CRIME & COURTS

Alex Murdaugh Retrial: Flurry of New Defense Motions Filed

Attorneys for accused killer seek change of venue, independent review of evidence and permission for their client to access electronic case files…

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by WILL FOLKS

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Attorneys for accused killer Alex Murdaugh filed a flurry of motions ahead of next week’s retrial status conference in front of South Carolina circuit court judge Debra McCaslin.

As they prepare for the ‘Retrial of the Century,” also known as ‘Murdaugh 2.0,’ the notorious defendant’s lawyers are seeking a change of venue, an independent laboratory review of evidence and permission for Murdaugh to have personal electronic access to materials related to his case as he remains imprisoned within the S.C. Department of Corrections (SCDC) system for multiple financial crimes.

Previously, Murdaugh’s attorneys – Dick HarpootlianJim GriffinPhil Barber and Maggie Fox – submitted a motion asking for the defendant to appear in court in street clothes and without shackles in the presence of jurors, as he did during his initial trial.

The three new filings – first reported by Ben Smith on X – were submitted on Wednesday (June 24, 2026), five days ahead of the initial status conference. That hearing – the first public proceeding since McCaslin was assigned the case – has been scheduled for 10:00 a.m. EDT at the Lexington County, S.C. judicial center in Lexington, S.C.

Murdaugh will appear at Monday’s hearing, we are told…

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Murdaugh was convicted in March of 2023 of murdering his wife, 52-year-old Maggie Murdaugh, and younger son, 22-year-old Paul Murdaugh, on the family’s hunting property near Islandton, S.C. on the evening of June 7, 2021. Last month, however, the S.C. supreme court reversed those convictions based on numerous factors – most notably jury tampering by former Colleton County clerk of court Becky Hill.

Hill, incidentally, is currently the defendant in a federal lawsuit brought by Murdaugh’s attorneys – an action that seeks to uncover whether others were involved in a coordinated effort to deprive him of justice at his first trial.

According to Murdaugh’s change of venue motion, his trial was “among the most heavily publicized criminal prosecutions in the history of this state.”

“For years (Murdaugh), his family, and the law firm with which his family was associated for generations have been the subject of saturating, sensational, and continuous media coverage,” the filing alleged. “That coverage has been especially intense within the five counties that comprise the fourteenth judicial circuit — Allendale, Beaufort, Colleton, Hampton, and Jasper — where the Murdaugh name has been synonymous with the local legal system for nearly a century, where the population is small and interconnected, and where the very documentaries, books, and films that have shaped public opinion were researched, filmed, and produced.”

Based on this “saturation,” Murdaugh’s attorneys argued he “cannot obtain the fair and impartial trial granted to him by the federal and state constitutions.”

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Alex Murdaugh arrives at his trial at the Colleton County Courthouse in Walterboro, Thursday, Feb. 23, 2023. (Grace Beahm Alford/Pool)

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Accordingly, Murdaugh’s attorneys asked the court to transfer his case “to a county outside the fourteenth judicial circuit,” promising to submit a memorandum in support of their request soon.

In the motion related to the independent laboratory review, Murdaugh’s attorneys revisited what they contend to be one of the key investigatory failures of the S.C. State Law Enforcement Division (SLED), the agency which investigated the murders, various ancillary crimes tied to Murdaugh and his associates – and the jury tampering investigation.

“DNA evidence was collected from underneath Maggie Murdaugh’s left-hand fingernails at the scene,” Murdaugh’s attorneys alleged. “SLED determined this DNA was from an unknown and unrelated male. No further analysis was attempted. This evidence, however, is crucial to the defense.”

References to this evidence were made by attorney Barber during his recent interview with our research director, Jenn Wood.

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RELATED | MURDAUGH ATTORNEY CHALLENGES ‘OVERWHELMING EVIDENCE’

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According to the motion, such DNA testing ultimately exonerated David Camm – a former Indiana trooper – of the murders of his wife and children. The reference to Camm is worth noting considering one of the blood spatter experts on his case was Oklahoma bloodstain analyst Tom Bevel.

Bevel, of course, was the analyst whose controversial interpretations of the alleged blood spatter evidence against Murdaugh raised credible questions about the integrity of the investigation.

While never introduced during Murdaugh’s first trial, Bevel’s work product was the evidence that buried the disgraced attorney and confessed fraudster in the court of public opinion – solidifying his guilt in the hearts and minds of many tracking the case.

