BEAUFORT — Former state Attorney General Charlie Condon
told a judge this week that the man defending himself against
charges he murdered two Beaufort County deputies used a “twisted,
perverted view” of Condon’s 2001 declaration of “open season” on
home invaders.
Condon testified as Abdiyyah ben Alkebulanyahh, 41, called 17
defense witnesses in the death penalty case that began Oct. 6.
He also called Beaufort County Sheriff P.J. Tanner, who told
jurors Alkebulanyahh ambushed his officers.
“When you speak of an ambush, are you alleging that someone
attacked your officers first?” Alkebulanyahh asked Tanner during
Thursday’s testimony.
“No,” Tanner responded, “when I speak of ambush, it’s
overwhelming amounts of evidence and witness accounts that suggest
that you were hiding in the closet and killed my two deputies.”
Cpl. Dyke “A.J.” Coursen and Lance Cpl. Dana Lyle Tate died
inside a Burton mobile home Jan. 8, 2002. Experts have testified
someone hid in a bedroom closet and ambushed the men.
“There were three people in the bedroom — you and my two officers
— and you were the only one who walked out,” Tanner said.
Alkebulanyahh, also known as Tyree Roberts, has called the
deputies “home invaders,” claiming they entered his home without
permission. He also says someone else shot the officers.
Condon and Tanner were among 17 witnesses Alkebulanyahh called
Thursday.
The former attorney general announced his policy in January 2001.
It was just days before Condon, now a U.S. Senate candidate,
announced he’d run for the GOP gubernatorial nomination and about
year before Tanner’s officers were killed.
“I am today declaring open season on home invaders. That season
is year-round,” Condon said at the time. He encouraged prosecutors
to give people the benefit of the doubt if they kill intruders.
An objection from prosecutor Randolph Murdaugh kept Alkebulanyahh
from asking about Condon’s “open season” policy in front of
jurors.
After the jury left the room, Condon said his rule would not
apply to deputies entering a home and doing their jobs. “It’s a
twisted, perverted view of citizens’ right to defend themselves
against criminal activity in their own home,” he said. “It’s not
even close.”
The deputies had responded to a domestic disturbance call at
Alkebulanyahhs’ home. They had to go inside when a woman reported
she was being held against her will, Condon said.