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JUSTICE? In a small town, jail for a jacked-up ride, allegations of strip searches; Eutawville police, judge under fire

By CHARLENE SLAUGHTER, T&D Special Assignments  Sunday, July 22, 2007

24 comment(s) | Default | Large

After working a 12-hour day, Thomas Anderson went straight to the courtroom of the Eutawville Town Hall for his trial. The Holly Hill resident had received a ticket for having an elevated vehicle in the town of Eutawville and requested a jury trial.

“It was the day after Martin Luther King Day,” he recalled.

His was the only case being heard that day. It was 6 p.m.

Some months earlier, Anderson purchased a older-model Crown Victoria and decided to fix it up a bit. He painted it a bright blue color, one that once seen is hard to forget. It almost sparkles, had some flash to it. He added 22-inch tires. It was his leisure car. He didn’t drive it much, just once in a while.

Anderson says he was coming from his mother’s house in Eutawville when he was stopped and told his car was elevated too high.

“I’d been riding through the city for six months with no problem and suddenly the car is too high?” he said. “They gave me a ticket and I said I wanted a jury trial.”

On the day of the trial, Anderson lost, in more ways than one. The jury found him guilty of driving an elevated vehicle and the presiding judge, Warren C. “Carlton” Connor, sentenced him to three days in jail. The offense is a misdemeanor punishable by a $25-$50 fine, according to the South Carolina Code of Laws.

He was taken to jail immediately to serve the time.

“I never been in jail before, never been in trouble,” he said. “I had to go to jail and sleep on the floor.”

Ask certain members of the Eutawville community, and they will say this type of behavior is the norm.

Complaints cut across racial lines, with three white men coming forward with claims of being strip searched in Eutawville Town Hall even as the national NAACP is planning legal action.

Jean Davis-Capers, Eutawville NAACP branch president, says the organization has received numerous complaints of unfair treatment from the town’s police department.

“We have an attorney appointed from nationals,” Capers said. “What we are focusing on doing is trying to remove Connor from his seat and get certified police officers in Eutawville.”

The chief there denies the strip search claims and says he has an open-door policy. If anyone has an issue, they are welcome to come talk to him. Connor says Anderson’s sentence was a mistake but is no reflection on the fairness of the town’s judicial system.

Still, the allegations bring about questions of what is real in the town’s judicial system, what is rumor and what is commonplace.

Riding high

Anderson says he had never been in trouble and he’s not a trouble man. That all changed when he spent three days in jail for having his car raised too high – a misdemeanor punishable by a fine, no more.

“I got three days in jail and a $175 fine because I requested a jury trial,” Anderson said.

Anderson contends his wish to have a jury trial is what caused his jail time. He received the jury trial, and in the days leading up to the trial, received a letter notifying him of the jury selection. Anderson did not attend the jury strike. In that letter he was advised of the penalty he could get if convicted.

“Your date of trial has been set for 01-16-07 at 6 p.m. at the town hall in Eutawville,” the letter read. “Please be advised that if you do not appear for this date, the trial will continue in your absence and warrants may be signed for your arrest for failure to appear. Should you be found guilty by the jury, the judge will pass sentence at that time. The maximum sentence you could receive is a $200 fine or up to 30 days in jail or both. If you wish to change your mind and plead guilty in order to receive a reduced fine, this must be done before the jurors are called in because the town is required to pay any jurors who are subpoenaed. The officer will not agree to a reduced fine once the subpoenas are mailed.”

Anderson appeared before Connor and defended himself in the trial.

“I was the only person who had court that day,” he said. “They sentenced me to three days in jail and a $200 fine.”

According to court documents, signed by Connor, Anderson did not deny the violation in his defense, rather said he did not know about the law against elevated vehicles and only drove the vehicle in question occasionally, and “therefore did not think he should be charged.”

“He noted that there were no signs about the law at entry to town limits,” the trial documents state. “Prosecution was handled by the arresting officer. Prosecution noted that since this is a state statu(t)e, and not a town ordinance, signs are not required.”

The prosecuting officer was Jerry Reynolds, who presented testimony regarding the height of the vehicle. “Defense did not dispute the testimony,” the document states. In closing statements, Anderson again said he was not aware of the statute while Reynolds pointed out the allowable height of a vehicle and noted safety issues involved with an elevated vehicle, describing possible consequences of a collision between a standard vehicle and an elevated one.

