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  • Ridgeway public defender wins stand your ground case

    Whitaker Fired After He Fired Chief Following Wrongful Murder Charge

    CHESTER – It’s been a tumultuous week in Fairfield County’s neighbor to the north, where a man wrongfully jailed for murder has been freed and two high-ranking city leaders have been dismissed from their posts.

    The city shakeup was set into motion at an August 15 hearing to determine whether William Caldwell III was justified in killing Corey Marcelle Bennett.

    Jailed since his January 22 arrest, Caldwell never wavered from his story that he acted in self-defense, said Kay Boulware, the deputy public defender who represented Caldwell.

    “Mr. Caldwell never, ever was inconsistent in any of his statements with me or law enforcement,” Boulware said. “He testified absolutely consistently.”

    Circuit Court Judge Brian Gibbons agreed. On August 22, Gibbons signed an order granting Caldwell’s request for prosecutorial immunity.

    Gibbons wrote that Caldwell was justified in killing Bennett under the Protection of Persons and Property Act, the state’s version of the stand your ground law, because he (Caldwell) was an invited guest and credibly feared for his life.

    “The court finds that the Defendant was not at fault in bringing on the altercation that led to the death of Bennett and he was not involved in illegal activity,” the order states.

    Likewise, the judge said the testimony of Chester Police Chief Curtis Singleton, who investigted the case, was “not credible,” which weighed heavily in the decision to exhonerate Caldwell.

    “The lead investigator, Chief Curtis Singleton, when pressed by Defense [Boulware] in his testimony, failed to provide evidentiary support for his decision to charge the Defendant with murder within hours of the incident,” the order states.

    Singleton was dismissed as chief the following day by Malik Whitaker, Chester city administrator at the time.

    Whitaker himself was then terminated following a divided 5-4 Chester City Council vote Monday night. Whitaker, who was hired by the City of Chester in January 2023, had previously served as Fairfield County Administrator for one year.

    Chester Mayor Carlos Williams couldn’t be reached for comment. A phone recording said his voicemail had not been set up.

    Mayor Pro Tem Tabatha Strother confirmed the council voted to dismiss Whitaker, but declined further comment.

    “There was a vote but at this point I don’t want to make any comments,” Strother said.

    Boulware acknowledges even she was caught off guard by the swift firings in Chester. She said her primary focus was on proving that Caldwell acted in self-defense, calling it a “textbook case” for stand your ground laws.

    “He [Caldwell] was where he had a right to be, and he did the best he could to defend himself,” Bouleware said. “This is why this law exists. This investigation shouldn’t have gone this way. There should’ve been more time between when Mr. Caldwell gave his statement and when a warrant was signed.”

    According to court records, Caldwell and two relatives had been invited guests at Bennett’s home.

    Caldwell had been sharing a bottle of vodka, but around 5 a.m. decided to leave and take the vodka with him.

    Bennett got angry and threatened Caldwell outside with a knife, Caldwell said. Bennett pushed Caldwell to the ground and began to punch him while straddling him, court records state.

    Caldwell struck Bennett in the face with the vodka bottle, shattering it. Then he struck Bennett in the chest and torso until he could free himself.

    Bennett walked toward a shed, presumably to get a weapon, as Caldwell left the area.

    Caldwell returned moments later, though, to retrieve a lost cell phone only to discover Bennett lying face down. A witness called 911 and, when authorities arrived, Bennett was pronounced dead.

    “Mr. Bennett was still standing up when he [Caldwell] left. He had no idea that what he did to get Mr. Bennett off him fatally injured him,” Boulware said.

    Boulware said Caldwell has never wavered in his account of what happened that night. But what really stood out, she said, were damning statements captured by Chief Singleton’s body camera.

    According to the footage and court records, Singleton stated publicly to Caldwell and his family that he believed Bennett was killed by accident.

    “I didn’t mean to kill him,” Caldwell said.

    “I know,” Singleton replied, adding Caldwell didn’t “mean to do what happened.”

    Pressed by Boulware about his initial remarks, Singleton testified it was “an investigative tactic,” court records state.

