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Hidden Killers With Tony Brueski | True Crime News & Commentary

The Court Clerk Who Wanted to Be Famous and Destroyed the Murdaugh Murder Verdict

Hidden Killers With Tony Brueski | True Crime News & Commentary

True Crime Today

News, True Crime, News Commentary

3.3907 Ratings

🗓️ 19 May 2026

⏱️ 20 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Becky Hill wasn’t some rogue spectator who wandered into a courtroom. She was the elected Clerk of Court in Colleton County — chosen by the same community that filled the jury pool, entrusted with managing the evidence and protecting the process. And according to the SC Supreme Court’s unanimous ruling, she used that position of trust to push Alex Murdaugh’s jury toward a guilty verdict so she could sell more copies of a book she was writing.

Tony Brueski walks through what Hill did, why it mattered legally, and how one person’s ambition forced the state to erase a double murder conviction. The justices called her conduct breathtaking and disgraceful. They said she placed her fingers on the scales of justice. They found she told jurors not to be fooled by the defense and urged them to watch Murdaugh’s body language — coded instructions to distrust the defendant before deliberations began.

The ruling turned on a legal distinction between two different standards. The lower court asked whether the defense could prove Hill’s comments changed the verdict. The Supreme Court asked whether the state could prove they didn’t. That shift — from defense burden to state burden — is what overturned two murder convictions and two life sentences. Hill’s interference was so severe it triggered an automatic presumption that the trial was unfair.

Hill’s criminal case only reinforced what the court found. She pled guilty to perjury, obstruction, and misconduct. She got probation for conduct that will cost the state millions. Her co-author halted the book over plagiarism concerns. The publication that was supposed to be her legacy never materialized. What did materialize is a Supreme Court opinion that will define her name permanently.

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#BeckyHill #AlexMurdaugh #MurdaughTrial #JuryTampering #SCSupremeCourt #TrueCrime #ColletonCounty #MurdaughRetrial #HiddenKillers #SouthCarolina

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This is Hidden Killers with Tony Bruske.

0:03.2

Here now, Tony Bruske.

0:06.6

The South Carolina Supreme Court has seen a lot of misconduct.

0:11.3

It's a court that's been reviewing judicial proceedings for over 200 years.

0:17.9

And in all that time, every bad actor, every corrupt official, every person who's abused

0:23.9

their position, the court has never used the word it used to describe what Becky Hill did.

0:31.8

Unprecedented. Not the murders. Obviously, she didn't commit the murders. Not the defendant,

0:37.1

not the financial crimes involving the murders. Obviously, she didn't commit the murders. Not the defendant. Not the financial crimes involving the case where she did unprecedented work.

0:46.7

The thing that the court called unprecedented was the behavior of one woman.

0:52.7

The elected clerk of court in Colleton County, who was given the most

0:59.7

important job and the most important trial in South Carolina history and used it in an

1:07.1

attempt to sell a self-publish book that she, in fact, plagiarized.

1:13.7

How do you plagiarize a book that you're self-publishing about a case that at the time

1:22.3

no one had written about... I don't know how you... That's like those are some hoops.

1:26.2

Those are some hoops to jump through.

1:30.7

This is before AI even, too.

1:32.7

I mean, it's like, Jesus.

1:36.3

The justices called her conduct breathtaking and disgraceful.

1:40.7

They said she placed her fingers on the scales of justice.

1:43.6

They found that she became a character witness on behalf of the state,

1:47.4

encouraging the jurors to question Murdoz's credibility,

1:50.4

and they determined that her interference was so severe,

...

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