Co-Conspirators Disposed of Victim’s Body in the Woods
Florence, South Carolina --- United States Attorney Sherri
A. Lydon announced today that James Latron Sumter, a/k/a “T”, age 35, of Myrtle
Beach, South Carolina, has pled guilty in federal court to conspiring to
distribute a quantity of cocaine and heroin, the use of which resulted in
serious bodily injury or death. This
charge potentially carries a mandatory sentence of 20 years to life in federal
prison.
Assistant United States Attorney Everett McMillian presented
evidence that reflects Sumter was contacted on December 29, 2017, by
co-conspirator Charles Rayford Hunt, Jr., who was seeking to purchase what is
commonly called a “speedball”—a potent combination of cocaine and heroin—for
$100 for a female acquaintance of Hunt’s.
Hunt met the female while working as an Uber driver and had a short-lived
romantic relationship with her for two days prior to this incident. As reflected in text messages between Hunt
and Sumter and statements from witnesses, Hunt drove the female victim to an
apartment where Sumter provided the drugs sometime after 9:00 pm. The victim later used the drugs and
immediately thereafter showed signs of an overdose.
Upon seeing her reaction, Hunt contacted Sumter and returned
to pick him up. Not wanting to take the
overdosing victim home to her father with whom she lived, Hunt and Sumter drove
around and eventually stopped at Magoo’s Sports & Spirits to play pool
sometime after midnight—leaving the overdosing victim passed out in the back
seat of the car. After playing pool,
Hunt took Sumter back to the apartment complex and drove around the Myrtle
Beach area with the victim still passed out in the back seat of his car. Eventually, Hunt realized the victim had quit
breathing at which time he “panicked” and dumped her body in a wooded area just
across the North Carolina border during the early morning hours of December
30. Hunt then drove back to Myrtle
Beach, throwing the victim’s cell phone into the intercostal waterway on the
way back. He took the victim’s purse and
belongings to another conspirator, Jose Anthony Ortiz, Jr., who destroyed many
of the victim’s personal items in a burn pit at Hunt’s request.
On December 31, Special Agents with the Federal Bureau of
Investigation and Drug Enforcement Administration learned of the incident. Working together, the FBI and DEA quickly
collaborated with detectives from the Horry County Police Department and
Columbus County Sheriff’s Office in North Carolina to unravel the scheme. Hunt was located, promptly confessed his role
in the event, and led officials to the victim’s body. An autopsy and toxicology report later
confirmed the victim died as a result of a heroin and cocaine overdose. Further investigation uncovered that Sumter
had conspired with several other individuals in the Myrtle Beach area during
2017 to distribute cocaine and heroin on other occasions.
Hunt and Ortiz were prosecuted for their roles in covering
up the overdose. Both men pled guilty
and were sentenced to 21 and 27 months in federal prison, respectively.
This case is part of a concentrated effort to disrupt and
dismantle the flow of illegal opioids and other narcotics in the Myrtle Beach
area. By joining with local, state, and
federal law enforcement partners, the United States Attorney’s Office will
continue to aggressively prosecute those who deal in illegal narcotics,
especially those individuals who distribute opioids that cause serious bodily
injury or death to others.
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