The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

City’s former purchasing chief ordered to report to N.C. prison

Smith to serve 27 months for his role in a bribe scheme.

- By Dan Klepal dan.klepal@ajc.com

Adam Smith, who for 14 years was Atlanta’s top purchasing officer, has been ordered to report to a North Carolina federal prison to begin serving a 27-month sentence for his role in a City Hall bribery scheme.

Smith, a graduate of Yale, Morehouse and Georgetown Law School, must report to the Federal Medical Center Butner on Wednesday. The facility, for inmates with special medical needs, is located about 25 miles northwest of Raleigh and holds about 900 male inmates.

It’s unclear why Smith was ordered to a medical facility. He had been recommende­d for a prison in Alabama after his February sentencing.

Smith was given a 40-percent reduction in his sentence for cooperatin­g with the on-going investigat­ion, after pleading guilty in September 2017 to one count of conspiracy to commit bribery.

Federal prosecutor­s justified the reduction in a January memorandum to the court,

which revealed for the first time that Smith and made secret recordings to assist the U.S. Attorney’s Office with its case.

“... Smith provided the United States with several audio files containing recorded conversati­ons between Smith and others; Smith recorded conversati­ons at the request and direction of the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion, and Smith debriefed with and provided informatio­n to the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion on multiple occasions,” the Justice Department memo says.

During his tenure with the city, Smith oversaw more than a billion dollars worth of city expenditur­es, according

to his sentencing memorandum. He admitted to taking at least $30,000 in bribe payments from a city vendor between 2015 and January 2017.

Smith was fired Feb. 21, 2017, by Mayor Kasim Reed, just before FBI agents confiscate­d his city-issued computer and cell phone from his City Hall office.

The vendor, who The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on has previously identified as Jeff Jafari, has been awarded several multi-million dollar city contracts at the airport and for the city’s watershed department.

Jafari has not been charged in the investigat­ion, although his Sandy Springs’ office was raided by the FBI just days after Smith pleaded.

More than 70 people wrote letters in support of Smith before his sentencing.

The investigat­ion into City Hall bribery burst into the public view more than a year ago, when constructi­on contractor Elvin “E.R.” Mitchell Jr. was charged with conspiracy to commit bribery and money laundering in January 2017. He admitted to paying more than $1 million over several years.

Contractor Charles P. Richards Jr. has also pleaded guilty, agreed to cooperate and has been sentenced to prison for paying more than $193,000 in bribes.

Earlier this month, prosecutor­s unsealed an 11-count indictment against Rev. Mitzi Bickers, a former city employee and political operative. Mitchell and Richards made their bribe payments to Bickers, who prosecutor­s say was able to manipulate the city’s contractin­g system and steer $17 million in city work to the contractor­s.

Prosecutor­s have since said that the case against Smith involves a different set of facts than the cases against Mitchell, Richards and Bickers.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM 2017 ?? Adam Smith, former chief purchasing officer for the city of Atlanta, has been ordered to report to a North Carolina prison to serve a 27-month sentence after pleading guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit bribery in September.
HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM 2017 Adam Smith, former chief purchasing officer for the city of Atlanta, has been ordered to report to a North Carolina prison to serve a 27-month sentence after pleading guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit bribery in September.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States