South-Carolina
South Carolina’s Dawn Staley, Kamilla Cardoso ring opening bell at New York Stock Exchange
South Carolina women’s basketball coach Dawn Staley and now Chicago Sky forward Kamilla Cardoso are living it up in the Big Apple.
Shortly after being at the Brooklyn Academy of Music in Brooklyn, New York on Monday night to see Cardoso be drafted in the WNBA draft, the two Gamecocks were in Lower Manhattan to ring the bell to open the New York Stock Exchange on Tuesday.
Cardoso’s mom, Janete Soares, and sister, Jessica Silva, were also on hand for the moment as were South Carolina assists Lisa Boyer, Winston Gandy and Jolette Law as the NYSE celebrated the Gamecocks’ 2024 national championship win over Iowa. Both Soars and Silva were in attendance last night and have been in the States from their native country Brazil since South Carolina’s Senior Day back on March 3.
REQUIRED READING: South Carolina’s Kamilla Cardoso dazzled in red at WNBA Draft, ready for career in Chicago
South Carolina defeated Iowa 87-75 back on April 7 at Rocket Mortgage Fieldhouse in Cleveland to win its second national championship title in recent years while also becoming the 10th team in NCAA women’s basketball history to go undefeated for an entire season.
Shortly after ringing the bell to open up Wall Street, Staley and Cardoso joined CNBC’s ‘Squawk on the Street’ to talk about the future of women’s basketball and where the sport is going.
“We are at a point where there are more eyeballs on the game and our sport so they are seeing the disparities (and) salary disparities. But I will say the WNBA is moving in the right direction,” Staley said. “We are still a very young league. A very very young league just like the NBA. The NBA didn’t become what it has become in 28 years.
“… I do think our future is bright. I do think people are going to look at our sport and pour into it because they see dollar signs at the end of the day.”
She added: “I hope every school treats women’s basketball, women’s sports like the University of South Carolina. They invest in my salary, they invest in student-athletes.”
Cardoso was selected with the No. 3 overall pick in the 2024 WNBA Draft by the Sky. The Brazilian forward averaged 14.4 points, 9.7 rebounds and 2.5 blocks per game this season.
South-Carolina
Struggling South Carolina Farmers in Line for Assistance – FITSNews
by WILL FOLKS
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Crippled by drought and rising prices on fuel and fertilizer – and increasingly hemmed in by encroaching development – it’s been a devastating stretch of time for South Carolina farmers.
Some help for them could be on the way, though…
Farmers in the Palmetto State would receive an additional $35 million in state funding during the upcoming fiscal year thanks to a budget proviso championed by outgoing state senator Wes Climer. A separate piece of standalone legislation in the S.C. House of Representatives would provide them with an additional $50 million in funding.
Climer, who is the GOP nominee for the Palmetto State’s fifth congressional district, is resigning from the Senate this year as he prepares to campaign for the U.S. congress. His amendment, which was adopted without a recorded vote, would provide per acre assistance to farmers with per farm cap of $135,000.
“The program shall utilize a flat statewide per-acre payment rate across eligible row crop commodities,” Climer’s amendment stated. “The per-acre rate shall reflect approximately fifty percent of documented economic losses, subject to available funding and legislative proration.”
The S.C. Department of Agriculture (SCDA) would disburse the grants and report back to legislative budget writers no later than March 1, 2027 on the “total funds distributed; the number of recipients; distribution by commodity type, including specialty crops; the geographic distribution of funds; and any recommendations for future agricultural risk mitigation programs.”
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Climer’s emergency farm funding amendment is part of a massive $42.4 billion budget – although his proposal does not impose new obligations on taxpayers. That’s because the money to fund it came from a controversial economic development slush fund administered by the scandal-scarred S.C. Department of Commerce (SCDOC) – a fund which has been used to subsidize all manner of failed crony capitalist schemes.
Climer’s amendment compels Commerce to transfer the money from that slush fund to SCDA for the expressed purpose of subsidizing these grants.
“The highest and best use of economic development money is keeping the backbone of South Carolina’s economy intact during this period of unprecedented turbulence in commodity markets,” Climer told FITSNews. “The staggering dislocation between commodity input costs and output prices defies basic economic logic and has put South Carolina’s agricultural economy on the brink of collapse. This would be a catastrophic outcome for hundreds of thousands of South Carolinians who support their families through growing, processing, supplying, and transporting crops.”
Climer singled out S.C. Senate finance chairman Harvey Peeler as helping spearhead the proposal.
“I’m extremely grateful to chairman Peeler and the entire Senate for stepping into the breach to help our farmers through this season of instability,” Climer said.
