South-Carolina
Aggies Fall at South Carolina – Texas A&M Athletics – 12thMan.com
Marcel Reed earned the start for the Aggies (7-2, 5-1 SEC) and finished the night 18-of-28 passing for 206 yards and one touchdown. The redshirt freshman also added 46 yards on the ground on 16 attempts. Running back Amari Daniels led the Maroon & White with 83 yards on 13 carries to go along with one score. Among the Aggie receivers, Jabre Barber logged a team-best 80 yards on seven catches and one touchdown.
Linebacker Taurean York collected a team-high eight tackles, five of which were solos, while Dalton Brooks, Marcus Ratcliffe and Shemar Stewart each followed with five.
A fast start from the Gamecocks (5-3, 3-3 SEC) saw the Aggies face an early 14-0 deficit with 8:24 left in the opening quarter. Texas A&M was able to slow South Carolina’s momentum behind the leg of Randy Bond, who connected on a 52-yard field goal with 5:15 left in the period. The Maroon & White’s defense provided a spark in the closing minute of the first as Will Lee III forced a fumble that BJ Mayes was able to recover.
The Aggies capitalized off the turnover in the second quarter as Bond connected on a career-long 55-yard field goal attempt with 13:12 left in the half, cutting the deficit to 14-6. Following a South Carolina 25-yard field goal, Amari Daniels found a hole through the right side and broke free for a season-long 56-yard touchdown run to pull the Maroon & White to within four, 17-13, with 7:29 remaining. The Aggies later took the lead when Reed found Barber for a 2-yard touchdown following a fourth down stop from the Texas A&M defense. Bond’s extra point gave the Maroon & White a 20-17 advantage with 1:08 showing on the clock.
The two squads went on to enter the halftime break tied at 20-20 as the Gamecocks pushed a 44-yard field goal through the uprights in the closing seconds of the quarter.
Texas A&M gave up an early touchdown out of the break and didn’t have an answer for the Gamecocks, who were able to pull away in the third quarter and tack on a pair of touchdowns in the fourth quarter.
The Aggies are off next week before hosting New Mexico State on Senior Day on November 16.
Team Notes
- Texas A&M has forced a turnover in seven of the last eight games after forcing a fumble against South Carolina.
- The Maroon & White scored on a 50-plus-yard rushing play for the third time this season.
- For the first time since the 2015 season, the Aggies connected on multiple 50-plus-yard field goals in a game.
Individual Notes
- Junior RB Amari Daniels broke away on a season-long 56-yard touchdown run for his sixth rushing score of the season.
- Senior WR Jabre Barber led the receiving corps for the second time in three games catching a season-best seven passes for 80 yards and his first touchdown as an Aggie.
- Freshman QB Marcel Reed threw for a season-best 206 yards, completing 18 of his of 28 passes.
- Sophomore LB Taurean York led the defense for the fifth time this season with eight tackles.
- Junior DL Shemar Stewart matched his career high with five takedowns and added a career-best two breakups.
- Sophomore DB Marcus Ratcliffe tallied a season-best five tackles for the third time this year.
- Graduate K Randy Bond connected on his first field goal from over 50 yards of the season, first sending a 52-yarder through the uprights in the first quarter and later registering a new career-long with a 55-yard field goal in the second quarter.
- Bond has made eight field goals from 50-or-more yards in his career and became the first A&M kicker to connect on two 50-plus-yard field goals in a game since Taylor Bertolet (2012-15) hit 54- and 52-yarders against Alabama in 2015.
- Bond’s eight points in the game upped his career total to 270 to put him in a tie for seventh all-time with Rodney Thomas (1991-94) and Darren Lewis (1987-90) on A&M’s overall scoring list.
Hats off to South Carolina. They beat us. Beat us on the line of scrimmage, both sides of the ball. Controlled the game. Forced turnovers. Couldn’t run the ball. Couldn’t tackle, couldn’t control the quarterback. And so, you know, we didn’t do any of the things you need to do to win a football game. And so that’s why we lost. We’ve got to get better. We got to fix them. And we’ve got to not ever play like that again.
How disappointed were you in the tackling and just what do you think you guys weren’t doing, or what they were doing well, that was leading to so many of those missed tackles?
