The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Educators to learn sentences next week

- By Rhonda Cook rcook@ajc.com Ty Tagami ttagami@ajc.com and Mark Niesse mark.niesse@ajc.com

After considerin­g nearly five months of testimony, a Fulton County jury convicted all but one of the dozen former Atlanta teachers and administra­tors on trial in the largest testcheati­ng scandal in the nation.

On Wednesday afternoon, 10 former teachers and school administra­tors were handcuffed and taken to jail, where they will await sentencing, perhaps to decades in prison. The 11th was at home, waiting to give birth.

Only Dessa Curb, a former teacher, walked out of the courthouse a free woman.

“I knew God had my back,” she said.

In total, 32 former educators were convicted, counting the 21 who pleaded guilty to lesser charges before the trial’s start last year. Two others, including former Superinten­dent Beverly Hall, died of cancer before they could be tried.

The case capped what began in 2008 when The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on broke the first of several stories highlighti­ng suspect

test scores in Atlanta Public Schools and other Georgia districts. As the AJC kept digging, special investigat­ors were eventually appointed by the governor.

Wednesday’s conviction­s confirmed what those investigat­ors and prosecutor­s have said for years: teachers, principals and their bosses cheated so that inflated scores on standardiz­ed tests would earn them bonuses and pay raises, or at least allow them to keep their jobs, as Hall increased testing expectatio­ns beyond and above federal mandates.

Fulton County District Attorney Paul How- ard, who was criticized for bringing racketeeri­ng charges against teachers, said he hoped the outcome would lead to a re-examinatio­n of Atlanta’s education system and help the community “understand this was not some fantasy created by the DA’s office.”

The cheating robbed students, who often were passed on to the next grade though they couldn’t read, write or do basic math. Inflated test scores papered over these failures, causing schools to miss out on federal grants — the prosecutio­n tallied the loss at $8 million in 2009 alone — that could have paid for tutoring or other remedial programs.

It took years to expose the scandal.

After the AJC broke the news of questionab­le test scores in 2008, the articles prompted a state review of test answer sheets from 2009. The review found statistica­lly unlikely numbers of wrong answers erased and replaced with correct answers.

Students in a fourthgrad­e class at Dobbs Elementary School in southeast Atlanta had a 1 in 288 septillion chance of doing as well as they purportedl­y did.

The erasure analysis prompted an investigat­ion by the governor’s office. Special investigat­ors aided by scores of GBI agents interviewe­d hundreds of Atlanta Public Schools employees and obtained admissions of cheating. The inves- tigative report released in July 2011 concluded that cheating was pervasive and that thousands of schoolchil­dren were deprived of the education they deserved.

The report criticized the “business community” for defending Hall and the district after the erasures were exposed. “Image was more important than truth,” it said. “Somewhere in this process, the truth got lost, and so did the children.”

The report also prompted Howard to investigat­e and bring charges.

Prosecutor­s said Hall’s rigorous accountabi­lity measures — stronger than federal objectives under the No Child Left

Behind Act — demanded ever-increasing and unrealisti­c test scores. As scores rose, she garnered national accolades, but the governor’s report says teachers suffered under her administra­tion. The report said the system was primed for cheating by the severe consequenc­es meted out for failure, including firings, demotions and public humiliatio­n.

Well before the trial, the scandal led to an overhaul of the Atlanta school board and the hiring eventually of a new superinten­dent, Meria Carstarphe­n.

“I have always felt the whole thing was tragic,” said Erroll Davis, who was interim superinten­dent between Hall and Carstarphe­n.

“I think every teacher understand­s now the downsides of bad integrity,” he said. “That’s abundantly clear to all.”

The mayor, school officials and some parents saw the verdicts as a final page in a story that has run on too long, while others saw the outcome as a footnote in the lives of students denied an education.

Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed said he hoped the verdict would allow his city to “finally close this chapter and move forward with the education and developmen­t of our young people.”

But Richard Quartarone, a father of two kids in an Atlanta school, said the verdict brings his city no closer to absolution. Prosecutor­s focused on 2009 but said cheating had gone on for years, denying thousands of an education.

“Closure,” Quartarone said, “is figuring out how to educate the kids who are in the system now and how to support the kids who were denied the opportunit­y to learn.”

The 11 convicted former educators face up to 20 years in prison on one count alone, violating Georgia’s Racketeer-Influenced and Corrupt Organizati­ons Act, or RICO.

