Columbia, South Carolina --- United States Attorney Sherri
A. Lydon announced today that Maleik Houseal, age 23, of Newberry, was
sentenced to almost 6 ½ years in federal prison after pleading guilty to being
a felon in possession of a firearm.
Evidence presented to the court showed at approximately 2:12
am on September 16, 2017, a shooting between a group of rival gang members from
Newberry occurred outside the Empire Supper Club in the Vista entertainment
district of Columbia. It was a college football weekend and the Vista area was
full of people. All total, seven individuals, including Houseal, were shot
during the incident. The investigation revealed that Houseal had been shot in
the hip two weeks earlier and was involved in an ongoing gang dispute in
Newberry. The investigation showed that when the club closed at 2:00 am, as
people spilled out onto the sidewalks, Houseal went to the parking lot and
retrieved a firearm from the top of a car tire, where he had stored it.
Houseal, armed with the firearm, returned to the sidewalk area outside of the
club, where he encountered the other group of individuals from Newberry, who
were headed to their cars in the parking lot. As the other group left the club
parking lot, they fired weapons from their cars in Houseal’s direction,
striking Houseal and others. Houseal ran after the cars while firing his 9mm
handgun in their direction, discharging all 15 rounds. He then discarded the
handgun in a pile of chairs outside the club, where it was later recovered.
Federal law prohibits Houseal from possessing firearms and
ammunition based upon his prior state convictions for burglary 2nd degree,
carrying a firearm in a public building/adjacent area, carrying an unlawful
weapon (two separate convictions), burglary 3rd degree, obstruction of justice,
and possession with intent to distribute marijuana. At the time of the
September 2017 shooting, Houseal was both on state probation and on state bonds
for incidents that occurred after his release from the South Carolina
Department of Corrections in May 2017.
United States District Judge Mary Geiger Lewis of Columbia
sentenced Houseal to 77 months in federal prison, to be followed by a 3-year
term of court-ordered supervision. There
is no parole in the federal system. In denying Houseal’s motion for a reduced
sentence based upon his assertion that the other group fired shots first and
that he was merely defending himself, Judge Lewis stated, “to pop off 15 rounds
in a crowded area is about the most irresponsible and careless and thoughtless
thing you could do.” Noting Houseal’s extensive criminal record at the age of
23 and his propensity for firearms, the court stated “you’re exactly the reason
we have [firearm] laws like that.”
The case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI), the Columbia Police Department, and the Richland County
Sheriff’s Department. It was prosecuted
as part of the joint federal, state, and local Project Safe Neighborhoods
(PSN), the centerpiece of the Department of Justice’s violent crime reduction
efforts. PSN is an evidence-based
program proven to be effective at reducing violent crime. Through PSN, a broad
spectrum of stakeholders work together to identify the most pressing violent
crime problems in the community and develop comprehensive solutions to address
them. As part of this strategy, PSN focuses enforcement efforts on the most
violent offenders and partners with locally based prevention and reentry
programs for lasting reductions in crime.
Assistant United States Attorney Stacey D. Haynes of the
Columbia office prosecuted the case.
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