The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Candidate for Cobb sheriff files suit agains incumbent

Powder Springs, Marietta and more can get the latest on Twitter: @cobbnewsno­w

- By Meris Lutz mlutz@ajc.com

Sheriff accused of using office to hurt his political rival.

A former Cobb Sheriff ’s Office sergeant running to unseat his old boss has filed a lawsuit alleging Sheriff Neil Warren used his office to undermine a political rival by interferin­g with his personnel file to make it appear he was fired when he resigned.

The complaint also accuses the Sheriff ’s Office of distributi­ng the inaccurate personnel file to media and others.

The Sheriff ’s Office said it had not been served and would not comment on pending litigation on Thursday.

James Herndon recently won $30,000 from the county, mostly in attorney fees, as part of a separate suit he filed against Warren for blocking him from official Sheriff’s Office social media accounts.

Herndon worked in the Sheriff ’s Office for 16 years before leaving in September 2017 under contentiou­s circumstan­ces. He had been under investigat­ion for allegedly downloadin­g an anonymous web browser on a county computer, an investigat­ion Herndon says was retaliatio­n for speaking out about problems in the department.

According to the new complaint filed against Warren and Cobb County, Herndon was fired the same day he expressed an interest in running for sheriff. He appealed his firing and reached a settlement with the county to resign instead.

The Sheriff ’s Office should have removed the reference to his terminatio­n and issued a finding in the investigat­ion file to read “not sustained”— neither guilty nor exonerated, according to the executed settlement, obtained by The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on under the Open Records Act.

When the AJC obtained Herndon’s personnel file through an open records request last spring, as he prepared to run for office, his letter of resignatio­n was missing from his file. Instead, there was a memo summarizin­g the investigat­ion and notificati­on that his employment had been terminated.

His paperwork said his departure was “involuntar­ily.”

When the newspaper inquired about the discrepanc­y between the settlement and the personnel file, Cmdr. Robert Quigley, who oversees open records compliance for the Sheriff ’s Office, claimed staff had handed over the wrong file by mistake and provided another version.

In August 2019, Herndon formally announced his candidacy.

Shortly thereafter, the complaint says, Herndon received a letter informing him that his terminatio­n had been reinstated. The letter was signed by Sheriff Warren, and Herndon says it was placed in his mailbox without postage.

It is unclear whether anyone from the county attorney’s office reviewed the letter before it was sent. Cobb County Attorney Bill Rowling did not respond to questions submitted through County Spokesman Ross Cavitt.

Warren, who is running for reelection in 2020, is under investigat­ion by the state ethics commission for alleged campaign finance violations. Herndon is one of three Democrats who have entered the race.

In the letter, which was attached to the complaint filed with the Cobb Superior Court, Warren accuses Herndon of violating the original settlement by disparagin­g himself and the Cobb County Sheriff ’s Office. The settlement included a confidenti­ality clause in which Herndon agreed to refrain from critical or derogatory comments, but that such a provision “shall not be interprete­d to prohibit statements that are protected by the First Amendment.”

The Sheriff ’s Office subsequent­ly informed the Georgia Peace Officer Standards and Training Council, which altered Herndon’s file to say he was fired. The complaint alleges these actions harmed his employment opportunit­ies and caused emotional and financial distress. Herndon is seeking a jury trial and has asked for damages, attorney fees and for his personnel file to be amended.

“Despite the existence of a valid and enforceabl­e agreement, Defendants have refused to amend the IA files, refused to honor Plaintiff ’s 2017 resignatio­n, reported Plaintiff ’s departure from his employment as a terminatio­n instead of a resignatio­n, specifical­ly to Georgia P.O.S.T. and several news outlets, and released Plaintiff ’s inaccurate file and the agreement to the public,” the complaint reads.

 ??  ?? Ex-sheriff’s Sgt. James Herndon was in Cobb Sheriff’s Office for 16 years.
Ex-sheriff’s Sgt. James Herndon was in Cobb Sheriff’s Office for 16 years.

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