According to Murdaugh’s lawyers, a third party, Othram Inc., “believes it can conduct a more thorough analysis of the sample.” Othram “combines laboratory science, software, and process, to build a better and more robust infrastructure for justice,” according to its website.

Murdaugh’s attorneys want McCaslin to order the state to “deliver the DNA sample to Othram by appropriate means for testing at (Murdaugh)’s expense,” arguing a rush order is needed as the testing involved “takes considerable time.”

The final motion simply asks SCDC to provide Murdaugh access to a “secure laptop computer” to access the “voluminous” material associated with his retrial.

“This would be a much more secure method of providing Mr. Murdaugh access to materials in his case than sending several banker boxes. of papers, a great many of which are sealed or subject to a protective order, to a prison.”

A spokesman for S.C. attorney general Alan Wilson – the newly minted GOP nominee for governor of South Carolina – told FITSNews that Wilson’s office did not have any immediate comment on the defense filings.

“We will respond in our own filings,” said Robert Kittle, Wilson’s communications director.

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THE MOTIONS…

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR…

Will Folks (FITSNews)

Will Folks is the founding editor of the news outlet you are currently reading. Prior to founding FITSNews, he served as press secretary to the governor of South Carolina. He lives in the Midlands region of the state with his wife and eight children.

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13 comments

Just Another Guest June 24, 2026 at 11:01 pm

Just a thought, admittedly with LESS objective documentation than I usually present; but a plausible thought nonetheless.
First, the available OBJECTIVE documentation, which comes from THE TRANSCRIPT of former FITSNews employee Callie Lyons, a deposition taken by the excellent Debbie Barbier in the SECOND Beach et al v. Parker et al case.
nquestionably, Callie Lyons testified that the FALSE blood spatter evidence was leaked from SCAG’s office to Malicious Mandy Matney (“MMM”), also a former FITSNews employee.
And Callie Lyons was NOT speculating about that: she found an ACTUAL text or email or something to MMM from SCAG about the blood spatter evidence.
But SCAG does not itself test shirts. SLED does.
And MMM all but admits in her book that she regularly close-to-prostituted herself to get her “journalistic” scoops.
Could it be that MMM got that blood spatter “scoop” in return for sexual favors to that Kelly, whose termination remains unexplained?
Again, just a thought; but a plausible one nonetheless.

Reply
Kathy Parnell Top fan June 25, 2026 at 8:00 am

Alex Murdaugh has had a fair trial.
Move on.

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SubZeroIQ June 25, 2026 at 12:44 pm

South Carolina’s supreme court thinks otherwise.
Perhaps, YOU should “move on” from reading what you are telling others to “move on” from.
But before you do, PLEASE take this sincere report from me: once FALSELY convicted OR attempted-to-be-convicted of that which you did not do, you CANNOT morally or even physically “move on” from that.
Almost everything is a physical trigger of the horrible memories; and almost everything is a reminder of the moral obligation to ensure that it does not happen again to oneself or to others.
I sincerely hope you do not think that FALSE arrests/convictions do not happen.
But if you do acknowledge they happen, whether to Alex Murdaugh or to others, what are you telling us to do about it?
Just “move on” and let it happen over and over again?

Reply
Terminator44 Top fan June 25, 2026 at 3:25 pm

J.A.G – perhaps the blood splatter evidence “leak”, or the “scoop in return” “transaction”, took place on the grassy knoll? Or, maybe the blood spatter report originated at Area 51? Just as “plausible” as the rest of your moronic commentary.

Reply
SubZeroIQ June 25, 2026 at 4:39 pm

What makes my thought plausible and NOT “moronic” are: (1) the sworn deposition of Callie Lyons which you can, as I did, download from Hampton County’s Public Index of the SECOND Beach et al v. Parker’s et al case; (2) Malicious Mandy Matney’s (“MMM”) own book and her recitation of what appear to be almost daily one-night stands; (3) the in-court revelations of shocking state police conduct in the Karen Read cases in Massachusetts; and (4) the art of connecting observations and drawing conclusions from them.
No involvement of the grassy knoll or of Area 51 in my facts-based hypothesis whatsoever.
Even going by Callie Lyons’ sworn deposition ALONE, I want to know WHO in SLED and/or SCAG leaked the FALSE blood spatter report to MMM and WHY?
Nor is it “moronic” to want to expose corruption in the handling of high-profile criminal cases.
If such COULD and DID happen under the intense lights of the Murdaugh and Karen Read trials, what else happens in the cases of the rest of us in the dark?

