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2019 Boat Crash Coverage
The crash of a Murdaugh family boat in 2019 killed 19-year-old Mallory Beach and started a chain of events that would remain in the news two years later. Here are the stories from that crash.
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No conflict defending store owner sued in Murdaugh boat crash, SC lawmaker says
The powerful Murdaugh family is embroiled in several SC lawsuits. Here’s a breakdown
Boat passenger told attorneys he was scared of Murdaugh family’s influence, docs show
Here’s what Paul Murdaugh’s defense lawyers planned to argue during boat crash trial
SLED file details 3 boaters’ intoxication levels at time of crash, how Murdaugh got ID
SC AG’s case file: Photos show extensive damage to boat allegedly driven by Murdaugh
Illustrated video shows where Paul Murdaugh, Mallory Beach sat in fatal boat accident
SC drops all felony charges against Paul Murdaugh. Boat crash investigation stays open
Paul Murdaugh’s BAC was 3 times higher than legal limit in crash, toxicologist says
Alex Murdaugh tried to interfere with boat crash investigation at hospital, docs show
What happened the night of the boat crash that killed Mallory Beach? A timeline
Who was driving the Murdaugh boat that killed Mallory Beach in 2019?
Series of irregularities apparent in 2019 boat crash investigation, new depositions show
6 things to know from new court documents filed on the 2019 deadly Beaufort boat crash
Passenger claims ‘civil conspiracy’ in boat crash investigation involving Murdaugh
SC Attorney General investigating police handling of Mallory Beach boat crash, sources say
Police improperly investigated 2019 boat crash involving Murdaugh, Beach lawyer says
Mediation fails in lawsuit over boat crash that killed Mallory Beach. Is a trial next?
She was in his arms, and then she wasn’t. It’s been a year since boat crash killed SC teen
Murdaugh used “plan of deceit” to buy beer before boat crash, Parker’s says in documents
Mallory Beach’s family wants civil case in Hampton, not Beaufort County, records show
A year after boat crash, Mallory Beach’s dad remembers her as one who helped others
Beach family attorney claims Parker’s is withholding evidence in boat crash lawsuit
Defendant in Mallory Beach wrongful death lawsuit asks trial be moved to Beaufort Co.
Beaufort County boat crash victim told police Murdaugh was the driver, new documents show
Fire, EMS dispatched to wrong bridge in fatal Beaufort Co. boat crash, 911 calls show
Judge denies state’s request for alcohol monitoring on Murdaugh at Beaufort boat crash hearing
Man accused of felony BUI had alcohol charge before fatal Beaufort Co. boat crash, records say
Murdaugh asks for less strict bond conditions in fatal Beaufort County boat crash case
No cuffs. No jumpsuit. No jail. Paul Murdaugh gets a gentleman’s treatment in SC court
2 judges ask to be removed from Beaufort Co. boat crash lawsuit. Investigation continues
Mom’s attorney subpoenas DNR file on Beaufort Co. boat crash that killed teen daughter
Murdaugh’s hearing in fatal Beaufort Co. boat crash is Monday. Here’s what to expect
‘Prayers answered’: Man charged in Beaufort Co. boat crash that killed Mallory Beach
Murdaugh set to go before judge next month in fatal Beaufort Co. boat crash
SC Attorney General reviewing possible charges in fatal Beaufort County boat crash, officials say
Former solicitor allowed underage drinking before fatal Beaufort Co. boat crash, suit alleges
Sheriff’s Office removes itself from investigation tied to fatal Beaufort Co. boat crash
3 weeks after teen killed in Beaufort County boat crash, mother sues bar and others
Owner of boat involved in fatal Beaufort Co. crash will be sued, mom’s attorney says
Government office asks to be removed from fatal Beaufort Co. boat crash investigation
Two suspects silent in investigation two weeks after fatal Beaufort County boat crash, DNR says
Community says goodbye to Mallory Beach: Teen who was always kind with the biggest smile
No sobriety tests offered to boaters in fatal Beaufort County boating crash, official says
Beaufort County Coroner identifies missing teen boater and gives cause of death
‘God give us closure’: Mallory Beach’s family grateful for support, end of crash search
Female body found near Beaufort County crash site where teen went missing, officials say
Who was driving the boat? DNR ‘thoroughly’ investigating Beaufort County boat crash, officials say
Powerful SC family faces scrutiny following boat crash that killed 19-year-old woman
Was alcohol a factor in Beaufort Co. boating accident? Officials are investigating
Missing teen’s boyfriend shares details of Beaufort County boat crash as search continues
Family of teen missing after boat crashes into bridge in Beaufort Co. asks for prayers
Two documents filed in Hampton County Probate Court in late June show a $1.7 million settlement was approved for individuals whose circumstances match those of Mallory Beach’s parents.
Nowhere in the documents are specific people — the aggrieved, the defendants, even the attorneys who filed the settlement — identified. Everyone involved is described as Jane or John Doe — except the probate judge who signed the order.
But the scant details in the settlement are the same as the circumstances of Beach’s death: the same date of the accident, the same law firm representing the victims, and the same descriptions of the victim’s family.
Filed on June 28, the order approving the death settlement states that a female was involved in an accident that resulted in her death on Feb. 24, 2019.
That day, a 17-foot boat allegedly driven by Paul Murdaugh crashed, killing Beach.
The settlement filings were in Hampton County Probate Court, the same county where Beach’s family is suing the Murdaughs in civil court. That civil lawsuit — filed against the Parker’s gas station, Alex Murdaugh and his son, Buster Murdaugh — is still pending.
