The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Grand jury indicts former city employee

Shandarric­k Barnes faces felony charges of terroristi­c threats.

- By J. Scott Trubey strubey@ajc.com

Shandarric­k Barnes is alleged to have tried to intimidate a City Hall bribery investigat­ion figure.

A Fulton County grand jury has indicted a former city of Atlanta employee on charges he tried to intimidate a key figure in the City Hall bribery investigat­ion with a brick and dead rats.

Shandarric­k Barnes, 41, faces felony charges of terroristi­c threats and criminal damage to property in the September 2015 incident at the home of contractor Elvin “E.R.” Mitchell Jr. Mitchell is one of two Atlanta area contractor­s to plead guilty so far to paying bribes in order to win city business. The Barnes indictment is dated Feb. 7.

Mitchell and contractor Charles P. Richards Jr. have pleaded guilty to conspiracy charges. They admitted to paying more than $1 million to an unnamed person from 2010 to 2015 under the belief a portion of the money they paid went to one or more city officials with influence over contractin­g.

An Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on and Channel 2 Action News analysis found Mitchell’s companies won millions of dollars worth of contracts during that time, including emergency work to remove snow during winter storms in 2011 and 2014. Much of the snow removal work came around the time the feds say Mitchell paid bribes.

The incident involving Barnes at Mitchell’s southwest Atlanta home is one of the stranger moments

uncovered so far in an investigat­ion that has rocked City Hall.

Mitchell called Atlanta police before dawn on Sept. 11, 2015, after a brick crashed through his living room window. Written on the brick were the words: “ER, keep your mouth shut!!! Shut up.”

Dead rats also were left on Mitchell’s doorstep and truck.

Mitchell told police at the time he was talking to federal authoritie­s.

Barnes, a Paulding County resident, was arrested in the incident last November and charged with criminal damage to property in the second degree.

An Atlanta police arrest affidavit from November states Barnes confessed to federal agents and is cooperatin­g.

Barnes pleaded guilty in 2009 to racketeeri­ng in a scheme that defrauded government agencies in Cobb and DeKalb counties of more than $300,000.

Barnes found a job in the city’s Public Works Department after he was paroled and was employed by the city at the time he allegedly threw a brick through Mitchell’s window.

Barnes also has deep ties to Mitzi Bickers, a well-known political consultant who played a key role in helping Kasim Reed win his first race for mayor in 2009.

Federal authoritie­s have subpoenaed records related to Bickers from the city. Barnes worked for Bickers in several capacities before he went to prison, records reviewed by the AJC show. And he continued to work for her after she left City Hall in 2013, when Barnes was still employed by the city.

Barnes also listed Bickers, who is a former city director of human services, as a reference to get his city job.

 ?? SPECIAL ?? Shandarric­k Barnes has been accused of damaging property.
SPECIAL Shandarric­k Barnes has been accused of damaging property.
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 ?? SPECIAL ?? A brick (top) that smashed a window at E.R. Mitchell Jr.’s southwest Atlanta home in September 2015 and a rat (below) left on his porch. Bottom right: E.R. Mitchell, a contractor, is accused in a bribery scandal.
SPECIAL A brick (top) that smashed a window at E.R. Mitchell Jr.’s southwest Atlanta home in September 2015 and a rat (below) left on his porch. Bottom right: E.R. Mitchell, a contractor, is accused in a bribery scandal.

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