The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

FAA issues 2nd subpoena in investigat­ion of airport,

Move zeros in on billings from law firm amid revenue probe.

- By Kelly Yamanouchi kyamanouch­i@ajc.com

The Federal Aviation Administra­tion has issued a second subpoena in an investigat­ion into Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport and allegation­s that revenue was unlawfully diverted to the city of Atlanta.

The second subpoena zeros in on billings to the city from one particular law firm: Paul Hastings LLP, a global firm that has defended the city against legal challenges under former Mayor Kasim Reed and current Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms. It’s also a firm where Reed worked as an attorney early in his career.

The city of Atlanta says it provided more than 3,000 pages of unredacted legal invoices to the FAA this month, which a city spokespers­on said are under a federal court protective order to protect attorney-client and attorney work product privileges.

The FAA had called for Atlanta to produce all invoices paid to Paul Hastings using Atlanta airport funds, as well as invoices for work billed as “legal research” and “litigation consultati­on,” and engagement letters from Paul Hastings.

Engagement letters typicallyo­utline the services to be performed and the pay rate.

The Atlanta Journal-Constitu

tion has reported that the city paid $2.2 million to Paul Hastings for

the work billed as “legal research” and “litigation consultati­on” — at

rates as high as $25,000, $50,000 and $100,000 a month. Experts told the AJC that what made the arrangemen­t unusual is that the city could not produce an engage

ment letter detailing what legal matters the firm was working on, required under city guidelines.

The FAA also asked the city for documentat­ion on what the flat-fee payments were for, the name of each attorney assigned and a “detailed accounting of the dates and times spent by each attorney on each matter.”

In addition to the monthly flat fee invoices from Paul Hastings litigation partner William K. Whitner — an associate of Reed’s — Paul Hastings proposed attorneys’ fees of $950 per hour for Whitner, $700 per hour for litigation associate Eric Stolze and $255 per hour for paralegals for itemized legal work.

The FAA investigat­ion continues as the possibilit­y of an airport takeover looms during the Georgia legislativ­e session. Another possibilit­y is that state legislator­s could seek to create an oversight committee to monitor the airport. In pushing for state control, state legislator­s have cited the federal corruption probe into the city, indictment­s and investigat­ions.

FAA regulation­s prohibit the use of airport revenue for expenses other than the airport’s capital or operating costs. That’s aimed at preventing local government­s from turning airports into cash cows by funneling money away, and ensures that federal airport grants pay for airport projects and not other uses. Sanctions for improper use of airport revenue can threaten federal grant funding or result in civil penalties.

‘Proprietar­y to the firm’

This FAA investigat­ion started last year and followed the launch of a financial audit by the agency of Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport. The airport argued that records the FAA sought for the audit were protected by attorney-client privilege.

The agency sent the city of Atlanta a notice of investigat­ion last July saying it was looking into allegation­s that the city may have unlawfully diverted airport revenue and improperly withheld airport documents. The first subpoena in the investigat­ion sought all invoices paid using revenue or funds from the Atlanta airport to any attorney or law firm from 2016 through 2018.

The FAA would not comment on the subpoenas or the investigat­ion Wednesday.

The second subpoena seeks Paul Hastings billings dating to late 2013. It follows the city’s Nov. 22, 2019, response to an FAA informatio­n request with a batch of documents and explanatio­ns for why some documents were missing to explain what flat fees were paying for when paid by the city to Paul Hastings.

The city told the FAA that “Paul Hastings has more detailed internal records which would be responsive to this request, but Paul Hastings has to date declined to provide those records to either the city or the FAA because they are proprietar­y to the firm.” Paul Hastings indicated to the city that it could provide non-proprietar­y documents following “an internal review process.”

The city also gives an explanatio­n for one set of invoices involving an Atlanta public relations and crisis management expert — Jeff Dickerson, president of Dickerson Communicat­ions.

Dickerson was paid a monthly retainer through $10,000 invoices— as “passthroug­h costs” for outside profession­al services under the Paul Hastings contract.

Dickerson said his client was Paul Hastings, which he helped on public affairs amid controvers­y over contracts awarded for airport restaurant­s and legal challenges by losing concession­aires. He said he was working with a team of lawyers, and “we would strategize about how to handle some of the public controvers­y around concession­s contracts . ... It was all aviation related.”

After Reed left office, Dickerson acted as a spokesman for the former mayor for a period of time.

This is the latest FAA probe following a 2018 FAA inquiry launched after The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on reported that the city had paid three law firms more than $7 million to respond to federal grand jury subpoenas, with two of the firms paid out of federally regulated airport funds in a manner some experts said could violate FAA policy.

The city of Atlanta last year acknowledg­ed that it wrongly used airport funds to pay $90,000 to a consulting firm founded by former city attorney Cathy Hampton.

After the FAA launched an initial inquiry into potential revenue diversion, the money was paid back to the city and the airport revenue fund was credited.

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