University of South Carolina fraternity bus crashes in Mississippi injuring 11

Eleven people were injured when a bus carrying University of South Carolina students blew a tire and hit a concrete barrier in Mississippi.

Mississippi state troopers said the driver and a student were critically injured and taken by helicopter to hospitals after the crash Friday, while nine other students were taken by ambulance.

The 56 passengers were members of the university’s chapter of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity and their guests, who were traveling to New Orleans for an event.

11 students were injured on a bus after its tire blew out and hit a concrete barrier, near Bay St. Louis, Miss., on April 5, 2024. AP

Troopers said the driver, 55-year-old Tina Wilson of Roebuck, South Carolina, was traveling west on Interstate 10 near Bay St. Louis when a tire blew and the bus hit a center concrete barrier.

Bay St. Louis Police Chief Toby Schwartz said the bus careened away from the collision on two wheels before Wilson wrestled it back down onto all four wheels.

Schwartz told the Sun Herald of Biloxi that Wilson “took every piece of strength in her body to hold that steering wheel long enough to get it back down on the road.”

The windshield blew out, and Wilson was ejected when the bus hit the ground. A student, Paul Clune, then ran up and grabbed the steering wheel, Schwartz said. Clune tried to keep control until the bus skidded to a stop after nearly half a mile, WLOX-TV reported.

“If that bus had flipped, we would have had casualties,” Schwartz said. “It’s the bus driver and student that saved those kids. The bus driver is an incredible hero.”

First responders tended to a passenger from a bus after it blew a tire and hit a concrete barrier on Interstate 10 near Bay St. Louis, Miss., on Friday. AP

The uninjured students were taken by school bus to another location and later were taken to New Orleans. The interstate was blocked for hours.

University of South Carolina spokesperson Collyn Taylor said Saturday that travel arrangements have been made for students who want to return to Columbia and the university will provide mental health and academic support for anyone affected by the accident.

Taylor said university officials were trying to determine how many people were still in the hospital.

Troopers are investigating the crash by the bus owned by Dixon Motor Xpress of Chester, South Carolina.

The 56 passengers were members of the university’s chapter of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity and their guests, who were traveling to New Orleans for an event. AP

Owner Todd Dixon told The State of Columbia on Saturday that the crash was a “freak thing” and that his company has had no other accidents since it was created in 2019.

The company has a satisfactory safety rating, according to the US Department of Transportation’s Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration. In the previous two years, the company had passed an inspection and reported no accidents.

“We’ve always had safe operations,” Dixon said.

“We keep everything in top shape and don’t cut any corners, especially because we know we’re in the business of transporting people.”

Dixon praised Wilson, saying “she has years of experience and instinctively she is a safe driver.”

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Trump poised to hand Haley a ‘smackdown’ in South Carolina primary: poll

Donald Trump is dominating in South Carolina, leading White House hopeful Nikki Haley in her home state primary by a substantial margin, according to internal polling conducted by the super PAC backing the former president.

“President Trump is set to deliver a South Carolina smackdown to Nikki Haley” reads the memo handed to some of the 77-year-old former president’s donors and supporters Friday by polling firm Fabrizio, Lee and Associates, and obtained by Axios

The memo includes a survey that shows Trump beating Haley by 39 points in the Palmetto State, where she was born and raised and served as governor for six years.

When asked to choose between Trump, Haley and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, 64% of South Carolina Republican voters favored Trump; 25% went for Haley; and only 8% backed DeSantis, according to the poll. 

“What’s worse for Haley,” the pollster notes, is that her supporters appear to be far more uncommitted than Trump’s backers. 


Haley speaks during a campaign event held at DoubleTree by Hilton Manchester on Jan. 19, 2024, in Manchester, New Hampshire. AP

Trump dances off stage at the end of a campaign rally at the Grappone Convention Center on January 19, 2024 in Concord, New Hampshire.
Trump dances off stage at the end of a campaign rally at the Grappone Convention Center on Jan. 19, 2024, in Concord, New Hampshire. Getty Images

A majority of Trump supporters, 58%, responded that they would “definitely” be voting for the former president in the South Carolina primary, whereas only 18% of Haley supporters said the same. 

