South-Carolina
Murdaugh attorneys head to SC Supreme Court in quest to overturn murder convictions
COLUMBIA — Murdaugh mania will return to South Carolina when its most famous inmate asks the state Supreme Court on Feb. 11 to overturn his convictions for murdering his wife and son.
Three years ago, former Lowcountry lawyer Alex Murdaugh was convicted of gunning down his loved ones on the family’s farm in rural Colleton County on June 7, 2021. His six-week state murder trial in early 2023 was big news and drew a large television audience. Many were astounded by the depth of Murdaugh’s criminality and the quirks of the sleepy, secluded and swampy S.C. backcountry in which they occurred.
Murdaugh testified in his own defense during the trial. He denied shooting Maggie Murdaugh, 52, and Paul Murdaugh, 22, beside dog kennels on their 1,700-acre property, but jurors found his claims incredible and inconsistent. Prior to the trial, Murdaugh repeatedly denied being at Moselle near the time of the murders, only to change his story when he took the stand.
What’s more, video evidence presented at trial by prosecutors indicated Murdaugh was with his wife and son shortly before they were killed. Murdaugh’s believability was further diminished by his admission of being a drug addict and prolific thief who stole millions of dollars over years from a multitude of victims, including clients, his law firm and others. His victims included especially vulnerable people, including a paraplegic and minors who survived car wrecks and looked to Murdaugh for legal help.
Trial-watchers and a large part of the general public became mesmerized by the spectacular implosion of Murdaugh, a seemingly successful litigator who was born into a legal dynasty in Hampton County. Murdaugh was part of the fourth generation to work for his storied family law firm, a small-town operation that made big profits by suing large corporations. His great-grandfather, grandfather and father also served as the top prosecutor of a five-county Lowcountry circuit for 86 consecutive years, from 1920 to 2006.
Yet Murdaugh squandered this heritage and privilege, stealing huge sums of money again and again from legal clients in schemes that involved some of his friends, including a lawyer and banker who are both now in prison. Following his son Paul’s involvement in a drunken late-night boat crash in Beaufort in 2019 that claimed the life of a 19-year-old woman, Alex Murdaugh’s life began to unravel and his schemes, at least some of them, came to light. The Murdaugh saga has proved so deep, dark and twisting that it has spawned the publication of books, podcasts, television shows and movies.
At 9:30 a.m. on Feb. 11, the S.C. Supreme Court will consider whether to order another episode of the real-life drama, so to speak, by mandating a murder retrial.
There will be no witnesses called at the hearing and no new evidence will be introduced, but Murdaugh’s attorneys will appear in person to argue before justices that their client received an unfair trial and his murder convictions should be overturned.
In filings to the court, they have concentrated on two major complaints: that a former court official, Colleton County Clerk of Court Becky Hill, improperly influenced the jury during the trial; and that the trial judge improperly allowed certain evidence and testimony to be presented, including information concerning Murdaugh’s many financial crimes and firearms that were not alleged to be the murder weapons.
“This case was built on investigative failures, fabricated evidence, and jury tampering. The State ignored exonerating evidence, misrepresented forensic findings, and relied on inflammatory but irrelevant financial evidence to distract from the absence of proof that Alex committed these murders,” said a Nov. 6 legal filing by Murdaugh’s legal team, which includes lead lawyers Dick Harpootlian and Jim Griffin.
Prosecutors within the S.C. Attorney General’s office are expected to rebut these claims. In their own legal filings, prosecutors have downplayed the effect of Hill’s alleged statements to jurors.
“The jury convicted (Murdaugh) because he was obviously guilty,” said part of a filing by the attorney general’s office, which includes lead Murdaugh prosecutor Creighton Waters.
Joe McCulloch, a frequent legal commentator and a lawyer in Columbia, represents four people involved in the Murdaugh saga, including two jurors from the murder trial. He said he believes the Supreme Court should grant a new trial based on his knowledge and the arguments made by the defense.
He mentioned, for example, how the prosecution was allowed to introduce a variety of Murdaugh family firearms into evidence during the double-murder trial even though neither of the suspected murder weapons — a shotgun and a semi-automatic rifle — were definitively recovered. During the trial, these other weapons, which were very similar or identical to the suspected weapons, were used frequently in demonstrations by prosecutors and defense lawyers, or their witnesses, and arguably made an impression on jurors.
“They were props, and props belong in movies,” said McCulloch, who added that the weapons were allowed in the jury room during deliberations. “After six weeks they didn’t put a sticker on them that said, ‘These are not murder weapons.’ ”
McCulloch, who is also an adjunct professor at the Joseph F. Rice School of Law at the University of South Carolina, expected Murdaugh’s lawyers to aggressively argue that Hill improperly influenced jurors by making comments casting doubt on the veracity of Murdaugh’s testimony, among other communications.