The jury found Anderson guilty by unanimous verdict and was dismissed. Connor sentenced Anderson to 30 days in jail, suspended to three days and a $175 fine. On the sentencing sheet, in all caps, he wrote, “TOTAL OF 3 DAYS MUST BE SERVED.”

According to the South Carolina Code of Laws, a vehicle must not be elevated or lowered either in the front or back more that 6 inches by a modification, alteration, or change in the physical structure of the vehicle. “Any person violating the provisions of this section shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction shall be fined not less than twenty-five dollars nor more than fifty dollars,” according to the state statute.

Anderson served his days and sought legal advice. He said he was told the sentence wasn’t right. He wrote a letter of complaint to the Disciplinary Council of the South Carolina Supreme Court.

“I asked for a jury trial and the judge became very upset that I requested the same,” Anderson said in the letter. “The jury found me guilty. Judge Connor gave me 30 days in jail suspended to 3 days and payment of $175. I was given no right to appeal and was taken straight to jail and served 3 days. I ended up losing 2 days from work without pay. ... I do not contest being found guilty. I object to the judge sentencing me in excess of what the statute requires.”

Anderson and Attorney Glenn Walters did appeal the decision and the case was remanded and the sentence thrown out, but Anderson has already served three days in jail, days that he will never get back.

“Where else is this going?” he asked. “There’s money lost, time in jail – what about my pride?

“He don’t like that I didn’t do what they say. Those days are gone, at least I thought so. They said guilty and told the jurors all y’all can go. They probably don’t even know I went to jail. Three days in jail. I went to jail for that. They hurt me.

“They don’t care, seems to me. I had just worked 12 hours. ... You want to feel safe around town. It was harassment, I thought I’d fight it but it didn’t work out.”

It was a mistake

Ask 200 people who have had their case handled by municipal Judge Warren C. (Carlton) Connor, and he said 210 will tell you he’s been fair.

The suggestion that he didn’t want Anderson to have a jury trial is simply not true, he said. A jury trial is every man’s freedom. The sentence levied upon Anderson was due to his apathy, and his seemingly not having any intention of correcting the height of his elevated vehicle. That same sentence, he admits, was a mistake.

“Ninety percent of the traffic violations, the penalty is a certain fee, say $100 and assessment fees bring it up, and 30 days in jail or both.” Connor said. “Most all of the traffic violations are that way. When they found him guilty, I mistakenly sentenced him to $175 because in my mind as a judge, he had no earthly intention to correct the problem with the vehicle. I sentenced him to three days in Orangeburg and that is where the rub is. That is my mistake. This law doesn’t give any time. This has gone into appeal and Attorney (Glenn) Walters won the appeal. Not the guilty part, but based on the sentence, they threw it out. He still got his vehicle like that.

“This has been an ordeal based on my failure to bring up the exact law. I took for granted that it was the same as any violation.”

Connor said he has had to answer to two Supreme Court disciplinary inquiries on the matter. A decision has not been made as far as what will be done about giving Anderson the wrong sentence. But he said the sentence was not given with malicious intent. He explained that any time an infraction such as a taillight or parking light being out comes to his court, he’ll usually throw it out if it has been corrected. Elevated vehicles are dangerous, he said, and in accidents, can cause severe damage to the vehicles and passengers.

“He came to court without an attorney,” Connor said. “He asked for a jury trial. I had never met the man before the night of the trial. If he would have said he would correct the vehicle, the case probably would have been thrown out. The man showed no remorse, didn’t care, didn’t say ‘I will correct it’ or nothing.”

As a municipal judge, Connor said many of the thousands of cases never actually come across his bench. But they all have a right to, as people have the right to choose a jury trial. Judgeship in a municipality is hard, he said. Everybody wants to know the judge and talk about cases, but Connor said he knows nothing about a case until the court date.

“I had no connection with this case until it came before me,” Connor reiterated. “When he said I wanted not to have a case, that’s not true. The only problem was the sentence. Judges can’t make that mistake or there’ll be trouble. I’m paying the price for it, definitely paying the price for that.

