Alex Murdaugh Retrial: Eric Faddis on the Evidence That May Not Survive a Second Trial
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The South Carolina Supreme Court calculated that the prosecution spent twelve and a half hours of jury testimony on Alex Murdaugh’s financial crimes — spread over ten days of a six-week trial. The court said the State could have made the motive argument in a fraction of that time and ordered any retrial to present this evidence efficiently.
Eric Faddis provides a witness-by-witness analysis of what survives the restriction and what likely gets cut. The Seckinger confrontation about missing fees on the morning of the killings. The Tinsley hearing scheduled days later. The Chris Wilson fee discrepancy. Those connect directly to the exposure timeline that forms the spine of the State’s motive theory. But the individual victim narratives, the Tony Satterfield testimony about his brother’s disability, the extended accounting of each theft scheme — the court made clear those crossed from probative into unfairly prejudicial.
Fadds also identifies which of the unresolved evidentiary challenges from Murdaugh’s direct appeal gives the defense the best leverage at retrial, and addresses the fundamental strategic fork: fight to exclude or concede and sever.
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This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.
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