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Attorney Friend at Center of Alex Murdaugh Scandal Is Indicted for First Time on 18 Counts

 
Alex Murdaugh appears in an Oct. 14, 2021 mugshot obtained from the Orange County, Fla. Department of Corrections.

Alex Murdaugh appears in an Oct. 14, 2021 mugshot obtained from the Orange County, Fla. Department of Corrections.

South Carolina prosecutors have unveiled a superseding indictment against the heir to a legal dynasty and one of his closest friends.

The 44-page charging document, obtained by Law&Crime on Wednesday morning, alleges four new counts against Richard Alexander “Alex” Murdaugh. It also alleges eighteen separate charges against Cory Howerton Fleming, an attorney who has been described as Murdaugh’s best friend and former college roommate.

The indictment marks the first time Fleming has been charged in connection with the sprawling grand jury investigation surrounding Murdaugh’s various alleged schemes and nefarious doings, the South Carolina Attorney General’s Office said in a press release.

In summary, the document alleges that Fleming played a role in helping Murdaugh pocket settlement money that was supposed to go the family of a Murdaugh housekeeper who died in 2018.

Cory Howerton Fleming. (Image via screengrab from NewsNation/YouTube.)

Cory Howerton Fleming. (Image via screengrab from NewsNation/YouTube.)

Murdaugh was previously charged for allegedly cooking up a scheme to hire a hitman to kill him in order to trigger a payout from an insurance company.  He was subsequently indicted in November 2021, December 2021, and January 2022 on what has added up to a sum total of 71 counts, the AG’s office said. Those counts involve breach of trust with fraudulent intent, obtaining property by false pretenses, money laundering, computer crimes, and forgery.

The new indictment “charges Murdaugh and Fleming together with one count of Criminal Conspiracy for conspiring to surreptitiously give Murdaugh a share of Fleming’s fee from the multi-million dollar settlement of civil claims against Murdaugh resulting from the death of Gloria Satterfield,” the AG’s office said.

Gloria Satterfield was a Murdaugh housekeeper who died — allegedly in a trip-and-fall accident — on Feb. 26, 2018.

It has long been alleged that Murdaugh was the one who connected Satterfield’s heirs with Fleming; Fleming would allegedly represent the Satterfield estate’s claims against Murdaugh (as Satterfield’s employer).  But the deep connections between Fleming and Murdaugh stymied that case and created a conflict of interest, the Satterfield family has since alleged.

The AG’s office continued:

As to Murdaugh specifically, in addition to prior charges of Obtaining Signature or Property by False Pretenses, Value $10,000 or More (3 counts); Money Laundering, Value $100,000 or More (3 counts); and Computer Crime, Value $10,000 or More (3 counts), the State Grand Jury charged Murdaugh with three counts of False Statement or Misrepresentation in Connection with an Insurance Transaction, Value $50,000 or More. The new charges arise out of the alleged scheme to defraud multiple insurance companies in the course of surreptitiously delivering to Murdaugh a share of the proceeds resulting from the settlement of the claims against him. As before, the indictment alleges schemes by Murdaugh to defraud the victims of $3,483,431.95.

As to Fleming specifically, in addition to the criminal conspiracy charge, the State Grand Jury charged Fleming with three counts of False Statement or Misrepresentation in Connection with an Insurance Transaction, Value $50,000 or More; four counts of Breach of Trust with Fraudulent Intent, Value $10,000 or more; three counts of Breach of Trust with Fraudulent Intent, Value More than $2,000 but less than $10,000; three counts of Money Laundering, Value $100,000 or More; three counts of Money Laundering, Value More than $300 but less than $20,000; and one count of Computer Crime, Value More than $10,000. Fleming’s charges arise out of the alleged scheme to defraud multiple insurance companies, the personal representatives of the Estate of Gloria Satterfield, and the heirs of Gloria Satterfield in the course of surreptitiously delivering to Murdaugh a share of the proceeds resulting from settlement of the claims against him. The indictment alleges schemes by Fleming to defraud the victims of not only the $3,483,431.95 delivered to Murdaugh, but also of $140,000 wrongfully appropriated or retained by Fleming.

The AG’s press release contains a veritable laundry list of possible punishments for the myriad charges.

Murdaugh has long been in custody and remains locked up.  Both he and Fleming were suspended from practicing law last year.  Fleming’s name has been scrubbed from his former law firm’s website.

Murdaugh, the son of at least four generations of local attorneys and prosecutors in South Carolina’s Lowcountry region, said he found his wife Margaret “Maggie” Murdaugh, 52, and their son Paul Murdaugh, 22, shot and killed on family property in Islandton on the night of June 7, 2021.  Both were reportedly shot multiple times with different weapons.  Paul had been charged in connection with a deadly and allegedly drunken boating crash that claimed the life of Mallory Beach, 19.  Scrutiny on the family increased after the boating crash, the subsequent criminal and civil litigation surrounding it, and (naturally) the subsequent deaths of Maggie and Paul.  Reports that Alex Murdaugh had months later been shot in the head — claims the state says were part of an effort to off himself and save his surviving son from financial ruin — spread quickly last September and led to myriad probes into the family’s dealings.  Those probes included the one that has now ensnared Fleming for allegedly helping Murdaugh pocket settlement money that was supposed to go to the Satterfield family.

Fleming also represented Connor Cook, a passenger in the boat Paul Murdaugh crashed.  A civil lawsuit by Cook says Fleming sought to keep Cook quiet about who was actually driving the boat.  That civil lawsuit also alleges that Alex Murdaugh for a time sought to blame the crash on Cook, rather than on his own son Paul.

Eric S. Bland, an attorney for Satterfield’s family, released the following statement via email to Law&Crime in reaction to the indictment:

I think the grand jury has spoken loudly and clearly that Cory Fleming was not just another one of Alex Murdaugh Victims and did not believe his defense that he was too trusting of Alex.

Justice may move slow but when it moves it comes crashing down like a tidal wave.

It’s a golden day for justice. It.s bittersweet. As a lawyer I have made it my career’s Work to hold Lawyers accountable for their miss deeds and breach of trust that they owe their clients. But I am not naive, This is just another blackeye for our profession and creates further miss trust that some of the public has regarding my profession.

Murdaugh’s spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Fleming is scheduled to appear in court Thursday morning, according to the South Carolina Attorney General’s Office.  He is scheduled to turn himself in.  Reports that Fleming was in custody as of Wednesday afternoon were inaccurate, said Robert Kittle, the AG’s communications director, in an email to Law&Crime.  Court records do not yet list an attorney for Fleming.

Read the full indictment below:

[Editor’s note: this piece, which began as a breaking news report, has been updated.  It has also been corrected.  The original press release from the AG’s office said one of Murdaugh’s indictments occurred in January 2021.  The correct date is January 2022.]

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Aaron Keller holds a juris doctor degree from the University of New Hampshire School of Law and a broadcast journalism degree from Syracuse University. He is a former anchor and executive producer for the Law&Crime Network and is now deputy editor-in-chief for the Law&Crime website. DISCLAIMER:  This website is for general informational purposes only. You should not rely on it for legal advice. Reading this site or interacting with the author via this site does not create an attorney-client relationship. This website is not a substitute for the advice of an attorney. Speak to a competent lawyer in your jurisdiction for legal advice and representation relevant to your situation.