“It was his apathy and his whole attitude. ... you had to be there. He would not even had to stand trial if he would have said I’ll correct this. He didn’t care and he wasn’t going to do anything. The 30 or both rule, it was a mistake made. I comply with the law with every sentencing.”

Connor said he knows the law and knows what sentences to give. But in Anderson’s case, he assumed the sentence would be the same as other traffic violations, and because of that mistake, he said he has learned a valuable lesson.

“I’m not the perfect judge, I know,” he said. “He’s still guilty and needs to take care of his problem he’s got (with the elevated vehicle). I’ll answer to the board I have to answer to.”

Then, in a show of remorse for the sentence he levied, Connor said, “He lost three days wages because of my mistake.”

National involvement

For some time, the Eutawville branch of the NAACP has received complaints, some verbal, some written and signed, of mistreatment in the town. Capers and the NAACP members did not take them lightly, sending them up the ladder of the branch system, all the way to nationals.

The Anderson case is what sparked the NAACP’s national involvement, and an attorney has been appointed to look into him wrongfully serving time in jail for the elevated vehicle. Peter Wilborn of Derfner, Altmann and Wilborn of Charleston has been appointed to the Eutawville case. He is not representing all complaints the NAACP has, just the one involving Anderson’s jail sentence.

“I was brought into this on the suggestion by the national NAACP, who I have represented before,” Wilborn said. He also represented the NAACP in the Biker Week cases in Myrtle Beach, where suits were brought to ensure those attending the black biker week receive the same treatment as the white biker week attendees. “I know the NAACP real well. It’s a wonderful organization and I am proud to do some work in South Carolina. The NAACP is based upon a branch system and its strength is based upon the director’s strength on the branch level. They (Eutawville) have a good leader of the branch who had the wherewithal to take it up to the national level.”

Incensed, Wilborn said Anderson’s serving jail time for an elevated vehicle is unjust.

“From what I understand about the case, here I have a situation in which a man was given a ticket, no different from a parking ticket, and was thrown in jail,” he said. “I think we as a society should be very conscious of discounting throwing people in jail. Throwing a person in jail for one minute unwarranted, it is an absolute abuse of justice. We do not give the judicial system the power to take away a person’s liberty. It is the mark of bad government.”

While the case was remanded, Wilborn said that doesn’t forgive what has happened. He questioned why the town is focusing so heavily on elevated vehicles.

“We have a law and allow pickup trucks to be sky high, people driving on wheels that should be on a monster truck. Mr. Anderson is a working-class African-American, not a kid, a solid working guy, throws tires on his car and gets arrested for it. If it is a violation of law, we can handle that. We can go through the Legislature. It’s not the judge’s job. Why is law enforcement enforcing this so strongly. There are a lot of laws on the books. Why is the police cracking down on a guy’s wheels. That’s suspect. It pales in comparison to this man having a jury trial, being found guilty and being thrown in jail.”

Having just received the case, Wilborn said he doesn’t know what direction or action they will take. But, he guaranteed, some sort of action will be taken.

“I don’t know what we’re going to do yet,” he said. “I can tell you we’re not going to let it go away, not going to allow it to be minimized. How do you minimize going to jail – do not pass go, do not collect $200 – it’s an unjust miscarriage of justice of the greatest sense that I’ve seen in my 12 years. This one is big time. This one sticks in your craw. I am a proud, absolutely beamingly proud lawyer to be representing the NAACP. This proves why. ... I don’t know what we’re doing yet, but we’re doing.”

Wilborn applauded Anderson for coming forward, having the courage to right a wrongdoing, and sticking with having justice served in his case.

“I think it takes courage that does not exist in the everyday person,” he said. “That’s what injustice relies on, that people aren’t going to call it.”

’I felt violated’

Three friends were accustomed to going on fishing trips just outside of Eutawville. They had traveled through the city with boat in tow on many occasions, usually four to five times a summer. But not anymore.

This past Good Friday, the men had the day off and were out fishing near Eutawville most of the day. It was dusk, about 8 p.m. – not quite night, not quite day – when the three were pulled over traveling on S.C. Highway 6 in Eutawville. They were told they were stopped because the taillight was out on the back of the boat they were pulling.

According to the men, a routine traffic stop turned into their being violated as the men claim Eutawville police officers took them into the town hall and strip searched them.

