WINNSBORO – A special meeting of Fairfield County Council
has been called for 6 p.m., tonight, Tuesday, June 1, for the purpose of
discussing a candidate for the position of interim county administrator.
Sources say the candidate is another educator.
In an email to council members, Bell states that the
candidate, David L. Rawlinson, has been an educator for more than thirty years,
serving as a teacher, coach, intramural director, assistant principal and
principal, and is retired from the S.C. Department of Education as Director of
Special Projects.
Rawlinson will be the fourth candidate in as many weeks to
be considered by council for the interim administrator position. The first candidate,
a former Richland County government official, didn’t make it to the vote before
he was dropped from consideration because of reports linking him to sexual
harassment in the workplace at Richland County. The second candidate, educator
Jim Rex, dropped out the day after council voted to approve him for the
position. The third candidate, former Richland County administrator, Gerald
Seals, reportedly had his offer for the position withdrawn by Bell the day
following the vote and withdrawn formally by council four days later.
Both County Administrator Jason Taylor and Assistant
Administrator Laura Johnson have resigned their positions effective June 4.
The county is at risk of violating state law if an interim
or permanent administrator isn’t installed by June 4.
WINNSBORO – Two men from Winnsboro, a 17-year-old juvenile and 20-year-old Talib Akil Willingham, pictured, have been arrested in connection with the March 24, 2021, murder of Charlie Cason, III.
The juvenile was charged with murder along with burglary and possession of a weapon during a violent crime. Investigators also arrested Willingham and charged him with accessory after the fact of murder.
Cason, 18, a 2020 graduate of Fairfield Central High School, was found deceased about 3 a.m. on March 24. inside of his residence in Ridgeway, according to Fairfield County Cororner Chris Hill.
The Sheriff’s office said Cason had been shot multiple times.
Sheriff Montgomery said the investigation is still ongoing and Investigators are expecting to make more arrests.
‘We encourage citizens of all communities in Fairfield County to call and report any information that they may have related to the murder of Charlie Cason, III,” Fairfield County Sheriff Will Montgomery said. “Call our main office at 803-635-4141 or contact Crime Stoppers at 1-888-CRIMESC (888-274-6372) or visit www.midlandscrimestoppers.com to email a tip. Your identity will be kept anonymous and, if your tip leads to more arrests, you could be eligible for a cash reward of up to $1,000.00.
WINNSBORO – Gerald Seals has been around the block as an administrator for several large city and county governments including Greenville and Richland – so when he was so quickly hired and just as quickly dismissed with a phone call the next day as the Fairfield county interim administrator, he said he was surprised.
Seals
“The law in South Carolina says when you want to rid
yourself of someone, you have to do that publicly. You have to give them
written reasons and you have to give them the right to address you in public.”
Seals said none of that took place, so he plans to come back
and still do that – address council publicly and find out the real reason why
he was dismissed the day after council voted to hire him.
“I was called by Mr. [Moses] Bell on a Wednesday and invited
to interview for the interim county administrator job in executive session on
Thursday – albeit, an illegal session,” Seals said. The vote following
executive session was 4-3 to hire him.
Seals says he was told the next day by Bell that his
services were no longer needed – before any contract had been negotiated.
Seals said there are several problems with all of this.
“It was inappropriate hold an executive session for a simple
get acquainted interview” Seals said. “We weren’t negotiating anything, just
talking. That interview could and should have been done in public session.”
The morning after he was hired, Seals said he called County
Administrator Jason Taylor’s assistant to begin preparing for when he would
come to work. He said he requested budget, employee and other documents to
review and wanted to set up interviews with department heads.
Seals said Taylor nixed those requests later that day,
saying he didn’t want to hand over that information until Seals was under
contract with the county.
Seals called Bell.
“Mr. Bell wouldn’t talk to me about it. So it’s my view that
it was him [Bell] who instructed Mr. Taylor not to give me the information I
requested.”
