The state calls its 28th witness, Muschelle "Shelley" Smith, caregiver for Murdaugh’s mother.
The prosecutor questioning Smith is John Meadors, hired in January by the S.C. AG's Office and added to this case.
To my knowledge, this is the first time we've heard from Smith in this saga.
Smith testifies Alex Murdaugh’s mother, Libby, was suffering from Alzheimer’s in June 2021, at the time of the slayings. Meadors: “Was she aware of what was going on around her?” “No,” Smith says.
Reminder: A big part of Alex Murdaugh’s alibi is that he left Moselle to visit his ailing mother on the evening of the slayings.
Smith testifies she got to Alex Murdaugh’s parents’ house at 7:45 p.m. on the evening of the slayings. Smith says she didn’t want to disturb Miss Libby, who was sleeping in bed when she arrived.
Smith testifies about Alex Murdaugh coming to visit that night. He arrived late. That was unusual in her two years working for the Murdaughs, Smith testifies.
Smith testifies that it took her a few minutes to let Alex Murdaugh in after he called the house phone and said he was outside. He was wearing shorts and a T-shirt. He had on cloth shoes. Like Sperry’s. No socks.
Smith on Alex Murdaugh's demeanor on the night of the slayings when he came to visit his mother. “He was fidgeting.”
Smith testifies Murdaugh stayed with his mother for 20 minutes. He spoke with her initially, telling her he was there and had come to check up on her because his father was in the hospital. Meadors: “In your opinion as a caregiver, did she even know he was there? Smith: “No.”
Oh boy. Smith testifies that a few days after the slayings, Alex Murdaugh met with her in his mother's room and told her he had been visiting with his mother for 30-40 minutes on the night of the slayings. Smith testifies he was there for 20 minutes.
Smith is weeping on the witness stand. She says the Murdaughs are a good family. She said the conversation with Murdaugh, when he claimed to have been visiting with his mother for longer, disturbed her so much she called her brother about it.
Smith testifies that after the slayings, Alex Murdaugh asked her about the fact that she was planning to get married soon. He mentioned that weddings can be expensive and offered to help her with the expense. She said that was the first time they had talked about her wedding.
Smith testifies Murdaugh also offered to pull strings to get her a better job at the school where she worked.
Smith testifies that a few days after the slayings, Alex Murdaugh came by his parents house at 6:30 a.m. He had never come by that early in the two years she worked with the Murdaugh family, Smith testifies.
Smith testifies Murdaugh knocked on the door, and she let him in. Murdaugh’s mother was sleeping. Smith says she can’t recall if Murdaugh checked on his mother. Murdaugh had “blue something” in his hand. He was cradling it in his arms, she says. It looked like a tarp.
John Meadors is so good at this.
Smith is obviously distressed on the stand, and Meadors is figurately holding her hand as he walks her through this testimony that only she can offer.
A photo of the blue raincoat/tarp Murdaugh brought into the house is admitted into evidence. We should get a look at it this evening when the pool photographers are allowed to make photographs of the exhibits.
Smith testifies Murdaugh left the house after dropping off the blue coat and came back later in a white truck that she thought was his father’s. Then he left again in a black truck. She testifies he also had a cut/bruise on his forehead that day. Not sure what all this means.
We appear to be at more than 400 exhibits.
Yet again in this trial, it’s becoming difficult to follow important moments when lawyers/witnesses are directly referring to exhibits we cannot see.
Meadors has Smith identify Alex Murdaugh for the record and then ends his questioning. Defense attorney Jim Griffin rises to cross-examine Smith.
Griffin unfolds a big blue tarp in the middle of the courtroom. He asks Smith if something like this is what she saw Murdaugh bring into his parents’ house days after the slayings. She says yes. Griffin asks if she would confuse a blue tarp with a blue rainjacket. She says no.
Griffin seems to be challenging whether the blue, GSR-coated rainjacket the state has is the same thing as the blue tarp that Smith saw Murdaugh bring into his parents’ house in the days after the slayings.
Griffin asks about Alex Murdaugh's offer to help pay for Smith's wedding. “He was just being nice, wasn’t he?” Griffin asks. “Yes," she says. Smith says she was referring to "Mr. Alex Murdaugh" when she said the family were good people.
Griffin undercuts what the jury just heard about Alex Murdaugh’s behavior when he visited his mother on the night of 6/7/21. Griffin: “Is his normal behavior kind of fidgety?” “Yes.” “He’s just kind of a fidgety person, right?” “Yes.”
Griffin establishes that Murdaugh lay in bed beside his mother when he visited her. But he didn’t have blood on his shoes or hair. And he didn’t leave blood on the bed.
Griffin establishes that Smith initially told SLED Murdaugh was there at his parents’ house 30-35 minutes on the night of the slayings. Not just 15-20 minutes.
Griffin establishes that Smith didn’t tell SLED about the blue tarp in her first interviews with investigators. She told them about it in a follow-up with SLED in September. Griffin has her repeat over and over that what she saw was a blue tarp, *not* a blue rainjacket.
We are on a short break. But Griffin has done a lot here to try to establish that the blue tarp Smith saw and the blue, GSR-coated rainjacket that prosecutors have mentioned are not the same thing.
We are breaking for lunch until 2:30 p.m.