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SubZeroIQ June 26, 2026 at 8:38 am

Paul was NOT shot “BEFORE he was able to send it.” Paul did not send the kennel video BECAUSE IT WAS USELESS.
If you look carefully, there was NO “pone” or any other lesion on that furiously-wagging tail of Cash-the-dog.
It had been either an optical illusion or some caked dirt which Paul had mistaken for “a pone” and wanted the veterinarian friend of Rogan Gibson’s girl friend to look at and suggest remedies or continued passive observation.
By the time Paul took that video AND sleeved Cash-the-dog’s tail in Paul’s non-phone-holding palm, that caked dirt had fallen off or that swollen insect bite has flattened out AND Paul put his OWN phone back in his OWN pocket.
Think about it!
If Paul had been shot BY ALEX right after the kennel video: (1) Why was the phone left in Paul’s pocket and not taken by Alex along with Maggie’s phone? (2) Wouldn’t Cash-the-dog have run away spooked by the gunfire and had Paul’s blood at least on its paws? (3) Would Alex have had time to catch BOTH dogs (Cash and Bubba), clean them, and put both of them in their kennels in the SIX MINUTES between the last activity on Maggie’s phone and Alex leaving for Almeda?
Instead, the grounds/kennels-keeper testified that when he went to Moselle unsuspectingly in the morning, the dogs were ALL locked in their kennels and just hungry.
Of course, as I previously explained MANY TIMES, the REAL time of the shootings is closer to 9:30 pm judging by the victims’ stomachs’ contents at autopsy compared to the KNOWN time and composition of their last meal.

Reply
Just another guest June 26, 2026 at 8:39 am

Paul was NOT shot “BEFORE he was able to send it.” Paul did not send the kennel video BECAUSE IT WAS USELESS.
If you look carefully, there was NO “pone” or any other lesion on that furiously-wagging tail of Cash-the-dog.
It had been either an optical illusion or some caked dirt which Paul had mistaken for “a pone” and wanted the veterinarian friend of Rogan Gibson’s girl friend to look at and suggest remedies or continued passive observation.
By the time Paul took that video AND sleeved Cash-the-dog’s tail in Paul’s non-phone-holding palm, that caked dirt had fallen off or that swollen insect bite has flattened out AND Paul put his OWN phone back in his OWN pocket.
Think about it!
If Paul had been shot BY ALEX right after the kennel video: (1) Why was the phone left in Paul’s pocket and not taken by Alex along with Maggie’s phone? (2) Wouldn’t Cash-the-dog have run away spooked by the gunfire and had Paul’s blood at least on its paws? (3) Would Alex have had time to catch BOTH dogs (Cash and Bubba), clean them, and put both of them in their kennels in the SIX MINUTES between the last activity on Maggie’s phone and Alex leaving for Almeda?
Instead, the grounds/kennels-keeper testified that when he went to Moselle unsuspectingly in the morning, the dogs were ALL locked in their kennels and just hungry.
Of course, as I previously explained MANY TIMES, the REAL time of the shootings is closer to 9:30 pm judging by the victims’ stomachs’ contents at autopsy compared to the KNOWN time and composition of their last meal.

