Portions of the Education Scholarship Trust Fund Act have been ruled to be in violation of the South Carolina Constitution, with a 3-2 ruling from the South Carolina Supreme Court declaring that public funds cannot be used for the benefit of private schools.
Public school students in South Carolina will soon no longer be allowed to use their cellphones from the morning tardy bell to the afternoon dismissal bell.
Georgetown County inmates struggling with addiction can now take advantage of an in-house three-week Christian recovery course, put on by a local non-profit.
The Supreme Court of South Carolina has denied the request of the man scheduled for the state’s first execution in 13 years for additional information on the drugs used for lethal injections.
The Orangeburg County man accused of sexually assaulting three teenagers in three counties and violating bond dozens of times to play golf and go to restaurants is set to be released from prison next month.
The South Carolina Supreme Court says the attorney representing the death row inmate scheduled to be executed later this month has until Friday to decide the method.
New details were revealed about the arrest of the University of South Carolina’s (USC) women’s basketball player Ashlyn Watkins in a incident report from campus police.
A Beaufort County man’s family received a settlement from a lawsuit that claimed the Beaufort County Sheriff’s Office did not show up to the right address when their loved one was having a heart attack.
As college students return to campuses across South Carolina, some of them are receiving extra scholarship money this year because of what they are studying.
Tropical Storm Debby and similar storms have serious long-term consequences for Lowcountry water quality and it’s a problem expected to only grow worse.
An inmate set to be executed in South Carolina in three weeks wants the state Supreme Court to delay the execution so his lawyers can argue his co-defendant who testified against him lied about having no plea deal in exchange for his testimony.
A new South Carolina law dubbed the “Help Not Harm Act,” which carries implications for gender-affirming care for adults and children has been hit with a federal lawsuit.
Next time you are floating on the Broad River, Saluda River or Congaree River, keep your eyes peeled for a rare black longnose gar. Experts say they are more common in the Midlands rivers than you might think.