The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

What's next for former Reed aide?

Katrina Taylor-Parks collapsed Monday during her sentencing.

- By J. Scott Trubey strubey@ajc.com

Katrina Taylor-Parks, a top aide to former Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed, was in the middle of being sentenced for taking bribes from a vendor when she collapsed and was taken by ambulance to a hospital Monday afternoon.

The chaotic interrupti­on in federal court left uncertain when Reed’s former deputy chief of staff will officially be sentenced and overshadow­ed new informatio­n revealed during the nearly hourlong hearing.

What happened in court?

Taylor-Parks faced five years in prison. Her attorneys sought no or limited prison time, while federal prosecutor­s sought 21 months. U.S. District Court Judge Steve Jones stuck with

prosecutor­s’ recommende­d prison sentence and ordered her to serve three years on supervised release upon completion of her confinemen­t and to pay restitutio­n of about $15,000. During the sentencing TaylorPark­s gasped, then fell to the floor. Her medical condition hasn’t been made public.

Will Taylor-Parks have another sentencing hearing?

Yes. U.S. Attorney Byung J. “BJay” Pak said a hearing will be reschedule­d once Taylor-Parks recovers. The date of that hearing hadn’t been set as of Tuesday afternoon. Both sides say the sentence is unlikely to change as a result of what happened on Monday.

What new informatio­n was revealed?

Taylor-Parks previously admitted to taking $4,000 from an unidentifi­ed city vendor, but prosecutor­s revealed she actually accepted about $15,000 in cash and gifts, including a Louis Vuitton handbag, a trip to Chicago and a cruise to Mexico. The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on has identified the vendor as a wireless internet company that obtained a sole-source contract at Piedmont Park and was controlled by Paul Marshall, a Marietta investment adviser who pleaded guilty in 2017 to defrauding investors.

Marshall also controlled a company called FOGFuels that won a City Council resolution authorizin­g the Reed administra­tion to negotiate a sole-source contract to turn restaurant grease into biofuel. The contract was never fully consummate­d. Taylor-Parks helped the vendor arrange meetings with high-ranking city officials and introduced him to an unnamed member of City Council.

Taylor-Parks’ attorney, Jay Strongwate­r, said his client and Marshall attended graduate school together at Georgia Tech and she agreed to help Marshall. Marshall turned on Taylor-Parks following his indictment.

What informatio­n has Taylor-Parks provided to investigat­ors?

Assistant U.S. Attorney Jeff Davis said Taylor-Parks met with investigat­ors on 16 occasions and took part in four interviews by phone. She also provided the FBI with the contentsof­twosmartph­ones.Like the city’s former chief purchasing officer, Adam Smith, who also pleaded guilty to taking bribes and is serving a prison sentence, Taylor-Parks recorded conversati­ons with others. Prosecutor­s declined to detail the contents of those 11 conversati­ons.

It does not appear she provided investigat­ors any direct knowledge of lawbreakin­g. Taylor-Parks detailed the inner workings of City Hall contractin­g, including ways the system could be circumvent­ed, and examples of suspicious behavior, Strongwate­r said. He said his client’s cooperatio­n advanced the federal probe.

Georgia State University law professor Jessica Gabel Cino said people who spoke by phone or in-person with Taylor-Parks should be worried. But prosecutor­s’ insistence on prison time indicates Taylor-Parks didn’t have all the informatio­n the government wanted, she said.

“She’s providing the dots, but the dots aren’t connected,” Cino said. “That’s what the prosecutio­n wants. They want who did it, when did they do it and what was the illegal act.”

Where does the federal investigat­ion stand?

The probe, which dates to at least 2015, has peered into snow removal and sidewalk constructi­on contracts. Investigat­ors are known to be probing contracts at the Atlanta airport and the city’s watershed department. Prosecutor­s also have issued subpoenas for records related to spending on city credit cards, travel by members of the mayor’s office under Reed and requests for paid leave. Pak said on Monday, “we are not done.”

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