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RELATED | SECOND SCGOP DEBATE
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Meanwhile, H. 5569 – introduced on Thursday (April 23, 2026) in the S.C. House – would create the “South Carolina Farm Aid and Resiliency Grant Fund” and endow it with $50 million. The House would put this money in the hands of the S.C. Office of Resilience (SCOR), and task it – in consultation with SCDA – with “developing criteria, application procedures, and awarding guidelines for administering the grant program.”
Funding for the grant program would come via the state’s contingency reserve fund.
SCDA and the SC Farm Bureau – working alongside Clemson University – estimate losses on South Carolina row crops over the last two years at more than $700 million.
“Our farmers are in a desperate situation that is out of their control,” Farm Bureau president Harry Ott said. “We were already dealing with low commodity prices and now we have soaring fertilizer and fuel costs in addition to drought conditions across the state. If help doesn’t come soon, the agricultural landscape will look very different in 2027.”
Ott referred to Climer’s “emergency, one-time appropriation” as a “lifeline” – one which would be mirrored by federal funding contained in U.S. president Donald Trump‘s ‘One Big Beautiful Bill.’
“This funding will help provide necessary support to ensure agriculture and our rural communities survive,” he said.
Keep it tuned to FITSNews as we continue tracking state appropriations and holding lawmakers accountable for how they spend your tax dollars…
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR…
Will Folks is the founding editor of the news outlet you are currently reading. Prior to founding FITSNews, he served as press secretary to the governor of South Carolina. He lives in the Midlands region of the state with his wife and eight children.
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South-Carolina
Two from South Carolina charged with murder after Massachusetts man found dead in trash can
Two men have been charged after a Massachusetts man was found dead in disturbing fashion.
According to the City of Marion South Carolina Police Department, 31-year-old Shaiquan Ramaal Foxworth of Marion was arrested this week and charged in the murder of David Hutchinson which took place in January.
Hutchinson’s body was discovered inside a trash can that had been placed behind an abandoned residence on Pearl Street.
Foxworth has been charged with Murder (No bond set at this time), Desecration or Removal of Human Remains ($10,000 bond), Conspiracy ($5,000 bond), Possession of a Weapon During the Commission of a Violent Crime ($5,000 bond), and Discharging a Firearm within City Limits ($1,087.50 bond). His total bond has been set at $21,087.50. Bond on the Murder charge will be determined at a later date by a Circuit Court Judge.
Additionally, 31-year-old Travis Jermaine Godbolt, who is currently being held at the Marion County Detention Center on unrelated charges, has also been charged in connection with Hutchinson’s death. His charges include Murder (No bond set at this time), Desecration or Removal of Human Remains ($10,000 bond), and Conspiracy ($5,000 bond). Godbolt’s bond has been set at $15,000. As with Foxworth, bond on the Murder charge will be determined by a Circuit Court Judge at a later date.
Thomas Lee Brigman, Jr. was arrested and charged with Accessory After the Fact of Murder. His bond was set at $15,000 surety.
While no details were revealed by authorities, a GoFundMe fundraiser created by family states that Hutchinson “was lured to South Carolina with the promise of making money by a woman who claimed to be an entrepreneur, but upon arrival, he quickly figured out it was all a set up. After being taken for his money, he was dropped off at a trap house where his phone was also stolen. In the time leading up to his disappearance there was an altercation with his barbering equipment being stolen as well. When Dave confronted the individual(s) he thought took his belongings, he was met with violence and a gun was pulled. Later that same day he vanished without a trace.”
The investigation remains ongoing. Anyone with information regarding this incident is encouraged to contact the Marion Police Department at 843-423-8616 or submit information through the department’s mobile app. Tips may be provided anonymously.
South-Carolina
Suspect dead, SC deputy critically injured after traffic stop shooting
New details have emerged in an officer-involved shooting that left one dead and a deputy injured in Anderson County on Monday.
A deputy with the Anderson County Sheriff’s Office (ACSO) initiated a traffic stop outside of Townville, SC, on I-85 Northbound near Mile Marker 11 for a traffic violation, according to a release from the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division (SLED).
The deputy requested back-up and spoke to 32-year-old Austin Derrell Robertson, of Pennsylvania, in his patrol vehicle. Once the other deputy arrived, Robertson got out of the vehicle and “a physical altercation involving him and the two deputies” occured, according to SLED.
SC deputy critically injured after shooting during traffic stop, suspect killed
While deputies attempted to tase Robertson, officials said he grabbed a firearm from his vehicle and shot one of the deputies.
Both deputies then shot back at Roberston, and he was pronounced dead at the scene.
SLED said the deputy was airlifted to the hospital and remains there for treatment at this time.
The incident remains under investigation by SLED, as requested by the ACSO.
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