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  • Teen shot by masked gunman

    COLUMBIA – A 15-year-old was shot multiple times just outside of Blythewood (29016) after a gunman approached him and asked if he (the teen) had any weed, Richland County officials reported.

    Deputies are investigating the shooting, which occurred in the Palmetto Palms mobile home park located in the 9400 block of Wilson Boulevard near where it intersects with Killian Road.

    About 7:30 p.m. on Thursday, Dec. 26, deputies were called to the mobile home park where the teen told them he was standing behind a home when a male approached him wearing a black mask and black hoodie and asked if the teen had any weed, according to an incident report.

    The teen stated that when he said, “No,” the masked male pulled out a pistol and shot the teen several times. The victim stated in the report that the gun used appeared to be a Glock.

    The report stated that the masked gunman then ran away on foot.

    K-9 units responded and attempted to track the subject but with no results.

    The injured teen was transported to Prisma Health by EMS. There is no information about his condition or whether he Is still hospitalized.

    More information will be provided as it becomes available.

    Anyone with information about the Wilson Boulevard shooting can call Crime Stoppers at 1—888-274-6372 or visit midlandscrimestoppers.com and click ‘Submit a Tip.’

  • District charges $338 for FOIA records

    WINNSBORO – It will cost $338 before the Fairfield County School District will disclose expense records from the superintendent’s discretionary budget, which one board member characterized as a sort of ‘slush fund.’

    It’s from the superintendent’s account, also referred to as the superintendent’s contingency fund, that the district quietly paid for costly, out-of-state trips for the Griffin Bow Tie Club.

    Exactly how much is spent on the student groups and other things remains a mystery.

    In a letter to The Voice, Superintendent Dr. J.R. Green said the newspaper would have to pay an $84.50 deposit before the district would even process the request.

    “This District will provide you with copies of the requested information upon receipt of an appropriate deposit, as authorized by the FOIA,” Green wrote on Oct. 21. “Upon receipt of the deposit, the District will undertake the work necessary to respond to your request.”

    Green’s response came 10 business days after The Voice’s request, the maximum allowed under state law.

    The Voice contested the $338 charge in a reply sent Oct. 27, noting that state law allows public bodies to waive or reduce fees when “the agency determines that waiver or reduction of the fee is in the public interest because furnishing the information can be considered as primarily benefitting the general public.”

    The district took another 10 business days to respond to The Voice’s reply, saying it would not reconsider the $338 fee.

    Jay Bender, an attorney with the S.C. Press Association, of which The Voice is a member, said when public bodies slow walk public record requests, they’re sending a message that they want taxpayers kept in the dark about government activity.

    “It says this district does not want constituents to know how it’s spending its money,” Bender said. “They’re going to drag it out as long as they possibly can and set the charges as high as they possibly can to dissuade people from finding out actually what goes on.”

    Bender also challenged the legitimacy of the district’s charges. He said it shouldn’t take much effort or paperwork to provide credit card statements, cancelled checks or other documents specifying how the district spends taxpayer money.

    State law allows the public to review records at no cost. The intent is to help information seekers mitigate costs by identifying specific records to reproduce.

    Green has not responded to multiple requests from The Voice to inspect documents showing how money is spent from the superintendent’s discretionary account.

    “The law is clear. You’re entitled to see information taken in any account or voucher, so unless they have some obscure accounting system, you should be able to look at checks written on that fund,” Bender said. “And it should be itemized with respect to that fund. It shouldn’t [cost] anything to look at it.”

    The district’s obfuscation of financial records isn’t limited to the general public or press.

    Board Trustee Paula Hartman said she’s tried unsuccessfully for years to shed light on how the superintendent spends discretionary funds. She noted concerns over transparency in Dr. Green’s annual evaluation earlier this month.

    In June 2017, she and former trustee Annie McDaniel quizzed Dr. Green and other district officials about how superintendent discretionary funds are spent, but never received a detailed answer.

    “Quite a few years back I asked for that,” Hartman said. “He (Green) had told us he would let us know what was spent out of there each year and he hasn’t done that.”

    Green eventually acknowledged the fund does pay for trips for student clubs, such as the Griffin Bow Tie Club and the Elite Ladies of Fairfield County School District.

    The Voice requested more detailed expenses from the superintendent’s discretionary fund because it’s not itemized within the school district budget.

