the past two weeks, there have been a crazy number of reports
with big screaming headlines about how Maggie left all of her assets to Elic, as if this were the
smoking gun that clearly implicates him in her and Paul's deaths. But lawyers we've spoken to
have told us there really is nothing out of the ordinary with that. It's pretty standard.
Husbands typically leave their assets to their wives. Wives typically leave their assets.
assets to their husbands, and if both have died, they leave their assets to their kids.
And if the kids are minors, the assets go into a trust for them.
The will doesn't really do anything for us, so we're thinking it's much more important
to focus on the events of what led up to Maggie's and Paul's deaths.
So the walls began closing in on Ellick in 2019 with the Mallory Beach lawsuit.
Ehrlich had just hired two of the state's most expensive attorneys to defend Paul after Paul
was charged with three felony counts of BUI. Incidentally, these are the same two attorneys who are now
defending Ehrlich. Paul's case was not only high profile, it was destined to be drawn out for years
and incredibly costly. At this very same time, however, Ehrlich was putting out the word to the Beach
family attorney, Mark Tinsley, of Gooding and Gooding Law Firm in Allendale, that he was flat broke,
and therefore wouldn't be able to offer a settlement, never mind pay whatever a jury decided
his liability to be. Of course, the Murdox didn't appear to be all that broke. On the outside,
side anyway. As we all know now, they definitely weren't. One thing we want to note here is that in
2019, sources had told us that Maggie and Elek were headed toward divorce, but the boat crash and Paul's
situation derailed their plans. More recently, sources have told us that shortly before Paul's and
Maggie's deaths, a realtor had shown them houses for sale in the Hilton Head Island area. Also something
we want to note here because it's important when we're talking about Ehrlich's situation
leading up to the murders. Paul's reckless behavior didn't seem to change at all after the boat
crash. In fact, he seemed to learn nothing from the whole experience and was becoming an even
bigger liability for Ehrlich. The summer after the crash, we heard from people who had seen Paul
out partying, drinking, and boating around Edisto Beach. And up until his murder, Mandy and I
receive regular reports of Paul's excessive partying and drunken outbursts in and around the
low country area and in Colombia. In the meantime, the public was calling for justice for Mallory,
and people were starting to talk more about the shady boots way the Stephen Smith case was
handled. Because Ellick was claiming to be poor, Tinsley decided to call his bluff and began
formally demanding proof of Ehrlich's financial situation. In the fall of 2020, Murdoch's
attorneys made it clear to the court and to Tinsley that Ehrlich had no intention of answering
any of the questions he was being asked, calling the questions irrelevant and immaterial. He wasn't
going to share information about his checking and savings, his retirement accounts, the properties he
owned, or had an interest in, his stock holdings, his life insurance policies, or his investments.
And he certainly wasn't going to provide the name of the person who prepared their taxes for the past three years.
As we now know, he apparently had a lot of reasons not to share that information.
The pressure on him to open his books kept increasing, though,
and a hearing was scheduled for June 10th when the judge would hear arguments in the Beach family's motion
to compel Murdoch to show them his money.
Also looming out there, Maggie and Paul could be sued at any moment by the Beach family for their roles in the boat crash,
and Ellick knew this.
But first, the absolute worst was starting to happen.
Around April 2021, word began to spread that Randolph Murdoch, the family patriarch,
the revered and powerful former solicitor who put bandages over the good old boy's cuts and scrapes
and bandanas over the eyes of anyone who witnessed their falls, had terminal cancer.
Shortly after, sometime in May, Elyx law firm allegedly discovered a check on his desk
that led them to believe he had stolen money from them.
At some point after that, the firm hired a forensic.
accountant in Columbia to take a deeper dive. Then, on June 7th, just three days before his
financial reckoning in court, Ehrlich told investigators he had come home to find his wife and son
murdered. And we'll be right back.
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From the beginning, we have been working on,
off of a timeline that I'm not sure that we can rely on,
that Paul and Maggie Murdoch were murdered
between 9 and 9.30 p.m. on June 7th, 2021.
It's suspicious because it's based off
of the Colleton County Coroner's account,
which likely relied on when Ellick said he got home,
which we all know that we cannot trust.
Remember, at the time,
a lot of public officials in the area
feared the Murdoch family
and would have never second guessed anything they said.
