Does Alex Murdaugh's Motive Make Any Sense?



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Episode 1: https://youtu.be/qe71-ECgvHM
Episode 2: https://youtu.be/lHm4joezYsk
Episode 3: https://youtu.be/vjx6qU6hXdw
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Episode 6: https://youtu.be/LMWODjRZgcc
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38 thoughts on “Does Alex Murdaugh's Motive Make Any Sense?”

  1. If you found this video helpful, please send it to a friend, family member, or co-worker who is interested in the case! If this is your first time here, I've made 8 other videos on the Murdaugh saga very similar to this one. Check em out! Links in description. Thank you!!

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  2. I think there was a number of factors Maggie wanted to settle the boat case ie give them the money so it would go away for Paul she also wanted to buy another property and was under the impression they could afford it so the walls were closing in on all sides

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  3. Isn't the bigger issue that his wife was going to divorce him because of him financial issues?
    She had hired a forensic auditor to look into their finances and had confronted him about it.
    Obviously these financial crimes play into this, but I would expect that the divorce would cause him bigger issues.

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  4. What insurance money would Alex have got from the death of his wife and son. Since his homeowners insurance paid out generously for his maids death? Life insurance paid to Alex is a motive

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  5. I've watched LOTS of videos on the Murdaugh case. This one is the clearest, most concise explanation of Alex's crimes I've seen so far. Now it all makes sense. Keep digging, Eric! And thank you!!

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  6. In addition to what you've discovered, Maggie had also filed for divorce. I believe she knew about his financial crimes and had threatened to turn him in. There is also a possibility that Paul had joined with his mother in this threat. This would add to the incentive to kill them both. Either that, or Paul had stumbled into the murder scene of his mother and was killed because he was a witness.

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  7. Good follow up to this story. Wish it was attached to the original tragic story. So much has been missed to those who knew nothing about the boating accident. Solid story but please do a better back story next time. I say this with all respect to your doc. God Bless 🙏.

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  8. Let's assert that thelis motive makes any sense (I don't think it does). It's literally impossible for him to have committed the murders, clean up, and dispose of any evidence in even the extended timeline the state presented at trial.

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  9. Motive is actually not required to prove in a murder case. It can definitely help the prosecution (and I think it would be crazy to not argue a motive), but it's not an element of the charged crimes. Regardless, I'm sure most jurys would struggle to make a guilty verdict without motive.

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  10. Wow Eric, you’ve outdone yourself on this Murdaugh investigation! I am amazed, not only at what you’ve uncovered, but the way you’ve put all the pieces together. Especially since this motive thing has been nagging at me since the trial began. Thanks for say there’s got to be more to this story! Where’s the money?

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  11. I watched the trial live, and Creighton never got close to proving Alex committed the murders. Alex was convicted because he’s scum from his clients. The boat lawsuits were going away and there are far too many unanswered question. I got tired of hearing SLED say “not my job” when asked why they didn’t collect/do something.

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  12. I heard somewhere that he was spending $50,000 per week to feed his addiction, there’s no way unless he’s paying $200 per pill. I’m hoping you can get to the bottom of that lie and figure out where that money was really going

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  13. It's an interesting theory. I still feel that Alex all but turned himself in and provoked the jury to a guilty verdict, which begs the question- for me, what was worse than life imprisonment? Of course, you may have nailed it because your assessment seems solid. I'm just not satisfied yet.

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