The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Corruption probe seeks Reed's records

City-issued credit card use, South Africa trip focus of subpoena.

- By Stephen Deere sdeere@ajc.com and Dan Klepal dan.klepal@ajc.com

The sprawling federal investiga

tion into Atlanta City Hall corruption has now reached the office of former Mayor Kasim Reed.

An April 6 subpoena from a federal grand jury demands informatio­n about charges made to Reed’s city-issued credit card, along with informatio­n about Reed’s brother, Tracy; political consultant Rev. Mitzi Bickers, who was indicted

on bribery charges last week; and two other high-ranking officials still

in city government — deputy chief of staff Katrina Taylor Parks and Invest Atlanta chief executive Eloisa Klementich.

A second subpoena, dated April 3, focused solely on Taylor Parks, and asks for her city financial disclosure statements; permission requests for outside employment; ethics pledges; along with travel authorizat­ions and reimbursem­ent forms. The subpoena also asks for com- munication­s between Parks and four companies, and for all records related to the 2013 installati­on of wireless internet services at Pied- mont Park.

The two subpoenas are the fifth and sixth served on the city since 2016, when prosecutor­s first sought records related to Bickers, and indicate that prosecutor­s are plowing into new ground in their investigat­ion. Earlier subpoenas have focused on sidewalk and emergency con- tracting, and sought informatio­n related to firms doing business at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta Internatio­nal Airport.

Reed issued a statement Tuesday through his spokesman.

“Since the start of this investigat­ion, my administra­tion pledged full cooperatio­n with our federal partners,” Reed said. “My commitment has not changed and all documents requested in the April 6, 2018 subpoena will be provided. Many of these documents have been made available to members of the press previously and reflect legitimate expenses incurred as well as contributi­ons made during the course of my service as Mayor of Atlanta.”

A city spokespers­on said Taylor Parks was unavailabl­e for comment.

As a deputy chief of staff, Taylor Parks acts as a legislativ­e whip, pushing the Atlanta City C ouncil to approve contracts and policies advanced by the administra­tion. Councilman Howard Shook said the council received a one-line memo from mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms’ chief of staff late Tuesday saying that Taylor Parks had been placed on medical leave.

The subpoenas were issued after The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on reported that Reed charged nearly $300,000 on his city credit card during his last three years in office on five-star hotels, expen s ive business-class airfare, chauffeure­d luxury car service and more than $21,000 in restaurant tabs. Reed also made questionab­le expenditur­es such as a political contribu- tion and paying for on-go- ing educationa­l classes to maintain his law license. Reed reimbursed taxpay- ers $12,000 for those and other expenses just days after the AJC requested the state- ments under the Georgia Open Records Act.

Federal prosecutor­s also want all records associated with the nonprofit organizati­on Partners For Prosperity, which is a fundraisin­g arm of Invest Atlanta, the city’s eco- nomic developmen­t agency. Klementich serves as Part- ners For Prosperity’s chief financial officer. She could not immediatel­y be reached for comment.

The AJC reported earlier this month that Reed ordered $40,000 of his unclaimed salary donated to Partners For Prosperity in December, then had the nonprofit return the money to the city so it would cover a portion of an expensive and controvers­ial economic developmen­t trip Reed and other members of his administra­tion made last year to South Africa.

“Regardless of what happens in the future, I’m very thankful for the feds coming in and taking notice,” said Sara Henderson, executive director of Common Cause Georgia.

Richard Hyde, a longtime investigat­or who has worked for two Georgia attorneys general, said the subpoenas showed that the federal investigat­ion was getting more serious and cred- ited the AJC and Action 2 News for exposing some of the questionab­le spending that federal authoritie­s were now looking into.

“You’ve kind of given them the blueprint,” Hyde said.

Bottoms has put more distance between herself and Reed, who played an import- ant role in her election late last year, as the bribery investigat­ion has unfolded.

Bottoms’ cabinet consists of a vast majority of Reed holdovers. Three days the after the April 6 subpoena, Bottoms asked her entire Cabinet to resign, except for Chief of Staff Marva Lewis and Chief Operations Offi- cer Richard Cox. Bottoms hired both Lewis and Cox.

Bottoms said the officials could continue working and she would decide whose resignatio­ns to accept.

On April 10, Bottoms announced she would create a web portal so that members of the public could review the city’s financial data.

The next day, the AJC and Channel 2 Action News filed a complaint with Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr alleging widespread violations of the state’s open records’ laws.

Bottoms on Monday announced in a letter to the city council that she had created a new policy for handling public records requests that adopted proposals in the AJC and Channel 2 Action News’ complaint. A spokespers­on for Bottoms issued a statement Tuesday saying the city will continue cooperatin­g with the investigat­ion.

Documents related to the subpoenas must be turned over to the grand jury by May 8.

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