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Behaviorists assess body language of Murdaugh for signs of guilt
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Behaviorists assess body language of Murdaugh for signs of guilt

9

Feb 16, 2023, 7:37 AM

Thought y'all might find this interesting...

Behaviorists assess body language of Murdaugh for signs of guilt, lack of grief


BY LYN RIDDLE
LYRIDDLE@THESTATE.COM

The jury that will decide Alex Murdaugh’s guilt or innocence is on its fourth week of hearing from law enforcement, ballistics experts, people who worked for him and with him and the woman who examined the dead bodies of Murdaugh’s wife and son, who he is charged with killing.

All it took for four behaviorists known collectively as The Behavior Panel was one of the first pieces of evidence prosecutors introduced — a video of the interview with a South Carolina Law Enforcement officer conducted about two hours after Murdaugh called 911 to report he found their bodies.

Guilty. Guilty. Guilty. Guilty.

For Scott Rouse, Mark Bowden, Chase Hughes, and Greg Hartley, nothing about Murdaugh’s hour-long interview depicted a man grieving for his wife and son. His body language and behavior showed a man with lots to hide, they said.

Members of the panel have appeared on the Dr. Phil Show to analyze behavior of a man accused of killing his five-week-old son and a teen convicted of killing her mother.

Their YouTube channel takes on such luminaries as Meghan and Harry, Jeffrey Epstein and Patsy Ramsey.

They are Scott Rouse, whose “Body Language Frankenstein” presentations to business leaders and colleges educate and entertain; Mark Bowden, who is credited with pioneering nonverbal analysis of human behavior as it influences and/or persuades; Chase Hughes, who served 20 years in the Navy and teaches interrogation, sales, influence, and persuasion; and Greg Hartley, a former Army interrogator, who teaches not only interrogation but also how to resist it.

They didn’t pull punches.

Murdaugh’s wife Maggie and son Paul were found shot to death on the family’s 1,700 acre hunting estate in June 2021.

Hughes said Murdaugh showed “full body fear” in the first 18 seconds of the SLED interview video. Facial muscles don’t show grief. He also pointed out Murdaugh’s shoulder movements and refusal to look at the SLED agent.

He said Murdaugh seemed more like a person trying to sell the SLED agent, rather than tell what happened, as if he had a ######.

“It was the most red flags I have ever seen in one individual,” Hughes said.

Rouse pointed out that at the beginning of the interview, Murdaugh appears to break down, sobbing. Then the cry face disappears instantly.

“No tears,” he said.

And Murdaugh uses a tissue he is holding as a prop. Not once using it on his eyes.

Bowden said simply, “It’s bonkers.”

He said he noticed Murdaugh wiping his eyes with his hand and then performing a gesture like a chef sprinkling salt on food with his fingers.

“He was checking to see if he had tears,” Bowden said.

Hartley said,”If you stole my bicycle, I’d be more upset than this guy.”

Another red flag for them was that Murdaugh gave way too much detail about things that didn’t matter, such as a story about going to see his mother the night of the murders and her medical diagnosis of Alzheimer’s and another about a new employee who said he was with the CIA investigating the Black Panthers as a teen working from Myrtle Beach to Savannah.

Very little of Murdaugh’s conversation was about the actual murders and nothing about trying to find the killer. He cast aspersions on the employee and on people associated with a boat crash that killed one of Paul Murduagh’s friends. Paul was charged in the 2019 collision and was awaiting trial when he was murdered.

Bowden said Murdaugh basically said about the murders he found the bodies, called 911 and then he praised the 911 operator.

“You’re not giving out medals at that point,” Bowden said and added, there was no need to comment on customer service.

Hughes said people who have just found family members slaughtered do not tell what happened in chronological order, as Murdaugh did. Maggie was shot four or five times with an assault rifle and Paul twice with a shotgun at close range.

People who see such a scene are distraught, crying, jumping from subject to subject and demanding answers. They ask why.

Murdaugh did not.

“He’s storytelling. No sense of urgency. Useless details,” Hughes said.

At one point when Murdaugh was asked whether there was anything around Paul’s body, Murdaugh said without emotion, “body things,” referring to Paul’s brain, which had been blown out of his head and was lying on the ground beside him.

“He’s not doing anything normal humans would do describing a scene,” Rouse said.

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Re: Behaviorists assess body language of Murdaugh for signs of guilt

2

Feb 16, 2023, 7:57 AM

Great post. Definitely didn’t respond like someone who just found their family slaughtered imo

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Re: Behaviorists assess body language of Murdaugh for signs of guilt

2

Feb 16, 2023, 7:58 AM

Interesting read, thanks for the share.

I agree that he exhibited troubling behavior, acts and possible ‘tells’; but would be concerned if, or that actual evidence was not presented to prove guilt ‘beyond a reasonable doubt’. Not that this ‘evidence’ isn’t somewhat concerning or perhaps in some way legitimate.

We shall see, I s’pose! Although I haven’t followed closely, if I were a betting man, I’m thinking my $$ would be on a guilty verdict.

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Whatever choice(s) you make makes you. Choose wisely.


Re: Behaviorists assess body language of Murdaugh for signs of guilt

2

Feb 16, 2023, 8:00 AM

Have you been watching the trials? The lead investigator yesterday admitted to lying to the grand jury about some case details to get the case to trial. I would not be surprised if he gets acquitted.

