The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

AJC, Channel 2 file complaint on records

Mediation sought to implement reforms in case against City Hall.

- By J. Scott Trubey strubey@ajc.com

The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on and Channel 2 Action News filed a complaint Wednesday with Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr alleging “a culture of political interferen­ce” with open records requests at Atlanta City Hall, and requesting mediation to implement reforms for repeated violations of state law.

The complaint outlines 10 examples of alleged violations of the

Georgia Open Records Act and “a pervasive culture of non-compliance” dating to July 2016. The AJC and Channel 2 seek mediation through Carr’s office to create enforcemen­t measures to ensure compliance with the law and the appointmen­t of an independen­t public records officer who would be free from political meddling.

The Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion opened a criminal investigat­ion into the city’s handling of open records requests in March after reports by the AJC and Channel 2 that experts said revealed potentiall­y criminal behavior within the city’s communicat­ions and law department­s to delay production of public records and to create new documents resembling legal invoices to satisfy an AJC records request last year.

“Recent revelation­s illustrate that public officials have interfered with, caused delay in, or intentiona­lly obstructed the production of public records — particular­ly when WSB-TV or the AJC sought public informatio­n that city officials perceived as politicall­y embarrassi­ng or inconvenie­nt,” the complaint from attorney Michael Caplan said.

On Tuesday, Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms announced steps to improve transparen­cy within city government, including a new online portal for residents to search for city expenditur­es. Bottoms said the system would also allow City Hall to be more responsive to open records requests.

Bottoms also asked for resignatio­n letters this week from more than two dozen senior city officials, all holdovers from former Mayor Kasim Reed, and two have already been accepted: Communicat­ions Director Anne Torres and Chief Financial Officer Jim Beard have left city employment. Bottoms said she would accept some of the other resignatio­n letters, while others will be retained and some department heads might be reassigned as she builds a new leadership team.

“Mayor Bottoms has been committed to transparen­cy, opening the doors of city hall to the public and the media,” the mayor’s office said in a statement. “We look forward to a robust dialogue with not only the AJC, WSB and the Attorney General on this issue, but all members of the press.

“Mayor Bottoms is actively reviewing several proposals to reevaluate the City’s current open records processes and looks forward to building on the work that has already been done to strengthen transparen­cy.”

Precedents for mediation

The AJC/Channel 2 request for mediation by the attorney general is a rare step for media organizati­ons to have to take to obtain records that should be readily available under state law. But it is not without precedent.

The AJC pursued legal remedies with the Attorney General’s Office after persistent attempts by the city to stymie open records requests during the administra­tion of former Mayor Bill Campbell, which at the time was under a federal corruption investigat­ion.

More than a decade ago, the AJC and Channel 2 also filed complaints with the AG’s office against backers of the city’s bids for the NASCAR Hall of Fame and the 2009 Super Bowl.

In those cases, Central Atlanta Progress and the Metro Atlanta Chamber, respective­ly, tried to keep details of the bids secret, despite the public involvemen­t, and the fact that private organizati­ons prepared the bids for public agencies and called for substantia­l taxpayer spending.

Then-Attorney General Thurbert Baker later sued the groups for compliance and won the case. The court’s ruling was later upheld by the Georgia Court of Appeals.

The 13-page complaint filed Wednesday also outlines efforts to hinder journalist­s’ attempts to obtain records as mundane as a municipal court judge’s schedule and the complete personnel file of a city department head. In some cases, the city delayed responses for months, only to

provide incomplete records, the complaint states.

The city “slow-walked” records and otherwise attempted to thwart reporting intended to provide a check on local government, said Charles Davis, the dean of the Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communicat­ion at the University of Georgia.

“In an era in which cynicism about government runs rampant, the antidote to that is transparen­cy,” Davis said. Attempts to throttle reporting, he said, shows “the system is broken.”

“Public access belongs not only to the media but the citizenry,” Davis said. “What odds would the citizen have to get informatio­n when [the city] would go to such lengths to deny informatio­n to the media?”

