The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Kemp campaign aided by people he regulates

- By Johnny Edwards jredwards@ajc.com and Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com

In April, a chiropract­or who owns two massage clinics that have been the subject of a series of sexual assault complaints got a visit from his industry’s highest-ranking state regulator.

Secretary of State Brian Kemp hadn’t come with tough ques- tions, though. He came with an outstretch­ed hand.

Dr. Patrick Greco and his partner hosted a fundraisin­g gala for Kemp’s gubernator­ial campaign at their lavish estate in the heart of Madison, in a renovated antebellum home called the Honeymoon 1851 Mansion.

Meanwhile, the two Massage Envy clinics Greco owns face at least four allegation­s of therapists groping women during massages. The Board of Massage Therapy, under Kemp’s purview, looked into one woman’s complaint, but none of the accused therapists’

licenses has ever been sanctioned or revoked.

Kemp has also found support on the campaign trail from others under the oversight of his licensing or securities divisions. Such companies and individual­s have donated more than $325,000 to his gubernator­ial campaign, an analysis by The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on found.

Critics say such donations could undermine the credibilit­y of one of the state’s top regulators, and in interviews, two previous secretarie­s of state said they returned similar donations to comply with the law and avoid the appearance of a conflict of interest.

The legality of some of these donations is in question, and the head of the state ethics commission said he expects the panel to soon decide whether these types of contributi­ons are permissibl­e. Atlanta attorney Simon Bloom has filed an ethics complaint against Kemp and his campaign, citing nine examples of contractor­s, investment advisers and an auctioneer­ing firm that donated.

“You can’t curry favor with your wallet in elections when you are directly regulated by that person,” said Bloom, who supports Kemp’s opponent, Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle, in the July 24 runoff for the Republican nomination.

Kemp declined an interview request for this story through a campaign spokesman, who said in an email that even though the rules are unclear, the candidate has gone “above and beyond” what the law requires by refunding donations given in the names of companies that fall under his regulation.

“Given that Kemp is a man of integrity ,” spokesman Ryan Mahoney’s email said, “he decided to not take contributi­ons from regulated businesses. Our legal and compliance team spend a lot of man hours to screen these checks. We’ve refunded hundreds of thousands of dollars because of Kemp’s character.”

But the law sets up a legal loophole, making a distinctio­n between donations from regulated companies, which aren’t permitted, and donations from individual­s at those companies, which are.

Company owners, officers, employees, their relatives and related businesses have given Kemp hundreds of thousands of dollars. The AJC’s analysis found contributi­ons from investment firms, used-car dealers, engineers, chiropract­ors, veterinari­ans, funeral directors, electricia­ns and nurses, among others.

The biggest portion by far has come from residentia­l and general contractor­s, who have collective­ly given Kemp almost $200,000.

“This is yet another example of the type of pay-to-play nonsense that Georgia taxpayers are sick and tired of,” said state Sen. Elena Parent, an Atlanta Democrat who sits on the Senate’s Government Oversight Committee. “Georgians want their government to be responsive to them, not moneyed interests who can try to buy the officials that oversee them.”

What’s legal, what’s ethical

The AJC’s analysis found about $38,000 donated in the names of companies under Kemp’s regulation or connected to licensees. A Kemp spokesman said refunds totaling $5,500 will be given to four of those donors, which will be reflected in an upcom- ing campaign finance report.

The campaign disputed that other companies on the AJC’s list count as regulated entities since they aren’t directly registered or licensed.

So while the campaign refunded $6,600 to Williams & Associates Land Planners, it kept $10,500 from J. Williams Investment­s, which has the same address and is registered by company CEO Jon Williams. The campaign also accepted $10,500 from Parrish Developmen­t Group, though its registered agent is the CEO of Parri sh Constructi­on Group, David Cyr, a licensed qualifying agent.

Bloom’s ethics complaint is likely to push the state’s Government Transparen­cy and Campaign Finance Commission to interpret myriad gray areas in the law — such as whether it matters that Kemp is running for governor, who doesn’t directly oversee industries. Some interpret the law as saying he would only have to return company donations if he were running for another term as secretary of state.

Bloom says what matters is that Kemp remains in the post for now.

Donors who spoke to the AJC said they aren’t expecting anything in return.

“Brian has always been upfront and straight and honest,” said Ed Hutter, a licensed general contractor whose company, Hutter & Associates, donated $3,000, which the Kemp campaign now says it will refund. “He understand­s what business is all about and what we go through as business people.”

There’s little doubt that licensees and regulated businesses have benefited from a faster licensing process instituted under Kemp. He often says he brought a “chainsaw” mind-set to the Secretary of State’s Office by reducing regulation­s, and in one of his campaign ads, Kemp wields an actual chain saw and promises to continue the policy if elected governor.