Obviously I don’t want to sit up here and say it’s all us, right? Because you have to give them credit. I’m not going to be the coach who sits up here and gives them no credit. They got a big quarterback. He’s 240 pounds. They got a big running back. He’s 230 pounds. And you know, we didn’t bring our feet. We didn’t tackle the way you need to to tackle big backs. They’re big, powerful kids. And if you want to tackle big, powerful kids, you have to bring your body through the tackle. And we didn’t do that tonight.
On the fourth downs when you decided to go for them on your end of the field was that possibly a byproduct of maybe not having enough confidence in your defense to stop?
No. I mean, it was fourth and half a yard, both of them, that we went for. And we’re going to do that. I mean, that’s something that we’re going to do. We haven’t really been in that situation before, but, you know, we have to be able to get half a yard.
With the penalties do you feel like parts of the season y’all skated by and today kind of came back to bite you?
For sure. Yeah I told them, in a couple areas. I think the missed tackles have been growing and growing and you know sometimes the hardest thing to do is learn in victory, because it gets covered up and it gets masked up. So I think some of the things that have been behind the scenes and we’ve been playing and winning through certainly showed up tonight in a really bad way. And so that’s on me. That’s my job as a coach is to get them to understand that to the level they need to understand and to fix it. And I didn’t do that. And so that’s on me.
After the way it started did you feel like you kind of gained a little control and some momentum heading into halftime?
I don’t know that I ever thought we had control. I thought we should have come into the locker room with the lead. The two penalties on the two minute drive, you know, we just gifted them the three points to tie the game up. To some degree, that gave them the momentum back. We had stormed back. We had taken the lead. I thought we did a really good job managing the clock at the end of the first half and left them very little time to go down the field. And, you know, we gave them, what, 25 or 30 yards in penalties on that drive? And we just gifted them a field goal. But obviously at 20-20 you still felt like you had a chance. And then we misfit a run and on a fourth and one, they break it for a long touchdown. That’s a killer. And then we don’t get the fourth and half a yard and we are able to go out and hold them to a field goal, but that’s a killer. And then I still think at that point we’re still battling. Then it just gets to a point where we’re playing more of an all out defense to try to stop them from running the ball and they pop a long one and put the game away.
Off the top of your head what do you think of the performance of Marcel?
Certainly up and down some. We’re not built to play that kind of game. We can’t get behind like that in the second half. Once it got to that point and we weren’t able to play the game that we’re better at, I think that really hurt us. But, again, he’s still a young kid. He’s learning. He’s getting better. He’s got to be a little bit more careful with the football, obviously. The interception on the first down, that was obviously a huge momentum swing. I think we were down 10 at that point. He’s got to learn. But certainly not on him any of the game. There’s a lot of other things starting with me that that caused us to lose this football game.
Is Marcel the starter moving forward?
He’s the starter now and we’ll see where we go.
How’s Le’Veon Moss doing and how much did it hurt not having him?
Le’Veon is a great back and not having him was tough. We’ll see. I don’t think it looks real good right now, but, I don’t think it maybe looks as bad as it might have on the field. Hopefully it’s not one of those awful ones, but I do think he’ll be out for a little while.
Mike, is there any chance at all that you guys, after last week’s win and all the praise and everything that they’ve gotten over the last week that they’ve lost any focus?
No.
Does it feel like the everything is still on the table for what you want to do to make this a successful season?
It feels like it because it is. We’re tied for first. We still control our own destiny to Atlanta. We still control our own destiny to the playoff. So, yeah, it very much feels like it. Because it is.
You got close to getting to Sellers a few times, what did he do to escape?
Yeah, it felt like we were close to getting him a bunch of times. And I think we got him none. That’s why I’m chuckling. He’s a big kid. And obviously I did a poor job of getting our kids to understand how you have to tackle a 240-pound kid. We kept trying to go up high around him. And he’s too strong for that.
South-Carolina
A look back at who South Carolina has executed on death row in 2025. Who remains?
CHARLESTON, S.C. (WCIV) — Near the tail end of 2024, South Carolina executed its first person in more than a decade.
