Chattanooga Times Free Press

Ex-Atlanta official collapses during sentencing for bribery

- BY KATE BRUMBACK

ATLANTA — The sentencing hearing for a former high-ranking Atlanta city official was dramatical­ly cut short Monday when she collapsed to the floor as the judge sentenced her to prison.

Katrina Taylor-Parks, 49, pleaded guilty in August to conspiring to accept bribes while she was former Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed’s deputy chief of staff. Federal prosecutor­s say Parks accepted thousands of dollars from a vendor in exchange for helping him secure city contract work.

She was the sixth person charged and the fifth to plead guilty in a federal investigat­ion into corruption at City Hall that U.S. Attorney Byung J. BJay Pak said remains ongoing.

Parks, who was standing to receive her sentence from U.S. District Judge Steve Jones, collapsed immediatel­y after he ordered her to spend a year and nine months in prison and to pay $15,000 in restitutio­n. She shook as she lay on the floor saying she couldn’t breathe, and U.S. marshals cleared the courtroom.

Medical personnel arrived to help her, and she was taken from the federal courthouse in downtown Atlanta by ambulance.

The judge was not able to finish imposing the sentence, and lawyers for Parks and for the government said the sentence wasn’t finalized and will be completed later.

Roughly 30 people had packed the courtroom to show their support for Parks, and four addressed the judge. They told him of her kindness, her devotion to the city and her community and the difference she made mentoring young people.

One of her attorneys, Jay Strongwate­r, told the judge that Parks is the main caregiver for her elderly mother, who suffers from dementia. She was a devoted public servant, aside for the crimes that landed her in court, had shown great remorse and aided the government’s investigat­ion, Strongwate­r said.

He asked that she be allowed to serve her sentence on home confinemen­t, followed by a period of supervisio­n with strict conditions.

“I recognize my lack of judgment and take full responsibi­lity for those actions,” Parks told the judge in an emotional statement as she asked for his mercy.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Jeffrey Davis said the case was a difficult one. He cited Parks’ otherwise exemplary and law-abiding life but said that had to be weighed against her severe criminal conduct.

“Ms. Parks’ conduct shatters the very delicate trust between the city of Atlanta and its citizens,” Davis said.

Prosecutor­s have said that beginning in 2011 Parks met multiple times with a city vendor and accepted bribes from him in exchange for using her position to help him win city work. Over a period of more than 18 months, Parks traded her powerful influence over city contracts for approximat­ely $15,000 in money, trips and gifts, including a Louis Vuitton handbag, a trip to Chicago and a cruise to Mexico, Davis said.

In interviews with the FBI in November 2017 and February of last year, Parks falsely said she had never taken money from the vendor, prosecutor­s have said.

The year and nine months in prison that the government had recommende­d actually showed great leniency and took into account her cooperatio­n, Davis said.

He noted that, since May, she had provided informatio­n to the FBI, the IRS and the U.S. attorney’s office during 16 in-person meetings and four phone calls. She also made 11 recordings for the FBI and authorized agents to download informatio­n from two cellphones, Davis said.

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