Even locked away inside a maximum security state prison serving life, convicted murderer Alex Murdaugh is finding a way to get into legal trouble.
www.greenvilleonline.com
Aug 31, 2023
While officially Murdaugh is being detained in an
"undisclosed" maximum security location, it has been widely reported that he is being held at the
state prison in McCormick, S.C., and recent federal court filings confirm that.
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According to prison officials, Murdaugh provided media interview information to one of his attorneys through a legal call. Legal calls are not recorded or monitored on the inmate phone system per attorney/client privilege. Attorney Jim Griffin recorded Murdaugh reading the information, entries from the inmate's daily journal, and provided it to the media, stated the SCDC.
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According to the release, Murdaugh's recorded statements were then provided by Griffin to Fox Nation for its docuseries,
"The Fall of the House of Murdaugh," that released Thursday, Aug. 31, a day after Murdaugh's charges were announced.
According to a Fox Nation news release, their three-hour, three-part series includes exclusive, first-time interviews with Murdaughs's surviving son, Richard "Buster" Murdaugh Jr., as well as "exclusive access to Alex Murdaugh’s defense team Dick Harpootlian and Jim Griffin, behind-the-scenes footage before and during the trial, never-before-seen home movies, as well as intimate prison revelations from Alex himself."
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Alexandra Coscia, a spokesperson for Fox Nation, declined to comment on the prison violations, deferring the matter to Murdaugh's attorneys, but did confirm that the docuseries went live on Thursday.
The docuseries was originally slated to be released in mid-September, but Fox bumped up the release date to Aug. 31. It is unclear if this move was related to the prison violations, however.
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According to SCDC policy, inmates in their custody are not allowed to do interviews for legitimate reasons - to protect victims.
"SCDC’s interview policy is rooted in victims’ rights and is longstanding," stated the SCDC release. "The department believes that victims of crime should not have to see or hear the person who victimized them or their family member on the news. Inmates lose the privilege of speaking to the news media when they enter SCDC."