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South Carolina Deputy’s return to West Africa and back, and why

Senior Deputy Thomas Browne, whose family fled Liberia during that country’s bloody civil war, works to give back

Sheriff and Thomas Browne.jpeg

RCSD

When Richland County (South Carolina) Sheriff’s Department Senior Deputy Thomas Browne recently returned from a visit to his native West Africa, he brought with him gifts fit for a chief: shoes in fact, but specially designed handmade house slippers that are worn by African leaders and people of status.

“These are traditional African slippers that anyone can wear, but they are particularly designed for those of a particular lofty status or position,” said Browne, who brought shoes for both Sheriff Leon Lott and Lt. Col. Kelvin Ashe, who directs the department’s Uniform Patrol Division. “These shoes are worn during special events like marriages, birthdays and even funerals; with different designs designating a chief or a member of royalty.”

Sheriff and Thomas Browne.jpeg

RCSD Senior Deputy Thomas Browne presents handmade house slippers to Sheriff Leon Lott.

RCSD

Browne, who departed for the Ivory Coast in December 2021 and returned late last month, was born in Monrovia, the capital of Liberia, in 1983. His father, Colonel Hezekiah Browne, who was then the operations commander of President Samuel Kanyon Doe’s secret service (presidential security force), was killed during that country’s bloody civil war, which also resulted in President Doe’s capture, torture and execution by rebels in 1990. Young Thomas was then only six years old.

The Browne family was able to flee Liberia to the Ivory Coast, ultimately settling in Ghana before immigrating to the U.S. in 2000. Here, Browne went to work. In 2010, he earned a BA degree in criminal justice from East Tennessee State University. He joined the U.S. Army Reserve in 2013, earned his American citizenship, achieved the rank of staff sergeant, and has one overseas deployment to Iraq under his belt.

Browne is also a member of the Richland County Sheriff’s Department, having joined the department five years ago, becoming a patrol deputy and today serving on the Community Action (CAT) Team. On the CAT team, Browne is assigned to RCSD’s Region 1, and he is a liaison between the department and African communities living and working throughout central South Carolina. Browne is also a hostage negotiator on RCSD’s Crisis Management Team.

Browne speaks three languages. In addition to English, he is fluent in both French and Ashanti (or Twi), which aid in his outreach to the African-born citizens of Richland County, “now numbering in the thousands,” Browne says.

Why Browne’s recent return to West Africa? “The need and the plight of my people after so many years of civil war,” he says.

Browne is today – and going forward – serving that need through his non-profit organization, the Hezekiah Browne Foundation Liberia, so-named in honor of his late father.

Browne traveled to the Ivory Coast on December 28, 2021, to direct the delivery of three large barrels of items including men’s and women’s clothes, shoes, toiletries, children’s toys and first aid kits.

“The items were donated by Sheriff Lott, the RCSD Community Action Team, Good Shepherd Faith Assembly Church and the Jesus Christ Church, all from Columbia,” said Browne, who was unable to cross the border from the Ivory Coast into Liberia for logistical reasons related to his current service in the U.S. Army.

“These slippers and the tradition associated with them are extremely significant to me and much appreciated,” said Lott. “Perhaps even more so – and what makes this gift even more personally special – is the man and deputy who presented them to me. His story of overcoming seemingly insurmountable odds, of achieving great things, and then giving back to those in need is one which speaks to the very culture and tradition of our department and who we are.”

Though Sheriff Lott and Lt. Col. Ashe were the only recipients of the ornate slippers, Browne’s fellow members of the CAT team also received special African gifts.

W. Thomas Smith Jr., a special deputy with the Richland County Sheriff’s Department in Richland County, South Carolina, is a formerly deployed U.S. Marine infantry leader and former SWAT team officer in the nuclear industry.
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