WINNSBORO – The Voice of Fairfield County is offering a
$2,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the
person or people responsible for sending hate mail to some Dawkins community residents
in Fairfield County.
The Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office is looking into the source of the hate mail which showed up in mailboxes the week of Feb. 8 – 13. Three of the letters (with envelopes) have been turned in to the Sheriff’s Office. The white letter-size envelopes are addressed by hand, but there is no return address or other marks on the envelopes, according to Fairfield County Sheriff Will Montgomery. Montgomery is asking anyone who has received one of these letters to please contact the Sheriff’s Office.
“We have contacted SLED to help us with processing the
letters for possible DNA and fingerprints,” a spokesperson for the Sheriff’s
office posted. “If you receive one of the letters and have not opened it,
please do not. We would like to be able to preserve the letter for processing.”
Anyone with information concerning the hate letters (shown below) is asked to contact the Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office at (803) 635-4141 or Crime Stoppers at 1-888-CRIMESC (1-888-274-6372) or visit www.midlandscrimestoppers.com to email a tip. Your identity will be kept anonymous.
WINNSBORO – Sheriff Will Montgomery announced that Osman Shabazz, Jr. and Sylvia Bacon-Scott have been arrested for the murder of Gabriel Brisbon. The couple was arrested in Columbia and will be held at the Fairfield County Detention Center awaiting bond.
The body of Brisbon, 22, was discovered Friday morning, Feb. 5, in a mobile home located on Highway 321 near Peach Road. He had been missing since Jan. 31, according to the Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office.
This is a developing story and more information will be
posted as it is available.
WINNSBORO – Charles Byrd, 19, was found dead in a parking lot on Longtown Road in the Ridgeway area of Fairfield County on Sunday, Feb. 7. He had a gunshot wound and was pronounced dead at the scene according to Fairfield County Coroner Chris Hill.
This case is under investigation by the Fairfield County
Coroner’s Office and Fairfield County Sheriff’s Department. More information
will be posted as it becomes available.
WINNSBORO – A man and woman are wanted for the murder of Gabriel Brisbon, 22, whose body was discovered Friday morning, Feb. 5, in a mobile home locate on Highway 321 near Peach Road. He had been missing since Jan. 31, according to the Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office.
The suspects, Osman Shabazz, Jr. and Sylvia Bacon-Scott, are
possibly driving a spray-painted black 2000 Nissan Maxima with SC tag SXM 877.
Shabazz and Bacon-Scott also have a five-month old child
with them. Both suspects are to be considered armed and dangerous, according to
the Sheriff’s Office.
Anyone with information regarding their location is asked to
contact the Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office (803-635-4141) or Crime Stoppers
(1-CRIMESC or 1-888-274-6372).
Anyone who sees Shabazz or Bacon-Scott is urged to
immediately call 911.
Sheriff: Foul play is suspected in the death of a missing Winnsboro man
WINNSBORO – The body of a missing Winnsboro man has been found by his family, according to Fairfield County Sheriff Will Montgomery.
Gabriel Deshawn Brisbon, 22, was found in a mobile home on
Hwy 321 near Peach Road sometime Friday, according to Montgomery.
The cause of death is not known.
The Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office and Brisbon’s family
have been searching for Brisbon, who was last seen on Jan. 31 at the Winfield
West Apartments in Winnsboro. His car was found on Tuesday, Feb. 2 at the
Creekside Apartments.
This is a developing story and more information will be posted
as it becomes available.
WINNSBORO – The Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office seeks information concerning the whereabouts of Gabriel Deshawn Brisbon, 22.
Brisbon was last seen at Winnfield West Apartments in Winnsboro on Sunday, January 31 at approximately 4:00 p.m. He was driving a 2010 Grey 4-door Honda Accord, which was located in Columbia.
Brisbon is a black male, 6’3″ and about 300 lbs. He has a low haircut and a medium-length beard.