Even with DeSantis out of the picture, Trump still trounces Haley, according to the poll, beating the former governor 68% to 28% in a head-to-head race. 

Trump further solidified his standing with South Carolinians and dealt a blow to Haley on Friday after receiving the endorsement of Sen. Tim Scott (R-SC) — his onetime rival on the 2024 campaign trail. 

Trump has already received endorsements from half of South Carolina’s GOP congressional delegation — Reps. Russell Fry, William Timmons and Joe Wilson – as well as from Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) and South Carolina Republican Gov. Henry McMaster. 

The South Carolina GOP primary will be held on Feb. 24. 

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Stephen Smith’s body exhumed in Murdaugh-linked homicide investigation

The body of Stephen Smith, a South Carolina teen whose unsolved 2015 murder has gained new traction thanks to the Alex Murdaugh case, was exhumed over the weekend, the family’s lawyer confirmed.

Smith’s body was removed from his grave, re-examined in a second autopsy and returned to his final resting place, attorney Eric Bland tweeted Sunday.

The 19-year-old was found dead, with head trauma, on the side of a road in Hampton County on July 8, 2015 in what investigators at the time ruled a hit-and-run.


Sandy Smith holds a photo of her late son, 19-year-old Stephen Smith in Hampton, S.C.
AP

Last month — nearly eight years later — the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division (SLED) reclassified his death as a homicide after investigators found “new evidence” about the teenager’s final moments in the course of their probe into the 2021 murders of Paul and Maggie Murdaugh.

“I now believe that Stephen can really rest at ease because SLED and our team are going to do everything possible to find out just how he died,” Bland said in his tweet.


Stephen Smith’s body was exhumed after his death was ruled a homicide.
Sandy Smith/GoFundMe

He also announced that the late teen’s mother Sandy Smith is offering a $35,000 reward for information leading to the arrest of the person or persons responsible for her son’s death.

The money was raised as part of a GoFundMe for the distraught mother.

Much of the more than $100,000 raised was used to fund the exhumation and private autopsy of Smith’s body.


More than $100,000 raised was used to fund the exhumation and private autopsy of Smith’s body.
Sandy Smith/GoFundMe

Smith’s mysterious death gained renewed attention after the closely watched trial of patriarch Alex Murdaugh for the shooting deaths of his son and wife on the family’s property.

Smith’s body was found laying in the street not far from the 1,700-acre estate and the teen was a high school classmate of Alex Murdaugh’s surviving son Buster.

Sandy Smith linked Buster — who was rumored to have had a romantic relationship with Smith, who was gay — to her son’s murder in a letter she sent to federal investigators in 2016.

She also said local law enforcement botched the investigation.

Buster has denied the “vicious rumors” that he was involved in Smith’s death.

Investigators are reportedly eyeing two other men, who were also teens in 2015, as potential suspects.

“Stephen for many, many years I can only imagine was not so much at peace in his grave,” Bland said in a video posted on Twitter. “He probably was pounding on his coffin to anybody who could hear ‘I was not hit by a car but I was intentionally killed.’ And now we’ve told him we hear his voice.”

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South Carolina store allows teenage shoplifters to work instead of pressing charges

Two South Carolina teenagers stole from a store at a mall in Greenville, but the business elected to turn the incident into a learning opportunity and a chance to give back to the community instead of pressing charges against the shoplifters.

The teenage boys were caught by Greenville Police on surveillance video on March 13 stealing from Palmetto Moon in Haywood Mall.

But Palmetto Moon president Amber Dube said that when the clothing store learned the shoplifters were teenagers, they wanted to work with the families on resolving the issue without pressing charges.

As a result, the boys will work for Palmetto Moon.

“I think this is a situation where teenagers do stupid things, and we know that,” Dube told FOX Carolina. “So I think it’s important for us to think about what they did and really judge on the merits of who they are and what they can contribute back to the community.”

