Alex Murdaugh Denied $200K Bond By Judge After Request Made Following 5 Days in Jail

South Carolina attorney Alex Murdaugh was denied bond Tuesday by a judge who said that his financial resources and mental state put him at too much risk to wait for trial outside of jail, the Associated Press reported. Murdaugh is charged with stealing millions in insurance money that was meant for the sons of his deceased housekeeper.

Attorneys for Murdaugh asked Circuit Judge Clifton Newman to release Murdaugh without having him pay bail, a request granted by a previous judge in September as Murdaugh faced separate charges of arranging his own death to get a $10 million insurance payout, the AP reported. Prosecutors asked for a $200,000 bond and GPS monitoring for his current charges of obtaining property by false pretenses in the case with his former housekeeper's children.

Newman denied Murdaugh bond, saying that he wasn't "satisfied as to his mental condition." The judge said that he required more information and would reconsider his decision when he had obtained it, the AP reported.

For more reporting from the Associated Press, see below.

Alex Murdaugh Denied Bond
South Carolina attorney Alex Murdaugh was denied bond Tuesday by a judge who said that his financial resources and mental state put him at too much risk to wait for trial outside of jail. Murdaugh walks into his bond hearing Thursday, September 16, 2021, in Varnville, South Carolina. Mic Smith/AP Photo

One of Murdaugh's attorneys, Dick Harpootlian, said after the hearing that therapists at the drug rehab centers in Georgia and Florida where Murdaugh spent the past six weeks will send their records to a local psychiatrist, who will prepare a report for the judge, hopefully within a week.

"We understand the judge's concerns about Alex's mental condition. We're more than happy to comply with his request," Harpootlian said, adding of Murdaugh, "He seemed much more clearheaded today than I've ever seen him."

Harpootlian and Murdaugh's other attorney, Jim Griffin have said he is dealing with crushing grief and guilt after finding the bodies of his wife and son shot to death at their home in June. Murdaugh has adamantly denied having anything to do with their deaths and no one has been charged.

The latest charges against Murdaugh involve insurance payments that were supposed to go to the sons of his longtime housekeeper Gloria Satterfield, who died in 2016 a few weeks after falling at the family's home, investigators said.

No autopsy was performed, and a coroner said her death was improperly described as "natural" on her death certificate. State police said Tuesday in court that they are still investigating the circumstances of her death. Murdaugh denies having anything to do with her death, Harpootlian said after the hearing.

Murdaugh told Satterfield's sons he would help them get insurance settlements for her death, recommending they hire attorney Cory Fleming without telling them Fleming was a family friend, according to a lawsuit filed by the sons.

Murdaugh negotiated more than $4 million in payments, then had the checks — minus fees and attorney payments — sent to a fraudulent bank account.

A lawyer for the sons said they haven't seen any money from the settlements.

"He stole. He is a liar and a cheat," attorney Eric Bland told the judge Tuesday.

South Carolina Assistant Attorney General Creighton Waters said Murdaugh quickly took the money and put it in his personal accounts.

"He had been carrying a $100,000 credit card balance for months," Waters said. "That gets paid off. He writes $300 and some odd grand to his father. He writes a check for $610 grand to himself. He writes a check for $125 grand to himself. Not a dime goes to this family."

Waters asked for a $200,000 bond and GPS monitoring, saying, "A man who is a danger to himself is a danger to others."

Harpootlian and Griffin said Murdaugh needs more treatment for an opioid addiction that has lasted for more than a decade.

"He's not going to run," Harpootlian said. "That's not where he is now."

Griffin argued that "the Alex Murdaugh who is not hooked on drugs has lived a good, fruitful life — a law-abiding life."

"Only when he got hooked on opioids did things turn south and he truly regrets his conduct," Griffin said.

Murdaugh has been in jail since his arrest Thursday at a drug rehab center near Orlando, Florida.

The housekeeper's insurance isn't the only six-figure case being investigated by state police. Murdaugh's former law firm — founded by his great-grandfather a century ago — has accused him of stealing possibly millions of dollars.

Prosecutors hinted at Tuesday's hearing that Murdaugh has turned over all his affairs to his surviving son and in recent weeks sold a boat and property in Beaufort County in what they said might be an attempt to hide money from at least three ongoing lawsuits.

Each charge of obtaining property by false pretenses carries a sentence of up to 10 years. The three felony charges from the botched attempt to arrange his own death could bring up to 20 years in prison if he's convicted.

Murdaugh continues to insist he had nothing to do with the June deaths of his wife, Maggie, 52, and their son Paul, 22. Murdaugh said he returned to their rural Colleton County home to find them shot to death. Tight-lipped state police have neither named any suspects nor ruled anyone out.

In addition to all of the other cases, state police are looking into whether Murdaugh has connections to a 2015 hit-and-run death and whether he or other family members tried to obstruct the investigation into a boat crash involving Paul Murdaugh that killed a 19-year-old woman in 2019. Murdaugh also denies any wrongdoing in these cases, Harpootlian said Tuesday.

The Murdaugh family has dominated the legal community in Hampton County for nearly the past century. Murdaugh's father, grandfather and great-grandfather were elected prosecutors and their prestigious law firm became known for suing railroads.

Alex Murdaugh Hearing
A judge in South Carolina denied bond for attorney Alex Murdaugh on the second set of charges he has faced since finding his wife and son dead last June. Murdaugh listens to prosecutors outline their case against him during bond hearing in the Richland Judicial Center in Columbia, South Carolina, Tuesday, October 19, 2021. Lewis M. Levine/AP Photo

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