Fugitive Safe Surrender
in the greater Columbia area took place in mid-July 2008, under the
leadership of Johnny Mack Brown, United States Marshal for the
District of South Carolina.
Over
the course of the four-day surrender period,
382 individuals with
outstanding warrants took the opportunity to surrender to law
enforcement and help pave the way for a more successful future. As
a result of an extensive media and public outreach campaign, dozens
of people attempted to take advantage of the program each day,
making the program yet another unqualified success.
Fugitive Safe Surrender – Columbia
was the tenth operation of its kind undertaken by the USMS, and it
was the first to include two jurisdictions – Lexington and Richland
Counties.
With an estimated
backlog of over 100,000 outstanding warrants in the greater Columbia
area, the Marshals Service was eager to bring this initiative to
South Carolina. For more than a year, Marshal Brown coordinated with
local civic and law enforcement leaders to lay the groundwork to
make Fugitive Safe Surrender Columbia a reality.
Marshals Service organizers were pleased with
Fugitive Safe
Surrender’s results in Columbia. At the conclusion
of the operation, Marshal Brown for the
District of South Carolina, said that “ because
of the success of Fugitive Safe Surrender in Columbia, there will be
382 fewer potentially violent confrontations on community streets.
It is difficult to quantify, but I am convinced that we saved at
least one person – whether an officer, a suspect or member of the
public – from a life-threatening situation. At the same time, many
people with outstanding warrants got fresh starts after taking
responsibility for their actions and victims were able to begin to
get closure. I believe the relationships between our law
enforcement, legal, and faith-based partners will pay dividends for
years to come."
The doors of Bible
Way Church of Atlas Road opened at 9:00 a.m. on Wednesday, July 9,
and for four straight days, individuals wanted for a variety of
offenses waited and eagerly anticipated their turn to take a first
step at a second chance. Assisted by local advertising and a
word-of-mouth campaign organized by Columbia-area churches, as well
as news items on television and in the print media, several dozen
individuals presented themselves each day for adjudication of their
outstanding warrants.
Pastor Darrell
Jackson, Sr., of Bible Way Church praised the success of the
program. “The whole reason we got involved is because it gives
people a second chance,” said Pastor Jackson. This is a sentiment
that has been a hallmark of the program. Individuals with
outstanding criminal warrants cannot become productive members of
society, since they cannot land a job, or even obtain a driver’s
license. As a creative re-entry program,
Fugitive Safe
Surrender assists in giving people a second chance at
a productive life, and the response in each city has been
overwhelmingly positive for those people who are helped.
Preliminary
results showed that 382
individuals surrendered over the program’s four days, and that
38 of those were wanted
for felony crimes. An unusually high number of
people ( i.e.,
101) who
appeared at the church found that they had no active warrants
against them, further illustrating the benefit of the program. In
all, warrants were
cleared, and 15
individuals were arrested, including one man who presented himself on
sexual offender charges. Accompanied by his relatives, this
individual knew he was going to jail, but felt safe in surrendering
to law enforcement in the friendly confines of the church.
In addition to
Pastor Jackson and the leadership of Bible Way Church, key partners
in
Fugitive Safe Surrender – Columbia included the South
Carolina State Law Enforcement Division, the Lexington County
Sheriff’s Department, the Richland County Sheriff’s Department, the South Carolina Department of Probation, Parole, and Pardon
Services, and LRADAC - The Behavioral Health Center of the Midlands. The South
Carolina Employment Security Commission and the South Carolina
Department of Motor Vehicles also were on site to offer job
counseling services and advice on how to renew driver’s licenses.
Frontline law
enforcement partners included the South Carolina Judicial
Department, the South Carolina Court Administration, the Richland
County Magistrates’ Office, the Lexington County Magistrates’
Office, the Lexington County Clerk’s Office, and the Richland County
Clerk’s Office. Legal team partners include the Fifth Circuit
(Richland County) Solicitor’s Office, the Richland County Public
Defender’s Office, the Eleventh Circuit (Lexington) Solicitor’s
Office, and the Lexington County Public Defender’s Office.