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Jun 29, 2026

Alex Murdaugh retrial set for next year after South Carolina Supreme Court overturned double murder conviction 

Alex Murdaugh retrial set for next year after South Carolina Supreme Court overturned double murder conviction 

His 2023 conviction was thrown out over “shocking jury interference.”

ByJanice McDonald and Peter CharalambousJune 29, 2026, 11:48 AM

    Alex Murdaugh's retrial on charges alleging he murdered his wife and son has been set for next year. 

    Newly assigned Judge Debra McCaslin set the trial date for April 5, 2027, saying that once she sets a date, she sticks to it.

    Murdaugh shuffled into a full courtroom in chains and his prison jumpsuit for a status conference on Monday, as he returned to court for the first time since the South Carolina Supreme Court overturned his double murder conviction over "shocking jury interference."

    Alex Murdaugh arrives for a judicial hearing, June 29, 2026, at the Marc H. Westbrook Judicial Center in Lexington, S.C.Tracy Glantz/The State via AP

    A jury had found him guilty in 2023 of killing his wife, Margaret "Maggie" Murdaugh, 52, and younger son, Paul Murdaugh, 22, in a gruesome crime that captured global headlines. Both victims were found dead from multiple gunshot wounds near the dog kennels at the family's hunting estate in 2021.

    McCaslin had a laundry list of questions for both sides, the first of which was whether discovery had been met and if both sides had everything that they needed.

    Defense attorney Dick Harpootlian replied that "we don't know what we don't know," implying that new evidence could still be out there. 

    Defense attorney Jim Griffin said he wants the DNA under Maggie's fingernails to be analyzed by genetic genealogy. He said he is not sure how long that will take, using that as an argument as to why the retrial cannot happen quickly.

    RelatedAlex Murdaugh murder convictions overturned by South Carolina Supreme Court

    The defense had filed a motion, which it later withdrew, requesting that Murdaugh be allowed to appear in street clothes, saying the orange prison jumpsuit and chains would be prejudicial against him in front of the jury.

    In a dramatic moment, Harpootlian had Murdaugh stand up, pointing out his multiple chains and accusing the state of "parading him around in a jumpsuit like an animal."

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