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AG Alan Wilson announces a 25-year sentence for a Lexington County man for trafficking cocaine

South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson announces that a Lexington County man has been sentenced to 25 years in prison for trafficking cocaine in Kershaw County. On October 31, Walter Goad was found guilty of trafficking more than 200 grams of cocaine in Kershaw County.

Goad

In August of 2016, agents started investigating a suspected cocaine distributor in Kershaw County. During their investigation into this individual, they became aware that his supplier was Walter Goad. On or about September 22, 2016, Goad was observed by law enforcement arriving at the residence of the suspected cocaine dealer on Ward Road in Lugoff. Goad remained there for a few minutes and then left. Agents followed Goad and visually identified him.

At the same time, the suspected cocaine dealer called a law enforcement confidential informant and told him that he “just got his hands on” the cocaine he was waiting for. Within minutes, agents executed a search warrant on the Ward Road residence and recovered approximately ten ounces of cocaine. The suspected cocaine dealer implicated Goad as his supplier and told agents that Goad had just delivered the cocaine. The cocaine was still in its brick form when agents recovered it, and the packaging it had been delivered in was on the floor next to the cocaine.

Agents utilized the suspected cocaine dealer to conduct a monitored and recorded phone call with Goad. In the phone call, Goad asked where his money was and referred to the cocaine he had delivered. Immediately after hanging up, Goad called back and asked if he needed to send people over to Kershaw County to put guns in people’s faces to make them pay their drug debts.

On October 3, 2016, DEA agents along with the Lexington County Sheriff’s Office executed a search warrant at Goad’s home in Lexington County. During the search, a K9 Officer alerted to the odor of narcotics on a large black bin in the garage. Inside of the bin, agents found industrial-sized packaging materials that matched the packaging of the cocaine, along with a very large digital scale. Agents also recovered a suspected drug ledger.

After a four-day trial, a Kershaw County jury found Goad guilty of trafficking between 200 and 400 grams of cocaine. The Honorable Judge Jocelyn Newman sentenced Goad to 25 years in prison and imposed a $100,000 fine. Goad was given credit for the two days he spent in jail immediately following his arrest. Goad will be required to serve at least eighty-five percent of his sentence before he is eligible for parole.

Following Goad’s conviction, Kershaw County Sheriff Lee Boan said, “We are always thankful to see drug traffickers get prosecuted and sentenced to prison. These crimes often get forgotten because drug trafficking can be seen as a victimless crime. It is not.”

Assistant Attorneys General Christina Gatte and Jennifer McKellar of the State Grand Jury Section prosecuted the case for the State. The case was investigated by Michael Sellers, formerly of the Kershaw County Sheriff’s Office, Special Agent Adam Hardin of the DEA, the Kershaw County Sheriff’s Office, and the United States Drug Enforcement Agency, with assistance from the Lexington County Sheriff’s Office and the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division.

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