SC - Paul Murdaugh & mom Margaret Found Shot To Death - Alex Murdaugh Accused - Islandton *Guilty* #44

DNA Solves
DNA Solves
DNA Solves
South Carolina’s supreme court justices filed an order on Tuesday (August 13, 2024) agreeing to certify the appeal of Alex Murdaugh’s murder convictions – meaning they will take up the controversial decision reached back in January to deny Murdaugh a new trial on the basis of alleged jury tampering.

The ruling from the high court came a little over a month after a motion to certify Murdaugh’s appeal was filed by his attorneys – Dick Harpootlian, Jim Griffin, Phillip Barber and Maggie Fox. That motion (.pdf) asked the justices to revisit former S.C. chief justice Jean Toal’s decision from January denying Murdaugh a new trial – even though he appeared to have met the high bar she established in his case (and even though federal law appears to be on Murdaugh’s side).

According to Murdaugh’s attorneys, Toal erred in denying his motion for a new trial – effectively “ruling that South Carolina courts should disregard (the) binding precedent of the U.S. supreme court.”
...
According to the motion filed by Murdaugh’s counsel, the state supreme court must decide “whether the verdict returned after Mr. Murdaugh’s internationally televised murder trial should be overturned due to unprecedented jury tampering by a state official, the former Colleton County clerk of court.”

The legal principle of major importance the defense is asking the court to consider?

“Whether it is presumptively prejudicial for a state official to secretly advocate for a guilty verdict through ex parte contacts with jurors during trial, or whether a defendant, having proven the contacts occurred, must also somehow prove the verdict would have been different at a hypothetical trial in which the surreptitious advocacy did not occur,” Murdaugh’s lawyers argued.

In other words, was the tampering itself enough to warrant a new trial? Or did Murdaugh’s lawyers also need to prove it impacted the outcome of the proceedings?
...

What a mess and unnecessary expense to the taxpayers!
 
@BrianEntin

The South Carolina Supreme Court will take on Alex Murdaugh's appeal based on jury tampering allegations.The appeal alleges Clerk of Court Becky Hill tampered with jurors.If the SC Supreme Court sides with Murdaugh, he could get a new trial.


10:43 AM · Aug 14, 2024
 
I'm recalling a law in SC where certain cases of public interest get to cut ahead of the line and be heard quickly in the Appellate Court and wonder if same applies with the Supreme Court. I don't recall when AM's defense petitioned the Supreme Court to review Judge Toal's January 2024 decision. Nonetheless, to begin considering the case for retrial before the end of the year seems somewhat expedited to me. MOO

From quoted DM upthread:

Judge Toal ruled in January that a separate precedent in the South Carolina case of State v. Green meant that Murdaugh's team had to prove the unauthorized communication led to his jury changing their verdict.

But the state's Supreme Court rejected Toal's interpretation on Tuesday and could begin considering Murdaugh's case for a retrial before the end of the year.
 
I'm recalling a law in SC where certain cases of public interest get to cut ahead of the line and be heard quickly in the Appellate Court and wonder if same applies with the Supreme Court. I don't recall when AM's defense petitioned the Supreme Court to review Judge Toal's January 2024 decision. Nonetheless, to begin considering the case for retrial before the end of the year seems somewhat expedited to me. MOO

From quoted DM upthread:

Judge Toal ruled in January that a separate precedent in the South Carolina case of State v. Green meant that Murdaugh's team had to prove the unauthorized communication led to his jury changing their verdict.

But the state's Supreme Court rejected Toal's interpretation on Tuesday and could begin considering Murdaugh's case for a retrial before the end of the year.
All my angry faces are at the situation, BH, AM and his team, money that will be wasted, etc — not my fellow WS posters.
 


[…]

In July, Murdaugh's attorneys filed a motion asking the state Supreme Court to review the case before the appeals court hears it. This can happen if a case meets certain legal standards, such as "significant public interest or a legal principle of major importance." Murdaugh's attorneys argued his case fits both criteria.

Murdaugh's motion demands that the court review Toal's ruling, calling Hill, a "wart" on the South Carolina legal system. The motion describes Hill as an "elected state official in charge of managing juries engaging in deliberate jury tampering in a murder trial to secure a guilty verdict so she can make money selling books about it."

[…]

Murdaugh is also appealing his federal sentencing, arguing the punishment is "grossly disproportionate to the crimes committed." In that appeal, Murdaugh's attorneys claim that Judge Richard Gergel and federal prosecutors sought such a lengthy sentence to provide a backstop and ensure that, regardless of any successful state appeals or alternative verdicts during potential state retrials, Murdaugh would spend the rest of his life behind bars.

[…]
 
I'm recalling a law in SC where certain cases of public interest get to cut ahead of the line and be heard quickly in the Appellate Court and wonder if same applies with the Supreme Court. I don't recall when AM's defense petitioned the Supreme Court to review Judge Toal's January 2024 decision. Nonetheless, to begin considering the case for retrial before the end of the year seems somewhat expedited to me. MOO

In July, Murdaugh's attorneys filed a motion asking the state Supreme Court to review the case before the appeals court hears it. This can happen if a case meets certain legal standards, such as "significant public interest or a legal principle of major importance." Murdaugh's attorneys argued his case fits both criteria.

OK, now we know the Motion wasn't filed with the Supreme Court until July, and the defense did call on the SC law I recalled (to expedite a decision to hear the case and fast track a ruling). Just more fuel for the entitlement AM believes was his since birth! MOO
 

Members online

Online statistics

Members online
139
Guests online
2,364
Total visitors
2,503

Forum statistics

Threads
602,223
Messages
18,137,120
Members
231,276
Latest member
snoopE
Back
Top