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News

McLeod Law Group Files Civil Rights Lawsuit Against Colleton County Sheriff’s Office in the Shooting Death of William “Jerry” Crosby

September 28, 2022 By Ryan Bonner

Colby William Crosby, as the Personal Representative of the Estate of William Jerry Crosby v. The Colleton County Sheriff’s Office; Sheriff Guerry “Buddy” hill, in his Official Capacity; and Jacob Scott, individually.  

Today, McLeod Law Group, on behalf of the Estate of William Jerry Crosby, filed a Summons and Complaint in the Colleton County Court of Common Pleas for the untimely and wrongful death of life-long Walterboro resident Jerry Crosby.

As alleged in the filed complaints, on Sunday evening May 1, 2022, Jerry Crosby was a law-abiding citizen who was asleep at his home in Colleton County where he had a constitutional right to privacy and to be free from unnecessary governmental interference. Despite Jerry’s inalienable constitutional rights, Cpl. Jacob Scott came onto Jerry’s property without a warrant, without an invitation or without other lawful authority.

Once on Jerry’s property, Cpl. Scott peered through windows, canvassed his home then forced entry into the home through a sliding door on the second-floor screened porch. After Cpl. Scott’s unlawful entry, he found Jerry in bed where Jerry repeatedly told Cpl. Scott he was fine and to get out of his house. Cpl. Scott, however refused to leave and lured Jerry out of bed. Once out of his bed Cpl. Scott shot and killed Jerry in the privacy of his own home.

Attorney W. Mullins McLeod, Jr., said, “It is due time that agencies like the Colleton County Sheriff’s Office learn to respect the constitutional rights of the citizens they claim to serve. We will not rest until this wrong has been righted.”

As alleged in the filed complaint, where the government’s sole interest is preventing harm to a citizen of the community, using force likely to harm that person is manifestly contrary to the government’s interest in that interaction.

Jerry Crosby’s oldest son and the Personal Representative of the Estate said, “We loved our father, and we know that the people of Walterboro loved our father. He believed in making Walterboro and our community a better place, and we hope to continue his legacy by using this lawsuit to improve policing in our part of the low country. Our family loves and respects law enforcement, but our family also knows that what happened to our father was wrong.”

The Complaint, which is available here, is filed in the Fourteenth Judicial Circuit in Colleton County, South Carolina and demands a jury trial against all Defendants.

Filed Under: News

McLeod Law Group Fought for Justice After a Dedicated Father of Four Drowned – Profit Over Safety.

August 2, 2022 By McLeod Law Group

A verdict delivered late Friday afternoon, provides Wolde’s wife, Meswaet Abel and the four children she and Wolde shared with $20.7 million in damages following a week long civil trial. 

We were honored to work with this courageous family.


Read more at: https://www.myrtlebeachonline.com/news/local/article263995621.html#storylink=cpy

Filed Under: News

McLeod Law Group Helps Modern-Day Slavery Victim Receive over $500k in Restitution

February 22, 2022 By McLeod Law Group

Christopher Smith is a victim of modern-day slavery. Christopher Smith began working at J&J Cafeteria as a dishwasher when he was just 12 years old. During the years the restaurant was owned by Jeff Edwards and then Joe Edwards, Christopher was treated well. That all changed when Bobby Edwards’ older brother took ownership and Bobby Edwards began managing the daily operations.

The restaurant underwent renovations, including an “apartment” in the back. Edwards told Christopher to move in, despite the room having no windows, no kitchen, and no washing machine. When Chris moved into the apartment behind J&J, Edwards stopped paying him directly. He claimed he was taking out money for rent and putting the rest into a bank account for Chris. However, no such bank account existed. He only doled out money for Chris to buy hygiene products and snacks like Little Debbie’s to eat when he was not working. Every few weeks, Edwards handed him cash for a haircut.

Christopher, an intellectually disabled man was forced by Bobby Edwards to work at J&J Cafeteria over one hundred hours per week with no pay. Christopher was forced to work, even when he was sick. Chris did not have a cell phone. The restaurant phone, his only means of communication, was controlled by Edwards. When family would visit the restaurant, Edwards would wave them away, saying Christopher was too busy to spend time with them. Edwards threatened that if Chris tried to leave J&J, he would get him arrested for drugs.

