I’m posting this article because it demonstrates that the accusations of alleged Murdaugh favoritism and privilege…that may have fueled the motive for these murders…was not confined to social media.
When we discuss an airline crash, we cannot ignore the weather. This article reports the storm building in that area over two years ago.
The issue was no longer just gossip on FB pages…it entered the realm of professional reporting and opinion editorial with a wide reach in the area. The Island Packet for example is owned by the McClatchy group…which owns the following SC newspapers.
The Beaufort Gazette, Beaufort
The State, Columbia
The Island Packet, Hilton Head Island
The Sun News, Myrtle Beach
The Herald, Rock Hill
We have discussed that the pandemic caused legal backups that help explain why PM had not yet gone to trial. But PM also had his travel restriction removed in his favor during this time….which could only have reinforced the feelings of his ‘special handling’ compared to the average person. Two years had passed…and, in my opinion, faith in the justice system treating him as any other citizen might have been treated, was vastly depleted.
The impact of the public sentiment from this first case has not dissipated in my opinion. Hopefully LE is being scrupulous to remove anyone who ever moved anywhere within the M influence circles…far away from the case. It is imperative that the public have full confidence THIS time. This is why I feel it is puzzling that the Solicitor does not step aside….if for nothing more…than to reassure the people he serves.
The description of the interaction in court describes what drives public concern…today…in this now internationally followed case.
https://www.islandpacket.com/opinion/opn-columns-blogs/liz-farrell/article230068069.html
“Someone did not get the memo on how things “normally” proceed at the Beaufort County Courthouse.
That person would be the detention center guard, who on Monday — after
Judge Steven John set
Paul Murdaugh’s bond at $50,000 — mistakenly took that as a cue to do his job and came jingle-jangling over to young Murdaugh to cuff him and take him to jail, where, ostensibly, Murdaugh would have been booked, processed and released like all the
non-Murdaughs are after they’ve been
charged with three
felony counts of boating under the influence in a
fatal boat crash.
The guard walked up to Murdaugh with the assuredness of someone who has done this many times before ... almost, dare I say, “routinely.”
Murdaugh, who is 20, regarded the man with the type of assessment you might give a cater waiter who has a raging case of pink eye but is still offering you a canape off his tray.
Actually, that’s not a good characterization.
Murdaugh’s expression was more like, “
Handcuffs? No, no. There’s been some sort of mix-up. I’m not here to be arrested. I’m here to be ‘arrested.’ Like the summer intern version of arrested.”
For a moment, he appeared to be terrified that life was about to break a certain way for him, that several generations of the history, wealth, influence and power baked into his DNA were about to crumble away and expose the gooey, undercooked, terrible-tasting middle.
But fear not, all he had to do was wait four more seconds.
That’s when South Carolina Attorney General’s Office prosecutor Megan Burchstead — who works for you, by the way, and who never once said the name
“Mallory Beach” out loud nor made any solid subject-verb request on behalf of the state when it came to Murdaugh’s bond, though she did hint that his potential
alcohol consumption might be a “concern” for society — came through for the child and shooed away the overzealous guard.
Can you imagine the thought of getting handcuffed when you’re arrested?
Yes, you can.”