The stoppage in the Palmetto State was due to government officials being unable to procure the drugs used in the lethal injection. The General Assembly passed a shield law, and prison officials were able to find a compounding pharmacy willing to make the pentobarbital if its identity wasn’t made public, ending the 13-year pause.
Since then, the state has killed seven men in around 15 months. As 2025 comes to a close, South Carolina executed five men on death row.
READ MORE | “South Carolina Supreme Court upholds constitutionality of state’s 3 death penalty methods.”
Who were they, and what were they convicted of?
From L to R: Marion Bowman Jr., Brad Sigmon,{ }Stephen Christopher Stanko,{ }Stephen Bryant & Mikal Mahdi (FILE)
Marion Bowman Jr.
This undated photo shows Marion Bowman Jr. released by the South Carolina Department of Corrections. Bowman was put to death by lethal injection on Friday, Jan. 31, 2025, in the evening. (South Carolina Department of Corrections via AP)
Bowman was convicted of the 2001 killing of 21-year-old Kandee Martin. Martin was shot in the head, and her body was found in the trunk of a car that had been set on fire in Dorchester County.
Up until his death, Bowman maintained his innocence – going as far as deciding not to ask the governor for clemency, saying he didn’t want to spend the rest of his life in prison for a murder he didn’t commit.
Lindsey Vann, Bowman’s death penalty attorney, filed an appeal with the U.S. Supreme Court seeking a last-minute stay of execution to review the case in the days leading up to his execution. Vann argued that witnesses against Bowman “were getting deals from the prosecutors to provide their testimony against Mr. Bowman, and we’ve uncovered information that his defense team wasn’t adequately representing him and really was pressuring him to plead guilty, despite not reviewing all of the discovery and not really preparing to confront the state’s case at trial.”
That appeal was eventually denied and Bowman was executed by lethal injection on Jan. 31. For his final works, Bowman penned a poem titled “Last Breath or Sigh.”
READ MORE ON THE CASE: “Marion Bowman Jr. executed in South Carolina, third inmate since September.”
Brad Keith Sigmon
FILE – This undated image provided by the South Carolina Department of Corrections shows Brad Sigmon. (South Carolina Department of Corrections via AP, File)
Sigmon was convicted of the 2001 baseball bat murders of his ex-girlfriend’s parents, after they had evicted him from their trailer.
Prosecutors say Sigmon beat the couple to death at their Greenville County home, moving between their separate bedrooms until they died. He then kidnapped his ex-girlfriend at gunpoint, though she managed to escape.
His final words were used to urge his fellow people of faith to end the death penalty.
“An eye for an eye was used as justification to the jury for seeking the death penalty,” Sigmon said. “At that time, I was too ignorant to know how wrong that was. Why? Because we no longer live under the Old Testament law but now live under the New Testament.”
Sigmon became the first inmate executed by firing squad in the modern history of South Carolina on Friday, March 7.
READ MORE ON THE CASE: “Brad Sigmon executed by firing squad, first in South Carolina’s history.”
Mikal Deen Mahdi
This photo provided by South Carolina Department of Corrections shows Mikal Mahdi. (South Carolina Department of Corrections via AP)
Mahdi admitted to killing Orangeburg Public Safety officer James Myers in 2004, shooting him at least eight times and then burning his body. Myers’ wife later discovered his remains in a shed on the couple’s Calhoun County property, the same location where they had been married 15 months earlier. Mahdi was arrested in Florida while driving Myers’ unmarked police pickup truck.
Mahdi also confessed to killing Christopher Boggs, a convenience store clerk in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, three days earlier. Boggs was shot twice in the head while checking Mahdi’s identification. Mahdi was later sentenced to life in prison for that killing.
Despite multiple appeals, petitions to the governor, and claims that Mahdi had PTSD due to childhood trauma, Governor Henry McMaster denied clemency moments before Mahdi was put to death by firing squad.
Mahdi became the second inmate executed by firing squad in the modern history of South Carolina on Friday, April 11.
READ MORE ON THE CASE: “Witnesses recount harrowing final moments of Mikal Mahdi’s execution by firing squad in SC.”
Stephen Christopher Stanko
Stephen Christopher Stanko
Stanko, 57, was convicted for the April 8, 2005, murder of 43-year-old librarian Laura Ling, the murder of 74-year-old Conway resident Henry Lee Turner and the assault of Ling’s teenage daughter.
