South-Carolina
ELECTION DAY: Polls now open across South Carolina
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CHARLESTON, S.C. (WCSC) – Voters across South Carolina will head to the polls Tuesday for municipal elections and some State House races.
Click here to download the free Live 5 News app so you can see election results as they come in.
Polls will open at 7 a.m. and will close at 7 p.m. Any voter who is in line at their polling place at 7 p.m. will be allowed to cast their ballot.
Election results will be tabulated here after polls close and numbers begin coming in.
State Senate District 42′s special election is one of the races being watched. Democrat and State Rep. Deon Tedder faces Republican nominee Rosa Kay for the seat formerly held by Marlon Kimpson. Kimpson left the state Senate to take a position on President Joe Biden’s Advisory Committee for Trade Policy and Negotiations.
Across the state, several mayoral races and county council races will be on the ballot.
Two of the most talked about mayoral races are for the cities of Charleston and North Charleston.
In Charleston, incumbent Mayor John Tecklenburg is seeking his third term. The field challenging Tecklenburg includes an attorney, a current city councilman, a former state representative, a community activist and a former aide to Rep. Jim Clyburn.
Businessman and former State Rep. William Cogswell, who represented House District 110 for six years; community organizer Mika Gadsden, attorney and Charleston School of Law visiting professor Debra Gammons, Clay Middleton, a former aide to Rep. Jim Clyburn; and Charleston City Councilman Peter Shahid, who has represented District 9 since 2016, are all vying to become the city’s next mayor.
Odd-numbered city council districts are also up for re-election Tuesday, as well as the Commissioner of Public Works District.
In North Charleston, a total of 10 candidates are fighting to succeed outgoing Mayor Keith Summey, who announced earlier this year that he would not seek election.
The candidates vying for Summey’s office include former North Charleston Police Chief Reggie Burgess, North Charleston Councilwoman Rhonda Jerome, retired FedEx Express operations manager Russ Coletti, retired Summary Court Judge Stephanie Ganaway-Pasley, College of Charleston Board of Governors member Curtis Merriweather Jr., former North Charleston City Councilman Todd Olds, Charleston County Councilman Teddie Pryor Sr., businessman John Singletary, Charleston County Board of Zoning Appeals Board member and nonprofit founder Jesse Williams and the Rev. Dr. Samuel Whatley, a college adjunct professor.
A total of 34 candidates are seeking to fill the 10 North Charleston city council seats.
In Moncks Corner, incumbent Mayor Michael Lockliear faces a challenge from Thomas Hamilton.
Three people are running in the James Island mayor’s race to succeed Bill Woolsey. Voters will have to decide between Brook Lyon, Gresham Meggett III and Josh Stokes.
Kingstree Mayor Darren Tisdale, who has been mayor since 2016, is hoping to keep his seat but faces a fight from challenger Latonya Davis.
Click here to see your sample ballot based on your home address.
Click here to find your polling place.
Voters will be asked to show one of the following Photo IDs:
- SC Driver’s License
- SC Department of Motor Vehicles ID Card includes SC Concealed Weapons Permit
- SC Voter Registration Card with Photo
- US Passport
- Federal Military ID includes all Department of Defense Photo IDs and the Department of Veterans Affairs Benefits Card
If you cannot get a Photo ID, bring your non-photo voter registration card with you when leaving to vote.
You may vote a provisional ballot after signing an affidavit stating you have a reasonable impediment to obtaining a Photo ID. A reasonable impediment is any valid reason, beyond your control, which created an obstacle to obtaining a Photo ID. This ballot will count unless someone proves to the county board of voter registration and elections that you are lying about your identity or having the listed impediment.
Copyright 2023 WCSC. All rights reserved.

South-Carolina
Planning your trip to Greenville, South Carolina
South-Carolina
Lawmakers seek investigation into South Carolina’s latest firing squad execution

COLUMBIA, S.C. — Two South Carolina legislators have requested an investigation into the state’s firing squad execution last month after lawyers for the inmate said his autopsy showed the shots nearly missed his heart and left him in extreme pain for up to a minute.
The Democratic and Republican representatives asked the governor, the prison system and leaders in the state House and Senate for an independent and comprehensive review of the April 11 execution of Mikal Mahdi.
They also want the firing squad removed from the methods of execution that an inmate can choose until an investigation is complete. Condemned prisoners in South Carolina can also choose lethal injection or the electric chair.
Reps. Justin Bamberg and Neal Collins wrote in their letter that the request doesn’t diminish the crimes Mahdi was convicted of, nor was it rooted in sympathy for the 42-year-old inmate. Mahdi was put to death for the 2004 shooting of an off-duty police officer during a robbery.
