Current:Home > MarketsSignalHub-Alex Murdaugh friend pleads guilty to helping steal from dead maid’s family -Blueprint Money Mastery
SignalHub-Alex Murdaugh friend pleads guilty to helping steal from dead maid’s family
Fastexy View
Date:2025-04-07 09:31:00
KINGSTREE,SignalHub S.C. (AP) — Convicted murderer Alex Murdaugh ‘s old college buddy has pleaded guilty to a second set of charges for helping the disgraced South Carolina attorney steal millions of dollars of insurance settlements from the sons of Murdaugh’s dead housekeeper.
Cory Fleming, a 54-year-old former attorney, wasn’t immediately sentenced after his guilty plea to 23 state charges Wednesday.
Prosecutors indicated they would ask at a September hearing that Fleming spend more time in prison than the nearly four-year sentence he received for similar federal charges earlier this month, according to media reports.
During his federal sentencing, Fleming said he knew Murdaugh, now serving a life sentence for killing his wife and son, was going to steal something from the family of his housekeeper. She worked for Murdaugh’s family for decades before dying after a fall at their home in 2018.
But Fleming said he thought it might be $100,000 — not the entire $4 million-plus award.
Unless Fleming was “the dumbest man alive,” he knew what all Murdaugh was going to do, prosecutor Creighton Waters told the judge Wednesday.
When U.S. Judge Richard Gergel sentenced Fleming to 46 months in prison on the federal charges, he told Fleming he would let the state judge know he didn’t think the state charges should carry any more prison time.
However, South Carolina Circuit Judge Clifton Newman, who sentenced Murdaugh to life after a monthlong trial, doesn’t have to follow that recommendation at Fleming’s Sept. 14 state sentencing.
Fleming has surrendered his license to practice law in both Georgia and South Carolina, saying he dishonored the profession. He’s the second Murdaugh associate ordered to prison since investigators began scrutinizing every aspect of Murdaugh’s life in June 2021 after his wife and son were shot to death at their South Carolina home.
Banker Russell Laffitte was sentenced to seven years in prison earlier this month after pleading guilty to helping Murdaugh steal money from settlements for clients after vehicle wrecks or work injuries. Laffitte is appealing his conviction and sentence.
While Fleming knew Murdaugh was asking him to do wrong, he said he didn’t realize the depth of his old friend’s depravity.
Murdaugh still faces more than 100 charges in state and federal courts. Prosecutors say the crimes range from tax evasion and stealing from clients and his family’s law firm to running a drug and money laundering ring — even unsuccessfully arranging for someone to kill him so his surviving son could get life insurance money.
Newman plans a hearing on the status of those cases the same day Fleming is sentenced.
In Fleming’s case, the victims were Gloria Satterfield and her two sons. Satterfield cleaned the Murdaugh’s house, babysat their sons and did anything else the family asked for more than 20 years.
Murdaugh promised the sons, who were young adults, he would take care of them and recommended they hire Fleming as their lawyer. He didn’t tell them Fleming was a longtime friend, college roommate and godfather to one of his sons.
Murdaugh told insurance companies that Satterfield tripped over their dogs and convinced them to pay more than $4 million to what they thought was Satterfield’s estate through Fleming. But instead, Murdaugh had Fleming send the checks to him. The sons didn’t see a dime until Murdaugh’s finances began to unravel and they hired a different attorney.
The state charges included a second fraud victim. Prosecutors said Fleming helped Murdaugh steal settlement money from a woman badly hurt in a car crash and used his part of the ill-gotten gains to charter a plane to go to the College World Series.
veryGood! (92)
Related
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Michigan coach Sherrone Moore in no rush to name starting quarterback
- USA Basketball players are not staying at Paris Olympic Village — and that's nothing new
- Transit and environmental advocates sue NY governor over decision to halt Manhattan congestion toll
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Taylor Swift Reveals She's the Godmother of Blake Lively and Ryan Reynolds' Kids
- Yellowstone shuts down Biscuit Basin for summer after hydrothermal explosion damaged boardwalk
- Workers at GM seat supplier in Missouri each tentative agreement, end strike
- Trump suggestion that Egypt, Jordan absorb Palestinians from Gaza draws rejections, confusion
- Exclusive: Tennis star Coco Gauff opens up on what her Olympic debut at Paris Games means
Ranking
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Missouri judges have overturned 2 murder convictions in recent weeks. Why did the AG fight freedom?
- Jennifer Aniston hits back at JD Vance's viral 'childless cat ladies' comments
- Days before a Biden rule against anti-LGBTQ+ bias takes effect, judges are narrowing its reach
- Bodycam footage shows high
- Smuggled drugs killed 2 inmates at troubled South Carolina jail, sheriff says
- Inside Christian McCaffrey’s Winning Formula: Motivation, Focus & Recovery
- Man dies at 27 from heat exposure at a Georgia prison, lawsuit says
Recommendation
Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
'America’s Grandmother' turns 115: Meet the oldest living person in the US, Elizabeth Francis
Brittany Aldean Slams Maren Morris’ “Pro-Woman Bulls--t” Stance Amid Feud
Utah Supreme Court overturns death sentence for man convicted of murder
Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
Former Uvalde school police officer pleads not guilty to child endangerment in shooting
UN Secretary-General Says the World Must Turbocharge the Fossil Fuel Phaseout
Olympic swimmers agree: 400 IM is a 'beast,' physically and mentally