“They took us inside a room, it was a courtroom, and locked the door,” said Johnny Pippen, who was traveling that day with friends Ashley Fulmer and Justin Hooker. Handcuffed, Pippen said he and Fulmer were taken to the town hall together while Hooker remained at the scene with another officer. “They got Ashley and told him to sit down. Then they told me to take off my shirt. Take off my shoes. Take off my pants. And then my boxers and bend over. Ashley was sitting there waiting. They told me to put my clothes back on and did the same thing to him.” Hooker would later go through the same ordeal.

Police Chief Russell Parker says he’s been in Eutawville for 30 years, and he knows everybody and everybody knows him.

While not going into great detail about the allegations of either case, Parker denies that anyone from his department strip-searched anyone.

“We don’t strip-search people, ma’am,” he said. Connor also denied the likelihood of that having happened there.

However, Pippen, Fulmer and Hooker tell a different story. “We were pulled about a mile out of Eutawville,” said Pippen, who was driving. He went on to explain the details of that day. A Eutawville city police officer came to the driver’s side window and said he had a taillight out. He asked for Pippen’s license. He went back to the patrol car and came back saying he smelled marijuana.

“I said I don’t smoke marijuana,” Pippen said. “He said you’re lying.”

The three men were ordered out of the vehicle while officers searched the car for nearly two hours. They were then told that a marijuana stem was found in the truck and they were under arrest. The men said the officers did not show them the stem that was allegedly found. Handcuffed, Pippen and Fulmer were taken to the town hall while Hooker remained at the scene with another officer.

“They said they were going to search us further and if they didn’t find anything, we were free to go,” Pippen said.

“I didn’t know what to think,” Fulmer said.

The two say they were strip searched inside the courtroom of the town hall. Nothing was found. Then they were taken back to the scene, where Hooker, the other police officer and the truck and boat were. Pippen was ordered to drive his truck back to town hall. All three men were taken back inside the courtroom, where Hooker was strip searched.

According to the men’s account, the officers say they found a white seed in Hooker’s pocket and debated whether to take them to jail. Hooker insists it was not marijuana. In the end, Pippen was given a ticket for the taillight and Hooker received a ticket for simple possession of marijuana. Fulmer did not receive a ticket for anything. All three men were then allowed to leave.

“I drive everywhere I go to work. I can’t lose my license,” Pippen said he thought at the time. “The way they were talking, I was going to lose my license and my boat, everything. I felt intimidated.”

The three say they are telling their story because they feel the officers should have to pay some sort of penalty for what they did to them. They too have hired a lawyer and are planning to sue.

“I feel violated,” Pippen said. “Something has to be done. I have kids. I don’t want them to go through that. They may have kids that they teach to treat people like that too.”

“Do you trust cops any more?” Fulmer added. “Every time I see a badge, it’s like you just don’t know what the deal is. Makes you think officers can do whatever they want to, whenever they want to. I think they should have some type of penalty they have to pay.”

While the men in this case are white, there are also complaints from African-Americans. Capers said the NAACP has received at least two complaints from people saying they were strip searched.

“I wish I had thought out there and realized that what they were doing wasn’t right,” Pippen said.

In the coming weeks, Connor will hear another case involving an elevated vehicle in his courtroom. He said there won’t be a problem because, if the person is found guilty, he knows what sentence to give.

Wilborn and the NAACP have every intention of forging ahead with getting justice for Anderson.

QUOTABLES

“I asked for a jury trial and the judge became very upset that I requested the same. The jury found me guilty. Judge Connor gave me 30 days in jail suspended to three days and payment of $175. I was given no right to appeal and was taken straight to jail and served three days. I ended up losing two days from work without pay. ... I do not contest being found guilty. I object to the judge sentencing me in excess of what the statute requires.” – Thomas Anderson

“He came to court without an attorney. He asked for a jury trial. I had never met the man before the night of the trial. If he would have said he would correct the vehicle, the case probably would have been thrown out. The man showed no remorse, didn’t care, didn’t say ‘I will correct it’ or nothing.” – Eutawville Judge Warren C. “Carlton” Connor

“They took us inside a room, it was a courtroom, and locked the door. They got Ashley and told him to sit down. Then they told me to take off my shirt. Take off my shoes. Take off my pants. And then my boxers and bend over. Ashley was sitting there waiting. They told me to put my clothes back on and did the same thing to him.” – Johnny Pippen

“We don’t strip search people, ma’am.” – Police Chief Russell Parker

T&D Special Assignments Writer Charlene Slaughter can be reached at cslaughter@ timesanddemocrat.com and 803-533-5529. Discuss this and other stories online at www.TheTandD.com

To subscribe to the print edition of The Times and Democrat, click here.

