Guide to South Carolina Criminal Law and Procedure

Guide to South Carolina Criminal Law and Procedure
Author: Patricia S. Watson
Publisher:
Total Pages: 440
Release: 1997
Genre: Law
ISBN:

A user-friendly introduction to the Palmetto State's criminal justice system A handy reference for students, police officers, and concerned citizens, the Guide to South Carolina Criminal Law and Procedure, Fifth Edition, offers a comprehensive overview of the state's criminal justice system, including legislative changes enacted during the 1995-96 session. Patricia Seets Watson and William Shepard McAninch identify the functions of the police, prosecution, defense, and the Department of Corrections; define the jurisdiction and sentencing options of various courts; and discuss the procedures involved in processing a case from start to finish.

Constitution of the State of South Carolina

Constitution of the State of South Carolina
Author: State of South Carolina
Publisher: DigiCat
Total Pages: 98
Release: 2022-08-10
Genre: Fiction
ISBN:

This is the full text of the most recent constitution of the State of South Carolina, adopted in 1895. Previously there had been 6 earlier constitutions, starting in 1669. This first constitution was never fully ratified and the state has seen, as mentioned, successive constitutions come and go.

The Police Control of the Slave in South Carolina

The Police Control of the Slave in South Carolina
Author: Howell Meadors Henry
Publisher:
Total Pages: 180
Release: 2021-03-17
Genre:
ISBN: 9781678057657

"Henry offered important insights into the workings of South Carolina's slave patrol system." - An Old Creed for the New South (2008) "An excellent analysis of slave control...one of the few early historians of slavery to examine...why the various slave laws were passed." - Slavery, Race and American History (2015) "An analysis of the slave patrol and the elaborate police systems organized to police the behavior of African-Americans during slavery." - Black Police in America (1996) "As H.M. Henry described it, 'the plantation was a sort of governmental unit as to the police control of the slave, and to its head, the slaveowner, was given a large measure of sovereign management.'" - Our Enemies in Blue: Police and Power in America (2015) What kept thousands slaves from escaping to freedom every time an overseer turned his back, fell asleep, or was out-numbered? In 1914, Howell Meadors Henry (1879-1956), later to become Emory Dean and Professor of History, published a study of the slave patrol system entitled, "The Police Control of the Slave in South Carolina." In introducing his work, Henry writes: "Professor Frederick W. Moore suggested to me as a topic for investigation, the police control of the negro in the period of 1861-1865 and following years. It was his suggestion that by using several states as illustrations I should show to what extent the Southern people sought to perpetuate not slavery, but the same method of controlling the emancipated negro which was in force under the slavery regime...."