The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Bill eases path for Ga. ethics panel to make cases

It addresses issues raised by 2 ongoing high-profile cases.

- By James Salzer James.salzer@ajc.com

It took a few years, but the General Assembly gave final approval this week to legislatio­n aimed at giving state ethics investigat­ors more tools to make cases and clarifying that some uses for leftover campaign money are illegal.

The measure, sponsored by House Judiciary Chairman Chuck Efstration, R-dacula, addresses issues raised by two ongoing high-profile cases that have made headlines in recent years.

One involves former longtime Georgia Insurance Commission­er John Oxendine, a onetime GOP front-runner in the 2010 gubernator­ial race who has been fighting ethics charges for more than a decade.

The other involves former Republican state Senate leader Dan Balfour, who left office in 2015 and didn’t report what he did with $630,000 in leftover campaign money. By law, former politician­s aren’t allowed to keep their leftover campaign money for personal use.

Under Senate Bill 120, which the Efstration measure was amended into, the commission would:

Have more time to make cases without the statute of limitation­s running out.

Make ex-candidates hold on to campaign bank records longer.

Clarify that candidates could not use campaign contributi­ons

to make personal loans to themselves or invest in their companies.

Mandate what candidates could do with money raised for primary or general election runoffs when they fail to make the runoffs.

Increase what informatio­n candidates for partisan statewide offices — such as the governor — have to include in the personal financial disclosure­s they have to file.

The bill stalled on the last night of last year’s legislativ­e session because of chamber infighting over provisions the Senate wanted to add to the bill.

After the measure won passage without discussion Tuesday in the Senate on a vote of 38-15, David Emadi, executive secretary of the Georgia

ethics commission, said, “I want to thank Republican­s and Democrats in the House for uniting and passing this bipartisan bill in overwhelmi­ng fashion last year, and I also want to thank Republican­s in the state Senate as well as the six Senate Democrats who crossed over and voted to strengthen our ethics and campaign finance laws.

“This bill, which we have worked vigorously with the Legislatur­e on for the past two years, will strengthen our ethics and campaign finance laws in the state, and for that, all Georgians will ultimately benefit.”

While the bill doesn’t name the two former politician­s, some of the issues raised by the legislatio­n were brought up in their cases.

Following an Atlanta Journal-constituti­on

report, a complaint was filed against Oxendine’s gubernator­ial campaign in 2009 alleging that he accepted $120,000 in bundled contributi­ons from two Georgia insurance companies.

The ethics complaint against the insurers accused of giving the money to Oxendine was dismissed in 2014 because the ethics commission’s staff had made so little progress on it, in part because of staff turnover and seemingly endless drama at the agency. But the commission didn’t dismiss charges against Oxendine, the recipient of the donations, until this January.

The case remained largely dormant until the AJC reported in 2015 that Oxendine never returned more than $500,000 worth of leftover contributi­ons from his gubernator­ial bid and that he kept and spent money raised for Republican runoff and general election campaigns that he never ran because he lost in the GOP primary.

The commission then filed new charges against him.

Oxendine amended his reports in October 2015 to show more than $700,000 left over, including $237,000 in loans to his law firm, and the commission filed new charges.

The commission dismissed much of the new complaint against him that December after his lawyer, Doug Chalmers, argued that the statute of limitation­s had run out on charges involving the 2010 campaign.

But the commission in 2019 moved ahead on allegation­s that Oxendine spent campaign donations on luxury car leases, child care bills, an athletic club membership and a down payment on a $965,000 house.

Under Georgia law, a candidate can’t use contributi­ons for things such as houses and cars for themselves.

Last fall, an administra­tive law judge ruled that the charges should be dismissed because the statute of limitation­s had run out on the case. The case was delayed, in part because Oxendine fought the commission’s subpoena for bank records all the way to the Georgia Supreme Court. Those bank records led to the charges alleging misuse of leftover campaign money.

In January the ethics commission decided to reject the judge’s ruling and move ahead with its case against Oxendine. He has since asked a superior court judge to toss the charges.

In the other incident, the ethics commission in 2020 reopened what appeared to be a dead case against Balfour a week after the AJC reported it was being dismissed by the panel’s staff, despite the fact that the ex-gwinnett County lawmaker hadn’t reported what happened to about $630,000 in leftover campaign money.

Emadi initially dismissed the case because he said a loophole in campaign finance laws made it too late to investigat­e Balfour for not filing campaign disclosure reports. Those reports would have shown what happened to the leftover money.

Under state law, legislativ­e candidates can raise and spend money to win or maintain their office. Once they leave office, leftover money can be returned to donors or given to other campaigns or to nonprofits.

Former lawmakers must file campaign disclosure reports annually until all the money in their accounts is spent and they file terminatio­n reports. Balfour didn’t do that.

Chalmers, who is also Balfour’s lawyer, said the legislator’s campaign account was closed several years ago.

Current state law limits how long campaign bank records must be maintained and sets a statute of limitation­s for the panel to make ethics cases. Chalmers argued it’s too late to make a case against Balfour.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/AJC 2020 ?? Georgia ethics commission members James Kreyenbuhl (clockwise from left), Robert Watts and David Emadi converse during a recess at an ethics commission meeting in 2020. Emadi this week praised an ethics bill that just passed in the Legislatur­e, saying it “will strengthen our ethics and campaign finance laws in the state.”
HYOSUB SHIN/AJC 2020 Georgia ethics commission members James Kreyenbuhl (clockwise from left), Robert Watts and David Emadi converse during a recess at an ethics commission meeting in 2020. Emadi this week praised an ethics bill that just passed in the Legislatur­e, saying it “will strengthen our ethics and campaign finance laws in the state.”

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