Prosecutors in the double murder trial of Alex Murdaugh wove together an elaborate timeline during closing arguments Wednesday, seeking to convince a South Carolina jury that the once-reputable lawyer became a “family annihilator” when he killed his wife and younger son to evade accountability for a string of financial misdeeds.

The state built on weeks of testimony and hundreds of pieces of evidence in its sprawling case to place Murdaugh, 54, at the crime scene June 7, 2021. That evening, he called 911 to say he had found his wife, Margaret, 52, and son Paul, 22, fatally shot on the grounds of the family’s hunting estate in rural Colleton County.

“There is only one person who had the motive, who had the means, who had the opportunity to commit these crimes, and also whose guilty conduct after these crimes betrays him,” Creighton Waters, the lead prosecutor for the South Carolina Attorney General’s Office, told jurors.

“The forensic timeline puts him there. The use of his family weapons corroborates that,” he added. “And his lies and his guilty actions afterward confirms it.”

Earlier Wednesday, at the defense team’s request, the jurors were given more than an hour to visit the outdoor property, kennels and shed where Margaret and Paul had been in their last moments. The property has since been vacant, with the grass uncut, the kennels empty, and items such as a deflated football and a tube of sanitizing wipes seemingly left untouched.

A concrete pad where Paul had been struck twice by a shotgun and fell was still visible. Margaret, whose body was found several feet away, suffered five wounds from an AR-style rifle. While the interior of a feed room appeared renovated, large bullet holes remained in a back window.

The prosecution has said investigators didn’t find the two murder weapons.

Waters laid out a “gathering storm” of events engulfing Murdaugh’s life as he faced an investigation by his family’s law firm on the same day of the killings.

“Those pressures mount,” he said, “and that person becomes a family annihilator.”

The trial of Murdaugh, which began in late January and was initially expected to last a month, included 61 witnesses for the prosecution and more than a dozen for the defense.

The 12-person jury heard from an array of law enforcement investigators and crime scene analysts; cellphone and GPS data forensics experts; Murdaugh’s former law firm colleagues and banking associates; family members, including his surviving son, Buster; and the defendant himself.

Few trials in recent memory have riveted this region of South Carolina, known as the Lowcountry, where for nearly a century, three generations of Murdaugh patriarchs wielded power as top prosecutors for a cluster of counties. Murdaugh himself served as a part-time prosecutor and tried cases in the same Colleton County Courthouse where his double murder trial is taking place.

The prosecution secured an important victory earlier in the trial when Circuit Court Judge Clifton Newman agreed that testimony about Murdaugh’s financial crimes could be admitted into evidence to buttress the state’s motive that he killed his wife and son to gain sympathy and halt the looming investigation into $792,000 in missing settlement money he is accused of stealing from his family’s law firm.

According to prosecutors, Murdaugh had been swindling clients for years, and he used the money, in part, to feed an addiction to pain pills.

Murdaugh had also been under strain from a lawsuit involving Paul, who at the time of his death was facing trial on three felony counts of boating under the influence in connection with a 2019 boat crash that claimed the life of a teenage passenger.

A lawyer for the victim’s family testified that he thought he was going to have to drop the lawsuit if it turned out the murders were connected to Paul’s involvement in the boat crash.

During the state’s closing arguments, Waters said Murdaugh had much to lose if his financial malfeasance was exposed, but that the deaths of his wife and son promptly stopped the law firm’s investigation and stymied the boat crash case to his advantage.

“The pressures on this man were unbearable, and they were all reaching a crescendo on the day his wife and son were murdered by him,” Waters said.

Key moments in the Murdaugh trial

Murdaugh, however, has long maintained his innocence in the slayings and told investigators he had taken a nap and then went to visit his ailing mother, who has Alzheimer’s disease, at the time the killings occurred.

But prosecutors unveiled key evidence during the trial of a video that placed him at the crime scene in the minutes before they say the killings occurred at about 8:50 p.m. In response, Murdaugh took the stand last week and said he had lied multiple times to investigators, admitting that he was dishonest about his location before the murders because of his drug addiction and general paranoia.

Murdaugh’s defense team — led by veteran lawyers Jim Griffin and Richard “Dick” Harpootlian — have previously argued that the state has offered no evidence showing Murdaugh would reap a financial windfall from the deaths of his wife and son, such as a life insurance payout, nor that they knew of any alleged impropriety, which he sought to conceal by killing them.

The defense had yet to present its closing arguments Wednesday.

If found guilty, Murdaugh faces up to life in prison without parole for the two counts of murder, and another five years in prison for two counts of possession of a weapon during the commission of a violent crime.

This is a developing news story. Please check back for updates.

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Court revives health worker Covid-19 vaccine mandate in 26 states

A federal appeals court on Wednesday revived in 26 U.S. states a…

A way of life is all but extinguished by New Mexico’s largest wildfire

A lawsuit seeking unspecified damages was filed last June against the U.S.…

How a Hotel Was Converted into Housing for Formerly Homeless People

During the height of the pandemic’s economic disruption, in late January 2021,…

Peter King’s column: Tua Tagovailoa reintroduces himself in NFL Week 1

1. I think Jeff Darlington’s piece for ESPN on Miami coach Mike…