Reply
SubZeroIQ June 26, 2026 at 9:18 am

The Bill of Rights is NOT limited to the Sixth Amendment; nor is the latter even limited to trial by an untainted jury.
Before we even get to trial/retrial, the Constitution guarantees DUE PROCESS, procedural and substantive.
But he Defense is taking a complicated approach and playing into the Prosecution’s hands AGAIN.
Instead of all this talk about retrial arrangements, the Defense should push for a bench-directed-verdict-of-acquittal based on the CORRECT analysis of what the Prosecution presents as inculpatory evidence when it is in fact exculpatory.
And the Prosecution has one supposedly-inculpatory piece, and only ONE piece, which should, UNDER DUE PROCESS, be analyzed SCIENTIFICALLY.
And that is the Kennels video.
But think about it and pray Judge McCaslin has the courage to think OUTLOUD about it.
Paul was NOT shot “BEFORE he was able to send it.” Paul did not send the kennel video BECAUSE IT WAS USELESS.
If you look carefully, there was NO “pone” or any other lesion on that furiously-wagging tail of Cash-the-dog.
It had been either an optical illusion or some caked dirt which Paul had mistaken for “a pone” and wanted the veterinarian friend of Rogan Gibson’s girlfriend to look at and suggest remedies or continued passive observation.
By the time Paul took that video AND sleeved Cash-the-dog’s tail in Paul’s non-phone-holding palm, that caked dirt had fallen off or that swollen insect bite has flattened out AND Paul put his OWN phone back in his OWN pocket.
Think about it!
If Paul had been shot BY ALEX right after the kennel video: (1) Why was the phone left in Paul’s pocket and not taken by Alex along with Maggie’s phone? (2) Wouldn’t Cash-the-dog have run away spooked by the gunfire and had Paul’s blood at least on its paws? (3) Would Alex have had time to catch BOTH dogs (Cash and Bubba), clean them, and put both of them in their kennels in the SIX MINUTES between the last activity on Maggie’s phone and Alex leaving for Almeda?
Instead, the grounds/kennels-keeper testified that when he went to Moselle unsuspectingly in the morning, the dogs were ALL locked in their kennels and just hungry.
Of course, as I previously explained MANY TIMES, the REAL time of the shootings is closer to 9:30 pm judging by the victims’ stomachs’ contents at autopsy compared to the KNOWN time and composition of their last meal.

Reply
SubZeroIQ June 26, 2026 at 11:41 am

Alex Murdaugh IS special.
Anyone who found his beloved wife and younger son shot by strangers AND had the shootings FALSELY pinned on the grieving widower and father IS special.
The system should be in the proverbial ashes and sash cloth seeking Alex Murdaugh’s forgiveness instead of continuing to humiliate and torture him.
Look at what corrupt police did to Karen Read in Massachusetts.
Look at what the system did to me.
We who faced FALSE criminal accusations with courage and dignity ARE special.
Others should learn from us, not attack us.

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Obsessed Much? June 26, 2026 at 2:44 pm

Jesus, go write a book or something.

Reply
SubZeroIQ June 26, 2026 at 6:12 pm

What?!? And deprive FITS and his subscribers and guests of my insights and conscience-awakening writing?

Reply
SubZeroIQ June 29, 2026 at 11:22 am

Today’s first motion hearing having just ended. God willing and FITS permitting, I shall keep pasting here my most relevant replies to comments on FITSTube and YouTube. Here is one from this morning:
@ritaeichler2066 , relax and listen!
I did not write that Alex saw the video ITSELF.
I wrote that Alex must have SEEN PAUL MAKING THE VIDEO. The threesome, who had just had dinner together, were in the narrow confines of the kennels.
If Paul and Maggie could see Bubba-the-dog closely enough to debate whether what its jaws held was a chicken or a guinea, and for Alex to summon Bubba-the-dog and extract the bird from its jaws and later see that chicken died, then Alex MUST HAVE BEEN close enough to SEE PAUL MAKING THE VIDEO then put Paul’s own phone back in Paul’s own pocket.
Had Alex been the real shooter, or had he known that some shooters would show up at the kennels and confront Paul and Maggie, Alex WOULD NECESSARILY HAVE KNOWN that video on Paul’s phone would cast suspicion on Alex; and Alex would have taken the phone from a lifeless Paul’s pocket and disposed of it along with the shooting weapons.
“by 8:49” Paul and Maggie were NOT “dead.”
There is ABSOLUTELY no support for the assumption that they were.
And for the nth time: the food in their stomachs AT AUTOPSY was too little and too digested for their lives to have ended ONLY 19 MINUTES after their KNOWN large and relatively fatty last meal.
These are NOT false facts. These are long known MEDICAL facts about human digestion.
I understand that some people’s ideas are cemented. But I can no more accept that than accept, for example, a man being can be executed for saying the earth is round while most people had a fixed idea that the earth is flat.
I am NOT an Alex troll. I am one who had been FALSELY accused of crimes but, thank God and WITHOUT A LAWYER, ultimately COMPLETELY exonerated myself beginning with a 22-26 February 2010 jury trial in the court of none other than Judge Clifton Newman.
Please respect that or hold your peace.