Stanko attempted to overturn his death penalty conviction of Ling by appearing before the South Carolina Supreme Court in September 2007. Stanko also tried to appeal his conviction in the Turner murder case in February 2013. At both appearances, the court reaffirmed his sentence. Before his murder convictions, Stanko was previously incarcerated in 1996 for assault and kidnapping, where he served 8.5 years in prison.
Stanko was executed by lethal injection on Friday, June 13, at Broad River Correctional Institution.
READ MORE ON THE CASE: “Stephen Stanko executed in South Carolina, sixth inmate since September.”
Stephen Bryant
Current SCDC photo of death row inmate Stephen Corey Bryant. (SCDC)
Bryant, 44, was sentenced to death for the 2004 murder of Willard “TJ” Tietjen. Prosecutors said Bryant shot Tietjen, burned his eyes, and scrawled messages on the walls using Tietjen’s blood.
He was also convicted of killing two other men in Sumter County within the same five-day span—one prior to Tietjen’s death and one after. Authorities said Bryant had offered the men rides and shot them in the back after they stepped out of his car to urinate along the roadside.
Defense attorneys argued that Bryant had been unraveling in the months before the killings, telling both a probation agent and an aunt that he needed help because he was overwhelmed by memories of being sexually abused as a child by several relatives.
His attorneys filed a series of final appeals and sought clemency in the days leading up to the execution, but Gov. Henry McMaster declined to intervene. Like his predecessors, McMaster has never granted clemency to an inmate on death row.
Bryant was executed by firing squad at Broad River Correctional Institution on Friday, Nov. 14.
READ MORE ON THE CASE: “Stephen Bryant executed by firing squad, third in South Carolina’s history.”
Who is still on death row?
As of Dec. 24, 23 men remain on South Carolina’s death row. Fourteen of the men on death row are white. Nine of the men are Black. The particulars of the cases change; however, what remains the same is the process.
South Carolina’s Supreme Court issues execution notices when a defendant has exhausted all of their normal appeals. Final appeals may continue up until the defendant is in the death chamber, as lawyers wait for the final word from the governor or the United States Supreme Court.
The full list of death row inmates in South Carolina as of Dec. 24:
- Bayan Aleksey
- Steven Vernon Bixby
- Ricky Lee Blackwell, Sr.
- Luzenski Allen Cottrell
- Donnie S. Council
- William Dickerson
- Ron Oneal Finklea
- Mar-Reece Hughes
- Jerry Buck Inman
- Jerome Jenkins, Jr.
- Timothy Ray Jones
- Marion A. Lindsey
- Tyree Alphonso Roberts
- James D. Robertson
- Mitchell Carlton Sims
- Norman Starnes
- Bobby Wayne Stone
- Gary Dubose Terry
- Andres Antonio Torres
- James William Wilson
- Louis Michael Winkler
- John Richard Wood
- Anthony Woods
South-Carolina
SC sentences 2 in ‘disgusting, horrific’ case
Assistant Deputy Attorney General David Hernandez on contraband csc case
Contraband phones aided Criminal Sexual Conduct says State Attorney General office in Greenville court Dec 22 2025
A Simpsonville woman was sentenced to four decades in prison for what prosecutors called one of the most evil things a mother could do to a child.
Circuit Court Judge Patrick Fant III sentenced 26-year-old Abbygale El-Dier to 40 years.
Her boyfriend, Jacob Lance, 29, who was already serving a 30-year term for a 2015 Anderson County manslaughter case, was sentenced to 40 additional years for accessory to criminal sexual misconduct with a minor.
The case came to light after South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson launched a crackdown on contraband in state prisons. Jail staff discovered that El-Dier had sent Lance dozens of videos and photos showing her sexually abusing her three-year-old daughter. The three-year-old isn’t related to Lance.
Cortney Rea, assistant solicitor with the 13th Circuit, called it the worst case she has ever prosecuted, citing the severe trauma suffered by the toddler.
“I have tried to put this into words, but how vile these acts are, words fall short. Inhuman, disgusting, horrific, but what the defendant really did to her child is just evil,” Rea said. “Everyone who has touched this case has been negatively affected by their perversion. What this defendant (El-Dier) did to this child is incomprehensible.”
