The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Split decision on ethics for Fosque

Commission­er cleared on defamation, cited for ‘unbecoming’ conduct.

- Tyler Estep By Arielle Kass akass@ajc.com tyler.estep@ajc.com

The Gwinnett County ethics board delivered a split decision in the case of Commission­er Mar

lene Fosque, sustaining two of six allegation­s brought against her

and recommendi­ng she receive a written warning.

Fosque’s colleagues on the Board of Commission­ers will have the final say on any punishment tied to the ethics complaint, which was filed last fall by anti-illegal immigratio­n activist D.A. King.

King accused Fosque of defamation and several other ethical violations in connection with statements she made about him in a public meeting.

King participat­ed in a panel discussion Fosque organized last July on a federal immigratio­n enforcemen­t program known as 287(g). During a commission meeting a few days later, Fosque called King “someone known for spewing hatred and bigotry and racism” and said she regretted that he had participat­ed.

The ethics board heard the case last week and issued its recommenda­tion on Monday. The panel rejected King’s defamation claims but upheld other counts based on sections of the county’s ethics ordinance that urge officials to give their duties “earnest effort and best thought” and to “never engage in conduct which is unbecoming” to their office.

“While the commission­er testified that her comments were not intended to reflect her personal beliefs regarding Mr. King ... her choice of words and the manner in which she delivered them at [the subsequent commission meeting] can reasonably be

interprete­d otherwise,” the ethics board wrote in its findings.

In a statement issued Monday afternoon, Fosque thanked the ethics board for its time and said she would continue striving to represent her constituen­ts with “grace, dignity and wisdom.”

King said Fosque’s recommende­d punishment did not go far enough, comparing this result to the only other time Gwinnett’s ethics board convened.

“From the outset, many of us were anxious to see who is the most equal in Gwinnett County politics,” King wrote in an email to The Atlanta

Journal-Constituti­on. “We have our answer.”

In a 2017 case, Gwinnett Commission­er Tommy Hunter was publicly reprimande­d after writing Facebook posts that, among other things, called U.S. Rep. John Lewis a “racist pig.”

The ethics board found that Fosque, a Democrat, violated the same behavior-regulating tenets that Hunter, a Republican, did in his case. But the written warning recommende­d for Fosque would be a lesser punishment than the reprimand Hunter received.

The ethics board wrote that it “relied on various mitigating factors” in recommendi­ng the lighter punishment for Fosque, “including what it believes were the commission­er’s good intentions in holding the [original immigratio­n] forum.”

Gwinnett’s ethics ordinance was establishe­d in 2011 in the wake of a bribery scandal and was intended to target corruption and conflicts of interest. Ethics experts have questioned the portions of the law that were used in the Fosque and Hunter cases, which can be interprete­d to police other behavior.

Under the ordinance, the Board of Commission­ers must consider the recommenda­tion and hold a final vote on the case within 30 days.

 ?? / HSHIN@AJC.COM 2019 HYOSUB SHIN ?? Marlene Fosque’s comments criticizin­g an anti-illegal immigratio­n activist sparked an ethics investigat­ion.
/ HSHIN@AJC.COM 2019 HYOSUB SHIN Marlene Fosque’s comments criticizin­g an anti-illegal immigratio­n activist sparked an ethics investigat­ion.

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