The eight convicted on additional counts could get more time. Angela Williamson, a former teacher at Dobbs Elementary School in south- east Atlanta who was convicted of prompting kids with correct test answers, could spend the most time in prison. She was convicted on racketeeri­ng and four other counts, more than any of her codefendan­ts, with the other charges carrying incarcerat­ion sentences of five years or more.

Fulton County Superior Court Judge Jerry Baxter has indicated he will show little sympathy. He has noted that the defendants were given ample opportunit­y to accept plea bargains offered by the prosecutio­n. Twenty-one others accepted pleas, and many of them testified at trial.

Defense attorneys tried to use that fact, saying repeatedly throughout the trial that the prosecutio­n’s case was based on the words of admitted cheaters and liars.

George Lawson, who represente­d one of the three former regional administra­tors on trial, said outside the courthouse that he still has faith in the jury system but “not in the prosecutor­ial manner this was done.” He said that upon hearing the verdict, his client, Michael Pitts, turned to him and said: “Am I in America?”

During the eight days of jury deliberati­on, the courtroom remained filled with prosecutor­s, defense attorneys, defendants and their spouses. There was boredom punctuated by raucous laughter as people told jokes and stories to pass the time.

Then, around 1:45 p.m. Wednesday, a dozen deputies quietly entered, and the murmuring started, ending abruptly with the deputy’s now familiar call: “All rise.”

The jury of six men and six women entered.

Baxter broke the silence, thanking the jury and then reading off the verdicts.

The educators took it stoically, but there was an outburst when Baxter ordered them to jail.

Bob Rubin, who represente­d former Dobbs Elementary principal Dana Evans, said there was no reason to lock up the ex-educators before sentencing.

“There is a reason. They have been convicted,” Baxter retorted.

Teresa Mann, who represente­d former regional director Sharon Davis-Williams, joined the protest.

“They have been convicted of felonies, serious felonies,” Baxter said. “They have made this decision (to go to trial) and they have not fared well. I don’t like to send anybody to jail ... but they have made their bed and they have to lie in it.”

Then came the metal clicks as deputies pulled out their handcuffs. Their lawyers left the courtroom with their clients’ belongings — bags filled with jewelry, cellphones and computers.

Those with family members present got hugs before they were led out a side door.

Gerald Griggs said his client, Williamson, the former teacher, whispered to him that she could not believe she had been convicted on all five counts against her.

“My thought was, ‘What case were they listening to?’” Griggs said. “I respect this verdict, but how do you send teachers to prison?”

The Atlanta school system released a statement calling the case a “sad and tragic chapter” that is now over and said Carstarphe­n and the school board are collaborat­ing to “create a new culture.”

Joseph Adkins, a 79year-old raising his grandson, a sophomore at South Atlanta High, blamed the cheating on the relentless focus on tests, a focus that remains.

“Across the nation, schools have had to cheat in order to get their money. I think it was unfair,” he said. “Hall came up with some innovative ways to get black children to graduate. I know it wasn’t perfect, but Georgia was at the bottom anyway.”

But Shannon Williams, whose daughter is a sophomore at Carver Early College in south Atlanta, said the trial was necessary to expose, and hopefully to end, cheating.

“The only way that this would have been stopped was for them to be caught like this. It’s a good decision in my eyes,” she said. “It’s kind of an embarrassi­ng thing, but it needed to happen so now maybe they won’t do it anymore. Let’s hope they don’t.”

 ?? KENT D. JOHNSON / AJC ?? Fulton District Attorney Paul Howard, who was criticized for bringing racketeeri­ng charges against teachers, said he hoped the outcome would lead to a re-examinatio­n of Atlanta’s education system.
KENT D. JOHNSON / AJC Fulton District Attorney Paul Howard, who was criticized for bringing racketeeri­ng charges against teachers, said he hoped the outcome would lead to a re-examinatio­n of Atlanta’s education system.
 ?? KENT D. JOHNSON / AJC ?? Extra Fulton County deputies are stationed in the courtroom before the verdicts are read on Wednesday in the Atlanta Public Schools test-cheating trial.
KENT D. JOHNSON / AJC Extra Fulton County deputies are stationed in the courtroom before the verdicts are read on Wednesday in the Atlanta Public Schools test-cheating trial.

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