    In 2018-2019, the school board budgeted $404,874 for the superintendent’s office, but the budget doesn’t break out the discretionary fund. The 2017-2018 budget also doesn’t itemize the fund.

    Previous budgets between 2012-2013 and 2016-2017 were not available because links to those documents on the district’s website are broken. A district office representative couldn’t be reached before press time because the school district is on winter break until Jan. 3, according to the district’s website.

    Hartman asked about the account again this past June, specifically asking how much money was spent to send members of the Griffin Bow Tie Club to Churchill Downs in Louisville, Kentucky. Green couldn’t say, and six months later, an accounting of the trip has not been provided.

    Hartman also asked Green why the multi-day trip had not come before the board for approval as required by board policy.

    “I’d have to go back and check. It very well could’ve been an oversight,” Green said at the June meeting.

    “At a later meeting he confirmed that the trip had not been presented to the board for approval,” Hartman told The Voice. “We actually were not even informed that he was taking them to Kentucky, which is against board policy.”

    It’s also unclear how the Churchill Downs trip aligned with learning standards mapped out by the S.C. Department of Education. That information was not available since Green did not request board approval for the trip.

  • MLILY hosts grand opening of factory in Fairfield

    Company Brings $50M Investment and 250 Jobs to Fairfield

    Cutting the ribbon for the grand opening of MLILY USA are, from left: Fairfield County Director of Economic Development Ty Davenport, Operations Manager Chad Reinsel, Winnsboro Mayor Roger Gaddy, Rep. Annie McDaniel, State Senator Mike Fanning, Chairman and CEO of Healthcare Co., Ltd. James Ni, S.C. Secretary of Commerce Bobby Hitt, Fairfield County Council Chairman Neil Robinson, President of MLILY USA Stephen Chen and Suns Jian, president of Healthcare Co., Ltd.’s global sales and marketing. | Photos: Barbara Ball

    WINNSBORO – The grand opening last week of MLILY USA, Fairfield County’s new memory foam mattress factory, was an international event covered by Chinese television and newspapers as well as local and state media. MLILY is owned by Healthcare Co., Ltd., China’s largest mattres manufacturing company.

    Industry officials from China flew into the Fairfield County airport on Wednesday. On Thursday morning, they joined state and local government, business and industry leaders for the open house and ribbon cutting at MLILY’s renovated 650,000 square-foot manufacturing facility located at 1 MLILY Way just off Highway 321 in Winnsboro.

    S.C. Secretary of Commerce Bobby Hitt

    Prior to the ribbon cutting, there were comments by company officials as well as S.C. Secretary of Commerce Bobby Hitt and Fairfield County’s Director of Economic Development Ty Davenport. A tour of the facility, conducted by Chad Reinsel, operations manager, was followed by lunch.

    Barely a year ago, Fairfield County Council finalized an agreement with MLILY to bring a nearly $50 million investment into the county and restore the idle factory – previously owned by Mack Truck and later Guardian Building Products – to produce a line of sleep products for the U.S. market. In addition, the company announced it would hire 250 employees.

    So far, about 64 employees are already on the payroll.

    “And most of the folks hired so far are from this area,” Fairfield County Economic Development Director Ty Davenport told the 100 or so in attendance.

    Fairfield County Director of Economic Development Ty Davenport

    “We’re thrilled when the people who live here are the people working here. Revenue from this plant is going to flow to the town, the schools and will be used to further our county’s economic development,” Davenport said.

    “We’re going to see benefits from this plant for a long time. Things are looking up for Fairfield County. We already have other new industry coming in,” Davenport said. “We’re on a roll, and MLILY helped put us on that roll. I can’t thank you enough,” he told MLILY officials.

    Hitt said the open house marked a landmark day for Fairfield.

    “The Fairfield County government routinely works hard to make our community attractive to companies from all over the world,” Hitt said.

    Turning to Stephen Chen, Hitt continued, “Your investment in Fairfield reinforces that this is the business address, sitting right here above the state capital, in a very modern, progressive county.”

    Chen thanked Davenport, “for guiding the MLILY team through each step of the process to establish a factory in Winnsboro.”

    MLILY USA President Stephen Chen looks on as James Ni, Chairman and CEO of Healthcare Co., Ltd. addresses those attending the open house.

    MLILY’s factory will supply the company’s North American retail customers with mattresses, pillows and toppers made in the U.S. – a shift in the mattress manufacturing business where many companies are looking at off-shore production to maintain costs.

