On December 9, 2003, Steven and Rita Bixby were arraigned in Abbeville County on various charges related to the deaths of Wilson and Ouzts. Steven was charged with two counts of murder and one count of
criminal conspiracy, while Rita was charged with
accessory before the fact to murder, criminal conspiracy, and
misprision of a
felony. At
arraignment, Steven said he was acting in self-defense and cited the New Hampshire motto, parts of the
Constitution of New Hampshire, and some Federal law. There, he said, "I love this country. I just can't stand the bastards in it." Arthur Bixby was later arraigned on charges similar to those against Steven. Prosecutors originally planned to seek the
death penalty for all three Bixbys, but on August 23, 2006, Circuit Judge Alexander Macaulay ruled that the death penalty was not an option in Rita's case, a ruling that prosecutors appealed to have overturned by the
South Carolina Supreme Court. In
State v. Bixby, 373 S.C. 74, 644 S.E.2d 54 (2007), the South Carolina Supreme Court affirmed the trial court's decision that Rita Bixby was ineligible for execution under South Carolina law since she was only charged with accessory before the fact of murder. Following arraignment, Steven Bixby likened the standoff to the events at
Waco and
Ruby Ridge. another reason was the contest between the defense and prosecution over both the venue of the trial and the county from which a jury pool would be selected. In early 2006, Macaulay agreed with Steven Bixby's defense that it would be nearly impossible to seat a truly impartial jury of Abbeville County citizens; in July 2006, Macaulay ruled that potential jurors would come from Chesterfield County. Steven Bixby is currently on South Carolina's death row at the
Broad River Correctional Institution, in
Columbia, South Carolina. On February 19, 2007, a Chesterfield County jury found Steven Bixby guilty on 17 counts, including both murders and several lesser charges of kidnapping and conspiracy. On February 21, 2007, this same jury recommended that Steven Bixby receive two death sentences for the murders and 125 years in prison for the lesser charges. Bixby was scheduled to be executed on April 22, 2007; however, the appeals process has not been exhausted. On August 16, 2010, the South Carolina Supreme Court affirmed the conviction of Steven Bixby and the death sentence (
State v. Bixby, Opinion No. 26871, August 16, 2010). While in jail, Steven Bixby wrote over 1,500 pages of letters to his girlfriend. Some of the letters, signed "chaotic patriot Steve", were admitted during his trial. Despite initial concerns over security at the 100-year-old
Abbeville County Courthouse, Eighth Circuit Judicial Solicitor Jerry Peace determined on August 29, 2006, that the trial would be held in Abbeville County. The trial began on February 14, 2007, with a jury brought in from 160 miles away. On October 26, 2007, Rita Bixby was found guilty in Abbeville County
Court of General Sessions. Judge Alexander Macauley presided over the week-long trial. Rita Bixby was found guilty by a jury of one count of
conspiracy to commit
murder, 1 count of
accessory before the fact in the murder of Danny Wilson, and 1 count of accessory before the fact in the murder of Donnie Ouzts. The maximum penalty that could be imposed on the conspiracy count was 5 years. The accessory charge carried a minimum sentence of 30 years to life without parole. Judge Alexander Macauley sentenced Rita Bixby to 5 years in the custody of the
Department of Corrections for the charge of conspiracy to commit murder. He sentenced her to life without parole on each accessory conviction. Rita Bixby made no statement to the court, only asking her attorney to advise Judge Macauley that she "is not guilty of these charges". Tearful family members of the deceased who were present for the trial embraced each other in relief at the ruling of Judge Macauley. On the date of her sentence, Rita Bixby was 75 years old. Because Arthur Bixby had developed
dementia, he was found not capable of standing trial. In July 2008, prosecutors dropped the murder charges and requested the
probate court commit him indefinitely. On February 22, 2008, South Carolina state transportation officials agreed to name a stretch of state Highway 72 in Abbeville County for Abbeville County Deputy Sheriff Danny Wilson and Abbeville County Magistrate's Constable Donnie Ouzts. In September 2011, Arthur and Rita Bixby died of natural causes a week apart. On September 5, Arthur died at the age of 82. On September 12, Rita died of cancer at the
Graham Correctional Institution. She was 79. The house was demolished in 2018. Nearly a hundred people turned out to watch the event. Today, the place where the house sat is an empty lot. On August 17, 2010, the South Carolina Supreme Court upheld the death sentence for Steven Bixby. He remained on death row for years because the drugs used for
lethal injection were unavailable during that time. The passage of Act 43 in 2021 allowed the state to resume capital punishment via electrocution or firing squad. The state resumed executions in September 2024. Bixby appealed part of his case to the Supreme Court, as of August 2024, where a stay of execution was temporarily called on March 14, 2025. Bixby, who received his death sentence in 2007, was originally the sixth and final inmate slated to receive an execution date in May, but the South Carolina Supreme Court granted Bixby an indefinite
stay of execution via a 3–2 vote. That resulted in a status hearing on April 4, 2025, for mental competency hearing to assess whether he was mentally competent to be executed. Bixby's mental competency hearing was tentatively scheduled for August 2025. On September 15, 2025, he was found competent to be executed, however it was noted that Bixby's lawyers can appeal the ruling to the South Carolina Supreme Court. == See also ==