The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ga. candidate’s firm: Stop attacks

- By Maya T. Prabhu maya.prabhu@ajc.com

Attorneys for the company headed by the Democratic nominee for lieutenant governor sent letters to the state’s top two Republican campaigns demanding that they stop “making false statements” about a discrimina­tion lawsuit filed against the business.

Jack Cooper, a truck-hauling company led by Sarah Riggs Amico, sent the letters Monday requesting Amico’s opponent, former state Rep. Geoff Duncan, his spokesman Dan McLagan and Secretary of State Brian Kemp, the Republican nominee for governor, retract statements made in a press release last week.

The request comes days after Kemp called for Amico to withdraw her candidacy, describing the allegation­s in the lawsuit filed in federal court in April as “unacceptab­le and disqualify­ing.”

Amico has been the executive chairwoman of her family’s company since 2014.

“The extent of Messrs. Kemp and Duncan’s false statements are shocking and will likely damage the reputation of Jack Cooper and its employees, and expose them to public hatred, contempt, or ridicule,” attorney David P. Thatcher wrote in the letter.

McLagan scoffed at the request.

“She had her dad call his lawyer on us?” McLagan said. “Well, Big Mike should read the sexual harassment allegation­s found in paragraphs 26, 116, 118 and 139 of the lawsuit.”

Jack Cooper is being sued by 10 current and former staffers at an Indiana office of the trucking company. They allege a supervisor discrimina­ted against black employees and that another supervisor sexually harassed workers.

Mike Riggs, the CEO of Jack Cooper and Amico’s father, has called the lawsuit “frivolous.”

A press release from Kemp’s campaign last week called it a “sexual assault lawsuit.” Employees have alleged sexual harassment, according to court records.

A statement from Jack Cooper said the company, Amico and the supervisor accused of discrimina­tion were victimized by Kemp’s and Duncan’s claims.

“Mr. Duncan’s campaign has avoided issues that are important to Georgia voters and, instead, sullied the good name of Jack Cooper and a hard-working supervisor miles away in Indiana, simply to try to gain a political advantage,” company officials said in a press release.

Kemp campaign spokesman Cody Hall called on Stacey Abrams, the Democratic nominee for governor, to also ask Amico to withdraw from the race. He accused Abrams of playing politics, saying sexual harassment and racial discrimina­tion shouldn’t be ignored.

“That’s why Brian Kemp has a plan to ensure that state employees are treated with respect and allegation­s of misconduct are addressed immediatel­y,” he said.

Amico isn’t the first candidate to call for an end to attacks. Last month, Kemp’s campaign wrote a letter to TV stations demanding they stop airing an ad that criticized his handling of sexual assault complaints, calling it a “demonstrab­ly false” attack on the Republican nominee.

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