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  • Great Falls man charged in attack

    CHESTER – According to a Chester County Sheriff’s office report, a man was arrested on Jan. 9, 2022, after allegedly attacking the mother of his child with a hammer and the holding her and the child hostage in a home in the Douglas Road area of Great Falls.

    Mincey

    The incident unfolded beginning about 1 p.m. on Jan. 9, when the Chester County Sheriff’s Office received a call from the woman.

    Deputies were dispatched to the home and helped the woman escape the home with the child.

    The woman explained that the father of her child, later identified as Burton Mincey, Jr., attacked her with a hammer on Jan. 7, threatened to kill her and then held her and the child hostage for the next two days.

    After securing the victims, deputies executed a search warrant on the residence.

    During the execution of the search warrant, deputies arrested Mincey. He was transported to the Chester County Detention Center and charged with Domestic Violence High and Aggravated and kidnapping.

     This incident is under investigation by the Chester County Sheriff’s Office.

  • R2 Super updates on medical incident

    Davis

    COLUMBIA – In an email to the Richland Two community Wednesday afternoon, R2 Superintendent Dr. Baron Davis issued a brief update on a medical incident that occurred during the regularly monthly school board meeting Tuesday night. The meeting was being viewed by the public over YouTube at the time.

    “I am writing to personally share that I am doing well after a brief medical incident that occurred during the board meeting on Jan. 11. As a precaution, I received medical aid and was cleared to go home after a very brief visit to the emergency room.

    “Also, I wanted to express my appreciation for the outpouring of support and concern shared by the Richland Two family.”

    Following the medical incident, the meeting was adjourned and EMS was called to render medical aid.

    In an email to board members on Wednesday morning, Libby Ruff, the district’s information officer said Dr. Davis was alert and speaking at the time he received medical care.

    “Restricting access to video involving a medical emergency is in keeping with the district’s standard response in similar situations,” Ruff wrote. She said the video would be posted to the district’s YouTube channel by Jan. 14.

  • Eyeing corruption scandals, Gov. McMaster puts ethics on the agenda for 2022

    COLUMBIA – Gov. Henry McMaster wants to beef up a pair of watchdogs that investigate government misconduct, make the Palmetto State’s scandal-scarred sheriffs attend ethics training, and shine more light on special interests that secretly influence city and county councils.

    The Columbia Republican will package those proposals into his soon-to-be-unveiled executive budget, calling on lawmakers to spend some $3.4 million more per year on measures meant to repair South Carolinians’ faith in their government.

    The governor’s agenda would tackle some of the problems exposed over the past year by Uncovered, a project in which The Post and Courier has teamed up with 17 other newspapers across the state, including The Voice of Blythewood & Fairfield County, to investigate public corruption and expose the systems of oversight that fail to hold politicians accountable.

    More than 120 S.C. public officials have been arrested on criminal charges related to their government work over the past seven years, the investigation found. The state’s sheriffs keep getting arrested for breaking the laws they swore to uphold — more than a dozen have been charged with crimes while in office since 2010. But as newspapers and other watchdogs have declined, many other officials in small-town South Carolina have evaded scrutiny.

    The governor’s proposals come ahead of a budget cycle where lawmakers will have a mountain of cash to spend. The Legislature expects the state budget to grow by nearly $900 million next year and will have nearly $2.2 million to spend on one-time projects, making McMaster’s request a drop in the bucket.

    “The governor doesn’t think there is any more worthy investment than making sure government is more accountable to the people and transparent,” McMaster spokesman Brian Symmes told The Post and Courier.

    Strengthening watchdogs

    McMaster’s proposed budget would more than double the budgets of the State Ethics Commission and Office of Inspector General, giving the pair of government watchdogs more money to hire investigators and enforce laws that are already on the books.

    Both could use the help.

    The State Ethics Commission has a staff of just 18 to monitor campaign spending and fundraising, track lobbying activity at the Statehouse, and investigate complaints of misconduct against politicians and public officials.