So the chances that local officials took Elek at his word
to establish the timeline is pretty high.
Let's look at the science of this real quick.
When a person dies, rigor mortis,
or a stiffening of the muscles, starts to set in.
This becomes detectable usually within two to four hours
of a person's passing and can take up to 18 hours
to fully set in.
A coroner can determine whether it's started
by trying to move the person's jaw or their fingers,
to see how much resistance there is.
If it hasn't set in,
they can generally guess that the person died
within the past two to four hours.
Generally speaking, coroners aren't making
official declarations on time of death like this one did.
And they're definitely not using narrow timeframes
like this one did,
unless investigators have already established
a time frame based on when the person was last seen alive.
So, according to Ellick, he arrived home around 10
and discovered the bodies.
Let's assume there was no rigor mortis at that point,
based on the coroner's estimate that they died shortly before
This means they could have died much, much sooner than the coroner said.
And again, we keep going back to the fact that we cannot trust anything here,
especially when it comes to the local first responders.
And despite the fact that the Murdoch camp claimed that Ellick had a rock-solid alibi,
he does not.
And if he actually had a rock-solid alibi, we really haven't heard it.
So 10 days after the murders,
brothers John Marvin and Randy Murdoch spoke to Good Morning America, who reported that
Ehrlich took his father to the hospital that day on June 7th, then he checked on his mother at her home
in Hampton County before returning home to Moselle where he allegedly found the bodies.
That is not an ironcloth alibi by any stretch of the imagination. We have heard that Randolph was
actually released from the hospital that night, not taken to the hospital. And based on
conversations that we've had with sources, we have reasons to question Randos released from the
hospital. Was it actually authorized by medical personnel, or was something else going on?
If Elek was actually on camera at the time that the murders allegedly occurred, why haven't
his bulldog defense attorneys released that footage, or at least told us about it? Was he ever
really at the hospital that day? There's something really off about this hospital.
story. And we plan to get more details about that soon. When Alex's attorney Jim Griffin was
interviewed by Fox Carolina in October, Griffin claimed that his client's whereabouts were
completely accounted for during that 9 to 9.30 window that night, which is also, again, the window
that we cannot trust. The transcript of that interview reads, and I can assure you that we have
Alex's whereabouts accounted for completely during that period of time that night. He is sitting on
the bedside of his mother at her house when the coroner says these murders happen. She has dementia.
There's a house sitter or a caregiver with around the clock care, Winnie, and they're watching a
game show and watching a game show on television. But despite what Jim says, this is not an ironclad
alibi. In this version of the alibi that we're hearing, he mentions that Elyke saw his mother,
who has dementia and a caregiver who is probably terrified of the Murdoch family.
family, and a TV show that was on?
If, for instance, Elyke was caught on a ring camera outside of his mother's house at 9.15
p.m., you would think that he would have mentioned that.
So what we're saying here is that Ehrlich does not have a solid alibi.
And if he did, and his attorneys didn't reveal it clearly and publicly while the whole
world watches this case and questions Elyke Murdoch, then his defense attorneys are worse
than we thought they were.
On top of the physical evidence that links Elyke to the murders,
there are a few other things we want to note about the crime scene.
Let's start with the 911 call.
Mandy discussed the call with you guys in episode 6.
When the episode aired, listeners noticed a peculiar detail.
It seems like Ehrlich says,
For God's sakes, Paul, why did you get involved?
Take a listen.
Okay, and when anyone else supposed to be at your house?
Obviously, this raises a few questions, namely this one.
involved in what?
We should also take a look at who was at Moselle after the call.
It's positively surprising that we haven't heard anything
about photos from the scene being passed around over the past seven months,
given the number of Bubba's with smartphones and poor judgment
who stopped by the Murdox for a looky-loo that night.
There were so many people at the scene.
Generally speaking, the number of people who should enter a crime scene is very, very small.
Investigators are very cognizant of limiting every opportunity for evidence to get tainted.
They are very careful not to allow anyone behind the tape who doesn't absolutely need to be there.
According to the crime scene log, a whopping 24 people went behind the crime tape when all was said and done.
And here's the crazy part.
Most of those on the list were with Colleton County Sheriff's Office, which is very disturbing given that they immediately handed this case over to SLED.
