Pubdate: Thu, 30 Nov 2000
Source: Augusta Chronicle, The (GA)
Copyright: 2000 The Augusta Chronicle
Contact:  (LTEs from GA & SC only)
Address: 725 Broad Street, Augusta, GA 30901
Website: http://www.augustachronicle.com/
Author: Margaret N. O'Shea

LANDMARK SITE WILL GO ON MARKET

Government Will Auction Seven Gables, Seized After Drug-dealing Owner's Trial

NORTH AUGUSTA - U.S. Treasury officials are putting the historic Seven 
Gables mansion on the auction block after acquiring it as forfeited 
property from a convicted drug dealer who used it to launder marijuana profits.

Built in 1903 as a hunting lodge for wealthy patrons of the Hampton Terrace 
Hotel, which burned in 1917, the North Augusta landmark on Georgia Avenue 
was last used as a restaurant.

In the late '80s, the restaurant was known as the Buffalo Room and was the 
target of an FBI investigation because of its practice of barring blacks 
from the property.

The Tudor-Revival style house, named for its distinctive gables, has stood 
vacant since owner Randy Salter pleaded guilty in a Texas federal court to 
conspiring to distribute bulk quantities of marijuana and to money 
laundering. He is serving a 10-year sentence in an undisclosed federal prison.

Under a plea agreement, Mr. Salter gave up Seven Gables, which is on the 
National Register of Historic Places, along with several vehicles, a $4,000 
Rolex watch, two pairs of snow skis and $11,000 cash. The government agreed 
not to seize his home on Martinez Road.

Government agents found that Mr. Salter used Seven Gables to conceal 
illegal drug profits, which he channeled as loans to the restaurant through 
two corporations he had formed, said Jack Harris, Internal Revenue Service 
Criminal Investigations special agent in charge of operations in Corpus 
Christi.

The two-story house and an adjacent motel will be sold at auction Dec. 15 
at noon by EG&G Technical Services, a private company that handles sales of 
property seized by the federal government. The company is holding open 
houses from 1 to 4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, this weekend and next, for 
prospective buyers who must deposit $25,000 in certified funds if they plan 
to bid.

North Augusta Mayor Lark Jones said Wednesday that city officials hope the 
auction will attract a buyer who respects Seven Gables' style, history and 
importance to the town and who "will do something with it that benefits the 
community."

Possible uses, he said, are as a private home; a restaurant, for which it 
remains fully equipped; a banquet and meeting hall; or a bed-and-breakfast.

EG&G representative Britney Bartlett declined to speculate Wednesday on the 
value of Seven Gables, with its antique furnishings, dark wood paneling, 
carved mantels and balconies. "The ultimate bids will decide what it is 
worth," she said. "We don't want to influence the bids."

Part of the property's value is its rich history, and its buyer might be 
eligible for federal tax incentives to restore it, she said.

As the Hampton Terrace Hunting Lodge, it welcomed among its guests some of 
America's wealthiest and most famous - among them Marshall Field, Harvey 
Firestone, John D. Rockefeller and President William H. Taft. Under the 
name Palmetto Lodge, the mansion was a private winter home to some of North 
Augusta's most distinguished residents, including the John Herberts of New 
York. Author Edison Marshall wrote his novel The Vikings while living there.

The property began to acquire a more lurid image under the ownership of the 
Salter family in more recent years. Mr. Salter's father, Bruce, triggered 
an FBI investigation and lawsuit in 1989 when he refused to serve black 
customers at the restaurant, then known as the Buffalo Room - a reference 
to the horned head of a black buffalo that hangs in the paneled great room, 
one of several stuffed heads of big game on the walls.

Closed during that litigation, Seven Gables reopened in the 1990s under 
ownership of Randy Salter and his brother, James.

The restaurant did not come into play in Randy Salter's earlier drug 
convictions during Operation Jackpot, which targeted narcotics kingpins in 
South Carolina, because he didn't own it then, Assistant U.S. Attorney 
Marvin Caughman said.

In 1987, Mr. Salter was convicted in federal court in Charleston of 
possessing a controlled substance with intent to distribute it, and he was 
sentenced to 10 years in federal prison. The same year, he was convicted in 
Brunswick County, N.C., of conspiring to traffic more than 10 pounds of 
marijuana and got a six-year state sentence that was to run concurrently 
with his federal time.

In 1990, he was convicted of tax evasion in federal court in Columbia. He 
got probation.

The last time Mr. Salter was convicted, agents identified numerous 
properties either bought with drug profits or used to conceal them, Mr. 
Caughman said. The law allows the properties to be seized and sold to help 
pay for law enforcement and provide restitution to crime victims.

"The message we intend to send is that we're going to take the profit out 
of crime," Mr. Caughman said.

His office was one of several involved in investigating the drug ring that 
Mr. Salters led, culminating in his arrest in Texas in 1998. Other agencies 
included the North Augusta Department of Public Safety, the McCormick 
Violent Crime Task Force, and investigative units in the Carolinas and Texas.
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