    In addition to the general cleanup and renovation of the plant, which had been dormant for nine years, MLILY has installed equipment to manufacture, fabricate and distribute mattresses including springs, memory foam and other proprietary foams.

    “This is an exciting time for our company as we continue to grow in the United States. Our U.S. customers will now be able to get their products from Winnsboro, made by American workers,” James Ni, chairman and CEO of Healthcare Co., Ltd., said, drawing a burst of applause from the audience.

    “The investment in this factory allows us to develop and supply MLILY products that appeal to U.S. consumers, and it provides us with the opportunity to expand our product reach in this country. I’m thankful to our leadership team and our employees for their work in getting this plant ready and operational, as well as to the local and state government officials who have welcomed us into the community,” Ni said. “We look forward to playing an important role in the community.”

    Ni is credited with not only building Healthcare Co., Ltd. into the largest mattress manufacturer in China, but expanding operations throughout Asia and Europe.

    Ni said he saw a huge opportunity in the United States. To that end, his company built a North American headquarters in Knoxville, Tennessee.

    “The company’s mattresses, pillows and sleep accessories are now all manufactured in state-of-the-art factories located in China, Thailand, Spain, Serbia and, now, Winnsboro,” Ni said, “The factories located in China span more than 6 million square feet.”

    Davenport emphasized that MLily’s economic impact on Fairfield County will be significant.

    “Two hundred fifty jobs will mean 250 families are better off. It’s a great thing for any community,” Davenport told The Voice, “but it’s a huge one for ours, so we’re very thankful for that. “It’s a great way to start the new year. I think it’ll be a good place for our residents to work.”

  • Last week to enter U-Pick-’Em contest

    BLYTHEWOOD/FAIRFIELD  COUNTY – Need some extra cash to pay off some of those Christmas bills that are adding up? Then you might want to consider entering The Voice’s annual College Bowl U-Pick-‘Em contest that can be found on page 8 of this week’s issue.

    Three $100 dollar bills will be presented to the winner by contest sponsor Chris Griffith, owner of Alltemp Comfort Services. The winner will be announced after the Jan. 13 College National Championship game.

    This is the last week that the contest entry form will be published in The Voice. Only one entry per person, no photo copies of entry forms, and all entries must be postmarked by midnight Dec. 27. Do not drop them by our offices since the envelopes must be postmarked.

    And don’t forget the tie-breaker! Last year, one person lost just because he had not included the tie-breaker on his entry.

  • Community responds to Barclay School

    School’s Funding Has Been Cut, Not Delayed

    RIDGEWAY – While the Barclay School is not out of the woods financially, the head of the school, Gillian Barclay-Smith, said it seems like everyone associated with the school as well as complete strangers, are trying to move mountains to keep the school open after she learned two weeks ago that an IRS rule change had impacted a major non-profit funding source for the school.

    “It seems everyone has read about our plight and they want to help,” Barclay-Smith said. “It’s been overwhelming. We’ve received a lot of small donations, our landlord, MEKRA-Lang, has given us free rent for 2020, and others have done other things to help us in other ways. One of our parents cleaned up our website and revamped our online presence, literally overnight, which has actually helped our fundraising effort tremendously. So far, we have raised about $20,000 of the $50,000 we need to stay open until Christmas.”

    But that’s not all the school needs. It must have $150,000 to stay open until the end of the school year. But the $50,000 will give us time to put together a new funding plan for the future, according to Barclay-Smith.

    “One of our students’ parents who actually has a background and expertise in fundraising, is giving us invaluable help and advice,” Barclay-Smith said. “It’s literally round-the-clock work for all of us right now just to raise the $50,000. But we just have to stay open.”

    Barclay-Smith said some local media outlets have erroneously reported that the school’s funding is merely delayed.

    “That is not correct,” she said. “We will no longer get that funding. It’s that simple.”

    Begun more than a decade ago in a house on the campus of Columbia College, the Barclay School moved five years ago to Ridgeway. She said the town has welcomed the children with open arms.

    “We work with all children who learn differently. So, some of our children are on the autism spectrum, we have children with Down [Syndrome], we have children who struggle with reading and writing, we have children who struggle with anxiety. We are a hodgepodge of diversity and glad to be so,” Barclay-Smith said.

