Horry County doesn't need to create an ordinance that limits where registered sex offenders can work because a new state law already includes some of those restrictions and bans them from working in ice cream trucks.
Horry leaders rethink ordinance that would ban sex offenders from working at kid-oriented businesses
Concerns about the enforceability of the policy prompted Horry County leaders to consider amending it or abandoning the ordinance altogether. Fifteenth Circuit Solicitor Jimmy Richardson has asked the S.C. Attorney General’s Office whether the ordinance is even constitutional.
While he was serving his final day of quarantine for COVID-19, City Administrator Adam Emrick offered words of caution to others.
Thousands of South Carolinians who have failed to pay fines or have missed their dates in magistrate and municipal courts may be able to avoid…
A Myrtle Beach area man who was injured during a shooting last month has been charged with pointing and presenting a firearm after police dete…