Orlando Sentinel

‘I can’t believe he isn’t a danger’

Man committed in 2012 after slayings turns up free in SC

- By Jeffrey Collins

COLUMBIA, S.C. — The last thing the family of two sisters slain in a tiny South Carolina town had heard about the man who confessed to killing them was that he was headed to a mental hospital in 2012 to be treated for schizophre­nia so he could later be tried for murder.

For 10 years, they heard nothing.

Then, a few months ago, friends started to call a son of one of the women with news that they had seen Joseph Jermaine Brand around Kingstree, family attorney Lori Murray said.

Darren Tisdale, a son of the other sister and mayor of the town of 3,100, then began searching for Brand, spotting him just a couple of miles from where police said he confessed to shooting the two women in the head after breaking into their home in October 2010. Tisdale called prosecutor­s but got no answers.

“He executed two elderly women,” Murray said. “I can’t believe he isn’t a danger to the whole town just out walking around.”

Murray and the families of Naomi Johnson, 65, and her 74-year-old sister Thelma Haddock, gave the sparse court records they could find and other informatio­n to The Associated Press ahead of a news conference. Then they asked reporters for help.

“We need closure. I don’t know about you, but yesterday there was a big hole in my heart when I don’t have my mama on Mother’s Day,” Darren Tisdale said.

At the courthouse, a clerk said there was no record of Brand’s arrest or indictment­s for two counts of murder, armed robbery, first-degree burglary and a weapons charge. The records could not be found online either, although there were some court records still available in a file where the arrest warrants were kept. Other public records show Brand, 43, registered to vote from an assisted living home near Columbia in 2016. At one point, he also had a Facebook page.

That’s the only tangible piece of evidence about where Brand was until he showed up in Kingstree again. No one has given the family any explanatio­n for why his charges just disappeare­d.

A judge’s order in 2012 said if Brand’s mental competency was restored, he was to be brought back to Williamsbu­rg County and held without bond for his trial. Under the law, a prosecutor could seek 30 years to life in prison for Brand, with the possibilit­y of a death penalty trial.

Prosecutor­s have promised to reinstate the charges and said they will ask a grand jury to indict Brand again at the end of the month, Murray said. Solicitor Chip Finney didn’t return a phone message or email from the AP. Neither did the assistant prosecutor who signed off on dropping the charges because of the competency problem or Brand’s public defender at the time.

A woman in Kingstree identifyin­g herself as Brand’s grandmothe­r hung up on an AP reporter this week. No one responded to a message left at a telephone number listed for Brand’s mother.

Members of the sisters’ family said they had faith in the system, even when a call to Finney to check on the case in 2018 went unanswered. That was until they saw Brand walking free.

“It has been very hard on the whole family having to relive this event all over again,” the family said in a statement issued through their attorney. “We want justice for our mothers. We want closure for our families, we want Joseph Brand to pay for his crimes and we want answers as to how and why he was released without prosecutio­n.”

Brand lived a few doors down from Johnson and Haddock in 2010. He had moved to Kingstree to live with his father after a stint in a Nevada prison on charges of robbery, drugs and firing a gun out of a vehicle, according to legal records.

Brand came to the sisters’ house and asked to spread pine straw for money. When they refused, Brand barged into the home, wrested a gun away from one of the sisters and shot them several times, including in the head, Williamsbu­rg County deputies said.

Brand’s father found him walking aimlessly in the sisters’ front yard, investigat­ors said. The father saw their door was open and poked his head in to apologize. That’s when he discovered the bodies.

Brand confessed to the killings, according to arrest warrants. But the records show that his mental problems kept him from being able to assist his attorney, prompting a judge to order a psychiatri­c evaluation. A psychiatri­st’s report stated that Brand had schizophre­nia and his thinking was completely disorganiz­ed. The report indicated that Brand refused to take his medicine and that if he did take it, his competency could be restored.

When asked his age after his arrest, Brand responded, “Seventy-nine in Islam years.” Then he said he was

34. One of the two psychiatri­sts who examined him corrected him, saying court records listed him as being

33. “And a half!” Brand yelled back, according to the report on his mental state.

When asked how he hoped his case would turn out, Brand, who once lived in Reno, Nevada, said he wanted “to return back to the biggest little city.”

“I want to return back to life as a rock star,” he said, according to the report.

Brand was first sent for temporary psychiatri­c treatment, but remained incompeten­t to stand trial, according to Circuit Judge Clifton Newman, who in November 2012 ordered him to be confined until he was better.

That’s where the paperwork trail ends, aside from the record of his registerin­g to vote from the assisted living home in Blythewood in 2016. No one quite knows how Brand ended up back in Kingstree last year.

Murray said even though the solicitor has promised to bring the case before a grand jury, she is concerned about whether that will happen because it isn’t clear whether Brand was declared mentally competent. She said she still can’t get answers from Finney’s office.

“Mr. Brand is walking around as free as a jaybird,” Murray said.

State mental health officials said privacy laws prevent them from releasing any details of Brand’s treatment. But in a statement Monday, the Department of Mental Health said patients charged with crimes who need long-term care are committed by a probate judge and both that judge and prosecutor­s are informed when the patient no longer needs involuntar­y treatment.

Finney’s office told the family that investigat­ors have been keeping an eye on Brand since they realized he was back in Kingstree, but Murray said that is little comfort.

“He’s still out there,” Murray said. “And I think if there wasn’t any problem with the case, they could have brought him back in.”

 ?? JEFFREY COLLINS/AP ?? The families of two sisters killed in 2010 in Kingstree, S.C., stand by their attorney Lori Murray, far left. They say they want more informatio­n about why the man charged in the killings is free after being found incompeten­t to stand trial.
JEFFREY COLLINS/AP The families of two sisters killed in 2010 in Kingstree, S.C., stand by their attorney Lori Murray, far left. They say they want more informatio­n about why the man charged in the killings is free after being found incompeten­t to stand trial.

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