According to Seals, Bell also accused Seals of
“stalk-calling employees and other things, impugning my reputation, saying that
I’m some kind of abusive person with staff, and I haven’t even done any work
yet.”
“I told Mr. Bell that he can’t fire me,” Seals said. “That’s
an action that has to be taken by the full council.
“I do plan to appear before council again,” he said. “I’m
not asking to be hired. That’s not what I’m interested in,” Seals said. “I’m a
sitting pastor and I’ve been there a long time. I have 40 years in the business
where I teach ethics to up and coming business students, and what you’ve done,
you’ve said I’m unethical, that I abuse people, but I haven’t talked to anyone
but two people and all I’ve asked for is public information. You’ve turned
around and lied and said that the only way I can get that information is
through FOIA. That’s called closed government. That’s not legal in the state of
South Carolina. You can’t do what you’re doing.
“I want to have a voice to correct the record. I want to put
the lie out so there are no whisper campaigns going on,” he said. “Let’s put it
right out there in the public.”
BLYTHEWOOD – When an article in the April 29 issue of The Voice reported that Mayor Bryan Franklin unilaterally hired outside counsel – without town council’s consent – to represent the Town concerning MPA Strategies, Franklin, in a 19+ minute tirade against the newspaper’s account, said it was “absolutely fabricated and false.” He insisted that not he, but the town administrator and town attorney hired outside counsel.
“I did not hire outside counsel,” Franklin stated
emphatically at the May 3 council meeting. “I did not direct anyone to hire
outside counsel,” he said, claiming that he didn’t even find out about the hire
until about the same time council members found out, which was three days after
the hire. During Monday night’s town council meeting, however, Town Attorney
Shannon Burnett walked back the mayor’s claim that he did not direct or know
about the hire. Burnett said Franklin did know about the hire before it was
made, and that he approved it.
Burnett said that after she and Town Administrator Carroll
Williamson found who they thought would be the right attorney for the MPA
Strategy issue, they consulted Franklin.
“Before the [attorney’s] agreement was signed, you did
approve it,” she said, looking toward Franklin.
In his second tirade in a month against the press, Franklin
also targeted some of his fellow councilmen Monday night as conspiring against
him.
Getting into the weeds, Franklin sought to prove his point
by claiming that Richland County Councilman Derrek Pugh and Town Councilman
Larry Griffin had passed information to him that some council members said, “if
they make things so rough for [me], I would resign and we’d have a special
election and this individual would then run for mayor. That’s the kind of
council members you have up here,” Franklin said from the dias.
Contacted by The Voice after the meeting, Councilman Larry Griffin denied Franklin’s accusation.
What he (Franklin) said is not true. I did not say that.
Larry Griffin, Blythewood Town Councilman
“What he [Franklin] said is not true,” Griffin said. “I did
not say that. I recall Mr. Franklin asking me why he was getting so much heat
from people. I said, ‘Maybe if you get enough heat, you might resign.’ This was
general talk, not specific to anyone,” Griffin said. “I stand on my integrity and
I am not going to be drawn into petty bickering between my fellow council
members. This is childish and unprofessional behavior.”
Pugh declined to outright deny or confirm Franklin’s
accusation but responded to The Voice with an emailed statement.
“I have always been and will continue to be forthright in my
conversations and actions. I have not and do not engage in conversations that
undermine our leaders in any way,” he wrote.
Franklin launched into other claims as well that enforce his
belief that there is a conspiracy against him.
“I try to hold the powerful press accountable when they make
up stories and say things like ‘we’re trying to hire a municipal attorney’,
which is not what we’re doing,” he said. “We hired outside counsel, which is
not a municipal attorney.” The Voice used the term ‘outside council’ throughout
the article. It did not use the term ‘municipal attorney’ as Franklin claimed
(see page 1 of the April 29, 2021 issue.)
