For most of Alex Murdaughâs six-week murder trial, Wendell Butterfield took up residence in the Colleton County courtroom on a gallery bench directly behind the disgraced former lawyer.
Butterfield, an 80-year-old South Carolina state constable with over 50 years of law enforcement experience, wasnât just a spectator. The former judge, who also has a doctorate in theology, had a job to do: He was security for Judge Clifton Newman, Court of Clerk Becky Hill, and the court reporters.
Along the way, however, Butterfieldâs stoic presence behind Murdaugh caught the attention of viewers watching the proceedings online. That, and his brightly colored suitsâespecially a yellow one.
âFor the casting of the Murdaugh Murders Movie. Who should play Mr. Fashionista?â one Twitter user asked. âHis daughter thinks Clint, I think Eastwoodâs a little long in the tooth these days.â
Another added: âDr. Wendell Butterfieldâs suit was telling. It brought the sunshine today.â
Butterfield, who agreed to the courthouse gig just weeks before the trial began in January, told The Daily Beast that he was shocked to learn that the clothes his wife picked out for him got so much attention. He added that he wasnât thinking about his outfits when he arrived at the courthouse every morning to a sea of spectators and reporters from around the country.
âI had no idea that my suit choices were making quite a stir,â he added. âItâs been surreal.â
Hill told The Daily Beast it was a no-brainer to ask Butterfieldâwhose resume includes stints as a Marine, in the Colleton County Sheriff's Department, and with Homeland Security conducting auditsâto join the already-robust courthouse security team.
âHe takes pride in his uniform and the way he looks and is always immaculately dressed with starched shirts and pants, a crisp blazer, a tie, and shoes that are shined, and a very similar likeness to a favorite and very loved actor of mine, Clint Eastwood,â she said, adding that Butterfield showed up to work âevery morning before time to report with his coffee in one hand and my sweet tea in the other.â
The security job, Butterfield said, also allowed him to have a front-row seat to one of the most anticipated murder trials in South Carolina. He said that while he was concentrating on the safety of Hill, Newman, and other courthouse staffâhe was also closely watching Murdaugh and the 12-person jury.
âThere were a few times when Murdaugh seemed a little distracted and nervous. He was listening to witness testimonies and I could tell when he didnât seem too pleased about what was being said,â Butterfield said, adding that Murdaughâs âbody language would change from time to time.â
âMurdaugh seemed to be very involved in discussing some matters with his attorneys sometimes but the topic of discussion is unknown,â he added.
Originally, Butterfield said, he was stationed at the side of the courtroom âout of everyoneâs eyesight.â But he wasnât âtoo thrilledâ about the seat placement because it was too far away from the people he was tasked with protecting and did not have a good view of the proceedings.
âSo I took the first seat in the second row behind Murdaugh so I could go right through the gate if something were to happen,â he explained. âBut I didnât care for the fact that that meant the camera was right in my face.â
Butterfield said the live-streaming of the trial didnât stop him from âconcentrating on what I was doing.â He said he closely listened to dozens of witnesses as prosecutors presented their argument that Murdaugh fatally killed his wife and son near the dog kennels of their familyâs hunting estate on June 7, 2021. And, he said, he watched how the jury and Murdaugh himself were responding to the trial.
âThe thing I noticed the most was that the majority of the jury was paying attention to everything that was being said,â Butterfield noted. âThey were very engaged.â
He said that he believed it was a âvery bad ideaâ when Murdaugh made the decision to take the stand in his own defense. Several jurors have since come out and agreed with Butterfieldâs analysis, saying they did not believe Murdaughâs emotional testimony was genuine.
âThe defense tried to talk him out of it,â he added. âBut he knew what he wanted to do and he was going to do it regardless of what he was being told.â
Butterfield said his family would sometimes come to the courthouse while he worked, including his wife who one day sat next to the mystery novelist Rhonda Rich.
âThey hit it off,â Butterfield said.
The only real stir in the courtroom, he said, came from Murdaughâs own family.
Butterfield said that the family was warned not to communicate with Murdaugh after his sister âcame up to the defense table.â Despite a sharp warning, Murdaughâs sister later passed a book to one of his legal clerks on the defense team.
âThe clerk ended up giving it to Murdaugh and it was noticed. The book was confiscated and Murdaughâs sister was told that was the second time the family was warned and if something were to happen again, she would be restricted from the courthouse,â Butterfield explained. âShe wasnât too happy about it.â
Court staff eventually moved Murdaugh's family several rows behind the defense table to ensure there was no communication for the rest of the trial, Butterfield said.
On Friday, the jury only deliberated for about three hours before convicting Murdaugh of two counts of murder and two counts of possession of a weapon during the commission of a violent crime.
Butterfield said that as the verdict was being read, Murdaugh was âgritting his teeth.â
The next day, the packed courtroom was bristling with anticipation for Murdaughâs sentencing. After a searing admonishment, the judge gave Murdaugh two consecutive life sentences without the possibility of parole.
âThere was no clapping or whooping or anything like that in the courtroom,â Butterfield said. âEveryone understood that Newman did not allow that.â
Since the end of the trial, Butterfield said, he has been blown away that his fashion choices have been âtalk of the town on all the different social media outlets.â His daughter, Shanna Ayer, who first alerted him to his online fame, told The Daily Beast that she enjoyed his turn in the spotlight.
âI was very proud of him and honored that he was being showcased as the best dressed in the courtroom,â Ayer added. âMy dad is an amazing man who takes pride in everything he does. He is very humble but he deserves all the attention and praise for sure.â
But Butterfield added that he has a different favorite moment about this trial.
âThe moment it was over,â he said with a laugh.