Tag: richland county sheriff’s department

  • Blythewood residents killed by gunfire

    COLUMBIA – A Blythewood woman was one of two individuals who died about 10:30 p.m., Oct. 2 after being involved in a shooting in Columbia. Another man also from Blythewood, was found wounded in the incident according to a Richland County Sheriff deputy’s incident report.

    Christine Anne Hayes, 47, of Blythewood, died at the scene after being shot in the upper torso by someone, according to Richland County Cornor Gary Watts.

    Justin Glenn, 24, of Columbia, died at the scene after also being shot in the upper torso. 

    The incident occurred on Ballenton Road in Columbia.

    When officers responded to the location, they found three people. Hayes was lying face down in the yard of a residence. Glenn was slumped over in a vehicle nearby and a third victim, a 27-year-old male, also of Blythewood, was found in the back yard injured, but conscious and unable to move, the report stated. He was transported to a local hospital.

    Handgun shell casings and a sawed off shotgun were also found in the back yard, officials said.

    No information was available on the condition of the third victim.

    The Richland County Coroner’s Office and the Richland County Sheriff’s Department are investigating the incident.

    Anyone with information should contact the Richland County Sheriff’s office at 576-3000.

  • Cobblestone thefts suspect arrested

    BLYTHEWOOD – At least one suspect has been arrested in the aftermath of a string of thefts from mostly unlocked cars and the theft of two vehicles from a gated community in Blythewood last week.

    Elijah Ameria Worthy, 18, was arrested on Friday, June 7, on charges of possession of a stolen vehicle, larceny/breaking into a motor vehicle and two counts of financial transaction card theft that occurred in Cobblestone Park.

    On Thursday, June 6, Richland County Deputies responded to multiple reports of vehicle tampering and two vehicle thefts in the neighborhood.

    The suspect or suspects entered nine vehicles, which were left unlocked, and stole various property including handbags, wallets, electronics and tools, according to the incident report.  Additionally, two vehicles which had spare keys inside were stolen. Both of those vehicles were later recovered in the 100 block of Mary Lawhorn Road.

    Worthy was arrested the next day at his home on Marietta Street in Columbia where deputies found him in the driver’s seat of a vehicle that was reported stolen.

    Worthy was in possession of two credit cards which had previously been stolen from two different vehicles in the Cobblestone and Lake Carolina communities, according to the incident report. He was linked to a vehicle break-in in the Blythewood area after a latent print was lifted from the vehicle and was confirmed through the RCSD’s Latent Print section as being Worthy’s.

    It was reported that two of the thefts were from vehicles at Blythewood Mayor J. Michael Ross’s home.  Another resident, Ed Parler, the town’s Director of Economic Development, said that while his vehicles were spared, his neighbor’s Cadillac Escalade was stolen as well as another one down the street.

    “After the shock of it, I think it was a wake-up call for us to be more cautious,” Parler said.

    Worthy is being held in the Alvin S. Glenn Detention Center in Columbia.

  • Gunshot kills Blair native

    COLUMBIA – A shooting early Sunday morning left a Fairfield Couty man dead and another man injured, the Richland County Sheriff’s Department reported.

    Theron Rodrequis Woodard, 26, who lived in Columbia but is a native of Blair, was identified as the man who died, according to a news release from Richland County Coroner Gary Watts.

    An autopsy showed Woodard’s cause of death was a “gunshot wound to the upper torso,” Watts said in the news release.

    Deputies responded to a call of shots fired about 4:30 a.m. near Parklane Road and O’Neal Court in Columbia, Capt. Maria Yturria said.

    Yturria said deputies arrived to find two men who had been shot in the upper body. Both were taken to an area hospital.

    Woodard was pronounced dead at 5:12 a.m., Watts said in the news release.

    The other man remains hospitalized, according to Yturria.

    The shooting is being investigated by the Richland County Sheriff’s Department and coroner’s office.

    Anyone with information about the shooting is asked to call the sheriff’s department at 803-576-3000 or Crimestoppers at 888-CRIME-SC.

  • R2 Schools locked down as precaution

    BLYTHEWOOD – An incident that involved shots fired impacted several Richland Two schools in Blythewood on Monday after deputies began looking for a suspect in the Highlands neighborhood in Northeast Columbia. The shooting incident, which happened in the 4800 block of Hardscrabble Road, caused increased patrols in the area around Hardscrabble and prompted the Richland County Sheriff’s Department to place a limited lockdown on several Richland Two schools Monday afternoon.

