The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

City attorney thought Hall case would interest feds

Lawyer questioned by council members behind closed doors.

- By Dan Klepal dan.klepal@ajc.com

Atlanta City Attorney Nina Hickson told council members Wednesday she thought federal prosecutor­s investigat­ing City Hall corruption would be interested in how councilman Kwanza Hall came to be hired as a senior policy advisor to Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms’ administra­tion, and that’s why she enlisted two $900-an-hour outside attorneys to perform a probe of the issue.

Hickson said attorney Tom O’Brien has represente­d the city in the federal investigat­ion for years, and that experience made him the best person to perform the Hall probe. O’Brien and another partner at the Los Angeles-based Browne George Ross performed the work over six weeks. Their investigat­ion concluded Hall’s hiring in January 2018 violated the city charter which says an elected official has to wait a year after leaving office before taking a city job.

“The facts surroundin­g the hiring, it was my belief it would be of interest to the U.S. Attorney’s Office,” Hickson told council members.

Hickson was questioned by council members for nearly an hour in a closeddoor executive session Wednesday, after a series of stories in The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on raised questions about the cost and effectiven­ess of the Hall investigat­ion, which failed to determine who was responsibl­e for hiring him.

After the closed door session, Hickson made her first public comments on the investigat­ion when she spent about a half hour answering council members’ questions in an open session — during which she revealed for the first time that O’Brien had a “conversati­on” with Mayor Bottoms during the investigat­ion.

As the AJC has previously reported, Bottoms is not named on a list of people interviewe­d by the law firm that it included in its investigat­ion report. And a mayoral spokesman told reporters last week that there was no need for the attorneys to interview Bottoms and so they didn’t.

That story shifted Wednesday.

“Mayor Bottoms did not have a formal interview, but a conversati­on” with attorneys investigat­ing the Hall matter, Hickson said. The city attorney went on to explain that the mayor did not receive legal warnings that accompanie­d employees who were formally interviewe­d for the investigat­ion.

Hickson said it was O’Brien’s decision to not “formally” interview Bottoms.

Hickson also said Reed and other members of his administra­tion who may have had informatio­n about Hall were not interviewe­d because “of their status with regard to the DO J investigat­ion.”

Reed’s Human Resources chief Yvonne Yancy, who initiated Hall’s paperwork in late December 2017 to move him from city councilman to the advisor position at more than double his council salary, refused to be interviewe­d for the investigat­ion. The report implies that she may be largely responsibl­e for placing him in that job.

But Yancy provided the AJC with a statement last week saying that she initiated the paperwork at the direction of both Mayors Reed and Bottoms. She also said the paperwork was finalized by people within’ the Bottoms administra­tion.

Hickson on Wednesday disputed that assertion.

“Because it was a change of compensati­on, it was within the authority of the HR director to authorize it,” Hickson told council members. “There was no mayoral approval.”

Yancy pushed back against that claim.

“Any assertions that Ms. Yancy is responsibl­e for the decision to hire Kwanza Hall are false and a purposeful attempt to conceal the true facts around this matter,” said a statement issued to the AJC by a public relations firm representi­ng Yancy.

There was also confusion over how much salary Hall received during his six weeks on Bottoms’ payroll.

Hickson told council members that he received a check on Jan. 5, 2018 for a twoweek period in December when he was still on city council. But as the AJC has previously reported, city payroll records show the amount of Hall’s check was $5,272 — a rate double that of his council pay, and generally in line with an annual salary of $137,000.

City payroll records show Hall also received checks on Jan 19 for $4,386 and on Feb. 2 for $5,272. The department listed as his employer for all three of those checks is “EXE - Chief of Staff,” meaning the mayor’s office. Hall’s bimonthly paychecks as a councilman were $2,319.

Council President Felicia Moore said she’s not satisfied with the results of the investigat­ion or the answers she received on Wednesday.

“I can’t say I’m satisfied, but we’re probably as far as we’re going to get,” Moore said. “It is what it is.”

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? How Kwanza Hall came to be hired as a senior policy advisor to Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms’ administra­tion is the subject of a probe.
HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM How Kwanza Hall came to be hired as a senior policy advisor to Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms’ administra­tion is the subject of a probe.

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