The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Bottoms, Norwood facing subpoenas

Panel looks into alleged $550K in impermissi­ble campaign contributi­ons.

- By Stephen Deere sdeere@ajc.com

The two candidates in the 2017 Atlanta mayoral runoff allegedly accepted a combined $550,000 in impermissi­ble campaign contributi­ons, according to documents obtained by The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on.

Both appear to have been served subpoenas from the Georgia state ethics commission.

The commission on Monday notified Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms’ campaign of allegation­s that it accepted $382,773 in contributi­ons that exceeded maximum limits establishe­d by law.

The commission is also alleging that Mary Norwood, Bot

toms’ opponent in the runoff, accepted $168,975 in contributi­ons that exceeded the limits.

The documents outlining the violations do not name the donors whose contributi­ons allegedly exceeded the limits — which in 2017 were $2,600 for a general election and $1,400 for a runoff.

The ethics commission — whose formal name is the Georgia Government Transparen­cy Campaign Finance Commission — issued Norwood’s campaign a subpoena on Tuesday seeking the campaign’s bank records of any accounts that were under her control or did business with her campaign.

The AJC obtained a copy of the Norwood subpoena independen­t of the ethics commission. The AJC requested the Bottoms’ subpoena from the ethics commission, but Executive Director David H. Emadi said it was not subject to Georgia’s Open Records Act.

Bryan Tyson, a local election law attorney, told Channel 2 Action News that the campaigns could face fines if the alleged campaign finance violations are proven.

With 10 viable candidates, Atlanta’s 2017 mayoral race was one of the most expensive in the city’s history.

Just days before the general election, six of the candidates had raised more than $1 million, with several drawing deeply from their own bank accounts to make personal loans to their campaigns. Bottoms loaned her campaign $240,000 in personal funds.

In total, Bottoms raised $2.7 million for her campaign compared to Norwood’s $2.1 million.

A bitter contest

The mayoral runoff between Norwood and Bottoms was a bitter contest that highlighte­d the city’s racial divide, and included pledges from both candidates to clean up corruption at City Hall.

The aftermath of the race featured allegation­s of voter fraud. Norwood lost the election by fewer than 1,000 votes.

The fallout from the race has been ongoing for the past two years.

Norwood, who served on the city council alongside Bottoms, also lost her 2009 mayoral bid to Kasim Reed by fewer than 1,000 votes. Norwood said Tuesday that her campaigns have been investigat­ed four times — and exonerated in every instance.

“I look forward to the same outcome,” she said.

Norwood said that her finance team is taking the request seriously, and that she planned to provide a comprehens­ive response to the commission.

Bottoms told Channel 2 in a text message that her campaign had not yet received a subpoena from the Ethics Commission.

“We are confident we are in full compliance with all Ethics rules and will provide requested documents to substantia­te our compliance as appropriat­ely requested.”

An AJC analysis of 2017 mayoral campaign fundraisin­g reports found that Bottoms was the biggest offender when it came to not supplying required donor informatio­n on campaign finance reports, such as where her donors work — which is critical when identifyin­g city vendors contributi­ng to candidates. The AJC found employer informatio­n was missing for about 20 percent of Bottoms’ donors.

The ethics commission is scheduled to hear an audit report on the mayor’s race during a meeting on Wednesday.

Bottoms’ campaign finance consultant, Rick Thompson, sits on the ethics commission and, in that capacity, rules on complaints against campaigns and lobbyists. Thompson said he would recuse himself from the mayoral complaints, and had no input on the investigat­ion.

Ultimately, one person appears to have been behind both complaints that led to the ethic commission’s allegation­s.

Charlie Stadtlande­r, a senior advisor to the Bottoms’ campaign, filed an ethics complaint against Norwood on Dec. 4 — a day before the runoff. Stadtlande­r had previously worked for Norwood. He said Norwood improperly transferre­d funds between accounts and misused city resources to help her campaign.

Stadtlande­r later sought to have the complaint dismissed after he learned that the attorney who the Bottoms’ campaign had assist him with the complaint, Jeremy Berry, was the city attorney at time.

In his role as city attorney, Berry represente­d Norwood in her capacity as a council member and so drafting the complaint was a conflict of interest and inappropri­ate use of city resources, Stadtlande­r said.

Seven months later, Stadtlande­r helped Norwood’s campaign treasurer and his long-time friend, Jamie Ensley, draft a complaint against Bottoms.

“I would have never have filed that complaint had it not been for Charlie,” Ensley told the AJC.

Stadtlande­r said he eventually concluded both campaigns were corrupt. But he still considered Norwood a friend.

“The feeling I have right now is disappoint­ment,” he said. “In my opinion, they are equally responsibl­e for a breach of trust to the public.”

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Mary Norwood said Tuesday that her campaigns have been investigat­ed four times — and exonerated in every instance.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Mary Norwood said Tuesday that her campaigns have been investigat­ed four times — and exonerated in every instance.

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