The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Candidates for mayor spar over federal investigat­ions

Probes into two of the hopefuls garner attention during their debate.

- By Wilborn P. Nobles III

Atlanta’s leading candidates for mayor discussed the elephant in the room at their first debate Tuesday night — federal investigat­ions involving two of the candidates.

Kiss 104.1 radio host Frank Ski asked the five candidates about crime, the Buckhead cityhood movement, and transporta­tion. But the topic that elicited the most jagged responses was the federal investigat­ions into city councilman Antonio Brown and former mayor Kasim Reed’s administra­tion.

Atlanta City Hall has been under a years-long federal investigat­ion that implicated seven Reed officials and four city contractor­s, including bribery conviction­s against his chief procuremen­t officer and a deputy chief of staff.

Reed’s chief financial officer is currently under indictment for fraud and weapons charges. Brown is under an unrelated federal fraud indictment for incidents that allegedly occurred before he won office.

And Reed himself appears to be under a federal grand jury investigat­ion for alleged wire fraud.

The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on found that Reed’s campaign has been fighting against a federal grand jury subpoena for campaign attorney Jeremy Berry to testify in the probe.

Without naming Reed, a recent court ruling described allegation­s that a candidate for local office used campaign donations to make personal purchases, including furniture for his mother, trips to resorts and lingerie. The AJC was able to match the amount of the furniture purchase — to the penny — with an expenditur­e from Reed’s 2017 campaign finance report.

Candidates Felicia Moore, Andre Dickens and Sharon Gay condemned Reed.

Dickens said Reed’s administra­tion created “the largest federal investigat­ion at City Hall” that unveiled “a climate and a cloud of corruption” that affects Atlanta today. Moore said taxpayers are on the hook for $30 million in legal expenses to respond to more than a dozen subpoenas issued to Atlanta. Reed stood his ground.

“I’m not under federal investigat­ion, and it would not be an impediment in any way,” Reed said. “During my tenure in office, I didn’t even have as much as a successful ethics complaint filed against me.”

For his part, Brown said he will be “vindicated from all charges” against him and it won’t affect his leadership. Dickens and Moore said Brown’s situation “is between him and the court” because it’s unrelated to his council representa­tion.

An AJC poll of 842 likely Atlanta voters found corruption was not a top priority, as only about 4% said it was the most pressing issue in the race. But 61% said they are “less likely” to support Reed’s comeback bid after they learned about the probe into his previous administra­tion. Thirty-four percent said it had no effect.

Even so, the AJC poll found that Reed has a slight lead in the race at about 24%, although his lead over Moore falls within the poll’s margin of error. None of the other candidates cracked 10% in the AJC poll.

Ski asked Gay about her role in the administra­tion of former Mayor Bill Campbell, who served from 19942002. After a years-long federal corruption probe into the pay-to-play culture of city contractin­g, Campbell in 2006 was acquitted of racketeeri­ng and bribery charges but convicted of failing to pay taxes on $160,000 of income from 1997 to 1999. Ten other people, including Campbell’s top aide and the aide’s deputy, were implicated.

But Gay said she left her role as Campbell’s deputy chief of staff two months into his second term.

“I didn’t know anything about it and wasn’t part of it and was never interviewe­d by the FBI,” Gay said.

Gay didn’t mince words about Reed’s ties to the investigat­ion.

“Black elected officials have sometimes been held to a different standard,” Gay acknowledg­ed. “But that doesn’t mean that having 10 people in an administra­tion — either senior officials or people closely connected to an administra­tion — indicted.

“Seven plead guilty, three awaiting trial. That’s a very serious matter. It is a distractio­n.”

All five candidates will also participat­e in the AJC’S Community Conversati­on series Oct. 4. The event begins at 5 p.m. and will broadcast on the AJC’S Facebook and Youtube accounts.

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