    Due to the possibility that the suspect was within the community, the following schools were placed on a short delay for bus riders and walkers only: Bridge Creek Elementary, Rice Creek Elementary, Lake Carolina Elementary Upper and Lower, Center for Inquiry, Center for Achievement, Kelly Mill Middle, Blythewood Middle, Summit Parkway Middle and Ridge View High.

    Car riders were released on schedule.

    In an email on Monday afternoon, Sgt. Amanda Jordon with the Richland County Sheriff’s Public Information Office, stated that at about 2:30 p.m., deputies determined that the public was no longer in danger and the buses were released.

    Westwood Threat

    Across town, a threat that was allegedly made towards students and faculty members at Westwood High School last week has been deemed “not credible” by Richland County authorities.

    According to Deputy Alexis Aarons with the Richland County Sheriff’s Department public information office, a child with intellectual disabilities overheard a conversation and misunderstood what was being said in regards to a post on social media last week.

    “There was no intent to do harm in the post. No charges will be filed in this case,” Aarons stated.

    On Friday morning, Dec 14, at approximately 10 a.m., school officials notified parents that a morning assembly planned at the school was being cancelled after they were alerted that a threatening message was being sent through Snapchat.

    According to officials, the message said that a boy with a gun had threatened to cause harm during the assembly.

    By Friday afternoon, officials informed parents that the threat was already not appearing to be credible and that the faculty was continuing the day as normal on campus.

    Principal Cheryl Guy released a message to parents Friday afternoon saying that there had been no credible threats made against any student or the school, and that officials had acted swiftly when receiving the initial complaint.

    “I am thankful that we have students who immediately reported it to staff, and our School Resource Officer and our administrators were able to quickly investigate,” she stated in the notice.

    “A threat of any nature is not a joke to us,” she added in another notice.

    The assembly was rescheduled for Monday morning, and was held without incident.

    Barbara Ball contributed to this article.

  • Thefts in Blythewood increasing

    BLYTHEWOOD – On the same night that a Blythewood Exxon service station on Blythewood Road was robbed at gunpoint last week (Blythewood gas station robbed at gunpoint, Sept. 27 issue of The Voice), a resident on Blythewood road reported that her 2018 Thor Freedom RV was stolen from her yard, and that thieves had also ransacked and stolen items in her 2017 Ford Expedition that was parked at the home.

    The resident told Richland County Sheriff’s deputies that the Ford Expedition was unlocked and that it contained the only key to the RV. She said that key was apparently used to drive the RV away.

    According to the incident report, the resident stated that when she woke up that morning, she noticed that the RV was missing and that the glove box and center console of the Ford Expedition were open and appeared to have been “gone through.” Her wallet with miscellaneous debit and credit cards were also missing from the vehicle, the incident report stated.

    Three nights earlier, on Sept. 18, five residents of Blythewood’s Dawson’s Pond neighborhood also reported thefts during the night from their unlocked vehicles.

    At press time, the Richland County Sheriff’s Department had not provided more information on any of these incidents other than the number of the incidents and that the vehicles were unlocked.

    “We have experienced some auto break-ins in the Dawson’s Pond community. This trend is going on nationwide and we truly need the communities to help us with the issue,” Richland County Sheriff’s Deputy Danny Brown told The Voice.

    “People are leaving their cars unlocked with items in plain view inside. We want citizens to please lock your vehicles up, remove anything from the interior compartment. The vehicle should look empty if anyone walks up to it. Don’t tempt the bad guys,” Brown said. “They are going driveway to driveway late in the evening or early morning pulling on door handles to see if they are unlocked,” Brown said.

    Brown urged neighbors, “If you see something please say something.”

  • Blythewood gas station robbed at gunpoint

    Four robbers fired shots and threatened employees during Sharpe Shoppe heist on Blythewood Road. | Store Surveillance

    BLYTHEWOOD – Richland County deputies are looking for four suspects who robbed a service station in Blythewood at gunpoint last week.

    The incident took place early Friday morning, Sept. 21, at the Exxon service station located at 230 Blythewood Road at about 12:30 a.m.

    Surveillance video from the station shows the four suspects enter the store and rob it at gunpoint.

    “They burst into the store, fired a handgun into the ceiling, and one jumped the counter and took money from the cash register,” said station owner Larry Sharpe, Sr. “They tried to rob the safe, but couldn’t.”

    Sharpe said there were five or six customers in the store at the time who were forced to lay down on the floor during the robbery. Two of those customers were also robbed, Sharpe said.

    One of the suspects also fired a second shot into the ceiling as the four fled the scene.