Christopher feared daily for his life, as Edwards inflicted whippings, beatings and burns upon him. As the Post & Courier describes it, “For almost six years, Edwards had built an insidious trap of financial power, isolation, and violence that human traffickers often use to control their victims. Sometimes, the scourge festers in the nation’s murky shadows. Other times, right in plain sight.” To fully understand the history and the suffering of Christopher, we encourage you to read the profile written by the Post & Courier.

After a former employee of J&J wrote to then-Governor Nikki Haley’s office, the Governor’s Office of Constituent Services contacted the Horry County DSS and asked that they investigate the reports that a vulnerable adult was being abused by his employer at J&J Cafeteria. After an investigation made it evident that Christopher was being horrifically abused, DSS took Christopher into adult protective services custody.

After an investigation by SLED, a warrant was issued for the arrest of Bobby Edwards. According to the Post & Courier, although the warrant said Edwards had repeatedly beaten and tortured Chris, the man faced only one charge of second-degree assault and battery — a misdemeanor, albeit one with a maximum three-year sentence.

It was unfathomable that someone who brutally abused a vulnerable adult into providing forced labor would receive a maximum three-year sentence.

However, as the Post & Courier describes, it was late 2014, and most South Carolina prosecutors, including the one who brought the assault charge, were unfamiliar with a far more powerful tool at their disposal: the state’s relatively new human trafficking law. A first offense carried a maximum 15-year sentence and a felony record. The statute had gone into effect in December 2012, less than two years earlier, but not a single case had been brought yet with it. Law enforcement and prosecutors had received little to no training about its provisions. So they still turned to the usual hodgepodge of charges — ones like assault.

Edwards was booked into jail. A few hours later, he was released on a $10,000 bond.

Mullins McLeod, of McLeod Law Group, first heard about the case from a fellow attorney who had represented Chris on an unrelated minor charge.

“I could not believe the atrocities Christopher faced and how few consequences Bobby Edwards faced with the assault charge. I knew I had to do more. The law provides tools to right injustices. I knew we needed to find a tool buried in the statues that could provide Christopher justice,” McLeod stated.

McLeod asked Michael Cooper, a then-new attorney at McLeod Law Group, to find that tool. Cooper dove into the statutes and produced an idea. The federal human trafficking statute was amended in 2000, with a new section called “forced labor.” Anyone who obtains labor by threats, force or serious harm could face up to 20 years in prison. Aggravating factors could increase the sentence up to life in prison.

Cooper went to McLeod: This was a human trafficking case.

According to the Post & Courier, “Unlike state authorities, the lawyers threw a spate of allegations at Edwards. In November 2015, they filed a 14-count federal civil lawsuit against Bobby Edwards, his older brother Ernest Edwards and the restaurant’s registered corporation, Half Moon Foods, Inc.

This wasn’t only about an employer assaulting a worker.

It was about a White man terrorizing a Black man, whipping him, beating him, forcing him to work ungodly hours with no pay and no days off.

Count one read “Slavery.””

With that, the story went national.

Four days after < McLeod Law Group> filed the lawsuit, prosecutors forwarded Chris’ case file to the FBI.”

In October 2017, three years almost to the day after Chris was rescued, the federal court unsealed an indictment charging Edwards with one count of forced labor.

This was a felony, carrying a maximum of 20 years in prison.

But the sentencing guidelines, which considered things like Edwards’ lack of major criminal history, called for nine to 11 years. Presiding Judge Harwell came down in the middle at 10.

“Exploiting people like Mr. Smith, who are vulnerable — and doing it for profit — really has no place in any civilized society,” the judge said.

At Edwards’ sentencing, the judge also ordered him to pay Chris $272,952.96 in restitution, based on Chris’ typical 104-hour workweek and the federal minimum wage.

That prompted a new whirl of legal action.

Federal prosecutors appealed, arguing the Fair Labor Standards Act entitled Chris to twice that amount.

In April 2021, the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals agreed.

Then, in September 2021, Chris and McLeod Law Group settled the civil case with Edwards’ brother and Half Moon Inc. for $500,000.

Chris’ money went into a trust and can be used only for his benefit, although he doesn’t have access to it yet. He and his lawyers are still wrapping up legal loose ends.

Edwards is now federal inmate number 32836-171. He is 57 years old and housed at a medium-security prison in Maryland.

His release date is set for 2026.

Chris is living with his family, and gainfully employed by Freshwater Fish Co, a family-owned market where Chris is treated with love and respect.

Filed Under: News

McLeod Law Group helps secure historic $88 Million settlement on behalf of the Charleston church shooting victims.