    In part because it employs just four investigators, the agency has historically let public officials off the hook with warnings and minimal fines after investigations that sometimes disregard serious allegations, an Uncovered investigation found last year. And even when it does fine politicians, it has trouble forcing them to pay up, another Uncovered story revealed.

    The Office of Inspector General, an eight-person agency, also has its hands full with investigating fraud, abuse, waste and misconduct within the state’s 106 executive agencies.

    Led by former FBI investigator Brian Lamkin, the agency typically fields hundreds of complaints a year against state employees and programs. In one high-profile case last year, the Inspector General’s Office determined that a former state agency executive director helped her husband win a $600,000 contract with her agency.

    In another, the office investigated and scolded the Governor’s School for Agriculture at John de la Howe after an Uncovered report first revealed ethical breaches and questionable spending there.

    In addition to giving the Inspector General’s Office at least three more investigators, the governor also wants to expand the agency’s jurisdiction beyond just state agencies, his office said.

    McMaster will support efforts to empower the office to investigate any agency or group that gets state tax dollars, his office said. That includes school districts, cities, counties — even nonprofits that get state grants.

    The state’s 170 legislators haven’t seen the governor’s proposed budget yet. But two necessary allies, the chairmen of the House and Senate budget committees, told The Post and Courier they support the idea of strengthening the Ethics Commission and Inspector General’s Office.

    “I’ve spent my entire Senate career fighting for efficiency and accountability in government,” said Senate Finance Committee Chairman Harvey Peeler, a Gaffney Republican who was first elected to the Senate in 1980. “While I haven’t seen the details of the governor’s proposals, they will be strongly considered if they lead to those two items.”

    Local scrutiny

    McMaster also wants the state’s 46 sheriffs to undergo annual ethics training, a response to a steady stream of arrests and criminal convictions of the state’s top lawmen.

    The Post and Courier’s 2019 series “Above the Law” showed that one in four of South Carolina’s counties in the past decade had seen their sheriffs arrested for breaking laws. By the end of that year, three more sheriffs had been indicted and removed from office. In all, 15 sheriffs since 2010 have been arrested on charges ranging from drug dealing to driving under the influence.

    Ex-Chester County Sheriff Alex Underwood is currently awaiting sentencing after his federal conviction on corruption and abuse of power charges. Meanwhile, Marlboro County Sheriff Charles Lemon was indicted last month and suspended from office on charges of ordering a deputy to repeatedly jolt a suspect with a Taser in the county jail.

    The governor’s budget requests $200,000 to pay for the training. It also calls for a public listing of which sheriffs attend and which skip out.

    “Over the years, we have seen far too many instances of sheriffs abusing their office,” said Symmes, McMaster’s spokesman.

    House budget committee Chairman Murrell Smith said he likes that idea. The Sumter Republican would even support expanding ethics training to all public officials across the state.

    Smith, a lawyer, noted that even after graduating law school and passing the bar exam, attorneys are required to receive regular training. He thinks politicians should do the same, especially in an age where technology has made it easier than ever for everyday taxpayers to scrutinize elected officials’ dealings.

    “There is more scrutiny on people about their ethics than there was 20 or 30 years ago,” Smith said. “It’s time for us to make sure that we put more emphasis on ethics and compliance and training.”

    McMaster’s ethics agenda also calls for more scrutiny of local government. Currently, political operatives who are paid to influence decisions at the Statehouse have to register as lobbyists with the Ethics Commission. But no such requirement exists at the local levels. That allows businesses and special interests to wine and dine city and county council members free of oversight.

    As he has in the past, McMaster will call on lawmakers to close that loophole by requiring local lobbyists to register with the state.

    McMaster’s executive budget is just the first step in a long legislative process where proposals can be fine-tuned or outright rejected. The governor can also make his case at the Jan. 19 State of the State address, a speech in which governors typically tout their achievements and lay out their priorities for the year ahead.

