The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Records investigat­ion moves closer to Reed

GBI focuses on ex-mayor, his director of communicat­ions.

- By J. Scott Trubey strubey@ajc.com

TheGBIcrim­inalinvest­igationint­o open records violations at Atlanta City Hall now includes records associated with former Mayor Kasim Reed’s communicat­ions director and the mayor himself, The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on and Channel 2 Action News have learned.

On Friday, the GBI informed lawyers for the AJC and Channel 2 it wants records detailing how the city responded to an AJC request for Reed’s city-issued credit card statements, along with text messages by Anne Torres, Reed’s top spokeswoma­n, in which she pressured officials to delay the release of public documents.

GBI Special Agent Clinton Thomas said the GBI wants records of any communicat­ion that ‘establishe­s a timeline of an open records request ... in which the response or fulfillmen­t of the request was determined to be stalled or the provided records were misleading, incomplete or altered from their original form.’

The GBI’s probe began with a review of texts from Reed’s former press secretary Jenna Garland that showed she directed another city employee to delay a Channel 2 request for the water billing records of public officials.

The GBI’s latest request for records, delivered to an AJC/ Channel 2 attorney, suggests that agents now have questions about Torres, and any involvemen­t by the mayor in the AJC’s request for his credit card statements.

The AJC received the statements March 19, seven weeks after requesting them — and a week after Reed reimbursed the city $12,000 for personal expenditur­es made on his card. In a statement, Reed said he had already begun reviewing his charges and that his reimbursem­ent had no connection to the AJC’s request for the records.

In a letter dated Friday, GBI Special Agent Clinton Thomas said investigat­ors also want documents related to the AJC and Channel 2’s request for records detailing hundreds of thousands of dollars in bonuses paid by Reed to city workers before the end of last year, and documents associated with requests for Atlanta Chief Financial Officer Jim Beard’s city credit card records.

The city doled out more than $811,000 in bonuses to employees in late December, including tens of thousands awarded to winners of raffles and ugly sweater and lip sync contests. The bonuses roiled City Hall, with at least six senior staffers deciding to return the money, including Police Chief Erika Shields.

Thomas said the GBI wants records of any communicat­ion that “establishe­s a timeline of an open records request ... in which the response or fulfillmen­t of the request was determined to be stalled or the provided records were misleading, incomplete or altered from their original form.”

State law mandates that government officials provide responsive documents within three business days of a request if they are available. Obstructin­g or “frustratin­g” the release of documents is explicitly prohibited and punishable as a misdemeano­r.

Greg Lisby, Georgia State University professor of communicat­ion who teaches communicat­ion law, said the GBI “cast a very broad net” with this request.

“I was very pleased when I read it, because it seems to me they’re taking this very seriously,” he said.

Sunshine laws help the public and media hold government leaders and agencies accountabl­e for their actions.

Investigat­ions by the AJC and Channel 2 have exposed a culture within the Reed administra­tion to release public informatio­n on timetables of their choosing, not those set by state law. The reporting spurred the GBI to open a criminal investigat­ion in March.

Last month, the AJC and Channel 2 reported mes- sages that showed Torres pressured Atlanta Beltline CEO Brian McGowan to ignore advice from the agency’s lead lawyer to comply with a request for a copy of McGowan’s employment contract, with Torres even issuing a veiled threat to involve Reed.

“We can hold whatever we want for as long as we want,” Torres wrote McGowan in a text last September.

But McGowan and Beltline General Counsel Nina Hickson resisted Torres’ pressure, and ultimately prevailed and released the records in a timely manner.

The GBI’s interest in Reed’s purchasing card is focused on the AJC/Channel 2 request for the credit card statements and on potential violations of the Georgia Open Records Act. A federal grand jury, meanwhile, requested Reed’s credit card spending records as part of its corruption probe of Atlanta City Hall.

GBI interviews council members

In April, the AJC and Chan- nel 2 filed a complaint with state Attorney General Chris Carr’s office alleging “a culture of political interferen­ce” with open records requests at City Hall.

Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms, Reed’s successor, said in her State of the City address on Wednesday the city “will repair the trust” of residents in their government.

Bottoms said the city will create a position she called “an open records custodian” to manage fulfillmen­t of records requests, something akin to what the AJC and Channel 2 requested of the city in the complaint to Carr.

A spokesman for Bottoms said the GBI has requested “some phone numbers, open records policies and water system billing records.” He said Councilwom­an Cleta Winslow and Councilman Ivory Young have been interviewe­d by the GBI.

Council President Felicia Moore confirmed to the AJC that she also has been interviewe­d.

Contacted Friday, Torres deferred to her prior statement on the matter, in which she called her texts “inter-employee banter.”

Lisby applauded the GBI for investigat­ing what he described as a pattern of misconduct in the city’s law and communicat­ions department­s. But he said Friday’s request suggests the GBI isn’t buying Torres’ explanatio­n.

“This idea the city of Atlanta employees were just having a fun time with their day, that’s baloney,” Lisby said.

 ?? JOHN SPINK / JSPINK@AJC.COM ?? Then-Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed stands with his director of communicat­ions, Anne Torres, in 2015. In April, the AJC and Channel 2 filed a complaint alleging “a culture of political interferen­ce” with open records requests at City Hall.
JOHN SPINK / JSPINK@AJC.COM Then-Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed stands with his director of communicat­ions, Anne Torres, in 2015. In April, the AJC and Channel 2 filed a complaint alleging “a culture of political interferen­ce” with open records requests at City Hall.
 ??  ?? Text messages sent by Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed’s former top spokeswoma­n Anne Torres (left) to Atlanta Beltline CEO Brian McGowan show Torres pressured Beltline officials to delay production of public records.
Text messages sent by Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed’s former top spokeswoma­n Anne Torres (left) to Atlanta Beltline CEO Brian McGowan show Torres pressured Beltline officials to delay production of public records.
 ?? WSB-TV ?? Former Atlanta Communicat­ions Director Anne Torres.
WSB-TV Former Atlanta Communicat­ions Director Anne Torres.

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