Murdaugh trial Day Six: Alex hides handcuffs under his blazer

Alex Murdaugh arrived at court on Day Six of his double-murder trial hiding his handcuffs under his blazer as his defense prepared to grill the forensics officer who found blood in his car.

Defense attorney Dick Harpootlian will launch his cross-examination of Melinda Worley who arrived to find Murdaugh’s wife and son lying in pools of blood at the sprawling hunting estate in Islandton, South Carolina.

The state could continue presenting witnesses for the rest of the week and plan to call Curtis ‘Cousin Eddie’ Smith –  who allegedly shot Murdaugh in a botched insurance fraud scheme three months after the murders.

Murdaugh, 54, is accused of shooting his wife, Maggie, 52, and younger son Paul, 22, at the property on June 7, 2021, in a bid to gain sympathy and distract attention away from financial crimes at his law firm. 

The defense theory is that somebody killed Paul and Maggie in revenge for a boating accident that left 19-year-old Mallory Beach dead in February, 2019. At the time of his death, Paul was facing trial for driving under the influence in the fatal crash. 

Scroll down for live courtroom video. 

Alex Murdaugh arrived at court on Day Six of his double-murder trial hiding his handcuffs under his blazer

Murdaugh wore a checked shirt and brown pants

Alex Murdaugh arrived at court on Day Six of his double-murder trial hiding his handcuffs under his blazer

Alex Murdaugh, seated between his two layers Jim Griffin and Dick Harpootlian, listens during his double murder trial at the Colleton County Courthouse in Walterboro, S.C., Friday

Alex Murdaugh, seated between his two layers Jim Griffin and Dick Harpootlian, listens during his double murder trial at the Colleton County Courthouse in Walterboro, S.C., Friday

Defense attorney Dick Harpootlian will launch his cross-examination of Melinda Worley (pictured Friday), a forensic scientist, who arrived to find Murdaugh's wife and son lying in pools of blood at the sprawling hunting estate in Islandton, South Carolina

Defense attorney Dick Harpootlian will launch his cross-examination of Melinda Worley (pictured Friday), a forensic scientist, who arrived to find Murdaugh’s wife and son lying in pools of blood at the sprawling hunting estate in Islandton, South Carolina

Murdaugh is accused of killing Paul, 22, (right) and Maggie, 52, at the hunting property on June 7, 2021. His sole surviving son Buster stands on the left

Murdaugh is accused of killing Paul, 22, (right) and Maggie, 52, at the hunting property on June 7, 2021. His sole surviving son Buster stands on the left

Murdaugh told cops he arrived home around 10pm to find his wife and son dead, but prosecutors say phone pings will show the legal scion was there when the pair were killed.

Murdaugh’s relatives, his son Buster, brothers Randy and John Marvin, sister Lynn and sister-in-law Liz Murdaugh have sat behind him in the courtroom throughout the trial so far. Buster angrily rejected the suggestion that he is ‘supporting his father,’ when speaking to DailyMail.com in November.  

Jurors last week heard how Murdaugh, in his first interview with detectives, said Paul had been attacked and threatened a ‘lot’ after crashing the boat while drunk.

He then sensationally tried to cast suspicion on a farmhand who bragged to Paul that he was a killer for the FBI.

But jurors Friday heard from Detective Laura Rutland who said Murdaugh was ‘clean’ from head to toe, despite telling them he had touched the blood-soaked bodies of Maggie and Paul – even trying to roll his son over. 

KEY FACTS IN THE MURDAUGH TRIAL ON DAY SIX: 

MURDAUGH TELLS COPS ABOUT BOAT ACCIDENT

Murdaugh told 911 about Paul’s boat accident claiming that his son had ‘been threatened for months.’

The first cop to arrive said Murdaugh ‘immediately started telling’ him about the February 2019 accident that left 19-year-old Mallory Beach dead.

‘I know that’s what this is,’ he said.

At the time of Paul’s death, the 22-year-old was facing trial for driving under the influence in the boat crash.

The defense theory is that somebody killed Maggie and Paul Murdaugh as revenge for the accident.

Prosecutors claim Murdaugh deliberately made the comments to divert suspicion away from himself.

MURDAUGH DID NOT CRY

The first responders so far have all agreed that Murdaugh was not crying.

Although he appeared and sounded upset, police officers and firemen have stated that there were no tears in the attorney’s eyes.

