Category: News

  • Infant dies in crash on Hwy 321

    WINNSBORO – A 10-month old baby girl was killed when the vehicle she was a passenger in overturned numerous times on US Hwy 321 at Devil’s Racetrack Road in Fairfield County, accord­ing to Fairfield County Coroner Chris Hill.

    The crash occurred at about 10 a.m., on March 6.

    The infant, identified by Hill as Honesty Swearington of Irmo, SC, was unrestrained in a 2014 Toy­ota Sedan, and was ejected from the vehicle, according to SCHP Master Trooper Brandon Bolt.

    The driver of the Toyota was in­jured and transported to an area hospital.

    The vehicle was traveling north on U.S. Hwy 321 when it went off the right side of the road, then off the left side of the road, striking a tree, and overturning numerous times, according to Hill.

    An autopsy has been scheduled to determine the cause of death.

    Fairfield County Coroner’s Of­fice and South Carolina Highway Patrol continue to investigate.

  • Fairfield man dies in structure fire

    FAIRFIELD COUNTY – According to Fairfield County Coroner Chris Hill, the county’s fire services was dispatched to Cool Branch Rd. in the Carlisle area around noon Wednesday, Feb. 26 for a structure fire in which they were told one individual was unaccounted for.

    Once on the scene, firefighters extinguished the fire and found the missing individual, Richard Morrison, 77, who was deceased.

    According to Hill, firefighters notified the Coroner’s Office and Sheriff’s Office. SLED was also called in to help with the investigation.

    An autopsy has been scheduled with Newberry Pathology to determine the cause of death. Fairfield County Coroner’s Office, SLED and the sheriff’s department will continue the investigation.

  • Judge grants injunction against BW mayor

    COLUMBIA – A ruling has been handed down in the Town of Blythewood lawsuit in which four members of the Blythewood Town Council – Mayor Pro Tem Donald Brock, Rich McKenrick, Andrea Fripp, and Erica Page – filed for a temporary and permanent injunction to stop Blythewood Mayor Sloan Griffin from enforcing his Executive Order No. 3 concerning his ability to hire town hall employees. 

    Judge Daniel Coble – in the Richland County Court of Common Pleas – has ruled that the Council’s Motion for Temporary and Permanent Injunction is granted.

    This is a developing story and more information will be posted later this morning.

  • Gilbert appoints select councilmen to standing committees

    WINNSBORO – Following adjournment of the Feb. 10 Fairfield County Council meeting, Clerk to Council Kimberly Roberts handed out to all council members a list of the 2025-26 appointees to council’s five standing committees.

    County Council Chairman Clarence Gilbert made the appointments – a chair and two members for each committee – as required by the council’s bylaws.

    The lion’s share of Gilbert’s appointments, 14 out of 15 available seats, went to only four of the seven council members – Gilbert, Douglas Pauley, Carl Bell and Oren Gadson. The 15th seat, which is on the Presentation Committee, is not appointed, but rotates among all council members, depending on the district a presentation concerns.

    Gilbert appointed himself to three of the five committees and as chair of two of them.

    Gilbert did not appoint council members Dan Ruff, Peggy Swearingen or Don Goldbach to any of the standing committees. The three will only be eligible to serve on a session of the Presentation Committee if a citizen or organization from their district requests to make a presentation to council.

    Excluding certain council members from council’s standing committees comes at a time when both Bell and Gilbert have repeatedly made public calls for unity, cooperation, and collaboration among council members.

    Shortly before the list of appointees was distributed after the Feb. 10 council meeting, Bell stated during county council time: “We have to work with each other. It’s important we stay in tune with each other. We have to support one another in responding to the needs of our individual districts.  It is the reason we were elected.”

    However, for over a week, Bell has failed to speak out against Gilbert’s arbitrary exclusion of certain council representatives from being appointed to any of the standing committees.

    In answer to an email The Voice sent to Ruff, Swearingen and Goldbach on Monday, Feb. 17, asking why they were not appointed to any of the committees, Goldbach said he had specifically asked to be put on at least one committee and was hoping to be appointed to several, but was skipped over for all of them. He said there was no response to his request to be on a committee, and that he had not been contacted concerning the appointments before he was handed the list of appointments last week.

    Swearingen responded that she, too, had expected to be appointed to one or more committees and was not contacted by Gilbert prior to his release of the list of appointments.

    “It surprised me that I wasn’t listed on any of the committees, not even the ones I was already on.” Swearingen said. “I can’t recall a time when every council member was not appointed to at least one standing committee.”