Dube said the teenagers’ parents were heavily involved in finding a solution to the shoplifting incident and that the boys went back to the store to return the stolen items, apologize and pay for the items.


Palmetto Moon president Amber Dube said they wanted to work with the families on resolving the issue without pressing charges.
Fox Carolina: YouTube

“These kids are smart kids, they’re athletes, they have a strong future,” she said. “So we wanted to make sure that they learned a lesson, and they were held accountable for their actions, and felt that this was the best way for them to learn their lesson and also to give back to the community.”

The teenagers will work in the back of Palmetto Moon to learn what the workers do to prepare the store for customers.


The boys will donate the wages they receive to the Greenville Police Department and will also do volunteer work for the agency.
Fox Carolina: YouTube

The boys will donate the wages they receive to the Greenville Police Department and will also do volunteer work for the agency.

“I’m hoping really that this is a message of community, of giving back, of partnership in a parent’s involvement,” Dube said. “I’m hoping that this message is really resonating with the community to say, we’re all in this together, and we can make our communities much better and more positive.”

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Alex Murdaugh and family linked to 3 more mysterious deaths

Convicted murderer Alex Murdaugh started his life in prison for killing his wife and son on Friday, but mystery and scandal continues to swirl around the remains of his family, a prominent legal dynasty who had a lot of influence in the area.

Less than 24 hours after he was convicted on two counts of murder, Murdaugh, 54, appeared for sentencing at Colleton County Courthouse in South Carolina on Friday, cuffed and wearing a dark khaki prison jumpsuit – a stark image of how far he had fallen from his high-flying life.

“Everyone knows [the Murdaughs], and in addition to that, they had a lot of influence here,” former friend John Wright said of the family, which had reigned over the Low Country’s legal system for over a century.

“I thought the jury might be more reticent or fearful about convicting [Alex].”

Although Murdaugh insisted before the sentencing he would “never” hurt his family, he was nonetheless handed two consecutive life terms for gunning down Maggie, 52, and Paul, 22, at the family’s estate on June 7, 2021.


Alex Murdaugh was convicted of killing his wife and son on Thursday.
AP

The conclusion of Murdaugh’s trial, however, still leaves several questions about three other suspicious deaths linked to the disgraced scion and his relatives– as well as the moneyed family’s own future.

Stephen Smith

Stephen Smith, 19, was found dead in the early hours of July 8, 2015 on Sandy Run Road outside Hampton County, not far from the 1,700-acre Moselle estate where Maggie and Paul and Maggie and Paul were later gunned down.


Stephen Smith, right, was found dead on July 8, 2015.
Couresty of Family

The nursing student was supposedly walking home from a night class at Orangeburg-Calhoun Technical College after his car ran out of gas on Highway 601, Bluffton Today reported.

Smith’s death certificate listed his cause of death as blunt force trauma, and his arm had also been dislocated and bent behind his body. Police initially attributed the injuries to a hit-and-run accident involving the side-view mirror of a semi truck, the local paper said.

The teen’s family, however, never accepted the accident explanation. According to ABC4, interviews with witnesses unearthed unfounded rumors of a relationship between Smith, who was openly gay, and Alex Murdaugh’s oldest son, Buster.


Smith’s mother, Sandy, wants justice for her son.
Dana Kennedy / New York Post

Some of the witnesses also speculated Buster, who testified in his father’s defense last month, could have been involved in Smith’s death, although no link has ever been publicly disclosed by law enforcement. 

In June 2021, the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division (SLED) reopened a probe into Smith’s death based on information gleaned during the initial inquiry into the shooting deaths of Maggie and Paul earlier that month.

Speaking after Murdaugh’s conviction, Stephen’s mother Sandy told The Post: “That jury done excellent. They seen through the lies and a Murdaugh is finally brought down.

“Now that this case is back over they can get on Stephen’s case full time.”

As of March 2023, the investigation into Smith’s death remains ongoing.


Witnesses speculated that Buster Murdaugh may have been involved in Smith’s death.
Couresty of Family

Gloria Satterfield

The Murdaughs’ longtime housekeeper, Gloria Satterfield spent three weeks in a coma following an alleged “trip and fall” incident at the family’s home. She died at the hospital on Feb. 8, 2018.