In December, Hill pleaded guilty in Colleton County to charges of obstruction of justice and perjury for showing photographs contained in a sealed court exhibit to a reporter during the trial and lying about it. She also pleaded guilty to two counts of misconduct in office for improperly taking bonuses and using her position to promote a book she wrote about the trial.
Hill, however, was never charged with jury tampering for her comments to jurors, a group she supervised for the six-week trial and interacted with frequently.
A conviction for jury tampering would have likely bolstered Murdaugh’s chance of making a successful appeal.
McCulloch doesn’t believe Hill was investigated as fully as she could have been by state police and prosecutors. “There was less than a 110 percent, enthusiastic effort to investigate the jury tampering allegations,” he said.
Yet Eric Bland, another Columbia lawyer deeply entwined in the Murdaugh cases, believes Murdaugh received a fair trial and that the state Supreme Court will be disinclined to rule his way.
Bland thought the varied evidence and testimony allowed into trial would survive review. The effect of Hill’s communications with jurors, however, could be another matter.
“That’s a closer call. It arguably touches on Alex’s 6th Amendment rights” to a fair trial, said Bland, who represents seven of Murdaugh’s financial victims and six jurors from Murdaugh’s murder trial.
Bland said that even if the state Supreme Court declines to overturn the verdict, Murdaugh could eventually find success appealing to the U.S. Supreme Court, where justices might consider other case law than the standard so far applied in Murdaugh’s case in South Carolina.
Whatever occurs, said Bland, in some ways the issue is moot; even without a murder conviction, Murdaugh, 56, is already slated to serve at least 70 years in state and federal prisons for crimes beyond murder.
South-Carolina
Clyburn’s redistricting win fuels SC’s pitch to keep early primary position. An army of influencers are helping.
Congressman Jim Clyburn holds his hand over his heart during the singing of the national anthem at the South Carolina Democratic Party’s Blue Palmetto fundraising dinner in Columbia, SC at the South Carolina State Fairgrounds on May 29, 2026.
COLUMBIA — Congressman Jim Clyburn’s annual fish fry, now in its 34th year, is considered one of those can’t-miss dates on South Carolina’s political calendar.
Beyond its role as prelude to the following day’s Democratic convention, it’s an opportunity for the common folk — unable to afford the fee for the party’s annual fundraising dinner — to rub shoulders with both the powerful and wannabe powerful: city council candidates, state representatives, even future candidates for president.
It also serves as a barometer of the party’s energy for the upcoming election cycle to assess the party’s chances up and down the ballot in a state Republicans have dominated for the better part of the past quarter-century.
This year’s felt different.
The convention, an occasionally dry affair, was raucous, with brass bands and deafening crowds that simply weren’t present in recent years. The fish fry, always crowded, was packed wall-to-wall, while the convention was so well-attended that there weren’t enough chairs for all the attendees — the $2 per chair rental cost threatening the party’s already stressed convention budget.
The difference wasn’t a matter of star power, even with potential 2028 hopefuls in Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear and California Congressman Ro Khanna in attendance.
Recent speakers like vice presidential candidate Tim Walz and Maryland Gov. Wes Moore, who spoke in 2025, earned enthusiasm but not as much. Even renowned orators like New Jersey Sen. Corey Booker, one of two presidential hopefuls to make the trip to Columbia for the event in 2024 alongside Georgia Sen. Raphael Warnock, didn’t see as much enthusiasm ahead of a presidential election where Democrats lost the popular vote for the first time since 2004.
It was about belief in the message, a belief Clyburn said was lacking two years ago. The night of that year’s election, Clyburn said, he received a phone call asking him when he planned to arrive back in Washington for then-candidate Kamala Harris’ victory party.
Clyburn, in response, was blunt: “I’m not coming to Washington,” he said at the time, “because I don’t think there’s going to be a victory party.”
“It was simply because I do not believe that people have emotionally bought into our campaign,” he added. “That’s what I think it’s going to take for us, to run a campaign that people will buy into emotionally. People can hear the words, but they’ve gotta feel it.”
An attendee waves during the South Carolina Democratic Party’s annual convention in Columbia, SC on May 30, 2026.
A vibe shift
Democrats say they’ve got something to believe in this year.
A recent Republican-led effort to redraw the state’s congressional maps to eliminate Clyburn’s seat earlier in the week had failed, driven largely by massive Democratic turnout at the start of early voting credited with giving statehouse Republicans cold feet to continue. State legislative seats around the country had begun to flip, while South Carolina Democrats in recent special elections in areas like Dorchester and Sumter Counties have outperformed expected margins.