 
24 comment(s)
The following comments are reader submitted. They do not represent the views of The T&D or Lee Enterprises.

mothergoose wrote on Aug 3, 2007 10:03 PM:

" THANKS, TO THOMAS ANDERSON AND TO THE NAACP. WE NEED A REAL JUDGE AND CERTIED POLICES.THANK YA! THANK YA! THANK YA! "

captivated wrote on Aug 1, 2007 1:44 PM:

" A special shoutout to the 75 guys in Charleston and the 135 in Columbia with the 22s and the highriders, DO NOT Drive through Eutawville. Boss Hogg is waiting for you! If you do, carry bail money and prepare to be strip searched. "

rmerri4354 wrote on Aug 1, 2007 11:42 AM:

" Good Morning everyone. I would like like to say that I agree that this young man had a "pimped" ride and was cited for it. On the same note I would say that this is outright harassment. The south has been riddled with jacked up vehicles for as long as I can remember and hasn't changed yet. This is a perfect example of a petty law being used to intimidate an individual. His windows are tinted, he must be a drug dealer? His ride is pimped, he must be a drug dealer? He wears baggy clothes, he must be a drug dealer? What it boils down to is very easy to explain. Law enforcement has been and is being taught that drug dealing is where it's at if you want to be recognized. This is a perfect example why Law Enforcement is not welcomed in neighborhoods, community functions, and normal day to day life. They are so focused on trying to get that next big drug bust that they have forgotten all about the community they are supposed to serve and protect. When you see a cop, what is your first reaction? Wouldn't you like to feel safe and comfortable around law enforcement officials? Cops spend too much time in speed traps, drug stake-outs, and racial profiling to be a part of the community anymore. I was a law enforcement officer in SC for a total of about 4 years and I saw it first hand. That is one of the reasons I left. Everyone hates cops and it is very difficult for one to make a difference. People hate to see you coming not only in SC, but everywhere. It is a plague that has infected all of law enforcement. Think about this; 95% or more of all small town cops in SC are rejects from the bigger departments. This is a sad but true reality for some small towns. Look at Norway's reject Chief is now Ehrhardt's headache? Some start out there but an experienced officer is not going to work in a one horse town unless he has no other option. "

mycuzinloraine wrote on Jul 31, 2007 5:15 PM:

" This response is pertaining to the post about Eutwville is dying out because of Eutawville Polic Dept. Wake up, People don't come to Eutawville because they don;t want to ravel through Vance to gew there. I know because I own land in Eutawville lake, and go the long way around to keep from going down Highway 6. And everybody I have talked to has said they quit coming to Vance and Eutawville because of the Speed traps set there. Why haven't ther been inestigations in Vance is beyond me. "

mbryant wrote on Jul 30, 2007 7:03 PM:

" WHAT IS WRONG WITH THIS PICTURE? A BLACK MAN WITH A CUSTOM CAR STOPPED FOR BREAKING THE LAW! WHAT ABOUT ALL THE MEN WITH JACKED UP 4 WHEEL DRIVE TRUCKS. "

mycuzinloraine wrote on Jul 30, 2007 1:09 PM:

" Whya re you people only posting the Euatwville Police Department and Judge connors haters and no one else? There are still readers out there that is not as biased until we find out the real facts. Shame on the T&D. "

mycuzinloraine wrote on Jul 30, 2007 1:06 PM:

" I have posted a comment on this board from a different side of view, but apparently this board is controlled and monitored by what he wants the public to read not to offend a particular group of readers. It would be more to the newspapers ideal to only posting negative feedbacks against the Eutawille police department and it's judge. I for one see what you and the newspaer is going, to suffice only who you want to put out. Shame on the newspapers and its editors. It is by far the most racial source of media I have ever seen. But the facts are swtill there Mr. Troutman. There is corruption in Santee as well as Vance and you know it. Ignore it all you want, but it is still there and unless someone does something about it, it will continue to fester. My opinion may not be posted but It will be given. "

highcottonrealty wrote on Jul 29, 2007 4:18 PM:

