DEVELOPING Person on fire outside Trump's hush money trial rushed away on a stretcher
A person who was on fire in a park outside the New York courthouse where Donald Trump’s hush money trial is taking place has been rushed away on a stretcher.
A prominent South Carolina lawyer who found the bodies of his wife and son three months ago tried to arrange his own death earlier this month so his son would get a $10 million life insurance payment, but the planned fatal shot only grazed his head, state police said Tuesday.
The shooter, Curtis Edward Smith, was charged with assisted suicide, insurance fraud and several other counts in the Sept. 4 shooting of Alex Murdaugh on a lonely highway in Hampton County, the State Law Enforcement Division said in a statement.
Murdaugh's father, grandfather and great-grandfather all held the office of solicitor in the area for more than 80 years and other family members were prominent civil attorneys in the region. Murdaugh himself was an authorized volunteer prosecutor supporting his father's cases, a relationship the office severed this month as Murdaugh said he was seeking rehabilitation for an oxycodone addiction.
Murdaugh's lawyers said Smith sold him drugs and took advantage of his mental illness and deep depression over the deaths of his wife, Maggie, and son Paul, as well as his father's death from cancer the same week. They said Murdaugh told them all about what happened Monday and they called state police to share his confession to the assisted suicide attempt.
"He didn't want law enforcement spending more time on this fake crime instead of focusing on solving the murders of Maggie and Paul," attorney Dick Harpootlian said on the Today show.
Later Wednesday, state police opened a sixth investigation into Murdaugh and his family, looking into the 2018 death of a housekeeper and nanny who, according to a wrongful death settlement, was killed in a trip-and-fall accident at the Murdaugh home that was never reported to the local coroner and was listed as a natural death.
Murdaugh was not charged in his own shooting Tuesday night, but agents called him a co-defendant and said more charges were expected. Harpootlian said he expects Murdaugh to be charged in his own shooting, but doesn't think his client knows who killed his wife and son.
"Clearly he is distraught about their deaths. He did not murder them," Harpootlian said.
Murdaugh gave Smith the gun to kill him and he followed Murdaugh to Old Salkehatchie Road, firing one shot at the lawyer as he stood in the road, a state agent said in a sworn statement.
But that bullet only grazed Murdaugh's head and he was able to call 911 for help, authorities said.
Murdaugh wanted Smith to kill him so his surviving son would get his $10 million life insurance policy, state agents said.
Smith drove off after the shooting and disposed of the gun, authorities said.
Smith sold Murdaugh drugs, and the lawyer found his former client Saturday and "30 minutes later this guy is shooting him in the head. Didn't try to persuade him not to do it," Harpootlian said.
Murdaugh said last week through a family spokesperson that he pulled over after his Mercedes SUV's low tire pressure light came on. A man passing by in a pickup truck asked if he was having car trouble and then shot at him, Murdaugh claimed.
Agents said Smith, 61, confessed Tuesday and was charged with assisted suicide, assault and battery of a high aggravated nature, pointing and presenting a firearm, insurance fraud, conspiracy to commit insurance fraud, distribution of methamphetamine and possession of marijuana.
It wasn't immediately known if he had a lawyer to speak on his behalf.
Still unsolved are the June 7 killings of 52-year-old Maggie Murdaugh and her 22-year-old son Paul Murdaugh. Alex Murdaugh discovered the bodies of his wife and son at their Colleton County home. Both had been shot multiple times.
Two days after the shooting, Murdaugh announced he was going into rehab for an opioid addiction. He apologized to his family and said he was leaving his law firm. His law license was temporarily suspended.
"The murders of my wife and son have caused an incredibly difficult time in my life. I have made a lot of decisions that I truly regret," Murdaugh said, without going into details.
A few hours later, the PMPED Law Firm announced Murdaugh had taken money from the business and was fired from the firm. The amount of money has not been announced, but the firm and Murdaugh's lawyers have suggested it could be over $1 million.
Murdaugh's lawyers are doing their own investigation into the deaths and have a possible suspect, Harpootlian said, declining to give more details other than to say "the motive would be personal."
Along with the killings of Maggie and Paul Murdaugh and the shooting of Alex Murdaugh, the State Law Enforcement Division is also investigating the missing money, whether anyone tried to obstruct an investigation into a 2019 boat crash for which Paul Murdaugh was eventually charged and a July 2015 hit-and-run death in Hampton County.
The agency announced Wednesday that they are now investigating Gloria Satterfield's death. A lawsuit filed by her sons Wednesday said they were told the 57-year-old woman died after falling in the Murdaugh home in February 2018. She had worked as a nanny and housekeeper for them for two decades.
Alex Murdaugh had friends arrange a $505,000 settlement for the sons but did not get their approval, the lawsuit said.
The settlement reached nearly a year ago set aside $166,000 for attorney fees and the sons have not seen any of the $505,000, according to the lawsuit.
Hampton County Coroner Angela Topper asked for the state investigation, saying Satterfield's death certificate lists she died of natural causes, which is inconsistent with a trip-and-fall accidental death. She said her office was not informed so it could perform an autopsy.
State police said other information gathered during their Murdaugh investigations also led them to look into Satterfield's death. They didn't provide additional details.
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