El-Dier also received a five-year prison sentence for first-degree sexual exploitation. Lance was also sentenced to three years for sexual exploitation of a minor. The three-year sentence will run concurrently with his previous sentence.
According to prosecutors, El-Dier and Lance messaged each other from August 2022 to August 2023, where the two talked about abusing the child. The pair also spoke about the idea of Lance abusing the child, along with drugging them and other children. Law enforcement became aware of the pair’s conversations after someone tipped the Simpsonville Police Department about the messages.
After the tip, law enforcement arrested El-Dier, and agents from the Attorney General’s Office obtained Lance’s phone.
El-Dier pled guilty in July, and Lance pled guilty in November.
‘Suffered abuse’
In March 2018, both Jacob and his brother, Ernest Lance, were found guilty of beating Todd Cantlay to death before setting his Pendleton home on fire. Jacob Lance is serving his 30-year prison sentence at the Lee County Correctional Facility in Bishopville.
El-Dier’s attorney, Greenville-based Will Hellams, and her family accused Lance of manipulating and psychologically abusing her.
“We will always regret not catching on to how truly severe the situation was every day for the rest of our lives. We are so disappointed that our granddaughter will have to grow up knowing about these horrific events. The therapy she will have to go through will never be enough,” the victim’s advocate said in the hearing.
Lance told Judge Fant a different story during the hearing, in which he claimed El-Dier initiated the dialogue about the abuse and that he felt blackmailed to continue the conversations. He said if he didn’t, she would cut off communication and potentially alert the Department of Corrections about his contraband cellphones.
“I felt forced to go along with it because I didn’t want her calling a search team and turning it all around on me to make it seem like I’m some creep,” Lance said.
Contraband crackdown by AG’s Office
This case, along with several others, is part of an initiative by the Attorney General’s Office to punish the possession of contraband cellphones.
The State Grand Jury investigated and indicted each case in the initiative.
El-Dier’s family said they reported Lance to the South Carolina Department of Corrections multiple times, but he would have several phones at a time and would switch between them to gain access to El-Dier.
David Fernandez, assistant deputy for the Attorney General’s Office, said the detailed conversations between El-Dier and Lance about the daughter’s abuse were only the tip of the iceberg in comparison to the things El-Dier did to her own daughter.
“What has been provided today, your honor, is simply a snippet of the luminous conversation between the two. These were no fantasies; these were actions that were acted out in real time by El-Dier for the benefit of Jacob Lance,” Assistant Deputy Attorney General David Fernandez said during the hearing.
South-Carolina
HBCU to make history with flag atop South Carolina State House
For one day in January, a third flag will fly alongside the American and South Carolina flags atop the State House in Columbia. The honor will recognize South Carolina State University’s national football championship and mark a historic first for an HBCU in the state.
Gov. Henry McMaster approved a request to raise a flag bearing the Bulldogs’ logo above the Capitol dome, state officials said. As a result, South Carolina State will become the first HBCU to receive that recognition at the State House.
Officials will raise the flag on Jan. 19, Martin Luther King Jr. Day. Afterward, they will present it to the football team during the program’s championship victory parade in Orangeburg.
Championship Recognition
South Carolina State claimed the National HBCU Championship with a 40–38, four-overtime victory over Prairie View A&M in the Celebration Bowl on Dec. 13 in Atlanta. The win secured the Bulldogs’ second national title and capped their third appearance in the game in the past five seasons.
The flag-raising places South Carolina State’s championship into a wider historical frame. Moreover, it gives the Bulldogs’ victory a level of public recognition rarely afforded to HBCU athletic programs.
State officials said the presentation of the flag will serve as a lasting symbol of the championship achievement.
An HBCU First
Previously, South Carolina has flown university flags over the State House to honor championship teams. For example, officials raised the University of South Carolina women’s basketball flag last summer following its national title.
However, no HBCU has received that distinction until now.
By aligning the ceremony with Martin Luther King Jr. Day, state leaders added further significance to the moment. On Jan. 19, SCSU’s championship will take center stage on one of the state’s most visible civic platforms.
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