    Anyone with any information about the robbery or the identity of the suspects is urged to contact Crimestoppers by calling 1-888-CRIME-SC (888-274-6372) or visiting www.midlandscrimestoppers.com and emailing a tip. Your identity will be kept anonymous, and if your tip leads to an arrest, you could be eligible for a cash reward of up to $1,000

  • Local man charged with child porn

    Johnson

    COLUMBIA – On Wednesday, Aug. 15,  South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson announced the arrest of William Edward Johnson, 34, of Columbia, near Lake Carolina on six charges connected to the sexual exploitation of a minor.

    Investigators state Johnson possessed multiple files of child pornography.

    Johnson was arrested on August 14, 2018. He is charged with six counts of sexual exploitation of a minor, third degree (§16-15-410), a felony offense punishable by up to ten years imprisonment on each count.

    The case will be prosecuted by the Attorney General’s Office.


    Updated 8.16.18 at 7:58 pm – Aug. 22 changed to Aug. 165

  • Counties differ on animal abusers

    WINNSBORO  – A man convicted of setting a dog on fire is serving a five-year prison sentence, the maximum allowed under state law.

    Another man who dragged a dog with a truck more than a mile didn’t spend one day in prison.

    So what makes these cases different?

    One was prosecuted in Richland County; the other in Fairfield County.

    Hykeem Dontavious Jabar Golson, 23, of Columbia, was sentenced to five years in prison and fined $5,000 after a Richland County jury convicted him in December 2017 of one count of felony ill treatment of animals, according to Richland County court records.

    Golson is one of only two South Carolina defendants to receive the maximum sentence, according to media reports.

    Billy Ray Huskey, 51, of Great Falls, pleaded guilty in July 2016 to dragging a nine-month-old dog with his Dodge Ram pickup truck in Fairfield County.

    Two other dogs were later found emaciated and had to be euthanized.

    Huskey had been charged with ill treatment of animals, torture – also a felony.

    But instead of going to prison, Huskey was allowed to plead to the misdemeanor charge of ill treatment of animals and sentenced to 90 days in prison, suspended to three years of probation.

    Richland throws book at abusers

    The disparity between the Richland and Fairfield cases is representative of how both counties traditionally handle animal abuse cases.

    A recent investigation by The Voice found that of 14 ill treatment of animals cases prosecuted since 2016 in the 6th Judicial Circuit, which includes Fairfield County, very few resulted in actual jail time.

    Often times, defendants either received probation or the cases were nolle prossed, meaning the cases weren’t prosecuted.

    Richland County, however, has quickly developed a reputation for a no-nonsense approach to animal cruelty.

    “Our pets need to be properly cared for and treated with love because they are a part of our families,” Richland County Sheriff Leon Lett said in a news release announcing Golson’s arrest.

    A lot of Richland County’s assertiveness appears to be in allocating resources to combat animal cruelty.

    In 2015, the Richland County Sheriff’s Office founded an animal cruelty task force.

    That year, its founder, senior investigator Holly Wagner, also investigated at least four dog fighting rings, according to a sheriff’s office news release, landing her honors from the American Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals and Humane Society of the United States.

    Judicial discretion

    Often times, how defendants are prosecuted hinges on the presiding judge, a point raised during a recent Winnsboro Town Council meeting.

    In June, Police Chief John Seibles told council members that officers have charged several people with cruelty to animals, with some facing felony counts.

    Penalties, however, are set “at the discretion of the court,” Seibles said. Katera Alexander, however, was arrested by a police officer in Seibles jurisdiction and charged with only a misdemeanor after it was discovered that she had tied a pit bull to her porch and starved it to the point that it had to be euthanized by the County’s Animal Control. Seibles’ comments were part of a larger discussion council members were having about proposed revisions to the Fairfield County animal control laws.

    While some Winnsboro town leaders were reluctant to follow the county’s lead, others were open to tougher penalties in more severe cases.

    Councilman Clyde Sanders, for example, said he thinks the town should mirror the county’s $500 fine for cruelty cases.

    “I can’t stand seeing dogs chained in the yard without anything to eat,” Sanders said. “If we catch someone doing that, the fine ought to be high enough to prevent them from doing it again.”

    In the Huskey case, Assistant Sixth Circuit Solicitor Melissa Heimbaugh, who prosecuted, told the Court she thought the state would not win a felony case with the available evidence.

    The presiding judge grudgingly agreed.

    “The State (solicitor) is right, they would have had a high burden to prove your guilt,” Gibbons said. “We have no evidence of intent, so I’m giving you the benefit of the doubt, which I have to do under the law.”

