The Lowcountry Cases: Families Torn Apart by a Broken System
In the quiet coastal towns of South Carolina’s Lowcountry—stretching from Charleston through Dorchester County—a growing number of families have stepped forward to tell a chillingly similar story: children taken, rights ignored, and justice denied.
At the center is William Sewell, a hardworking father and mechanic from Summerville whose life was upended after what began as a routine custody dispute spiraled into a years-long legal nightmare. Sewell’s case—Sewell v. Sewell—reveals a web of judicial favoritism, court-appointed guardian conflicts, and procedural violations that stripped him of both his parental rights and his livelihood. Despite no finding of abuse or neglect, Sewell has been locked in perpetual litigation, drained of resources while local court insiders profit from fees and expert contracts.
But Sewell is far from alone. Across Dorchester, Berkeley, and Charleston Counties, a pattern is emerging—cases where protective orders, ex parte hearings, and “temporary” custody arrangements become permanent without due process. Fathers are sidelined. Mothers are silenced. Children are relocated or alienated, often under the guise of “best interest” recommendations written by the same small circle of attorneys and guardians ad litem.
Several other families have echoed Sewell’s experience:
- A mother in North Charleston who lost custody after reporting domestic violence, only to have her abuser awarded primary placement.
- A disabled veteran in Dorchester County denied ADA accommodations during hearings and later jailed for missed child support he could not physically pay.
- A Summerville parent who discovered sealed transcripts and missing filings that prevented an appeal.
Together, these stories point to a systemic pattern of neglect, bias, and unchecked judicial discretion—where local politics, patronage networks, and profit motives intersect at the expense of family unity and constitutional rights.
Through Fatherand.Co’s Lowcountry Investigations, we are collecting records, testimonies, and court documents to expose how these South Carolina courts have operated beyond accountability. Our investigation aims to connect local stories like Sewell’s to a broader national pattern of family court corruption, parental alienation, and disability discrimination.
Each family’s story is different. But their message is the same:
“We are not cases. We are parents fighting for our children.”
To learn more and read full case investigations, visit The Thunder Report to explore The William Sewell Case series.