Category: News

  • Additional charges for BW sex trafficker

    BLYTHEWOOD – A Blythewood man has been sanctioned a second time for contacting witnesses in a pending sex trafficking case.

    Watson

    Brian Leroy Watson, known as “Lil B,” has been indicted on a count of human trafficking conspiracy, increasing the number of counts against him to 13, according to recently filed court records.

    Filed in December 2020, the new count says Watson conspired with a second man in Florida to “recruit, entice, harbor, transport, provide, obtain, advertise, solicit, patronize, and maintain by any other means,” women to participate in commercial sex acts.

    A federal grand jury indicted Ryan Darian Grover, 27, of Pensacola, Florida, also on a count of human trafficking conspiracy. Grover was arrested in March 2021 and has pleaded not guilty, documents state.

    Watson is charged with various human trafficking and drug counts involving nine victims, including one minor.

    In addition to the main case, Watson has repeatedly tried to contact and/or intimidate witnesses, according to court filings.

    In September 2020, a federal judge sanctioned Watson for contacting witnesses from jail.

    Court records state Watson was ordered not to discuss the case with any potential witnesses or victims after he was caught discussing potential retaliation against a witness.

    Contact continued, however.

    In November 2020, the presiding judge signed a sealed order modifying the conditions of Watson’s detention because he “willfully violated” the court’s previous order against contacting witnesses.

    While details of the sealed order remain secret, a separate motion referencing it states Watson “has a history of intimidating, threatening and/or influencing victims/witnesses, or attempting to do so,” documents state.

    Watson’s case thus far has produced more than 5,500 pages of documents, several interviews, photographs, audio and video recordings, surveillance, and a slew of computers, communications equipment, weapons and other items seized after serving search warrants.

    Watson, 48, has pleaded not guilty.

    The charges against Watson allege human trafficking violations occurred between 2016 and 2019 in South Carolina.

    They also charge the suspect with distributing heroin and fentanyl, and with unlawfully operating a Blythewood dwelling for the purpose of storing and distributing heroin, fentanyl, cocaine, crack cocaine and methamphetamine, according to the indictment.

  • Fairfield Forward brings FoodShare hub to the county

    Volunteers who helped fill FoodShare boxes for 800 Fairfield County residents last October included, from left: Gabriel Wilhelm, Director of FoodShare; Russell Price, former Director of the County’s Parks and Recreation Department; County Deputy Administrator Laura Johnson and former County Councilman for District 2 Jimmy Ray Douglas. | Barbara Ball

    WINNSBORO – Fairfield Forward has now affiliated with FoodShare SC to create a food hub that will provide boxes of fresh fruits and vegetables every week at deeply discounted prices. The boxes can be purchased by anyone – inside or outside of the county.

    The boxes are filled with 9 to 11 varieties of fresh fruits and vegetables. The contents change regularly and each box includes recipe ideas for that box’s produce. The produce is the same as that found in grocery stores but bulk buying at wholesale prices makes the boxes more affordable.

    The boxes come in two sizes and FoodShare accepts cash and SNAP EBT. A large box with about 12-15 pounds of produce is ideal for a week for three or four people and costs $20 if paying cash and $10 if purchasing with a SNAP card. A small box, holding about 8-9 pounds of produce, is suitable for one to two people and costs $15 if paying cash and $5 if using a SNAP card.

    The program is the brainchild of FoodShare SC, a non-profit organization in Columbia. They introduced the program in Fairfield last October when they provided 800 free boxes of fresh produce for Fairfield residents during the pandemic. County Administrator Jason Taylor, Assistant Administrator Laura Johnson and Fairfield Forward leaders saw it as a program they would like to see made available to  Fairfield county citizens on a regular basis. The end goal of Foodshare is sustainability of food distribution over the long term.

    The program works like this – FoodShare will send a truck load of boxes of fresh fruits and vegetables into an as yet to be determined Fairfield hub where a group of volunteers will sort the produce, pack the boxes and distribute them. All the boxes distributed through a hub are purchased by the people who come to pick them up.

