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Alex Murdaugh wants retrial; South Carolina Supreme Court hears appeal

GREENVILLE, SC – More than a year after the historic double murder trial of Richard “Alex” Murdaugh captured the nation’s attention, the disbarred attorney serving two life sentences for the murders of his wife and son has a chance at a retrial.

Last year, Murdaugh, who destroyed a South Carolina law dynasty, was convicted of the murders and pleaded guilty to state and federal charges related to a sweeping, decade-long series of multimillion-dollar financial fraud that claimed victims in several South Carolina counties. Murdaugh continues to deny killing his family. His request for a retrial, accusing a court official of jury tampering, was initially denied.

On Tuesday, the South Carolina Supreme Court granted Murdaugh's request and said it will hear his appeal, meaning he can skip the lengthy appeals process. The focus of the appeal and review is not Murdaugh's guilt or innocence, but whether former South Carolina Chief Justice Jean Toal was right to deny him a new murder trial earlier this year. The Supreme Court could reverse or overturn that ruling — and could order the court to grant him a new trial.