Murdaugh’s demeanor will play a central role in the case. Prosecutor Creighton Waters told jurors on the opening day to watch the body worn footage ‘closely.’

‘Watch those closely. Watch his expressions. Listen to what he’s saying and what he’s not saying,’ Waters said.

Murdaugh sounded lucid throughout his dealings with officers that night, even greeting one by saying: ‘How ya doin?’

The defense has argued that Murdaugh was distraught after the killings and had just hours before been having a ‘bonding experience’ with his son.

NO BLOOD ON HIS WHITE T-SHIRT

Murdaugh had no visible blood on his white t-shirt, first responders have told the court.

Police described seeing pools of blood under the bodies of Maggie and Paul.

His defense attorney, Dick Harpootlian, described to jurors how Paul’s head ‘literally exploded … like a watermelon.’

Murdaugh earlier told 911 he had checked his wife and son’s pulses – but when cops arrived they saw no blood on him.

The prosecution has also drawn jurors attention to significant volumes of water pooled around the deceased despite it not having rained yet that night.

GRUESOME GUN WOUNDS OF MAGGIE AND PAUL

Horrifying body cam footage of the ‘butchered’ bodies of Maggie and Paul has been played to jurors.

The 12 men and women have covered their mouths at times while Murdaugh has hunched forward to weep.

Fire chief Barry McRoy told the court that when he arrived Paul’s ‘brains were down by his ankles’ and that he checked neither victim because ‘both had injuries that were incompatible with life.’

The defense argue that given the brutality of these execution-style killings, it is simply ‘not believable’ that Murdaugh – a ‘loving’ husband and father – could have carried them out.

FOOTPRINTS AND TIRE TRACKS ‘NOT PRESERVED’

Murdaugh’s defense team have attacked several first responders already over their failure to preserve footprints and tire tracks found at the scene.

Sgt. Daniel Greene even noted there were multiple tire tracks in the wet grass which were incompatible with the number of vehicles at the property.

He said he did not inform SLED (state law enforcement) about the evidence because it was ‘not part of my job description’.

Harpootlian tore into Greene for failing to take photographs and put anything on his feet to preserve the blood and brains spattered on the ground.

He later ripped another officer for the same reason, telling him: ‘You don’t know what you’re doing.’

Despite his failure to preserve evidence, Greene told the attorney he was ‘not aware’ of any evidence being destroyed or contaminated.

MURDAUGH’S CELL PHONE DATA

In the body-worn footage, Murdaugh is heard telling the first cop on the scene that he head been visiting his mother with late stage Alzheimer’s.

He said Maggie and Paul had been at the kennels when he left, but they were not back home when he came back.

But Waters told jurors that data from ‘cell phones are going to show otherwise.’

The prosecutor stressed that phone records will be critical in the case and the jury will hear that the Murdaughs were ‘prolific’ cell phone users. 

Rutland added that it looked like Murdaugh had changed following the murders, noting that she found it odd the defendant was sweating but his clothes were ‘dry.’ 

Worley, a forensic analyst for SLED (state law enforcement), said Murdaugh’s white t-shirt and khaki shorts reacted positive to a test for blood.

However, she admitted that the test can also be triggered by bleach and rust.

Forensic evidence of the horrific crime scene was laid out by Rutland who – referring to her notes from the investigation – observed strands of brown hair in Maggie’s hands, as well as what appeared to be scratches and a bruise on Paul’s cheek. 

Worley later described images of pieces of skull, hair strands, blood, tissue and brain matter scattered across the feed room of the kennel where the bodies were found.

Worley said the two shotgun shells recovered at the scene were both 12-gauge shells, but from different brands, one Winchester and the other Federal. 

'I knew it was really bad,' Murdaugh said in the back of a police car as he was interviewed by detectives. 'I could see his brain.'

‘I knew it was really bad,’ Murdaugh said in the back of a police car as he was interviewed by detectives. ‘I could see his brain.’

Other images show drone shots of the crime scene, including the buildings where Maggie and Paul Murdaugh's bloody bodies were found. Maggie was found by the red-roof building

Other images show drone shots of the crime scene, including the buildings where Maggie and Paul Murdaugh’s bloody bodies were found. Maggie was found by the red-roof building 

Pictured: The dog kennel where police found Paul's body in a pool of blood

Pictured: The dog kennel where police found Paul’s body in a pool of blood

NIGHT OF THE MURDER: New images on Friday showed the police body cam footage of Murdaugh (right) wearing a clean white shirt on the night of his wife and son's murder

NIGHT OF THE MURDER: New images on Friday showed the police body cam footage of Murdaugh (right) wearing a clean white shirt on the night of his wife and son’s murder

The forensic expert said she found a .300 Blackout rifle round underneath Maggie’s knee, differing to the shotguns shells around Paul’s body.