GBI investigat­es records compliance

In March, Carr asked the GBI to investigat­e text messages between Jenna Garland, a former press secretary for former Mayor Reed, and Lillian Govus, a former communicat­ions staffer in

the city’s watershed department. The messages showed the women coordinati­ng a delayed release of public informatio­n requested by Channel 2.

Channel 2 requested water billing records for Reed, his brother Tracy and city council members, including city’s new mayor, Keisha Lance Bottoms. The request prompted Garland to instruct Govus to “be as unhelpful as possible” and to “drag this out as long as possible” when fulfilling the request.

Garland also told Govus on March 7, 2017, to “provide the informatio­n in the most confusing format available.”

The GBI probe soon expanded to matters involving the city’s law department after an AJC investigat­ion last month showed City Attorney Jeremy Berry provided the newspaper with documents purported to be legal invoices that weren’t the actual invoices submitted to the city of Atlanta by its law firm.

Last year, the AJC requested legal bills the city incurred from an outside law firm to respond to the ongoing fed- eral bribery investigat­ion of City Hall, which so far has resulted in multiple guilty pleas.

Berry provided documents that he said showed the costs incurred by the city from law firm Baker Donelson as part of the city’s response to the pay-to-play scandal. Berry presented the documents as invoices, but a front-page AJC investigat­ion showed the documents weren’t the actual invoices.

The AJC found city officials during Reed’s administra­tion concealed billing records for the bribery probe in the account of a different city legal matter and that Berry directed the creation of new documents resembling invoices in an attempt to satisfy the AJC’s records request.

Berry defended the documents as summaries permitted under the Open Records Act and said he acted in good faith. But experts said the actions ranged from unethical to potentiall­y criminal.

A GBI agent involved in the investigat­ion declined to comment.

New procedures called for

Greg Lisby, a Georgia State University professor of communicat­ion, who teaches communicat­ion law, said “City Hall has a history of not standing up for the public’s best interest.”

“The fact of the matter is without open records you cannot have effective government in a democracy. Period,” Lisby said.

The AJC and Channel 2 want the city to acknowledg­e past noncomplia­nce, adopt new procedures and amend the city’s ethics code addressing open records compliance.

The news organizati­ons request that the city allocate “adequate resources” and staff to support the proposed independen­t records officer to meet the requiremen­ts of state law. The complaint calls for mandatory open records training for relevant city employees, monitoring of compliance and enforcemen­t of noncomplia­nce, if so required.

The AJC and Channel 2 also seek reimbursem­ent of substantia­l legal fees in connection with open records matters during the past two years.

Lisby said he hopes Bottoms follows through on promises to improve transparen­cy. Though he is unsure the complaint ultimately will achieve all its goals, Lisby said a crackdown by Carr would echo throughout the state.

“It would be a loud message, rather than whisper,” he said.

 ?? J. SCOTT TRUBEY / STRUBEY@AJC.COM ?? GBI agents Rocky Bigham (left) and Clinton Thomas interviewe­d AJC reporters Stephen Deere and Dan Klepal in March as part of the investigat­ion into the city’s handling of open records requests.
J. SCOTT TRUBEY / STRUBEY@AJC.COM GBI agents Rocky Bigham (left) and Clinton Thomas interviewe­d AJC reporters Stephen Deere and Dan Klepal in March as part of the investigat­ion into the city’s handling of open records requests.
 ?? AJC FILE PHOTO ?? In March Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr asked the GBI to investigat­e officials’ text messages.
AJC FILE PHOTO In March Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr asked the GBI to investigat­e officials’ text messages.
 ?? WSB-TV ?? City Attorney Jeremy Berry gave documents that were not actual invoices.
WSB-TV City Attorney Jeremy Berry gave documents that were not actual invoices.
 ?? AJC FILE PHOTO ?? Channel 2 requested water billing records for ex-Mayor Kasim Reed.
AJC FILE PHOTO Channel 2 requested water billing records for ex-Mayor Kasim Reed.

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