    “Our goal is to make it affordable for people who want to eat healthy, and would especially benefit people who have diabetes, high blood pressure and other diseases,” Lindsay Decker, program manager for Fairfield Forward, said.

    The FoodShare program begins May 10.

    “It eliminates the barrier of affordability for everyone. Instead of picking up boxes from the Columbia Food Hub, we’ll be able to distribute them from our hub here directly to local pick-up sites,” Decker said.

    For more information or to sign up for the program, contact Decker at (803) 815-2045.


    Free Food Boxes

    To celebrate the grand opening of the FoodShare Fairfield County hub, a fresh food box giveaway on April 28 is being sponsored by Fairfield Forward and Fairfield County Council.

    “We want to introduce the FoodShare program to folks in Fairfield by giving 600 free food boxes of food to county residents on a first come/first served basis,” Lindsay Decker, Fairfield Forward Program Manager, said. “The boxes will include ordering information and box pick-up locations for anyone who wants to purchase the produce on a regular basis, starting the week of May 10.”

    The April 28 Fresh Food Box Giveaway will be located at four sites throughout the County:

    McCrorey-Liston School of Technology, 1978 SC Hwy 215 in Blair

    Mitford Fire Station, 70 Meeting Street in Great Falls

    Geiger Elementary, 150 TM Cook Lane in Ridgeway

    Fairfield County Airport, 1291 Runway Road in Winnsboro

    Distribution will begin at 5:30 pm. All locations will be drive-through service with one box per household (identification of each household required) for a limit of two boxes per car. The giveaway is available only to Fairfield County citizens and ID showing proof of residency is required.

    For more information on Fairfield County’s FoodShare program, contact Fairfield Forward at (803) 815-2045 or Lindsay.Decker@fairfield.sc.gov.

  • BHS’s Knight notches 100th career win

    Blythewood girls soccer celebrated head coach Kathy Knight following the game against Rock Hill last Friday. It was a milestone 100th win for Knight. | Contributed

    BLYTHEWOOD – The Blythewood Soccer team kept the pressure on Rock Hill Friday night, and when the kicks were complete at District 2 stadium, the Bengals finished off a 9-0 shutout over the Bearcats, giving head coach Kathy Knight her 100th win.

    “It was a great surprise, I haven’t even been keeping tally,” said Knight, in her eighth year coaching the Bengals. “To find that out at the end of the game, it was just the icing on the cake for it to be tonight.”

    Knight entering triple digits would have come a year earlier, were it not for the global pandemic and the public health emergency that followed closing down the 2020 athletic season after six games.

    Rock Hill, bringing just 11 players to the game, felt the pressure of the Bengals right from the kickoff. The Bearcats eventually became an 11-person goalkeeper against Blythewood, which kept the ball on the Rock Hill side throughout the game.

    Blythewood took 14 shots on goal by the final minutes of the first half, and Rock Hill keeper Abby Vaulk and her team fended off all of them—except Lauren Hendry’s shot at the 2:50 mark. Hendry took a pass from Madison Powell and powered it past the reach of Vaulk to put the Bengals up 1-0, a lead they held going into intermission.

    “In the first half they (Rock Hill) did a really good job packing the back and stepping to the ball first before us,” Knight said. “At halftime we had to make a lot of adjustments to get the ball moving, taking just those quick one-two touches and passing quickly in order to keep them moving.”

    Lauren Hendry (6) had two goals in the 9-0 win over Rock Hill. | photos: Anthony Montgomery

    Hendry struck again two minutes into the second half, this time from Maya Moran’s corner kick. Moran got the assist.

    “We had a lot of missed opportunities in the first half,” Hendry said. “It was good to have a goal in the last three minutes, it lifted up our spirits and gave us confidence for the second half.”

    Once Hendry’s goals were in the net, the Bengals kept finding scoring avenues.

    Meredith Stone put one in at the 28-minute mark, with Hendry getting the assist.

