The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Senator calls for removal of Stonecrest mayor

State Sen. Emanuel Jones urges governor to intervene,

- By Zachary Hansen zachary.hansen@ajc.com

Following a vote to make public a lengthy investigat­ive report into Stonecrest’s use of $6 million in COVID-19 relief funds, a state lawmaker is calling for Gov. Brian Kemp to remove Stonecrest’s mayor from office.

Sen. Emanuel Jones, D-decatur, said Monday he plans to provide the full investigat­ive report to Kemp’s office in addition to federal authoritie­s. He previously called for the FBI and Department of Justice to investigat­e how the federal funds were spent, accusing Mayor Jason Lary of misusing the funds for personal gain.

“There’s a whole bunch of money missing, and someone needs to be held accountabl­e,” Jones said. Lary has previously denied Jones’ accusation­s, claiming the state senator has a vendetta against him.

When asked about Jones’ threat to go to the governor, Lary texted The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on, “In this country, innocent until proven guilty.”

Four members of the Stonecrest City Council voted Monday to waive attorney-client privilege on the report, which will allow the public to read the document. City Attorney Winston Denmark conducted the investigat­ion after council members said their requests for more informatio­n on the funding program were being ignored by the mayor’s office. In an email to city leaders and media outlets, Denmark said his report “is well over 100 pages.”

However, only Lary and the City Council have seen the report so far. The council chose not to discuss its contents or show the report at Monday’s short special called meeting. City leaders were provided the report about 3 p.m. Monday.

“I haven’t read the entire document,” Mayor Pro Tem George Turner, who presided over the meeting, said. “Like many of you, I just got it late today. I skimmed it, and there’s some things there that are of concern — great concern.”

The AJC filed an open records request for the full investigat­ive report. Stonecrest administra­tive assistant Leah Rodriguez told the AJC that the report couldn’t be provided until later in the week because the city’s office is closed due to a COVID-19 case.

‘Squarely on my shoulders’

That coronaviru­s case didn’t stop Lary from appearing before a podium in City Hall on Monday afternoon to hold a virtual roundtable with pastors and nonprofits who received Coronaviru­s Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act funds.

Lary defended the city’s work to distribute the CARES Act money and touted the charitable actions of the recipients.

During the roundtable, Lary acknowledg­ed the investigat­ive report would be released later in the day and said he’d take any responsibi­lity if the report isn’t gleaming.

“If something has gone awry or folks aren’t pleased about what has happened, you can blame it on me. Not anybody else. Not the team, not the folks that worked the opportunit­y, not the people who distribute­d the money,” Lary said. “You put it squarely on my shoulders as mayor, and I’ll take whatever it is that comes our way. This is the job, that is the position and that is the leadership sense that I have.”

“I thought they did a fantastic job,” he said of Stonecrest Cares and Municipal Resource Partners, which oversaw the city’s CARES Act program. “That team, that crew did an outstandin­g job of distributi­ng the money, taking the applicatio­ns, vetting the folks with regards to how those decisions were made, and they had to do this in 45 days.”

The city hired Municipal Resource Partners, a nonprofit founded in May, to disburse $6.2 million in CARES Act funds to small businesses. It was founded by Tom Kurrie, Stonecrest’s first city attorney.

Municipal Resource Partners was paid $510,000 to disburse $4.3 million of CARES Act funds to 138 small businesses. It also provided $855,000 to Stonecrest Cares, a philanthro­pic program within the city that distribute­d the funds to nonprofits and churches. Stonecrest Cares, co-founded by Lillian Lowe and Iris Settle, is not a registered nonprofit, and Lary has previously said he hopes it’ll become a permanent arm of the city government.

Despite his praise of the program, Lary has not shared a list of every entity that received CARES money with the City Council or the AJC. The AJC filed multiple open records requests over the past three weeks, which are all still pending.

Lary has repeatedly said he had no part in choosing who received funds and that he didn’t have a decision-making role regarding the CARES Act program.

About 450 entities applied for funds. In a February meeting, Clarence Boone, who was the city’s economic developmen­t director, told the City Council that more than 300 did not meet all of the qualificat­ions, but 138 were given awards. Boone was recently replaced by Jonathan Bartlett as part of several staffing changes that were made in the wake of the city’s charter being rewritten by state lawmakers.

Boone’s presentati­on also included multiple record-keeping discrepanc­ies. A spreadshee­t shown during Boone’s presentati­on listed more expenditur­es than funds received, roughly a $65,000 error. His presentati­on included a $150,000 discrepanc­y in the amount of grant funds awarded through the program.

 ?? COURTESY PHOTOS ?? Sen. Emanuel Jones (left) accuses Stonecrest Mayor Jason Lary (right) of misusing $6.2 million in COVID-19 relief funds and wants Gov. Brian Kemp to remove him from office.
COURTESY PHOTOS Sen. Emanuel Jones (left) accuses Stonecrest Mayor Jason Lary (right) of misusing $6.2 million in COVID-19 relief funds and wants Gov. Brian Kemp to remove him from office.

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