  • Underwood set for court appearance next month

    CHESTER – Former Chester County Sheriff Alex Underwood has a court date set for early next month, though it will not be to face sentencing.

    Alex Underwood

    Underwood was found guilty in federal court on seven different counts eight months ago. Documents indicate he will be in court on Jan. 10, “to address the objections in the presentence reports only.” It is specifically noted that, “sentencing will be scheduled for a later date.” A pre-sentence report is a legal document that presents findings on the background of a person convicted of a crime.

    The proceedings next month have been delayed as Underwood’s attorneys have successfully requested extensions. One of the motions for an extension argued more time was needed as the pre-sentence report “includes calculations for a significant amount of incarceration.”

    “Defense counsel needs more time to consult the notes and the large amount of discovery material provided to research the applicable guideline law and properly challenge the pre-sentence report. Additionally, counsel’s office is recovering from a ransomware virus that made it difficult to access files,” the filing said.

    Earlier this month, a legal bid by Underwood seeking a new trial or acquittal was rejected by Judge J. Michelle Childs.

    “The question is whether the evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the prosecution, is such that the finder of fact might find the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt,” Childs wrote, quoting from the United States v. Wooten case. “A defendant who brings a sufficiency challenge bears a heavy burden…a defendant is entitled to relief only if no rational trier of fact could have found proof of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt…the court does not weigh the evidence of assess the credibility of witnesses and assumes the jury resolved a contradictions in favor of the government.”

    In the end, Childs ruled that “the government put forth sufficient evidence to support each of Underwood’s convictions…accordingly, this is not a ‘rare circumstance’ requiring the court to grant a new trial.”

    At the conclusion of a two-week trial in April, a jury found Underwood guilty on seven different federal charges. Those included a conspiracy charge in relation to wire fraud, federal program theft or falsification of records. That was tied to schemes dealing with skimming money from subordinates and seeking to enrich himself on ECHO DUI task force checkpoints funded by a federal grant administered through the Hazel Pittman Center (checks cashed electronically crossed state lines which brought on the wire fraud charge), a separate scheme to have on-duty police officers build a personal party barn on his property and falsification of records related to the 2018 arrest of Kevin Simpson. He was also found guilty of civil rights violations related to the arrest of Simpson, federal program theft and four additional conspiracy charges. Underwood was indicted in May of 2019 and subsequently removed from office by Gov. Henry McMaster, who named Max Dorsey interim sheriff. Because he had not been convicted prior to the 2020 General Election, Underwood was eligible to run for a third term in office but was defeated by Dorsey.

    Former deputies Robert Sprouse and Johnny Neal were both convicted on multiple charges alongside Underwood. Sentencing has still not been scheduled.

  • Winnsboro man identified in fatal crash

    WINNSBORO – Fairfield County Coroner Chris Hill has identified the man who was killed in a motor vehicle crash on Tuesday Jan 4.

    Stefon Gaither, 59, of Winnsboro, was traveling west on Hwy 34 (Newberry Rd) when he lost control of the Ford pickup truck he was driving and crashed into a guardrail, possibly flipping during the accident. 

    Mr. Gaither was removed from the vehicle by Fairfield County volunteer firefighters and was taken by Fairfield County EMS to MUSC Fairfield Emergency Department where he was pronounced deceased. 

    The accident remains under investigation by Fairfield County Coroner’s Office and South Carolina Highway Patrol.

  • Body recovered from Lake Carolina identified as missing kayaker

    COLUMBIA – Richland County Coroner Naida Rutherford has confirmed that the body that was recovered at Lake Carolina around 4:35 p.m., Tuesday, Jan. 4, 2022 is that of Theron Wallace, 20, of Columbia.

    Wallace

    Wallace had been missing since Christmas morning while he was kayaking on Lake Carolina.

