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Alex Murdaugh pleads guilty to 22 counts of financial fraud and money laundering

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Alex Murdaugh pleads guilty to 22 counts of financial fraud and money laundering. He is serving life in prison for killing his wife and son.

Disgraced attorney Alex Murdaugh pleaded guilty to 22 counts of financial fraud and money laundering in court on Thursday.

"He's been totally cooperative and apologized to the victims of his theft," Murdaugh's lawyer, Dick Harpootlian, told reporters after the hearing. "This is, we believe, the first step for him in putting this behind him. He did not argue with a single fact. He did not argue with me to push back on any allegation."

Murdaugh is already serving a life sentence after he was found guilty in March of fatally shooting his wife and their youngest son near the family's estate in June 2021.

MORE: Alex Murdaugh sentencing: Disgraced SC attorney gets life in prison

In May, a federal grand jury returned a 22-count indictment against the former lawyer for bank fraud, wire fraud, money laundering and conspiracy to commit wire fraud and bank fraud.

The indictment accuses Murdaugh, 54, of engaging in three different schemes to obtain money and property from his personal injury clients while he was working as a personal injury attorney at his Hampton, South Carolina, law firm between 2005 and 2021.

The alleged schemes involved routing clients' settlement funds to his own accounts as well as to a fake account under the name "Forge," as well as conspiring with a banker to commit wire fraud and bank fraud. The banker, Russell Laffitte, was convicted on six federal charges in connection with the scheme in November 2022, prosecutors said.

PHOTO: Attorney Richard Harpootlian speaks in court, Sept. 14, 2023, during a hearing for convicted murderer Alex Murdaugh, who faces multiple state financial crime charges.
Attorney Richard Harpootlian speaks in court, Sept. 14, 2023, during a hearing for convicted murderer Alex Murdaugh, who faces multiple state financial crime charges.
The Island Packet via Getty Images

The indictment further alleges that Murdaugh conspired with another personal injury attorney to defraud the estate of his former housekeeper, Gloria Satterfield, who died after a fall at Murdaugh's home in February 2018. Prosecutors allege Murdaugh funneled nearly $3.5 million into his fake account "for his own personal enrichment."

Murdaugh's life sentences for the murder of his wife and son will run consecutively, Judge Clifton Newman said during his sentencing in March.

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