    “The chief, the one thing he was consistent about, was that he thought it was an accident,” Bouleware said. “He went straight from declaring it was an accident, believing it was an accident, but then hours later he filed warrants for murder.”

    Other parts of Singleton’s testimony didn’t add up either.

    For example, the former chief testified he didn’t know it’s standard procedure to send blood samples from homicide victims to SLED for toxicology analysis, despite logging in over 20 years in law enforcement.

    What came next stunned even the presiding judge.

    Boulware asked Singleton why he didn’t contact the solicitor for guidance, which court records state is customary in death investigations.

    “Chief Singleton inexplicably testified that he was a new chief and if he would have known who the solicitor was, he would have,” contacted him, according to the judge’s order.

    Singleton claimed he had no way to find the solicitor’s name, even though that information is published on the Sixth Circuit Solicitor Office website.

    “I was just floored by that. I don’t know that any head law enforcement officer doesn’t know who their solicitor is,” Boulware said.

    Later, Singleton advised Caldwell’s family to consider hiring a private attorney to defend Caldwell, saying public defenders “can only take you so far.”

    Boulware said she took that remark personally, but noted it galvanized her to pick apart Singleton’s testimony.

    “I was offended by that. We are skilled, knowledgeable lawyers. I take my job very seriously,” she said. “We are ethically and professional required to try to know what we can about the case. I don’t know that this case would’ve turned out like this without the video.”

  • City of Chester fires Whitaker, former Fairfield County Administrator

    Whitaker

    CHESTER – Following a lengthy executive session Monday night, Chester City council voted 5-4 to fire Administrator Malik Whitaker. The firing came five days after Whitaker fired Police Chief Curtis Singleton and only eight months after he (Whitaker) was hired as Chester City administrator.

    At the beginning of Monday night’s council meeting, Councilwoman Robbie King-Boyd motioned to place “personnel issue, administrative department” on the agenda for discussion in executive session.

    Leading up to Monday night’s vote, a special called meeting of council was held last Friday to take away the administrator’s ability to fire department heads. That vote failed 5-4.

    Whitaker previously served one year as county administrator for Fairfield County. After leaving Fairfield, he was hired by the City of Chester, reporting for work on Jan. 15, 2023.

    Read more on Whitaker’s termination in Thursday’s issue of The Voice of Fairfield.

  • Watson gets 25 years for sex trafficking

    BLYTHEWOOD – A Blythewood man accused of sex trafficking and drug dealing will spend 25 years behind bars, according to federal court documents.

    Brian Leroy Watson, 51, formerly of Blythewood, was sentenced last week to 300 months in prison and ordered to repay $45,000 in restitution divided evenly among nine victims, documents state.

    Watson

    Watson had been indicted on 13 counts, though in July he pleaded guilty to only two: attempted sex trafficking of a minor and distribution of heroin. Some of his victims were minors.

    A federal judge sentenced Watson to 300 months on the sex trafficking charge and 260 months on the drug charge. Both sentences will run concurrently.

    After serving his time, Watson will be on supervised release for the rest of his life, according to sentencing documents.

    “Criminals like Watson should know that if they choose to harm our children, they will not escape justice,” Richland County Sheriff Leon Lott said in a news release. “We are pleased with this sentence and will continue to prosecute those who abuse our young people.”

    According to federal prosecutors, Watson targeted victims with specific vulnerabilities.

    Many victims suffered from drug addictions as well as “physical and mental impairments,” the release said.

    One victim was homeless and others were teenagers.

    Victims were subjected to sexual violence, including non-consensual sex. Watson often used physical violence, slapping and hitting his victims and pistol whipping customers, according to the release.

    In a jail call played in court, Watson boasted about how he manipulated his victims.

    “They do what I tell them, that’s why I like drug addicts,” Watson stated, according to the release. “I love them, I love them, I love them.”

    His intimidation efforts didn’t stop following his arrest in 2020. Watson was sanctioned twice – once in September 2020 and another time in April 2021 – for contacting witnesses.

    After a judge ordered him to cease further contact following the first violation, Watson continued to reach out to witnesses.

    That prompted the presiding judge to sign a sealed order modifying the conditions of his pretrial incarceration because he “willfully violated” prior court orders.