Gloria Satterfield died on Feb. 8, 2018.

Alex Murdaugh claimed the family dogs caused Satterfield, 57, to trip, but her death was not reported to the coroner and an autopsy was not initially performed.

SLED opened a criminal investigation into Satterfield’s death in Sept. 2021, shortly after police busted Murdaugh’s bizarre plot to be fatally shot by his drug dealer in order to secure a $10 million life insurance payout for Buster.

On the same day SLED announced the new probe, Satterfield’s two sons filed a lawsuit claiming that Murdaugh never forked over the liability insurance money he promised after their mother’s death.

The grieving family recovered $4.3 million in stolen funds in October 2021. Satterfield’s son, Michael, later testified against Murdaugh at his trial.

In June 2022, SLED announced plans to exhume Satterfield’s body.


Michael Tony Satterfield testified against Alex Murdaugh.
AP

Mallory Beach

At the time of his murder, Paul Murdaugh was facing three felony charges – two of boating under the influence and one of causing death and bodily injury – for the river-based accident which killed Mallory Beach.

According to official reports and accounts from surviving passengers, Paul drunkenly drove his power boat into a piling of the Archers Creek Bridge around 2:20 a.m. on Feb. 23, 2019. 


Mallory Beach was killed in a boating accident in Feb. 2019.
facebook

Beach, 19, was ejected from the boat into dark water. Her body was found one week later.

Paul was later found to have a blood-alcohol content three times the legal limit, CBS reported. Alex Murdaugh, who met his son and the other survivors at the hospital, was allegedly overheard at one point saying “[Mallory’s] gone. Don’t worry.”

By the time Maggie and Paul were killed in June 2021, the family was also facing a wrongful death suit filed by Beach’s family.

In bodycam footage from the scene of the Murdaugh killings, a strangely composed Alex Murdaugh can even be heard telling the responding officers he felt Maggie and Paul’s murder was linked to the fatal crash.


Paul Murdaugh faced three felony charges for the drunken accident.
SOUTH CAROLINA LAW ENFORCEMENT DIVISION

Almost two years later, Murdaugh repeated this theory on the stand.

“I did then believe [they were killed] because of the boat wreck and I do now,” he told prosecutor Creighton Waters last month.

An uncertain future

Now that Alex Murdaugh will officially spend the rest of his life behind bars, it remains to be seen what will happen to the remaining Murdaugh relatives as they try to return to life in the Low Country area they once ruled.


Investigators found ample evidence of underage drinking on the boat after the crash.
SOUTH CAROLINA LAW ENFORCEMENT DIVISION

Murdaugh’s surviving son, Buster, faces an especially lonely road after losing all of his immediate family members within two years.

“Buster held up pretty well until the cameras were off him — but then he collapsed,” a source told The Post of the 26-year-old’s reaction to the guilty verdict.

“He was crying uncontrollably. The uncles [Alex’s brothers, John Marvin Murdaugh and Randy Murdaugh] finally got him into a car.”

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Shirt Alex Murdaugh wore night his wife and son were murdered ‘destroyed’: defense

South Carolina officials destroyed the T-shirt Alex Murdaugh wore the night his wife and son were gunned down — making it impossible to challenge claims that it links him to the murders, according to his attorneys.

The disgraced 54-year-old legal scion’s legal team claimed in a 96-page filing Wednesday that contradictory claims about the shirt are at the heart of a “campaign of selective and deceptive leaks to convince the public that Murdaugh is guilty before he is tried.”

Prosecutors hired an unqualified expert, ex-cop Tom Bevel, “to opine that the white cotton T-shirt Mr. Murdaugh wore the night Maggie and Paul were murdered is stained with high-velocity blood spatter, most likely resulting from shooting Paul,” the filing states.

But Bevel’s first report “emphatically said the shirt contained no stains consistent with back spatter resulting from a gunshot,” attorneys Dick Harpootlian and Jim Griffin wrote.

