Two Correctional Officers Indicted for Public Corruption and Contraband Smuggling at Lee Prison
Summary
South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson announced that the State Grand Jury returned indictments against two South Carolina Department of Corrections officers, Niccole Matthews Al-Saddiq and Candace Elizabeth Smith, on charges of public corruption, official misconduct, and conspiracy to smuggle contraband into Lee Correctional Institution. The charges carry penalties of 0-10 years imprisonment. The investigation, known as 'Clean Sweep,' was conducted jointly with SLED, the SCDC Inspector General, and the Lee County Sheriff's Office. Bond will be set upon apprehension.
What changed
The South Carolina State Grand Jury returned indictments against two SCDC correctional officers for official misconduct related to unlawful relationships with inmates and participation in conspiracies to smuggle contraband into the Lee Correctional Institution. The investigation, known as 'Clean Sweep,' has now returned six indictments covering 14 defendants total. Correctional officers and state government agencies involved in prison administration should expect heightened scrutiny and potential broader enforcement actions as this investigation continues. The presumption of innocence applies to all defendants until proven guilty through judicial proceedings.
What to do next
- Await bond hearing upon apprehension
- Assert presumption of innocence in court proceedings
Penalties
0-10 years imprisonment per count for Misconduct in Office
Archived snapshot
Apr 15, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
APR 14, 2026
Attorney General Alan Wilson announces two correctional officers indicted on charges of public corruption and contraband smuggling at the Lee Correctional Institution
(COLUMBIA, SC) - South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson announced today that the South Carolina State Grand Jury has issued an additional indictment of two South Carolina Department of Corrections (SCDC) sworn officers for their alleged illicit relationships with inmates and participation in lucrative conspiracies to smuggle large amounts of contraband into the Lee prison. These indictments followed a multi-jurisdictional investigation, with cooperation among a number of law enforcement agencies in the area. These indictments arose from a State Grand Jury investigation known as “Clean Sweep”.
The State Grand Jury returned one indictment alleging official misconduct relating to unlawful relationships between correctional officers and inmates, the extent of which involves one correctional officer allegedly “marrying” an inmate in secret, who was under her supervision, and who she was responsible for securing and guarding. The allegations against these correctional officers include the corruption of their office and aiding and abetting in the smuggling of dangerous contraband to inmates at the Lee facility.
“The State Grand Jury at the Attorney General’s Office continues to work closely with SLED and SCDC to fight allegations of corruption in the prison system,” Attorney General Alan Wilson said. “I want to thank the hard work of the State Grand Jury staff and their law enforcement partners in continuing to root out corruption in our state agencies,” he added.
SCDC Director Joel Anderson said the agency has high standards for its employees and works hard to keep inmates, staff, and the public safe.
“These former officers violated the trust SCDC puts in its officers,” Anderson said. “Their behavior is not characteristic of our agency or the people who work in our department.”
The investigation has thus far returned six indictments covering 14 defendants. The most recent charges are listed below against the named individuals:
Niccole Matthews Al-Saddiq (a/k/a “Shavon White”; “Nadia ‘Niccole’ Zahira Matthews”)
- 2026-GS-47-16 (Lee County)
- Misconduct in Office: 0-10 years
Candace Elizabeth Smith (a/k/a “Elizabeth”)
- 2026-GS-47-16 (Lee County)
- Misconduct in Office: 0-10 years Bond will be set for defendants Al-Saddiq and Smith once they are apprehended.
The case was investigated by the South Carolina State Grand Jury, which was assisted in this case by a partnership of the Attorney General’s State Grand Jury Division, the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division (SLED), the South Carolina Department of Corrections Office of the Inspector General, and the Lee County Sheriff’s Office. The cases will be prosecuted by Assistant Deputy Attorney General David Fernandez, Special Assistant Attorney General Margaret Boykin Scott, and State Grand Jury Division Chief Creighton Waters.
Attorney General Wilson stressed that all defendants are presumed innocent unless and until they are proven guilty in a court of law.
Media Contact
For media inquiries please contact Robert Kittle, [email protected] or 803-734-3670
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