    Prosecutors stated in court filings that Watson had a “history of intimidating, threatening and/or influencing victims/witnesses, or attempting to do so.”

    Watson has an extensive criminal history, with over 50 convictions.

    In 2018, he pleaded guilty to breach of trust and shoplifting, $2,000 or less. He also pleaded guilty in 2017 to receiving stolen goods, according to Richland County court records.

    Watson pleaded guilty to two counts of attempted armed robbery in 2010 and was sentenced to seven years in prison, court records show.

    The Richland County Public Index lists additional theft and drug-related charges dating back to at least 1990.

    Watson will serve his term at a South Carolina facility, though sentencing documents don’t state exactly where.

    The federal government is also pursuing a forfeiture judgment against Watson.

  • Hall of Fame Coach honored by former Winnsboro Wildcats

    Former Winnsboro Wildcat players gathered in Ridgeway over the weekend to celebrate their Hall of Fame basketball coach, Eddie Raines. The reunion, a surprise for the coach, was a way to celebrate the impact Raines had on his players’ lives. | Contributed

    WININSBORO – It was everything one could wish for in a reunion of high school basketball players and their beloved coach – like a movie, one that brought it all back in the most heartwarming way.

    The reunion started coming together earlier this summer when several former Winnsboro High School basketball players – Carl Kennedy, David Seibles, Michael Squirewell and others – learned their high school basketball coach Eddie Raines had been inducted into to the South Carolina Coaches Association Hall of Fame last March.

    The former teammates began calling other former teammates to plan a surprise reunion to honor their former coach who had spent a combined 17 years (1968 – 1976 and 1977 – 1986) coaching basketball at their alma mater, Winnsboro High School.

    When Raines and his wife Eunice arrived at a covered party patio at Oakbrook Farm in Ridgeway last Saturday with their sons Kevin and Barry for what they thought was a party for their grands, about 50 of Raines’ former players lined up across the patio and shouted in unison, “1-2-3 Wildcats! 1-2-3 Wildcats!” just as they had done when they broke huddle on Raines’ court in high school.

    Recovering from his shock and surprise of seeing so many of his players, now grown men, Raines pointed across the room, and shouted sternly, “Ok, guys, get on the baseline!” Just like old times. Everyone laughed and swarmed around him.

    After hugging and visiting, one by one, the players came to the front of the room to recall memories of their high school years with Raines and to testify how this one coach, and even his wife, had changed their lives.

    They recalled how he believed in them and wanted the best for them just as a parent would. He coached them the years before, during and after the desegregation of their school – and they grew to see him as a father figure.

    “I remember when I injured my shoulder,” Curtis Dunbar recalled, “my parents were out of town and you took me to the hospital, then brought me home to your house and put me in with your boys and I spent the night with them. You were always there for us. I love you Coach,” Dunbar said as he walked over and hugged Raines.

    James Pearson talked about how he came out of poverty and credits Raines with setting him on the path to succeed. Pearson pointed proudly to his own children’s college education and said Raines gave him the courage and confidence he needed to get where he is.

    Tim Hopkins talked about how he saw his future as nothing special when, his junior year, Coach Raines informed him he would be going to college on a sports scholarship. Today, Hopkins is the Assistant Superintendent of Schools in Kershaw County and on the board of Fairfield Electric Coop. He was blunt as he spoke.

    ‘I owe it all to you, Coach.”

    As they talked and remembered, each player recalled the feeling of family that they say Raines created for the team. They talked about the cookouts at his house, their trips to the beach, and just hanging out after practice talking with him.

    “If we were in town and Mrs. Raines saw one of us, she would always ask if we needed a ride,” Carl Kennedy recalled. “And she would drive us home.”

    After more than an hour of walking down memory lane, the former team members presented Raines with a gift – a pair of white Converse gym shoes they had all signed. That was the only kind of shoe he would let them play in back then, they recalled.

    Coach Eddie Raines and his wife, Eunice, admire the autographed Converse sneakers gifted to him by his former players. | Contributed

    There were endless jokes and heartfelt memories throughout the afternoon.