The T-shirt Alex Murdaugh wore the night his wife and son were murdered has been “destroyed,” his lawyers said.
via REUTERS

“Yet for some reason, without any additional evidence he changed his opinion entirely after an in-person visit from lead [South Carolina Law Enforcement Division] SLED investigator David Owen,” they wrote.

After that, Bevel suddenly claimed “that the shirt has over 100 stains consistent with back spatter from a gunshot,” the filing said.

Murdaugh’s attorneys asked earlier this month to get the shirt for further testing at “an outside laboratory” — just to be told 13 days later that it was “destroyed,” the filing said.

Photos of the T-shirt showed it now almost completely blue, with sections also cut out.

“SLED elected to conduct its tests in a manner that would prevent anyone else from conducting subsequent tests,” they insisted — which “may well have happened in bad faith, but it could also be mere gross negligence.”

Either way, “neither the defense nor Mr. Bevel have been able to perform any tests on the shirt because the State destroyed it.”

Murdaugh’s lawyers say the shirt is at the heart of a “campaign of selective and deceptive leaks to convince the public that Murdaugh is guilty before he is tried.”
TNS

Murdaugh’s legal team also noted that the disgraced lawyer had been the one to find his wife and son murdered near a dog kennel outside one of their homes on June 7 last year.

“The murder scene was gruesome; there was a large amount of blood on and around their bodies which transferred onto Mr. Murdaugh’s hands and clothing when he frantically checked them for signs of life,” they wrote of the high likelihood he would have blood or DNA on him.

“But the State needs blood spatter evidence because it is exceedingly difficult to explain how Mr. Murdaugh could have murdered Paul with multiple 12-gauge shotgun blasts at pointblank range in a small closet without getting at least some blood spattered on his shirt.

“After all, blood was spattered all over the closet door, walls and ceiling. So instead of accepting an honest exculpatory report, the State changed it to a false inculpatory report,” the filing said.

SLED Chief Mark Keel told The Post and Courier that his force was “reviewing the motion and will respond at the appropriate time.”

“The murder seen was gruesome,” the filing said of the night in June last year when Alex’s wife and son were found murdered outside one of their homes.
AP

South Carolina Attorney General’s Office spokesman Robert Kittle told the outlet that prosecutors would respond in a court filing next week.

Murdaugh — a fourth-generation lawyer from a powerful Southern legal family — has pleaded not guilty to the slayings. His trial is set to start on Jan. 23.

As well as the double murders, he faces nearly 100 other charges ranging from money laundering to drug offenses to stealing from clients and trying to arrange his own death to get his surviving son a $10 million life insurance benefit.

Focus on the case quickly led to his shocking downfall, with him admitting to years-long drug addiction and stealing from his family law firm.

On Tuesday, a banker charged with helping Murdaugh take money from the legal settlements of clients was found guilty of wire and bank fraud charges in South Carolina.

Former Palmetto State Bank CEO Russell Laffitte was allowed to remain free on bail as he awaits sentencing at a later date. Each of the six charges he was convicted of in federal court carry a maximum sentence of up to 30 years in prison.

“None of this would have happened without Alex Murdaugh,” prosecutor Emily Limehouse had said in her closing statement.

SLED Chief Mark Keel told The Post and Courier that his force was “reviewing the motion and will respond at the appropriate time.”

South Carolina Attorney General’s Office spokesman Robert Kittle told the outlet that prosecutors would respond in a court filing next week.

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Snapchat co-founder Reggie Brown accused of running amok in swanky gated community

The one-time tech visionary who invented Snapchat’s disappearing-photos feature vanished from the public eye after a nasty legal battle with his co-founders — and has since been accused of running amok in a swanky gated community, The Post has learned.

Reggie Brown, who co-founded Snapchat with Evan Spiegel and Bobby Murphy while the trio were hard-partying undergraduates at Stanford University, was pushed out of the company a decade ago. While Spiegel and Murphy became billionaires when Snap Inc. went public, Brown largely dropped off the map after winning a $157.5 million cash settlement from Snapchat in 2014 — when he was just 24 years old.