Anyone who has any information concerning Gabriel Dehsawn Brisbon is asked to call the Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office at 803-635-4141 or call crime stoppers at 1-888-CRIME-SC.
Bell, Greene, Roseborough vote in favor to make it happen
WINNSBORO – Following an executive session Monday night to discuss and receive
legal advice regarding the county administrator’s contract, council voted 4 – 3
to renew County Administrator Jason Taylor’s contract, but for only five
months.
Taylor
Councilman Mikel Trapp made the motion to renew the contract until June 30, 2021, end of the fiscal year. Councilwoman Shirley Greene seconded the motion.
“I think we need to give Mr. Taylor a longer time – a year,”
Councilman Douglas Pauley said. “Mr. Taylor has done a great job, and we’ve
been moving Fairfield County forward, so I would like to see it at least for a
year.”
“I have to agree Mr. Pauley,” Councilman Neil Robinson said.
“We should at least give him a year for evaluation if that’s what the new
council members want.”
“As a new council person, I think that basically, we’ve got
to have a chance to work with Mr. Taylor,” Greene said. “We’ve taken a look at
some of the legal ramifications and some of the legal points have been made,
and giving us the chance to work with Mr. Taylor and to be able to evaluate him
the way it should be done, and having some relationship with him and his work
is basically what I see as a new council person.”
Green, Council Chair Moses Bell, Trapp and new councilman Tim Roseborough voted ‘for’ the five-months of employment. Councilman Clarence Gilbert, Pauley and Robinson voted ‘against.’
A source told The Voice that the terms of the extension of
the contract were not discussed with Gilbert, Pauley and Robinson in executive
session, rather Bell asked the attorney to review Taylor’s previous evaluation,
but nothing was discussed or disclosed regarding extending his contract or
limiting his employment, the source said.
“It was a surprise to the three of us when Mr. Trapp made
the motion to renew the contract for only five months,” Robinson said.
Rumors had been circulating through the county for the last week that Taylor would be placed on administrative leave Monday night, but that rumor did not materialize.
When The Voice asked Bell for a comment following the vote,
he said, “No comoment,” several times before walking away.
“I’m totally disappointed in this,” Gilbert told The Voice
following the meeting. “Mr. Taylor has done so much for this county. He’s the
ultimate professional, easy to work with, honest. He has such vision for our
county. Why would we want to turn back our progress at this point? I would hate
to think it’s a personal vendetta. But it was planned. There was no substantive
discussion about it,” he said.
Taylor was hired in May, 2016, with a contract for $120,000
each year for a three-year term.
In July, 2018, council voted unanimously to extend Taylor’s
contract for another year and also voted to increase the period of compensation
for Taylor in the event of termination without cause to two years. Council
members also approved a 3.44 percent pay raise, increasing Taylor’s salary from
$123,997.60 to $129,297.52.
Billy Smith, council chair at that time, praised Taylor’s
performance, saying, “Jason, I think you’re doing a great job.”
Taylor came to Fairfield County from Jasper County, where he
was previously the town administrator for Ridgeland since 2002.
He also spent eight years with the S.C. Department of Social
Services and four years as Saluda County’s economic development director.
County Council Chairman Neil Robinson recently credited
Taylor for guiding the council’s directives to fruition over the last four
years.
“While much was accomplished in 2019 in Fairfield County,”
Robinson was quoted in an end of year story in The Voice, “despite the ensuing
pandemic and all the associated challenges, 2020 was a phenomenal year in
Fairfield County for economic development, jobs, infrastructure and a laundry
list of other accomplishments.
Praising Taylor for his work to turn the county around, Robinson
said, “His vision and knowledge of where we should be and how we get there
surprises me every day. In the last four years we’ve brought more than 1,000
jobs, six new industries and $70 million in investment. We’ve accomplished more
this year and last year than we have in the previous ten.”
This story which first appeared online on Tuesday, Jan. 26, has been updated.