October 28, 2021 By McLeod Law Group

What are the five things to know about the $88 Million Settlement:

  1. The mass shooting occurred on June 17, 2015, at the Mother Emanuel AME church in Charleston, S.C. The shooting is one of the deadliest mass shootings at an American place of worship in U.S. history.
  2. On July 10, 2015, FBI Director James Comey informed the American people the FBI made mistakes in conducting the background check for the firearm Dylan Roof used to carry out this racially motivated mass shooting and that Roof should not have been allowed to purchase the firearm. 
  3. Mother Emanuel AME church is one of the oldest Black churches in the U.S and has long been a center for organizing civil rights events.
  4. It is a tribute to a remarkable group of people whose loss, patience, determination and grace made the settlement possible.
  5. While African Americans have not always received equal justice in our courts, this settlement serves as a beacon for all and as an important reminder that justice does exist.

Mullins McLeod of MLG was co-lead counsel. His courtroom work and tireless advocacy was instrumental in helping secure this important settlement.

News Coverage Links

Video

ABC News – Video: https://abcnews.go.com/US/video/settlement-reached-2015-charleston-church-shooting-80857295

C-Span – https://www.c-span.org/video/?515694-1/mother-emanuel-ame-massacre-lawsuit-news-conference

Articles

Post & Courier – https://www.postandcourier.com/church_shooting/emanuel-shooting-victims-survivors-reach-historic-88m-settlement-in-fbi-lawsuits/article_9aa9642c-2a9f-11ec-b1da-fb88687d6b29.html

The State – https://www.thestate.com/news/local/crime/article255349806.html#storylink=mainstage_lead

The State – https://www.thestate.com/news/local/crime/article255357076.html

Channel 2 – https://www.counton2.com/news/local-news/doj-reaches-88m-settlement-with-survivors-families-of-9-killed-in-racist-attack-emanuel-ame-church/

USA Today:  https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2021/10/28/justice-department-fbi-emanuel-church-shooting-88-million-settlement/6176999001/

Yahoo News:  https://www.yahoo.com/gma/doj-reaches-settlements-victims-families-153512624.html

WCSC:  https://www.live5news.com/2021/10/28/emanuel-9-families-attorneys-hold-news-conference-lawsuit/

WSJ:  https://www.wsj.com/articles/u-s-will-pay-88-million-to-families-and-survivors-of-2015-shooting-at-black-church-11635439533

Filed Under: Featured, News

MLG Attorneys Named Best Lawyers in America 2022

August 23, 2021 By McLeod Law Group

Four attorneys from McLeod Law Group were selected by their peers for inclusion in The Best Lawyers in America© 2022. As one of the oldest and most distinguished legal directories, Best Lawyers conducts peer-review surveys to compile its annual list of top attorneys across several practice areas. The 2022 edition of the publication is available today at www.bestlawyers.com.

The McLeod Law Group attorneys named among Best Lawyers in America for 2022 are:

W. Mullins McLeod, Jr.

John D. Hudson, Jr.

H. Cooper Wilson III

Michael T. Cooper

Filed Under: News

3 lawsuits filed in Lake Murray Boat Crash That Killed Husband, Left Wife without Leg

April 16, 2020 By McLeod Law Group

Source: WIS News

LAKE MURRAY, S.C. (WIS) – The family of a man killed in a boat crash on Lake Murray in September 2019 has filed three lawsuits against two restaurants on the lake.

The lawsuits say the restaurants overserved alcohol to the man who caused the crash.

Tracy Gordon, 53, was charged with three counts of felony BUI after the boat he was driving hit a pontoon boat on Saturday, Sept. 21 near the Lighthouse Marina off Johnson Marina Road.

Stanley Kiser died at the scene. His wife, Shawn Kiser, lost her leg and his daughter, Morgan Kiser, suffered injuries as well.

The three lawsuits were filed April 14, 2020 — one by Shawn Kiser, one by Morgan Kiser and one by Sloan Kiser, another of Stan’s daughters, on behalf of his estate.

They are against the Rusty Anchor and Liberty Taproom.

Allegations outlined in the suits say those businesses served Gordon too much alcohol, “including beer and several rounds of liquor shots.”