    “It was fun when we played for Coach Raines, but it was tough,” Kennedy recalled. “The rules! We were probably the first high school team in South Carolina that had a curfew – 11 p.m. He would call our houses every night to be sure we were home. He had a whole network of our parents who helped him.”

    For his part, Raines said he is blessed to have coached them all.

    “This reunion was as good as the induction into the Hall of Fame,” he said. “It meant the world to me.”

    Through those 17 years at Winnsboro High, there were two trips to the state championship, and many other wins and honors – all wonderful memories for the players and their coach. Kennedy recalled that Raines’ teams could hold their own against any team.

    “We were good,” he said. “But Coach made us more than a team.”

    “Of all we accomplished and what we did,” Raines said in an interview with The Voice, “the warmest thing I think I’ve ever felt, was when I saw them Saturday, and they all still called me Coach.”

    Stanley Seibles, Alan (Reb) Watkins, and David Seibles
  • Police stage chilling raid on Kansas newspaper office

    MARION, KS — In an unprecedented raid Friday, local law enforcement seized computers, cellphones and reporting materials from the Marion County Record office, the newspaper’s reporters, and the publisher’s home.

    The town’s entire five-person police department, along with two sheriff’s deputies, raided the newspaper offices and the home of the paper’s co-owner and publisher. That co-owner, Eric Meyer, told the Kansas Reflector that the police took “everything we have.” It wasn’t clear [at the time] how the newspaper staff would take the weekly publication to press Tuesday night.

    On Saturday, a day after the raid, Joan Meyer, 98, Eric Meyer’s mother and co-owner of the paper, collapsed and died at her home. The Record said Joan Meyer had been “stressed beyond her limits and overwhelmed by hours of shock and grief.”

    The article went on to say she hadn’t been able to eat or sleep after the raid and said, “She tearfully watched during the raid as police not only carted away her computer and router used by an Alexa smart speaker but also dug through her son Eric’s personal bank and investments statements to photograph them.”

    The editorial boards of The Wichita Eagle and The Kansas City Star wrote, “We could express our outrage at what is happening here. But we probably couldn’t say it any better than the 98-year-old newspaperwoman since 1953: ‘These are Hitler tactics and something has to be done.’ It turned out to be one of the last things she ever said. Mrs. Meyer complained of feeling upset and stressed by the invasion of her home when she spoke to us on Friday. Late Saturday, we received the sad news that she had collapsed at home and passed away.”

    Eric Meyer said police were motivated by a confidential source who leaked sensitive documents to the newspaper.

    The raid followed news stories about a restaurant owner who kicked reporters out of a meeting last week with U.S. Rep. Jake LaTurner, and revelations about the restaurant owner’s lack of a driver’s license and conviction for drunken driving.

    Meyer said he had never heard of police raiding a newspaper office during his 20 years at the Milwaukee Journal or 26 years teaching journalism at the University of Illinois.

    “It’s going to have a chilling effect on us even tackling issues,” Meyer said, as well as “a chilling effect on people giving us information.”

    The search warrant, signed by Marion County District Court Magistrate Judge Laura Viar, appears to violate federal law that provides protections against searching and seizing materials from journalists. The law requires law enforcement to subpoena materials instead. Viar didn’t respond to a request to comment for this story or explain why she would authorize a potentially illegal raid.

    Emily Bradbury, executive director of the Kansas Press Association, said the police raid is unprecedented in Kansas.

    “An attack on a newspaper office through an illegal search is not just an infringement on the rights of journalists but an assault on the very foundation of democracy and the public’s right to know,” Bradbury said. “This cannot be allowed to stand.”

    Meyer reported last week that Marion restaurant owner Kari Newell had kicked newspaper staff out of a public forum with LaTurner, whose staff was apologetic. Newell responded to Meyer’s reporting with hostile comments on her personal Facebook page.

    A confidential source contacted the newspaper, Meyer said, and provided evidence that Newell had been convicted of drunken driving and continued to use her vehicle without a driver’s license. The criminal record could jeopardize her efforts to obtain a liquor license for her catering business.

    A reporter with the Marion Record used a state website to verify the information provided by the source. But Meyer suspected the source was relaying information from Newell’s husband, who had filed for divorce. Meyer decided not to publish a story about the information, and he alerted police to the situation.