Now, a series of police reports, exclusively obtained by The Post through the Freedom of Information Act, shed light on the rejected inventor’s allegedly troubled life since he was ousted from Snapchat — despite his key role in creating the wildly popular social network — and returned to his native South Carolina.

The documents include allegations that Brown “swatted” a police officer after recklessly driving a Bentley luxury sedan during a reported music video shoot. He later became locked in an increasingly bizarre feud with his elderly next-door neighbors, who accused Brown of damaging their lawn with his car, using his large dog to intimidate them and even grabbing his crotch in front of their grandchildren, according to Columbia Police Department reports.

Brown had a series of run-ins with Columbia, SC police, records show.
AP

The Snapchat co-founder’s alleged behavior sparked outrage among residents of his close-knit neighborhood in Columbia. When police officers prepared to arrest Brown, they found out that he had left the state.

Brown and his family could not be reached directly for comment. Two attorneys who represented him in his litigation against Snapchat — James Lee and K. Luan Tran — did not respond to repeated requests for comment. A third attorney who previously worked for Brown, Ray Mandlekar, declined to comment.

Brown reportedly crashed a black Rolls Royce SUV into his subdivision’s security gate.
Google Maps

‘Filming a music video’

Brown’s first documented run-in with South Carolina cops was in December 2020 in the Kings Grant gated community, where he had lived since at least 2018 when he paid $890,000 for a five-bedroom, 6,900-square-foot mansion, according to property records.

On Dec. 10, a Kings Grant security guard told local cops that day that Brown had crashed a black Rolls Royce SUV into the subdivision’s security gate, according to police records. Police responded but left the scene without speaking to Brown.

The following day, police responded again after a neighbor complained about Brown allegedly recklessly driving another car — this time a four-door Bentley sedan. The neighbor also griped that Brown and his friends were “filming a music video” at the community center, which features a pool, playground and clubhouse.

Brown held a raucous music video shoot at the Kings Grant community center, according to police records.
Facebook/King’s Grant on the Ash

When an officer arrived, Brown was sitting in his Bentley outside the clubhouse and refused to roll down the window, according to the police report.

“I observed Mr. Brown to have a glassed over look upon his face and to have dilated pupils,” the officer wrote.

A man who was participating in the shoot then approached the police officer and explained that Brown had invited him there to film a music video, according to the police report. As the cop was speaking with the man, the Snapchat co-founder’s mother arrived, according to the report.

A section of the Columbia Police Department report on Brown’s alleged music video shoot.

Brown then stepped out of his Bentley and “aggressively lunged” at the neighbor who had originally called the police, according to the report. When the police officer tried to separate the pair, Brown allegedly “swatted” the cop’s arm away, leading the cop to put him in handcuffs.

Brown’s father and more neighbors then showed up, the police wrote, adding that “the scene quickly escalated and the [responding officer] requested additional units to maintain control.”

The officer then asked Brown to perform a field sobriety test. Brown agreed, according to the report, and passed the test. The police officer took off his handcuffs and released him. It would be nearly a year before his next run-in with the law.

Brown (left), with fellow Snapchat co-founders Bobby Murphy (center) and Evan Spiegel (right).
LA County Superior Court

‘A million-dollar idea’

Brown’s Snapchat story began in 2011, when he was smoking marijuana with his Stanford University fraternity brothers, according to the book “How to Turn Down a Billion Dollars,” by Billy Gallagher.

Brown, then a junior in college, mused that a disappearing images app would make sexting with girls easier — then rushed down the hall to see his friend Evan Spiegel, with whom he often threw Red Bull and vodka-fueled parties, according to the book.

“That’s a million-dollar idea!” Spiegel responded.

Brown and Spiegel then brought in Bobby Murphy, who wrote the code for a basic version of the app. In the summer of 2011, the trio moved into Spiegel’s father’s house in Los Angeles to work on the app.

But Brown’s relentless partying reportedly alienated Spiegel and Murphy, who were concerned he was more focused on going out than working, according to the book.

