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- State slowly pieces together Alex Murdaughs motive and lies
"His ego couldn't stand that And he became a family annihilator " The state spent over three hours delivering its closing statement in the nearly 6-week trial, taking up all courtroom proceedings in Colleton County on Wednesday
- Alex Murdaugh trial: Prosecutors say he was the only one with motive . . .
State prosecutors said in closing arguments of Alex Murdaugh’s murder trial Wednesday that he was the only person who had the motive, means and opportunity to kill his wife and son in
- Why did Alex Murdaugh kill his wife and son? Here’s the motive . . . - AOL
What was his motive? Prosecutors laid out the motive for the murders throughout the six-week trial – a motive that jurors appeared to agree with in convicting him of murder
- Alex Murdaughs Motive Was Covering Up Lies, Prosecutors Say In Closing
As the “gathering storm” of his financial misdealings swirled above him, Alex Murdaugh murdered his wife and son in a desperate attempt to garner sympathy and protect his legacy, prosecutors alleged
- Prosecutors disclose Murdaugh motive for killing wife, son | The State
SC prosecutors filed a motion saying a “perfect storm” of debts and the looming exposure of his life of lies drove Alex Murdaugh to kill
- ‘They deserve a voice’: Prosecutors argue motive in Murdaugh trial . . .
Prosecutors in the Alex Murdaugh double-murder trial on Wednesday said the shame of his decades-long financial crime schemes being found out led to him killing his wife and son
- Summary of the Murdaugh Case: Murders, Fraud, and Trial
The State of South Carolina v Alex Murdaugh The investigation led to the arrest of Alex Murdaugh The prosecution, led by Creighton Waters, built its case around the motive that Murdaugh murdered his wife and son to generate sympathy and distract from the imminent collapse of his financial world
- Alex Murdaugh cast as family annihilator in prosecutions closing . . .
According to prosecutors, Murdaugh had been swindling clients for years, and he used the money, in part, to feed an addiction to pain pills
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