    She describes the school as a community where the children celebrate each other’s victories, where there’s no homework or “drill and grill” instruction, where chores and social graces are taught along with academics. There’s a farm-like collection of class pets, and the calendar is broken up with frequent field trips and downtown shopping excursions.

    Another important aspect of their learning is community service. The children participate by helping with Meals on Wheels, making cards, decorating downtown, and anything else that they can do to learn how to give back.

    “We’re a very different kind of school. We focus very much on what’s called strength-based learning, which basically flips the paradigm upside-down. Instead of focusing on everything we can’t do,” Barclay-Smith said, “we’re way more interested in what you can do. Where’s your passion? Where’s your love? For a lot of our children it’s music, it’s the arts, it’s drama. We try to find the children’s strengths, and it’s truly metamorphosing when they come here.

    “There is a great need for schools like ours,” Barclay-Smith said. “These children are special. They learn here and they love it here. When they left school this week for Christmas break, they all said to us, ‘we’ll see you after Christmas!’

    “And I truly hope they do,” Barclay-Smith said.

    Debra McCown Thomas contributed to this story.

  • Winnsboro man arrested for assault

    LEXINGTON – After being sought by Lexington Police for almost two weeks for assaulting a woman, the suspect, a Winnsboro man, was arrested on Dec. 16.

    Simpson

    Officials said Calvin Simpson, 38, is facing two counts of third-degree assault and battery after officials say a woman at a mobile home park on Sunset Boulevard reported that Simpson punched her in the eye during an argument that turned physical at her home.

    According to the incident report, the woman told police that Simpson was a former boyfriend.

    The attack took place Dec. 4. After fending off her attacker, the woman told police that Simpson asked her to drive him to a nearby Bojangles.

    Simpson posted bond and is awaiting trial.

  • Barclay School looking for Christmas miracle

    School Must Raise $50K by Dec. 25 to Stay Open
    The students at Barclay School celebrate the joys of the season despite the worry that their school may close.

    RIDGEWAY – After an IRS rule change impacted a major nonprofit funding source, a special needs school in Ridgeway is hoping for a Christmas miracle to help keep its doors open in 2020.

    The Barclay School, which currently serves 16 special needs children, has become a valued part of the community in the last few years as it has grown, says Gillian Barclay-Smith, head and founder of the school.

    Begun more than a decade ago in a house on the campus of Columbia College, it moved five years ago to Ridgeway, a town of about 300, which she says has welcomed the children with open arms.

    “We work with all children who learn differently. So, some of our children are on the autism spectrum, we have children with Down [Syndrome], we have children who struggle with reading and writing, we have children who struggle with anxiety. We are a hodgepodge of diversity and glad to be so,” says Barclay-Smith.

    “It sounds really trite, but we really are a family; the feel here is different. We meet the children where they are and not where the calendar says that they probably should be.”

    The school’s funding uncertainty going into the new year has a lot to do with a change to IRS rules for tax deductions disbursed through programs like South Carolina’s Exceptional SC, the nonprofit charged with distributing funds donated by taxpayers through an education-focused tax credit program.

    The organization currently helps to fund 142 special needs schools across the state, with funding distributed through a formula based on enrollment. At the Barclay School, this funding supplements the revenue generated by tuition that’s charged on a sliding scale.

    “I love this program because it redirects tax dollars to do something government is not very good at – these kids. It’s not that they can’t learn; they just learn differently,” says Chad Connelly, executive director of Exceptional SC.

    “Once you get a program in place like ours [for] five or six years, they come to count on it – and when something like this happens, what the heck do you do? It puts everybody in a bad fix.”

    The IRS rule change, he says, capped the amount an individual donors can claim a federal tax deduction for at $10,000. So while donors still receive a dollar-for-dollar match in state tax credits at a higher amount, the limit on federal deductions discourages larger contributions.

    The limit does not apply to corporate donors, but corporate taxes are low in South Carolina, he says – so limiting individual donors has cost the program big time. Last year, Exceptional SC raised $17.5 million in a day and a half; this year it raised just $6 million – and that took six months.

    Barclay-Smith says that for a small school like hers, funding received through the program is a big deal. Now, she says, they need to raise $150,000 to get through the end of the school year – $50,000 of that is needed by Dec. 25 to stay open – which will also buy time to put together a new funding plan for the future.

    The community response so far has given her hope in this tiny town, whose iconic main street is fit for a Hallmark movie.