    Nine minutes later, Rock Hill suffered an own goal when one of the players inadvertently kicked the ball in on Stone’s corner kick.

    “We just decided to play our game by then, and opened up and making sure that we were technically sound,” Stone said. “I think that helped us a lot, focusing on moving the ball around a lot instead of panicking.”

    Emery Christensen struck the back of the net with 12:40 to go, after taking the rebound when her previous shot was kicked away. Olivia Harris took the assist on that play, which put Blythewood up 5-0.

    Four goals in the final 10 minutes sealed the win.

    Maya Moran headed in a shot with Megan Moran getting the assist. After Lydia Daniels’ goal came off of Michaela Bosmans’ assist, Macy Moran came out of the net as goalkeeper and put on a field jersey to score a goal with 2 minutes left.

    “It was nice to see every senior score, even our goalkeeper,” Knight said. “She (Macy Moran) plays on the field as well, but in her club.”

    Daniels closed things out with a goal with about a minute to play.

    All four seniors honored on senior night scored for the Bengals – Hendry twice, Stone, and Macy and Maya Moran. Daniels also scored twice.

    “It’s crazy,” Stone said. “It feels incredible. Everything you’ve worked for for the past four years is just good to see it pay off.”

    Blythewood (10-2, 6-0) defeated Spring Valley (7-8, 6-2) 3-0 Tuesday night to clinch the Region 4-5A championship. Emery Christensen scored a goal and had an assist, and Hendry and Evelyn Wright had goals. Meredith Stone had two assists.

    Blythewood is at Ridge View Friday.

  • Bengals thump Ridge View, Spring Valley

    Alex Nevils (2) puts a tag on a Spring Valley runner in last Friday’s game. | Anthony Montgomery

    BLYTHEWOOD – Coming off a 2-1 nail-biter victory over Spring Valley last Friday, Blythewood went up early on Ridge View Tuesday night, scoring six runs in the first en route to an 11-1, 5-inning victory over the Blazers.

    Kevin Steelman got the win for the Bengals (15-2, 7-0), scattering three hits over 4 2/3 innings of work. He struck out six and walked two.

    Zac Cowan led off the game with a single and scored on Ty Dooley’s double. Caleb McCants drove in Dooley on a triple to rightfield to make it 2-0 Bengals.

    McCants then scored on a wild pitch as Alex Nevils batted. Nevils singled and his courtesy runner, Ryan Hunter, scored on Watson Saunders’ single to centerfield to make it 4-0 Blythewood with nobody out.

    After Camden Watts grounded out and Justin Flemming walked, Saunders stole home to make it 5-0. Landon Penfield grounded out at first, but it was enough for Flemming to cross the plate and make it 6-0.

    Justin White closed out the first inning flying out to centerfield.

    Blythewood scored two more runs in the second inning, and after giving up a run in the fourth, the Bengals got three more runs in the fifth to close out the game on the 10-run mercy rule.

    Against Spring Valley Friday night, the game was much closer.

    The Bengals clung to a 1-0 lead going into the top of the sixth, when Ethan Rumpel’s 2-out single to score Wynn Ravan and tie the game.

    Watson Saunders led off the the bottom of that frame with a single, moved to second on a passed ball, and moved to third on Nevils’ sacrifice bunt. Watts then laid down a bunt to the pitcher that enabled Saunders to score.

    With Watts at first, Kevin Steelman doubled and moved Watts to third with one out for Flemming. As it turned out, Watts got picked off third and Flemming struck out to end the inning.

    It was all the Bengals needed. Cowan, on the mound since the top of the sixth, struck out one and got two batters to ground out get the 2-1 win.

    Blythewood plays host to Ridge View for a double header Friday.

    Blythewood6-2-0-0-3-X  – 11-12-1

    Ridge View – 0-0-0-0-1-X – 1-3-0

    WP: Kevin Steelman. LP: Noard

    Hitters: Alex Nevils 3-3, 2B. Watson Saunders 3-3, 2B. Caleb McCants 3B. Ty Dooley 2B.

