Stephen Smith's mother implicated the Murdaugh dynasty in a newly released 2016 letter to the FBI begging the agency to help solve her son's mysterious death.
The 19-year-old died in July 2015 in what pathologist Erin Presnell determined was a hit-and-run on a rural road just miles from the Murdaugh family's hunting estate, Moselle, in Hampton County, South Carolina. Stephen was rumored to be the lover of Alex Murdaugh's son, Buster.
But the slain teen's mom, Sandy Smith, and South Carolina Highway Patrol officers didn't agree with Presnell's conclusion in the autopsy report.
In the Sept. 28, 2016, letter, obtained and published by FitsNews, Sandy wrote, "It has been apparent from the first week of this investigation that authorities are covering up critical evidence, and we no longer know who to trust."
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The grieving mother has been fighting for justice for her son since he was found dead nearly a decade ago on Sandy Run Road three miles from his car, which was out of gas.
The South Carolina Law Enforcement Agency (SLED) opened a homicide investigation into Smith's death in June 2021, two weeks after Alex Murdaugh fatally shot his wife, Maggie, 52, and their 22-year-old son, Paul. Alex was convicted of the murders and sentenced to life in prison earlier this month.
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The family patriarch's downfall has ruined the Murdaugh name and undermined the family's dominance, which may make it easier for Sandy to finally get the answers she's been seeking.
Her lawyers, Eric Bland and Ronnie Richter, announced Wednesday in a press release that SLED Chief Mark Keel told them for the first time the agency does not believe Smith was killed in a vehicular accident but was the victim of an intentional homicide.
In the 2016 letter, Sandy told the FBI the Murdaughs were involved in her son's death and a subsequent cover-up.
"The first call my family received after the murder was from authorities notifying us of Stephen's death," she wrote. "The second came very quickly the same morning from Solicitor Randolph Murdaugh."
The retired solicitor, who had served as the region's top prosecutor before retiring in 2005, is the late father of Alex Murdaugh.
He allegedly told her he was willing to work pro bono as a liaison between the family and investigators but soon stopped returning their calls, the letter says.
Sandy then pointed fingers at one of the younger Murdaughs.
"The Murdaughs are probably the most prominent family in Hampton County," she wrote. "Stephen had on more than one occasion mentioned to friends and his twin sister that he was involved romantically with someone from a prominent family in the county who was hiding his sexuality. He said that it would shock people to know this person was gay. We suspect this could be the young man Stephen was referring to, though he never named him."
The grieving mother also described the brutal nature of her son's attack in the letter.
"He was attacked so violently that the entire side of his face was rebuilt with putty for his funeral."
Within days of the killing, Stephen's twin sister was repeatedly approached by peers telling her Alex Murdaugh's only surviving son, Buster, and his brother, Paul, who was later murdered, were responsible, Sandy wrote.
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A stranger told Stephen's brother, Chris, that he witnessed Buster "beat Stephen to death with a baseball bat" because he was gay.
Sandy highlighted several anomalies at the crime scene, including the absence of tire marks or skid marks, which would be expected if her son was struck and slid across the asphalt. There was also no blood spatter.
"We desperately need your help," she told the FBI. "This investigation is being derailed."
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Buster, 26, issued a statement Monday, through his attorney, Jim Griffin, denying any role in Stephen's death.
"These baseless rumors of my involvement in Stephen's death are false," he said. "My heart goes out to the Smith family."
Buster added that he is trying to cope with the death of his mother and brother and his father's convictions.
Anyone with information regarding the death of Stephen is urged to contact SLED at 803-737-9000.