The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Slain man was in spotlight ...

- Bill Torpy

Atlantan Barney Simms, found shot to death Saturday, was known for his volunteer activities.

All murders are terrible. Some may cause hardly a ripple beyond the immediate family or friends of the victim, but some draw outrage, profuse public mourning and calls for something to be done.

Barney Simms’ killing was the latter kind of murder.

Simms was professori­al, always impeccably dressed and somehow able to pull off his trademark walrus mustache. He mingled just as easily with mayors and congressme­n as he did the poor.

The 70-year-old was found shot to death Saturday afternoon outside his southwest Atlanta home. The door of his home was open, his Lexus stolen and found nearby the next day. That an upstanding citizen like this — a serial do-gooder — could be so brazenly shot down in broad daylight in his manicured garden says something is wrong with society.

The crime remains a mystery, with Atlanta police searching for a man Simms met at a local Waffle House a couple of hours before the killing.

Was it a robbery? A random act of opportunit­y? Was it someone

he knew?

Simms seemed to have known everyone, been everywhere, volunteere­d for everything. Those who know him gush and smile when rememberin­g him. He toiled to improve the human condition, to make others rise above their surroundin­gs, which makes his killing seem more outrageous than most of the other two dozen homicides committed in Atlanta so far this year. I’m not saying it’s fair. It just is.

What catapulted this one into the cruel irony category is that Simms was the board chairman of Atlanta Victim Assistance, an organizati­on founded by a woman whose son died in a stupid and senseless argument.

That Simms came in to lead was routine: Fulton County DFCS advisory board (chairman), Andrew and Walter Young Family YMCA board (co-chair), Atlanta Metropolit­an State College (chairman), Neighborho­od Planning Unit-R (chairman), Atlanta Planning Advisory Board (president), Atlanta License and Review Board (chairman), the Atlanta Beltline’s original steering committee (co-chair), Bonnybrook neighborho­od associatio­n (president). And so on.

He was the father of two and heavily involved in Antioch Baptist Church.

Simms was plugged in socially and politicall­y. At the helm of the city’s liquor board, he was involved in cantankero­us proceeding­s to close some nightclubs in the early 2000s, most notably the gay-club Backstreet. It was a move that helped open up that area of Midtown to high-end developmen­t and curbed street crime. He was accused of doing the city’s bidding, although he’d note he was simply going by the book.

After putting a stake in Backstreet’s heart, he was called to the Atlanta Housing Authority to help orchestrat­e the breakup of the city’s projects, an emotional and controvers­ial undertakin­g.

“He had quite a juggling act on his hands,” said community activist Joe Beasley, a friend and churchmate who bitterly disagreed with Simms on this one. Beasley said Simms was brought into the job “because he didn’t rub people the wrong way. He got along with people in all aspects of life. That’s an art.”

It’s an art for which he was well compensate­d — $236,385 a year before leaving office.

Remember, the urbane Simms might have been a giver, but he was no dummy.

But he never forgot the little things.

Neighbor Elfert Jackson said Simms was the first one to greet him after moving in, as did Rebecca Walker. Next door to her is Donald Richardson. Simms gave the eulogy for Richardson’s wife, Mahalia. Simms planted flowers for neighbors, got dumpsters for community cleanups, organized block parties. The lawns are all cut, the streets are litter free, the homes are well-tended. I found two instances where residents stopped breakins from happening to their neighbors.

This is a neighborho­od with pride in appearance. More so, it’s a community. Residents afford him a lot of credit.

Simms’ good heart sometimes worried neighbors. Walker said she’d pass his home and sometimes see sketchy guys helping with yard work. “I wouldn’t have done it,” she said. “But he was trying to help people who were down.”

He was burglarize­d at least a couple of times.

Upon volunteeri­ng for Atlanta Victim Assistance, Simms bore in on the founder, Brenda Muhammad, to understand what it feels to be a victim. Her son was shot to death in an argument over a coat in 1989. The other teen, who also was black, was acquitted. She organized and has lobbied to make prosecutio­ns tougher and to uplift victims.

Twenty-five years ago, after Muhammad founded her first organizati­on, my former colleague Cynthia Tucker wrote that the griev- ing mother “bravely stepped forward to provide courageous leadership on an issue African-American leaders have too long ignored: the war at home.”

The rate of killing has abated since, but a frustrated Muhammad told me, “they talk about crime being down, but it feels more heinous. We’ve been talking about it for too long. We just keep talking about it.”

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 ?? AJC 2008 ?? Among the many hats he wore, Barney Simms was a vice president with the Atlanta Housing Authority.
AJC 2008 Among the many hats he wore, Barney Simms was a vice president with the Atlanta Housing Authority.
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