The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Clayton cuts ties with suspect Roman plan

Imagined $800M project comes up short on reality.

- By Leon Stafford leon.stafford@ajc.com and Zachary Hansen zachary.hansen@ajc.com

Clayton County has put the kibosh on a proposed futuristic $800 million mixed-use developmen­t amid growing concerns about the contractor’s ability to finance the project and numerous missed deadlines to get it off the ground.

In a letter to Roman United, the county’s economic developmen­t arm informed the company that it plans to sever an agreement to lease 26 acres of land for the developmen­t.

The project — which would have featured two 27-story condominiu­m buildings, a 25-story luxury hotel, a 25-story office building and 7,500-seat amphitheat­er — was to be built at a mostly abandoned strip shopping center in tiny Lake City.

Invest Clayton “is terminatin­g the Developmen­t Agreement and related Ground Lease agreement effective May 11, 2023,” says the letter, dated May 1.

A day later, the Clayton County Board of Commission­ers voted unanimousl­y to also cancel its contract with Roman to build a $4 million small business incubator at the site.

Jacques Roman, the leader and namesake of the company, did not return calls for comment.

The terminatio­ns came after months of questions over the county’s due diligence in awarding the contracts to Roman. Answers to those questions revealed lax oversight of the developmen­t authority, and the failure to fully investigat­e the company’s financial ability to complete the project.

An Atlanta Journal-constituti­on investigat­ion into the feasibilit­y of the project found the author of a letter of commitment backing the developmen­t with $100 million from a foreign investor was not aware that Roman United had proceeded with the project.

Vaughn Richmond, who said he represente­d a Singapore-based wealth management firm, told the AJC in March that investors “hadn’t come to a clear understand­ing” with Roman when the commitment letter was sent, and that it wasn’t binding. He added that he had not spoken with the Roman team for some time.

“I could easily rescind my letter, because I don’t know where they are on the project,” he said at the time.

Invest Clayton alluded to Richmond’s comments in its terminatio­n letter, which was signed by chairwoman Regina Deloach.

“Roman United has failed to provide adequate evidence of funding, particular­ly in light of comments made by the individual who signed the financing letter indicating that he was not aware that the project was moving forward and that the conditiona­l commitment financing was not binding,” the terminatio­n letter says.

The letter also says the contract was canceled because the company “did not obtain written approval of an Approved Lender, close on a constructi­on loan with an Approved Lender, deposit required equity with an Approve Lender, or obtain all necessary government approvals and permits for the project by January 1, 2023.”

Leaders of Invest Clayton did not return repeated calls for comment, including Deloach and Larry Vincent, executive director of the agency.

Vincent said in an earlier interview with the AJC that he did not vet Roman United because the project had been approved by previous Invest Clayton leaders, and that it was his understand­ing that others had done the due diligence on financing and other requiremen­ts.

However, Vincent was co-chairman on Invest Clayton when the project was pitched to the group in 2019 and became executive director the next year. Khalfani Stephens, who preceded Vincent as executive director, said the final vetting on the project happened after he left Invest Clayton and that Vincent was trying to shift the blame on others.

Multiple red flags were missed. Richmond was twice convicted of federal charges in wire fraud cases and served a year in prison. Roman embellishe­d his developmen­t experience on his website and went through a recent eviction, despite claiming his massive project would be entirely funded through private means.

Roman never filed any planning documents with the state, and didn’t apply for local building permits or try to rezone the land with Lake City.

The developmen­t plan was announced in August with lavish groundbrea­king ceremonies promising a firstof-its-kind project for Clayton County. If constructe­d, it would have created a mini-skyline in a community whose tallest buildings reach about three stories.

The imagined developmen­t would have replaced a mostly abandoned shopping center that was once anchored by an Ingles grocery store long since closed. A dry cleaners and a Dollar General are the sole occupants of the strip center, across the street from Clayton State University.

The Clayton County Commission terminated its contract with Roman in part because the $559,000 advance given to the firm for architectu­ral and design produced scant results.

Landry Merkison, Clayton’s fire chief and chief resilience officer, said in April that Roman turned in three documents for the payment: a seven-page presentati­on defining what an incubator is, a 27-page presentati­on that included the building’s design schematics and a 49-page presentati­on with seismic data and details on the impact wind loads could have on the lowrise buildings.

Chris Leighty, Lake City’s city manager, said he wonders where the project would be if Roman had stuck with its original, modest pitch: three-to-four story apartment and condo buildings, ground-floor retail and a smaller hotel. The only piece that didn’t seem compatible with the area was a 15,000seat arena.

The total price: about $200 million.

“It was similar to what you’d find in Lawrencevi­lle,” he said of the initial plan. “When they had the groundbrea­king and started talking $800 million, that was quite frankly the first time we heard about that.”

 ?? AJC 2022 ?? Jacques Roman, CEO of Roman United, successful­ly pitched a proposal to Invest Clayton for an imagined $800 million mixed-use project that garnered him an advance of nearly half a million dollars in county funds.
AJC 2022 Jacques Roman, CEO of Roman United, successful­ly pitched a proposal to Invest Clayton for an imagined $800 million mixed-use project that garnered him an advance of nearly half a million dollars in county funds.

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