    When the school’s landlord MEKRA Lang North America – a major industrial employer in Ridgeway – heard what had happened, they offered a valuable Christmas gift – free rent in 2020.

    Small donations have started to trickle in from the community: a $300 check from a town community fund, a local tea shop’s pledge to host a fundraiser, smaller donations from individuals giving what they can. It’s a good start – but it’s still a big hole to fill. 

    “People tell me Ridgeway is Mayberry. It’s an amazing little place. And if we could run on kindness, we wouldn’t have a problem,” she says.

    But it takes more than love from the community to cover bills and payrolls taxes. It takes dollars. And while they’ve set up a donation page (savebarclay.com) and parents are mobilizing to help raise funds, it’s a big task. They’re hoping more people will join in the effort.

    For Barclay-Smith, who herself struggled with learning issues as a child, education is a lifelong passion. The Barclay School began 11 years ago with a handful of parents who asked Barclay to work with their children using her holistic teaching methods.

    Her own story is an interesting one. After failing a high-stakes test as a middle-school student in her native England, she was sent to a school for low-performing students. But that school taught differently, and the next time testing came around, she went from failure to prodigy overnight.

    “I knew that I hadn’t changed,” she says. “The only thing that had changed was the approach in how I was taught.”

    She went on to earn a master’s degree in Germany and a Ph.D. in education from the University of South Carolina. At the Barclay School, she says, the teachers understand their students because they too have struggled with issues like dyslexia and ADHD.

    In addition to the school’s five full-time and two part-time teachers, they also rely upon two employees provided by Goodwill, two volunteer art teachers, help from college students studying to become teachers, and countless community groups that help with everything from lessons on gardening to talks on practical life-skills topics to weekly trips to the library.

    Barclay-Smith describes the school as a community where the children celebrate each other’s victories, where there’s no homework or “drill and grill” instruction, where chores and social graces are taught along with academics. There’s a farm-like collection of class pets, and the calendar is broken up with frequent field trips and downtown shopping excursions.

    Another important aspect of their learning is community service. The children participate by helping with Meals on Wheels, making cards, decorating downtown, and anything else that they can do to learn how to give back.

    “We’re a very different kind of school. We focus very much on what’s called strength-based learning, which basically flips the paradigm upside-down. Instead of focusing on everything we can’t do,” Barclay-Smith says, “we’re way more interested in what you can do. Where’s your passion? Where’s your love? For a lot of our children it’s music, it’s the arts, it’s drama. We try to find the children’s strengths, and it’s truly metamorphosing when they come here.”

    In the end, successful education is not about money, Barclay says. It’s about mindset. As a small, independent school, they’ve always operated on a shoestring budget. Still, it takes something.

    “Pretty much every desk, every chair, every book in this building was given to us or we went through Goodwill or we dug it out,” she says. “We’ve got this far on string, so let’s see if we can keep going.”

    To make a donation, go to savebarclay.com or call 803-629-6318.

  • New bill would limit state senators’ power to nominate magistrates

    Report highlights Fanning, Underwood connection

    WINNSBORO – In small counties like Fairfield, a single state senator routinely has unilateral authority to nominate magistrates.

    That would change, however, under a new bill recently prefiled by two Republican state senators.

    Senate Bill 903 would expand nomination responsibilities to a county’s legislative delegation, which include both state House and Senate members.

    Dubbed the “Magistrate Reform Act of 2020,” the bill strikes existing language that gives senators exclusive power over nominations.

    If adopted, S. 903 would appoint magistrates “with the advice and consent of the legislative delegation of the county in which the magistrate shall serve,” the measure reads.

    “An appointee receives the advice and consent of a legislative delegation if the appointee receives a majority of the weighted vote of the Senators in the legislative delegation and a majority of the weighted vote of the members of the House of Representatives in the legislative delegation,” the bill continues. “If the legislative delegation provides advice and consent to an appointee or if the legislative delegation rejects an appointee, then the legislative delegation shall report to the Clerk of the House of Representatives, the Clerk of the Senate, and the Governor.”

    While the bill would affect every South Carolina county, its impacts would be most directly felt in smaller counties. Among them is Fairfield County, where Sen. Mike Fanning, D-Great Falls, has direct control of Fairfield appointments.

    If S. 903 becomes law, Rep. Annie McDaniel, D-Winnsboro, would also be able to nominate magistrate candidates.

    McDaniel said she supports the general premise of the bill, saying more than one person should be involved in nominating magistrates. However, she wanted to reserve comment on the bill’s specifics until she could read its full text.

