Pubdate: Sat, 16 Aug 2003 Source: Herald, The (SC) Copyright: 2003 The Herald Contact: http://www.heraldonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/369 Author: Tim Eberly The Herald Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/raids.htm (Drug Raids) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) DEPUTY SHOT DURING DRUG SEARCH Lancaster Officer In Serious Condition HEATH SPRINGS -- A Lancaster County sheriff's deputy was in a Charlotte hospital Friday night after he was shot while trying to execute a search warrant for drugs on a home. Stacy Roberts, 34, of Lancaster was in serious condition at Carolinas Medical Center. A three-year deputy in the patrol division of the Lancaster County Sheriff's Department, Roberts was shot two or three times while he was using a battering ram to get inside a South College Street home, said sheriff's Lt. Christy Rogers. Roberts was wearing a bulletproof vest, but one bullet hit the upper right part of the vest and traveled into his body, lodging in one of his lungs. Another bullet struck one of his fingers. A third bullet may have been blocked by his vest, Rogers said. A 21-year-old Heath Springs man, Terrell Flood of 334 S. College St., was arrested at the home and charged with the shooting in the small town in southern Lancaster County, about three miles north of the Kershaw County border. Flood is facing charges of possession of crack cocaine and assault and battery with intent to kill. Another man, Lewis Rod-riguez Stevenson, 25, of 425 S. College St. was arrested on a charge of distribution of crack cocaine and resisting arrest. Authorities had the arrest warrant on the drug charges for Stevenson prior to executing the search of his home. Five other people who were at the home when the incident occurred were taken into custody, Rogers said. They were not charged with any crimes and were later released. The incident occurred at 7:30 a.m. More than a dozen officers were at the home, and Roberts was part of the "entry team," Rogers said. Rogers said the officers first announced themselves as members of law enforcement. When no one responded, Roberts began striking the front door with a metal ram as several officers stood near him. Three shots were then fired through the door, Rogers said. Friday afternoon, shattered glass covered the front porch, and the door was riddled with bullet holes. A witness, 21-year-old Chris Wright, said he saw Roberts buckle over, grab his chest and nearly fall backward off the concrete front porch. "It scared the hell out of the whole neighborhood," said Wright, who saw the incident from his apartment window across the street. "It was like World War III out there." Rogers described what happened next as courageous and brave. She said the other deputies grabbed Roberts and pulled him behind a vehicle. One of the officers shot a pit bull that attacked an officer as he ran for cover, Rogers said. Wright, however, claimed officers opened fire on the pit bull before Roberts was shot and that the dog was only barking. He also said there have been several recent armed robberies in the neighborhood and speculated that Flood thought robbers had opened fire on him. "They shot first," Wright said. "He probably thought they were shooting at him in the house." After the gunfire, the Special Weapons and Tactics team then entered the home through a back door, Rogers said. A man who lives in the home said he heard officers kicking in doors and screaming. They were ordering people in the home to raise their hands and lay down, said the man, who asked not to be identified. Either three or four people were in the house at the time, and about five people were hanging out in a small wooden shed behind the dwelling, the man said. Flood was taken into custody without further incident. A handgun was recovered from the crime scene, Rogers said. The State Law Enforcement Division was called in to investigate the officer-involved shooting. The search warrant was the culmination of an investigation that began several months ago into narcotics activity at the one-story home off U.S. 521. "We've had many complaints about the house," Rogers said, adding that they were "specifically (about) crack cocaine." Rogers said it was the first officer-involved shooting in the jurisdiction of the sheriff's department in recent history, and the first time Roberts has been seriously injured while on duty. Roberts is married and has two children, Rogers said. He is a well-liked officer who also teaches the Drug Awareness Resistance Education, or DARE, program at area schools. "I guess we have to consider ourselves fortunate that he wasn't hurt worse than he was and that he's still with us," Rogers said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin