Attorney: Hephzibah father’s heart failed after jail ignored pleas for help

Tyrone King is shown at left in the hospital. At right, he poses with his family.

Date: August 31, 2025

A 32-year-old Hephzibah man and father of four is now living with permanent heart damage and awaiting a transplant, after what his attorney calls a “completely preventable medical crisis” that unfolded while he was in custody at the Charles B. Webster Detention Center.

Tyrone Edell King was arrested on Aug. 15, 2024, by Richmond County deputies on a range of charges, including obstruction of a law enforcement officer, giving false information to police, and multiple traffic-related offenses. Court records also show he had an order to show cause in Superior Court and a warrant from Magistrate’s Court.

But King’s attorney, Robert T. Homlar, says what followed his arrest is the real story.

From the moment he was taken into custody, King repeatedly told officers he was having trouble breathing, that his chest was tightening, he felt faint, and was visibly sweating. Rather than rushing him to emergency care, deputies called in a non-emergency ambulance. Paramedics reportedly evaluated King for only eight minutes before releasing him back to deputies, who booked him into jail.

Mugshot of Tyrone King

In jail, King continued to vomit, struggle to breathe, and begged for help over the course of three days. His condition was reportedly dismissed by jail personnel until, on Aug. 18, 2024, a nurse finally ran an EKG, revealing he had suffered a massive heart attack caused by a complete blockage of a coronary artery. By then, the damage was done.

King was transported to Piedmont Hospital’s cardiovascular ICU, where doctors found that more than 70 percent of his heart had been permanently damaged. He underwent emergency surgery, was given an Impella heart pump, and was later fitted with a LifeVest external defibrillator. Despite his critical condition, King was returned to jail, and only later released on bond.

In May 2025, King received a Left Ventricular Assist Device (LVAD), a mechanical heart pump used for patients with end-stage heart failure. He is now the youngest patient ever at Piedmont to receive the device and is currently on the heart transplant list.

Once a healthy construction worker and sole provider for his family, King is now unable to work. His wife, caring for their newborn and three other children, is struggling to keep the family afloat. They face mounting medical expenses, housing insecurity, and daily logistical challenges as King attends appointments in both Augusta and Atlanta.

A GoFundMe campaign titled “Help Tyrone King Stay Alive for His Wife & Four Children” has been launched by attorney Homlar to raise funds for rent, basic living costs, transportation for medical care, medication, home modifications and long-term care.

King remains at home in Hephzibah with his family as he awaits a donor heart.

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The Author

Greg Rickabaugh is an award-winning crime reporter in the Augusta-Aiken area with experience writing for The Augusta Chronicle and serving as publisher of The Jail Report. He also owns AugustaCrime.com. Rickabaugh is a 1994 graduate of the University of South Carolina and has appeared on several crime documentaries on the Investigation Discovery channel. He is married with two daughters.

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