    Spring Valley – 0-0-0-0-0-0-1 – 1-6-0

    Blythewood -1-0-0-0-0-1-X – 2-5-3

    WP: Zac Cowan.

    Hitters: Zac Cowan 3B. Alex Nevils 2B. Kevin Steelman 2B.

  • Redhawks soccer falls to Irmo

    Westwood dropped Tuesday’s conference game to Irmo. The Yellowjackets took a 1-0 win over the Redhawks, now 1-7 in conference play.

  • Bengal softball crushes Ridge View, Spring Valley

    BLYTHEWOOD – The Blythewood softball team scored 34 runs against Region 4-5A rivals Spring Valley and Ridge View in the last week.
    The Bengals (11-2, 4-0) solidified their hold at the top of the region with a 16-4 rout at Spring Valley Friday, and a 18-1 drubbing at Ridge View Tuesday.

    Lauren Hardy, who got the victory in the circle for the Bengals Friday, drove in four runs on two hits at the Blazers Tuesday. Other big hitters Tuesday were Josie Smith, who drove in three runs and went 3-for-3 with a double; Haley McCoy, who had 2RBI on a double and a triple; and Callie Baucom, who went 2-for-3 with a triple and three RBI.

    Against Spring Valley Friday, Blythewood gave up three runs to the Vikings in the bottom of the first, but scored three in the top of the second to take a 6-3 lead. Blythewood’s 5-run fourth and 5-run fifth closed out the win over the Vikings.

    Keley Swanier went 3-for-3 with a home run and 3 RBI to lead the Bengals. Hardy had two hits and tripled, Josie Smythe had two hits and doubled, Anna Fridrikson had two hits and Haley McCoy doubled.

    Blythewood is at Lexington for a non-region matchup Friday.

    Blythewood – 1-6-7-4  – 18-13-0

    Ridge View – 0-0-1-0  – 1-4-3

    WP: Josie Smith.

    Hitters: Anna Fridriksson 2-2. Lauren Hardy 2-2. Callie Baucom 2-3, 3B. Haley McCoy 2-3, 2B, 3B. Josie Smythe 3-3, 2B.

    Blythewood – 3-3-0-5-5 – 16-13-1

    Spring Valley – 3-0-0-0-1 – 4-7-2

    WP: Lauren Hardy.

    Hitters: B – Kaley Swanier 3-3, HR. Lauren Hardy 2-3, 3B. Josie Smythe 2-2, 2B. Anna Fridriksson 2-2. Haley McCoy 2B. SV – Raina Palevich 2-2. Cydney Cooper 2B.

  • Courthouse repairs, upgrades begin

    Bryant Brown with GMK architectural firm in Columbia shows off new look of rear of courthouse. | Barbara Ball

    WINNSBORO – Renovations to the Fairfield County Courthouse that are funded with bond money remaining from the 2013, $24 million Fairfield Facilities Corporation bond, may soon be underway.

    Bryant Brown, an architect with GMK Associates in Columbia, presented information to council Monday night about how those renovations and repairs are going to proceed.

    “You have a very unique building,” Bryant said. He said GMK works with Robert Mills courthouses that need renovation all across the state.

    “One of the things you asked us to do is an evaluation of the building, to look at the mechanicals, at what needs to be done for safety, ADA compliance, the walls and all the things in the building that need to be repaired. The vast majority of the problems are mechanical,” he said. “They [mechanicals] are old and need to be upgraded.”

    Brown said the evaluation is in the final stages.

    “We finished the study last year and we’re now in the first phase of the renovation – to go in and start working on the restrooms. They all have to be updated. The second phase will build a new addition to the back of the building,” he said. “One of the keys to this is to keep the work inside going as we move through the phases. We’re going to be working with the parking area and the infrastructure underneath it.”

    Bryant also addressed the moisture problems, saying the mold is nothing that can’t be corrected.

    “We’ve got to control the humidity in there. The new air conditioning system will address this situation and make a huge difference,” he said.