And as the Democratic National Committee meets in the coming months to reconsider South Carolina’s place in the presidential nominating calendar for 2028, a state party that recently reached superminority status in the statehouse now seems like a place worth watching again.
Beshear, a Democratic governor in a state that voted for Trump by a two-to-one margin in 2024, told reporters he believed South Carolina should be “the first of what I think should be two southern states” in the opening group of four early primary states. Khanna, a potential presidential candidate who has maintained a frequent presence in South Carolina, upped the ante, saying recent on-the-ground events should “settle the question” of South Carolina’s role in the calendar.
“South Carolina should be the first state in the South with the DNC,” Khanna told reporters. “I don’t even see how, after what they have done, that this can be an open question.”
But the South Carolina Democratic Party still has to demonstrate they deserve it.
Throughout the weekend, the party enlisted the help of a small army of social media influencers to help sell the message, recording the weekend festivities and interviewing candidates to share with their followings.
It’s a new program, started in December 2025 as part of the party’s outreach efforts, and is currently unpaid, meant primarily as an effort to glean neutral commentary from creators with pre-existing audiences who simply want to help Democrats win. It’s also a means of humanizing party messaging many may perceive as overly polished, or inauthentic, allowing non-political consumers to better understand or buy into the messages candidates are selling them.
“As influencers we build relationships with the people that follow us,” said Tabatha Andonian, a Fort Mill activist who built an audience in part by her work tracking ICE agents in Charlotte last year. “They trust us.”
Selling the party
The project also has a purpose, part of a growing trend among party leaders in response to the massive leveraging of social media personalities by Republicans in the years after the COVID-19 pandemic.
Donald Trump’s White House, for example, has begun incorporating sympathetic content creators into its rotating press pool in part of an effort to reach new audiences, while national Democrats for several years have begun paid influencer programs to get their messages out.
South Carolina is looking to follow suit. While redistricting helped inspire voters, the message was spread to voters directly by social media personalities across the state, helping get the message to vote early out to thousands of people who might not otherwise have tracked the redistricting debate through traditional media.
Zackory Kirk, a social media influencer from Atlanta, GA, films content during the South Carolina Democratic Party’s annual convention in Columbia, SC on May 30, 2026.
“The way politics has been done forever has been ‘let’s spend millions of dollars to pay a corporation owned by billionaires to air a commercial to one specific demographic 35 times a day,’ instead of, ‘Hey, let’s invest in people who are actually part of the community and can reach people,’” comedian Steve Hofstetter, a participant in the program who counts millions of followers across his social media platforms, told The Post and Courier at the convention. “I think that makes a lot more sense.”
It also serves a practical purpose for the party itself. The content generated over the weekend, the party’s creator director and Barack Obama campaign alum Michael Ceraso told The Post and Courier, would likely become part of the party’s pitch to the DNC in the coming weeks, while also serving as a means of communicating the upsides of South Carolina’s nuanced Democratic electorate to party leaders and the public.
Zackory Kirk, an Atlanta-based content creator with a sizeable Instagram following, told The Post and Courier he believed the electorate of places like South Carolina, rather than his home state of Georgia, could help nominate the type of candidate who could survive in a general election environment, able to appeal to rural and urban voters in ways more cosmopolitan candidates could not.
Georgia, a battleground state, has often been raised as a national focus for the party’s efforts to win in the South. But it’s hard for people to learn what South Carolina is capable of, he said, if they aren’t able to see for themselves.
“As much as I love Georgia — it’s home, right? — I don’t want Atlanta to pick the Democratic nominee,” he said. “Atlanta is a microcosm; it’s a small place, it’s unique, but it’s not representative of America in the way that South Carolina is representative now.”
South-Carolina
South Carolina Lottery Powerball, Pick 3 results for May 30, 2026
Powerball, Mega Millions jackpots: What to know in case you win
Here’s what to know in case you win the Powerball or Mega Millions jackpot.
Just the FAQs, USA TODAY
The South Carolina Education Lottery offers several draw games for those aiming to win big.