They knew that SLED was on its way.
They should have stopped what they were doing and stayed outside the perimeter until SLED could get there.
And how many South Carolina coroners does it take to declare two people dead?
Turns out the answer is three.
Three corners went behind the crime scene tape.
Three.
We question whether they even needed to be behind the tape until after the investigators cleared out,
especially because any one of the four EMTs who were behind the tape would have already been able to declare Maggie and Paul dead.
And then there's the 14th Judicial Circuit solicitor in his band of roving investigators.
For some reason, they were on the property that night and for days after.
afterward, and even got caught on camera chumming around with Ehrlich's younger brother, John Marvin.
Remember, these are Elek Murdoch's guys who were, apparently conducting their own shadow
investigation to make sure SLED didn't mess up. Defense lawyers survive in the courtroom by throwing
doubt on every piece of evidence presented. They only need to persuade one person on the jury that
there's a problem with an investigation. Having so many Colleton County Sheriff's Office
deputies, law enforcement officers who live and work in Murdoch country, behind the tape,
is certainly something that Elyke would like seeing.
And one more important piece of information about the crime scene, the guns.
Sources had told us that at least one of the weapons used in the double homicide belonged to, you guessed it, the Murdoch family.
And we'll be right back.
So let's talk about the summer of 2021 and where Ehrlich was for a minute.
Throughout the summer, I kept hearing reports on Elyke's whereabouts.
We heard that he was having a good time in Key West in July.
Also in July, several people reported seeing Ehrlich and his son buster at the Governor's Cup fishing tournament in Edisto, South Carolina.
On both occasions in July, Murdoch was described as carefree, having a good time, and specifically not someone his wife and son were killed.
That's the language that was told to me.
I was also told that he was not wearing a wedding ring, for whatever that's worth.
Elyke was spotted again on Hilton Head Island in August.
This time, people told me that he looked like hell, quote unquote.
In fact, there were rumors about Solicitor Duffy Stone,
the prosecutor who took after Randolph III,
being spotted with Ehrlich Murdoch on Hilton Head Island that same weekend at the trial lawyer's convention.
Then, suddenly, just days after the convention,
Duffy recused himself from the case, which was a really big deal at the time.
In an August 11th letter to the South Carolina Attorney General, Stone asked Wilson to handle
prosecution in the case, quote, considering the events of today's SLED investigation, end quote.
However, he did not elaborate on his exact reason for stepping away in the case.
We were told by sources close to the investigation that this indicated that SLED was narrowing
its investigation. Stone had a long list of conflicts of interest, starting with the fact that
Ellick had a special position in his office that allowed him to use a badge and lights on his car
like he was a prosecutor. Previously, Stone justified his unusual involvement in the case by saying
there was, quote, no clear suspect in the case. So when Stone recused himself, many of us closely
watching this thing unravel thought it had to be because his employee was now a suspect.
Around the same time, behind the scenes, we kept hearing that an arrest was coming soon.
While Duffy Stone recused himself on August 11th, the public was not alerted until August 25th.
And behind the scenes, it was clear that pressure was building on Ehrlich Murdoch.
So just a week and a half after it was publicly known that Duffy Stone stepped out of the
double homicide investigation, Eleg did something very stupid.
And there is no alleged with that sentence.
Whatever ELEC did on September 4th was very stupid
and sent his life spiraling out of control.
We're not going to talk about what actually went down on September 4th.
We're not going to debate on whether or not ELEC was shot,
but we're going to talk about something we haven't talked about, the why.
Ehrlich admitted to hiring Eddie Smith to shoot him on the side of the road
in broad daylight on September 4th, 2020.
He claimed that this was so his son could collect a $10 million insurance payout, one that
he did not read the suicide clause on, according to his own lawyers.
But the reasoning for the September 4th shooting makes sense to no one.
Why would anyone commit suicide and leave their son who just lost their mother and brother
in a horrific double homicide without any immediate family members?
all for money? And if Eddie Smith would have killed Ellick and made it look like a random shooting,
wouldn't that have left Buster scared to leave his home and fear that someone was after his family?
Who would want that kind of life for their son? Which makes us wonder, why did Elick want it to
look like someone was after him? Why did he set up a scenario, going as far as allegedly,
slashing his own tires and lying to the police.