    “We’re pulling everything together now, getting pricing for our budget,” he said.

    Displaying both an aerial view of the Courthouse grounds as well as an artist’s rendition of the new look of the back of the building, Bryant explained that entrance to the building would be from the dressed up back of the building.

    “The reason for this entrance upgrade is for safety and protection. It will separate the employee population from visitors to the Courthouse,” he said. He also explained that while the curved iron steps on the front of the building are not ADA compliant, the back will accommodate access to the second and third floors of the building.

    When there was some discussion in 2016 about building a new Courthouse, members of the bar in Fairfield County weighed in on the uniqueness, grandeur and practicality of the current building, calling for it to be saved at all costs.

    “Ours is, by far, the best Courthouse in the state of South Carolina when you consider the practical nature of the courtroom, the comfort it affords the litigants, the great acoustics and the historical significance of the Courthouse, itself, which was designed by Robert Mills,” Winnsboro attorney Creighton Coleman said in an interview with The Voice. “Some things could be improved a little, but it should not be scuttled. It’s a wonderful courtroom and Courthouse,” Coleman said, “and we should keep it as our Courthouse.”

    Bryant said the cost of the renovations are estimated at $5.3 million but that number, he said, includes all the bells and whistles and that some things could be cut out to accommodate the $4.2 – $4.3 million that is left in the bond money.

    He said the renovation will start in the next two to three weeks and will take a little over a year to complete.

    “I’ve worked on other buildings like this, one in Camden, and this building is in comparatively pretty good shape,” Bryant said. “You’re very blessed for that. You’ve taken good care of it for all these years.”

    Designed by Robert Mills, the Courthouse was built in 1823-1824.

  • Mosley takes 1st at Falcon Invitational

    Mosley

    COLUMBIA – Joshua Mosley represented Fairfield Central at the Ben Lippen School’s George Johnson Falcon Invitational on April 10. Mosley took first place in the 3200 meter run finals with a time of 10:13.54, two seconds ahead of second place finisher Judson Taylor of Lexington High School.

    Mosley, a junior, set his personal record in the 3200 meter run at the March 6 Diamond Hornets Invitational with a time of 10:03.09.

    The Griffins were set to compete in Lugoff Elgin’s meet on Wednesday, but scores were not available at press time. They will travel to Keenan for the Raider Twilight Invitational on April 16 and to Columbia International University on April 17 for the Rams High School Invitational.

  • Blythewood crushes Rock Hill 21-0

    Anna Fridriksson shows a bunt.

    WINNSBORO – The Blythewood softball team picked right up where they left off after winning the Soda City Classic April 3.

    In their first game since that Spring Break Tournament, the Bengals exploded for a 17-run first inning en route to a 21-0 Region 4-5A victory over Rock Hill Tuesday night.

    Blythewood banged out 11 hits including Haley McCoy’s grand slam home run and Maya Van Zyl’s triple Van Zyl went 3-for-3 with six RBI.

    Josie Smythe needed to pitch only three innings because of the 15-run mercy rule. She gave up a hit, struck out six and walked one.

    Blythewood (9-2, 2-0) is at Spring Valley Friday and at Ridge View Tuesday.

    Rock Hill  – 0-0-0 – 0, 1, 2

    Blythewood – 17-4-X – 21, 11, 0

    WP: Josie Smythe.

    Hitters: Maya Van Zyl 3-3, 3B. Anna Fridriksson 2-2. Haley McCoy HR (Grand Slam).

    Josie Smythe threw only 50 pitches in Tuesday’s game. | Photos: Martha Ladd
  • Abuse of Power: Alex Underwood trial opens

    COLUMBIA – “Abuse of power” is what the government offered as a summation of the charges against former Chester County Sheriff Alex Underwood and two deputies at the start of a federal trial on Monday. It’s the same term Underwood attorney Stanley Myers used about the case against his client.