“When you have conspiring council members working with the
press, that’s discouraging to me as the mayor,” he continued. “I have been met
with anger. I have been met with consternation. I have been met with private
attacks, and I have been disregarded,” Franklin said. “I feel I was betrayed,
even blackmailed.”
Franklin covered many bases during his almost seven minute
broadside claiming even that some councilmen had disparaged the town staff and
“think lowly of them.”
He accused – but did not name – one council member of saying
that, “if I would apologize to Ms. Hunter [of MPA Strategies] for the way she
was treated or find out who spread false rumors about her, and that if we paid
the legal fees that she incurred, that her FOIA would go away. I felt
entrapped,” Franklin said.
Councilman Donald Brock told The Voice after the meeting
that Franklin was apparently referencing him but misrepresenting what he
[Brock] said.
“I believe that Mayor Franklin has confused some of the
details from our April 27 meeting to discuss the open FIOA request from Ms.
Hunter,” Brock said in response to a request from The Voice.
“I never stated that signing the marketing contract would
end the FIOA request; additionally, I had no advanced notice that any FIOA
request was forthcoming as he has alluded to in prior conversations.
“I did recommend signing the agreement since it was approved
by a majority Council vote and is clearly in the best interest of Blythewood,”
Brock added.
“When asked what I felt was a reasonable resolution between
the Town and Ms. Hunter, I did suggest that the Mayor either apologize for the
defamatory comments made or reveal the source of the anonymous voicemail he
claims to have received,” Brock said. “I also asked if he still has the
voicemail. He replied that it had been deleted.
“In regard to the payment of Ms. Hunter’s legal fees, I did
suggest that the Town, as a partner and in good faith, inquire as to the
legality of a reimbursement,” he said. “It is my opinion that Ms. Hunter was
treated rudely and unfairly during the RFP and negotiation phases of our
marketing search and the Town should remedy if applicable. I have had zero conversations with Ms. Hunter
prior to and after this meeting in regard to the above. Any insinuation to the
contrary is false.”
Franklin called for his fellow councilmen and the newspaper
to be held accountable.
“I pray that people hold these people accountable to the
point where they resign or leave office voluntarily and do not run again,”
Franklin said.
“It pains me to say these things, but quite often as you’ve
all seen, the paper does not carry the true meaning of what we do here. They
spin things to make people look bad,” Franklin said. “Well, they’re making the
wrong people look bad. In my opinion the truth will prevail.”
HOPKINS – Last Friday’s Track and Field championships may not have been the finish that the Griffins’ wanted, but it was a good one nonetheless. Sharmelle Holmes, Tamerra English and Joshua Mosley represented Fairfield Central in their respective events last Friday at the SC High School League AAA State Championships.
Sharmelle Holmes
Holmes took home second place in the 200 meter dash with a time of 25.41. Ja’Lencia Griffin of Manning took first place at 25.14. Holmes also finished fourth in the 100m dash with a time of 12.48. Griffin also took first at 12.33.
Joshua Mosley finished fourth for Fairfield in the 3200
meter run finals with a 9:53.66 finish, a new personal best for him.
Pendleton’s Ronan O’Neill finished first in the event at 9:35.39.
Tamerra English finished seventh in javelin at 70-08.00.
Bishop England’s Hope-Elaine Stowell took first place.
The Griffin girls team finished second in the region this season.
Fairfield Electric Co-op Vice President Doug Payne presents grand prize winner Nathaniel Owens, Jr. of Winnsboro with the keys to a 2013 Chevrolet Impala. | Photos: Barbara Ball
Co-op CEO Bruce Bacon
BLYTHEWOOD – A record number of voters – almost 4,000 – returned two longtime trustees to their seats on the Fairfield Electric Co-op board. Mike Good of Great Falls was elected to the seat his father John Good held for more than 60 years.
The voting lasted for five days in four locations – Chester,
Lugoff, Blythewood and Winnsboro. During the drive-thru voting, members also
received folding bag chairs.