Following a series of arguments, Spiegel and Murphy locked Brown out of the startup’s accounts just months after Snapchat had launched.

While Snapchat soared in popularity, Brown sued Spiegel and Murphy in 2013, claiming that he rightfully owned 20% of the company. Spiegel’s response was brutal.

Evan Spiegel and Bobby Murphy ousted Reggie Brown from Snapchat in 2011, leading to a costly legal battle.
AFP/Getty Images

“I regret inviting him into my house,” Spiegel said of Brown during his deposition in the suit, which was leaked to Business Insider. “I regret spending that time with him at my house. I regret giving him so many chances. He exploited my attempts at generosity . . . the generosity was giving Reggie an opportunity to work on something like this.”

Still, Spiegel conceded, “Reggie may deserve something for some of his contributions.”

At the same time Brown was fighting Spiegel and Murphy in court, he completed a 10-month master’s degree program in management studies at Duke University’s Fuqua School of Business and graduated in May 2014, according to Gallagher’s book. He reportedly did not tell his classmates about his time at the company.

In September of 2014, Snapchat finally agreed to pay Brown $157.5 million in a cash settlement that included a gag order banning him from ever speaking publicly about the company.

Snapchat also released a statement that month acknowledging that Brown “originally came up with the idea of creating an application for sending disappearing picture messages” — but it buried the news from the tech press by publishing the release immediately before Apple’s iPhone 6 and Apple Watch launch event.

Brown’s former home in Kings Grant, where he allegedly engaged in a bizarre feud with his neighbors.
MLS

‘Mocking grandchildren’

Last November — nearly a year after Brown’s confrontation with neighbors and cops during the music video incident — a police officer knocked on the door of his mansion. Brown refused to let the officer inside, but cracked the door open a few inches to talk, according to a police report. It was two days after Thanksgiving.

The officer was there to confront Brown about what his neighbors said was an escalating harassment campaign they claimed he had waged against them.

Brown, the neighbors claimed, had damaged his neighbors’ lawn by driving his vehicle through it. He was also accused of shining his vehicle’s headlights into their bedroom windows and setting off his car alarm in the middle of the night to aggravate them, according to the police report.

In addition, neighbors accused Brown of walking up and down the street in front of his neighbor’s house while “making remarks to his family,” “mocking his grandchildren” and “making hand gestures,” the police report said.

Brown denied driving his vehicle in his neighbor’s lawn, entering their property or interacting or speaking with anyone while walking in front of their property, according to the report. He allegedly responded by claiming to the police officer that the neighbor had stolen half an acre of land from him and killed his palm trees.

“Mr. Brown stated [that the neighbor] has been pouring gasoline and oil down palm trees on his side of the property line which has turned them pink and killed them,” the report reads. “He stated [he] had video footage on his phone of the incident but told me he was not going to show me.” 

Brown reportedly added that his neighbor’s actions could be considered domestic terrorism and said he was considering calling the FBI. He said he was considering having his neighbor hauled away to Alvin S. Glenn Detention Center, a prison on the outskirts of Columbia, the police report says. 

The police officer told Brown that his neighbors had asked him to stop contacting them, then left, according to the report.

Brown accused his neighbors of stealing his property and killing his palm trees, according to a police report.
MLS

Arrest warrant

Shortly after the police officer left Brown’s residence, Brown’s neighbor called again to report a civil disturbance. The neighbor told police that — minutes after the first police officer had left — Brown walked onto his property and “began using profanity and antagonizing him.”

Brown then allegedly walked back to the border between their two yards, where he continued yelling “derogatory terms” at his neighbor and his grandchildren.

“Brown then grabbed his crotch toward him and his grandchildren,” the police report reads.

The neighbor also detailed more previous alleged incidents involving Brown. He said that Brown intimidated him with a Belgian Malinois dog that he had trained to respond to German commands, according to the report.

“Mr. Brown will command the dog to bark at him, and aggressively charge at him,” the neighbor told police.