    “We thought we were being set up,” Meyer said.

    Police notified Newell, who then complained at a city council meeting that the newspaper had illegally obtained and disseminated sensitive documents, which isn’t true. Her public comments prompted the newspaper to set the record straight in a story published Thursday.

    Marion County District Court Magistrate Judge Laura Viar signed a search warrant authorizing the police raid of the newspaper office.

     Marion County District Court Magistrate Judge Laura Viar signed a search warrant authorizing the police raid of the newspaper office. (Sam Bailey/Kansas Reflector)

    Sometime before 11 a.m. Friday, officers showed up simultaneously at Meyer’s home and the newspaper office. They presented a search warrant that alleges identity theft and unlawful use of a computer.

    The search warrant identifies two pages worth of items that law enforcement officers were allowed to seize, including computer software and hardware, digital communications, cellular networks, servers and hard drives, items with passwords, utility records, and all documents and records pertaining to Newell. The warrant specifically targeted ownership of computers capable of being used to “participate in the identity theft of Kari Newell.”

    Officers injured a reporter’s finger by grabbing her cellphone out of her hand, Meyer said. Officers at his home took photos of his bank account information.

    He said officers told him the computers, cellphones and other devices would be sent to a lab.

    “I don’t know when they’ll get it back to us,” Meyer said. “They won’t tell us.”

    The seized computers, server and backup hard drive include advertisements and legal notices that were supposed to appear in the next edition of the newspaper.

    “I don’t know what we’re going to do,” he said. “We will publish something.”

    Newell, writing Friday under a changed name on her personal Facebook account, said she “foolishly” received a DUI in 2008 and “knowingly operated a vehicle without a license out of necessity.”

    She said the “entire debacle was brought forth in an attempt to smear my name, jeopardize my licensing through ABC (state Alcoholic Beverage Control Division), harm my business, seek retaliation, and for personal leverage in an ongoing domestic court battle.”

    At the law enforcement center in Marion, a staff member said only Police Chief Gideon Cody could answer questions for this story, and that Cody had gone home for the day and could not be reached by phone. The office of Attorney General Kris Kobach wasn’t available to comment on the legal controversy in Marion, which is north of Wichita in central Kansas.

    Melissa Underwood, communications director of the Kansas Bureau of Investigation, replied by email to a question about whether the KBI was involved in the case.

    “At the request of the Marion Police Department, on Tuesday, Aug. 8, we began an investigation into allegations of criminal wrongdoing in Marion, Kansas. The investigation is ongoing,” Underwood said.

    Meyer, whose father worked at the newspaper from 1948 until he retired, bought the Marion County Record in 1998, preventing a sale to a corporate newspaper chain.

    As a journalism professor in Illinois, Meyer said, he had graduate students from Egypt who talked about how people would come into the newspaper office and seize everything so they couldn’t publish. Those students presented a scholarly paper at a conference in Toronto about what it has done to journalism there.

    “That’s basically what they’re trying to do here,” Meyer said. “The intervention is just like that repressive government of Egypt. I didn’t think it could happen in America.”

  • Judge rules on 5 MPA/Town of Blythewood motions

    BLYTHEWOOD – There was movement last week in the more than two-year-old legal battle between the Town of Blythewood and MPA Strategies, a marketing company the Town contracted with in April, 2021, and terminated less than three months later.

    At issue are a Freedom of Information lawsuit filed by MPA against Mayor Bryan Franklin and the Town of Blythewood and a countersuit filed by the Town against MPA.

    A public motions hearing was held Aug. 9, via Webex, to resolve motions filed by both MPA and the Town, with both sides ending up with wins and losses. Circuit Court Judge Clifford Newman presided.

    The Judge ruled on five of the motions in the order they were filed.

    He first denied MPA’s motion to strike the Town’s counterclaim, allowing it to go forward to trial. He also denied MPA’s claim for summary judgement.

    “We are very disappointed with that ruling,” Paul Porter, attorney for MPA, told The Voice. “However, it’s very hard to get a case thrown out before the trial,” he said. “That’s by design to ensure open access to the Courts. I don’t think it’s a testament to any flaws in our argument. If there is a legal basis for any of the complaints [in the countersuit], I haven’t seen it.

