The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Gwinnett leader absent for meeting on ethics

Black Caucus calls for commission­er to resign over ‘racist pig’ posts.

- By Tyler Estep tyler.estep@ajc.com

Tommy Hunter was “out of town on business” Tuesday — but not out of the spotlight.

In the embattled Gwinnett official’s absence, his fellow county commission­ers held their regular meetings, dealt with the now-routine appearance of protesters, and appointed a familiar face to the ethics board that will investigat­e him.

In addition, Georgia’s Legislativ­e Black Caucus issued a statement calling for Hunter’s resignatio­n.

“We cannot allow the commission­er to set precedent for unethical behavior without repercussi­on,” state Rep. Erica Thomas, a Democrat from Austell, said in the caucus’ lengthy emailed statement. “It has been 43 days since he exhibited the behavior that warrants his resignatio­n or removal, and that is far too long.”

Hunter has been the subject of protests and repeated calls for resignatio­n since a Jan. 14 Facebook

post in which he called civil rights leader and U.S. Rep. John Lewis a “racist pig.” He also referred to Democrats as “Demonrats” and a “bunch of idiots.”

The Republican commission­er has apologized for his “choice of words” in the post but has also made it clear he has no plans to step down from his District 3 commission post.

The statement from the Black Caucus, a body comprised of 60 members of Georgia’s General Assembly, was sent to media members in the middle of the Gwinnett Board of Commission­ers’ 10 a.m. Tuesday meeting. Chair Charlotte Nash had already announced that Hunter would not be present for the day’s proceeding­s.

Seth Weathers, a consultant who has acted as a spokesman for Hunter, later told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on that the commission­er was “out of town on business.”

Hunter’s conspicuou­s absence came after two consecutiv­e weeks in which he skipped out on open public comment periods at board meetings. Since Hunter’s controvers­ial social media activity was first reported by the AJC, those periods have been filled with protesters.

Even without their target present, protesters still showed up. More than a dozen people addressed the Hunter-less board, eating up about an hour of public comment time.

“Invisible Mr. Hunter: You have brought us back to a very divisive time,” one woman, Snellville resident Pat Lark, said. “Please resign.”

Before the protests, the Board of Commission­ers appointed Herman Pennamon to the ethics panel being assembled to hear a complaint filed against Hunter. Gwinnett’s ethics panel, which has not been assembled since the county’s ethics ordinance was passed in 2011, is not a standing body and must be created from scratch each time a complaint is filed.

Pennamon had a long career with Georgia Power, including work as a state lobbyist. He also has been a community leader and volunteer in Gwinnett for years, holding board positions at nonprofits such as the Gwinnett Coalition, the 100 Black Men of North Metro, the Foster Children Foundation, the March of Dimes and the Red Cross.

The ethics complaint against Hunter was filed Feb. 6 by two local attorneys, on behalf of an Atlanta woman named Nancie Turner. The complaint alleges that, with his “racist pig” Facebook post and others, Hunter violated several sections of Gwinnett’s 2011 ethics ordinance.

If a complaint is sustained, the ethics ordinance grants the ethics board power to recommend penalties ranging from written reprimand to removal from office. In the absence of a criminal act, however, state law allows for an elected official to be removed only via recall election.

 ??  ?? Herman Pennamon will be on Gwinnett’s ethics panel.
Herman Pennamon will be on Gwinnett’s ethics panel.

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