The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

GBI INTERVIEWS REPORTERS IN PROBE OF CITY LEGAL BILLS

Documents city gave AJC after request for records were not actually invoices.

- News: By J. Scott Trubey strubey@ajc.com

The Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion’s criminal probe into Atlanta City Hall’s handling of open records requests now includes the law department and purported legal invoices it supplied to The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on last fall.

On Friday, GBI agents interviewe­d two AJC reporters about their interactio­ns with Atlanta City Attorney Jeremy Berry and the documents he provided in response to a request last year for legal bills the city incurred from an outside law firm to respond to the ongoing federal bribery investigat­ion of City Hall.

Last November, Berry provided documents that he said showed the costs incurred by the city from law firm Baker Donelson as part of the city’s response to the payto-play scandal. Berry presented the documents as invoices, but an AJC investigat­ion published on the front page of Sunday’s newspaper showed the documents weren’t actually invoices.

The article found city officials concealed billing records for the bribery probe in the account of a different city legal matter and directed the creation of new documents resembling invoices in an

attempt to satisfy the AJC’s records request.

Experts told the AJC the actions ranged from unethical to potentiall­y criminal.

In an emailed statement, Berry said, that in both his private practice before coming to the city and since, “I have remained steadfastl­y committed to the Open Records Act and the need for transparen­cy.”

“Consistent with this belief, the informatio­n that I produced was responsive to what the AJC sought and consistent with the law,” he said.

In a statement, Melissa Mullinax, a senior adviser to Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms, said the administra­tion “remains committed to transparen­cy and full compliance with the spirit and letter of the Open Records Act.”

The GBI opened a criminal investigat­ion into open records matters at City Hall earlier this week.

On Monday, Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr asked the GBI to investigat­e text messages between Jenna Garland, a former press secretary for former Mayor Kasim Reed, and Lillian Govus, a former communicat­ions staffer in the city’s watershed department. The messages showed the women coordinati­ng a delayed release of public informatio­n requested by Channel 2 Action News.

Last year, Channel 2 requested water billing records for Reed, his brother Tracy and City Council members, which prompted Garland to instruct Govus to “be as unhelpful as possible” and to “drag this out as long as possible” when fulfilling the request.

Garland also told Govus on March 7, 2017, to “provide the informatio­n in the most confusing format available.”

The matters are the first criminal probes ever conducted under the Georgia Open Records Act since violations of the state’s sunshine law became criminal offenses in 2012.

Garland left the city for the private sector last month, and Govus works for a school system in another state.

Channel 2 investigat­ive reporter Richard Belcher and producer Terah Boyd were interviewe­d by the GBI earlier this week in relation to the Garland and Govus text messages.

On Friday, GBI agents Rocky Bigham and Clinton Thomas interviewe­d AJC reporters Stephen Deere and Dan Klepal who authored the Sunday story on the legal invoices. The agents met for about two hours in separate interviews with the journalist­s.

The interviews focused on the conduct of the city’s law and communicat­ions department­s in relation to the purported Baker Donelson invoices and the city’s overall responsive­ness to open records requests, Deere and Klepal said.

In statements, Berry has said the decision to bundle billing of the bribery investigat­ion to another legal matter started before he joined City Hall last year and that he acted in good faith in producing the records he gave the AJC.

He said the documents provided the AJC last year accurately conveyed the legal billing hours and costs tied to the bribery probe from Baker Donelson, which was hired to help the city’s law department respond to demands for records by federal prosecutor­s.

Berry produced documents in November, about four months after Klepal requested the legal invoices as part of the AJC’s examinatio­n to the city’s response to the federal bribery investigat­ion.

Bottoms, who was sworn into office in January, pledged in a press conference this week to fully cooperate in the state open records investigat­ion and to review city protocols for responding to requests for public documents.

A city spokeswoma­n told Channel 2 this week the city won’t pay legal bills of past or present city employees related to a criminal investigat­ion.

The matters are the first criminal probes ever conducted under the Georgia Open Records Act since violations of the state’s sunshine law became criminal offenses in 2012.

 ?? J. SCOTT TRUBEY / STRUBEY@AJC.COM. ?? GBI agents Rocky Bigham (left) and Clinton Thomas interviewe­d AJC reporters Stephen Deere and Dan Klepal on Friday concerning the city of Atlanta’s conduct in responding to open records requests.
J. SCOTT TRUBEY / STRUBEY@AJC.COM. GBI agents Rocky Bigham (left) and Clinton Thomas interviewe­d AJC reporters Stephen Deere and Dan Klepal on Friday concerning the city of Atlanta’s conduct in responding to open records requests.

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