    “For instance,” he said, “starting with the Federal False Claims cause, you can’t file that claim in state court. There’s a way you have to file it and they didn’t file it that way. Plus, federal money must be involved to file this claim and there is no federal money involved.”

    Judge Newman denied a motion filed by the Town that would prevented MPA from deposing Town Attorney Shannon Burnett. MPA has tried unsuccessfully for months to depose Burnett, according to court records. The judge’s denial of the Town’s motion allows MPA to go forward with Burnett’s deposition.

    The last two motions filed by the Town were resolved in one ruling – to show cause and to compel.

    The Town accused MPA of spoliation (destruction) of documents and asked the Judge for sanctions against MPA.

    Following the Webex hearing, Mayor Bryan Franklin issued a prepared statement that included the following:

    “Importantly, one of the Town’s motions asked the Court to sanction MPA for its continued discovery abuses and destruction of evidence.

    “After hearing arguments on behalf of the Town and MPA, Judge Newman agreed with the Town that MPA had failed to comply with rules governing discovery and preservation of evidence, and that sanctions against MPA were warranted,” Franklin said.

    Porter took a different view of the ruling.

    “While Judge Newman did find that MPA had engaged in spoliation, and that he felt there should be some kind of sanction for that,” Porter said, “he left it for the trial judge to determine the facts concerning the issue and to make any decision concerning sanctions at that time.

    “It’s a unique situation,” Porter continued. “She [Ashley Hunter, CEO and owner of MPA] had a pre-existing retention policy for her text messages, so she unequivocally denies that she destroyed any evidence and believes no relevant discernable documents were destroyed. We’re looking forward to filing a Motion to Reconsider in order to preserve this issue for appeal.”

    In his statement, Franklin said, “Judge Newman denied motions brought by MPA for summary judgement and to strike the Town’s counterclaims, ruling that the Town’s counterclaims may move forward in the lawsuit.”

    “Today’s rulings are a meaningful step forward in progressing this case,” Franklin said. “I thank the Blythewood citizens for their patience and continued support in seeing that justice prevails for our Town.”

    Porter also issued a statement.

    “We are glad to get to take depositions and get this case moving. We look forward to all the facts related to this issue coming to light,” he said, “and when they do come to light, I think it will be apparent that there’s not much to this issue.”

  • WDPS arrests Winnsboro man for DC murder

    Officers Say Suspect, Victims are Family Members

    WINNSBORO — A Winnsboro man is in the Fairfield County Detention Center awaiting extradition to Prince George’s County, MD where he has been charged with murder of one family member and the attempted murder of another family member and other related charges.

    Edward Gary, 37, of Winnsboro is charged with shooting and killing Isaac Jenkins, 43, also of Winnsboro, and wounding a woman in the Capital Heights area, a suburb of Washington, D.C., according to Winnsboro Department of Public Safety Chief Kevin Lawrence.

    On Saturday, July 29, at 9:20 p.m., Prince George’s County police officers responded to a report of a shooting in the Capital Heights neighborhood of the county where they found Jenkins lying on the ground with multiple gunshot wounds. He was pronounced dead a short time later, according to the police report.

    Gary and both victims, reported to be related, were attending a family reunion in Prince George’s County, MD when the shooting occurred during a domestic dispute. According to the police report, Gary took a handgun from the trunk of a vehicle and fired toward Jenkins and the woman. Gary then stole a car and drove off, the police documents stated.

    The injuries suffered by the woman as a result of the shooting were not considered to be life-threatening.

    WDPS was alerted of the shooting on Sunday, July 30, and set up a watch on Gary’s home, according to Lawrence. Gary returned to Winnsboro after the shooting, contacted WDPS on Monday, July 31 and was taken into custody that same day.

    Gary remains in custody at the Fairfield County Detention Center pending extradition to Prince George’s County. 

    Chief Lawrence said the Fairfield County Sheriff’s Department was also on scene when Gary was taken into custody.

    Prince George’s law enforcement has 20 days in which to extradite Gary to Maryland.