    “This has been a difficult week for the Wallace family. While we didn’t get the results we hoped for, we are grateful that this family can begin the process for healing. We will continue working with the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources to fully investigate this accident”, Coroner Rutherford states.

    According to Rutherford, The Richland County Coroner’s Office Forensic K-9 unit assisted the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources with the recovery of the of Wallace’s body.

  • 10 tremors near Elgin since Dec. 27

    ELGIN/LUGOFF – Three more tremors were recorded near Elgin this week, with the last two occurring on Wednesday morning bringing the total number of tremors since Dec. 27 to 10, the U. S. Geological Survey reported.

    The last 9 tremors continue to be aftershocks of the 3.3 magnitude tremor recorded on Dec. 27, the strongest of the 10 tremors.

    The first tremor on Wednesday was recorded at 2.6 magnitude at 1:45 a.m., 5 km southwest of Lugoff, according to the USGS. It was the strongest aftershock since the initial 3.3 magnitude earthquake.

    The second tremor on Wednesday, a 1.5 magnitude tremor, hit at 8:18 a.m., 7 km south-southwest of Lugoff.

    A 2.5 tremor on Monday, Jan. 3 occurred after a night of heavy rain, high winds and thunderstorms. Residents in Blythewood, Fairfield County and Columbia who were up early reported hearing a loud roar about 5:49 a.m., accompanied by a tremor lasting several seconds. It was 5 km south of Lugoff.

    Following the initial earthquake on Dec. 27, comments lit up Facebook pages of Blythewood and Fairfield County residents who reported that they felt their home shake. Some comments likened the the earthquake to the sound of thunder, a train or an airplane flying low over a house.

    The aftershocks confirmed in Kershaw County have been similar in strength.

    In the past two months, a series of seven minor tremors have been reported around the Monticello reservoir in Fairfield County.

    No major damage or injuries have been reported from any of these earthquake or aftershocks.

  • Crash on Newberry Road results in death

    WINNSBORO – A person in a Ford pickup truck died of injuries from a crash that occurred at 5:45 p.m., Tuesday, Jan. 4, on Newberry Road, about 3 miles north of Winnsboro.

    The pickup truck was traveling west on Newberry Road when it ran off the right side of the road, hit a guardrail and overturned, according to Master Trooper Joel Hovis with the S. C. Highway Patrol.

    According to the officer, the occupant in the pickup truck was not seat belted, was injured, was entrapped and had to be mechanically extracted. The person was transported to MUSC Farfield and died in the hospital.

    The Fairfield Coroner’s office has not yet released the name of the person who died.

    The crash is being investigated by the S.C. Highway Patrol.

  • Body recovered from Lake Carolina

    COLUMBIA – Richland County Coroner Naida Rutherford is releasing information concerning a body that was recovered at Lake Carolina around 4:35 p.m., Tuesday, Jan. 4, 2022.

    According to Coroner Rutherford, The Richland County Coroner’s Office Forensic K-9 unit assisted the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources with the recovery of the body of an African American male. 

    “Details are limited at this time, however, a full autopsy with positive identification will be conducted in the morning with our forensic pathologist and anthropology team. We never want to give false hope or give a family wrong information, so we will positively identify this individual before sharing any other details. I have personally spoken with the family of the missing teen from Lake Carolina and they are aware of this discovery. Upon proper notification being made, we will release more detailed information,” Coroner Rutherford states.

    More details will be posted as they are available.

  • Fairfield Electric files lawsuit against Central Co-op

    COLUMBIA – Central Electric Cooperative’s efforts to consolidate power could cause “irreparable harm” to the state’s regional co-ops that provide electricity to millions of South Carolina customers, according to a lawsuit recently filed by Fairfield Electric Cooperative, headquartered in Blythewood.

    The suit alleges that Central is close to enacting a 10-year master plan that would further bind member co-ops, including Fairfield Electric Cooperative, to Central.