    Alex Underwood

    The original charges for the three stem from a Nov. 2018 arrest of Kevin Simpson and his mother Ernestine. Charges against Simpson and his mother were ultimately dropped by S.C. Attorney General Alan Wilson.

    Indictments for Underwood and former deputies Robert Sprouse and Johnny Neal in connection with the Simpson arrest included creating a false incident report, violating Simpson’s civil rights, causing him bodily injury by slamming him to the ground, evidence tampering and lying to federal investigators. The Simpson family received an undisclosed sum in a settlement of a civil suit they filed in recent weeks.

    After the indictments on those charges were handed down, additional corruption charges were also brought. Previous federal indictments allege that the three men used their positions as law enforcement officers to intimidate others, took “family members on trips (while) charging the cost to the sheriff’s office,” directed “payments for contracted security detail services through a particular sheriff’s office bank account to avoid tax payment,” used “sheriff’s office employees to conduct manual labor that personally benefitted Underwood while the employees were actively working for the sheriff’s office” and “establishing a climate of fear within the sheriff’s office to direct and secure obedience among subordinates.” The indictment notes that upon conviction, the three men may face a financial judgment “equal to the total value of the property subject to forfeiture in the approximate value that each gained from the offenses of conviction.” A superseding indictment from last September added additional corruption and wire fraud charges for Underwood and Neal stating the two “fraudulently obtained payment for work at ECHO checkpoints that they did not perform based on hours billed to Hazel Pittman for other sheriff’s office employees…(they) skimmed from the payments made to the sheriff’s office account based on work performed by subordinate employees…on other occasions (they) split the money received in the sheriff’s office bank account for the work of certain sheriff’s office employees, while the affected employees received nothing.”

    The government touched on all those charges in opening statements saying the three abused their power and “violated the trust of the citizens of Chester County.” Additionally, the state alleged officers were often pulled from important police work to do manual labor on Underwood’s property and that deputies were used to track, follow or spy on Underwood’s adversaries.

    Underwood attorney Stanley Myers said the abuse of power was actually by the government in going after his client. He said the grand jury system that produced the indictments is an unfair system where the defendant does not get a chance to tell their side of the story.

    “They want them to think, “Hey, this must be what happened,’” Myers said.

    The government prosecutors objected and when Myers, for a second time, went in the direction of alleging that the government abused its power in going after Underwood. Judge Michelle Childs warned him to not speculate on the government’s motives but to instead address the facts of the case. He said the Facebook Live video of Simpson being arrested by Underwood was “an epilogue not a prologue” and that there had been interactions between he and Neal and Simpson prior to the video streaming that would offer context. He said he would show in the course of the trial that Underwood acted properly and there were reasonable explanations for the steps taken after the fact.

    He said Underwood and Sprouse did travel with their wives to out-of-state functions, but did not knowingly have the tabs for their wives picked up by taxpayers. Underwood thought his assistant had taken care of that and that the two paid back the money for their travel and accommodations when they found out. He said there was context and explanations needed on the other charges, but those would show he is not guilty. He also touted Underwood’s many of years of public service, including the fact that he “took a bullet” in the line of duty while working with the State Law Enforcement Division.

    Neal’s attorney noted that his client was fairly far down the command chain and had no involvement in many of the allegations involving Underwood. As for allegations he shoved Simpson down and caused him bodily injury, he claimed Simpson changed his story several times and was not believable. As for financial issues related to deputies being paid for working at DUI checkpoints, Neal’s attorney said it was a relatively small amount of money in terms of discrepancies (with some deputies receiving less than they should have, while Underwood and Neal appeared to be paid more than they’d earned) and was not an attempt by Neal to skim money. At worst it was an accounting error and the attorney said he doesn’t even think it was that. When it came to working on Underwood’s property on county time, he said there is only one picture showing his client on the scene and that he is sitting down in that picture not doing work.

    Editor’s note: The News & Reporter watched much of the early portions of Monday’s court action in a spillover room on video. The opening statement from Sprouse’s attorney was delivered away from the microphone and was inaudible.