  • Columbia men arrested for Criminal Solicitation of a Minor

    COLUMBIA – South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson announced the arrest of Joseph Daniel Garcia, 31, of Columbia, and Micka White, 28, of Columbia on four total charges connected to the attempted sexual exploitation of minors.

    Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) Task Force investigators with the Goose Creek Police Department and Mount Pleasant Police Department made the arrests in these unrelated cases. Investigators with the Richland County Sheriff’s Department, Monks Corner Police Department, and U.S. Marshals Service, all also members of the state’s ICAC Task Force, assisted with these investigations.

    Investigators state White solicited a person he believed to be a minor for sex and Garcia encouraged a person he believed to be a minor to produce child sexual abuse material.

    White was arrested on July 24, 2023.  He is charged with three counts of criminal solicitation of a minor (§16-15-342), a felony offense punishable by up to 10 years imprisonment on each count.

    Garcia was arrested on July 22, 2023.  He is charged with one count of attempted sexual exploitation of a minor, first degree (§16-15-395), a felony offense punishable by up to 20 years imprisonment.

    These cases will be prosecuted by the Attorney General’s Office.

  • Shooting on I-77 injures 2 juveniles

    FAIRFIELD COUNTY – The Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office  has requested the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division (SLED) to assist in an investigation following a shooting that injured two juveniles.

    On Saturday, Aug. 5, at approximately 8:39 p.m., the Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office responded to what is believed to be a road rage incident on Interstate 77 South in Fairfield County between mile markers 48 through 34.

    Initial information indicates that a family of four was traveling South in a white Nissan Maxima on I-77 when a dark colored vehicle, possibly a Mazda with a paper tag and no headlights  on, began following the Maxima closely.

    The driver of the Maxima tapped the brakes and then sped up to get away from the Mazda. The dark colored vehicle began shooting at the Maxima.

    Two female juveniles in the back seat of the Maxima were shot during this incident and transported to an area hospital. Both juveniles are currently in stable condition.

    Anyone who may have witnessed this incident is encouraged to contact the Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office’s Chief Deputy Brad Douglas at (803) 635-4141 or bdouglas@fairfieldsc.com.

  • Human trafficking arrest made in Blythewood

    BLYTHEWOOD – An Ohio man has been arrested in Blythewood for Human Trafficking and Contributing to Delinquency of a Minor.

    A Richland County Sheriff’s Department incident report on the arrest was vague and heavily redacted, but stated that Ralpheal Monte Willis, 24, was arrested on Friday, July 28 while walking down a sidewalk in Blythewood with a juvenile who had been reported missing from Ohio.

    While the report stated that the incident was initiated on Wednesday, July 26, the report does not refer to anything that prompted the arrest until July 28, when the reporting officer received a call from an FBI agent that a juvenile reported missing from Ohio was located in Richland County.  

    A source informed The Voice that a search warrant was served at the motel on Friday, which had been staked out for about four hours on Friday evening before the arrest was made at about 10 p.m. Friday night.

    The report states that “a green leafy material believed to be marijuana was found in the suspect’s pocket.” The report also stated that a personal weapon was involved, but it did not state how it was involved.

    Willis was booked into the Alvin S. Glenn Detention Center later that evening and is being held without bond. The juvenile who was with Willis when he was arrested was taken into protective custody, according to a Richland County public information officer who stated that the SC Department of Social Services is working with her (the juvenile’s) family and a local agency on her next steps.

    Prior Arrest

    According to an Orange County Florida arrest affidavit obtained by The Voice, Willis had been arrested in Orlando, Florida on July 17 (11 days prior to his Richland County arrest) and charged with Grand Theft 3rd Degree – Motor Vehicle.

    When he was arrested, Willis was driving a silver Nissan Altima that matched a vehicle that had been reported stolen from Bedford, Ohio, earlier that day (June 17), according to the report. After the reporting officer confirmed that the vehicle had been reported stolen, Willis was charged and transported to Orange County Booking and Release, the report stated. A supplemental report on the arrest was not available to The Voice at press time.

    Besides the Grand Theft charge, Willis was also charged with Possession of Cannabis under 20 Grams (with a weapon), another charge of Possession of Cannabis under 20 Grams, and Possession of Drug Paraphernalia.