The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Reed says fed’s bribery probe does Atlanta ‘a favor’

Mayor: ‘Need to punish any individual involved in wrongdoing.’

- By Leon Stafford lstafford@ajc.com

In his last appearance as mayor before the Atlanta Press Club, Kasim Reed on Tuesday tried to put a positive spin on the bribery scandal threatenin­g to mar his legacy.

After citing a list of accomplish­ments over the past seven years — including a residentia­l boom, thousands of new jobs and millions of dollars for infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts — Reed acknowledg­ed the probe has the potential to taint everything he has done.

“We need to accept the Justice Department’s investigat­ion as something that is doing the city a favor because if there is a problem with our process, we need to get to the bottom of it and we need to punish any individual involved in wrongdoing,” he said. “I’m not going to let the last seven years of what we have done to move Atlanta to a position it simply has not been in be thrown out the window.”

Federal authoritie­s are investigat­ing allegation­s of “pay-forplay” in contractin­g at City Hall. Since January, two subcontrac­tors have pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit bribery and the city fired its chief procuremen­t officer last week after the FBI confiscate­d computers and other items from his office.

Reed has not been implicated in the probe and has said he has not been interviewe­d by federal authoritie­s.

A standing-room only crowd of journalist­s from all of the city’s print, radio and broadcast media, as well as national newspapers such as the Wall Street Journal, turned out for Reed’s appearance at the swanky Commerce Club in downtown Atlanta.

The mayor’s roughly 50-minute

speech was wide-ranging, touching on the successes of his tenure, surprises he hopes to unveil in the coming months before it ends later this year and even handicappi­ng the race to succeed him. He declined to say who he thinks has the best chance.

It also continues a victory lap of sorts the mayor has been having since the new year. Looking back over his tenure, Reed has given similar speeches that focus heavily on economic developmen­t, such as attracting NCR Corp. and the U.S. headquarte­rs of German car manufactur­er Mercedes Benz to the region and convincing Atlantans to increase the sales tax by almost a penny last November to pay for improvemen­ts to MARTA and the city’s ailing infrastruc­ture.

He boasts of getting many homeless veterans off the streets, outpacing Gwinnett, Forsyth and Cobb counties in the number of building permits issued and a rosier financial picture than when he took office in 2010.

“My goal is to leave the city of Atlanta with $175 million in the bank for a rainy day,” he said Tuesday. But it’s clear the bribery scandal is having an impact. The laundry list of accomplish­ments he has committed to memory now come with a caveat: “Despite the fact we are currently in the midst of the toughest period of my administra­tion ... the City of Atlanta by every measure is absolutely ascendant.” The Tuesday meeting with the Press Club was different from the others in one way, however. It gave him his last opportunit­y to meet with a frequent adversary: the media.

Things started out jovial. Referencin­g the ongoing battle between the press and President Donald Trump, who has called the media the “enemy of the people,” Reed said, “Even members of the press need love.”

But Reed was more combative when defending his record, his use of press releases to go after specific reporters and media outlets, and his office’s decision to release more than 1.4 million documents related to the bribery case, including hundreds of pages that had no informatio­n on them because they related to employee’s personal informatio­n like Social Security numbers.

He said while the press may not support him, the public does, with his favorabili­ty dropping no lower than 62 percent throughout his time in office. He did not cite the origins of the numbers. “You all’s profession isn’t viewed any more favorably than mine,” he said, “but I’m not going to go Trump on you because you’re not fake news, you’re news. You are valuable, you are essential.”

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / AJC ?? Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed speaks at Atlanta Press Club’s Newsmaker Luncheon on Tuesday at the Commerce Club in downtown Atlanta. The Atlanta Press Club hosts newsmakers from around Atlanta, Georgia and the United States to speak to members and guests at...
HYOSUB SHIN / AJC Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed speaks at Atlanta Press Club’s Newsmaker Luncheon on Tuesday at the Commerce Club in downtown Atlanta. The Atlanta Press Club hosts newsmakers from around Atlanta, Georgia and the United States to speak to members and guests at...
 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed receives a standing ovation after he spoke at the Atlanta Press Club’s Newsmaker Luncheon.
HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed receives a standing ovation after he spoke at the Atlanta Press Club’s Newsmaker Luncheon.

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