The judge who presided over convicted murderer Alex Murdaugh’s trial and sentencing spoke out Tuesday about some of the decisions he made during the high-profile case.
In a speech at his alma mater Cleveland State University on Tuesday, South Carolina Circuit Court Judge Clifton Newman said he did not anticipate for Murdaugh’s trial to captivate the nation’s attention beyond South Carolina.
“It had the added notoriety because it involved a lawyer who had been accused of stealing over $8 million from a number of clients,” Newman said. “A lawyer who admittedly was strung out on drugs and more than anything else, a man who’s accused of killing his wife and his son.”
“And despite those type of facts that would certainly make folks interested, I believe when I decided to make the entire process open to the public and open to the media and broadcast wherever it needed to be … nationwide and worldwide, I wasn’t experiencing any of that — I was simply a judge in a trial doing my job, as I’ve done repeatedly over the years,” he continued.
Newman sentenced Murdaugh to two consecutive life sentences on March 3, one day after jurors convicted the former lawyer in the murders of his wife, Maggie Murdaugh, and youngest son, Paul Murdaugh.
Before announcing his sentence, Newman spoke directly to Murdaugh and said he will have to deal with the deaths of his wife and son in his “own soul.”
“I know you have to see Paul and Maggie during the night time when you’re attempting to go to sleep,” Newman said. “I’m sure they come and visit you.”
Newman elaborated on those comments in his speech at Cleveland State.
“I don’t believe that he hated his wife, and certainly I did not believe that he did not love his son, but he committed the unforgivable, unimaginable crime, and there’s no way that he’ll be able to sleep peacefully,” he said.
He also spoke of his ruling to allow Murdaugh’s alleged financial crimes into evidence in the murder…
Read the full article here