WINNSBORO – The Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office is seeking
assistance in locating Jacob Trimayne Anderson, 27, of Winnsboro. Anderson is
currently wanted on a warrant for Attempted Murder in connection with a
shooting incident that occurred in the early hours of Saturday, Dec. 19.
On that morning just before 2 a.m., deputies from the sheriff’s office were dispatched for a shooting incident to Old Chester Road near Highway 200. Once on the scene, deputies learned there had been a physical altercation outside a club, and a 30 year-old black male was transported to the Providence ER with multiple gunshot wounds, officials said.
Anderson is wanted in connection with this shooting. To
provide information on Anderson’s location, contact the Fairfield County
Sheriff’s Office or Crime Stoppers at 1-888-CRIMESC (888-274-6372) or visit
midlandscrimestoppers.com to email a tip. Your identity will be kept anonymous.
Coleman
was arrested in 44-year-old cold case in October
FAIRFIELD COUNTY – Saying he represented a threat to the
community, Judge Brian Gibbons denied bond to Charles Ugvine Coleman on
Tuesday, who was arrested in October in connection with a 44-year-old cold case
murder.
Coleman
The charges relate to the 1976 rape and murder of Chester’s Elizabeth Ann Howell Wilson, who disappeared while working a night shift at the Eureka Mill. Her dead, barely-clothed body was found in Fairfield County several hours after she never reported back to her station after a break.
Sixth Circuit Assistant Solicitor Riley Maxwell presented
the state’s case during a short bond hearing at the Fairfield County
Courthouse. He recounted the day of Wilson’s disappearance from work at 4 a.m.
on March 20. A witness had seen an unidentified black male in the parking lot
that night and the car belonging to a plant manager was reported missing around
the same time that Wilson disappeared. Within two hours of Wilson and the car
disappearing, a vehicle with a body lying beside it was spotted by a passerby
near the intersection of Ashford Ferry Road and Dave Jenkins Road in Blair. The
body, later identified as being Wilson, was wearing only stockings and a top.
There was an indication that she’d been raped and “brutally beaten to death,”
Maxwell said. No arrest was ever made but her stockings and a towel in the car
were taken as evidence and remained there until 2012. At that point, then-Chester
County Sheriff Richard Smith began taking a look at some unsolved murders in
Chester County, including that of Wilson. In the department evidence room there
was some DNA evidence in the form of semen collected from the stockings and
towel.
“But DNA evidence wasn’t even a thing back then when it
happened,” Smith said in October. “With modern technology, though, you’ve got a
lot of new ways of solving stuff.”
Smith said he had no idea why the items relative to the
Wilson case continued to sit in the evidence room for 36 years. He submitted
everything he found to the State Law Enforcement Division (SLED) in hopes for
“a hit.” At the time he did so, he discussed his decision with a member of
Wilson’s family.
According to his arrest record, Coleman was arrested in April
of 2020 by the Union County Sheriff’s Office and charged with pointing and
presenting a firearm and use of a firearm under the influence. A swab was taken
and uploaded into the CODIS (Combined DNA Index System) national DNA database
maintained by the FBI and the DNA came back with a match with evidence from
this crime from 1976. Maxwell said the chance of the DNA belonging to anyone
but Coleman was approximately one in 21 quintillion.
Maxwell said the most recent arrest was far from being the
only trouble Coleman had gotten into in his life. In 1977 he was arrested and
eventually convicted of assault and battery with intent to kill for an incident
in which he grabbed a woman standing alone talking on a payphone and tried to
force her into a car. That was eerily similar to what happened to Wilson just a
year before, Maxwell said.
Ann Wilson
A full SLED background check details incidents dating back
45 years.
In 1975, Coleman was arrested by the Chester County
Sheriff’s Office on charges of driving under the influence and operating a
motor vehicle without a license. He was assessed a fine of $150. On September
24, 1976 (just six months after the murder of Wilson), he was charged with
driving under suspension third offense and operating a motor vehicle while
uninsured. He was convicted on both counts and was fined a total of $200.