The prosecution say Murdaugh first shot Paul twice with a shotgun, hitting him in the chest and head, before shooting Maggie twice in the head with an AR-15-style rifle.

Murdaugh rocked back and forth and cried as Worley described the scene. 

Worley said police found blood in Murdaugh’s SUV, along with a 16-gauge shotgun shell in the rear. She told the court the Chevrolet Suburban tested presumptive for blood after swabs were taken from the steering wheel, edge of the driver’s seat and lock button.

At 1am on the night of the killings, Murdaugh sat with detectives, telling them his relationship with Paul as ‘as good as it could be’ and he ‘had a wonderful marriage’ with Maggie.

During the 30-minute interview he described at length the threats and violence Paul had suffered in the aftermath of the boating accident.  

Murdaugh said his son ‘didn’t know’ some of the people menacing him because much of it was coming from online due to ‘negative publicity’ from the accident.

The defense theory is that somebody killed Paul and Maggie in revenge for the boating accident in February 2019 that left 19-year-old Mallory Beach (pictured) dead.

Mallory Beach

The defense theory is that somebody killed Paul and Maggie in revenge for the boating accident in February 2019 that left 19-year-old Mallory Beach (pictured) dead.

The defense theory is that somebody else killed Murdaugh's wife and son in revenge for a boat crash (the Murdaugh boat Sea Hunt is pictured) during which Paul had been driving under the influence, killing a 19-year-old woman, in February 2019

The defense theory is that somebody else killed Murdaugh’s wife and son in revenge for a boat crash (the Murdaugh boat Sea Hunt is pictured) during which Paul had been driving under the influence, killing a 19-year-old woman, in February 2019

Bottles and cans of beer found aboard the boat which Paul Murdaugh was driving under the influence

Bottles and cans of beer found aboard the boat which Paul Murdaugh was driving under the influence

He said people had threatened to ‘kick his a**’ and said Paul had gone out in Charleston a couple of months ago and received a black eye.

Murdaugh describe Paul as a ‘man’s man’ but said he was unable to fight back because he was facing trial over the fatal boat accident. 

He then described how farmhand, CB Rowe, had recently confided in Paul that he had ‘killed radical Black Panthers’ while working undercover for the FBI.

Murdaugh told cops: ‘He told Paul a story the other day about how when he was in high school he got in a fight with some black guys.

‘And the FBI undercover team observed him fighting with those guys and put him on an undercover team with three Navy Seals and their job was to kill radical Black Panthers and they did that from Myrtle Beach to Savannah.’

But Murdaugh quickly added: ‘I actually do not think in all honesty it’s him but I know y’all got to talk to him.’

The legal scion said ‘Paul was so taken aback’ by Rowe’s story that he recorded the farmhand on his phone saying some of it.

Murdaugh said that he had hired Rowe at the farm about two months ago but he ‘wasn’t cutting the mustard’ and Paul was having to tidy up a shoddy job the farmhand had done with sunflower fields on the estate. 

Buster Murdaugh, Alex Murdaugh's sole surviving son, listens to testimony Friday

Buster Murdaugh, Alex Murdaugh’s sole surviving son, listens to testimony Friday

The camo shotgun that was taken from Murdaugh by the first officer who arrived at the scene

The camo shotgun that was taken from Murdaugh by the first officer who arrived at the scene

Asked about how his son was coping after the boat crash, Murdaugh told cops: ‘I’ve never been prouder of him than the way he’s handled the pressures and adversity in that situation. I mean Paul is a wonderful, wonderful, wonderful kid. He can do almost anything. He gets along with almost anybody.’ 

Describing his relationship with Maggie, Murdaugh said they ‘had a wonderful marriage, wonderful relationship.’

Earlier it was revealed that redacted body-worn camera footage from the investigation is due to be released, after new images showed Murdaugh talking to cops wearing a pristine white T-shirt, as well as drone footage of the crime scene.

The T-shirt formed a central part of the evidence this morning, with Detective Rutland repeatedly asked about Murdaugh’s clothing, arms and hands, and answering that all were ‘clean.’

