Sheriffs race marred by kidnapping allegation

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Reba

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This is pitiful:

SENECA, S.C. (AP) — Voters choosing a sheriff in one South Carolina county can pick from four men accused of doing something wrong, including a former Secret Service agent accused of trying to kidnap someone and a second man investigated by state agents.

If neither suits their fancy, voters also can pick from a former deputy who was fired last year after his bosses accused him of lying on his time sheets, or the current chief deputy, who was the No. 2 man at the agency when a former office manager stole more than $500,000 forfeited by drug dealers. All four men deny any wrongdoing.

"It's a travesty for all the people of Oconee County," said Jeff Bright, an engineer who backed the ex-Secret Service agent facing the felony charge, James Bartee.

To top it all off, they will all have to conduct write-in campaigns or get back on the ballot in November through collecting signatures. All four were kicked off the ballot Wednesday because of mistakes filing campaign paperwork, just six days before the Republican primary. No Democrats were running for the seat.

Most people expected an intense campaign after 20-year Sheriff James Singleton announced his retirement. But the ugliness has become unsettling: Salacious allegations with little to back them up are swirling on Facebook, and the candidates frequently trade copies of court documents and personnel files at forums.

The sheriff's office is typically an important seat of power in South Carolina, where strict incorporation laws mean 65 percent of the state's residents don't live in cities or towns. Sheriffs often control jails, can hire and fire anyone and have tight control over finances — in Oconee County, the sheriff's office gets nearly 15 percent of the $43 million budget for the county of about 74,000 people. They also choose what their deputies concentrate on, meaning drugs may be a focus in one county while it's traffic control in another.

...The State Law Enforcement Division said Bartee was taped asking someone to arrange the kidnapping of a former judge so he would miss a court hearing questioning whether Bartee has the proper credentials to be sheriff. Bartee was hauled off to jail in the middle of that hearing, which has been suspended, and charged with solicitation of a felony.

Bartee vigorously maintains his innocence, saying he was trying to stop the kidnapping. The tone of his campaign has changed. On the billboards he bought months ago is the slogan: "Businessman. Gentleman. Lawman. Your Man." Recently, as he held a fundraiser in a karaoke bar for his defense, he spent a lot of time explaining the arrest and telling people, "it's time to get the pigs out of the water."

...Then, one day after the karaoke bar event, Bartee abruptly decided to drop his run for sheriff and campaign for state Senate instead. He said spending a night in jail made him realize the system is broken in a much bigger area than Oconee County.

...When a reporter walked up his driveway Wednesday, Blackwell suddenly came out wearing a bulletproof vest and carrying a rifle, pointed at the ground. He agreed to talk only after frisking the reporter, warning that a sniper inside his home was watching their every move.

Blackwell said he was a Bartee supporter until the candidate stunned him by suggesting the kidnapping. He insisted he was not an informant and said he fears for his life after being labeled as such in the local paper. He said someone fired shots at his home in 2008 — three windows don't match. Blackwell refused to discuss the why he's gotten involved in the sheriff's race, though Fricks dismissed him as a "troublemaker."

Plenty of others have their own theory. Blackwell admitted shooting a man six times in March 2011, but said it was self-defense after the other man pulled a gun. Oconee County deputies are still investigating the case, but no charges have been filed.

The other two candidates, former Oconee County deputy Mike Crenshaw and current Chief Deputy Terry Wilson, also have found themselves on the defensive at recent candidate forums.

Crenshaw was fired last year after the sheriff accused him of lying on his timesheets, spending hours at home when he was supposed to be working, using as evidence a GPS device attached to Crenshaw's official vehicle by internal affairs investigators. Crenshaw said the sheriff and his hand-picked top management had become so paranoid they were spying on officers they did not like, so he took to doing work at home where he knew his phones weren't tapped and his files wouldn't be rifled through.

Accountability has also become a big issue. Wilson insists he did not know drug money was being stolen from the sheriff's office for two years and helped put in place safeguards so it doesn't happen again. It's obvious there are a lot of people not too happy with the current organization. Wilson's website doesn't once mention his retiring boss and promises to provide "a new direction and new ideas."

Before he found out all four candidates were tossed off the ballot along with dozens of other candidates across South Carolina who got bad advice from the parties about filing certain required economic statements, Richard Dubber was trying to figure out who to vote for. He doesn't think the office is doing a good job, but he can't find out what issues the candidates stand for, or what they would fight against because of all the crazy allegations.

"I'm trying very hard to find out the news," Dubber said as he loaded his groceries in his car at the Seneca Walmart. "But all I keep hearing is this silly gossip."

more at: SC sheriffs race marred by kidnapping allegation - Road Runner
 
I'm glad that I don't live in Oconee County. We had our primary today, and we only had to choose between two candidates for sheriff, and neither one of them had such history. :lol:

We did have one peculiar item in the sheriff's race.

...The two also differed somewhat in their response to a question of whether they would sign a pledge, promoted by former Sheriff Richard Mack of Texas, promising to protect the citizens of Dorchester County from the federal government if necessary.

Knight said the sheriff’s association had declined to endorse the pledge and he would stick with the association.

Turner said he wasn’t concerned about signing onto a pledge.

But, he said, county sheriffs are the only ones who have the authority and ability to stop the overreach of the federal government, a line that earned applause from the mostly Republican audience....

Has anyone else come across this pledge in their sheriff's campaigns?

I didn't realize we needed our county sheriffs to protect us from the federal government. :shock:
 
WOW what a choice. I guess the bright side is, you do not have to guess if they are crooks, with records like the you know for sure.
 
I'm glad that I don't live in Oconee County. We had our primary today, and we only had to choose between two candidates for sheriff, and neither one of them had such history. :lol:

We did have one peculiar item in the sheriff's race.



Has anyone else come across this pledge in their sheriff's campaigns?

I didn't realize we needed our county sheriffs to protect us from the federal government. :shock:

whoa. that's a rather very strong language. very interesting! :hmm:

I like it! :lol: absolutely constitutional and just.
 
I'm glad that I don't live in Oconee County. We had our primary today, and we only had to choose between two candidates for sheriff, and neither one of them had such history. :lol:

We did have one peculiar item in the sheriff's race.

Has anyone else come across this pledge in their sheriff's campaigns?

I didn't realize we needed our county sheriffs to protect us from the federal government. :shock:

It is just other fear.

For me, I think state of Alabama is more overreach than federal government.
 
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