Read the full article here

Filed Under: News

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South Carolina Traumatic Brain Injury

According to the CDC, there are more than 2.8 million emergency room visits for traumatic brain injuries each year. Over 837,000 of these are children. While that number is staggering, it doesn’t make a TBI any easier to cope with when it’s happening to you or your family member. ⁠

A TBI can result from motor vehicle collisions, sports injuries, violent crimes, bicycle or motorcycle accidents, exposure to toxic chemicals, infections, and more. Additionally, TBIs can sometimes sneak up and go undetected on an MRI or x-ray.

Our attorneys understand how gravely a serious incident like a TBI can affect your family’s life. Our experienced South Carolina traumatic brain injury lawyers are well-equipped to guide you through the complicated legal process and fight for justice.

South Carolina Tractor Trailer Wreck Lawyers

Accidents involving trucking, semi-trucks, construction vehicles, tractor-trailer rigs, commercial or industrial vehicles, or 18-wheelers can be devastating. Tractor trailer crashes can often be due to their massive size, blind spots, and difficult maneuverability, but it is sometimes the result of a careless driver, poor driver training, speeding, an unbalanced load, mechanical failure, or driver fatigue.

If you or someone you love has been in a serious tractor-trailer wreck, turn to our team of tractor trailer accident attorneys for guidance you can trust. Our lawyers advocate aggressively on behalf of our clients’ rights, and work tirelessly to get results.

South Carolina Nursing Home Abuse Lawyers

Aging is inevitable, and there often comes a time when a family member requires long-term residential care. In that instance, we want our loved ones to be in a safe, caring environment with healthcare professionals who treat people with dignity and respect.

When it comes to nursing homes, the unfortunate reality is that profit is sometimes put above people. Sadly, this vulnerable population can be taken advantage of in a variety of ways. Overlooked medical needs, overt bullying or threats, and accidents that are wrongly attributed to “old age” are all examples of how abuse can occur to people who are not in a position to make their concern heard.

If you suspect elder abuse, negligence, or nursing home abuse, our team of experts wants to help. Our nursing home abuse attorneys are committed to identifying neglect, exposing injustice, and securing compensation on behalf of your loved one.

South Carolina Medical Neglect Lawyers

People in South Carolina occasionally must entrust their well-being to healthcare professionals or hospital systems. In turn, these providers must adhere to a certain standard of care when treating patients. What happens when you or a loved one receives substandard treatment that results in more harm or injury?

When a medical provider makes a critical mistake in treating a patient, the results can be harmful or even life-changing. Medical neglect cases can apply to doctors, surgeons, dentists, chiropractors, nurses, physician’s assistants, pharmacists, hospitals, birthing centers, trauma centers, nursing homes, and others. Proving that the provider deviated from the standard of care is complicated — and that’s where our lawyers can help.

If you or someone you love has been harmed by a preventable medical error, our medical neglect lawyers want to help. Medical professionals are sometimes unwilling to acknowledge serious mistakes — and those errors could range from illegible written prescriptions, to a failure to diagnose, to surgical injuries. Our attorneys help you navigate the legal process and fight diligently to hold the negligent health care provider accountable for the error.

South Carolina Civil Rights Lawyers

As United States citizens, there are certain rights and protections that every single one of us is guaranteed. Under these laws, each citizen has the right to freedom from discrimination and repression. When those rights are violated, our team of South Carolina civil rights lawyers work to seek justice for victims and their families and to hold accountable the responsible corporations, institutions, and individuals in power.

At MLG, our mission is to amplify the voice of — and provide legal power to — citizens whose civil and personal rights have been violated. Civil rights cases can involve discrimination due to religion, race, sex, familial status, and national origin. Our civil rights attorneys have a range of experience in complex cases, and can develop a comprehensive legal strategy in order to fight for the results you deserve.

South Carolina Catastrophic Injury Lawyers

Accidents of any kind cause pain, stress, and worry. Sometimes, they result in catastrophic injuries that leave you disabled mentally, physically, or in appearance for an extended period of time or even permanently. Catastrophic injuries can include motor vehicle accidents, product liability injuries, construction injuries, and others.

Not only can these types of injuries cause real physical suffering, but there are often continuing costs and associated damages. If you suffer a long-term or permanently disabling injury — whether it’s caused by an automobile accident or if it happens on the job — MLG catastrophic injury attorneys have the experience needed to guide you through the legal process in the fight for medical costs, lost work wages, pain and suffering, and more.

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3 Morris Street, Suite A
Charleston, SC 29403

(843) 277-6655

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Sumter, SC 29150

(843) 890-3618

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