The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

2 more Dekalb ethics board members resign

Exiting vice chair suggests entire group should quit.

- By Tyler Estep tyler.estep@ajc.com

At least two more members of Dekalb County’s ethics board have resigned, including the group’s vice chairman — who called the current working dynamic on the board “irreparabl­e” and suggested the remaining members should step down too.

The resignatio­ns of vice chair David Moskowitz and colleague Candace Walker follow that of ethics board chairwoman Alex Joseph, who departed last week after she accused another board member of alleged “bullying, underminin­g, and attempted manipulati­on.” Joseph’s proposal to oust that board member, Bill Clark, failed to garner full support, which led her to resign.

Three of the ethics board’s seven regular members have now stepped down, though

the panel also has two alternate members. Clark is one of the alternates.

In his resignatio­n letter Thursday morning, Moskowitz expressed support for both Joseph and her proposed motion to remove Clark. Moskowitz agreed that Clark’s purported comments “crossed the line and were totally unacceptab­le.”

“As I represent individual­s in my day-to-day practice of law that are bullied and mistreated, I could not in good conscience participat­e in an organizati­on that would allow such conduct to go unpunished,” Moskowitz, a longtime labor and employment attorney, wrote.

Citing “a great deal of havoc and dissension,” Moskowitz also said that now was “a perfect time for the entire board to resign and start anew.”

The comments in question were allegedly made by Clark in a Jan. 12 closeddoor executive session. In a memo attached to an agenda item that would have ousted Clark, Joseph quoted him as saying to her: “I have been a lawyer for more than three times as long as you have so your hanging your hat on your minute as a baby lawyer carrying someone’s briefcase as a government lawyer adds no validity to your opinions.”

Moskowitz isn’t the first person to suggest disbanding all current members.

The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on obtained Thursday a chain of recent emails sent between several ethics board members and Bonnie Levine, their attorney.

In one email, Levine wrote that she didn’t believe “anyone (could) make unconflict­ed decisions in the board’s interest any longer.” Joseph has suggested that Levine was also a target of the “rhetorical cycle of toxic axe-grinding” allegedly perpetuate­d by Clark and two other unnamed colleagues.

Implying that Walker made the initial suggestion, Levine said she agreed that a “fresh start” could be the best path forward.

She wrote that she would “be happy to be part of that joint resignatio­n.”

The Dekalb ethics board is an entity tasked with investigat­ing potential ethical missteps among the county’s thousands of employees and elected officials, making the current questions about its internal culture all the more striking.

State Rep. Viola Davis, D-stone Mountain, who crafted the legislatio­n that governs the ethics board, told the AJC that she was “disappoint­ed” and called the situation “very troubling.”

“I don’t want to speak for the whole (Dekalb County legislativ­e) delegation, because we have not spoken on this issue,” Davis said, “but this would need to be something that we look into, considerin­g the number of people who are asking questions.”

Disarray, though, is also nothing new.

The current iteration of the ethics board was revived in early 2021, after more than two years of dormancy triggered by a lawsuit that successful­ly challenged how some of its members were appointed.

Several board members had departed even before this month’s resignatio­ns.

With her term nearing completion, longtime ethics officer Stacey Kalberman — a full-time employee responsibl­e for fielding complaints and referring them to the volunteer board — stepped down early last year.

The County Commission took months longer than expected to confirm the ethics board’s chosen replacemen­t, effectivel­y leaving it on another unplanned hiatus.

Former deputy ethics officer Latonya Nix Wiley accused Kalberman and others of racial discrimina­tion and retaliatio­n. An independen­t investigat­ion subsequent­ly found those allegation­s to be unsubstant­iated.

Wiley, who had been on paid administra­tive leave for months, was let go in January.

Just last week, she filed a federal lawsuit based on similar allegation­s.

Mary Hinkel, the leader of Dekalb watchdog group Concerned Citizens for Effective Government, agrees that the ethics board’s remaining members should probably go ahead and step down.

But, she said, they had a tough job, and meeting exclusivel­y in a virtual setting due to the pandemic likely didn’t help calm any interperso­nal issues that arose.

And there’s plenty for which to hope, Hinkel said.

“In the midst of this chaos, we have a terrific new ethics officer. This board did clear a lot of the backlog of ethics cases,” Hinkel said. “...We have the structure. We just don’t have the right people in place.”

 ?? ?? David Moskowitz, vice chair of Dekalb County’s ethics board, and Candace Walker, a board member, both resigned shortly after chair Alex Joseph quit.
David Moskowitz, vice chair of Dekalb County’s ethics board, and Candace Walker, a board member, both resigned shortly after chair Alex Joseph quit.

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