Subscribe to our daily newsletter for a refreshing cocktail (or mocktail) of LGBTQ+ entertainment and pop culture, served up with a side of eye-candy.The canines were wearing collars and were believed to be someone’s pets.
But rather than, say, locate the animals’ owners, Brown chose to fatally shoot one of them instead.Per local media outlet FITSNews:Unbeknownst to Byrd and Brown, their actions were recorded on two separate police cameras and sent to S.C.
eighth judicial circuit public defender Chelsea McNeill — who was notified of the incident by an unrelated witness.Following her 11-month investigation across multiple departments, McNeill concluded that Byrd and Brown had committed felonious animal cruelty for the unprovoked shooting of these canines.
Her argument? That a civilian would be arrested for doing the exact same thing under the exact same circumstance.According to his LinkedIn profile, Brown first started working for the Laurens County Sheriff’s Office in 2019.