Charges of public drunk and disorderly conduct followed, but in 1977 came the
assault and battery with intent to kill charges for which he was sentenced to
12 years in prison, but he was arrested again just four years later for DUI and
leaving the scene of an accident. There is no indication he went to trial on
those charges. In the years that followed he was charged with being drunk and
disorderly on multiple occasions, resisting arrest, DUI, public drunk, multiple
counts of public multiple instances of public disorderly conduct and
shoplifting.
Maxwell said there
were a few other incidents that were either unresolved or had not led to
conviction, including threatening a woman and allegedly assaulting two women at
the Chester Motor Lodge.
“It’s not like there was this incident in 1976 and he lived
a pristine life since then,” Maxwell said. “He’s been a danger to the community
since then.”
It was also mentioned that at the time of Wilson’s murder,
Coleman lived only about a mile away from where her body was found.
Coleman’s attorney, Robert Fitzsimons, said his client is
65-years-old which would have made him 20 or 21 at the time of Wilson’s murder.
It will take many months for the state to find possible witnesses, many of whom
are either dead or have moved by now. Coleman does not have a lot of money, so
his attorney asked for a low bond and said he was “entitled to be in the
community.”
“He’s on probation now and will be monitored…the case is not going anywhere and he’s not going
anywhere.”
Surviving members of Wilson’s family asked to speak in
court. Duke McWaters was married to Wilson’s daughter Pam for 42 years. He was
a city police officer at the time and heard radio calls about a missing person.
He went home to learn from his wife that it was her mother who was missing. He
left to go back to the police department and was met by someone at the door who
told him he needed to go to Fairfield County. When he got there, he was asked
to identify his mother-in-law’s body. Even during a long law enforcement career
in which he saw some jarring sights, he said he never saw anything like what
was done to his mother-in-law.
“It was one of the most heartless things I’ve ever seen,” he
said.
His family was left to live in fear and he was left without
an answer to the daily question he wife asked him, “Who killed her?”
The person responsible for killing Wilson has been out and
living life for 44 years, he said, and he hoped that Gibbons would see fit to keep
Coleman in jail until his trial.
Ralph Mobley is still married to one of Wilson’s daughters
(Sherri). He said the family had no idea the damage that had been done to her
and that Wilson’s funeral was a closed-casket affair. He said he didn’t want
his wife to have to worry for so long as she did in the wake of her mother’s
death and begged Gibbons to deny bond. Sherri spoke as well, talking about how
good a person her mother was and how much she did for others.
“They took that away,” she said.
She said she had prayed to God for 44 years that whoever was
responsible would be found.
Gibbons said the details of the case were horrific. He
reminded all that this was not a determination of Coleman’s guilt or innocence,
only a decision on whether or not he was entitled to a bond. A person is
presumed innocent until proven guilty at trial he said. His determination was
simply down to whether Coleman was a flight risk and whether or not he was a
threat to the community. He judged him not to be a flight risk but said he did
regard him as a threat.
“Bond is respectfully denied,” he said.
When he does go to trial, Coleman will be facing charges of rape and murder.
Travis Jenkins is the Editor of the Chester News & Reporter.
WINNSBORO – The Winnsboro Department of Public Safety is
looking for an assailant they say will be charged with assault and battery
(weapon) for shooting a 31-year-old male.
When WDPS officers responded to a shots-fired incident on Garden Street in Winnsboro at about 10:40 p.m. on December 11, they arrived to find a large crowd gathered in front of Wyman’s church. Nearby, a man was lying on the ground next to the back wheel on the passenger side of a green SUV. Upon further inspection, officers determined that the he had been shot.
Officers dispatched EMS who transferred the victim to the
Providence Fairfield ER.
The incident is being investigated by the Winnsboro
Department of Public Safety. Anyone with information about the incident should
contact the WDPS at 803-635-4511.