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  • Christmas in Winnsboro

    FCHS Color Guard opened the parade, followed by Grand Marshall Kevin Lawrence.
    Photos by Martha Ladd
    Fresh Picked Band
    Washington Street Baptist Church
    Snowing in November? The snow machine in front of the Town Clock following the parade was a hit with children waiting to see Santa.
  • Crash on Candlewood Circle results in fatality

    WINNSBORO – A one-vehicle crash that occurred on Candlewood Circle near Little Cedar Creek Road on Friday, Nov. 26, has resulted in the death of the driver.

    The crash happened at about 7:34 p.m., according to Trooper Nic Pye with the S. C. Highway Patrol.

    The vehicle was traveling South on Candlewood Circle when it ran off the road left, struck a tree and overturned, killing the driver, Pye reported.

    There is no more information on the crash at this time. The driver has not yet been identified by the Fairfield County Coroner.

    The crash is being investigated by the S. C. Hiighway Patrol. More information will be provided when it becomes available.

  • FCSO arrests 3 in Mitford area

    From left, Herman Gear, Dennis Timothy “Timmy” Lee, and Justin Yearwood

    FAIRFIELD COUNTY – After investigating illegal narcotics activity at 15753 State Hwy 200 in the Mitford area over the last two years, the Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office’s narcotics unit conducted a search warrant at this location on Nov. 14, which resulted in the arrest of Dennis Timothy “Timmy” Lee, Herman Gear, and Justin Yearwood.

    The property owner, Thomas Reid Powers III was arrested on Nov. 8, for violation of bond conditions, and remains in the Fairfield County Detention Center.

    The Sheriff’s Office has received numerous complaints from concerned citizens in the Mitford area about suspected drug activities at this address.

    “Our narcotics unit has relentlessly investigated these allegations and has made numerous arrests from this location,” Sheriff Will Montgomery said.

    Lee was charged with Trafficking Methamphetamine, Trafficking Heroin, and Possession with Intent to Distribute Cocaine Base (crack).

    Gear was charged with Possession of Methamphetamine and Possession of Heroin.

    Yearwood was charged with Possession of Methamphetamine and Possession of Heroin. All subjects were transported to the Fairfield County Detention Center and are awaiting bond hearings.

    “The information provided by the citizens in the Mitford area was helpful, and our narcotics unit has done a fantastic job utilizing all information provided in order to effect a significant impact in this area of the county,” Montgomery said.

    Over 1,000 pills containing methamphetamine and heroin, quantities of methamphetamine, cocaine base (crack), and marijuana were seized.

  • Whitaker releases employee survey responses

    WINNSBORO – A Fairfield County survey found county workers feel like county administration and council members treat them like second-class citizens.

    Many were content with the nature of their job and living in Fairfield, but also blamed the current council majority for low employee morale.

    Low pay and disdain for county leadership were common themes in the report.

    One employee praised their boss, but lashed out at Fairfield County Council, accusing them of cronyism and taxpayer waste.

    “I believe that my [redacted] has the County and its people in his best interest,” the employee wrote. “He is being hamstrung by County Counsel [sic] and is dead-set on making sure he DOES NOT succeed.”

    Another employee said the current council majority’s prioritizing rec center construction over boosting employee pay “leaves a pretty sour taste in employees’ mouths.

    “The fact that some council members see more fit to build unnecessary rec centers and not bat an eye that employees are living paycheck to paycheck is asinine,” the employee wrote.

    Delayed for months, the survey was finally released this week following a story in The Voice and pressure from Councilman Clarence Gilbert, who initially requested the survey.

    A table listing responses classifies employees with complaints as “detractors.” Respondents complimentary of the county are called “promoters,” while a handful are described as “passive.”

    At least 43 comments from so-called “detractors” cited low pay and/or lack of pay raises as a major grievance.

    During the budget process this past spring, council members said the county couldn’t afford pay raises. Council members eventually voted to increase pay and give bonuses days before the November general election.

    Read more about this story in the November 23 edition of The Voice.

  • Election tilts council’s balance of power

    WINNSBORO – Voters sent a clear message to the Fairfield County Council Tuesday night as they turned out County Council Chairman Moses Bell (Dist.1) and long-time Councilman and Vice Chairman Mikel Trapp (Dist. 3), leaving council with a new majority vote.

    Dan Ruff

    Voters returned Dist. 5 representative Douglas Pauley and Dist. 7 representative Clarence Gilbert to their seats to each serve their second full terms.

    The two had faced a fierce, months-long campaign from a few residents from the Center Creek and the Cedar Creek area who supported Pauley’s and Gilbert’s opponents, Kirk Chappell and Lisa Brandenburg, respectively, and Bell.