    “When you have just one person, it lends itself to some concerns,” McDaniel said. “Any time you have more people involved that means you’re empowering the people.”

    In addition, S.903 prohibits the family member of any state lawmaker from being nominated. Family members of former lawmakers must wait two years after the lawmaker leaves office to become eligible.

    Another provision, aimed at curbing magistrates serving in a “holdover capacity,” magistrates may not serve more than 90 days after the date that their term expires, according to the legislation.

    When a “non-lawyer magistrate” sentences a defendant, magistrates hearing any appeals must possess a law degree, and any case that’s appealed begin from scratch, the proposed law states.

    Introduced Dec. 11 by Sens. Tom Davis, R-Beaufort and Tom Young, R-Aiken, the bill has been referred to the Senate Judiciary Committee, according to legislative records.

    Young is also the sponsor of a second bill that targets magistrates with stains on their record.

    S. 905 states that “any magistrate or magistrate candidate who has been reprimanded by the supreme court or any other disciplinary authority may not be appointed or reappointed unless approved by a majority of the senate after the senate is informed of the reprimand or disciplinary action.”

    If passed, S. 905 could impact Chester County Magistrate Angie Underwood, who previously was hit with a one-year suspension by the South Carolina Supreme Court.

    Nominated by Sen. Fanning, Underwood is the wife of former Chester County Sheriff Alex Underwood, who’s now under federal indictment. Angie Underwood was also part of a panel that interviewed candidates for Fairfield County magistrate vacancies earlier this year.

    “I support magistrate judge reform and am both sponsoring and cosponsoring separate bills that are filed right now to implement magistrate judge reforms,” Young said in an email sent to The Voice.

    S.903 and S. 905 come in the wake of investigative reports by The Voice about four controversial magistrate nominations in Fairfield County. When Fanning nominated the magistrates last spring, none had law degrees and all were appointed without taking tests that are required by state law to be passed by nominees before they are appointed.

    Two of Fanning’s appointments required multiple attempts to pass the basic, sixth-grade level competency exam.

    One candidate required at least three tries before achieving a passing score, according to judicial records that The Voice obtained.

    Two Chester County candidates that Fanning nominated also had to take the exams multiple times, records show.

    In June, following The Voice’s initial reports about magistrate appointment irregularities in Fairfield County, the S.C. Governor’s Office instituted a new policy requiring proof that magistrate nominees have passed their competency exams before being appointed.

    Since then, the Post and Courier (Charleston) and ProPublica, a non-profit investigative newsroom, published a joint report highlighting abuses in the nomination of magistrates statewide.

    Both news organizations also published a report highlighting potential conflict of interest issues between Magistrate Angel Underwood and her husband, the former sheriff.

    “And yet, just months after returning to her magistrate duties, the judge [Angel Underwood] secretly aided the sheriff’s office in drafting a complaint against her colleagues on the bench,” Post and Courier reporter Joseph Cranney wrote in This judge is married to the sheriff. Ethics complaints have piled up.

    The report also notes that Fanning has removed six of 10 magistrates in his district while retaining Angel Underwood in spite of her having received a suspension from her magistrate duties after conflicts involving her husband, the sheriff.

    To read the Post and Courier report, click here.

  • Land forfeitures conform… after 30 years

    WINNSBORO – Fairfield County has finally developed a formal process to dispose of land and property forfeited to the county, ending more than 30 years of non-compliance with state law.

    On Nov. 11, the Fairfield County Forfeited Land Commission held its inaugural meeting, where it appointed officers and adopted policies and procedures. “Its primary function is to effect the sale of lands forfeited in pursuance of the South Carolina Code of Laws,” according to the Fairfield County website.

    “The Delinquent Tax Collector at the tax sale submits the bid on behalf of the Forfeited Land Commission equal to the amount of all unpaid taxes, assessments, penalties and cost,” the site states.

    County Administrator Jason Taylor said he was unaware a forfeited land commission had never been established. He estimated that the county has a backlog of 120 undisposed properties, and that none have sold since 2008.

    “They go back a long, long time. Before that, I do think if somebody researched and decided they wanted a piece of property, they’d inquire about it and possibly purchase it,” he said.

    Taylor noted the county uncovered forfeited lands in droves while working on the Zion Hill renovation project. He couldn’t say why the issue hasn’t arisen sooner, but surmised Fairfield County’s comparatively low property values may be one reason.

