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CAUTION: this information could be upsetting to some readers - Dogfighting Busted

SLED CHARGES 11 MEN IN DILLON AND MARION COUNTIES FOLLOWING DOGFIGHTING INVESTIGATION

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 The South Carolina Law Enforcement Division (SLED) charged the following subjects on Wednesday, April 2, 2025:

  • Robert Kendale Adams, 41, was charged with Animal Fighting, Criminal Conspiracy, Ill Treatment of Animals, Trafficking Marijuana, and Possession of Less Than One Gram of Meth – 1st offense. - Gavin Mandell Miles, 44, was charged with Unlawfully Placing a Child at Risk, Animal Fighting, Ill Treatment of Animals, Possession of Cocaine Base – 2nd offense, Possession of a Schedule II Controlled Substance – 1st offense, Possession of a Controlled Substance – 1st Offense, and Criminal Conspiracy. -James Maurice Bethea, 50, was charged with Criminal Conspiracy, Ill Treatment of Animals, and Animal Fighting. - Jonathon Ja’Teil Lester, 22, was charged with 3 counts of Animal Fighting, and 3 counts of Ill Treatment of Animals. The following subjects were charged by SLED on Thursday, April 3, 2025: - Larry Darnel Mack, Jr., 49, was charged with Animal Fighting and Ill Treatment of Animals. - Christopher Terrell Jordan, 32, was charged with Animal Fighting, Ill Treatment of Animals, Criminal Conspiracy, Possession of a Firearm by a Person Convicted of Certain Crimes – 1st offense, Possession of a Weapon During a Violent Crime, Possession of Crack Cocaine, Possession of Ketamine, Possession of Marijuana, Possession of Oxycodone, Possession of Alprazolam, Possession of a Stolen Pistol, Trafficking Cocaine, Trafficking Fentanyl, and Trafficking 3,4-Methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA). - Anthony Dante Gause, 44, was charged with Criminal Conspiracy, Animal Fighting, and Ill Treatment of Animals. - Wade Rodeon Shipman, 61, was charged with Criminal Conspiracy. - Sammy Junior McCormick, 45, was charged with Animal Fighting and Ill Treatment of Animals. - Blake Alexander Rogers, 29, was charged with Animal Fighting and Ill Treatment of Animals. Tyquan Tymore Rogers, 24, was charged in Dillon County on Friday, April 4, 2025, with Criminal Conspiracy
  • Adams, Miles, Bethea, and Lester were booked into the Dillon County Detention Center on Wednesday, April 2, 2025. Mack, Jr., Jordan, Gause, McCormick, and Blake Alexander Rogers were booked into the Marion County Detention Center on Thursday, April 3, 2025. Tyquan Tymore Rogers was booked into the Dillon County Detention Center on Friday, April 4, 2025.
  • SLED was assisted by the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA), the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources (SCDNR), the Dillon County Sheriff’s Office, the Charleston County Sheriff’s Office, the Summerville Police Department, the Marion Police Department, the Mullins Police Department, the Marion County Sheriff’s Office, the North Carolina National Guard Counterdrug Task Force, the South Carolina National Guard Governor's Counterdrug Task Force, the South Carolina National Guard Readiness Center, the Mullins Fire Department, as well as several local fire departments in Dillon County.
  • The operation resulted in the rescue of 160 dogs, as well as the seizure of $69,700 in cash, approximately 55 firearms, 17 pounds of marijuana, 11 grams of crack cocaine, 1 kilogram of cocaine, 2 grams of ketamine, 990 round blue fentanyl pills, and 2,266 ecstasy (MDMA) pills.
  • The case will be prosecuted by the South Carolina Attorney General’s Office. If you have information regarding suspected dog fighting in South Carolina, report it to the SLED Dogfighting Unit at tips@sled.sc.gov.
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  • 160 dogs rescued from dogfighting ring in Marion, Dillon counties

    BY: SHAUN CHORNOBROFF - APRIL 7, 2025 7:14 PM

    COLUMBIA — Eleven men were arrested and more than 160 dogs were rescued in South Carolina’s second-largest bust ever of a dogfighting ring in the Palmetto State, authorities announced Monday.

    Beyond finding scarred and hungry dogs, the officers who went to 10 homes in Dillon and Marion counties with arrest warrants last Wednesday and Thursday seized lots of drugs, cash and guns, according to a news release from the State Law Enforcement Division, which coordinated the bust. One of the 11 people arrested turned himself in Friday.

    “If you are involved in dogfighting in South Carolina, we will find you, we will arrest you and we will hold you accountable,” SLED Chief Mark Keel said at a news conference Monday with Gov. Henry McMaster at the agency’s forensic lab.

    In all, officers took $69,700 in cash, 55 guns and an assortment of drugs that included 17 pounds of marijuana, 11 grams of crack cocaine, one gram of cocaine, two grams of ketamine, 990 fentanyl pills and 2,266 ecstasy pills, according to the release.

    Most of the 11 face charges of animal fighting, a felony that carries a penalty of up to five years in prison and a $5,000 fine, and ill treatment of animals. On first offense, that charge is a misdemeanor punishable by up to 90 days in jail and a $1,000 fine. Additional convictions are punishable by up to two years in prison and a $2,000 fine.

    “Many dogs were constantly tethered by heavy chains fixed to metal objects on the ground, leaving little room for movement,” reads the arrest warrant for a 41-year-old Dillon man with 27 dogs found behind his home, many of them scarred from fights, as well as a dead puppy.

