The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Measure to end pay for indicted officials passes

Constituti­onal amendment to be put on ballot for Georgia voters to decide.

- By James Salzer James.salzer@ajc.com

Georgia voters will be asked next year to approve a constituti­onal amendment to keep taxpayers from having to pay state officials who are suspended from their jobs while facing felony indictment­s.

The Georgia House voted 169-0 Tuesday for Senate Resolution 134, which puts the issue on the 2022 ballot. The Senate backed the resolution earlier this month.

The proposal was filed a few weeks after The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on reported that by June 30, the state will have paid about $400,000 in salary and benefits to suspended Georgia Insurance Commission­er Jim Beck.

Beck was indicted a few months after taking office on charges alleging that he swindled his former employer out of $2 million, in part to fund his campaign for office. He has denied the charges.

During debate Tuesday, Rep. Matthew Wilson,

D-brookhaven, said Beck “is about to go a whole term without doing a job Georgians put their trust in him to do, but the taxpayers have been on the hook for his salary, health care and benefits the whole time.”

“If you can’t do the job, you shouldn’t get paid for it. I think he should have resigned,” Wilson said. “But since no one can be compelled to that end, we’ve got to make it so public corruption doesn’t get so comfortabl­e you can just hang around picking up a paycheck until the clock runs out.”

Rep. Mary Margaret Oliver, D-decatur, said the state already has the ability to set up a review panel to decide whether an indicted official should be suspended from office.

“It’s totally appropriat­e and positive movement in my view that we also suspend the pay,” she said. “You do have a constituti­onal right not to be incarcerat­ed wrongly, but I’m not sure in the private world or in the public world you have a right to a job and pay for a job you are not performing.”

SR 134 would apply to state officials who are indicted on charges related to their performanc­e in office.

Indicted officials who are exonerated would return to their jobs and receive back pay.

Even if voters pass SR 134, it would have no impact on Beck’s case. Beck is expected to go to trial this year on his charges, which involve activity before he took office. Plus, the law would apply to future cases.

Beck was indicted in May 2019, five months after taking office, and suspended by Gov. Brian Kemp.

Since he didn’t resign but was suspended, the state is paying two insurance commission­ers: Beck and Kemp’s choice to replace him, John King.

Beck won election in November 2018 and took office the next January. By May, then-u.s. Attorney Bjay Pak was announcing the indictment of Beck, a former leader of the Georgia Christian Coalition, alleging that he stole money to pay personal credit card bills and taxes, and pump money into his 2018 campaign for insurance commission­er.

Three former Department of Insurance employees later sued the state and Beck, saying they were ousted as retaliatio­n because he thought they provided informatio­n about him to state and federal officials and the media.

The insurance commission­er’s job will be back on the ballot in 2022. If Beck is cleared of the criminal charges, he is entitled to take back the post and stand for reelection. In the meantime, the state will continue paying two commission­ers.

 ?? EMILY HANEY/AJC 2019 ?? Jim Beck was indicted in May 2019, five months after taking office, and suspended by Gov. Brian Kemp. Since he didn’t resign but was suspended, the state is paying two insurance commission­ers.
EMILY HANEY/AJC 2019 Jim Beck was indicted in May 2019, five months after taking office, and suspended by Gov. Brian Kemp. Since he didn’t resign but was suspended, the state is paying two insurance commission­ers.

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