In a stunning legal bombshell decision Wednesday, the South Carolina Supreme Court struck down the murder convictions of disgraced legal scion Alex Murdaugh.
The five-member court unanimously overturned the outcome of Murdaugh’s six-week trial from 2023 which convicted him in the brutal 2021 killings of Maggie Murdaugh and Paul Murdaugh.
The South Carolina Supreme Court overturned a previous ruling denying Murdaugh’s appeal, finding serious concerns surrounding allegations of jury tampering and misconduct tied to the six-week trial in 2023 that found him guilty.
The extraordinary decision throws the sprawling Murdaugh saga back into uncertainty nearly three years after a jury convicted him in the brutal killings.
The case will now return to circuit court, where South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson’s office must decide whether to retry Murdaugh for the killings.
At the center of the appeal were allegations involving former Colleton County Clerk of Court Becky Hill, who was accused of improperly influencing jurors.
Murdaugh’s attorneys argued Hill made comments about his testimony, urged jurors not to be misled by the defense and sought publicity surrounding the high-profile case.
Hill later pleaded guilty to obstruction of justice, perjury and misconduct charges related to her conduct surrounding the trial, intensifying scrutiny over whether Murdaugh received a fair trial.
The state Supreme Court’s ruling does not declare Murdaugh innocent. Instead, it centers on whether the integrity of the trial itself was compromised.
“If only the people who may be innocent get a fair trial, then our Constitution isn’t working,” defense attorney Dick Harpootlian argued before the justices earlier this year.
What the ruling means for Murdaugh now
Despite the dramatic reversal, Murdaugh will not be walking free.
The 57-year-old remains behind bars serving multiple prison sentences tied to dozens of financial crimes in which prosecutors said he stole millions from clients, law partners and others.
Even with his murder convictions vacated, those financial crime sentences alone could keep him imprisoned for decades.
The ruling instead resets the murder case procedurally.
The case will now return to circuit court, where South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson’s office must decide whether to retry Murdaugh for the killings.
Legal experts say a second murder trial would likely become another massive spectacle, reigniting worldwide attention on a case that already spawned documentaries, podcasts, books and nonstop true crime coverage.
Why the Supreme Court overturned the convictions
The appeal centered largely on claims that Hill improperly influenced jurors during the original murder trial.
Several jurors testified during earlier hearings that Hill made comments warning them not to let the defense “distract” or “mislead” them. Others said she encouraged jurors to closely watch Murdaugh’s body language while he testified.
Former South Carolina Chief Justice Jean Toal previously ruled Hill acted improperly but concluded there was insufficient evidence proving her comments affected the verdict.
The Supreme Court ultimately disagreed.
During oral arguments in February, several justices openly questioned whether the integrity of the trial had been irreparably damaged.
Chief Justice John Kittredge pressed prosecutor Creighton Waters over testimony that Hill told jurors, “Don’t let the defense confuse you.”
“Assume we find that statement was made,” Kittredge said. “Do you still have a path to victory?”
Waters maintained the evidence against Murdaugh remained overwhelming and argued Hill’s comments were too brief to influence jurors after six weeks of testimony and hundreds of exhibits.
But appellate courts focus not on guilt or innocence – they focus on whether the legal process itself was fair.
Ultimately, the justices determined the concerns surrounding juror influence warranted a new trial.
Prosecutors still maintain the evidence was overwhelming
Even with the convictions overturned, prosecutors continue to stand by the evidence presented at trial.
At trial, prosecutors argued Murdaugh murdered his wife and son as his financial crimes were collapsing around him and public exposure was closing in.
Defense attorneys countered that there was no direct physical evidence tying Murdaugh to the shootings, no murder weapons were ever recovered and no blood or DNA connected him to the killings.
They also argued prosecutors unfairly flooded the trial with extensive testimony about Murdaugh’s financial crimes, prejudicing jurors against him.
Chief Justice Kittredge himself questioned whether prosecutors went too far.
“The granular detail, and the expansiveness of everything under the sun that was allowed, was arguably problematic,” he said during arguments.
How the case captivated the nation
Murdaugh’s fall from power stunned the country.
A member of a once-dominant South Carolina legal dynasty, Murdaugh was convicted in March 2023 of killing Maggie and Paul at the family’s Colleton County hunting estate on June 7, 2021.
The trial exposed not only the murders, but also a tangled web of alleged corruption, financial fraud and addiction that destroyed the family’s public image.
The case quickly became a national obsession, fueled by livestreamed courtroom testimony, explosive revelations and the mystery surrounding the killings themselves.
Now, with the convictions overturned, the legal drama enters yet another extraordinary chapter.
What happens next
The next move belongs to prosecutors.
Attorney General Alan Wilson’s office must now decide whether to pursue another murder trial – a process that could take months or even years to unfold.
If prosecutors move forward, the state would once again need to present its case before a new jury while the defense seeks to capitalize on the controversy surrounding the original proceedings.
Legal analysts say the Supreme Court’s ruling could also have sweeping implications beyond Murdaugh’s case, particularly in how South Carolina courts handle allegations of juror misconduct in future high-profile trials.
For now, one thing is certain: the Alex Murdaugh saga is far from over.