Here’s a look at May 30, 2026, results for each game:
Winning Powerball numbers from May 30 drawing
01-27-35-44-52, Powerball: 12, Power Play: 2
Check Powerball payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Pick 3 Plus FIREBALL numbers from May 30 drawing
Midday: 1-3-8, FB: 9
Evening: 7-1-4, FB: 4
Check Pick 3 Plus FIREBALL payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Pick 4 Plus FIREBALL numbers from May 30 drawing
Midday: 7-1-9-2, FB: 9
Evening: 1-2-3-3, FB: 4
Check Pick 4 Plus FIREBALL payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Cash Pop numbers from May 30 drawing
Midday: 09
Evening: 04
Check Cash Pop payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Palmetto Cash 5 numbers from May 30 drawing
07-14-15-18-29
Check Palmetto Cash 5 payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Powerball Double Play numbers from May 30 drawing
04-27-65-66-69, Powerball: 04
Check Powerball Double Play payouts and previous drawings here.
Feeling lucky? Explore the latest lottery news & results
Are you a winner? Here’s how to claim your lottery prize
The South Carolina Education Lottery provides multiple ways to claim prizes, depending on the amount won:
For prizes up to $500, you can redeem your winnings directly at any authorized South Carolina Education Lottery retailer. Simply present your signed winning ticket at the retailer for an immediate payout.
Winnings $501 to $100,000, may be redeemed by mailing your signed winning ticket along with a completed claim form and a copy of a government-issued photo ID to the South Carolina Education Lottery Claims Center. For security, keep copies of your documents and use registered mail to ensure the safe arrival of your ticket.
SC Education Lottery
P.O. Box 11039
Columbia, SC 29211-1039
For large winnings above $100,000, claims must be made in person at the South Carolina Education Lottery Headquarters in Columbia. To claim, bring your signed winning ticket, a completed claim form, a government-issued photo ID, and your Social Security card for identity verification. Winners of large prizes may also set up an Electronic Funds Transfer (EFT) for convenient direct deposit of winnings.
Columbia Claims Center
1303 Assembly Street
Columbia, SC 29201
Claim Deadline: All prizes must be claimed within 180 days of the draw date for draw games.
For more details and to access the claim form, visit the South Carolina Lottery claim page.
When are the South Carolina Lottery drawings held?
- Powerball: 10:59 p.m. ET on Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday.
- Mega Millions: 11 p.m. ET on Tuesday and Friday.
- Pick 3: Daily at 12:59 p.m. (Midday) and 6:59 p.m. (Evening).
- Pick 4: Daily at 12:59 p.m. (Midday) and 6:59 p.m. (Evening).
- Cash Pop: Daily at 12:59 p.m. (Midday) and 6:59 p.m. (Evening).
- Palmetto Cash 5: 6:59 p.m. ET daily.
This results page was generated automatically using information from TinBu and a template written and reviewed by a South Carolina editor. You can send feedback using this form.
South-Carolina
South Carolina Democrats celebrate redistricting win as governor hopefuls clash
COLUMBIA, S.C. (WACH) — Hundreds of South Carolina Democrats gathered at the State Fairgrounds on Saturday for the party’s annual convention, rallying supporters, hearing from candidates and celebrating what they called a major political win.
The event brought together candidates, elected officials, party activists and voters ahead of what many hope will be a competitive election cycle.
Party leaders and attendees praised the recent failure of a Republican-led redistricting proposal in the state Senate, calling it a victory for fair representation.
“I’m happy that the people responded with clear heads. I’m happy that we will have a fair and free election, and we’re maintaining our democracy in the state. I’m from Cluburn’s District. I’m from Colleton County South Carolina so this is personal to me,” said DeShawn Blanding, a candidate for South Carolina commissioner of agriculture.
Dr. Annie Andrews, a candidate for U.S. Senate, said, “That was a win for democracy people like to say it was a win for Democrats. Yes it was but it was a win for democracy. South Carolina has 40% Democrats. We deserve some representation in our congressional delegation.”
Mayra Rivera-Vázquez, a candidate for South Carolina’s 1st Congressional District, said the outcome showed statewide resolve. “That’s the power of the low country and the power of all the state, showing that we are no one to be directed from someone in Washington, that we are the ones that were gonna control our destiny here,” she said.
But as party members celebrated, a dispute between gubernatorial candidates created tension inside the convention.
Gubernatorial candidate Mullins McLeod announced he would not share the stage with his fellow Democratic candidates during the event.
“I just wanted to go on the record and tell you why I was not gonna share the stage with three people whose platforms would violate will of the people in South Carolina,” McLeod said.
McLeod also accused fellow Democrat Jermaine Johnson of siding with Republicans. “Jermaine Johnson is getting ready to tell all these people how he is for them, but he and I both know that he has voted with the Republican establishment more than 90% of the time,” he said.
Johnson, a Democratic state representative for District 52, responded to McLeod’s allegations and his decision not to appear onstage with the other candidates.
Hopefully he can get the help that he needs. We’re watching a mental health crisis in front of our eyes and I’m just praying for him,” Johnson said.
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