Reply
SubZeroIQ July 2, 2026 at 9:38 am

SCIENTIFICALLY, Alex Murdaugh is already-proven ACTUALLY innocent because the shootings did NOT happen as early as the Prosecution pretended.
The food in Paul and Maggie’s stomachs AT AUTOPSY was too little and too digested for their lives to have ended ONLY 19 or 22 MINUTES after their KNOWN large, and relatively fatty, last meal ended at 8:30 pm on 7 June 2021, just as the sun BEGAN SETTING on that Low Country day so close to the summer solstice.
Those who took the time to attend the hearings and/or go the now-reversed trial, should take the time to read this TRUE CRIME story from Oregon as told in Atlas Obscura:
How a Victim’s Last Meal Can Identify a Killer
To solve crimes, two botanists identify half-digested potatoes, tomatoes, and lettuce under a microscope.
by Tove DanovichDecember 12, 2017
It was 10 p.m. when the two men held up a blue Dutch Brothers coffee kiosk in Eugene, Oregon. They were wearing dark clothing and had covered their faces with handkerchiefs. The first man told the lone barista to turn around with his hands on the back of his head and close his eyes. They likely hoped that the second man could grab the cash while the other watched the barista. But the plan went wrong. The barista got out his gun and shot and killed the first man. The second man tried to get in a few shots, but soon ran away on foot.
The kiosk’s surveillance cameras were out of order, and nearby cameras did not capture the two men on video. The case might have reached a dead end there if not for the criminal’s autopsy and, specifically, the identification of what the dead man ate for dinner that night.
As a forensic analyst for the Eugene Police Department, Lisa Pope doesn’t perform autopsies, but she is sometimes in the room to help tie up any forensic loose ends. Pope was there, in 2010, for the autopsy.
“[The Medical Examiner] was examining the stomach contents, which is a part I don’t like because it doesn’t smell good,” Pope recalls. “But I started paying attention—he was pulling out food that wasn’t well-digested.”
Thanks to the process of chewing combined with caustic stomach acids, it’s typically difficult to identify foods from a deceased’s stomach contents. “But he’s pulling out chunks of hamburger about the size of my index finger, a piece of cheese, then a piece of bacon about a half inch long,” Pope says. “Then he pulls out half a French fry.”
Pope recognized it at once. It was a thick cut fry with the skin still attached—a signature of Wendy’s fries. Even better, Pope knew there was a Wendy’s restaurant just a few blocks from the Dutch Brothers kiosk. She called the lead detective, and when they asked Wendy’s for surveillance footage from that night, they found clear video of the deceased suspect and his partner ordering food, eating their meal, and then trying on their masks before walking out the door. The detectives couldn’t believe it. “If it weren’t for the stomach contents, we might not have gotten that video,” Pope says.
The first forensic autopsy used to determine whether foul play was involved in a victim’s death took place in the early 1300s. Yet these autopsies were performed sparingly, and they usually aimed to simply determine whether a victim died from heart attack or poison, knife wounds or a gunshot. If a man died of a coughing fit, the autopsy may have only looked at the throat and chest—ignoring the rest of the body. Physicians only saw what they looked for, and it wasn’t until the mid-1800s that people started championing more comprehensive autopsies that looked at every organ of the body and documented each one according to a set standard.
The Dutch Brothers Kiosk is a rare example of an old-school form of stomach analysis (using only what can be detected with the eye) working. Yet a closer look at stomach contents could lead to these almost unbelievable successes happening more often. Today most autopsies only look at stomach contents to get a vague idea of how long it’s been since a victim’s last meal. It’s rare that the deceased was such a terrible chewer that foods can be identified with the naked eye. But forensic botanists and co-authors of the book Forensic Plant Science, Jane Bock and David Norris, have proven that looking at stomach contents under a microscope can be an important tool in solving a crime—even if it is only just starting to catch on.
Bock and Norris were normal, American academics—she a botanist and he an animal ecologist—until 1982, when they got a call from an Assistant Coroner in Denver. A young woman had been murdered. The investigators knew she had eaten with her boyfriend the day before at a McDonald’s. As anyone who has seen a detective show knows, the significant other is always a primary suspect. Yet some of the deceased’s stomach contents didn’t seem to match their last meal together.
The stomach stops working after death, creating a gastronomic time capsule of the victim’s last moments. Though digestion varies from person to person, a meal is typically fully digested (and the stomach empty) six hours after eating. To determine time of death, examiners commonly look at body temperature and rigor mortis (for more recently killed victims) or decomposition and insect activity (for bodies found later). They rarely rely on stomach contents.
