Standoff in Abbeville Over,
Suspect in Custody |
Courtesy: The Greenville
News
ABBEVILLE — Scores of law officers unleashed a barrage
of gunfire and gas Monday night at a house in an effort to overwhelm
two men after a deputy was taken hostage and a constable was fatally
shot in the front yard earlier in the day. Before midnight, two men
inside the house had surrendered and were taken into custody, one of
them wounded, authorities said.
Deputy Daniel Wilson was
found dead inside the house, which authorities were searching for
weapons and booby traps.
Donnie M. Ouzts, 63, who apparently
had rushed to try to aid the deputy as the standoff began about 9
a.m., was shot to death about 25 yards from the front door of the
residence, Abbeville County Coroner Ronnie Ashley said.
Abbeville County Sheriff Charles Goodwin said they had had
no contact with Wilson since the beginning of the incident, which
authorities said involved a dispute between the resident of the
house and the highway department over a strip of land needed to
widen the road.
Officers rushed the house about 8:30 p.m. A
flash appeared in the front yard, flashlight beams waved in the
smoke. The sound of rapid gunfire tore through the air.
Steve Bixby, in 30s, surrendered a short while later,
authorities said.
Arthur Bixby, in his 70s, who was wounded,
surrendered later after additional exchanges of gunfire, authorities
said. He was being taken to a hospital.
No other injuries
were reported, according to authorities, who said they faced
semi-automatic, high-powered gunfire from inside the house.
Authorities said they also went to a nearby apartment
complex, where relatives had threatened to open fire. Authorities
said they took a relative into custody.
They said they
seized anti-government literature.
The siege at the house
occurred in a neighborhood of houses and businesses near the
intersection of State 72 and Union Church Road, about 40 miles south
of Greenville.
Officers standing next to patrol cars with
blue lights flashing kept the public about 300 yards away. More than
half a mile of State 72 was blocked off. The high-traffic road
connects Abbeville to the Georgia state line.
Ouzts' body
was recovered after a state trooper used his patrol cruiser as a
shield to block any gunfire that might come from the house, said Sid
Gaulden, spokesman for the state Department of Public Safety.
Lance Cpl. Steve Sluder said when he arrived at the scene he
could see the constable lying on the ground.
"I pretty much
made a mad dash and grabbed him," he said.
Deputies tried to
contact the gunmen by phone, but no one answered, Goodwin said.
About 4 p.m., a deputy tried with a megaphone.
"We don't
want anybody else to get hurt," the deputy said. "If you're alive,
come to the door."
The State Law Enforcement Division's SWAT
Team was requested shortly after 10 a.m., said SLED spokeswoman
Kathryn Richardson called "an active situation."
An
estimated 200 officers from the Abbeville Police Department, the
Abbeville County Sheriff's Office, the Greenwood County Sheriff's
Office, SLED, the South Carolina Highway Patrol and the state
Department of Natural Resources Division responded.
SLED
brought in at least two robots, along with an armored vehicle.
Helicopters from several law enforcement agencies whirled
overhead.
An autopsy was scheduled on Ouzts at Anderson
Regional Medical Center to determine the exact cause of his death,
Ashley said. Ouzts worked as a constable for Abbeville County
Magistrate Tommy Ferguson.
Magistrate's constables are
appointed by local magistrates to serve civil court papers. They
have the same authority as a sheriff's deputy. |
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