Solicitor releases statement in Tucker Hipps investigation

In response to media inquiries, 10th Circuit Solicitor Chrissy Adams released information regarding the case. The Oconee County Sheriff’s Office, along with the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division (SLED), has been investigating the death of Tucker Hipps since Sept. 22, 2014. The investigation revealed that 30 students affiliated with Sigma Phi Epsilon went on a group run at approximately 5:30am the morning of Sept. 22, 2014. The students left Donaldson Hall and ran toward Fike Recreation Center on Heisman Street. They then turned right on Williamson Road and then proceeded to take a left on Highway 93. The run continued down Highway 93 facing traffic and across the bridge from Pickens County to Oconee County. The group ran single file while on the bridge. The group turned around slightly after the bridge and returned to Donaldson Hall along the same route initially travelled. The run lasted less than thirty minutes. Upon realizing that no one saw Tucker Hipps return from the run and his absence at breakfast, the group began conducting their own search for him. Tucker Hipps was not reported missing to law enforcement until around 1pm. Tucker Hipps’ body was eventually found in Lake Hartwell under the Oconee County side of the bridge headfirst in rocky, shallow water. Over these past months, the Oconee Sheriff’s Office and SLED have interviewed and re-interviewed potential witnesses, reviewed videos from Clemson University and from businesses along the route of the run as well as phone records and text messages from multiple individuals. Every possible explanation for Tucker Hipps’ tragic death has been explored. An expert forensic pathologist has also been consulted in order to determine what kind of event would have resulted in Tucker Hipps’ injuries. All students on the run are claiming that they have no knowledge of how Tucker Hipps could have fallen to his death and that no one saw Tucker Hipps go off the bridge and fall to his death. The Oconee County Sheriff’s Department and SLED have worked diligently and have exhausted all leads that have been received as of this date. Law enforcement is at a standstill and unable to go forward until such time that additional credible leads are received and can be investigated. Therefore, the Oconee County Sheriff’s Office has assigned this case to its unsolved crimes investigation unit. Anyone with information is urged to call Crime Stoppers at 1-888-CRIME-SC or those who wish to speak directly with an investigator can call the Oconee County Sheriff’s Office at 864-718-1052. All calls will remain anonymous and confidential. “Tucker Hipps’ death is a terrible tragedy,” stated Solicitor Adams. “This young man will not, and must not be forgotten. His family deserves answers. His family and those who knew and loved him deserve to know the circumstances surrounding his untimely death. I can only hope and pray that anyone with information will find the strength to come forward, for the sake of the family and in Tucker’s memory.”