South Carolina Boutique Owner Arrested Again — for 15th Time in 2026 — After Customer Complaints

A South Carolina boutique owner accused of repeatedly defrauding customers has been sent to prison for the 15th time since the beginning of 2026, records show.
Pamela Brooke Schronce He was arrested in Greenville County on Thursday, April 2, on five counts of obtaining property valued at $2,000 or less under false pretenses, according to court and jail records he reviewed. Us Weekly.
these signs Schronce’s 15th arrest According to WHNS, mugshots have been taken statewide for the 15th time since January 1.
Schronce, 30, of Anderson County, who owns Thomas & Turner Boutique in Belton, is accused of failing to deliver items that dozens of customers purchased online from his business, according to authorities. We has been reported previously.
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Its customers had been complaining for months that Schronce never refunded them, WHNS reported.
According to her boutique’s Instagram page, Schronce markets her business as a “boutique for trendy toddlers” offering “custom designer pieces.”
His business did not respond to previous requests for comment We.
A web page for his business states that Thomas & Turner Boutique is no longer accepting online orders.
Before April 2, Schronce was arrested on March 19 in Anderson County. We has been reported previously. This was his 14th arrest.
Schronce has established himself as an authority in Pendleton, according to Pendleton’s Interim Police Chief David Poulson.
Similar to the last arrest, he is accused of receiving property valued at $2,000 or less under false pretenses, police said.
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Schronce’s attorney said following his 13th arrest in March in Newberry County, where he was accused of receiving property valued at $2,000 or less under false pretenses. Joy C. Davisit has been said before We It was stated that “the case is still in its early stages.”
“I can tell you that Ms. Schronce is truly looking forward to her day in court,” Davis wrote in a March 3 emailed statement.
Davis did not immediately respond to a request for comment Friday, April 3.
Following Schronce’s most recent arrest on April 2, he left the Greenville County Detention Center and was released, records show. His bond was set at $5,000.
He was previously arrested in Greenville County on Feb. 13, according to WHNS.
In February, the South Carolina Attorney General’s Office was asked to file charges against Schronce, according to WHNS. The office has previously said it was working on “how to determine the best path forward.”