    Ruff had served as chair of the Public Services and Development committee until Gilbert appointed Pauley as chair of that committee last week, leaving Ruff out. Ruff has not yet responded to The Voice’s email asking whether he declined to continue serving or was passed over by Gilbert for re-appointment.

    According to the council’s bylaws, “The chair of county council shall appoint the members and the chairs of the following standing committees: Administration and Finance Committee; Public Affairs and Policy Committee; Public Services and Development Committee; and the Economic Development Committee.”  The Presentation Committee is not mentioned in the bylaws.

    “Once appointed for the year, no member of a committee may be removed by the chair of council without the approval of council,” the bylaws state.

    Gilbert has not yet responded to an email sent from The Voice on Tuesday asking why Ruff, Swearingen, and Goldbach did not receive appointments to any of the standing committees.


    Gilbert’s 2025-26 Standing Committee Picks

    Administration & Finance

    • Clarence Gilbert – Chairman
    • Doug Pauley
    • Carl Bell

    Economic Development

    • Doug Pauley – Chairman
    • Clarence Gilbert
    • Oren Gadson

    Public Services & Development

    • Doug Pauley – Chairman
    • Oren Gadson
    • Carl Bell

    Public Affairs & Policy

    • Carl Bell – Chairman
    • Doug Pauley
    • Oren Gadson

    Presentation Committee

    • Clarence Gilbert – Chairman
    • Carl Bell
    • Rep. of District from which the request originates
  • Hearing on injunction filed by Town of Blythewood set for Feb. 21

    BLYTHEWOOD – Friday, Feb 21 has been set for Judge Daniel Coble to hear a motion for an injunction filed by the Town of Blythewood against Blythewood Mayor Sloan Griffin.

    In a Motion for Injunction filed Feb. 11 with the Richland County Court of Common Pleas, four Blythewood Town Council members asked the Court to move for a temporary and permanent injunction against Griffin.

    The four council members who filed the lawsuit, Mayor Pro Tem Donald Brock, Councilman Rich McKenrick and Councilwomen Andrea Fripp and Erica Page, as well as Griffin, have been notified to be present at 9:30 a.m. in the Court of Common Pleas in the Richland County Courthouse.

    In particular, the motion states, the plaintiffs seek a ruling of the court compelling the defendant, Griffin, to maintain the status quo and not hire additional employees whose positions have not been funded or authorized by the town council.

    The Town [the four council members] are being represented by Attorney James Edward Bradley, with the Moore, Bradley, Myers law firm in West Columbia.

    Griffin has told The Voice that he has not retained legal representation and doesn’t plan to.

    In a letter to Judge Daniel Coble, Bradley stated that the dispute regards the municipal authority of the mayor in ultra vires acts – acts that require legal authority but are done without it. Bradley seeks a declaration of the powers of the mayor and the council in regard to the mayor’s attempt to hire employees whose positions have not been funded by town council.

    In December, 2024, Griffin announced that he had hired two employees for whom he had created two positions – a deputy administrator and a social media specialist – without discussing either position or either hire with any members of council. Neither position had been funded by council.

    After it was made public by The Voice that the newly hired deputy administrator is under criminal investigation by the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division, Griffin announced that the new hire decided not to pursue the job.

    Council removed funding in the budget for all unfilled positions, stipulating that funding for new positions would have to be approved by council.  Griffin requested a S.C. Attorney General’s opinion concerning the mayor’s authority to hire employees without council’s consent. The AG responded that while the mayor in a mayor/council form of government has the authority to hire employees without permission from council, section 5-9-40 of state law places the responsibility of adopting a municipal budget with the council, and that the mayor is prohibited from expending funds not appropriated by council.

  • Douglas asks county council to replace Sheriff’s aging, unsafe vehicles

    WINNSBORO – During the Feb. 17 Fairfield County Council meeting, Fairfield County Sheriff’s Chief Deputy Brad Douglas said the Sheriff’s Office is already working on its budget for fiscal year 2025-26, and that he has serious concerns as to whether the department can safely sustain its services in the county until the new budget year begins July 1, 2025.

    Critical Situation

    “We’re in a critical situation with our vehicles,” Douglas told council members. “We’ve had to rent vehicles because we had no available spares. We’ve had situations arise where on-call officers’ vehicles broke down when they were responding to scenes. In one particular instance, an investigator – who’s assigned vehicle had previously broken down, leaving him stranded on the side of the road – was responding to a call of a deceased person when the spare vehicle he was driving also broke down, again leaving him stranded. An off-duty investigator had to be called in to respond.”

     “Officer safety is a real concern for us,” Sheriff Will Montgomery said. “I want to make sure that we are putting our deputies in vehicles that allow them to do their jobs safely and efficiently. Our responsibility is to provide the law enforcement services to our citizens that they deserve, and to provide effective public safety for the entire county. We need safe and dependable vehicles to do that and, right now, we don’t have that.”