Door prizes ranging from $50 gift cards to a 2013 Chevrolet Impala were awarded through a drawing prior to the annual board meeting following the election.
Co-op Awards:
Grand Prize 2013 Chevrolet Impala; Nathaniel Owens; Winnsboro Husqvarna 42-inch Riding Lawn Mower; Vivian H. Jacobs; Great Falls $500 Credit on Electric Bill; Booker T. Rice; Blackstock $100 Visa Gift Card; Delores Rose Nelson; Elgin $200 Credit on Electric Bill; Edward H. Mills; Blackstock $100 Credit on Electric Bill; Al Crocker; Elgin $100 Visa Gift Card; Kay K. Jackson; Blythewood $50 Visa Gift Card; Bruce Neal; Blythewood $200 Credit on Electric Bill; H. Harvey; Lugoff $50 Credit on Electric Bill; John Brown, Ill.; Elgin $100 Visa Gift Card; Keenan Price; Lugoff $50 Visa Gift Card; Raymond Coad; Blair $200 Credit on Electric Bill; Jerome McFadden; Blythewood $50 Credit on Electric Bill; Edith Evans; Blythewood $100 Visa Gift Card; Kurt & Nancy Bischofberger; Elgin $100 Visa Gift Card; William L. Hart; Blythewood $100 Credit on Electric Bill; David Nesbitt, Blythewood $50 Credit on Electric Bill; Alvetta Brice; Winnsboro $100 Visa Gift Card; Daniel Timms; Winnsboro $50 Visa Gift Card; Addie W. Suber; Blair $200 Credit on Electric Bill; Joseph Bukowski; Lugoff $50 Credit on Electric Bill; Gary Cook; Elgin $100 Visa Gift Card; Crystal Jefferson; Chester $50 Visa Gift Card; Darryl Leon Twiggs; Elgin $200 Credit on Electric Bill; Thomas A. Haff; Lugoff $50 Credit on Electric Bill; Anthony Jackson; Winnsboro $100 Credit on Electric Bill; James C. Gaston; Blackstock $50 Credit on Electric Bill; Georgeann Doucette; Blythewood $100 Visa Gift Card; Mike Roberts; Lugoff $50 Visa Gift Card; Brook Grant; Lugoff Yeti Cooler; Larry E. Hyatt; Blackstock Yeti Cooler; Don Silvia; Winnsboro $50 Lowes Gift Card; Samuel A. Clowney; Rock Hill $50 Lowes Gift Card; Tenika Montau Watkins; Winnsboro $50 Lowes Gift Card; Reginald Poag; Blackstock $50 Lowes Gift Card; Jennifer B. Richardson; Lugoff
A Chester County man, Tyler Donnet Terry, center, charged with four counts of murder and 11 attempted murder charges in South Carolina and Missouri along with other crimes in both states, was ordered to remain in jail without bail Tuesday in court in Chester. At left is Sixth Circuit Public Defender William Frick of Winnsboro and attorney Kay Boulware of Ridgeway. | WBTV
CHESTER – The largest manhunt in Chester County history came to a close Monday near where it began.
After a seven-day manhunt, alleged serial killer Tyler
Donnett Terry was taken into custody Monday morning.
Terry, 26, was taken into custody Monday morning near
Jones-Hamilton in the Richburg area. According to Chester County Sheriff Max
Dorsey, the subject of the week-long manhunt that included more than 300 local,
state and federal law enforcement officers ended without a shot being fired.
Terry was laying on the ground near some power lines and did not have a gun on
his person, though one was recovered. He was checked out by EMS officials, then
transported to the Chester County Detention Center. Due to ongoing COVID
protocols, he will be quarantined for at least 10 days and an initial bond
hearing will be scheduled. Terry had actually not been seen in a couple of
days, but officers laid eyes on him Sunday.
