(A) It is the intent of the General Assembly to enhance the grand jury system and to improve the ability of the State to detect and eliminate criminal activity. The General Assembly recognizes the great importance of having the federal authorities available for certain investigations. The General Assembly finds that crimes involving narcotics, dangerous drugs, or controlled substances, trafficking in persons, as well as crimes involving obscenity, often transpire or have significance in more than one county of this State. When this occurs, these crimes are most effectively detected and investigated by a grand jury system with the authority to cross county lines.
(B) The General Assembly finds that there is a critical need to enhance the grand jury system to improve the ability of the State to prevent, detect, investigate, and prosecute crimes involving criminal gang activity or a pattern of criminal gang activity pursuant to the provisions of Article 3 of Chapter 8, Title 16. Crimes involving criminal gang activity or a pattern of criminal gang activity transpire at times in a single county, but often transpire or have significance in more than one county of this State. The General Assembly believes criminal gang activity poses an immediate, serious, and unacceptable threat to the citizens of the State and therefore warrants the state grand jury possessing considerably broader investigative authority.
(C) The General Assembly finds that there is a need to enhance the grand jury system to improve the ability of the State to detect and eliminate public corruption. Crimes involving public corruption transpire at times in a single county, but often transpire or have significance in more than one county of this State. The General Assembly believes that a state grand jury, possessing considerably broader investigative authority than individual county grand juries, should be available to investigate public corruption offenses in South Carolina.
(D) The General Assembly finds it fundamentally necessary to improve the ability of the State to prevent, detect, investigate, and prosecute crimes that involve the depiction of children under the age of eighteen in sexual activity, and obscenity crimes that are directed toward or involve children under the age of eighteen. The serious and unacceptable threat that these crimes pose to children is self-evident and impacts the State as a whole even if the actual criminal act occurs only in one county of the State. An effective effort to eliminate these heinous crimes requires a coordinated effort, which is accomplished more effectively through the state grand jury system. The effective prevention, detection, investigation, and prosecution of these crimes may require the use and application of state obscenity statutes or common law offenses not specifically directed toward the prevention and punishment of obscenity crimes involving children. Because many of these crimes involve computers, statewide jurisdiction over these crimes is consistent with the jurisdiction of a state grand jury over offenses defined in the Computer Crime Act. The General Assembly concludes that a state grand jury must be available to employ its broad investigative powers in the investigation of child-related obscenity by enabling the state grand jury to investigate all obscenity offenses, regardless of their multi-county impact, or whether they transpire or have significance in more than one county of this State.
(E) The General Assembly finds that there is a need to enhance the grand jury system to improve the ability of the State to detect and investigate crimes involving the election laws including, but not limited to, those named offenses as specified in Title 7, or common law crimes involving the election laws where not superseded, or a crime arising out of or in connection with the election laws, or attempt, aiding, abetting, solicitation, or conspiracy to commit a crime involving the election laws.
(F) The General Assembly finds that there is a need to enhance the grand jury system to improve the ability of the State to detect and investigate knowing and wilful crimes which result in actual and substantial harm to the environment. These crimes include knowing and wilful offenses specified in Titles 13, 44, and 48, or any knowing and wilful crime arising out of or in connection with environmental laws, or any attempt, aiding, abetting, solicitation, or conspiracy to commit a knowing and wilful crime involving the environment if the anticipated actual damages including, but not limited to, the cost of remediation, are two million dollars or more, as certified by an independent environmental engineer who shall be contracted by the Department of Health and Environmental Control.
(1) The General Assembly finds that the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control possesses the expertise and knowledge to determine whether there has occurred an alleged environmental offense as defined in this article.
(2) The General Assembly finds that, because of its expertise and knowledge, the Department of Health and Environmental Control must play a substantial role in the investigation of any such alleged environmental offense.
(3) The General Assembly finds that, while the Department of Health and Environmental Control must not make prosecutorial decisions regarding such alleged environmental offense as defined in this article, the department must be integrally involved in the investigation of any such alleged environmental offense before and after the impaneling of a state grand jury pursuant to Section 14-7-1630.
(4) The General Assembly finds that it is in the public interest to avoid duplicative and overlapping prosecutions to the extent that the Attorney General considers possible. Therefore, the Attorney General shall consult with and advise the Environmental Protection and Enforcement Coordinating Subcommittee and cooperate with other state and federal prosecutorial authorities having jurisdiction over environmental enforcement in order to carry out the provisions of Sections 14-7-1630(A)(8) and 14-7-1630(C).
(G) The General Assembly finds that related criminal activity often arises out of or in connection with crimes involving narcotics, dangerous drugs or controlled substances, criminal gang activity, obscenity, public corruption, or environmental offenses and that the mechanism for detecting and investigating these related crimes must be improved.
(H) Accordingly, the General Assembly concludes that a state grand jury should be allowed to investigate certain crimes related to narcotics, dangerous drugs, or controlled substances, criminal gang activity, trafficking in persons, and obscenity and also should be allowed to investigate crimes involving public corruption, election laws, and environmental offenses.
(I) This section does not limit the authority of a county grand jury, solicitor, or other appropriate law enforcement personnel to investigate, indict, or prosecute offenses within the jurisdiction of the state grand jury.
HISTORY: 1987 Act No. 150, Section 1, eff from and after February 8, 1989 (the date the amendments to Article I, Section 11, and Article V, Section 22, of the South Carolina Constitution was ratified and declared to be part of the Constitution); 1992 Act No. 335, Section 1, eff May 4, 1992; 2004 Act No. 208, Section 1, eff April 26, 2004; 2005 Act No. 75, Section 1, eff May 24, 2005; 2007 Act No. 82, Section 2, eff June 12, 2007; 2015 Act No. 7 (S.196), Section 1, eff April 2, 2015.
