Agents with the South Carolina State Law Enforcement Division (SLED), working with local partners, carried out coordinated raids this week at vape shops across the Palmetto State, multiple sources told FITSNews.
The operation could produce potentially hundreds of charges against dozens of defendants, with a mass arraignment scheduled for 10:00 a.m. EST on Thursday, Dec. 11, 2025 before S.C. circuit court judge Heath Taylor. S.C. Attorney General Alan Wilson—whose statewide grand jury division is leading the prosecutions tied to these raids—plans to review the charges in detail at a press conference tentatively set for 9:30 a.m. EST on Friday, Dec. 12, 2025. Neither SLED nor the attorney general’s office had commented publicly ahead of that event.
Sources say SLED and local officers hit “dozens of stores” earlier this week, seizing products and cash. News accounts from Darlington, Florence, Greenville and Surfside Beach offered snapshots of the activity, and the Greenville County Sheriff’s Office (GCSO) posted details from one enforcement action on its social media pages.
GCSO said its raid, which included help from several local agencies, was part of “an on-going investigation involving the distribution of illegal marijuana products.” The agency added the probe began, in part, after complaints about high school–age children using similar products.
It’s not clear whether the Greenville raid is part of the statewide sweep, but law enforcement and prosecutors—led by Assistant Attorney General Jennifer McKellar—are clearly mounting a coordinated effort to shut down synthetic cannabinoids and other illegal intoxicants sold at vape shops.
“These products are incredibly dangerous,” SLED Chief Mark Keel told lawmakers at a legislative hearing last month. “These users have no idea what they are ingesting.” Keel also warned of enforcement challenges, saying the current regulatory framework is “unenforceable” and that authorities lack the manpower to seize, store and analyze the vast quantity of THC products now in the state.
FITSNews earlier examined one stark example of the dangers Keel described: the case of 29-year-old Zachary East Elias of Columbia. Elias is charged with two counts of murder, two counts of attempted murder and one count of possessing a weapon during the commission of a violent crime in connection with a shooting at Budiman’s Smokeshop & Art Gallery in Rock Hill at about 9:40 p.m. EST on Dec. 4, 2024.
Police say Elias entered the store shirtless and barefoot, armed with an assault rifle. After asking about the whereabouts of the “mushroom man,” he opened fire, killing 27-year-old employee Celci Johnson and 49-year-old customer Emad Saadalla. Saadalla’s wife was shot but survived.
Elias’ attorney, Alexandra Benevento, says the shooting resulted from “involuntary intoxication induced by mislabeled and deceptively marketed products sold as legal substances.” She says the products were marketed as containing only lawful mushroom derivatives and promoted as a CBD-style legal alternative by the shop. Subsequent SLED testing of the chocolate bars Elias consumed reportedly found psilocin, “an illegal, dangerous Schedule I controlled substance.” Authorities say Elias then suffered acute drug-induced psychosis.
“Zach’s alleged actions were not the product of malice, planning or criminal disposition, but rather the direct and involuntary effect of ingesting a mislabeled, illegal product,” his bond motion states.
Law enforcement sources tell FITSNews they are pressing to more aggressively enforce state limits on Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) under current hemp laws and to target the distribution networks behind some of these products. At the same time, critics argue the raids are the wrong tool.
“They want to look like they’re doing something to give the legislature cover for not doing anything,” one skeptical source told FITSNews. “This is a political, (cover your ass) clickbait prosecution—not a real crackdown.” That critic added SLED and the attorney general are “going after the wrong people,” saying distributors who mislabeled products, not shop owners who sold items based on those representations, are most culpable.
The statewide sting comes as South Carolina lawmakers consider a new regulatory framework for hemp-infused products. Federal lawmakers also acted last month on “marijuana-adjacent” products, though those federal provisions don’t take effect until November 2026.
FITSNews will continue to follow this investigation and will report developments from Thursday’s arraignment and Friday’s attorney general’s press conference.
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Will Folks is the founding editor of FITSNews. Before launching the site, he served as press secretary to the governor of South Carolina. He lives in the Midlands with his wife and eight children.
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