His tenure has also seen enforcemen­t efforts scaled back through budget cuts in the wake of the Great Recession. In 2008, before he took office, it drew about $42 million annually in state funds. This fiscal year, it got about $25 million.

Under Kemp, 40 boards that regulate profession­s as varied as veterinari­ans, electricia­ns, massage therapists, plumbers, chiropract­ors and architects have been required to share a pool of 15 investigat­ors.

The division responsibl­e for enforcing rules on both securities and charities, once among the nation’s best at catching cheats, now operates with three enforcemen­t attorneys and a budget of less than $700,000, sharing the same group of investigat­ors. The year Kemp took office, that division received $1.6 million, and critics say the reduction has allowed fraudsters to proliferat­e.

In other fields, investigat­ions languish, and cases reported in the news can slip through the cracks because no one is closely monitoring businesses that can cheat you out of money or jeopardize your health.

Money pours in

The campaign wouldn’t disclose how much money Greco’s fundraiser in Madison generated. Campaign finance records show he personally donated $1,000 last year. He did not return several phone calls seeking comment for this story.

Other licensees, and companies connected to them, have given far more. They include Coastal Industrial Contrac ting, a chemic al plant subcontrac­tor in Liberty County, which donated more than $92,000 through various channels, including two limited liability companies. CEO David Steverson is a licensed general contractor qualifying agent.

Cooper, Barnette & Page, a Statham-based environmen­tal contractor whose managers hold licenses, gave $29,600. The Kemp campaign refunded $ 25,000, retaining a portion donated under the name of the company’s Florida division. Company officials donated an additional $13,200.

“It is a tremendous violation of the public interest, and it raises the question about who he’s going to serve if he’s elected,” said Max Cleland, a Democrat who served as secretary of state from 1983 to 1996 and was later elected to the U.S. Senate.

Cathy Cox, Georgia’s secretary of state from 1999 to 2007, said she largely avoided contributi­ons from companies her office regulated when she ran for governor as a Democrat in 2006. She said she sought to restrict donations even from firms overseen by profession­al licensing review boards that her office had little direct authority over.

“We were very careful bec ause perception was important,” said Cox, now the dean of Mercer University’s law school. “Even though legally there was no conflict, we knew that the heart of every campaign is trust — and you want to do everything you can to build up that trust.”

Ripping up regulation­s

The Kemp campaign brushed aside questions about another perception problem: The donations come on th e heels of an 8 1/2-year tenure of office that saw consumer protection­s erode, to the benefit of some regulated businesses.

“What does fundraisin­g for the governor’s race and funding shortages in the (Secretary of State’s) office have to do with each other? That’s a huge stretch,” his spokesman said in an email.

As secretary of state, Kemp has contended with constant calls from Gov. Nathan Deal to keep his budget flat, which he heeded. He did fight back against further cuts, telling lawmakers they would undercut his staff ’s work. A letter he penned to Deal’s chief financial officer in 2014 was typical of his approach.

“Only about 3 percent of all investment advisor firms are being audited each year because of the drasticall­y reduced workforce in the Securities Division,” Kemp wrote of a proposed reduction to that office.

The division neverthele­ss took a $165,000 cut.

Kemp never sounded a public alarm, though, about risks to consumers and investors the way he did potential voter fraud, which also falls under his office.

Some of his most popular initiative­s have been aimed at making processes smoother for corporatio­ns and licensees. The streamlini­ng he did in the licensing process cut wait times down from a month to a matter of weeks.

Hutter, of Hutter & Associates, said that’s something else he likes about Kemp.

“We’re licensed in several other state s ,” said Hutter, who has hosted two fundraiser­s for Kemp, “and the system that Georgia has is a lot easier than some of the other states to try to renew licenses and what have you. A lot more efficient, I can say that much.”

John Hadden, an electrical contractor, said the tug of friendship — not industry ties — motivated him to donate $500.

“I’ve known him personally for 15 years. I know his family and I respect him,” Hadden said. “He’s technicall­y the head of our licensing board, but he’s not someone you’d ever deal with on a day-to-day basis.”

Rick Thompson, a former head of the state ethics commission, said he’s skeptical of restrictio­ns on donations from regulated businesses, which can put candidates at a fundraisin­g disadvanta­ge. He said though the current law could be interprete­d to restrict Kemp from receiving those donations, he makes no connection between the donations and Kemp’s performanc­e as a regulator.

“Especially,” Thompson said, “because he would not be regulating them anymore.”

‘You can’t curry favor with your wallet in elections when you are directly regulated by that person.’ Atlanta attorney Simon Bloom

 ??  ?? Simon Bloom (pictured) filed an ethics complaint against Brian Kemp.
Simon Bloom (pictured) filed an ethics complaint against Brian Kemp.

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