Coworker's Confrontation with Alex Murdaugh Hours Before His Family's Tragic Death

Chisom Ndianefo
A photo of Alex Murdaugh with his son and wife at an outdoor setting.
twitter | CBS Evening News

It's a wild world out there!

Alex Murdaugh was confronted by his coworkers, specifically the chief financial officer of the South Carolina law firm where he worked, about financial mismanagement sometime in 2021, just hours before he was accused of murdering his wife and son.

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The Confrontation

Alex Murdaugh being helped out of a car by two armed police officers.
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According to the CFO Jeanne Seckinger, who testified at Murdaugh’s murder trial in the Colleton County courthouse on Thursday. she said;

“He gave me a very dirty look, not a look I’d ever received from Alex. Just a kind of frustrated-with-me look.”

Questioning Him About The Missing Money

Seckinger had been questioning him regarding the $792,000 in fees that her staff had been unable to locate, despite Murdaugh's assurances that they were stored in an account that was open to the public.

She claimed that she entered his office on the second floor via the stairs on June 7, 2021, and shut the door to converse with him directly.

She had grown to believe that Murdaugh, whom she had known for years since high school, had stolen the money by setting up for it to be paid to him directly rather than the company.

“I told him I had reason to believe he had received those funds himself and I needed proof that he had not,”

Seckinger testified.

The Two Events That Altered The Confrontation

Seckinger testifying in court
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Then, two events took place.

The first was a phone call that halted Seckinger and Murdaugh's confrontation. He got a call informing him that his father, a powerful local prosecutor and former partner at the firm, was in the final stages of dying in a Savannah hospital after his health had deteriorated.

A few hours later, Seckinger received a call from a friend informing her that Murdaugh's wife and son had been murdered at their remote hunting lodge by an unidentified assailant. Law firm employees were so horrified that they decided to shut down their business for a week. Seckinger then decided that any inquiries about missing money could be postponed until the end of the year, at which point accounts would need to be settled.

Letting Him Off The Hook After The Event

Letting him go
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“Alex was distraught and upset and not in the office much. Nobody wanted to harass him about nothing that we thought was really missing,” she said. “We had several months until the end of the year to clear it up, so we were not going to harass him at that point in time.”

The Prosecution's Claim Of Why Alex Acted Out Of Character

Prosecutors claim that Murdaugh had that exact plan in mind when he allegedly decided to shoot his wife, Maggie, and son Paul at around 9 p.m. that evening.

According to the prosecution, Murdaugh thought he was about to lose his job, law license, and freedom because he thought the company would reveal his financial wrongdoings. He needed to give himself some grace and time.

Calling Witnesses

A witness in court
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Earlier in the day, Judge Clifton Newman ordered prosecutors to start calling witnesses to discuss Murdaugh's alleged financial crimes—and thus his motive for murder—because defense attorneys had questioned a longtime family friend about whether they thought he could have had any reason to kill.

To what extent and how it will be presented to the jury, the judge has not yet decided on the 99 financial crime charges that Murdaugh is also facing.

The Judge Is Set To Make A Decision

The judge said that either the prosecution and defense need to come to an agreement on how to admit the financial evidence without significantly lengthening the trial (Murdaugh's attorneys had argued this could add at least two weeks to the case) or he would make a decision, most likely on Friday.

Learning About His Theft

Thief
Giphy | The Office

Seckinger detailed in her testimony on Thursday how she and other legal team members eventually learned that Murdaugh had been stealing for more than ten years from numerous clients and the legal team itself.

Seckinger went on to say that in May 2021, she had observed Murdaugh attempting to structure the legal fees he had received from a case in an unusual way.

What The Firm Thought At First

Although she and the other firm partners did not yet think Murdaugh was stealing money, they were worried that he was attempting to avoid the law and conceal his income. She said that they didn't want to be a part of that because it would be wrong.

Later that month, she discovered the missing $792,000. This led to the secret meeting on June 7 in his office.

Alex Murdaugh Got His Friend Involved

Chris Wilson feeling betrayed in court
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Murdaugh had collaborated on that case with Chris Wilson, a longtime friend, and colleague at another firm, whose share of the legal costs totaled $792,000.

He claimed in his testimony on Thursday that Murdaugh had asked him to make the check payable to him personally rather than the company in March 2021 so he could use the money to buy an annuity with the approval of his employer.

Betraying Wilson

Wilson testified in court that Murdaugh had told him he had "messed up" and could not structure the fees as he had hoped to do a month after the killings.

He asked his friend to temporarily cover the remaining $192,000, which he claimed had been locked up in an annuity, after returning $600,000 to Wilson's trust.

Why It Still Wasn't Adding Up

Seckinger claimed that in July, Murdaugh and Wilson sent her an email stating that the $792,000 was in the trust and could be transferred whenever convenient. That assurance, according to Seckinger, temporarily put an end to her inquiry.

Seckinger, however, decided to double-check the accounts at the beginning of September 2021 and found additional irregularities involving several checks that Murdaugh had signed over to his fictitious company.

Another Mystery

Gun
Unsplash | Tom Def

The firm's management, which included Randy Murdaugh, Murdaugh's older brother, scheduled a meeting for Friday, Sept. 3, to discuss the issue.

Seckinger claimed Randy concurred that Murdaugh appeared to have committed theft and that he needed to be confronted right away.

Seckinger, however, received another startling phone call that Saturday, the day after Murdaugh decided to resign, informing her that Murdaugh had been shot in the head.

The Reason For Murdaugh's Actions

Fortunately, the injury was superficial. After that, Murdaugh was accused of insurance fraud.

Wilson had confronted Murdaugh about his resignation and the alleged theft the day before the shooting on the side of the road.

Wilson reported that Murdaugh sobbed as he confessed to robbing him and others to support a 20-year drug addiction.