“This independent investigation is to preserve the integrity of South Carolina’s justice system and public confidence in our state’s administration of executions under the rule of law,” they wrote.
Bamberg, a Democrat, and Collins, a Republican, are deskmates in the South Carolina House.
Prison officials say the execution was conducted properly
Prison officials said they thought the execution was properly conducted. House and Senate leaders did not respond. Republican Gov. Henry McMaster said he sees no need to investigate.
“The governor has high confidence in the leadership of the Department of Corrections. He believes the sentence of death for Mr. Mahdi was properly and lawfully carried out,” spokesman Brandon Charochak wrote in an email.
Even without an investigation, what happened at Mahdi’s execution may get hashed out in court soon. A possible execution date for Stephen Stanko, who has two death sentences for murders in Horry County and Georgetown County, could be set as soon as Friday. He would have to decide two weeks later how he wants to die.
Mahdi had admitted he killed Orangeburg Public Safety officer James Myers in 2004, shooting him at least eight times before burning his body. Myers’ wife found him in the couple’s Calhoun County shed, which had been the backdrop to their wedding 15 months earlier.
Just one autopsy photo
The autopsy conducted after Mahdi’s execution raised several questions that the lawmakers repeated in their letter.
The only photo of Mahdi’s body taken at his autopsy showed just two distinct wounds in his torso. A pathologist who reviewed the results for Mahdi’s lawyers said that showed one of the three shots from the three prison employee volunteers on the firing squad missed.
The pathologist who conducted the autopsy concluded that two bullets entered the body in the same place after consulting with an unnamed prison official who said that had happened before in training. Prison officials said all three guns fired and no bullets or fragments were found in the death chamber.
“Both bullets traveling on the exact same trajectory both before and after hitting a target through the same exact entrance point is contrary to the law of physics,” Bamberg and Collins wrote.
Shots appeared to have hit low
In the state’s first firing squad execution of Brad Sigmon on March 7, three distinct wounds were found on his chest, and his heart was heavily damaged, according to his autopsy report.
The shots barely hit one of the four chambers of Mahdi’s heart and extensively damaged his liver and lungs. Where it likely takes someone 15 seconds to lose consciousness when the heart is directly hit, Mahdi likely was aware and in extreme pain for 30 seconds to a minute, said Dr. Jonathan Arden, the pathologist who reviewed the autopsy for the inmate’s lawyers.
Witnesses said Mahdi cried out as the shots were fired at his execution, groaned again some 45 seconds later and let out one last low moan just before he appeared to draw his final breath at 75 seconds.
Little documentation at the autopsy
Bamberg and Collins said Mahdi’s autopsy itself was problematic.
The official autopsy did not include X-rays to allow the results to be independently verified; only one photo was taken of Mahdi’s body, and no close-ups of the wounds; and his clothing was not examined to determine where the target was placed and how it aligned with the damage the bullets caused to his shirt and his body.
“I think it is really stretching the truth to say that Mikal Mahdi had an autopsy. I think most pathologists would say that he had ‘an external examination of the body,’” said Jonathan Groner, an expert in lethal injection and other capital punishments and a surgeon who teaches at Ohio State University.
Sigmon’s autopsy included X-rays, several photos and a cursory examination of his clothes
Prison officials have used the same company, Professional Pathology Services, for all its execution autopsies, Corrections Department spokeswoman Chrysti Shain said.
They provide no instructions or restrictions to the firm for any autopsy, she said.
The pathologist who conducted the autopsy refused to answer questions from The Associated Press.
Bamberg and Collins also want the state to allow at least one legislator to attend executions as witnesses.
State law is specific about who can be in the small witness room: prison staff, two representatives for the inmate, three relatives of the victim, a law enforcement officer, the prosecutor where the crime took place, and three members of the media.
South-Carolina
Suspect expected in court after allegedly killing Waxhaw woman in South Carolina
The man accused of killing a 22-year-old woman from Waxhaw is expected to face a judge later Tuesday.
We told you last week when Logan Federico was killed while she was staying the night with friends in Columbia.
Police say Alexander Dickey broke in, shot Federico in the chest, stole her wallet, and then went on a shopping spree.
PREVIOUS STORY >> ‘Angry’: Union County woman killed in South Carolina while visiting friends
Federico graduated from Marvin Ridge High School and worked at the Carolina Steel Sports Bar in Ballantyne. Her family is raising money for her funeral, and you can help at this link.
Dickey was caught and charged with murder and burglary.
>>Watch Channel 9 on Tuesday for updates on Dickey’s first appearance in court.
(VIDEO: Waxhaw dad beats Stage 3 colon cancer, urges vigilance on symptoms)
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