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Updated: 2:38 PM EDT May 14, 2021 A Mauldin police officer has been fired after he was accused of using a racial slur with a former student while working at a football game, according to the South Carolina Criminal Justice Academy. According to a statement in Anthony Koutsos file, on or around Oct. 30, 2019, Officer Koutsos used a racial slur during communication with a former MHS student while working the Mauldin/Hillcrest football game. READ THE FULL PERSONNEL FILE HERE.The report indicates that even though the officer and former student were/are good friends and may consider language of this type as non-offensive, it must be recognized that others around them could likely be offended by the language used. Records show Koutosos was removed from the Mauldin Police Department on May 7 for a policy violation. The records do not say what the violation was. Earlier this month more than a dozen community activists, some with the South Eastern New Black Panther Party, gather
Three Horry Co. jail employees fired for alleged cocaine use seen in Snapchat video J. Reuben Long Detention Center (Source: WMBF News) By Brad Dickerson and Madison Martin | May 4, 2021 at 10:44 AM EDT - Updated May 4 at 11:24 AM
HORRY COUNTY, S.C. (WMBF) – Three employees with the J. Reuben Long Detention Center were terminated from their positions after a Snapchat video surfaced allegedly showing them using cocaine, records stated.
According to separation documents from the South Carolina Criminal Justice Academy, Katlyn Fairchild, Laine Jordan and Robert McGowan III were all jail employees and students at the academy.
On April 26, a student in the academy’s Basic Law Enforcement class told an instructor that he had received a Snapchat video from Fairchild on the evening of April 23.
Dozens walk for people impacted by drunk driving
Families, volunteers, and first responders came to the South Carolina Criminal Justice Academy to for the 8th annual Walk like MADD event Author: Devin Johnson Updated: 8:30 AM EDT May 2, 2021
COLUMBIA, S.C. On of the ways Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD) is raising awareness about the dangers of drunk driving in our state is the annual Walk Like MADD event. Held Saturday, May 1, at the South Carolina Criminal Justice Academy, the event brought together friends and families of those killed or injured by those driving under the influence of drugs and/or alcohol.