    Huskey faced up to five years in prison, but escaped prison by pleading guilty to the misdemeanor charge. He was also ordered to perform 30 hours of community service and banned from owning a dog.

    “I want to sentence you to the maximum jail time that I can under the guidelines,” Gibbons said. “I’m going to give you not two years of probation but three.”

    Lax laws

    Prosecutorial leniency is one reason most Fairfield defendants have escaped accountability in animal abuse cases, but not the only reason.

    One S.C. House member says South Carolina lags when it comes to meaningful protections for pets.

    “The laws need to be strengthened,” said Rep. Bill Taylor, R-Aiken. “It’s common knowledge that people who torture and abuse other animals are one step away from torturing or harming human beings.”

    In 2014, Taylor introduced a bill that would’ve toughened penalties for animal abusers, making most cases felonies. The measure, however, failed to gain traction.

    That year, though the General Assembly did revise animal abuse laws that cases are now heard in general sessions court versus magistrate or municipal court, where penalties tend to be lighter.

    But it’s not enough, Taylor says.

    “There’s a myriad of bills filed every session about this,” he said. “Very few of them ever get passed.”

    As recently as February, the S.C. Senate introduced a bill, which among other things, tightened anti-tethering laws. The Senate passed the bill, but it died in the House.

    Penalties for violating the tethering law would’ve included up to 90 days in prison and a $1,000 fine.

    The law also required magistrates to receive animal cruelty training and improving shelter standards, but the anti-tethering provisions drew opposition.

    “Serial killers over the years tortured animals at some point,” Taylor said. “These are serious crimes that can lead to other crimes, we need to be serious about this.”

  • Prostitution sting nets Wendell Irby

    Police video shows arrest during online sexual predator sting. | WISTV.com

    COLUMBIA – A Fairfield man was one of 38 arrested during what authorities are calling the most successful four-day online sexual predator sting in South Carolina.

    Wendell Irby, 61, of Winnsboro was arrested July 11 in Columbia after he propositioned an undercover law enforcement officer for sex, according to a Richland County Sheriff’s deputy’s incident report. Irby paid $80 for sexual services and was arrested when he showed up at the agreed upon incident location, the report stated.

    The Sheriff’s Department led the statewide sting that included the U.S. Attorney’s office, the U.S. Secret Service, the S.C. Attorney General’s office and other state and federal agencies.

    The internet sting involved deputies posing as 13-year-old girls having conversations with adult men, Richland County Sheriff Leon Lott said.

    “We made like we were that 13 or 14-year-old girl,” Lott said. ”Unfortunately for the men, they didn’t meet that young girl. They met us, law enforcement.

    “All of us came together during this four-day period of time [June 10-14] with one mission, and that mission was to get these monsters off the streets,” Lott said.

    The men were caught on police video as they drove up to a house, walked to the door and knocked. In most cases the men can be seen in the video being arrested as they start to enter the house where the sting was being conducted.

    Lott said 12 men were arrested when they showed up at the location of the sting in anticipation of meeting the 13-year-old. An additional six people were arrested based on information gathered during the sting. He said 15 ‘johns’ were arrested along with five prostitutes.

    The public index for Richland County listed June 11, 2018 arrest as Irby’s first, and he was released on a personal recognizance bond of $465. However, an article in The Voice dated Dec. 21, 2012, stated that Irby, the Fairfield County Tax Assessor, at the time, was arrested in a motel room on Two Notch Road on Dec. 13, 2012 for soliciting prostitution. The incident, the article states, was part of a two-day sting operation being conducted by the Richland County Sheriff’s Department. Irby was one of seven individuals lured to the motel with a bogus ad on the web site Backpage.com, a site used to advertise adult services, the article states.

    A Fairfield County spokesperson said Irby was terminated by the County on Dec. 19 following the arrest and investigation.

    Maria Yturia, a spokesperson for the Richland County Sheriff’s Department, said there is no record of the 2013 arrest.

  • Two 53-foot trailers stolen in Blythewood

    BLYTHEWOOD – A Blythewood office for a national trucking company is missing a couple of 53-foot trailers, a Richland County Sheriff’s Department incident report states. While the report was filed last week, the trailers are reported to have been stolen from a truck/trailer storage lot at 10432 Wilson Boulevard in Blythewood for perhaps as long as six months.

    The trailers, a 2007 white transport trailer and a 2011 flatbed, were stored in a lot where other contractors had access, the incident report states.

    Anyone with information about the missing trailers, call the Richland County Sheriff’s Office Crimestopper Hotline at 1-888-CRIME-SC.