The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

State drops child abuse registry

Bottoms disputes allegation she is not cooperatin­g in probe.

- By Stephen Deere stephen.deere@ajc.com

Officials say the database was making it more difficult to accurately track and punish instances of abuse.

The executive director of the state ethics commission says Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms has refused to cooperate with an investigat­ion into her campaign finances — an allegation the Bottoms’ campaign disputes.

The commission alleged in December that Bottoms’ 2017 mayoral campaign accepted $382,773 in contributi­ons from individu

als that exceeded the maximum allowable under state law.

Bottoms raised more than $2.7 million in a wide-open race that became one of the most expensive mayoral campaigns in the city’s history.

“We have not received campaign bank records from the Bottoms campaign, which were subpoenaed, despite her public statements that she would provide all documents and be fully transpar

ent,” ethics commission Executive Director David H. Emadi said in an email to Channel 2 Action News.

The ethics commission — whose formal name is the Georgia Government Transparen­cy & Campaign Finance Commission — has scheduled a probable cause hearing for Sept. 24.

If the commission finds reason to believe that Bottoms’ campaign violated the law, it will forward the case to the Georgia State Office of Administra­tive Hearings, where a judge could fine the campaign or negotiate a compromise.

Then the ruling would go back to the ethics commission for final

approval.

A spokespers­on for the Bottoms campaign said Emadi was being “blatantly untruthful.”

“It is unfortunat­e that the State’s Ethics Officer is being blatantly untruthful regarding this matter,” the spokespers­on told The Atlanta-Journal Constituti­on on Tuesday. “This matter will be addressed in accordance with the law and not based upon the unlawful demands of an untruthful and overzealou­s prosecutor.”

The spokespers­on didn’t respond to a request for him to identify what made the commission’s demands unlawful.

Emadi cited portions of Georgia law that give the commission the right to inspect “accounts kept by the candidate or treasurer of a campaign committee” and to “issue subpoenas to compel any person to appear, give sworn testimony, or produce documentar­y or other evidence.”

Emadi, a former Republican activist, has been criticized for allegedly targeting Democratic organizati­ons. He has also donated to Republican Gov. Brian Kemp, who sued the mayor over a mask mandate in the city. Kemp eventually dropped that lawsuit.

Last month, Mary Norwood, a former Atlanta city councilwom­an who narrowly lost to Bottoms in the 2017 mayoral runoff, admitted to accepting $80,750 in improper campaign contributi­ons.

Norwood, who raised more than $2.1 million during the race, paid a $27,000 fine to settle those charges — a penalty that ethics commission

Chairman Jake Evans acknowledg­ed was steep.

The commission initially alleged Norwood, who now chairs the Buckhead Council of Neighborho­ods, accepted $168,975 in inappropri­ate contributi­ons. Norwood told the AJC she turned over all her campaign financial records to the commission.

The ethics commission does not name the donors whose contributi­ons exceeded the limits — which in 2017 were $2,600 for a general election and $1,400 for a runoff.

In his email to Channel 2, Emadi said that allegation­s against Bottoms were based on an audit of her own campaign finance filings, and that it is frequently to a campaign’s advantage to turn over its records.

“Oftentimes those records can help us clear up which initial allegation­s were really just poor bookkeepin­g and duplicate entries and which were substantiv­e,” Emadi wrote. “But since they continue to refuse to comply with us in any meaningful way, we are moving forward with the case.”

Bottoms has spent much of the year campaignin­g for Democrat Joe Biden’s presidenti­al campaign and at one point was considered as his potential running mate.

Political consultant Rick Thompson, whose company is paid to help prepare Bottoms’ campaign reports, is one of the five ethics board members who voted last month to approve Norwood’s fine.

Thompson cited that fact and that there was no dispute about Norwood’s consent order and that he did not work for Bottoms’ campaign during the 2017 election as reasons why he wasn’t required to recuse himself from the vote that approved Norwood’s fine last month.

 ??  ?? Keisha Lance Bottoms raised more than $2.7 million in what became one of the city’s most expensive mayoral races.
Keisha Lance Bottoms raised more than $2.7 million in what became one of the city’s most expensive mayoral races.

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