DeKalb Sheriff Brown’s campaign for Congress assailed by rights activist Joe Beasley

DeKalb County Sheriff Tom Brown’s campaign for the congressional seat held by Rep. Hank Johnson is under attack by veteran human rights activist Joe Beasley.

Beasley said he filed a complaint against Brown’s campaign practices with the Federal Election Commission. Beasley said he holds a dim view of Brown because of the sheriff’s demeanor following the fatal shootings in 2006 at the Fulton County Courthouse, and Brown’s handling of evictions during the foreclosure crisis of the Great Recession.

Brown’s campaign responded Sunday evening that the attack is being made on behalf of the Johnson campaign. The response characterized the filing of a “technical challenge” as “an old tactic often used by political campaigns in trouble.”

Beasley said his motive is not to help Johnson, but to stop Brown from reaching higher office.

“I’ve watched Tom Brown over the years and I don’t think he would be a good congressman. I don’t think he’s been a good sheriff,” Beasley said.

Beasley said he signed a six-page complaint against Brown’s campaign and sent it to the FEC on April 5. The package included 44 pages of materials intended to support the complaint.

The complaint begins:

The response from the Brown campaign said it has yet to receive notice the complaint was filed. After observing “it is obvious” the complaint was filed on behalf of the Johnson campaign, the response states:

The complaint lists seven “specific concerns”:

  1. “Untimely filing of FEC statement of candidacy and statement of organization;
  2. “Payments to political polling firm HEG in January and February 2013 from Thomas Brown for Sheriff account;
  3. “Use of federally prohibited funds in furtherance of Tom Brown’s campaign for Congress;
  4. “More evidence of untimely filing due to contributions exceeding $5,000 on or before Aug. 7, 2013;
  5. “Evidence to support that FEC filing should have occurred on or before July 17, 2013;
  6. “Billboard expenditure not reported and not attributed to any independent committee;
  7. “Ongoing and continuous violations of the disclaimer rule on campaign printed material.”

To read each page on the Beasley complaint, click on these links: page 1, page 2, page 3, page 4, page 5, page 6.

Beasley said he met Brown after the courthouse shootings and determined that Brown was focused mainly on positioning himself for higher office. Beasley said the two were serving on the blue ribbon task force convened after the shootings for the purpose of improving courthouse security.

In that case, Brian Nichols was convicted and sentenced to life in prison without parole for 54 counts including the fatal shooting of Fulton County Superior Court Judge Rowland Barnes, court reporter Julie Brandau, sheriff’s Deputy Hoyt Teasley, and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agent David Wilhem.

“It was clear to me that Tom Brown’s main interest was higher office,” Beasley said.

Beasley said the next interaction occurred during the foreclosure crisis. Beasley was working with the Occupy Atlanta movement and participating in the efforts to impede evictions.

In one instance that involved an 82-year-old woman who was to be evicted, Beasley said he and Brown and an Occupy leader met at the DeKalb County Jail. The purpose of the meeting was to plan for the way deputies would handle the protesters. This sort of advance negotiation is not uncommon in planned cases of civil disturbances.

“Tom Brown flipped the script, he abused his authority, and it didn’t go the way it should have gone,” Beasley said. “I was treated as we’d discussed. But [others] were not.”

This controversy in the 4th District is the strongest yet to emerge in a short primary campaign headed to the May 20 election.

Three of the six congressional districts that serve most of metro Atlanta have opposition in the primary. Representatives Hank Johnson and David Scott are defending their seats against a single challenger in the primary.

The open District 11 seat, the post Rep. Phil Gingrey is leaving to run for the Senate, is a six-way battle among GOP candidates whose debate Saturday in Cobb County was chronicled minute-by-minute by peachpundit.com.