The SC Supreme Court Missing Writ
How a Four-Day Documentary Test Exposed Selective Docket Suppression at South Carolina's Highest Court.
Document Overview
Supreme Court of South Carolina, Appellate Case No. 2026-000919
Documentation Period: May 11–15, 2026
Document: SC Supreme Court Docket Visibility Anomalies — Documentary Record
Contents: Side-by-side docket captures showing 16 publicly-listed Original Jurisdiction Extraordinary Writs, the SC Supreme Court's written policy assertion that such writs are not publicly docketed, before-and-after screenshots of the Hicks v. extraordinary writ erasure within a four-day window, and the full email correspondence with appellate staff
Executive Summary
On May 11, 2026, Petitioner McNeil wrote the SC Supreme Court, stating, among other things,
Petitioners are not presently finding the Petition on the public docket. Please advise when it will appear, or whether any additional step is needed from Petitioners for docket visibility.
On May 12, 2026, a Case Management Specialist from the Supreme Court of South Carolina told the self-represented Petitioner - in an email that "Original Jurisdiction cases are not posted on public ctrack".
On May 13, 2026 - in a phone call - McNeil was told by the same person that "as a policy, they do not put non-attorney filings online" and went further to state that "all parties in a publicly posted filing must be represented", further stating that it was because of the risk of highly sensitive information being posted, pointing to "some pro se being prisoners" and referencing the burden of auditing such documents line-by-line as the issue.
Petitioner McNeil offered to audit the document and provide assurance nothing highly sensitive was in there, to save the burden. He was told she "can ask the Clerk of Court".
Later that same day, May 13, 2026, McNeil received an email from the Case Management Specialist stating "Please see the attached response from the Clerk of the Supreme Court."
That letter, from Patricia A. Howard, Clerk, stated "Extraordinary writs filed with the Supreme Court, including petitions for a writ of mandamus, are not available on C-Track Public Access."
The same Court's own docket, searched on May 15, though, returned sixteen listings documenting such cases publicly listed. Within four days of the petitioner pointing this out, one of the sixteen - Hicks (2026-000915) - disappeared from the public docket without any apparent judicial order. Plaintiffs preserved the before-and-after captures.
What the Record Shows
- The Stated Policy: SCSC written correspondence dated May 14, 2026 asserts Original Jurisdiction extraordinary writs are not posted on the public C-Track system.
- The Counterexample (May 15, 2026 Capture): A docket search using the Court's own filters — Group: Original Jurisdiction and Writs; Type: Extraordinary Writ; date range 5/1/2024–5/15/2026 - returned 16 publicly-listed cases, including Hicks, Mills/Spero v. Toal, Bryant v. Anderson, Citizens Alliance v. York County, and the Tibbs asbestos cluster.
- The Erasure: Hicks (2026-000915) was visible on the public docket on May 11, 2026. After Plaintiffs raised the visibility discrepancy with the Court, Hicks was removed from public visibility within the four-day window ending May 14, 2026 - the same window in which the policy assertion issued.
- The Hidden Petition: Plaintiffs' own Petition for Writ of Mandamus (Appellate Case No. 2026-000919) - the case that triggered the inquiry - remains unlisted on the public docket.
What This Reveals: A documentary, falsifiable record that the Court's stated public-access policy is contradicted by the Court's own docket, and that the only case demonstrating the policy is fictional was selectively removed during the inquiry window - a side-by-side, dated, screenshot-grounded contradiction.
Why This Matters Now
The May 28, 2026 hearing in McNeil & Poyer v. SAC 181, LLC et al. (Case No. 2025-CP-10-05095) follows a 199-day delay on Plaintiffs' unopposed Motion for Leave to File the Second Amended Complaint and a 116-day delay on Plaintiffs' federal-statutory ADA accommodation motion - including a request for the same electronic-filing access defense counsel enjoys 24/7. The SC Supreme Court's April 28, 2026 return-request letter placed that local pattern under active supervisory review. The selective docket suppression of Plaintiffs' Petition, paired with the documented Hicks erasure, is the appellate-level mirror of the same access-asymmetry pattern playing out in the trial court.
This page exists so that journalists, oversight bodies, and other pro se petitioners whose filings may have been quietly erased have a stable, citable record of the documentary anomalies. The full PDF below preserves the captures, the email correspondence, and the comparisons in their original form.
The Four-Day Window: Timeline of the Erasure
- April 28, 2026: SC Supreme Court issues return-request letter in Appellate Case No. 2026-000919, placing the local Ninth Circuit motion-blackout pattern under supervisory review.
- May 11, 2026: Plaintiffs print and preserve a public docket capture showing Hicks (2026-000915) listed as a publicly-visible Original Jurisdiction Extraordinary Writ.
- May 11, 2026: Plaintiffs send written inquiry to SC Supreme Court appellate staff regarding the visibility of their own pending Petition (2026-000919) and the visibility of comparable extraordinary writs.
- May 14, 2026: SC Supreme Court issues written response asserting that Original Jurisdiction extraordinary writs are not publicly docketed on the C-Track system.
- May 15, 2026: Plaintiffs run the same public docket search using the Court's own filters and capture sixteen publicly-listed extraordinary writs — but Hicks, visible four days earlier, is gone.
The Sixteen Publicly-Listed Extraordinary Writs (May 15, 2026 Capture)
The May 15 capture preserved in the PDF below shows sixteen cases publicly returned by the Court's own docket search parameters, including Mills/Spero v. Toal (2026-000383), Bryant v. Anderson (2025-002187), Citizens Alliance v. York County (2025-002174), the Tibbs asbestos cluster, and others.
The full list, dated and timestamped, is preserved in the PDF.
The Federal Stakes
The First Amendment right of public access to judicial proceedings - including dockets - is established under Press-Enterprise Co. v. Superior Court, 478 U.S. 1 (1986), and Richmond Newspapers, Inc. v. Virginia, 448 U.S. 555 (1980). Selective administrative concealment of a pro se petitioner's docket, while sixteen comparable filings remain public, raises a substantial federal Equal Protection question under the Fourteenth Amendment. Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act, as construed in Tennessee v. Lane, 541 U.S. 509 (2004), independently obligates state courts to provide equal access without disability-based discrimination.
For questions about this documentary record and the May 28, 2026 hearing, contact:
Chris McNeil, Pro Se Plaintiff
Email: Click here to email with web form
Case: 2025-CP-10-05095, Charleston County Court of Common Pleas
Document Access
SC Supreme Court Docket Visibility Anomalies — Documentary Record (McNeil v. SAC 181, Appellate Case No. 2026-000919)
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