    In Council Dist. 1, former Councilman Dan Ruff with 555 votes (48%) ousted Moses Bell with 381 votes (33 %) in a three way contest with political newcomer Kennedy (Kenny) Robertson who garnered 227 (20%). There were two write-in votes.

    In Dist. 3, Peggy Swearingen with 583 votes (57%) won over Mikel Trapp who had 446 votes (43%). There were 7 write-ins.

    In Dist. 5, incumbent Douglas Pauley won by the largest margin of all the county council candidates with 536 votes (59%) Kirk Chappell who had 379 votes (41%). There were 16 write-in votes.

    In Dist. 7, incumbent Clarence Gilbert with 589 votes (57%) bested Lisa Brandenburg who had 442 votes (43%). There were 6 write-in votes.

    At press time, neither Bell nor Trapp had responded to The Voice’s requests or comments. However, Bell made the following post on Facebook shortly after the election results were announced:

    “I want to thank you all so much for your support and votes. We were able to accomplish much together in these 4 years…continue to be very proud of that record.  I will be talking more in next weeks and months.  The odds were against me and I was not able to bring it across the finish line.  I called Dan Ruff to congratulate him on his victory…I had to leave a message since he did not pick up.”

    Pauley also thanked his supporters on Facebook for his win.

    “Thank you for believing in me, thank you for voting for me, and thank you for allowing me to serve District 5 in our great county for four more years!,” Pauley wrote. “I will continue to work on improving Fairfield County to make it a great place to live, work, and visit!”

    Gilbert said he already feels a new openness coming back to the Fairfield government.

    “I’m truly grateful to my friends, family and supporters who voted for me in this election. And I pledge to serve with openness and dignity and to help this county and its people prosper. We can’t shut out the people. We can’t censor employees from talking to our councilmen. We can’t have a guard always on duty to be sure the citizens don’t find out what we’re doing,” Gilbert said. “Our business is the people’s business and we want them to be part of the discussion.”

    Pauley and Gilbert had been at odds with Bell and his majority on council for the last two years over the issues of government openness and Bell’s spending priorities, among other issues.


    Related: County election results are in

  • Winnsboro pit masters win 1st place at Pig

    RIDGEWAY – Perfect weather, a huge crowd and tons of great barbecue defined last weekend’s Pig on the Ridge festival in Ridgeway.

    Friday night’s ‘No Pigs Allowed’ crowd was packed into the Cotton Yard elbow to elbow as they roamed the yard, enjoying everything from pizza to mac and cheese to chili.

    “The barbecue was just great – most teams sold out early, and our vendors had a great sales weekend,” said POTR steering committee member Gloria Keeffe. “I think everybody came to buy Christmas gifts and eat barbecue, and that’s what we offered,” she said with a laugh. “That and a really good time on an absolutely beautiful fall day.

    “We had great volunteers who gave it their all. And the kids’ choir from Geiger Elementary was entertaining as usual. We had a wonderful collection of classic and antique cars and Doug Pauley did a great job as DJ. I can’t say enough about how well everything went,” Keeffe said. “I think everybody had a great time. And best of all, we raised a lot of money that will be used to give back to our community.”

    Winners this year included Winnsboro’s Boro Que amateur cook team who took home $500 in prize money and a trophy.

    ‘Big George,’ chief cook for Monkey Bottom Boys of Timmonsille, S.C. took home $1000 as winning professional cook team.

    Chief cook Gene Culbertson’s Backwoods BBQ team from Trenton, S.C. won $500 for Friday night’s ‘No Pigs Allowed’ event.

    Chief cook Philip Miles’ Tail-Gater Haters out of Lake City S.C. took home points and a trophy for best ribs.

    Hog Calling champs were Caleb Benson for the children’s category and Steve Stewart for the adult category.

  • COG Executive’s endorsement of Bell may have violated Hatch Act

    Bell Offered County Ads to Voice in Exchange for Endorsement

    WINNSBORO – Moses Bell’s request for an election endorsement may have resulted in a violation of the Hatch Act, a federal law that bars the intermingling of political campaigning and government work.

    Bell also offered The Voice the county’s ad revenue in exchange for an endorsement in the newspaper.

    COG Exec Endorses Bell

    Ben Mauldin, executive director of the Midlands Regional Council of Governments, which coordinates a multitude of federally funded projects, confirmed to The Voice that he endorsed Bell for re-election to Fairfield County Council. But Mauldin also doesn’t think the endorsement violates the Hatch Act.

