The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Former DeKalb official charged in bribery case

Guilty plea expected from ex-zoning appeals board member.

- By Mark Niesse mark.niesse@ajc.com

Prosecutor­s are accusing yet another former DeKalb County official of corruption — this time involving allegation­s of bribery.

Jerry Clark, who served on the DeKalb Zoning Board of Appeals until June 2013, allegedly obtained $3,500 in exchange for his influence, according to court documents released Friday.

Clark, 44, is expected to plead guilty in federal court Thursday. He and his attorney declined to comment.

Clark solicited and accepted a bribe involving transactio­ns valued at more than $5,000, according to a one-count criminal informatio­n filed in the case.

The filing of a criminal

exchanging items sold in online transactio­ns.

“It has become very prevalent. The internet is allowing criminals to shop for victims,” said Cpl. Jake Smith of the Gwinnett County Police Department.

“They are able to determine what the victim will have (money or item) and where they will commit the crime,” Smith said. “Craigslist is the most common site used and is one of the more difficult to track.”

Concerns about Craigslist have gained renewed attention because of the deaths of Bud and June Runion. The Marietta couple was lured to rural Telfair County last month, allegedly by a man they had contacted via Craigslist as Bud Runion searched for a classic Ford Mustang. The two were shot to death in the rural county. And earlier this week, James Jones Jr., 21, was robbed, shot and killed while attempting to buy an iPhone6 from Craigslist, Marietta police said. Patty Zeitz (center), mother of the victim Daniel John Zeitz, reacts as she sits with family members and friends during a hearing for 16-year-old Kayla Dixon, who Sandy Springs police say fired the shot that killed her son over a video gaming system the victim had advertised on Craigslist, at Fulton County Superior Court last September. Less than 24 hours later, investigat­ors had arrested three suspects and charged them with murder.

Two other people in the metro area have died over the last two years in crimes linked to Craigslist.

“When it comes to safety and security, they have a total blind spot that is bad for their users, bad for them and has led to incredibly sad outcomes, like the Runions,” said Peter M. Zollman, founding principal of AIM Group, an interactiv­e and classified advertisin­g consulting firm.

Zollman said he has documented at least 50 homicides nationwide related to Craigslist trans- actions.

“I use Craigslist. I love Craigslist. I think (founder) Craig (Newmark) and (CEO) Jim Buckmaster provide a great service,” Zollman said in a phone interview Friday. “They can’t solve the problem, and they should not be blamed for the actions of people who rob and kill and rape other people using Craigslist as a connecting tissue.”

But he said Craigslist has been remiss in protecting its customers. Zollman criticized what he called Craigslist’s “very half-hearted, moderately well-hidden security informatio­n.”

A representa­tive of Craigslist did not respond to a request for comment Friday. But in a 2011 blog post, Buckmaster noted Zollman’s research has been funded by a competitor of Craigslist. And he said any crimes linked to his company are dwarfed by the hundreds of millions of uneventful posts and transactio­ns.

“Crime is rare on Craigslist in part because criminals know that the electronic trail they leave there helps ensure their capture, and CL is unusually helpful and cooperativ­e with law enforcemen­t,” he wrote.

“The risk is not zero, of course, and common sense precaution­s are in order when using Craigslist, just as you would do at other venues or offline (where risks are arguably higher),” Buckmaster wrote.

Police department­s around the country have seen Craigslist robberies of all kinds, but say they often center on mobile devices or gaming systems.

Officer Jesse Roybal, spokesman for the Las Vegas Metropolit­an Police Department, said his department usually sees a spike in such robberies with the release of new products such as iPhones or PlayStatio­ns.

“When the PlayStatio­n 4 was released, people were advertisin­g that they had them, and they didn’t and they robbed the people who came to buy them,” Roybal said. “We saw that a lot.”

Roybal said they also notice a spike in Craigslist robberies around Christmast­ime. Even so, he couldn’t remember a recent case that resulted in murder.

Sgt. Pete Simpson, spokesman for the Portland, Oregon, Police Department said that the most common Craigslist robbery in his city is of iPhones. Even though they usually involve a weapon, none has ended in murder, Simpson said.

Zollman said that nearly 50 police department­s around the nation have begun inviting people to transact Craigslist business at police stations.

Metro Atlanta police department­s have begun allowing online sales transactio­ns to happen on their premises.

Though Craigslist crimes have gained attention, Zollman acknowledg­ed that crime via classified ads isn’t new.

“It used to happen with newspaper classified­s 30 year ago,” he said. “That said, Craigslist is absolutely not doing enough to encourage, to promote and to provide avenues to safe transactio­ns. Simple as that.”

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