Alex Murdaugh Wrote a Check to a Cop — Nobody Can Explain Why

Alex Murdaugh Wrote a Check to a Cop — Nobody Can Explain Why

Author: Real Story Media May 12, 2026 Duration: 31:34

A new book is reframing everything about the Murdaugh case — and it starts with the patterns nobody was paying attention to.

James Lasdun's The Family Man: Blood and Betrayal in the House of Murdaugh spent years tracing Alex's behavior through original interviews and evidence that never made it to trial. The picture it paints isn't of a man who snapped. It's of a man who had been rehearsing.

The book reveals that the night of the boat crash — years before the murders — Alex showed up at the hospital and immediately began trying to control the narrative. He tried to get into Morgan Doughty's room even after she told nurses to keep him out. He cornered Connor Cook and told him to keep his mouth shut. Morgan's first written statement that night said Connor was driving when the boat hit the bridge. That story was rewritten the next day.

After the staged roadside shooting months after the murders, Alex sat with a sketch artist and helped produce a composite that resembled Anthony Cook — a boat crash survivor. He had a bullet wound in his head and was still framing people.

Lasdun also uncovered a $5,000 backdated check to a police chief who was at the Moselle crime scene, connections to a business with drug-smuggling ties, and evidence the state agency investigating the case told conflicting stories about where key evidence was found.

Part 1 of a three-part interview. The blueprint was hiding in plain sight.

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From the team at Real Story Media, True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews cuts through the noise to deliver a clear, daily account of the stories gripping the true crime community. This isn't just a recap of headlines; it's a focused dive into the latest developments, ongoing investigations, and the pressing legal questions that emerge each day. We move beyond the surface, offering thoughtful commentary that considers the real-world impact of these cases on families, communities, and the justice system itself. The daily format of this podcast ensures you're informed with a current, sober perspective, while exclusive interviews with journalists, experts, and sometimes those close to the cases provide depth you won't find elsewhere. If you're looking for a reliable source that respects the gravity of the subject while satisfying a need to understand the ever-evolving narrative of crime and justice, this is the essential listen. Tune in for a straightforward, daily update that prioritizes factual reporting and meaningful context over sensationalism.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 100

True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews
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