" AL SHARPTON???? I am a white what some would call PREPPY 27 yr old and have been harrassed by this town cop numerous times as have my friends this is not a white/black issue, this "officer" is an equal oppurtunity offender. I guarantee you he has harrased more white people than black people over the years. I am just glad something is finally being done about him. I have made numerous complants to the town about him and nothing has been done. He has killed the restaurant business in town and the mayor seems not to care. "

lsweeper wrote on Jul 27, 2007 8:52 AM:

" OH MY GOD!!!!!!! I CAN'T BELIEVE WHAT I AM READING. I grew up in Eutawville and left 10 years ago, now living in Atlanta. The Eutawville police department would have a heart attack if they were to come to Atlanta. I guess I can't come back home to visit friends and family because the vehicle I drive is also elevated. What law is this? Where is this law. They have nothing better to do than to single out innocent people and all the "real" criminals are on the streets. Al Sharpton needs to be aware of this. "

marik wrote on Jul 24, 2007 7:25 AM:

" It is about time...what goes around, comes around! Poor Eutawvill is soon going to die. i am surprised that it shops are still open. No one wants to go through the town for fear of the "wanna be cop." You Eutawville business owners should be up-in arms over this situation. Fix it and you will have business out the wazoo. There are some really great reataurants in the Eutawville area but no wants to pay an extra $300. or more even if the Back Door Panene is the best in SC! As I said , "What goes around, comes around." "

superfluousman wrote on Jul 24, 2007 4:30 AM:

" Publicity is justly commended as a remedy for social and industrial diseases. Sunlight is said to be the best of disinfectants; electric light the most efficient policeman. >>>>>>>>>>>>>> Decency, security, and liberty alike demand that government officials shall be subjected to the same rules of conduct that are commands to the citizen. In a government of laws, existence of the government will be imperiled if it fails to observe the law scrupulously. Our government is the potent, the omnipresent teacher. For good or for ill, it teaches the whole people by its example. Crime is contagious. If the government becomes a lawbreaker, it breeds contempt for law; it invites every man to become a law unto himself; it invites anarchy. >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Louis Brandeis Great job. Keep it up. "

mothergoose wrote on Jul 23, 2007 10:09 PM:

" I am glad that someone finally stood up Eutawville police Dept. Because they really needs to be look into because if they stop you you are going to get a ticket or jail no matter what it is my boys had many dealing with them.I am so glad the naacp is looking into it thanks Anderson "

dwatson4471 wrote on Jul 23, 2007 4:51 PM:

" Being an Overseer of the NAACP, I totally understand the embarrasement of Anderson's situation. I personally will do everything in my power to make sure that all parties involved are rightfully punished according to the South Carolina State Laws. I can be reached at dwatson4471@yahoo.com "

confisussum wrote on Jul 23, 2007 3:38 PM:

" Sam, I agree with disciplining the judge, but the fact of the matter is that this young man DID commit a crime. Whether that crime is out dated or unpopular is not the issue, as long as it is on the books, it is the law. Citing him is perfectly acceptable, it is the actions following the citation that are worthy of review. "

cosmms2 wrote on Jul 23, 2007 2:06 PM:

" My son has been stopped 4 times in 9 months by 2 different officers in Eutawville for absolutely nothing. They rudely questioned him, looked in his car and when they couldn't find anything suspicious they let him go. My son is eighteen years old and is white and drives a very basic, unassuming vehicle. This is completely uncalled for and undeserving. Law abiding people who drive through Eutawville have the right to travel on through. Those who are stopped for a traffic violation, should be treated be with caution with regard to the officers safety, but should also be treated with dignity and respect. Multiple, legitimate complaints against particular officers need to be investigated. Eutawville's officers should have been called on this years ago. "

sam wrote on Jul 23, 2007 1:03 PM:

