Alex Murdaugh May Face Death Penalty in Retrial Over Murder of Wife and Younger Son

By
South Carolina’s top court overturned Alex Murdaugh’s murder convictions, and prosecutors now say they may seek the death penalty in his upcoming retrial over the deaths of his wife and son. Alex Murdaugh - via ABC News YouTube account

Alex Murdaugh may face the death penalty when he is retried for the murders of his wife and younger son after South Carolina's highest court overturned his earlier convictions and ordered a new trial.

South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson said his office will pursue a retrial "as soon as possible" and that prosecutors are now reconsidering sentencing options, including capital punishment, because the case has effectively restarted.

He said that, in light of the court's decision, "we're back to square one on this case, and that means all our legal options are on the table, including the death penalty." Prosecutors must formally notify the court if they intend to seek death, but no filing has yet been announced, according to ABC News.

The South Carolina Supreme Court unanimously overturned Murdaugh's 2023 murder convictions this week, ruling that improper conduct by then-Colleton County Clerk of Court Becky Hill deprived him of a fair trial.

Justices cited "disturbing" interference with the jury, including alleged comments about Murdaugh's credibility and pressure to reach a quick verdict, as grounds for the reversal. The ruling vacated the guilty verdicts and life sentences, sending the double-murder case back to the trial court for a full retrial.

Murdaugh, a disbarred attorney and member of a prominent South Carolina legal family, had been convicted of fatally shooting his wife, Maggie, and their younger son, Paul, near the dog kennels on the family's rural property in Colleton County in June 2021.

Prosecutors at the first trial argued he killed them to divert attention from mounting financial misconduct and an unraveling reputation, pointing to evidence of alleged theft from clients and his law firm. The defense countered that investigators mishandled key evidence and said Murdaugh discovered the bodies after the shootings, ABC11 reported.

Even with the murder convictions overturned, Murdaugh remains in state custody serving lengthy sentences on dozens of state financial-crime charges, including stealing millions of dollars from settlements owed to clients. Those convictions and sentences are unaffected by the Supreme Court's decision in the murder case.

No retrial date has been set, and upcoming pretrial hearings are expected to address where the new trial will be held, how jurors will be selected, and what evidence from the original proceedings will be allowed.

The high-profile case has drawn national attention, spawning extensive media coverage, podcasts, and true-crime projects, including the Netflix series "Murdaugh Murders: A Southern Scandal." Murdaugh's lawyers have not yet publicly responded in detail to the attorney general's statements about possibly seeking capital punishment in the retrial, as per the BBC.

Tags
Murder, Death Penalty

© 2026 Lawyer Herald All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission.

Join the Discussion
More News
Car C rash

Woman's Legs Amputated After Knife-Wielding Driver Plows Into Crowd of Pedestrians in Italy

Alex Murdaugh

Alex Murdaugh May Face Death Penalty in Retrial Over Murder of Wife and Younger Son

Police

19-Year-Old Transgender UW Student Found Dead in Laundry Room With at Least 40 Stab Wounds

Nigeria Gunman

Gunmen Kidnap More Than 80 Students, Including Toddlers, From Nigeria Schools in the Past Week