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Deputy managing editor for investigations at The Post and Courier in Charleston, SC. Semi-reformed crime reporter, hiker, guitar player, beer snob.

Glenn Smith’s Journalist Portfolio

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Till death do us part: A Post and Courier Special Report

Till death do us part: A Post and Courier Special Report

Post and Courier — More than 300 women were shot, stabbed, strangled, beaten, bludgeoned or burned to death over the past decade by men in South Carolina, dying at a rate of one every 12 days while the state does little to stem the carnage from domestic abuse.

Watched

Watched

Post and Courier — Police forces across the United States are stockpiling massive databases with personal information from millions of Americans who simply crossed paths with officers. A person can end up in one of these databases by doing nothing more than sitting on a public park bench or chatting with an officer on the street. Once there, these records can linger forever and be used by police agencies to track movements, habits, acquaintances and associations – even a person’s marital and job status. What began as a method for linking suspicious behavior to crime had morphed into a practice that threatens to turn local police departments into miniature versions of the National Security Agency. In the process, critics contend, police risk trampling constitutional rights, tarnishing innocent people and further eroding public trust.

Shots fired: When police pull the trigger in South Carolina, flawed investigations and double-sta...

Shots fired: When police pull the trigger in South Carolina, flawed investigations and double-sta...

Post and Courier — When police pull the trigger in South Carolina, flawed investigations and double-standards follow.

S.C. security guards hold same powers as deputy sheriffs on private property with fraction of tra...

S.C. security guards hold same powers as deputy sheriffs on private property with fraction of tra...

Post and Courier — South Carolina depends on an army of private security guards to protect everything from gated communities to nuclear power plants, but the state has among the nation's weakest training standards for these hired guns. Security guards in the Palmetto State have about the same authority on private property as a deputy sheriff, including the power to make arrests. Yet the state requires as little as eight hours of training before a new guard can strap on a pistol and head out on patrol. In comparison, a would-be manicurist must train for at least 300 hours before he or she can polish a set of nails.

Mentally ill, in prison and locked away alone

Mentally ill, in prison and locked away alone

Post and Courier — RIDGEVILLE - Dozens of eyes peered through cloudy panes of reinforced glass as a trio of corrections officers, encased in protective vests and face shields, shuffled along the cell block's concrete floor. One inmate pressed his face against a spider web of cracked glass and pounded furiously on the metal door, his voice echoing off the concrete walls. "You got to get me out of here!" Rage built in his voice. "They've been experimenting on me and planting things in my head. The FBI and the CIA know about it, and the GPA too. You've got to help me!"

A SC funeral home left a body to rot for years in 'corrupt' system that protects homes

A SC funeral home left a body to rot for years in 'corrupt' system that protects homes

Post and Courier — When Mary Alice Pitts Moore died at the age of 63, her family scraped together whatever cash they could to hold a proper funeral. About 100 people showed up to pay their respects at the old AME church in rural Greenwood that day in April 2015. A preacher spoke.

Into the wilderness: Secretive South Carolina camps come under scrutiny following teen's death

Into the wilderness: Secretive South Carolina camps come under scrutiny following teen's death

Post and Courier — The phone call interrupted her as she removed her son's laundry from a dryer. Just five weeks had passed since a probation violation had landed him at a remote wilderness camp for small-time juvenile offenders. His original crime: stealing candy from a Kmart.