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Monthly Archives: August 2023

Courier Notice to Creditors 8-16-23

NOTICE TO CREDITORS OF ESTATES
All persons having claims against the following estates MUST file their claims on Form #371ES with the Probate Court of PICKENS COUNTY, the address of which is 222 MCDANIEL AVE., B-16 PICKENS, SC 29671, within eight (8) months after the date of the first publication of this Notice to Creditors or within one (1) year from date of death, whichever is earlier (SCPC 62-3-801, et seq.), or such persons shall be forever barred as to their claims. All claims are required to be presented in written statements on the prescribed form

Courier Legal Notices 8-16-23

LEGAL NOTICE

Wills of the following decedents have been delivered to me and filed.

No proceedings for the probate of said Wills have begun.

Roger Dale Pilgrim filed Jan.4, 2023 Marjorie Irene
Dickson Durham filed Jan.5, 2023 David E. Cooper filed Jan. 5, 2023 James Norman Krider filed Jan. 10, 2023 Carol Ray Houlihan filed

‘Forever our hero’

Easley officer killed in line of duty

By Jason Evans
Staff Reporter
jevans@thepccourier.com

EASLEY — The family of the Easley Police Officer killed in the line of duty last week said his last act “exemplified everything he stood for.”

Officer Matthew Hare died Wednesday morning after being struck by a train while assisting a person in distress. He was 22 years old.

Easley Police Lt. Ashley Anderson said the police department received a call around 5am Wednesday, August 2 “about a person experiencing

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Woman charged in officer’s death

By Jason Evans
Staff Reporter
jevans@thepccourier.com

PICKENS COUNTY — A woman has been charged in connection with the incident that took the life of Easley Police Officer Matthew Hare early Wednesday morning.

Gabrielle Alexis Benites, 25, of Easley, is charged with aggravated breach of peace, according to a release from Renèe Wunderlich, Director of Public Information Director with the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division (SLED)

A warrant states that on August 2 Benites “knowingly and willfully trespassed on an active

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Costner elected SCAC president

COUNTY — Pickens County Council vice chairman Roy Costner was elected president of the South Carolina Association of Counties (SCAC) for 2023-24 during the association’s annual conference, held last week.

A business development manager at Spectrum Reach, Costner has lived in Liberty for 35 years. In addition to his county council service, he also is vice chairman of the S.C. Entertainment and Music Hall of Fame and serves on the executive committee for the Upstate Alliance. Costner succeeds Debra B. Summers of

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County shelves Trump payment

By Riley Morningstar
Courtesy The Journal
rmorningstar@upstatetoday.com

PICKENS — Pickens County delayed reimbursing itself $30,000 more than a month after former President Donald Trump’s campaign visit to the area, while the city pulled its request for money.

Attorney Les Hendricks told Pickens County Council his opinion was that an accommodations tax (ATAX) application had to be filled out and reviewed by an advisory committee for a recommendation before full

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County football teams gear up for season

By Bru Nimmons
Staff Reporter
bnimmons@thepccourier.com

COUNTY — Football fever has begun to take over Pickens County as the season approaches at break neck speeds. Practice for the local high school teams opened up on July 28 and this week marks the final week of scrimmages and jamborees before regular season play begins on Aug. 18.

Three county teams are set to take the field on Friday at the Easley jamboree for

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5 charged in CU baseball, soccer facilities’ robbery

By Riley Morningstar
Courtesy The Journal
rmorningstar@upstatetoday.com

CLEMSON — Five minors were charged with second-degree burglary in June after a string of thefts at Clemson University’s Doug Kingsmore Stadium and Soccer Operations Complex.

Clemson University Police Chief Greg Mullen confirmed the juveniles were charged with the non-violent offense earlier this week after The Journal received a completed open records request from the school.

The department first announced in March a group of people burglarized the $8 million soccer facility that opened in 2020 and stole more than $2,000 worth of property in mid-February.

One incident report provided showed police were called to the baseball stadium on Feb. 14 when chief of staff Brad Owens said six players reported nine items missing from their lockers — which included five pairs of Oakley sunglasses, a baseball glove and two university jerseys. Owens provided an entry log that showed between 12:43-12:49 a.m. on Feb. 14 the door to the dugout opened. It was used again to access the door at 3:09 a.m., the report added, with a generic key fob belonging to a contract cleaner.

On Feb. 17, a soccer operations employee called police to report some players noticed shoes and other gear was missing, but thought it was a prank. A report said players started to report other missing items and officials recovered footage of two people “wearing hoodies and masks” breaking in through the front door through “manipulating the lock with some small device.” Minutes later, close to midnight on Feb. 14, three others showed up with masks and hoodies.

In total, eight pairs of soccer cleats valued at $270 each, a bottle of cologne and a purple puffer jacket were stolen. Officers noted after both initial investigations there wasn’t enough evidence to move forward on identifying suspects.

 

MAY RUN IN

After midnight on May 22, an officer was driving near the soccer practice facility and saw someone “crouched down” behind construction equipment. Three people wearing backpacks and sweatshirts took off into the woods, a report said, but the officer did not find them. Security camera showed five people again going into the soccer facility while another officer saw a car parked in the gravel lot along S.C. Highway 93 on the Pickens County side of the bridge at Lake Hartwell that still had a warm engine. The officer noted the license tag of the vehicle. Some 40 minutes later, the car was gone. There were no items reported missing, but the break-in happened while the men’s soccer team was in Italy, the report said.

On May 23, police reported senior associate athletic director Eric Sabin showed coaches and support staff a photo of the suspects. More than three lines of information are then redacted in the report, which leads to the blacked-out names of five possible suspects.

Police subsequently started to pull state driver records and then contacted the Pickens County Sheriff’s Office for help identifying the suspects.

 

ADMISSION?

On May 25, a university detective logged that a father of one of the suspects said “all of the parents” talked with the minors and “all of the juveniles involved have admitted to being the ones who committed to the crime.” The father told police everyone was willing to meet with police and offer written statements and return the stolen property.

In an interview on June 1, a report said one of the suspects found a key in the lock of a door to a storage area near the soccer complex and used that to get into the facility. The four other minors generally admitted the same to police in interviews with parents present, a detective wrote. There was a discrepancy with two of the five charged saying they were not at the first round of thefts.

Each of the five minors were “thanked for their time and honesty” before being released to their parents and will now be prosecuted in Pickens County Family Court, the report said.

County flood coalition invite raises questions

COUNTY — Pickens County Council members recently discussed what benefits the county would receive if it joined the American Flood Coalition, with one council member saying the invitation did not “pass the smell check.”

Council members discussed the invitation, and a resolution providing for the county to join the coalition, during their July 10 meeting.

Councilman Chris Lollis said he’d spent “probably more time than I should have researching this.”

“I’m not sure what the benefit would be for Pickens County to join this coalition,” he said.

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AnMed named ‘Great Community Hospital’

ANDERSON — AnMed has been named among the nation’s 153 Great Community Hospitals by Becker’s Hospital Review, a leading provider of industry news and analysis.

AnMed’s exceptional standard of care, expansion of access to care for rural residents and training programs for nursing students, physician residents and sports medicine

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