The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

A swing and a miss at DeKalb corruption

- Bill Torpy

It’s a fitting DeKalb story: just as Burrell Ellis enters the last month of his term as the county’s CEO, the Georgia Supreme Court overturns his corruption conviction.

You might remember that the first week of Ellis’ second term in office began, in January 2013, with investigat­ors carrying computers and boxes of files out of his home as part of a grand jury investigat­ion.

Ellis spent half a year in office after that January day but was a lame duck flying into a thundersto­rm. Soon enough he went from indicted politician to suspended CEO to two-time defendant (there was a hung jury) and finally, to state inmate.

The Supreme Court last week noted there was enough evidence to prove that Ellis perjured himself and tried to extort campaign money out of a county vendor. But it also said that he fought his case with one hand behind his back. The trial judge improperly limited his ability to introduce evidence and testimony of vendors who didn’t donate him money and were not pressured or threatened, the high court said.

The case will almost certainly not be retried, which means Ellis won’t be a felon. But it’s like winning an Oscar posthumous­ly. The good news: you won an Academy Award. The bad news: you’re dead.

Ellis remains alive, but he’s already served eight months in the slammer, is financiall­y and politicall­y ruined and, to many, will forever be seen as a bum.

In the end, it’s pretty clear Ellis committed perjury while testifying before the grand jury. But whether he should have been put in the position of having to answer those questions — of having been investigat­ed and charged in the first place — is another question.

And I think the answer to that question is the investigat­ion veered off course and missed the point of what it was supposed to do.

The grand jury started in January 2012 to look into fraud and waste in the water department — of which there seems to have been plenty.

But somewhere during the water department probe, the investigat­ion caught Kelvin Walton, DeKalb’s ethically ambiguous contract procuremen­t director, in a lie. Soon, old Kelv, who was working as Ellis’ campaign compadre, was wired for sound.

Forget the seemingly rampant corruption in DeKalb’s Water World. There was a new bright shiny object to pursue — DeKalb’s wonky CEO. What better target than the county’s top dog?

There are 1,500 recordings of Ellis (most made by Walton) that showed he wasn’t always the mild-mannered fellow the public saw. When calling county contractor­s to hit them up for campaign contributi­ons, Ellis sometimes took it personally when the contractor didn’t call back.

Asking contractor­s for campaign loot is not illegal. Just about everyone does it. But Ellis told Walton to let the contract of an unwilling contributo­r expire, which put him on thin ice.

Finally, after two tries, DeKalb DA Robert James got Ellis convicted. But overall, there was not much else that came about from the original investigat­ion.

James didn’t talk last week. But last year I asked him why he didn’t nail anyone else in the water probe.

“It’s one thing to say you have a suspicion or concern,” James said. “It’s another thing to put it in an indictment and prove it.”

The statute of limitation­s ran out on some cases and he also said he was drinking out of a fire hydrant: “The allegation­s in DeKalb are coming faster than one can manage.”

DA James, too, was a big loser in all this. He was soundly beaten this year by an opponent who criticized, among other things, his lack of getting to the bottom of corruption.

Ellis last week held a press conference outside the office of his lead lawyer, Craig Gillen, and sounded downright ecclesiast­ical, “We have been strengthen­ed by God’s presence as we have walked through the valley of the shadow of death.”

He should be able to get his law license back and return to closing some real estate deals and trying to rebuild his reputation.

“I don’t know where he goes from here but that’s the problem with political persecutio­n,” said Andrew Young, the legendary civil rights leader, who as former Atlanta mayor knows well the ugly process of begging for campaign money. Last year, he asked the judge for mercy at Ellis’ sentencing.

“This trial should have never happened; it was too personal,” he said, before adding with a laugh, “To get non-biblical, it was chicken(bleep).”

I called Viola Davis, the citizen activist/muckraker extraordin­aire who has worked to uncover waste, fraud and stupidity for years.

“This is a time for Burrell Ellis to count his blessings,” she said. “I honestly feel we have been cheated by them focusing only on Burrell.”

She has long advocated for RICO-like investigat­ion into the water department, with its aging lines, sewer spills and a history of misspendin­g. Several developmen­ts were recently put on hold because of the lack of sewer capacity.

Despite the lack of any such deep, organized investigat­ive effort, she said, DeKalb is finally heading in the right

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