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Left: Margaret Roberson (Horry County Sheriff”s Office). Right: The residence where children were allegedly trafficked in Carolina Forest, S.C. (Horry County Police Department).
A South Carolina judge has denied bail to a woman implicated in a human trafficking case linked to the tragic death of an 11-year-old girl. This week, Margaret Roberson, 57, faced charges including five counts of human trafficking, three counts of unlawful conduct toward a child, and one count of criminal conspiracy, as per the Horry County Sheriff’s Office.
The allegations against Roberson, along with Camisha Marie McGaskey, 32, originate from events beginning in January 2025. Authorities allege that the two women coerced five minors into cleaning medical clinics in the Conway area, a town approximately 15 miles from Myrtle Beach.
The case gained public attention in June 2025, following McGaskey’s arrest for the murder of A’Kyri Bell, an 11-year-old from Texas. The young girl resided with the accused on Sago Palm Drive in Carolina Forest, a location situated between Conway and Myrtle Beach.
Horry County Police Chief Kris Leonhardtt addressed the gravity of the situation during a press conference, as reported by Florence’s CBS affiliate WBTW. “This was a horrific crime,” Leonhardtt stated. “This poor 11-year-old victim suffered multiple injuries. If you see these types of things in our community, please, please, report them.”
Initially, McGaskey, along with Lakesha Burnett, 34, and Alantis Thomas, 22, faced charges of obstructing justice. As the investigation progressed, further charges were brought against the others. McGaskey, who was A’Kyri’s legal guardian, now faces an upgraded charge of murder.
McGaskey and two other defendants – Lakesha Burnett, 34, and Alantis Thomas, 22 – were initially charged with obstruction of justice. Additional charges came later for the other defendants. Meanwhile, McGaskey, A’Kyri legal guardian, had her charges upgraded to murder.
A total of six adults are now charged in the case.
As the investigation continued, the human trafficking charges were leveled against Roberson, who prosecutors referred to as the “matriarch of the house,” during a hearing this week, according to a courtroom report by Myrtle Beach-based NBC affiliate WMBF.
Leigh Waller, an attorney for the state, described how abuse would allegedly be meted out to the children who lived in the house.
“They said if they didn’t clean they – Camisha McGaskey – they would get what they called ‘the upper room treatment’ … when a child would be taken into a bathroom, the upstairs bathroom, and essentially waterboarded,” the prosecutor told the court.
The state’s attorney said there are videos of the abuse occurring. Those videos allegedly implicate Roberson.
“Margaret Roberson sits in the videos and watches, while she sits in her bedroom,” Waller told the judge on Thursday.
During the bond hearing, one alleged victim said Roberson knew about the abuse and “thought it was funny.”
A defense attorney for Roberson disputed his client’s knowledge of any such abuse – and also took issue with claims that the children in the house had been human trafficked under the law.
“The fact that it’s forced labor just doesn’t seem to be verified by the evidence that I’ve seen,” Morgan Martin, Roberson’s lawyer, told the court. “I think that there are situations where children can be working, or asked to work, or told to work, that doesn’t amount to human trafficking, because that’s got a totally different definition to it.”
The defense attorney also said the facts about the work are murky.
“Nobody from Conway hospital, nobody other than these children, who give contradictory statements, the each of them, frankly, about exactly what was happening with regards with their going to Conway hospital to work,” Martin went on.
A’Kyri died on June 11, 2025. She was found by authorities and rushed to a hospital that day where she succumbed to blunt force injuries.
Authorities believe A’Kyri was one of five children trafficked by McGaskey and Roberson. Additionally, prosecutors allege Burnett, Alantis Thomas, Alexandria Thomas, 20, and Darnell Dearmas, 21, “contributed to the circumstances that led to the homicide.”