The Post and Courier: Non-fatal inmate overdose at Richland County jail follows recent death, stabbing
Investigators at the hospital confirmed the overdose was a result of ingesting narcotics inside the jail, the Richland County Sheriff’s Department said.
Yahoo: Unresponsive inmate dies after found at Richland County jail, SC officials say
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Richland County’s Alvin S. Glenn Detention Center. (Tracy Glantz/tglantz@thestate.com) A man who was an inmate at a jail in ...
Unresponsive inmate dies after found at Richland County jail, SC officials say
The State on MSN: Investigators probing another inmate overdose at Richland County jail, sheriff says
AOL: Unresponsive inmate dies after found at Richland County jail, SC officials say
A man who was an inmate at a jail in Columbia died Tuesday night, according to Richland County officials. The 66-year-old inmate was unresponsive when he was found on a unit recreation yard inside the ...
Who's and whose are easy to confuse. Who's means who is or who has. Whose shows possession (e.g., Never trust a doctor whose plants have died).
Who is a subject pronoun (used for the person performing an action), while whom is an object pronoun (used for the person receiving an action). The words whose and who’s may sound identical, but their meanings and usage are completely different.
Whose is the possessive form of the pronoun who, while who’s is a contraction of the words who is or who has. However, many people still find whose and who’s particularly confusing because, in English, an apostrophe followed by an s usually indicates the possessive form of a word.