Structure South Carolina Code of Laws
Chapter 7 - Juries And Jurors In Circuit Courts
Section 14-7-10. Rules of construction.
Section 14-7-20. Words "male" and "men" to include "female" and "women".
Section 14-7-30. "Clerk" defined.
Section 14-7-40. Summoning and empanelling jurors by coroners, clerks, or magistrates not affected.
Section 14-7-110. Summoning of jurors by clerk of the court of common pleas.
Section 14-7-120. Vacancy or disqualification in office of jury commissioner.
Section 14-7-140. Use of computer for drawing and summoning jurors.
Section 14-7-150. Preparation of jury box.
Section 14-7-160. Drawing and notification of jurors.
Section 14-7-180. Custody of jury box and keys.
Section 14-7-210. Discharge of jury prohibited.
Section 14-7-220. Drawings to be open and public; notice.
Section 14-7-230. Methods for drawing names of jurors.
Section 14-7-240. Selection of jurors by drawing.
Section 14-7-250. Disposition of names of those who are drawn and serve on a jury pool.
Section 14-7-260. Number of jurors to be drawn and summoned.
Section 14-7-270. Preparation of special jury list in certain circumstances.
Section 14-7-280. Duty of circuit judge in case of irregularities.
Section 14-7-290. Preparation of special list and drawing of special jury in certain circumstances.
Section 14-7-300. Supplying deficiency in number of jurors drawn.
Section 14-7-310. Venires for additional jurors.
Section 14-7-320. Calling of alternate jurors.
Section 14-7-330. Notice of motion to quash panel because of disqualification of jury commissioners.
Section 14-7-340. Procedure to obtain jurors when jury commissioners are disqualified.
Section 14-7-350. Term of extra or special panel.
Section 14-7-360. Requirement that persons serve as jurors unless disqualified or excused.
Section 14-7-370. Penalty for neglect of duty in drawing and summoning jurors.
Section 14-7-380. Punishment of jury commissioners guilty of fraud.
Section 14-7-390. Service of summons for jury duty by first class mail or by alternate method.
Section 14-7-410. Service of summons for jury duty by certified mail; alternate procedure.
Section 14-7-430. Exclusiveness of method and procedure described by this article.
Section 14-7-810. Enumeration of disqualifications in any court.
Section 14-7-820. Disqualification of county officers and court employees.
Section 14-7-830. Exclusion from jury service of members of grand jury which found indictment.
Section 14-7-845. Postponement of jury service for students and school employees.
Section 14-7-850. Frequency of jury service.
Section 14-7-870. Procedures applicable to excused jurors.
Section 14-7-1030. Time for making objections to jurors.
Section 14-7-1040. Juror's liability to pay taxes not cause of challenge.
Section 14-7-1050. Impaneling jury; in court of common pleas.
Section 14-7-1060. Procedures to be employed by clerk to draw jury panel.
Section 14-7-1080. Effect of jury's delay in rendering verdict.
Section 14-7-1100. Impaneling jury in criminal case.
Section 14-7-1110. Peremptory challenges in criminal cases.
Section 14-7-1120. Challenges and strikes of alternate jurors.
Section 14-7-1130. Juror may take affirmation instead of oath.
Section 14-7-1140. Effect on verdict of irregularity in venire or drawing of jurors.
Section 14-7-1320. Jury may view place, property, or thing; expenses.
Section 14-7-1330. Procedure when jury fails to agree.
Section 14-7-1340. Duties and service of alternate jurors.
Section 14-7-1350. Petit jurors may be held beyond period for which summoned.
Section 14-7-1360. Verdict may be set aside on gratuity given to juror by party.
Section 14-7-1370. Compensation of jurors in circuit courts.
Section 14-7-1380. Cost of feeding juries paid by county.
Section 14-7-1390. Penalty for nonattendance.
Section 14-7-1520. Drawing of juror names; writs of venire facias; issuance and delivery of writs.
Section 14-7-1540. Drawing of grand jurors and alternates.
Section 14-7-1560. Employment of expert accountants.
Section 14-7-1600. Short title; State Grand Jury of South Carolina defined.
Section 14-7-1610. Legislative findings and intent; applicability.
Section 14-7-1615. Definitions.
Section 14-7-1620. State grand jury system established; meeting place; quorum.
Section 14-7-1640. Indictment by state grand jury; powers and duties of state grand jury.
Section 14-7-1650. Duties and obligations of Attorney General; recusal; motion to disqualify.
Section 14-7-1660. Selection of grand jurors.
Section 14-7-1670. Appointment of foreman and deputy foreman.
Section 14-7-1680. Issuance of subpoenas and subpoenas duces tecum; contempt for failure to respond.
Section 14-7-1690. Notification of expansion of areas of inquiry.
Section 14-7-1710. Administrating oath or affirmation by foreman.
Section 14-7-1730. Jurisdiction of presiding judge.
Section 14-7-1740. Scheduling of activities of state grand jury.
Section 14-7-1750. Indictment by state grand jury; sealed indictment.
Section 14-7-1770. Sealing of records, orders, and subpoenas.
Section 14-7-1790. Employment of experts by state grand jury.
Section 14-7-1800. Rules for operation of state grand jury system.
Section 14-7-1810. Severability clause.
Section 14-7-1820. Application of article.
Section 14-7-1920. Impanelment of grand jurors; issuance and delivery of writs of venire facias.
Section 14-7-1940. Drawing of grand juror and alternate names; discharge of remaining jury venire.
Section 14-7-1950. Application of other law relating to grand juries and jurors.
Section 14-7-1960. Election of alternate provisions by county ordinance.
Section 14-7-1970. Periodic exemption of jurors from subsequent duty.