    “I don’t think so. He (Bell) is the one who asked for a quote,” Mauldin said. “It was something he asked for. It’s nothing we’ve normally done, just a quick little quote.”

    Maudlin said Bell is the only political candidate that he recalls ever requesting an endorsement from himself or the COG.

    When contacted by The Voice for comment, Bell responded via text message with personal attacks.

    “Evidently you are an idiot. It is not an endorsement but a comment concerning my leadership strengths. Are you afraid people may know of my strengths and capabilities?” Bell‘s text read.

    As County Council chairman, Bell sits on the Central Midlands COG board of directors as well as the Executive Committee which hires and oversees the executive director. The COG facilitates the flow of millions of federal taxpayer dollars to various road, employment and other projects in the Central Midlands, which includes Fairfield County, according to agency records.

    Jay Bender, a media law attorney with the S.C. Press Association, of which The Voice is a member, said the agencies accepting federal money potentially fall under the Hatch Act.

    “The question of whether or not the Hatch Act applies depends on whether or not the Council of Governments receives any federal funding.” Bender said. “If the COG has federal funding, then I think the Hatch Act might apply.”

    The endorsement in question came in a print ad from Bell for his District 1 re-election effort. Bell’s ad includes a quote attributed to Mauldin, which says “Bell’s leadership, expertise and time volunteered is very much appreciated” by the COG.

    Enacted in 1939, the Hatch Act limits political activities of federal employees as well as local government employees who work in connection with federally funded programs, according to the U.S. Office of Special Counsel, which enforces the act.

    The law’s purposes are “to ensure that federal programs are administered in a nonpartisan fashion, to protect federal employees from political coercion in the workplace, and to ensure that federal employees are advanced based on merit and not based on political affiliation,” the OSC states on its website.

    Local and state agencies that “frequently receive financial assistance from the federal government” fall under the Hatch Act.

    A majority of the Central Midlands COG’s Aging Services division is federally funded, according to the COG’s website.

    The COG has also facilitated the flow of millions of federal highway dollars to various road projects in the Midlands, agency records show.

    As an elected official, Bell likely wouldn’t face any sanctions over the advertisement. Hatch Act sanctions are typically aimed at employees of federal agencies or agencies that receive federal funding.

    Penalties can range from a warning to the agency losing some of its federal funding, according to the OSC website.

    In extreme cases, the OSC could recommend removing a violator from federal service, according to the OSC website.

    Bell Offers The Voice a Deal

    Bell also asked The Voice’s publisher for an endorsement on Monday in exchange for placing all the county’s ads with The Voice.

    The newspaper, which had run the county’s ads for several years, was one of a number of heads to roll under Fairfield County’s new council majority that was seated in January, 2021 – Councilmen Moses Bell, Tim Roseborough, Mikel Trapp and Councilwoman Shirley Greene.

    In March, 2021, the following announcement was posted on the county’s Facebook page:

    “Please be aware, effective immediately, Fairfield County will no longer use The Voice of Fairfield County for ads and legal notices…”

    A week earlier, county officials notified The Voice’s staff that (former) Fairfield County Administrator Jason Taylor had been instructed by Council Chair Moses Bell to immediately switch the county’s advertising from The Voice to The Country Chronicle, which is published out of Camden.

    The final move to cut all advertising to The Voice came after months of verbal and emailed instructions from Bell pressuring Taylor to switch to the newspaper of Bell’s choice.

    In an email dated Jan. 12, 2021, Bell took a new tack, trying to convince Taylor that, “The Voice newspaper has not been a friend to our communities.”

    During council meetings, Bell publicly criticized The Voice and urged citizens to support other newspapers.

    “Mr. Bell does not like hearing the truth,” Councilman Douglas Pauley said during a subsequent council meeting. “He has found out that he cannot bend The Voice to his will and make them write what he wants. He would just rather shut them down.”

    Publisher Barbara Ball contributed to this story.

  • Winnsboro man arrested on child sex abuse material charges

    COLUMBIA – On Oct. 28, Winnsboro resident Bryce Allen Frey, 53, has been arrested on 15 charges connected to the sexual exploitation of minors, according to South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson.

    Investigators received a CyberTipline report from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, which led them to Frey. Investigators state Frey possessed files of child sexual abuse material.

    Frey is charged with 15 counts of sexual exploitation of a minor third degree, a felony offense punishable by up to 10 years imprisonment on each count.

    Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force investigators with the Attorney General’s Office made the arrest. Investigators with the Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office, U.S. Secret Service, and Homeland Security Investigations, all also members of the state’s ICAC Task Force, as well as the Winnsboro Police Department, assisted with the investigation.

