Latest twists in Murdaugh murder mystery: ‘More like ‘Ozark’ every day’
Alex Murdaugh, big time lawyer, embezzler, murderer and drug kingpin?
WALTERBORO, SC — Two men who are “cousins” to some of the Walterboro Cowboys, a violent Bloods-affiliated street gang that originated in the so-called “Eastside” of this small city right off I-95, are the latest characters dragged into the notorious Murdaugh murder mystery — and one said he is being “railroaded.”
Meanwhile, one member of the gang told The Post that “Alex Murdaugh runs half the drugs in this county.”
Last month, the state grand jury indicted two local men — who several Cowboy gang members told The Post are their “cousins,” or close friends — on the same day it levied yet another indictment as Murdaugh, who was arrested in July for the murders of his wife and son at the family’s hunting lodge in June 2021.
Cowboy “cousins” Jerry Rivers, 39, and his friend Spencer Anwan Roberts, 34, were indicted Aug. 19 on charges that prosecutors say involve possibly being part of Murdaugh’s alleged drug and money laundering pipeline in the Low Country.
Murdaugh now faces a total of 90 charges of financial wrongdoing, including recent allegations that he was involved in drug distribution and money laundering across several counties here.
Locals speculate that Murdaugh’s alleged drug operation was bigger than anyone realizes.
A Charleston law enforcement source familiar with the case said the Cowboys gang and other local criminals, with their proximity to I-95 — long a conduit for drugs and guns run from Miami to New York — may play a bigger role than anyone on the South Carolina coast.
“There’s still a lot more to come out and a lot more surprises, I’d bet my life on it,” the source said.
South Carolina Assistant Attorney General Creighton Waters said in court that money “misappropriated” by Murdaugh went through his alleged accomplice, Walterboro resident Curtis “Cousin Eddie” Smith, 62, who’s in jail after being indicted with Murdaugh in late June on sweeping drug and conspiracy charges. From Smith, the AG said, the money “continued downstream” to Rivers and Roberts.
“I ain’t done nothing,” Rivers told The Post last week while sitting on his porch wearing an ankle monitor after having had to post $150,000 bond. “I’ve been railroaded.”
Spencer Roberts’ attorney, Mark Peper, said the charges against the two appeared to be trumped up by prosecutors who are “grasping at straws.”
“They don’t have enough to get Murdaugh on the murders,” he said. “They’re desperate. This is trying to get ‘Cousin Eddie’ to talk more or for Alex to talk more. They’re trying to send a message but it’s ridiculous.”
Rivers — who lives across the street from Khiry Broughton, the leader of the Walterboro Cowboys who was sentenced to prison in 2017 with seven associates — served time at the federal prison in nearby Estill on 2012 cocaine trafficking charges, but claims he’s gone straight. He was first subpoenaed in November and was arrested along with Roberts, who also has a criminal record, at a nearby gambling joint last month. Roberts was not at home when The Post went to his address last week.
Rivers was nailed on an obstruction of justice charge for taking Roberts’ phone during the arrest and when asked to return it, admittedly gave the cops a fake phone.
“It’s bull—t!” one Cowboys gang member with the letters COW (for Cowboys) tattooed across his throat told The Post on the run-down deck of a modular home, a block from Rivers’ house. He said he did not want his name published as he was recently released from prison.
“They (the cops) want to get the Cowboys name in there to muddy the water [of the Murdaugh case] and get everyone to think we done killed those people,” the man said. “Maybe look at some of the corrupt white sheriffs here instead.”
Former Colleton County Sheriff Andy Strickland was in charge at the time Broughton and seven other Cowboys were arrested and sentenced to prison — but three years later Strickland himself was accused of selling illegal drugs. Prosecutors agreed to a plea deal that meant Strickland got five years’ probation.
Sauce/more: https://nypost.com/2022/09/10/new-twists-in-murdaugh-mystery-more-like-ozark-every-day/
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