The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Reed kept subpoena aimed at airport from public view

Experts: Disclosing deeper probe could have altered mayor’s race.

- By Dan Klepal dan.klepal@ajc.com Stephen Deere sdeere@ajc.com and Kelly Yamanouchi kyamanouch­i@ajc.com

Former Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed’s administra­tion last year withheld from the public a poten

tially explosive federal subpoena, concealing the full scope of the

corruption investigat­ion at City Hall, The Atlanta Journal-Consti

tution and Channel 2 Action News have learned.

The 10-point subpoena — dated Sept. 9, 2016, and kept from the public with Reed’s knowledge —

included demands from federal prosecutor­s for informatio­n about lucrative constructi­on and concession­s contracts at Hartsfield-Jack- son Internatio­nal Airport; vendors with close political ties to Reed; and financial records for three members of his cabinet.

“This is a serious subpoena,” said Caren Morrison, a law professor at Georgia State University who was a federal prosecutor in the Eastern District of New York. “It’s not a fishing expedition.”

In addition to being kept secret from the public, the subpoena was withheld from City Council, which voted to award four multi-million dollar contracts without knowing they were under federal investigat­ion.

The disclosure would have significan­tly increased council scrutiny on the contractor­s before them, and possibly changed the political dynamic of the 2017 mayoral race, said Ceasar Mitchell, who was council president and a mayoral candidate last year. At the time, the council and the public knew of only two subpoenas, both of which suggested the federal inquiry was far narrower.

“I think the kinds of questions that I asked as council president, related to what was clear to me as a crisis of corruption, would have been asked earlier,” said Mitchell.

Longtime Council Member Howard Shook said withholdin­g the subpoena impaired the council’s ability to do its job: “This is turning out to be one more activity that was being conducted behind the Iron Curtain.”

Instead, Reed’s influence remained unencumber­ed by the fact that the U.S. Department of Justice was scrutinizi­ng two of the city’s largest department­s, which have combined operating budgets of $700 million.

“Wow,” said Greg Lisby, a communicat­ions law professor at Georgia State University. “The only thing you can imagine, and I’m supposing here, is that there’s something more damning in those records than all the others.”

Reed: Subpoena ‘unrelated’ to probe

In February 2017, Reed held a highly staged news conference in front of boxes of documents and announced the release of 1.4 million pages of records related to the federal investigat­ion in the “spirit of complete transparen­cy.”

“We’re providing every document we’ve provided to the Justice Department thus far in this matter,” Reed said.

Among the documents made public during Reed’s news conference was an August 2016 subpoena naming Mitzi Bickers, Reed’s political consultant who has since been indicted on 11 felony counts of bribery and money laundering. Also made public was a November 2016 federal demand for records relating to a pair of contractor­s who are now in prison for paying bribes.

In a st a tement, Reed defended the decision to withhold the September subpoena on the grounds that it sought personnel informatio­n related to airport general manager Miguel Southwell and Watershed Commission­er Jo Ann Macrina, both of whom were fired by Reed.

In response to questions from the AJC and Channel 2 last week, Reed said those documents were “unrelated to the federal bribery investigat­ion.”

In fact, the withheld subpoena came from the same grand jury investigat­ing corruption at City Hall, and the records being sought appear related to allegation­s Southwell made three months earlier about political interferen­ce from City Hall over airport contracts.

Attorney: Southwell not a target

In a May 31, 2016, letter to Reed, Southwell’s attorney, Lee Parks, raised pointed questions about the timing of Southwell’s “sudden terminatio­n” 11 days earlier, and the award of lucrative contracts at the airport.

Parks alleged that senior procuremen­t staff had taken actions that would cause contract awards to be made to “companies other than the highest-ranked bidder.”

“Those same senior officials represente­d that these directions were originatin­g from the ‘second floor’ or ‘the Mayor,’ ” Parks wrote.

At another point, Parks said that Southwell had heard from Reed: “‘You worked in Miami. I thought you know how things worked,’ ” which Parks said “could only be interprete­d as a blunt reference to Miami Internatio­nal Airport’s own long and difficult history of patronage-based awards.”

Parks declined to make his client available for an interview last week, but said “it is my understand­ing that (Southwell) is not a target” of the investigat­ion.

In his statement to the AJC, Reed noted that he and Southwell issued a joint statement resolving difference­s over the firing on Sept. 6, 2016, three days before the subpoena was issued.

Reed donors named in subpoena

But the Sept. 9 subpoena asked for records that went well beyond Southwell and identified specific contracts and vendors about which investigat­ors wanted more informatio­n.

It sought documents involving the city’s “ranking and/ or re-ranking” of companies competing for a $12 million annual contract to manage the airport’s $6 billion constructi­on program over five years.

It specifical­ly named the PRAD Group Inc., whose Sandy Springs offices were raided by the FBI last year. Former PRAD executive Jeff Jafari was also named in a 2017 subpoena, which requested all contracts won by six companies associated with him.

