The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Mitchell faces foreclosur­es after Atlanta bribery plea

Key figure in federal probe faces questions about his honesty.

- By Leon Stafford lstafford@ajc.com

Two months after he pleaded guilty in federal court to conspiracy to pay $1 million in bribes for contracts at City Hall, Elvin “E.R.” Mitchell Jr. was back in front of a judge Tuesday facing foreclosur­e on his two homes, hefty property tax bills and new questions about his honesty.

Mitchell, a key figure in a federal investigat­ion of a pay-toplay scheme in Atlanta’s central government, is accused by his estranged wife Marjorie Mitchell, of taking out the maximum in second mortgages on homes they own in Atlanta and Hilton Head without her knowledge.

Marjorie Mitchell’s attorney Esther Panitch said E.R. Mitchell cashed out $600,000 in equity on the Hilton Head property and $400,000 on a house on Desoto Falls Court in Atlanta. The move caused both homes to go into foreclosur­e, even though they had long been paid off.

“Mr. Mitchell has allowed the marital estate to be wasted,” Panitch told the court.

Marjorie Mitchell has moved out and is living in an apartment.

Tuesday’s proceeding­s also brought up Mitzi Bickers, another central figure in the federal investigat­ion.

Marjorie Mitchell’s attorney alleges that E.R. Mitchell fraudulent­ly put property in Bickers’ name. Bickers, a one-time chair of the Atlanta Public Schools board, played a key get-out-the-vote role in Reed’s mayoral run in 2009. Federal authoritie­s subpoenaed records from the city concerning Bickers last year. She has not been charged nor named as a suspect in the case.

Fulton Judge Constance Russell ordered E.R. Mitchell to cease

any spending on the 10 to 15 companies for which he is allowed to write checks while the court tries to determine his financial status and the extent of his business holdings. Russell’s order also stops others, including Mitchell’s family members, from writing or signing checks on any of the accounts.

Mitchell’s lawyer, Odis Williams, said his client is broke and has borrowed money to pay attorney fees.

The court appearance is the latest developmen­t in an investigat­ion that has rocked City Hall since January when Mitchell was charged and pleaded guilty in a bribery scheme prosecutor­s said led to millions in city contracts.

Since then a second contractor, Charles P. Richards Jr., pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit bribery in February and Reed released more than 1.4 million pages of documents the city turned over to federal investigat­ors.

Adam Smith, the city’s chief procuremen­t officer, was fired in late February, the same day federal agents seized items in his office. Smith has not be accused of any wrongdoing.

Williams, E.R. Mitchell’s attorney, said Tuesday Bickers was added to the divorce filing to draw media attention. He said Bickers was only involved in the transfer of a DeKalb County home from Mitchell’s company to Bickers.

“Mitzi Bickers has no role in all of this,” he said. “She tried to join Mitzi Bickers, I believe, for the sensationa­lism.”

The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on, however, previously reported that Bickers and E.R. Mitchell share a number of business connection­s in addition to the DeKalb property. Bickers formerly worked as a vice president operations at E.R. Mitchell Company, one of Mitchell’s firms, according to a resolution honoring her in 2012 at the state Capitol. She also acquired property from a Mitchell company in Atlanta and later deeded it back to a separate Mitchell firm in 2015.

Judge Russell grilled E.R Mitchell on his income and recent checks he had written through E.R. Mitchell Company, which he said his wife owns. Mitchell said that Atlanta Public Schools, the sole client of the company, paid the firm $19,600 in February and again in March.

When asked by Russell what happened to the funds, Mitchell said February’s payment was used to pay insurance, subcontrac­tors and other bills that he did not specify. About half of the money paid to the company in March has been spent, mostly to the same entities.

Russell ordered that no more payments be made until more informatio­n could be learned about Mitchell’s income and business holdings.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States