    “The goal is to get these properties out of unproductive status and into a productive status,” Taylor said.

    At the Nov. 11 commission meeting, county attorney Tommy Morgan said in many cases, the parcels are small and virtually unnoticeable, but remain in the county’s possession, nonetheless.

    “Some properties that are in the commission’s name already, for example, are nothing more than a driveway,” Morgan said.

    Miriam Woodward, the county’s tax collector, said there’s never been any direction from past county councils to address forfeited lands. She said it wasn’t until recently that the forfeited lands were deeded.

    “Now we’re just playing catch-up in getting the properties out there and available to the public,” Woodard said. “I just never, ever had the time to get all the information together and all the deeds drawn up.”

    Tim Smith, a spokesman with the S.C. Department of Revenue, said via email that every South Carolina county is required by law to establish a forfeited land commission.

    The commission’s purpose, he said, is to ensure that bids at delinquent tax sales satisfy the delinquent and current tax amounts.

    “The FLC may sell any property in its portfolio in any way possible, as long as the sale is determined by the FLC to be in the best interest of the county,” Smith said. “The point is to get the property back on the tax rolls and contributing to the tax base of the county.”

    Smith couldn’t say what consequences a county might face for not establishing a land commission.

    “It is a requirement in the statute, but we don’t know who would challenge that to enforce it or who would suffer damage,” he said.

    The Fairfield commission consists of three members: Peggy Hensley, county auditor; Judy Bonds, register of deeds; and Norma Branham, county treasurer. Branham was appointed commission chair. Jim Thompson with the assessor’s office was designated the agent of the commission.
    Also at the Nov. 11 meeting, commissioners voted to adopt a policies and procedures manual that lists the duties and powers of the commission and its officers.

    It also delineates who has first rights of refusal of a property, and the order in which a party can place bids.

  • Underwood, deputies hear new federal indictments

    Plead Not Guilty to Charges

    CHESTER – As they did when facing their first round of federal indictments, suspended Chester County Sheriff Alex Underwood and two former deputies entered “not guilty” pleas on new charges in federal court Tuesday.

    Tuesday’s proceedings were quick and to the point. Underwood, Robert Sprouse (a former chief deputy) and Johnny Neal (a former lieutenant) acknowledged they understood the charges. They entered their pleas and the state indicated it was fine with the bond conditions continuing as is. Those conditions include that none of the three may possess a firearm or contact any potential witnesses in their cases, including any employee of the Chester County Sheriff’s Office. All three were forced to relinquish their passports and they may not leave the state without permission of the court.

    New Charges

    The most recent indictments say Underwood, Sprouse and Neal 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.”

    According to the indictments, Underwood and Sprouse took their wives to Reno, Nevada in 2017, using the county procurement process and money while claiming their wives were employees of the sheriff’s office. Underwood also took his wife (Chester County Chief Magistrate Angel Underwood) to New Orleans that year, again using the county procurement policy and money.

    Upgraded Travel

    It is not mentioned in the indictment, but the trips nearly always also included upgraded travel and hotel room and chauffer services all paid for with county tax dollars. The indictment notes that Underwood and Sprouse provided personal checks to cover the expenses incurred by their wives on those trips in March of this year, nearly two years after the trips took place and only after they had been questioned about the expenses by the Charleston Post and Courier.

    Avoided Paying Taxes

    The indictments also indicate that from 2015 until 2019, Underwood, Neal and “others known to the grand jury, directed security-detail payment to flow through accounts…for the purpose of avoiding employment taxes.” Chester County Council recently learned that in the past few years, $238,000 has essentially been paid under the table to deputies for outside security work. New W-2 forms will have to be issued to 70 impacted employees and the county may end up on the hook for paying more than $30,000 in back FICA taxes. Underwood is also alleged to have used on-duty deputies to perform manual labor at his home, including renovating a barn.

    The three were originally indicted in April after allegedly illegally arresting Kevin Simpson of Fort Lawn in November of 2018. Simpson’s arrest was streamed live on Facebook and when the three discovered that, they allegedly returned to his home without a warrant, took his phone and tried to delete the video. Those charges ranged from creating a false incident report, to violating Simpson’s rights and causing him bodily injury, to lying to federal investigators and evidence tampering.


    This article was reprinted with permission from The Chester News and Reporter.