SC Woman Charged With Assaulting Young Girl She Accused Of Stealing Mail

A South Carolina woman is facing assault and battery charges after accusing an 11-year old girl of stealing her mail.

Young Skhylur Davis said she was getting her grandmother’s mail when she was approached by Elizabeth Shirey, 38, who is white, according to the May 11 Aiken Public Safety incident report.
Skhylur’s attorney says Shirey’s actions were racially motivated.
“On the heels of the Ahmaud Arbery tragedy, there aren’t any good reasons for an adult to prejudge an 11-year-old girl, wrongly accuse her of a crime and then assault her as she picked up her grandmother’s mail,” Justin Bamberg, an attorney who represents Skhylur, said in a statement to CNN. 
An attorney for Shirey said she “deeply regrets this incident.”
“My understanding is there was never any touching of this girl,” attorney Jim Huff said in an email to CNN. “There absolutely was nothing racial in this case.”
Here’s more from WJBF:

CNN reports:
Skhylur’s grandmother said the girl and three other children walked to get the grandmother’s mail. With the post in her hand, Skhylur was standing at a mailbox when she was approached by a white woman identified as Shirey, according to the incident report.
Skhylur said Shirey “approached her in an aggressive manner and demanded her mail back,” the report said. Skhylur told the woman the mail was not hers.
Skhylur says in the report Shirey attempted to grab the mail from her and in the process grabbed her by the arms and pulled them. When Shirey saw the address on the mail and realized it was not hers, she let go, Skhylur told APS.
Shirey told authorities she believed the girl had taken her mail. She yelled out to her, saying “Ma’am,” and walked to Skhylur when there was no response, the report said.
Shirey admitted she tried to grab the mail but saw the address, “realized the person was a juvenile” and attempted to apologize. Skhylur said Shirey “offered to make it better by offering cookies,” the report said.
“Based upon the girls delay at her mail box and not responding to her calling, Mrs. Shirey thought it was reasonable to ask if she could see the address on the envelopes,” Huff said. “A request the girl refused.”
“My client apologized to the girl and even offered to bake cookies and bring them to their home,” Huff said. “Later, Skhylur’s mother and grandmother came to my client’s house. My client apologized to both of them.
“At that point what I find to be uplifting is that the girls’ mother showed grace and understanding to my client and they both hugged each other before the mother left.”
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Shirey was issued a citation for third-degree assault and battery.