The motive is thin - even with all the financial stuff allowed. Killing maggie and paul did not solve his money woes. His father was also dying at that same time so if he wanted a few weeks of reprieve to get money together he could have used that instead of killing wife and child.

There was also testimony that he couldn't put down the family dog when it was sick (old yeller style). And he was terrible about faking that roadside incident. I doubt he could pull this off without help. That was so ameturish compared with the murders that left not much dna.

Also there was unidentified male dna under maggies fingers.

My guess is this is a mob hit because he had dirty dealings. Im not convinced he did it.


Message was edited by: CUdude98®


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To me, this statement he made to 911 said "guilty"

2

Feb 16, 2023, 9:27 AM

"I need police and an ambulance immediately. My wife and child have been shot badly."

His son's head was blown open and his brain was next to his body. The guy was an avid hunter. He would have known they were long gone, and that he didn't need an ambulance.

And when a 911 operator asked if they were breathing, he simply said, "No ma'am"

I think he was trying to act naive, but overdid it.

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Re: Behaviorists assess body language of Murdaugh for signs of guilt

1

Feb 16, 2023, 8:00 AM

null


Message was edited by: CUdude98®


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Re: Behaviorists assess body language of Murdaugh for signs of guilt

2

Feb 16, 2023, 8:34 AM

https://youtu.be/EeUk7BF4AIg

Here’s an interview. Murdaugh doesn’t necessarily say much to give away his guilt, but his body language is just off. His arms, hands, neck, face, everything is red.

I also feel that if he did not kill them, he would be more curious about things, and talking more comfortably trying to get answers, not just actually looking comfortable. Some people may get anxious being interrogated regardless of why they’re there, but Murdaugh has been involved in power and high social status for a long time given his family, and I don’t imagine a small interrogation would make him like that if he was innocent.

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He needs to be in jail............

1
1

Feb 16, 2023, 8:50 AM

He raised a crappy, entitled kid and he was a drug addict. We all know he was associated with the killings.

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Re: Behaviorists assess body language of Murdaugh for signs of guilt

1

Feb 16, 2023, 9:16 AM

Body language reading is a load of ####, especially those on youtube. I'm not speaking on this particular case, but anyone who genuinely believes these youtubers is an idiot.

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Of course he did it!

3

Feb 16, 2023, 9:21 AM

During the O.J. Simpson trial, I had the opportunity to meet the funny (now departed) P.J. O'Rourke.

Trying to make some small talk, I asked him what he thought of the case. He launched into what was clearly an oft-repeated story. "My grandfather was a lawyer who said that there are only three things you need to know about the law. When a restaurant burns down, it's arson. When a 14-year-old girl disappears, she's shacked up with somebody. And when a married person is murdered, the spouse did it."

I often share that story, rearranging the three based on the topic of the conversation.

Coincidentally, we have a similarly notorious case up here in Fairfield County - the Dulos case. Body has never been found, but rich guy killed his wife and then (after being put under house arrest) killed himself. His girlfriend and lawyer are basically being charged as accessories.

Last night I got a call from a polling company. Seemed like your typical automated political poll - and sometimes I like to have a little fun with those things. Approve/Disapprove POTUS? Approve/Disapprove Congress? Then five questions about where I get my news. The standard stuff. But then the call took an interesting twist with four or five questions about my familiarity with the Dulos case. It hit me that what the call was really about was the defense team getting the trials moved out of the county.


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Re: Behaviorists assess body language of Murdaugh for signs of guilt

1

Feb 16, 2023, 9:24 AM

I wonder how his history of heavy opiate use comes into play. Does that impact his body language?

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I have NO idea of his guilt or innocence..


Feb 16, 2023, 11:09 AM

but if I was forced to say Yea or Nay..

based on his crazy past & deeds I'd say YES!

But, that is wrong!

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The conviction will come from the fact that he adamently


Feb 16, 2023, 8:06 PM

says he wasn't there before finding them dead, yet his voice is on the video that his son sent to a friend.

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Re: The conviction will come from the fact that he adamently


Feb 16, 2023, 8:44 PM

I’ve watched a lot of this trial. No doubt this cat is a stone cold creep. And probably a stone cold killer. The defense asserts he had no reason to kill them. Sometimes reasons can’t be explained. He was certainly under a lot of pressure and stressed at that time. He had just been confronted by the law firm for stealing and his deceased son had a court date for the boat death a few days later. He was being sued for 10 million for the boat death and his insurance wasn’t covering it. Also his dad was dying and did die 3 days later.

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Re: The conviction will come from the fact that he adamently


Feb 17, 2023, 7:06 AM

How do you account for the timing then? He had about an hour to commit murder, clean himself spotless, ditch the guns somewhere where they cant be found, chuck maggies phone then drive to his parents for a visit and come back.

The state estimates maggie and paul are killed around 8:50 and hes back at moselle by 10. And during that time he went to varnville.

I think the state has proved its possible that he did it but are far from a reasonable doubt standard.

State even admitted a two shooter theory is possible. Thats reasonable doubt.

At a minimum he had help if he planned it. But looking at how bad the roadside suicide thing went down i cant imagine him and uncle eddie pulling off a murder like this.

He pissed off the wrong person and they sent a message. He owed so many people large suns of money. Could have been anyone.

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Re: Behaviorists assess body language of Murdaugh for signs of guilt


Feb 17, 2023, 8:10 AM

I surely wouldn't want behaviorists deciding my fate. Sounds like something that would come from the State, which I believe is the "Enquirer" of SC.

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