Taylor would spend a year behind hard at the Sheriff Al Cannon Detention Center in Charleston on the robbery, but it was a tool the FBI was using to pressure him and build a stronger case. He was eventually released because the FBI couldn’t establish probable cause for charges.
As he was incarcerated, Taylor’s mother Joan was fired and Shaun lost customers at his auto repair business. A pastor in their church stopped talking to them as well
“The FBI, in one brief stroke, had comprehensively and permanently reduced Timothy Taylor’s life and the lives of his family members to smoking rubble,” the lawsuit says.
At one point, Shaun Taylor hatched a plan to confess to Drexel’s killing, take sole responsibility in an effort to bring peace to the family. An attorney said it wouldn’t work, because the FBI would want to recover Drexel’s remains as proof.
In February 2019, Brown retold his story to a journalist, but every detail had changed. The FBI knew Taylor had nothing to do with Drexel’s murder – just as SLED agents told them years prior.
“The FBI watched as Taquan Brown’s credibility collapsed, taking with it their own. They ruled Timothy Taylor out as a suspect, but they were careful to keep that a secret,” McKaig’s lawsuit claims.
By not publicly clearing him, Taylor and his family
remained the prime suspects in the public eye, and the bullying and death threats continued.
As of the March 26 lawsuit filing, the FBI has yet to apologize or publicly acknowledge that Taylor had no involvement in the tragic, final weekend of Drexel’s life.
“To this day, the only apologies that the Taylors have received were given to them by the people who suffered and lost the most from this long and senseless human tragedy the parents of Brittanee Drexel,” McKaig wrote
HORRY COUNTY, S.C. (WBTW) — Chad and Dawn Drexel believed their fury toward Timothy Taylor was warranted. After all, if FBI agents told you they were certain who was behind the brutal kidnapp…
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