‘Enough Is Enough!’ 🚨 SC Attorney General Demands Death Penalty After Career Criminal Kills College Student
The brutal murder of 22-year-old Logan Hailey Federico has ignited a firestorm of outrage across South Carolina and beyond, thrusting the state’s criminal justice system into the national spotlight. On September 30, 2025, South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson fired off a strongly worded letter to Fifth Circuit Solicitor Byron Gipson, demanding the death penalty for Alexander Devonte Dickey, the 30-year-old “career criminal” accused of gunning down the aspiring teacher during a home invasion in Columbia. With Dickey’s staggering record of 39 arrests and 25 felonies—yet only about 600 days behind bars over a decade—Wilson argued the case screams for capital punishment, citing statutory aggravating factors like the murder occurring amid a burglary. Logan’s father, Stephen Federico, hailed the move as “fantastic,” vowing to fight until “justice for Logan” is served, even calling for federal intervention if state prosecutors falter. As tensions rise between Wilson and Gipson, this case exposes deep cracks in how repeat offenders evade accountability, leaving families shattered and communities demanding reform