Yet many common models are subject to external factors such as temperature. A body found in a scorching desert will actually heat up, and a body found in a snowbank will cool more rapidly. Even rigor mortis, which can also be sped up or slowed based on the weather, relies on subjective assessments of a body’s stiffness.
While most investigators take these factors into consideration, Norris says that stomach contents are very useful, too, and can sometimes provide a more accurate timeline of the victim’s last hours. If you know about a person’s last meal and can see the volume of material left in the stomach, you can determine (if the stomach is nearly empty) that a victim was killed six hours after eating or (if full) closer to one hour after a last meal.
“This determined who the suspects were and who they weren’t,” Norris says, referring to cases where a suspect had an alibi for, say, the later possible time of death range but not the earlier one. “A lot of methods are used to determine time of death, but they all have a fairly large plus or minus factor.” In other words, stomach contents are equally or more reliable than other commonly used methods when you know the time of a victim’s last meal and can identify the meal under a microscope.
For Bock and Norris’s first case, the Denver coroner sent stomach contents swabbed onto slides. Bock, a botanist unused to dealing with dead animal material, had refused to look at them otherwise. When they examined the slides, they discovered that not only was there no trace of hamburger, but the victim’s last meal had actually been a salad—under a microscope they detected remnants of cabbage, green peppers, and kidney beans. Her last meal had been at a Wendy’s, which, in the 1980s, was one of the few fast food restaurants to have a salad bar. (Unlike the would-be Dutch Brothers robber, this woman chewed her food before swallowing, which meant fries or salad remnants couldn’t be identified by sight alone.) The boyfriend had an alibi for the evening and was no longer considered a suspect. Norris says that years later, serial killer Henry Lee Lucas confessed to her murder. (Take it with a grain of salt: Lucas has variously confessed to committing 60 to 3,000 unsolved murders.)
In another of Bock and Norris’ famous cases, a woman named Jill Coit was suspected of killing her estranged husband, Gerry Boggs. Boggs had been her ninth husband (she was married 11 times to nine different men), and they’d separated acrimoniously. Boggs was one of those men who start every morning the same way: He got up and ordered coffee, hash browns, toast, and eggs at a local diner. Then he opened the store that he ran with his brother Doug. But one morning when Doug got to work, the store was still closed. He called, but got no answer. When checked on Gerry after work, Doug discovered his brother’s body. He had been hit with a shovel, burned with a stun gun, and shot three times.
Coit was an obvious suspect—she had a pattern of marrying men for their money, and a previous husband had been killed under suspicious circumstances. She had an alibi for the later half of the day when Boggs was murdered, but not for that morning. His stomach contents were sent to Bock and Norris, who found potato and onion consistent with the contents of his last meal—breakfast. Based on that information, authorities obtained a search warrant for Coit’s home where they found the murder weapons. Jill Coit is currently serving a life sentence without possibility of parole.
Despite their early successes (and having a few of their famous cases dramatized for the television show Forensic Files), Bock and Norris have found that getting a new form of forensic science accepted by investigators is sometimes an uphill battle.
“If you pick up most textbooks on forensic science, they don’t cover botanic material at all,” Norris says. That’s one of the reasons why he and Bock wrote a textbook about forensic botany. Changing the standards for forensic science may require an overhaul of the whole system.
Yet in the 30 years he and Bock have been solving cases with botany, the number of cases they get asked to work on has gone down while the number of workshops they’ve been brought in to teach keeps increasing. They were recently invited to a regional FBI lab. “We feel that it may be a reflection that we are getting the word out.”
Over their three decade career, investigators throughout the Unites States have sent stomach contents to Bock and Norris. “Some of them would come FedEx,” Norris says. “They typically put absorbent material in with it in case the container broke, but it would be shipped like any other liquid.” Often, agents drove or flew into Colorado and delivered the contents directly to the forensic botanists. Norris says that most people are familiar with what stomach contents look like: “It looks like vomit.”
As long as the food in the sample had a cell wall—think plants rather than meat, cheese, or processed foods, which turn to “goosh,” as Norris calls it, soon after mingling with stomach acids—they can tell exactly what it was. Even when meat is relatively intact, Norris explains, since all skeletal muscle looks alike, it’s impossible to tell steak from grasshopper meat. In other words, there’s now another (admittedly macabre) reason to eat vegetables at every meal.
Gastro Obscura covers the world’s most wondrous food and drink.
© 2026 Atlas Obscura. All rights reserved.

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