Unless he had a good reason to make it look like someone was after his family.
What if Elek never actually intended on dying that day?
What if he just wanted someone to shoot at him
and make it look like people, perhaps drug traffickers,
were after him and his family?
And that leads us to the suspects and the suspects,
the theories. In the immediate hours after word got out about Maggie and Paul on June 8th,
those with deep connections to the Murdox began to circulate with a lot of certainty in some
cases that Paul and Maggie were killed by a groundskeeper at Moselle after Paul had gotten
into an argument with him over a hunting field getting seated too soon. In the meantime,
people on the internet were speculating that the Murdox were killed in an active revenge for
the boat crash, Stephen Smith's death or Gloria Satterfield's death. And then the Labor Day
weekend situation happened. All of this leads us to wonder if this theory was leaked by the
Murdoch camp to tie up sled and send armchair detectives in a new direction.
Whatever Ehrlich was planning on accomplishing on September 4th, it backfired in ways that no one
could have ever predicted. In the next month, Eleg's entire reputation crumbled in the public eye
as we found out about his scheme to still millions of dollars from clients, allegedly. During this
downward spiral, an interesting story emerged from the posting courier and island packet,
two newspapers whose coverage on this saga has noticeably favored Murdoch and his defense
attorneys. The newspapers reported that a local gang called the Cowboys was being investigated
by the state grand jury in connection with the Murdoch murder saga. Specifically, the
newspapers reported that they were investigating if a trail of absurdly large checks
Murdoch allegedly made to his drug dealers link back to this cowboy gang.
And then, like clockwork, soon after the story broke,
lots of people on social media started to question
if this gang was involved in the double homicide.
All of this leads us to wonder if this theory was leaked by the Murdoch camp
to tie up sled and send armchair detectives in a new direction.
Finally, we need to talk about the few calls for justice from the Murdoch family.
Typically, in a case like this, when nearly every major news outlet in the country is covering a murder, you usually hear the family on the news, often calling for justice and accountability on behalf of their murdered loved ones.
But in this case, we barely heard from the family.
A week after the murders, neither the Murdoch family nor PMPED have offered any reward money for information leading to an arrest in the double homicide.
Then, just a few days later, Randy and John Marvin suddenly appeared on Good Morning America
and asked the public's help in finding Maggie and Paul's killer.
This was the first and only time they did this.
And again, we know everybody grieves differently,
but if the Murdoch family truly believed that a random person or gang targeted and killed
two of their family members, wouldn't they want to publicly pressure law enforcement to solve the case?
Wouldn't they be begging news outlets to continue to write about the double homicide to get answers for them?
And then there was that strange $100,000 reward they offered a few weeks after the double homicide
to anyone who provided information on the murders of Maggie and Paul that led to an arrest.
The award was announced by MP Strategies, a PR firm hired by the Murdoch family.
But here is the thing.
That reward expired on September 30th, which was really odd.
And when it expired, the PR company, working for the Murdox, released the following statement.
The transcript of that interview reads,
We are disappointed that no one has stepped forward with any leads to solve the murder and claim the $100,000 reward.
At this time, the family is evaluating what additional steps could be taken to solve the murders of Maggie and Paul.
We haven't heard anything from the family or MP strategies calling on justice in this case since they released that statement in September.
On Tuesday, we reached out to sled officials who declined to comment on the status of the investigation.
So what does all of this mean?
Like we said, all roads seem to lead to Ellick.
And now that we know physical evidence directly links him to the homicides, the only question we have now is when can we expect him?
an arrest.
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So before we end this episode, we have an important update from last week's podcast
about attorney Justin Bamberg taking on PMPED.
Since the last podcast aired, I think people have started to look a little more at what's going on
and how they were done by Alec in their situation.
I've had multiple calls, but we have been retained to,
represent another five individuals over misappropriated money, including a couple of individuals
for whom no indictment have been levied as of yet. Those people also have not actually even been
given their money back. And that is something that we are presently working on. Okay, wow. So what
Justin is saying here is that since the podcast aired, which was last Wednesday, five alleged
victims of Ehrlich Murdoch have stepped up and hired him as their attorney. That is a total of
seven clients for Justin Bamberg and his fight against the firm. And some of those victims haven't
been included in the indictments yet, which means, as we already knew, that more financial
charges are coming down for ELEC. People in general have always have reservations.
