South Carolina Law Enforcement Division

The South Carolina Law Enforcement Division (SLED) is a statewide investigative law enforcement agency in South Carolina. SLED provides manpower and technical assistance to other law enforcement agencies and conducts investigations on behalf of the state as directed by the Governor and Attorney General. SLED Headquarters is located in the state capital, Columbia, with offices in the Midlands, Piedmont, Pee Dee, and Low Country regions.[1]

History

SLED was created in 1935 by Act 232 of the South Carolina General Assembly.[2]

Mission

SLED has exclusive jurisdiction over a wide variety of law enforcement functions in South Carolina, including the operation of a statewide criminal justice information system, coordination of counter-terrorism efforts, and the investigation of arson and explosive devices.[3] SLED is also responsible for investigating child fatalities, crimes against vulnerable adults, and the interdiction of narcotics. The agency operates the state’s forensics laboratory and maintains specialized tactical response units. In addition, SLED regulates the sale and consumption of alcoholic beverages in the state. It also licenses security guards, private investigators and polygraph examiners. SLED also regulates Governor appointed and Commissioned State Constables.[4]

Organization

SLED is made up of civilian employees and law enforcement officers that have many different specialties and areas of expertise. The major bureaus within SLED include Criminal Justice Information Services, Investigative Services, Forensic Services, Counter-terrorism/Tactical Services, and Regulatory Services.[5]

SLED’s Criminal Justice Information Services (CJIS) is the hub of law enforcement information for the state. Databases of fingerprints, criminal records, sex offenders, and investigative matters are linked to other states through connections with the FBI’s National Crime Information Center.[6] SLED CJIS publishes Crime in South Carolina on an annual basis in order to provide crime statistics to the public and policy makers.[7] SLED CJIS also assists citizens who need background checks conducted for employment, adoption, and other reasons.

Agents assigned to Investigative Services work cases involving all types of offenses, including crimes of violence, computer crimes, vehicle theft, child fatalities, and crimes against vulnerable adults. SLED Agents also investigate officer-involved shootings, public corruption, insurance fraud, as well as narcotics and alcoholic beverage violations.[8]

SLED’s Forensic Laboratory processes and analyzes physical evidence in support of criminal investigations. Units within the lab specialize in DNA, toxicology, drug identification, latent fingerprints, questioned documents, firearms, and trace evidence. Agents assigned to the lab process crime scenes throughout the state to document and collect evidence.[9]

Counterterrorism and Tactical Services includes units that specialize in explosive devices, arson, and Special Weapons and Tactics (SWAT). SLED also maintains a kennel of tracking bloodhounds, helicopters, and a fleet of specialized response vehicles.[10]

Regulatory Services serves as a licensing bureau for security guards, private investigators, and citizens with concealed weapons permits. The Alcohol Licensing Unit works in conjunction with the S.C. Department of Revenue Alcohol Beverage Licensing Department in the processing of certain types of alcohol license applications for the state of South Carolina. SLED Regulatory also oversees Governor appointed State Constables per SC Statute 23-1-60 for training, policies and procedures and receives quarterly reports of their actions taken as law enforcement officers.[11]

Chiefs

The following Chiefs have served since 1935:[12]

J. Henry Jeanes, 1935-1941

G. R. Richardson, 1941-1942

S. J. Pratt, 1942-1943

A. Roy Ashley, 1943-1946

G. R. Richardson, 1946-1947

Joel D. Townsend, 1947-1949

Oren L. Brady, 1949-1956

J. P. Strom, 1957-1988

Robert Stewart, 1988-2007

Reginald Lloyd, 2008-2011

Mark Keel, 2011–present

See also

References

  1. "SLED website".
  2. South Carolina Legislative Manual 1944-1974; FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin, Volume 26, Number 11, November 1957, Article by Chief J. P. Strom.
  3. "SC Code of Laws Section 23-3-15".
  4. "SLED Accountability Report 2013" (PDF).
  5. "SLED Accountability Report 2013" (PDF).
  6. "SLED website CJIS".
  7. "SLED website SCIBRS".
  8. "SLED website Investigative Services".
  9. "SLED website Forensic Services".
  10. "SLED website Counter-Terrorism".
  11. "SLED website Regulatory".
  12. Wilkes, Buddy (July 14, 2015). "SLED History". SLED History. Buddy Wilkes. Retrieved August 28, 2015.
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