The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Fulton Country elections chief is urged to act
Registration director’s potential conflict concerns commissioners.
Fulton County commissioners Wednesday urged the elections director to take action against a senior employee accused of a potential conflict of interest.
Ralph Jones Sr., the director of the registration division, was listed as the registered agent for the company RJ Mays Consulting, which did more than $3,600 worth of business for Keisha Lance Bottoms’ mayoral campaign.
In his role for the county, Jones oversees the elections database, mails absentee ballots to voters and performs other duties.
Commissioner Liz Hausmann said Jones’ involvement with a consulting firm doing business with a candidate “crosses some kind of transparency line.”
“It doesn’t smell good, it doesn’t look good,” Hausmann said. “If we lose the integrity of our elections, we lose everything.
“I think your department has to act on it,” she told Richard Barron, Fulton’s director of registration and elections.
Jones’ son, Ralph Jones Jr., incorporated RJ Mays Consulting. He said in a statement that his father’s role as registered agent “was to be a third-party designee who could accept documents, notices, forms and other mailings” on his behalf.
“He had absolutely no financial stake in my company; and he did not have a role in the daily operations. We merely lived in the same house,” the statement said.
Barron said Jones Jr. lived in an apartment, but used his parents’ address as his permanent address. Jones Sr., Barron said, only learned that he was the company’s registered agent a week ago, when a letter dissolving the company was addressed to him.
The younger Jones was the social media communications manager for Bottoms’ campaign, and now works in the city’s Watershed Department.
Barron said Jones Sr. hadn’t violated his oath or ethical standards.
“He didn’t know anything about the articles of inception,” Barron said. “It seems as though Ralph had no knowledge of this.”
But county commissioners said the appearance of impropriety alone is harmful to the elections process, and the county. Bottoms narrowly defeated Mary Norwood, by 821 votes, in a December runoff.
“It’s not enough to avoid an actual impropriety. You need to avoid the appearance,” County Commissioner Marvin Arrington said. “Certainly, it left room for people to question the integrity of the process.”
The board did not specify what action it wants taken.
Commissioners said they want to make sure the county’s elections board — which meets today — knows they were unhappy with the situation. Commissioner Emma Darnell said she shared her colleagues’ “unease.”
“It doesn’t look good and it doesn’t reflect well on us,” Vice Chairman Bob Ellis said.
Staff writer Stephen Deere contributed to this story.