  • Teen arrested for turning donuts and damaging Doko Meadows Park

    Steven Hasterok, former Director of the Conference and Events Center, examines damage from large ‘donuts’ cut into the park’s athletic field in August 2021 by an adult who was never arrested. Similar damage was caused again last month by a 17-year-old who was arrested on Oct. 18. | Barbara Ball

    BLYTHEWOOD – Richland County Sheriff’s deputies have arrested a male juvenile accused of vandalizing Doko Meadows Park.

    The teen was arrested on Oct. 18, according to Sara Blann, a public information officer with the Sheriff’s department.   He was charged with vandalism and released into the custody of a parent.

    The incident occurred on the evening of Wed., Oct. 5, 2022, according to the sheriff’s report. The damage to the park consists of donuts driven into the grass on the soccer field next to McLean Road, according to Town Manager Carroll Williamson, who said the field suffered significant damage, rendering it unusable.

    According to the incident report, a town hall employee reported that “upon his arrival to work the morning of Oct. 5, he noticed several tire marks in the grass of the park that appeared as if someone was doing donuts in the grass with a vehicle. He stated that the grass is off limits to vehicles.”

    After viewing footage from the town hall’s surveillance cameras, the deputy said he was able to view the suspect’s vehicle license plate.

    A press release issued by Town Hall stated that town leaders have made significant investments in park security, including fencing, extensive camera coverage, license plate readers, and an automated security gate.

    Asked by The Voice how the intruder got into the park with a vehicle at night, Williamson had not responded at press time.

    The case of an adult male digging glaring donut holes in the grass at a large gathering in the park on July 31, 2021, causing $1,500 in damage, went unsolved even though he was identified and had connections in the community.

    Richland County investigators still haven’t publicly identified the prime suspect in that incident who remains at large despite a wealth of evidence, most of which investigators and Town officials have shielded from public view.

    In a response to a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request from The Voice, a sheriff’s department representative said it would cost The Voice $200 to receive the sheriff’s email communications with Town of Blythewood leaders concerning the Doko Park vandalism incident.

    The Voice submitted a similar FOIA request to The Town of Blythewood, which denied the newspaper’s request, possibly in violation of the FOIA.

    Town Administrator Carroll Williamson said releasing emails to and from elected town leaders would “interfere with a prospective law enforcement proceeding.”

    Jay Bender, an attorney with the S.C. Press Association, of which The Voice is a member, said the exemption cited by Williamson applies to law enforcement records, such as police reports, not political or administrative discussions about a crime.

    “I would make the argument that political discussions are not exempt from disclosure,” Bender said.

    Neither town hall nor the sheriff’s department would release surveillance video, and an incident report redacted rudimentary information, including the truck’s color, the apartment complex in which the suspect lives, and even the suspect’s age.

    Bender questioned why the report was so heavily redacted.

    “They probably think they can make an arrest without citizen interest,” he said. “If they wanted the public’s help, they would hold a press conference.”

    No information has been provided to The Voice by the Town or Sheriff’s department in order to receive help from the public in tracking down the known suspect.

    The Town of Blythewood didn’t file an incident report until Aug. 3, three days after the vandalism occurred. On that date, a deputy reported that he circled the apartment complex but couldn’t find the suspect or his truck.

    Investigators identified the suspect after running his vehicle information through an S.C. Department of Motor Vehicles database.

    Investigators have obtained warrants but those were not made available to The Voice. The sheriff’s department would not say when warrants were obtained.

    “A suspect has been identified in this incident and charges are pending at this time. The individual’s identity will be released when an arrest has been made,” an agency spokeswoman said via email.

    Bender said there’s no legal requirement to withhold an unserved arrest warrant.

  • 17-year-old arrested in recent Winnsboro shootings

    WINNSBORO – Fairfield County Sheriff Will Montgomery announced the arrest of a 17-year-old juvenile from Richland County in connection with several recent shootings in Fairfield County.

    The juvenile turned himself in to the Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office on Wednesday Oct, 26, 2022 and was transported to the Fairfield County Detention Center where he was charged with 6 counts of Attempted Murder, 4 counts of Assault and Battery 1st Degree, 3 counts of Possession of a Weapon during a Violent Crime, and 3 counts of Discharging a Firearm into a Dwelling.

    These charges stem from recent shooting incidents that occurred in the Winnsboro area on Old Chester Road, in South Winnsboro, and on Flora Circle.

    The Sheriff’s office is continuing to investigate these shooting incidents and urges anyone who may have any information about any of these incidents to please contact the Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office at 803-635-4141.