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The administrator of the Cherokee County Detention Center has offered his resignation following a Carolina Public Press investigative report published earlier this week in which former guards alleged a pattern of inmate abuse.

Capt. Mark Patterson’s resignation will take effect Nov. 30.

Sheriff Derrick Palmer told a local radio show Friday morning that he intends to make administrative changes in his department, including at the detention center, starting Dec. 1.

“Things happen, and sometimes things happen that knock us off kilter a bit,” Palmer said on the WKRK program. “… But ultimately the character of someone is what you do when it happens. Even though we can’t change what happened before, we can certainly look at what we do from this point forward.”

Palmer at times read from a statement during the half-hour program, which WKRK streamed on Facebook Live.

Cherokee County Detention Center Administrator Mark Patterson

Neither Palmer nor Patterson responded Friday to CPP’s requests for comment regarding Patterson’s resignation.

Patterson started working at the Cherokee County Detention Center in 2003 as a part-time guard, county records show. Patterson left employment with the Cherokee County Sheriff’s Office in 2007. After Palmer’s election in 2014, he named Patterson detention center administrator. Earlier this year Patterson was receiving an annual salary of $43,435.

Patterson is also one of two candidates running for two seats on the school board in Cherokee County in the November election and will win by default unless a write-in candidate makes a successful bid.

In the recent CPP article, two former guards alleged that Patterson’s oversight of the jail had encouraged an aggressive “hands on” approach with inmates. They also alleged that some guards coerced fights between inmates, used inmates as enforcers, exposed at-risk inmates to harm and did not assist some inmates in receiving medical attention. The guards questioned the handling of one inmate who died hours after being admitted to the jail with a suspicion of drug use.

While the sheriff did not refute allegations of inmate mistreatment during his radio appearance, he did say employees have never come to him to report problems.

Cherokee County Sheriff Derrick Palmer

“If these things are true, and if these things did happen, I am ultimately responsible for it,” Palmer said. “I have no one to shift the blame to. I have nobody else to point a finger at even if I may not have known about it.”

Palmer called the coverage “disheartening” on the WKRK program several times.

“If in fact it was true,” Palmer said, “if it turns out there was some validity to that, it’s very disheartening that supervisors would allow that to happen and that people would allow that to go on in there.”

Toward the end of the program, he said, “Even though we can’t change what happened before, we can certainly look at what we do from this point forward. That does include administrative changes. That does include personnel changes.”

He did not elaborate on those changes and added: “That does include … looking at what we are doing and how to do things different to ensure that this never, ever, ever is an issue again. That’s what our goal is for the next four years.”

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