And it's, you know, well, I don't want my name in the newspaper.
or, you know, my loved one, and they mentioned my father who passed, and it makes them nervous.
Again, I think it is important when someone is a victim, who they are matters.
And the fact that you're not just a number, you're not just a victim number five or a Jane Doe with no identity.
You, your loved one, was a living, breathing person, or someone who unfortunately passed away, who was done wrong.
And we want the public, we want society to understand that Alec wasn't stealing from numbers on a piece of paper.
He was stealing from people whose lives were drastically altered because of his grief.
And you don't have to be afraid.
You don't have to be scared.
You don't have to worry about backlash or someone bothering you or intimidating you, right?
There are processes in place to protect you.
And victims of crimes in this state have certain rights under the South Carolina Constitution.
There's a victim's bill of rights.
And you have the right to be free from intimidation.
you have the right to be informed as to what's going on as the perpetrator is prosecuted by the state government.
And I think that the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division, I think that the South Carolina Attorney General's office has been doing a very good job.
The victim's advocates that are at SLED and at the AG's office have been doing an amazing job.
making sure that the victims of Alex's misdeeds and crimes are comfortable.
And that's one thing that my office has been focused on in this process is, yes, we're pursuing claims against Alex Murdoch.
We're pursuing claims against the firm and the bank's involved, right?
But we also want the clients to know and other people to know that there are people who have your back.
You're not going at this alone.
As I said at the beginning, I hope everyone had a happy holiday and a happy new year.
We have loved hearing all of the stories about Facebook.
families getting together and talking about the podcast. We've heard about grandmothers and granddaughters
bonding on a long drive while listening to the podcast. We heard one story about sisters reconnecting
after years when one of them brought up the podcast over Christmas dinner. We love it. We are here
for it and we are thankful for you, the listener, for being a part of this. Our audience is why we have
been able to make such a huge impact and hold agencies accountable.
You are the reason why we are seeing change unfold before our eyes.
Thank you for listening and thank you for helping us expose the truth wherever it leads.
There is so much more to unpack in the seven investigations related to Alec Murdoch.
We're only two work days into 2022 and I have been hit with non-stop, insane breaking news that I haven't all uncovered yet.
We have so much more news on PMPED, Alex alleged financial credit.
and a lot of other things that are happening behind the scenes.
Stay tuned to the Murdoch Murders podcast for the latest updates in this case.
See you next week.
Revisiting this episode now, I am reminded that the murders of Maggie and Paul were not just a family tragedy.
inevitable result of a system built to protect power at all costs.
For generations, the Murdox used political connections, courtroom influence, and their control
of local institutions to blur the lines between justice and privilege.
That same system, the one funded by public dollars and dependent on public trust, failed to
protect the community that it was meant to serve.
Episode 26 showed how evidence, timelines, and even the coroner's reports could be shaped to fit
a narrative rather than the truth.
The cover-ups and delays weren't just random mistakes.
They were symptoms of a culture where money speaks louder than accountability.
Every time, the public's resources are weaponized to protect the powerful,
justice for victims like Maggie Paul, Stephen Smith, and Gloria Satterfield become harder to reach.
This story isn't just about one family.
It's about an entire system that must be built from the ground up if South Carolina is ever going to hear.
If there's one takeaway from this remastered episode, it's this.
Truth takes time.
Maggie's character in the sixth episode of Murdoch death in the family
stoically says to Ehrlich, after he bloviates about changing,
All I hear is noise.
And we aim to pull truth through all the noise in this case and beyond.
We are not done by a long shot, so stay tuned.
Stay pesky and stay in the sunlight.
The Murdoch Murder's podcast is created by me, Mandy Matney, and my fiancé, David Moses.
Our executive editor is Liz Farrell.
Produced by Luna Shark Productions.
I need police and an ambulance immediately.
Murdoch, Death in the Family Official Podcast, is here.
I'm joining Patricia Arquette, Jason Clark, and the cast to uncover all things Murdoch.
Family first.
To unravel the story piece by piece was really surprising because you don't want to believe it.
Murdoch, Death in the Family Official Podcast, Wednesdays.
And stream Murdoch, Death in the Family on Hulu and Hulu on Disney Plus for bundle subscribers.
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