PRAD was part of a team with Hill Internatio­nal that competed for the airport constructi­on management contract, which the former airport manager believed was favored by the mayor’s administra­tion even though it was not the highest-ranked.

PRAD Group was a political supporter of Reed and a major contributo­r to Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms’ campaign. In fact, Jafari was on the host committee for a major Bottoms fundraisin­g event in January 2017, just five months after the subpoena was issued. In 2012, Jafari, his wife and PRAD president George Reynolds gave $16,800 to Reed’s campaign.

Another set of records the subpoena asked for was those of an airport bid involving ATL Constructi­on Management Partners, a joint venture of two large engineerin­g firms: CH2M Hill and Parsons, along with a company run by Atlanta businesswo­man Joy Rohadfox called Rohadfox Constructi­on Control Services Corp.

Joy Rohadfox once had a close personal relationsh­ip with Reed, her attorney Darryl Cohen acknowledg­es, and she was a major supporter of his 2009 campaign for mayor. She also made a large personal loan to Reed’s 2009 campaign, which he repaid after the election.

Cohen said his client could not comment other than to say: “You are more than welcome to look at any of the contracts. Everything she has done is transparen­t.”

The previously undisclose­d subpoena also asked for records identifyin­g concession­aires on Concourse E, where most of the restaurant­s are run by two firms with close ties to Reed — Hojeij Branded Foods; and a joint venture including Jackmont Hospitalit­y, which was founded by former Mayor Maynard Jackson, his daughter and Daniel Halpern, who was a co-chairman of Reed’s 2009 mayoral campaign.

Significan­tly, the subpoena also sought records involving former procuremen­t chief Adam Smith, who is in prison after pleading guilty in September to taking at least $40,000 in bribes.

Other informatio­n was also demanded by the subpoena: the employment/disciplina­ry history for Smith, Southwell and Macrina; records and communicat­ions related to the city’s imaging of Southwell’s computer and city-issued cellphone; emails and text messages sent and received by Southwell; and communicat­ions between the city and the auditing firm Banks, Finley, White and Company.

Finally, the subpoena also asked for communicat­ions the city had with two other firms, global constructi­on and engineerin­g firm Johnson Controls, and water resources engineerin­g firm Montgomery, Watson Harza.

Political fallout could have been big

Release of the subpoena could have had serious political repercussi­ons for Reed, and even influenced the course of the 2017 election to replace him, political insiders said.

Reed officially endorsed Bottoms in October, but supported her long before that with verbal jabs at her opponents. Halpern, Jafari and Wassim Hojeij served on a fundraisin­g host committee for Bottoms’ campaign before she officially qualified.

Had the subpoena been produced earlier, Reed’s endorsemen­t “could have become the kiss of death,” Lisby said.

Former state Sen. Vincent Fort, a 21-year veteran of metro Atlanta’s political scene, said public knowledge of the subpoena would have made Reed’s legislativ­e agenda more difficult to accomplish. Fort, who ran for mayor last year, also said the former mayor’s political influence would have been diminished.

“If people had known the depth and breadth of the investigat­ion, it would have been a different atmosphere at City Hall,” Fort said.

And public knowledge of the subpoena could have spurred even more scrutiny on campaign contributi­ons.

After the FBI raided PRAD’s offices, Bottoms’ campaign returned more than $25,000 in contributi­ons from people connected to the company. Bottoms’ campaign also returned $17,800 donated by Hojeij Branded Foods and its employees after revelation­s that the wife of an airport deputy general manager owns a company that does business with Hojeij. The deputy general manager has since been fired.

But individual­s associated with Rohadfox gave Bottoms’ campaign at least $8,050.

Mitchell said accepting money from anyone associated with individual­s or entities named in the Sept. 9 subpoena would have been “very uncomforta­ble.”

Morrison, the Georgia State law professor, said withholdin­g the subpoena also protected the airport’s image — which is significan­t since it is one of the largest economic drivers in the state.

“This is ugly, really ugly,” Morrison said. “All this makes me want to bring my own sandwich next time I go to the airport.”

Staff writer J. Scott Trubey contribute­d to this story.

 ?? HENRY TAYLOR/HENRY.TAYLOR@AJC.COM 2017 ?? Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed stands in front of documents as he announces the release of records tied to the federal probe in February 2017. Last week, Reed said documents in a withheld subpoena from Sept. 9, 2016, were “unrelated” to the federal bribery...
HENRY TAYLOR/HENRY.TAYLOR@AJC.COM 2017 Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed stands in front of documents as he announces the release of records tied to the federal probe in February 2017. Last week, Reed said documents in a withheld subpoena from Sept. 9, 2016, were “unrelated” to the federal bribery...
 ??  ?? Informatio­n about former Atlanta officials Jo Ann Macrina and Miguel Southwell was demanded in the Sept. 9, 2016, subpoena.
Informatio­n about former Atlanta officials Jo Ann Macrina and Miguel Southwell was demanded in the Sept. 9, 2016, subpoena.
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