The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Election Board: Top manager didn’t know he was agent

But Fulton County board to seek policies to prevent ‘electionee­ring.’

- By Stephen Deere sdeere@ajc.com

Fulton County Election Board members expressed concerns Thursday about “electionee­ring” having occurred inside the home of a high-ranking manager at the county’s election department and ordered the department’s staff to consider new policies to prevent similar situations.

The board’s action followed rev- elations that Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms’ campaign paid more than $3,600 to a consulting company registered to Ralph Jones Sr., registrati­on chief of the election department.

Ralph Jones Jr., who served as

social media communicat­ions director for the Bottoms campaign, is listed as the company’s “incorporat­or.”

The filings have raised concerns about what experts said was an alarming lack of separation between a top election employee and an active political campaign.

Fulton County Commission­ers on Wednesday had urged Elections Director Rick Barron to take action against Jones Sr., but Barron and election board members said circumstan­ces didn’t warrant discipline.

At Thursday’s meeting, Barron said that Ralph Jones Sr. had not violated any oath or county policy because his son had made him the registered agent of the company without telling him.

“What is the defense of the unknowing in such a situation?” Barron asked.

Barron called it an “an example were the reporters could have dug deeper.”

Barron said he made his determinat­ions based on discussion­s with Jones Sr. and on his own examinatio­n of the registrati­on process with the secretary of state.

“Someone other than the owner must be listed as the registered agent,” Barron said.

But a spokeswoma­n for the Georgia secretary of state disagreed. “There is no such limitation,” said Candice Broce.

Barron also said he had confirmed with the Secretary of State’s office that Jones Sr. and his son’s now dissolved political consulting business weren’t part of an investigat­ion into potential irregulari­ties in the Dec. 5 runoff between Bottoms and Mary Norwood — a contest decided by less than 900 votes.

Broce declined to comment on whether the matter was under review, citing the ongoing the investigat­ion.

Earlier this week, Jones Sr. declined an interview with The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on and Channel 2 Action News. A spokeswoma­n said he had left the office when the AJC made a second request for an interview Thursday.

Jones Sr. oversees the elections department’s Registrati­on Division which maintains master voter lists, purges criminal and deceased voters from the polls, verifies petitions, and mails absentee ballots.

Board Member Vernetta Nuriddin said she knew Jones Sr. both profession­ally and personally and she believed he had told the truth. But she had issues with the business having listed Jones Sr.’s home for its address.

“It’s not for me to decide whether he knew or not,” Nuriddin said. “But for me to be a representa­tive of the electorate, it is for me to say: ‘Hey, there’s smoke here, and we have a right to know if electionee­ring is going on in your top officials’ homes.”

Barron said he had spoken to the department’s lawyers about strengthen­ing conflict of interest policies.

“Whether in this instance anything that we thought of might have helped, is another matter,” Barron said. “He was unknowing in this.”

Barron insisted that Jones Jr. did not live with his father when he ran the political consulting business.

In a statement Monday, Jones Jr. said his father “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.”

On Thursday in another statement, Jones Jr said: “We shared a residence during my childhood, but my father and I did not reside in the same house at the time of incorporat­ion, nor at any time during my operation of RJ Mays Consulting.”

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