The law firm representing the Beach family in that case, Gooding & Gooding P.A., is listed as receiving attorney fees and costs in the death settlement documents.
In the settlement documents, Jane Doe filed the petition as mother and personal representative of daughter Jane Roe’s estate. In the Hampton civil lawsuit, Renee Beach, Mallory Beach’s mother, filed the lawsuit as personal representative of her daughter’s estate.
Mark Tinsley, Renee Beach’s lawyer with the firm Gooding & Gooding, said he could not comment on anything his clients did or didn’t do.
He would not say whether the June settlement and the wrongful death lawsuit both stem from the death of Mallory Beach, or whether the unnamed defendants in the settlement are the same defendants who were dropped from the original lawsuit filed by Renee Beach.
“Any settlement in the pending action of the Beach case would have to go through Judge (Daniel) Hall” (the judge overseeing the wrongful death suit), he said. “Anything else that’s happened would be something separate.”
The anonymous wrongful death and survival action settlement was paid from the insurance providers of six anonymous people or parties. Those parties are never identified.
But six parties — Luther’s Rare & Well Done, Kristy Wood, James Wood, Randolph Murdaugh III, Randolph Murdaugh III as Trustee of the Murdaugh Residence Trust 2, and the Murdaugh Residence Trust 2 — were removed as defendants in Renee Beach’s wrongful death suit in 2019.
Hampton County Probate Judge Sheila Odom’s order approving the anonymous settlement, signed June 28, came after the anonymous petitioner and the decedent’s father testified at a hearing. The date of that hearing is not included in the order.
Who paid the settlement?
The six respondents to Jane Doe’s petition for approval of settlement are listed as: Jane Doe #2, John Doe #1, John Doe #2, John Doe #3, John Doe #4 and John Doe #5.
According to Odom’s order, Jane Doe #2 and John Doe #1 were insured with Heritage Property & Casualty Insurance Co., which provided $500,000 of liability coverage. Of the available coverage, an arbitrator awarded the petitioner $279,600, according to the order.
John Doe #2 had a $1 million liability policy with Hudson Specialty Insurance Co., according to the order. An arbitrator awarded the petitioner $559,200 from the coverage, according to the order.
Respondent John Doe #3 was insured under a $500,000 liability coverage policy from Auto Owners Insurance Co. The arbitrator awarded $279,600 from the coverage, according to the order.
John Doe #4 and John Doe #5 each had $500,000 liability coverage policies with Great Lakes Insurance SE, according to the order. The arbitrator awarded $279,600 from each.
The total combined settlement from the anonymous respondents — including accrued interest — was $1,700,032.45, the order said.
That settlement was divided into two claims: $850,032.45 to the wrongful death claim and $850,000 to the survival claim.
How the money was allocated
The $850,000 settlement paid to the survival action claim was split nine ways, according to the judge’s order:
▪ $283,333.33 paid to Gooding and Gooding, P.A. for attorneys’ fees;
▪ $28,145.56 paid to Gooding and Gooding, P.A. for attorneys’ costs;
▪ $470.50 to petitioner to pay medical bills that the decedent owed to Jasper County EMS. The order said the bills were unrelated to “this incident.”
▪ $576 to petitioner to pay medical bills that the decedent owed to Allendale County Hospital — also unrelated to the incident.
▪ $5,538.48 payable to the U.S. Department of Education to satisfy decedent’s student loan;
▪ $7,915.20 to decedent’s father for reimbursement of funeral expenses;
▪ $4,038.48 to decedent’s father for reimbursement of a grave monument;
▪ $1,532.31 to Hampton County Probate Court for additional probate costs;
▪ $518,450.16 to be distributed to the petitioner and decedent’s father in equal shares.
The $850,032.45 settlement paid to the wrongful death action was split three ways:
▪ $283,333.33 to Gooding and Gooding, P.A. for attorneys’ fees;
▪ $28,145.56 to Gooding and Gooding, P.A. for attorneys’ costs;
▪ $538,553.56 to be distributed to the petitioner and decedent’s father in equal shares.
The judge’s order states that “nothing in this order ends or affects those other claims which are pending in another matter related to this incident.”
Renee Beach lawsuit against Murdaughs
Renee Beach’s wrongful death lawsuit was filed a little over a month after 19-year-old Mallory Beach was killed in the boat crash on Feb. 24, 2019 boat.
Paul Murdaugh was accused of driving the boat while under the influence and faced criminal charges brought by the S.C. Attorney General’s Office.
The crash thrust the prominent Murdaugh family into the spotlight in a complicated saga that now stretches more than two years, with several unrelated criminal investigations and deaths tied to the family.
Mallory Beach is one of them. Renee Beach’s lawsuit seeks damages from Alex Murdaugh, Paul’s father and owner of the boat that crashed; Paul’s older brother, Buster, who gave him his ID to buy beer; and Parkers 55, the gas station chain where the underage Murdaugh purchased beer.
The lawsuit initially was also filed against Kristy and James Wood, accused of serving alcohol at an oyster roast before the boat crash; Luther’s Rare Well & Done, where Paul Murdaugh and Connor Cook bought shots before the crash; Randolph Murdaugh III, Paul Murdaugh’s grandfather, sued both individually and as a trustee of a family trust and the trust itself.
In May 2019, an amended lawsuit was filed, and those six defendants were dropped.
This story was originally published October 23, 2021 6:30 AM.