View Comments
Two people were charged in connection to the June 20 shooting death of Joshua Hardin who was found inside of a vehicle on Welcome Avenue and York Drive in Greenville, according to deputies.
Hardin, 21, of Seneca, was found dead in a car with multiple gunshot wounds around 9 p.m., according to Greenville County Coroner Parks Evans.
Jerome Smith III, 18 of Greenville and a 16 year-old juvenile were charged with murder, according to the Greenville County Sheriff s Office and warrants.
Smith was additionally charged with armed robbery, according to a warrant.
Investigators learned that Hardin had planned to meet the two people to sell some stereo equipment at Welcome Park. Hardin was met by Smith, the juvenile and another person to look at the equipment, according to the Sheriff s Office. The juvenile pulled out a gun and shot Hardin, according to investigators.
Seneca man found inside a car with a gunshot wound on Welcome Avenue
independentmail.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from independentmail.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Woman collapses after getting home to see house on fire; 9 displaced
jamaicaobserver.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from jamaicaobserver.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
camera icon © KRISTEN BOBO
Recording Civil War names can be difficult: Some signatures are layered atop one another, while others are frustratingly succinct, such as “William,” “Capt. Jones,” and “1863.” Names have been smoked onto ceilings by candle flame, scratched into walls with rocks or knives, or neatly handwritten with pencil or ink.
The three-year study, which ended in 2019, yielded only 41 confirmed signatures left by Civil War soldiers during wartime. (Douglas estimates that more than 10,000 signatures were left in the cave over the past two centuries not to mention pictographs and other markings made by Native Americans.) Such finds add little to the overall record of use of the cave by the Confederate and the Union armies, but by matching signatures found deep underground with photographs, letters and journal entries, the team achieved something they consider equally valuable: They humanized the soldiers who, for a brief moment, took