More than 100 people flock to Maggie and Paul Murdaugh's grave over the weekend trends now More than a hundred people attended the graves of Maggie and Paul Murdaugh on Sunday afternoon after Alex Murdaugh was found guilting of murdering them - his wife and son. The two graves in Hampton Cemetery, South Carolina, were visited by people from near and far looking to pay respects to the mother and son, who some said had been overlooked in recent months. Those that attended were described as respectful, according to Fox News Digital, and unlike the hordes that showed up to the murder scene last month after a Netflix series aired. Murdaugh, 54, who maintains he is innocent of killing his wife, 52, and son, 22, on their estate just 13 miles northeast of the cemetery, was given a life sentence on Friday after a six-week trial. More than a hundred people attended the graves of Maggie and Paul Murdaugh on Sunday afternoon. Picture here is Minnie Artis, 81, who drove two hours with her son to be at the cemetery The graves of Margaret, 52, and Paul, 22, were beside that of Alex Murdaugh's father Randolph. Pictured is the grave of Paul South Carolina Department of Corrections mugshot of former lawyer Alex Murdaugh The graves of Margaret and Paul were located next to the tombstone of Alex Murdaugh's father, Randolph, who died just three days after them. Unlike his, theirs are without headstones. Instead, their graves were marked by small plastic plaques featuring their names and surrounded by a combination of fresh and artificial flowers. Mike Artis, 60, drove his mother Minnie Artis, 81, two hours from her home in Sumter to the cemetery so she could pay her respects, the outlet reported. 'It really affected me,' Minnie said. 'I don't think he did it. I don't think anybody could shoot their son in the head like that.' Mike told Fox News Digital he disagreed with his mother and believed Murdaugh was in fact guilty. Instead he said that he found it upsetting that Paul and Maggie did not have proper permanent grave markers. Murdaugh, 54, who maintains he is innocent of killing his wife, 52, and son, 22, on their estate just 13 miles northeast of the cemetery, was given a life sentence on Friday after a six-week trial Karen Morrison (center) with four friends at Hampton Cemetery, where Maggie and Paul Murdaugh were buried One visitor to the cemetery was disappointed that both Maggie and Paul's graves did not have permanent headstones but instead their names were displayed on plastic plaques 'This really irks me. With all the money and wealth, the rest of the family, Randy and John Marvin and Liz, they can spring for headstones,' he said of Murdaugh's affluent siblings. '[Paul and Maggie] are the forgotten victims in all this,' he told Fox News Digital. 'So much focus was on him and not enough focus was on them and that's why we came down here.' Joan Martin, 73, drove with her husband about an hour from Saint Matthews to visit the graves of murdered Maggie and Paul. 'We felt great empathy toward Paul and Maggie. I spoke to her a few minutes ago, and I told her to rest in peace,' she told Fox News Digital. 'The kind of death that she died was just frightening and unfathomable,' she added. Alex Murdaugh, 54, maintains he is innocent of killing his wife and son on their estate just 13 miles northeast of the cemetery. He was sentenced to life in prison on Friday Some visited the cemetery from within South Carolina but some drove even further to pay their respects Another woman Karen Morrison drove four hours from Rutherford, North Carolina, with several friends. She told Fox News Digital she had been following their family since Paul crashed the family boat into a bridge in 2019 fatally killing Mallory Beach. 'The Murdaughs have what everybody in the South wants, lots of property, a beautiful home, a beautiful family, they just seemed to have it all,' Morrison told the outlet. All rights reserved for this news site (dailymail) and under his responsibility