“Yesterday was the break we were looking for,” Dorsey said
at a Monday press conference.
The manhunt for Terry began close to midnight last Monday
following a high-speed chase that stretched through two counties and
subsequently ended with a crash near Lewisville High School, after which he
fled into the Richburg woods. As it turns out, that was only the last stanza of
a violent crime spree during which Terry was alleged to have murdered four
individuals in two states, shot another man, fired shots at Chester County
Sheriff’s Office deputies and carried out burglaries and other non-fatal
shootings.
It is still unclear what prompted it, but the violent binge
appears to have begun with a number of incidents on May 2. On that day, Thomas
Durell Hardin of Lowery Row in York County, was murdered. On May 19, once the
manhunt had begun in Chester County, York County law enforcement charged Terry
with Hardin’s murder, along with additional charges of possession of a weapon
during a violent crime. They added additional charges of first-degree burglary,
injury to property and attempted murder in relation to other shootings in York
that same day.
Also on May 2, the husband of Adrienne Roshea Simpson (the
woman who was with Terry in the car during the chase and who is facing numerous
felony charges herself), Eugene Simpson, was reported missing. By this past
Wednesday, Simpson’s body was found on a roadside near Great Falls and within
24 hours both Terry and Adrienne Simpson were charged in his murder. According
to warrants, Terry shot and killed the victim, with he and Adrienne Simpson
dumping his body off of Stroud Rd. She apparently gave statements to
investigators that led to the charges and discovery of the body.
Last week, the City of Chester Police Department obtained
warrants for attempted murder, possession of a weapon during a violent crime,
first degree burglary, discharging a firearm, unlawful carrying of a pistol and
malicious injury to personal property for Terry, with accessory charges leveled
against Adrienne Simpson in relation to a shooting that occurred on Erhlich
Street. Additionally, three counts of attempted murder were brought against
Terry by City police in connection with a May 2 shooting that occurred at the
Chester location of Taco Bell at 1715 J.A. Cochran Bypass. Adrienne Simpson was
charged with accessory after the fact in that incident.
On May 15, Terry and Adrienne Simpson had allegedly made
their way to St. Louis, Missouri. According to various media reports, they
stole a license plate from a truck there sometime between 8 p.m. and 9 p.m. and
put it on their vehicle. Less than two hours later, they allegedly shot Barbara
and Stanley Goodkin as they were driving on the 8200 block of Delmar Boulevard.
Barbara was killed as a result of a gunshot to the head, while her husband
survived wounds to the leg and chest, with the latter apparently being at least
partially repelled by a cell phone. Within an hour, just before midnight, Terry
and Adrienne Simpson are believed to have shot Dr. Sergei Zacharev outside the
Drury Inn in Brentwood as he waited for an Uber. The motive in both shootings
is believed to have been robbery and there was no known connection of any kind
between the victims and the subjects. The two are then believed to have
purchased drugs somewhere in St. Louis before returning to South Carolina where
Terry was captured on Monday.
WINNSBORO – During a special called meeting Thursday
evening, Fairfield County Council voted to hire former Richland County
Administrator Gerald Seals as interim administrator for Fairfield. Current Fairfield County Administrator Jason
Taylor will be leaving the county on June 5 to assume the duties of Town
Manager for the Town of Winnsboro.
Seals
Seals served as county administrator for Richland County, making headlines when the county fired him in May, 2018 in a close 6-5 vote. He walked away with a $1 million settlement and resumed teaching at Newberry College where he had taught previously. He served as administrator for Greenville County prior to coming to Richland.
Following the 4-2 vote to hire Seals, Councilman Mikel Trapp
moved for Bell and town attorney Charles Boyken to negotiate a contract with
Seals.
Councilman Neil Robinson’s requested that all council
members be allowed to review the contract before it is signed.
“If the salary goes above what we talked about,” Bell said,
otherwise dismissing Robinson’s request.