    Douglas said the department has been low on vehicles for two-and-a-half years.

    “During that time, we were also down over 15 deputies – over 25 percent of our department’s manpower – so the lack of vehicles was not as impactful then since we didn’t have the deputies to drive them,” Douglas said.

    Now that the department is almost fully staffed, Douglas said the full effects of its vehicle crisis is being felt.

    “We recently secured an SRO grant for three SRO vehicles which has freed up three older marked patrol cars that we can add to our patrol fleet, but that really doesn’t put a dent in our aging fleet,” he said.

    High Mileage, Aged Vehicles

    Going into detail, Douglas said that 48 patrol cars – not including spares – have over 100,000 miles; 14 of those have over 150,000 miles; and four of those have over 200,000 miles. Douglas said twenty-six of these vehicles are 10-15 years old.

    “All of these vehicles are driven every day and present a number of serious safety hazards,” Douglas said. “High mileage vehicles are more prone to engine, brake, and transmission failure which can compromise the vehicles’ performance during emergency response situations.

    “And these high miles are not normal high miles. They’re much harder miles and take an unnatural toll on the vehicles,” he said. “These miles are run up under heavy and stressful use, sometimes at high speeds over prolonged shifts.”

    Douglas pointed out that these are actually the department’s better vehicles.

    “Our specialized unit vehicles – criminal Investigations, civil process/Court security, narcotics, etc. – are in even worse condition,” he said. “Some have over 200,000 miles, with most falling into the 150,000+ miles range.

    “We have historically had a pool of spare vehicles with 4WD capabilities for severe weather events when our deputies are often responsible for transporting essential personnel –  911 dispatchers, Board of Disabilities staff, nursing home staff, etc – if they are unable to get to their places of work,” Douglas said.

    He said the department’s ability to transport these personnel was significantly compromised during the recent cold weather events.

    “We had to rely on overtime to get those few deputies – whose vehicles are equipped with 4WD – to assist in providing these services.”

    High Cost of Repairs

    Douglas said older, high mileage vehicles lead to more repairs.

    “We’ve already gone well over our vehicle maintenance budget this year just to keep our deputies in running vehicles,” he said. “This past year, we’ve put new transmissions in several vehicles that are over 10 years old, and we’ve put new engines in even older cars.”

    Douglas said the department is going to have to paint some of its vehicles that are over 10 years old because, he said, “they are embarrassingly unprofessional looking.”

    “This is glaringly evident when we work with neighboring agencies,” he said.

    With a sustained call volume and increasing responsibilities, Douglas said the department’s work load is only going to get heavier and the need for reliable vehicles greater.

    A Better Option

    “Over the last five fiscal years, we’ve received 18 new vehicles (excluding grant-funded vehicles and replaced wrecked vehicles), that’s an average of 3.3 new vehicles per year.

    “Continuing this trend has us retiring our vehicles at approximately 15 years of age. If the county continues to purchase vehicles the way that we always have, we will continue to live on the edge of these vehicles’ capabilities by running them until they literally fall apart,” Douglas said. “We will always be in this crisis and without the ability to properly protect our citizens.

    “There’s a much better option that we hope the county will consider,” he said. “We’ve identified a leasing program that many agencies (big and small) are going to. This is a system that ensures that safe, dependable, and professional-looking vehicles are always in service. While initial costs are slightly higher, these programs demonstrate that they effectively offset these costs through far fewer maintenance costs/issues and higher resale values which we receive credit for.

    “We would love to have an opportunity to have a leasing vendor give a presentation for county council and the administration to consider,” Douglas said.

    Only Council members Don Goldbach and Peggy Swearingen had input and asked questions concerning the leasing program. After they spoke, Council Chair Clarence Gilbert said he would be willing to sit down and discuss the department’s vehicle needs.

  • USPS investigating checks stolen from drop boxes in Blythewood

    Blythewood Post Office’s blue drop boxes have mail theft notices for postal customers.

    BLYTHEWOOD – At least three individuals have reported to the Blythewood post office that checks they dropped in the two outside blue postal collection boxes last week for mailing had mysteriously fallen into the wrong hands – hands that had subsequently tried to cash them.

    Blythewood resident Kim Graber told The Voice that she dropped mail, including a check and a Valentine’s Day card with cash, in one of the two blue drop boxes outside the Blythewood post office around 6 p.m., Tuesday, Feb. 11.  The next day, around 1 p.m., she received a call from a Wells Fargo bank in Charlotte stating that someone had brought the check in to the bank and tried to cash it.

