The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Documents: DA padspay $195K in grant money

State ethics panel notifies Paul Howard he’ll face two more allegation­s of violating campaign finance laws.

- By Bill Rankin brankin@ajc.com

Fulton County District Attorney

Paul Howard received an additional $25,000 in salary supplement­s from the city of Atlanta that he funneled through a nonprofit he heads as CEO, The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on and Chan

nel 2 Action News have learned. That means Howard padded his pay with $195,000 of the $250,000 in grant money the city signed over to the DA’s Office in two

checks in 2014 and 2016. The final $25,000 in payments were disclosed in a recent letter from the state ethics commission­that notified Howard he will face two more allegation­s of violating state campaign finance laws.

In April, after the AJC and Channel 2 reported the unusual financial arrangemen­t, the Government Transparen­cy and Campaign Finance Commission filed a dozen allegation­s against Howard, many for failing to disclose his secondary employment as the

CEO for People Partnering for Progress. The nonprofit, set up about a decade ago, says its mission is to reduce youth violence.

The disclosure­s also led the GBI to conduct a criminal investigat­ion of Howard at the request of Attorney General Chris Carr. In prior statements, Howard

has strongly denied any wrongdoing. His office did not respond

this week for a request for comment. Atlanta lawyer Frank Strickland, who represents Howard before the ethics commission, declined to comment.

Clark Cunningham, a Georgia State University law professor who has reviewed documents in the case, called on Howard to immediatel­y address the accusation­s in public and open up the books for his People Partnering for Progress nonprofit to show he did nothing wrong.

“It’s hard to see a noncrimina­l reason for his conduct, so I think the voters need to hear from him an explanatio­n that is well documented and supported,” Cunningham said. “I can’t see any legal justificat­ion for doing it. It looks like theft by conversion, which is a felony under Georgia law.”

Howard initially approached the city in 2014 and asked for a $70,000 salary supplement to the $158,000 he was receiving at the time from the state and a county supplement. (He makes roughly $175,000 today.)

When the city declined that request, then-Mayor

Kasim Reed arranged for the city to write a $125,000 check to the DA’s Office in 2014 and another $125,000 check in 2016.

After he learned the city had approved the first payment, Howard wrote a thankyou letter to Reed on Aug. 22, 2014. In that note, he said the funds would be used to augment his community prosecutio­n program. They also would “aid in crime reduction and improved quality of life within the city of Atlanta as well as provide additional compensati­on to the community prosecutio­n staff and the district attorney,”

Howard wrote.

The letter made no mention of Howard’s plan to divert almost 80% of the city’s funds to himself.

The AJC and Channel 2 previously reported that People Partnering for Progress used the city funds to pay Howard $170,000 from 2014 through 2017. Attached to the recent ethics commission letter were copies of four $5,000 checks that the nonprofit paid Howard in 2018 and another $5,000 check in 2019.

Howard is being challenged in the upcoming Democratic primary by attorneys Christian Wise Smith and Fani Willis. On Tuesday, during a forum hosted by the Georgia Justice Partnershi­p, the two challenger­s criticized Howard for getting caught up in the controvers­y.

In response, Howard said, “I would ask people to kind of ask themselves the question: Well, I wonder why is it all of a sudden during this election season that we now start to see allegation­s against Mr. Howard?”

Then, referring to the late Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., he added, “I’m reminded of something that has happened throughout our history with people like Dr. King, and I’m not comparing myself to Dr. King. But always allegation­s were placed against him.”

Such attacks have happened before, he said. “And I can tell you with those allegation­s, whatever process they take, I can tell you that I will be fully exonerated.”

After the initial charges were filed against him in April, Howard amended his 2015-2019 financial statements to disclose his position as CEO at the nonprofit, said David Emadi, executive director of the state ethics commission. “That complaint and investigat­ion remains open at this time.”

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Fulton District Attorney Paul Howard is being challenged in the Democratic primary by Christian Wise Smith and Fani Willis. Both criticized him for getting caught up in controvers­y. He said he will be exonerated.
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Fulton District Attorney Paul Howard is being challenged in the Democratic primary by Christian Wise Smith and Fani Willis. Both criticized him for getting caught up in controvers­y. He said he will be exonerated.

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