Murdaugh told the cops he had checked Maggie and Paul’s bodies for pulses and even tried to roll Paul over – causing his phone to pop out of his son’s pocket. 

Murdaugh claimed he had been visiting his elderly mother who suffers from Alzheimer's and arrived home to find Maggie and Paul dead near the estate's dog kennels

Murdaugh claimed he had been visiting his elderly mother who suffers from Alzheimer’s and arrived home to find Maggie and Paul dead near the estate’s dog kennels

A shed near the dog kennels at Moselle Hunting Lodge where Maggie and Paul Murdaugh were gunned down

A shed near the dog kennels at Moselle Hunting Lodge where Maggie and Paul Murdaugh were gunned down 

The exterior of the crime scene

Footprints near a trailer at the estate

Photos showing the exterior of the kennels and out houses at the estate, where footprints were discovered by investigators

A photo taken by investigators showing water inside the kennels. Jurors have heard that the body of Paul Murdaugh was saturated with both blood and water despite it not having rained

A photo taken by investigators showing water inside the kennels. Jurors have heard that the body of Paul Murdaugh was saturated with both blood and water despite it not having rained

Murdaugh said he briefly attempted to do something with the phone before placing the device back on top of Paul.

Rutland also said she did not see any footprints or kneeling marks on the ground in the kennels where the bodies were discovered, despite there being pools of blood.

‘Is the individual that you describe as clean head to toe sitting in this courtroom,’ the prosecutor asked Rutland.

‘Yes,’ she replied, pointing to Murdaugh.

Defense attorney Jim Griffin then grilled Rutland about the evidence, attempting to turn the cleanliness she noted in Murdaugh’s favor.

‘Did he look like someone who blew his son’s head off,’ Griffin asked.

Rutland replied that distance would have been a factor in whether Murdaugh would have been covered in blood spatter if he fired the shots.

Griffin also questioned why a dirty shirt was not found despite Murdaugh giving officials ‘carte blanche’ to search the estate and examine his cell phone. 

Rutland confirmed that Murdaugh did allow police to fully search his property.

Rutland noted that she canvased the land on an ATV and that other investigators dove in ponds near the property.

Griffin then asked if Murdaugh was a suspect that night.

Rutland replied: ‘That night, everybody was a suspect.’

Griffin also asked the detective if she was aware that investigators left some 30 shotgun pellets behind in the feed room of the kennels when they left the property. Rutland said she did not know that.

During his interview with cops, Murdaugh said that there were probably 25 guns on the estate.

He said that in addition to the camo shotgun officers took off him when they arrived there were ‘all kinds of rifles.’

He added: ‘I mean you name ’em, we have ’em.’ 

The Murdaugh family, were one of the most prominent family's in South Carolina's Lowcountry, along the state's coastline. They've also been linked to a series of mysterious deaths including the death of a 19-year-old openly gay nursing student Stephen Smith

Alex Murdaugh pictured with his wife Maggie and their two sons Paul (left) and Buster

The trial is taking place at the Colleton County Courthouse in Walterboro, a sleepy, rural town 50 miles west of Charleston in a low-lying region of South Carolina over which the Murdaugh family has wielded immense judicial and political power.

Indeed, in the courtroom where Murdaugh faces judgment a portrait of his late grandfather – legendary longtime 14th Circuit Solicitor Buster Murdaugh Jr. – had hung on the wall before it was removed ahead of the trial.

Prosecutors have said Murdaugh killed his wife and child to generate sympathy and distract from his financial crimes, an alleged motive that Murdaugh’s lawyers have argued doesn’t make sense.

But he has adamantly insisted from the moment he found the bodies of his wife and youngest son shot multiple times that he was not the killer. 

Following the murder trial, Murdaugh will have to face more than 100 additional criminal charges, ranging from drug trafficking to allegations that he stole nearly $9 million from clients and other attorneys. 

Prosecutors say Murdaugh lured his wife and son to their 1,700-acre hunting lodge and shot them dead.

The court also claims that his life was spiraling out of control amid years of opioid addiction and ballooning debts.

Murdaugh pleaded not guilty in June, and the blockbuster trial is expected to include wild allegations of dark family secrets, financial ruin and hedonistic excess.  

In total, over 220 people could testify against Murdaugh in the trial, it was revealed Tuesday. 

source: dailymail.co.uk