" Sounds to me like the same things that have been going on in this and other counties throughout the state of South Carolina forever, and i doubt very serious if it will ever change, at least not in our lifetime. old habits are hard to change, particularly if they are a racial nature. i strongly recommend that the judge in this case spends a couple of nights in jail since he admits he made an error. Why should this gentleman be remorseful, certanly didnt commit a crime.you folks in S C will continue to do things backwards and try to make it look like its the fault of the victim. when you are charged with having to uphod the law, then you have to make sure you do the right thing. "

cavalierhater wrote on Jul 23, 2007 11:54 AM:

" swillabill, if you read the whole article it says that the naacp is taking actions on the white mens case also, who are you "

swillabill wrote on Jul 22, 2007 9:47 PM:

" While I agree that this gentleman should be angry for having to serve jail time, the fact of the matter is he was guilty of a crime, and unrepentant. The judge was guilty of committing an error and he admits guilt and appears to be sincere. What is disturbing is how the fact that three men were humiliated and violated without credible charges being brought. All the talk here is on a some "pimped" ride being illegal, yet no one even mentions the actions taken against the three young white guys. Why wouldn't the NAACP take up their case? Does it not support their claims? If they fail to address these young men's claims based on their race, then by default they are a racist organization and should be promoted as such. "

Krazyk128 wrote on Jul 22, 2007 8:10 PM:

" I'm Glad that someone has finally stood up to these folks. we in orangeburg county have the worst set of magistates in the country. Not only do we need to look at this one in Eutawville but we need to look at a few in Orangeburg as well. It seems that they write the laws as they go a long and it does have alot to do with who you know and the color of your skin.My son had a problem with these same folks in Eutawville where we ended up paying them over $800 for something that was never proven while others that he was with just got to walk out of the little town hall. I'll be the first to tell you that there is time for in a change in Orangeburg county and its up to the people to make these changes. Let's come together and let these people know that we are tried of the criminals going free while innocent folks like this gentlemen are harassed. seems if your into crime in this county your good friends with law enforcment! "

dirty sanchez wrote on Jul 22, 2007 6:06 PM:

" This is outrageous. That small town is nothing but a corrupted speed trap with a "wanna be" police officer. You should fight this one man "

fhsmct wrote on Jul 22, 2007 4:48 PM:

" This is an obscure, makes no sense law that is clearly being "selectively" enforced. I doubt this law has ever been or is being enforced against trucks and other SUVs that have been raised well over the allowable 6 inches, of which there are many in the area . . . "

vancefinest_803 wrote on Jul 22, 2007 2:04 PM:

" I'm glad somebody finally fight for what's right because Eutawville Polices were getting outrageous. They are the reason why I don't go through town today. Anderson, I know exactly what you went through with your elevated vehicle but spending three days in jail for NOTHING is just pitiful! I know that you may not get those three days in jail back but continue to fight for your pride. Hooker, Pippen, & Fulmer, that was just overboard what they did you guys, but fight on. Don't give up. "

Mslucky wrote on Jul 22, 2007 12:37 PM:

" I do not doubt the young man's story. I was born and raised in Eutawville, and never have I seen it so segregated. I have witnessed officers stopping young black males for traffic violations and search their vehicles, find nothing, and then release them. All the while the young men are standing at their vehicle in public view and everyone is watching. How humilating!! It seems in the area, the powers that be do not like Blacks to ask for services that are guaranteed them. We are tax payers and we have a right to jury trial, good roads, and any other services that other communities receive. Something should have been done about the treatment of our citizen a long time ago, I support this young man. "

SanteeNana wrote on Jul 22, 2007 5:46 AM:

" Most people in the area and areas around Eutawville have heard this type of complaint many many times before. We all know someone that has had this type of experience. Admit it or not they were profiling and expected to find drugs. When this was not the case they used a stupid law to show him what town he was in. Justice has been bought,sold, misused and used correctly in this town based on who you are and who you know. Never ever ask for a jury trial becauuse your peers will become your fears, quick fast and in a hurry. "



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CHRISTOPHER HUFF/T&D Thomas Anderson spent three days in jail after being convicted in Eutawville town court of having his vehicle elevated too high. According to S.C. law, the maximum punishment for the offense is a $25-50 fine. “I got three days in jail and a $175 fine because I requested a jury trial,” Anderson says. The town judge acknowledges he made a mistake in the sentencing.




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