Cory Fleming, the former college roommate and close friend of disgraced South Carolina legal scion Alex Murdaugh, appeared for a bond hearing Thursday after a new indictment charged him as a co-conspirator in an alleged plot to defraud the heirs of Murdaugh's former housekeeper, Gloria Satterfield, out of more than $3.6 million.
Richland County Judge Alison Lee granted Fleming a $100,000 surety with a 10% cash option, according to local news reports.
Fleming remained detained at the Alvin S. Glen Detention Center in Richland County as of midday Thursday, according to online jail records. He only needs to post $10,000 to be released.
Fleming, who reportedly turned himself in before the hearing, was required to surrender his passport and agree not to leave the state if he’s released, though Lee noted she did not see him as a flight risk. Lee denied a request from defense for Fleming to be released on his personal recognizance. Fleming is married to a public defender, his lawyer noted.
An indictment made public Wednesday accuses Fleming of working with Murdaugh to defraud the sons of Satterfield, who died following an alleged fall at the Murdaugh home in 2018, by suing Murdaugh on behalf of the sons but diverting the resulting insurance payouts to Murdaugh and himself.
Fleming also wrote himself checks from Satterfield's estate to pay for his own mortgage, credit card debt, tax payments, video games and other purchases, prosecutors said.
The sons said in a lawsuit that they never got any of the money. They said Murdaugh convinced them at their mother's funeral to use Fleming as their attorney and sue him for wrongful death, without disclosing that Fleming had been his college roommate and godfather to at least one of Murdaugh’s sons.
According to the latest indictment, Fleming, 53, chose not to tell Satterfield's sons about two settlements he secured from insurers. He instead knowingly moved money from both agreements to a fraudulent bank account Murdaugh had named similarly to that of a company that handles settlements, authorities said.
Fleming previously said he was helping the sons' new lawyers and maintained he "was not a willing participant in Mr. Murdaugh’s scheme but was used," according to a joint statement between Fleming and the sons' attorneys in October. Deborah Barbier, an attorney for Fleming, said in a statement that Fleming was "deeply disappointed" by the charges.
Barbier said Fleming looked forward to defending himself in court and maintained her client was "yet another casualty of the host of crimes perpetuated by Alex Murdaugh."
Eric Bland and Ronnie Richter, attorneys for the Satterfield sons, said Wednesday that the grand jury clearly did not believe Fleming's defense that he was yet another of Murdaugh's victims:
"Justice may move slow but when it moves it comes crashing down like a tidal wave," they said in a statement.
Grand jurors also issued four new charges for Murdaugh.
Murdaugh currently faces 75 state charges, among them trust, forgery, money laundering, computer crime and now criminal conspiracy with Fleming, altogether accusing him of stealing nearly $8.5 million intended for victims of wrongful death and insurance settlements. He's also accused of trying to arrange his own death so his surviving son could collect a $10 million life insurance policy.
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Murdaugh, 53, has been jailed since October. A judge set his bail at $7 million and refused to reduce it, even as Murdaugh’s lawyer argued his bank accounts were seized in civil lawsuits, and he could barely afford to buy underwear at the Richland County jail. He has pinned his problems on a years-long drug addiction.
His legal troubles were revealed after his wife Maggie, 52, and son Paul, 22, were killed in a shooting at the family’s home in June. Murdaugh’s lawyers insisted he had nothing to do with it, calling on investigators to work as hard to find their killers as they are trying to unravel Murdaugh’s finances.
Murdaugh's great-grandfather, grandfather and father were all elected prosecutors in Hampton County, where his family law firm bore the Murdaugh moniker until recently. The South Carolina Supreme Court has suspended Murdaugh and Fleming from practicing law in the state.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.