Brown’s neighbors claimed that he intimidated them with a Belgian Malinois dog that he had trained to respond to German commands, according to police records.
Getty Images/iStockphoto

The neighbor also described a past incident in which Brown allegedly interrupted a dinner party. The neighbor and his family were entertaining guests on their front porch when Brown drove into his driveway, got out of his vehicle and “started making derogatory comments to his family and guest,” forcing everyone to go inside, according to the report. 

“He and his family are afraid for their wellbeing due to the fact that Mr. Brown’s behavior had gotten more aggressive over time,” the police report reads. 

When the police officer arrived at Brown’s house in response to the call, the officer said he saw Snapchat co-founder yelling at the neighbor from the back window of his house. The officer tried to speak with Brown, but he reportedly refused to come to the door. 

Four days after the last dust-up, seven police officers showed up at Brown’s house and knocked on his door. They were carrying an arrest warrant for his arrest on a charge of first degree harassment.

A section of a police report about Brown allegedly harassing his neighbors.

No one answered the door, so the officers reportedly went to Brown’s parents’ house nearby. Brown’s brother answered the door and allegedly said that Brown had left South Carolina for another state.

According to the police report, Brown’s father then reportedly arrived and explained that Brown had just been dropped off at an out-of-state mental health rehabilitation center. The center charges $58,000 for a minimum 20-day stay.

The neighbors appear to have since dropped the charges against Brown. They did not respond to multiple requests for comment for this story.

Snapchat’s 2017 initial public offering made Evan Spiegel and Bobby Murphy multi-billionaires in their twenties.
REUTERS

‘Vanished’

When Snapchat went public in 2017, the Los Angeles Times noted that the company’s mysterious third founder had “vanished from public life.”

The IPO made both both Spiegel and Murphy multi-billionaires in their twenties. If Brown had settled his lawsuit in exchange for Snapchat shares instead of cash, he too could have become a billionaire.

Even with Snapchat shares down 80% so far this year, a 20% stake in the company would be worth more than $3 billion.

In August of this year, Spiegel and his supermodel wife Miranda Kerr paid $145 million for an estate across the street from the Playboy mansion, Dirt.com reported in August. Combined with a $30 million villa Spiegel and Kerr maintain in Paris, the value of the Snapchat CEO’s real estate holdings is higher than the entire cash settlement received by Brown.

Meanwhile, the other Snapchat co-founder, Bobby Murphy, reportedly owns at least nine multimillion-dollar properties in Los Angeles worth a collective $60 million.

Murphy and Spiegel are both worth more than $2 billion each, according to Forbes.

A little over a month after Brown allegedly went to rehab, he sold his house on Jan. 11, 2022 for $1.04 million, property records show. It’s unclear where he currently lives. 

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5 killed in shooting inside South Carolina home

Five people were killed in a shooting inside a South Carolina home over the weekend, local authorities said.

Police discovered the bodies of four people who were fatally shot inside a home on Bobo Drive in the town of Inman around 7:45 p.m. Sunday, the Spartanburg County Sheriff’s Office said.

A lone survivor was rushed to Spartanburg Regional Medical Center, where they died in surgery, according to local CBS News affiliate WSPA.

Two of the victims, 37-year-old Thomas Ellis Anderson and 32-year-old Adam Daniel Morley, lived in the home, the outlet reported, citing the county coroner.

None of the victims, who were found in different areas of the house, were related. All were adults.

Some of the victims had multiple gunshot wounds, the coroner said.

“The sheriff’s office, my office, nobody’s going to let up — not even the prosecutor’s office is not going to let up on this,” Spartanburg County Coroner Rusty Clevenger said of the quintuple shooting. “They’re all hands on deck. Everybody is really working hard on this.”

The identities of the three other victims have not been released.

The victims were found in different areas within the home and some had multiple gunshot wounds.
FOX Carolina

It’s unclear how long the victims had been dead inside the home before they were discovered.

A neighbor told the local FOX station that she heard gunshots on Saturday, a day before the bodies were found.

“You don’t think nothing of it because you’re living in the country,” Sue Gonzalez told FOX Carolina. “But it’s scary.”

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