“I would still like council to be able to review the
document, Mr. Chair.” Robinson said.
Again dismissing Robinson, Bell called for the vote on the negotiation of the contract, which also ended 4-2.
Seals thanked council for their confidence in him.
“The council has expressed itself, so for the next four to
five months I’ll work with them and try to understand their priorities and
vision,” Seals told The Voice following the meeting. “Our job is to make that
vision come alive.”
Seals also serves as pastor of the Living Word Church and
Fellowship in Northeast Richland County.
He is the third candidate the majority four on county
council has considered for the interim job. Three weeks ago, Bell called an
executive session to discuss hiring a former City of Columbia official who, it
was learned, left the City after he was accused of sexual harassment. When that
information was revealed to council, the majority four declined to move forward
with a vote.
Last week, the majority four voted 4-3 to offer the interim
job to former State Superintendent of Education Jim Rex. However, Rex turned
down the offer on Tuesday, saying the deeply divided vote as well as the
current turmoil in the county government made the job ‘not a good fit for me.’
The county has issue an RFP for a firm to search for a
suitable permanent administrator. The process to find a replacement for Taylor
is expected to take five to six months.
Seals said he was not sure when he will start work as
interim administrator, that it would be up to council.
WINNSBORO – Two incidents last week – one covered by the
Winnsboro Department of Public Safety (WDPS) and one by the Fairfield County
Sheriff’s Office – turned out to be connected and ended in an investigation
into the death of a man at an area motel.
At about 7:30 p.m. on Thursday, May 14, the Fairfield County
Sheriff’s Office responded to the Fairfield Senior Village on Highway 321 N.
Bypass. When officers arrived, they were told that an altercation had occurred
between two women, and that one of the women ran into the nearby woods.
A responding officer noted that when he entered the wooded
area where the woman was last seen, he found her lying along the edge of the
woods. The officer reported that the woman had tied a tree vine around her neck
and was having difficulty breathing. The officer said he untangled the vine and
called for EMS. The woman was transported to an area hospital. An update on her
condition has not been released.
The incident report identified a witness to the women’s
altercation as the husband or boyfriend of the woman who ran into the woods.
The man left after the incident and checked into a Winnsboro motel for the
night.
According to authorities, the same man was found
unresponsive Friday morning, May 15, in a room at the motel, also located on
the Highway 321 N. Bypass.
At approximately 10:30 a.m., Friday morning, Winnsboro
Department of Public Safety (WDPS) officers responded to a call from motel
employees who reported they had found a middle-aged man dead on the floor in
his room, according to police officials.
Sources have told The Voice that the man had stayed
overnight at the motel and was found when motel workers went to check the room
after he failed to check out as expected.
Officials have said that at this time, foul play is not
suspected. The cause of death remains unknown as authorities await autopsy
results.
The incident is under investigation by WDPS and the Fairfield
County Coroner’s office.
BLYTHEWOOD – As part of the Richland County Transportation Penny Tax program, the town is in line to have Creech Road extended from Blythewood Road down to Main Street (Highway 21/Wilson Boulevard) as well as the construction of either a roundabout at the intersection of McNulty Street and Boney Road or a 4-way stop.
Before plans are drawn up for the two projects, Richland
County officials want to hear from the residents of Blythewood regarding their
preferences for the extension and the roundabout.
A public meeting for that purpose is set for 6 – 8 p.m., May
26, at The Manor.
Of the four Blythewood projects that will be completed with
Penny Tax funds, the first will be to widen and improve the Creech Road
Extension down to Main Street. Second priority is to widen and improve McNulty
Street from Main Street to Blythewood Road. The third priority is to widen and
improve Blythewood Road from I-77 to Main Street. And the fourth priority is to
widen and improve Blythewood Road from Syrup Mill Road to Fulmer Road.
Displays of the various projects will be available for
residents to look at and ask questions about during the input session.