    Essentially, it would further strip locally run co-ops of local control by requiring them to align with Central’s governance structure and policy making.

    “This is an action for a declaration that Central’s governance structure violates the basic edicts of South Carolina’s well-established law on the duties owed by trustees or corporate offices of an organization,” the suit states.

    “The conflicts arising from Central’s governance structure cannot be rectified with the laws of our state, and the conflicts force its trustees or corporate officers to choose with whom their allegiance lies,” the suit continues.

    Fairfield Electric has also asked a judge for an injunction that would prevent Central from enacting the master plan while the case is pending.

    Central had not filed an official response as of press time.

    John Tiencken, general counsel for Central, said in a statement that the cooperative does plan to respond and that it strongly disagrees with assertions in the Fairfield Electric suit.

    “For over 70 years, Central has operated on the idea that electric cooperatives in South Carolina can work together to buy power and build electric transmission,” Tiencken’s statement said. “This lawsuit challenges that idea.

    “Central, and organizations like it all over the country, are simply membership organizations, which do what the membership directs,” the statement continues. “On occasion a member may not agree with the direction that other members want to go, but, as in all democratic organizations, the majority decide the outcome.”

    Fairfield Electric filed the suit Dec. 15 in Richland County Circuit Court.

    It’s at least the second such suit a S.C. co-op has filed against Central. Marlboro County Co-op has sued Central in federal court, citing similar governance issues, court documents show.

    Fairfield Electric is one of 20 S.C. co-ops that belong to Central as member-owners. Central’s board consists of two delegates from each of the co-ops.

    Co-ops, the suit notes, provide electricity to small towns and rural residents, accounting for one-third of the state’s total population.

    According to the suit, Central’s bylaws already require trustees to discharge their duties “in a manner the Trustee reasonably believes to be in [Central’s] best interests.” This provision poses conflict of interest issues for trustees whose duties to their co-op may differ from Central’s, the suit says.

    “Representatives of Central have consistently reminded Trustees that they must discharge their duties with only Central’s best interests in mind,” the suit states. “Trustees have been told to ignore what they believe to be in their best interest of their member cooperative and to vote in manners consistent with what they believe to be in the best interest of Central.”

    The proposed master plan referenced in the suit goes further. It would “restrict its member cooperatives from certain opt out provisions regarding new power generation.” 

    The suit describes Central currently as a “middleman,” serving as a wholesale generation and transmission electric cooperative that contracts with Duke Energy, Santee Cooper and other large providers to fulfill electricity demands of members.

    Now Central is seeking to transition itself into a “fully operational generation and transmission cooperative,” the suit states.

    “Central Electric may opt out of Santee Cooper with new generation purchases by changing to a new business model that will allow them to generate or obtain power from other sources,” Fairfield Electric’s Board Chair Mitch Rabon said. “The new plan will not allow the Co-ops, including Fairfield Electric, to exercise similar options for wholesale power purchases.  It will continue to restrict the Co-ops from purchasing other generation from other sources even if the cost would be lower for the members of Fairfield Electric.

    The new plan will not allow Fairfield Electric to exercise similar options for lower priced wholesale power purchases.

    Mitch Rabon, Fairfield Electric Cooperative Board Chair

    “The Board of Fairfield  Electric is requesting governance changes at Central Electric that will allow our members to exercise other supply options when the interest of Central Electric do not align with the best interest of our Co-op,” Rabon said.

    “Our primary responsibility to our members is to provide safe, reliable power at a reasonable cost.” he said.

    In 2019, Central generated over $1.34 billion in revenue, according to the co-op’s most recent federal tax return.

    The suit seeks a declaration that Central’s trustees should be allowed to discharge their duties in the best interests of their respective regional cooperative, even if doing so conflicts with Central’s best interests.

    In addition, the suit seeks a declaration that Central’s governance structure violates state law. The suit seeks legal fees and other unspecified relief as well.

    A deadline of July 13, 2022 has been set to complete mediation.