    “The person on the phone said the check had been washed and the amount had been changed from $100 to $5,600,” Graber said. “Fortunately, the bank refused to cash it.”

    Employees at the post office told The Voice that in addition to Graber, two other individuals reported similar experiences with mail they had dropped into the outside drop boxes.

    “I was notified by Blythewood Post Master Cedric Jackson about the incidents and sent him a notice to be posted on the boxes as we investigate what happened,” said Postal Inspector Mike Rogers.

    The notice stated that mail was stolen from one or both of the blue collection boxes between Tuesday, Feb. 11, at approximately 4:30 p.m., and Wednesday, Feb. 12, at approximately 4:30 p.m., which is the time the collection box is emptied each weekday.

    “In cases like this, there are usually no leads until someone whose check is stolen realizes that their check didn’t reach its destination or they check their bank account, or a bank contacts them, then they notify the post office and the postmaster notifies me,” Rogers said. “We don’t know about these crimes unless someone calls us.”

    Rogers also suggested that victims of mail theft should file incident reports with the Sheriff’s department. 

    “Investigating these cases, the only thing I can hang my hat on is evidence, witnesses and confessions,” Rogers said. “We have at least three victims confirmed that their mail was stolen. The link is that they all dropped it in the blue collection boxes at the post office.”

    The notice on the blue collection boxes cautions postal customers who placed checks in the boxes between 4:30 p.m., Feb. 11 and 4:30 p.m., Feb. 12, to check with their financial institutions to determine whether there has been any fraudulent activity on their accounts. The notice also encouraged individuals whose mail is stolen to file an incident report with the local law enforcement as soon as possible.

    A secure 24-hour postal drop is also located on the wall inside the post office lobby.

    “Please let law enforcement know that the US Postal Inspection Service is aware of the incident and have them reference the USPIS case number (#3848889-MT),” the notice states.

    The United States Postal Inspection Service phone number is (877) 876-2455.

  • Debbie Winner won!

    Jimmy Ray Douglas presents prize money to Debbie Winner. | Barbara Ball

    BLYTHEWOOD – This year’s winner of The Voice’s Bracket Challenge is a triple winner – her name is Debbie Winner, she won $200 by picking the most winners in the Challenge, and her favorite football team, Ohio State, won the college football championship.

    A native of Ohio, Winner said she and her husband, Herb, moved to Ridgeway 19 years ago.

    “I support the Buckeyes as well as the Cleveland Browns,” Winner said. “So, I was thrilled that Ohio State won and that I won $200 as well.”

    When Winner came to pick up her winnings, she wore her favorite Ohio State shirt and posed with Jimmy Ray Douglas, who sponsored this year’s competition. Douglas is the only two-time winner of the newspaper’s contest.

    Besides following the Buckeyes, Winner also plays pickleball in her spare time and participates in a women’s group at Transfiguration Catholic church on Wilson Blvd.

    Winner was one of only three participants to place Ohio State in the National Championship game – and the only one to correctly predict their win.

    No one picked Ohio State to face Notre Dame in the National Championship game, and Notre Dame was chosen by only two contest participants to win the title.

    Georgia and Oregon were the most popular selections – each chosen to win 24 times.  Clemson received three picks.

  • Man found dead near campground in Fairfield Co.

    Photo: Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office

    WINNSBORO — A man who was found dead near the Broad River Campground on State Hwy 215 S., has been identified as 54-year-old Luis Olmeda, according to Fairfield County Corner Chris Hill.

    Hill said Olmeda was found at around 5 p.m., on Feb. 6 by a resident of the campground where Olmeda lived. The campground is in the southwestern part of Fairfield County.

    The body was found approximately 30 yards into the wood line, outside the RV campground. There are no signs of foul play, and it appears to be a natural death, according to Hill. An autopsy has been scheduled to determine the cause of death.

    The Fairfield County Sheriff’s and Coroner’s offices are investigating this incident.

    Anyone with information related to this case is encouraged to contact the Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office at 803-635-4141.

  • Winnsboro man arrested for trafficking drugs

    Edmonds

    WINNSBORO – Willie James Edmonds Sr. was arrested in Winnsboro last week and charged with trafficking illegal drugs.

    While executing a search warrant at a residence on E. Liberty Street in Winnsboro on Thursday, Feb. 6, Investigators with the Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office’s Narcotics Division trafficking quantities of cocaine base (crack), marijuana, and an illegally possessed firearm.

    Edmonds was arrested and charged with Trafficking Cocaine Base (Crack), Possession With Intent to Distribute Marijuana, Possession of Weapon During Violent Crime, and Possession of Firearm by Person Convicted of Certain Crimes.