Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Animal shelter supporter resigns amid reports of missing money


Charles Karesh, a prominent philanthropist who spearheaded drives to stop dogs and cats from being euthanized and to find mentors for underprivileged children, has left the Charleston Animal Society's board after the nonprofit discovered $69,000 missing from its accounts.


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In a statement today, the group said the Charleston Animal Society cashed checks that were returned because of insufficient funds. The checks were written over the past four years, said Barbara Eggers, president of the society's executive committee.
A SunTrust bank employee discovered the checks Sept. 24 and contacted the Animal Society's associate director, Marc Edwards, who informed the group's board. Eggers said that the board's committee met with Karesh about the issue Sept. 27, and that he resigned three days later.
Board members were devastated and angry, she said.
Karesh had long been one of the group's most active and effective leaders, pushing hard for a new $11.2 million shelter on Remount Road. Last March, he was elected president of the group's executive committee, an unpaid position.

"Without Charlie, that magnificent building wouldn't be there," she said. "I was personally heartbroken; others are angry and feel betrayed. The important thing is that we're very concerned about how all of this will affect our mission to protect animals."

Karesh could not be reached via email or his cell phone or at his office and home over the past four days.
The group's statement said the organization isn't focusing on "pressing criminal charges." In the meantime, the group has hired a new finance director and is poised to hire a new executive director early next year.
Charleston County Sheriff Al Cannon said that he's asked the State Law Enforcement Division to examine whether a criminal investigation is warranted. He decided to contact SLED because money from his department goes to the Animal Society for the county's animal control work.

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

SC Man Eats Cocaine From Brother's Butt, Dies.

Really South Carolina???

Police: Man Trying To Hide Drug Evidence In Squad Car



North Charleston Police Department
A South Carolina man's brother died after police said he was forced to eat cocaine hidden in his brother's backside.Both brothers were taken into custody on allegations they had drugs in their car.But police told Charleston, S.C., TV station WCIV there were additional drugs hidden in 23-year-old Deangelo Mitchell's backside.Officers said Deangelo Mitchell convinced his brother, 20-year-old Wayne Mitchell, to swallow the ounce of cocaine to hide the evidence. He died soon afterward."It's sickening," North Charleston Police Chief Jon Zumalt told WCIV. "I got upset when I saw the thing. I was pretty shocked on it."Deangelo Mitchell already bonded out of jail on the drug charge, but now police are looking for him again on charges of involuntary manslaughter.

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Trial begins for truck with fake testicles. Follow the hearing on Twitter:

Fake truck testicle trial set to start Wednesday

By Dave Munday
Tuesday, December 13, 2011


The trial of a woman who was charged with obscenity for driving a pickup truck with fake testicles on the back is set to start at 10 a.m. Wednesday in Bonneau.
Virginia Tice, a 67-year-old resident of this small town north of Moncks Corner, pulled a pickup truck with big red fake testicles dangling from the rear into a gas station July 5. Police Chief Franco Fuda wrote her a $445 ticket for an obscene bumper sticker.
State law says "a sticker, decal, emblem, or device is indecent when taken as a whole, it describes, in a patently offensive way, as determined by contemporary community standards, sexual acts, excretory functions, or parts of the human body."
Tice planned to object to the ticket in traffic court, but Fuda requested a jury trial before she was set to appear.
Attorney Scott Bischoff of Savage & Savage is representing Tice. Fuda will be the prosecutor.
Follow tweets from the trial at twitter.com/dmunday.