Red Devils shut out by Landrum on the road
By Matthew Kannarney
Special to the Courier
news@thepccourier.com
LANDRUM — Coming off a hard-fought overtime loss at Ninety Six the previous week, Liberty failed to get back into the win column on the road Friday at Landrum.
The Cardinal front seven stymied Liberty’s offense, allowing only 62 total yards in a 21-0 shutout.
The Red Devils also didn’t do themselves any favors, however, losing three fumbles that gave Landrum the ball in
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Green Wave struggle to keep up with Westside
EASLEY — The atmosphere was tense Friday night after Westside took a 41-20 win over Easley on the gridiron to clinch second place in Region I-4A and earn a first-round home playoff game.
After Westside lined up and went for a two-point conversion up 41-13 with 3:31 left in the game, the Rams spurned the handshake line at midfield, instead sprinting to the locker room when the final whistle sounded.
“I don’t understand the decision,” Easley coach Jordan Durrah said. “But that’s the way he wanted to do. I’m just
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Lions set record with fourth straight region title
By Bru Nimmons
Staff Reporter
bnimmons@thepccourier.com
CENTRAL — During Jeff Fruster’s seven-year tenure as head coach, the Daniel High School football team has set a number of records.
Against Pendleton on Friday night at Singleton Field, the Lions added one more by winning their fourth consecutive region championship for the first time in school history with a 51-13 throttling of the Bulldogs.
“Any time that you get a chance to do something
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Tigers claw back from two-score deficit to top Syracuse
By Ian Taylor
Courtesy The Journal
itaylor@upstatetoday.com
CLEMSON — For the fifth time this season, the Clemson Tigers entered into a game where both teams were undefeated, and for the fifth time this season, Clemson were the ones walking away with the win after coming from behind to drop No. 14 Syracuse 27-21.
However, Saturday’s win at Memorial Stadium featured more adversity than the fifth-ranked Tigers (8-0, 6-0 ACC) had seen to this point in
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Courier Classifieds 10-26-22
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Courier Trespass Notices 10-26-22
In the state of South Carolina, trespass after notice is a misdemeanor criminal offense prohibited by section 16-11-620 for the South Carolina Code.
Those who enter upon the lands of others without the permission of the owner or manager shall be deemed guilty of misdemeanor
Courier Notice to Creditors 10-26-22
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 (FORM #371ES) indicating the name and address of the claimant, the basis of the claim, the amount claimed, the date when the claim will
Courier Legal Notices 10-26-22
PUBLIC NOTICE
To all persons claiming an interest in: 1987-16’ FIBERGLASS GLASTECH – EXL12526B787 – SC5099CE, 1977-70HP-EVINRUDE – JOO14291 ROY and DEBRA RAUP will apply to SCDNR for title on watercraft/outboard motor. If you have any claim to the watercraft/ outboard motor, contact SCDNR at (803) 734-3699. Upon thirty days after the date of the last advertisement if no claim of interest is made
Conviction overturned in toddler’s 2014 death
By Jason Evans
Staff Reporter
jevans@thepccourier.com
STATE — The South Caroline Supreme Court has overturned a Pickens woman’s conviction in the 2014 death of her 13-month-old grandson.
Angela Brewer, 51, was found guilty of homicide by child abuse in the death of her grandson, Brentley Kolbin Lane Lusk, and sentenced to 20 years in prison in 2017. She is currently housed in Columbia at the Graham Correctional Institution, according to online state prison records.
On Oct. 12, the South Carolina Supreme Court released its opinion on her appeal after a February hearing, rejecting one of its issues and upholding the other.
The opinion laid out the facts of the case.
Paramedics arrived at Brewer’s home at 5:30 p.m. on Oct. 17, 2014, after receiving a 911 call about an infant who was not breathing. The child was taken to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead.
From 10:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. that day, Brewer was the only one in the house with the child and his 1-month-old sister.
Authorities said 911 was called after Brewer could not wake the boy from his nap.
Law enforcement arrived, and Brewer’s husband agreed to a search of the home.
Officers documented a daily pill container and collected two sippy cups, one containing a reddish-colored liquid and the other a yellow-brownish liquid.
Pathologist Dr. James Fulcher performed the autopsy and submitted tissue and blood samples to the National Medical Services (NMS) laboratory because, at that point, he could not determine a cause of death.
On Nov. 6, 2014, Brewer met with a Pickens County detective and rejected his suggestion that the child may have taken her prescription Oxycontin, telling him she kept the medication in her purse at all times.
On Nov. 17, 2014, Fulcher concluded his own report after receiving the NMS report, concluding the baby’s death was caused by “acute oxycodone toxicity.”
SLED testing on the sippy cups said the reddish-brown liquid tested positive for oxycodone and the yellow-brownish liquid tested positive for methamphetamine.
“No report indicated that the child ever tested positive for methamphetamine,” the opinion said.
On Dec. 18, Rita Burgess with the Pickens County Sheriff’s Office and Christine Cauthen of SLED interviewed Brewer after she was read her Miranda rights. Brewer signed a form stating she understood and waived those rights.
Asked if she was under the influence of any medication, Brewer said she’d taken her prescription Oxycontin around 6 a.m. that morning and took Valium shortly before the interview.
Around 45 minutes into the interview, Burgess and Cauthen walked outside with Brewer “to give her a break, because Brewer was slurring her words and struggling to stay awake.”
The interviewed resumed until Brewer requested a lawyer.
“At that point, the investigators ended the interview, sought an arrest warrant and charged Brewer with homicide by child abuse,” the opinion said.
During a pretrial hearing, defense counsel sought to exclude the interrogation video, arguing Brewer was too intoxicated to waive her constitutional rights.
The trial court viewed the video and acknowledged Brewer slurred her words from the outset, but determined she was still capable of giving a voluntary statement, at least initially.
But the court determined the second portion of the video was inadmissible because Brewer’s condition deteriorated to the point where she was too intoxicated to be understood.
Defense also argued Fulcher could not testify regarding the amount of oxycodone found in the child because the only support for that conclusion was the NMS lab report.
“Because the State did not plan to call anyone who actually performed the tests as part of the NMS report, defense counsel argued this violated Brewer’s Sixth Amendment right to confront her witnesses,” the opinion said.
The trial court concluded since the NMS report was not testimonial in nature, the Confrontation Clause was not implicated.
The issues before the Supreme Court were determining whether the court of appeals erred in affirming the circuit court’s admission of Brewer’s statement to law enforcement “despite evidence she was intoxicated” and whether the court of appeals erred in affirming the circuit court’s admission of the NMS report on the grounds that the test results were nontestimonial, Justice Kaye G. Hearn wrote.
“We disagree that the trial court erred in permitting the State to play the first portion of the video,” Hearn wrote. “There is evidence that Brewer, while affected by her medication at the beginning of the interview, sufficiently understood the nature of the questions and was able to answer them.”
Regarding the NMS report, “the State cannot undermine the Confrontation Clause by utilizing a private laboratory in a criminal trial without calling the individual who performed the testing,” Hearn said.
The NMS lab report is testimonial in nature, Hearn wrote.
Brewer should have had an opportunity to cross examine the individual who performed the testing, she wrote.
“We affirm the court of appeals’ conclusion that the trial court did not err in admitting the first portion of the December 2014 interrogation video, but we reverse Brewer’s conviction and sentence because the Confrontation Clause mandates that an individual who actually performed the forensic testing be subject to cross- examination,” Hearn concluded.
The 13th Circuit Solicitor’s Office and State Attorney General’s Office will now have 15 days to file a petition for a rehearing in the case
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