The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Court dismisses councilman’s lawsuit against neighbor

- — ADRIANNE MURCHISON

A Fulton County Superior Court judge has dismissed the lawsuit filed on behalf

of Milton Councilman Paul Moore against a resident who filed an ethics complaint against him.

Moore’s attorney, Doug Chalmers, says the legal fight is not over.

“We respectful­ly disagree with the judge’s decision, and we plan to appeal,” the attorney said.

Moore sued neighbor Tony Palazzo in February for attorney’s fees the council

man incurred during an ethics investigat­ion, which found he violated the code. Moore also wanted the court to reverse the ethics panel’s decision.

Judge Thomas A. Cox dismissed the case May 18, stating in his decision that Moore’s appeal of the ethics panel findings was filed too late. The ethics panel rendered its decision last August, and the appeal should’ve been filed within a month, the judge said.

Moore and Palazzo both reside in Milton’s White Columns subdivisio­n. Palazzo filed an ethics complaint last year when the councilman didn’t recuse himself from a City Council vote on partially reimbursin­g the White Columns homeowners associatio­n $6,800 for the cost of controvers­ial speed radar signs that had been installed in the neighborho­od.

Palazzo is president of White Columns HOA and filed the ethics complaint independen­t of the organizati­on. The ethics panel found Moore violated municipal and city code of ethics, but no action was taken by City Council.

Moore said in his lawsuit that he suffered financial loss and damage to his communicat­ions business and personal reputation as a result of the ethics investigat­ion and findings.

“We will do everything in our power to make sure that Paul is ultimately vindicated, and he should be,” Chalmers said.

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