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Hidden Killers With Tony Brueski | True Crime News & Commentary

Why Did The State Refuse To Charge Becky Hill With Jury Tampering?

Hidden Killers With Tony Brueski | True Crime News & Commentary

True Crime Today

True Crime, News Commentary, News

3.3907 Ratings

🗓️ 26 May 2026

⏱️ 30 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary


Five days after the South Carolina Supreme Court unanimously overturned Alex Murdaugh's murder convictions, his defense team filed a federal civil rights lawsuit against Becky Hill. Seventeen pages. Section 1983. Six hundred thousand dollars in damages directed to the receivership. Jim Griffin said publicly the money isn't the point — the subpoena power is. Depositions. Sworn testimony. The ability to ask questions under oath that the state never bothered to ask.

The Supreme Court ruled Hill put "her fingers on the scales of justice." The state prosecutor who handled Hill's criminal case said there wasn't enough evidence to charge her with jury tampering — four months before the Supreme Court ruled that's exactly what happened. The defense argues the state never treated Hill's conduct as the constitutional violation it was. This federal suit is designed to go where the state wouldn't.

Eric Faddis breaks down what a Section 1983 claim requires — why it's typically aimed at law enforcement rather than a court clerk, what Murdaugh's team has to prove, and what civil discovery opens up that the criminal process never did. He explains why Griffin emphasized that no recovered funds go to Murdaugh personally — everything flows to the receivership.

The broader question is why the retrial matters at all. Murdaugh is 57 and serving 40 years federal — he's never leaving prison regardless. But Maggie Murdaugh was 52 and Paul Murdaugh was 22. They were shot to death on their family's property, and as of the Supreme Court's ruling, nobody stands convicted of killing them. The guilty verdicts are erased. The life sentences are vacated. A financial crimes sentence is not a murder conviction by proxy. The constitutional obligation to answer who killed them hasn't been extinguished — it's been reset.

People personally harmed by Murdaugh's financial crimes have said they'll go through the process again. The Attorney General is reportedly considering the death penalty.

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#AlexMurdaugh #BeckyHill #MurdaughRetrial #Section1983 #JuryTampering #MaggieMurdaugh #PaulMurdaugh #EricFaddis #HiddenKillers #TrueCrime

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This is the big breakdown.

0:02.2

A long look back at some of the biggest stories we're covering for you at the Hidden Killers podcast and True Crime Today.

0:09.1

This is Hidden Killers with Tony Bruske.

0:12.2

Here now, Tony Bruske.

0:17.0

Why retrying Alec Murdoch isn't optional.

0:22.4

It is the only path to justice.

0:25.8

You can hear a lot of people ask the question.

0:28.3

Some of them already are all over social media and comments sections of their podcasts.

0:32.8

Alec Murdoch, 57 years old, he's serving 40 years in federal prison for stealing approximately 12 million from his clients.

0:39.5

He's got a concurrent 27-year state sentence for financial crimes. He's going to likely die behind bars if all that holds.

0:48.9

That's the mathematical reality of his situation, regardless of what happens in the courtroom from this point forward.

0:58.0

Maybe.

0:59.3

So why spend millions of taxpayer dollars on a retrial?

1:03.3

Why put families through another trial?

1:05.4

Why drag the state of South Carolina through another six-week media circus for a man who is never walking out

1:11.9

of prison. Why even do any of this? It's a fair question. On the surface, if you don't

1:21.9

understand a lot about the case. And I understand why people ask it, but the answer is simple,

1:28.5

and it's not complicated,

1:31.0

and it doesn't require a law degree to understand.

1:33.7

Maggie Murdoch was 52 years old.

1:35.0

Paul Murdoch was 22.

1:41.4

They were shot to death at close range on their family's property on a June evening. And as of the moment, the Supreme Court issued its ruling, nobody has been

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