    At the home of a man who owned 22 dogs for fighting, guns were found in an unlocked closet, accessible to the suspect’s young daughter, leading to an additional charge of unlawfully placing a child at risk, according to his arrest warrants.

    His dogs were found “tethered by heavy logging chains weighing as much as 12 pounds,” one read.

    At another home where emaciated, wounded and scarred adult dogs were rescued, a puppy was found alone in a crate with no food or water, and “in its own feces,” the warrant read.

    Evidence collected by officers included photos, audio and written documentation of dogfighting contests.

    Organizations involved in the takedown and rescue of the animals include drug task forces from both North and South Carolina and the sheriffs for Dillon and Marion counties.

    “SLED is fortunate to partner with local law enforcement departments, sheriff’s offices, and our federal agencies and task forces,” Keel said.

    Jennifer Bonovich, a forensic veterinarian at the announcement, described the trauma endured by the dogs as a “fate worse than death.”

    The dogs made to fight are chained, battered, bruised and often malnourished as people sit to the side attempting to profit off that pain.

    “Bones are crushed and fractured, all of this while members of your community are watching and cheering,” said Bonovich, who said she works with SLED and goes to the crime scenes to evaluate the animals.

    Since its creation in 2023, SLED’s four-person dogfighting unit has rescued 492 dogs and arrested 116 people, according to statistics from the agency.

    That tally includes last week’s bust.

    Marion and Dillon counties lead the state with the most dogs seized since Jan. 1, 2024, with 82 and 72 respectively, followed by Richland (45), Darlington (43) and Georgetown (40), according to a map of counties SLED provided Monday.

    “This is an unspeakable thing that’s happening,” said McMaster, who began leading the fight against dogfighting in South Carolina long before his time in the Governor’s Mansion.

    It was McMaster who started South Carolina’s anti-dogfighting task force with then-SLED Chief Robert Stewart in 2004.

    In his January State of the State address, he again asked the Legislature to provide SLED more money to “end this unforgivable savagery.” He added that “most of the people participating in this barbaric activity have long criminal records.”

    SLED asked legislators for $500,000 in the coming fiscal year to cover the veterinary bills and care of dogs it rescues. But the House didn’t include any additional money for the unit in the plan it passed last month. The Senate’s budget-writing committee is crafting its spending plan this week.

    Last year, McMaster asked legislators to provide $566,286, which they did. In 2022, the Legislature sent SLED $181,148 for the salary and equipment of an agent dedicated to animal-fighting enforcement — again, matching McMaster’s request.

    “We have to put a stop to it,” McMaster said Monday.

    When SLED rescues the dogs, it partners with organizations like the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals to find facilities where they can be nurtured and hopefully one day adopted, said Matthew Bershadker, president of the ASPCA, who was at the announcement.

    Once they are cared for, they often find homes and live out a normal life, McMaster said.

    Until last year, the cost of prosecuting animal fighting rings and the long-term care of their victims allowed abusers to escape paying for their crimes. As these cases dragged on, potentially for years, the costs fell on taxpayers. The dogs couldn’t be adopted until the criminal charges were resolved.

    That changed with a law dubbed the “cost of care” act, which McMaster signed last May after both chambers passed it unanimously.

    It flipped the financial burden of care from the government to the accused — and allowed for dogs’ placement with new, loving owners much faster.

    As long as a judge determines the seizure was justified, an accused owner must either pay for the dog’s care for the duration of the case or immediately forfeit ownership, allowing the dog to be adopted.

    “This law is critically important for law enforcement to pursue animal cruelty investigations,” Bershadker said, “and it helps ensure that the animals get the treatment that they need and deserve.”

    SLED encourages anyone with information regarding dogfighting to contact its tipline at 866-472-8477 or email tips.sled.sc.gov.

    Dogfighting bust

    Eleven men in Dillon and Marion counties were arrested last Wednesday through Friday and accused of being part of a dogfighting ring. Here are their charges:

    Dillon County:

    • A 50-year-old Dillon man was charged with criminal conspiracy and ill treatment of animals
    • A 44-year-old Dillon man was charged with unlawfully placing a child at risk, animal fighting, ill treatment of animals, possession of cocaine base (second offense), possession of a schedule II controlled substance, possession of a controlled substance, and criminal conspiracy
    • A 41-year-old Hamer man was charged with animal fighting, criminal conspiracy, ill treatment of animals, trafficking marijuana and possession of less than one gram of meth
    • A 24-year-old Dillon man was charged with criminal conspiracy
    • A 22-year-old Dillon man was charged with three counts of animal fighting, and three counts of ill treatment of animals

    Marion County:

    • A 32-year-old Mullins man was charged with animal fighting, ill treatment of animals, criminal conspiracy, possession of a firearm by a person convicted of certain crimes, possession of a weapon during a violent crime, possession of crack cocaine, possession of ketamine, possession of marijuana, possession of oxycodone, possession of alprazolam, possession of a stolen pistol, trafficking cocaine, trafficking fentanyl, and trafficking MDMA
    • A 44-year-old Marion man was charged with criminal conspiracy, animal fighting, and ill treatment of animals
    • A 61-year-old Mullins man was charged with criminal conspiracy
    • Two Marion men, ages 29 and 45, and a 49-year-old Mullins man were charged with animal fighting and ill treatment of animals

    SHAUN CHORNOBROFF

    Shaun covers the state legislature for the South Carolina Daily Gazette.SC Daily Gazette is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.