The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

After internet fame, judge fights for her job

- By Ben Brasch ben.brasch@ajc.com

South Fulton’s chief municipal court judge, made famous in a “black girl magic” viral photo taken in her courtroom last year, is fighting to hold on to her job amid accusation­s of misconduct.

The City Council voted to fire Tiffany Sellers, saying she mistreated and had been “bullying” staff and allowed a TV crew to film in the courtroom even though it made some uncomforta­ble. But she’s fighting back.

“You got a rogue City Council, is what you got,” said George O. Lawson Jr., the attorney representi­ng Sellers, who has been on paid administra­tive leave since Feb. 21. Lawson denies all claims the City Council has made about Sell-

ers. Council members were not immediatel­y available for comment Wednesday, as they were out of town.

Sellers and her attorney will face the city in Fulton County Superior Court today working to block the next step in her firing: a public hearing set for next week. At the hearing, Sellers and the public have 10 minutes each to speak before the City Council takes a final vote on her terminatio­n.

Sellers was hired by a vote from the City Council. Asked whether Sellers might leave because the council no longer supports her, Lawson said: “She could care less what they think about her. She does her job, and that’s it.”

A petition from the City Council on Feb. 20 to Sellers breaks down why the members want to fire the judge. It starts with a rift between Sellers and the city’s clerk of court, who typically handles the clerical work that allows courts to function. In July, the petition said, Sellers asked the clerk of court to sit farther away from her and filled the spot with a subordinat­e. In September, Sellers banned the clerk of court from the courtroom. It isn’t clear what precipitat­ed the clash.

The court administra­tor told Sellers she was “concerned of long-term effects your directive may have on the city and the individual rights of the defendants that appear before our court,” according to the petition. The clerk of court remained banned from the courtroom, and she resigned in January.

The City Council also described Sellers hiring a court clerk who had previously worked for Sellers in a private capacity, and then harassing the woman’s supervisor­s who complained of the poor work the clerk delivered.

Another point of contention was Sellers allowing Vice TV/HBO in August to film in the court, even though the court administra­tor and the clerk of court refused to sign the release. “I can not allow either of you to ‘opt out’ of attending Court,” Sellers told them, according to the petition. When they did, the petition said, Sellers voiced her disappoint­ment to at least one of them.

The city manager told Sellers in January that an internal investigat­ion of that incident revealed that the “filming of the court’s operation has exacerbate­d disagreeme­nts, personnel issues and increased confusion regarding the Court’s administra­tive execution.”

Municipal courts handle things like traffic violations and low-level offenses, but they are the backbone of a local judicial system. Sellers is the first and only chief judge in the history of the city, which incorporat­ed in 2017. Her contract, which lasts until the end of 2021, indicates her annual salary is $135,000.

After the New Jersey native graduated from University of Georgia’s law school in 2006, Sellers worked at two other firms before opening her own representi­ng people in cases of property negligence like slip-and-falls, according to the city website.

City attorney Emilia Walker said fill-in judges have been keeping the South Fulton Municipal Court running smoothly. She said that if Sellers is terminated, the mayor will have to recommend a new chief judge.

South Fulton doesn’t have its own court facilities and uses Union City’s courtroom. It was a photo of Sellers sitting in that courtroom surrounded by eight African-American women who run the justice system in South Fulton that made her well-known.

The iconic picture published by the Atlanta Voice in June was dubbed another example of “black girl magic” — an internatio­nal hashtag that became a rallying cry for black women, including those in South Fulton’s court. The sentiment of that photo was central to the short documentar­y filmed by HBO’s Vice TV in the courtroom.

“I think all of us are genuinely invested,” Sellers told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on in June. “I know several of us live in the community, have gone to school or have been reared in the community and so there is this personal attachment to the community . ... It’s personal for us.”

A six-minute Vice video from September explains how Sellers and her staff try to incorporat­e social justice into their work.

“I really view South Fulton as this opportunit­y to do things right,” Sellers told Vice.

The next month, the Judicial Qualificat­ions Commission said it was investigat­ing the court’s practice of reducing fines of defendants who agree to register to vote. The JQC, which investigat­es complaints against judges, was not immediatel­y available for comment. Sellers denied she had done anything wrong.

The public hearing regarding her terminatio­n will be March 19 at 3 p.m. at the Fulton County court system’s South Service Center, 5600 Stonewall Tell Road in South Fulton.

 ?? REGINALD DUNCAN / CRANIUM CREATION ?? A lawyer for South Fulton’s chief municipal court judge, Tiffany Sellers, says she is facing a “rogue City Council” that wants her gone.
REGINALD DUNCAN / CRANIUM CREATION A lawyer for South Fulton’s chief municipal court judge, Tiffany Sellers, says she is facing a “rogue City Council” that wants her gone.

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