July 31, 2021 - A 40 year
career over in four hours
This Plain Dealer report is behind a pay-wall. We show its
text
below.
A federal jury Friday convicted Cleveland Councilman Kenneth
Johnson of corruption and tax charges in a verdict that
ended his 40-year career at City Hall.
The jury deliberated four hours before it found Johnson
guilty of all 15 charges in his indictment: two counts of
conspiracy to commit theft from a governmental program; five
counts of tax violations; six counts of theft from a federal
program; and separate counts of tampering with a witness and
falsifying records.
He faces up to 10 years in prison when U.S. District Judge
John Adams sentences him Oct. 8. The jury also convicted
Johnson’s longtime executive assistant, Garnell Jamison, 63,
of all 11 charges in his indictment. He could face about
five years in prison when Adams sentences him the same day
as Johnson. Both are expected to appeal. They are free on
personal bonds pending their sentencings.
Johnson, 75, appeared ashen upon hearing the jury’s
decision. The two men, who worked together for years and
were inseparable in the Buckeye-Shaker Square neighborhood,
appeared motionless when Adams read the verdicts. Jamison
stared at a wall.
“We respect the jury’s verdict, but we’re disappointed,”
said Johnson’s attorney, Myron Watson. “These were honest
mistakes. There was no intent to defraud the government.”
Jamison’s attorney, David Doughten, said: “Garnell truly
believed that his actions were within the law.”
The verdict followed a two-week trial that highlighted
Johnson’s push to profit off his job. It means he is
officially off City Council, and any chance of reelection is
over.
A grand jury indicted Johnson in February. Based on those
charges, a special state panel suspended Johnson in April.
He could not participate in the business of City Council,
but he retained his title and his salary of $88,000.
Today, that’s gone.
“It’s a sad day,” Councilman Blaine Griffin said. “I don’t
enjoy watching the demise of a man who served his community
for so long. Most importantly, the people of the
Buckeye-Shaker Square community have to know that their
government will be accountable to them. I respect the jury’s
decision, and he is going to have to be held accountable for
his actions.”
Marion Anita Gardner, a community activist, replaced
Johnson. She is not running for the seat in the November
general election. Johnson, despite the charges, had sought
to regain his seat. Ten candidates are vying for the job in
the September primary.
Seven days of testimony portrayed Johnson as a man who
schemed to put money in his pocket and avoid paying taxes.
Prosecutors said Johnson, in 2013, began double-dipping, a
move that allowed him to begin collecting his retirement
benefits while he worked. That, prosecutors said, led to a
large tax bill.
In 2014, Johnson began listing tens of thousands of dollars
in deductions on his taxes, much of it in donations to the
city recreation center named after him. In 2015, for
instance, Johnson’s taxes showed that he had an adjusted
gross income of $137,000. He listed $103,000 in itemized
deductions.
IRS agent Nick Miller testified that Johnson also listed
about $10,000 a year in deductions for rental property for
his offices. Johnson, however, had two offices at the
recreation center, a city building, but he didn’t pay any
rent to the city or have a lease for the offices,
prosecutors said. Based on the overinflating of the
deductions, Johnson owes the IRS $92,000 in back taxes for
2014 through 2018.
Prosecutors stressed that Johnson fleeced the government in
different ways. They said Johnson and Jamison conspired to
submit false timesheets from Robert Fitzpatrick, a city
recreation department employee who signed the sheets that
said he performed ward services for Johnson.
Fitzpatrick testified last week that he never did any work.
From January 2010 to October 2018, Johnson received $127,200
in city reimbursement checks. Fitzpatrick pleaded guilty to
a conspiracy charge this year and will be sentenced after
the trial. Johnson testified that he did pay Fitzpatrick,
and he called Fitzpatrick’s statements to the jury about not
getting paid “as false as you can get.”
The investigation into the timesheets mirrored stories in
2018 by Mark Naymik, then-a columnist for cleveland.com and
The Plain Dealer. He wrote a series that detailed Johnson’s
yearslong abuse of his city expense account. The stories
indicated that many top city officials, including Council’s
president and current mayoral candidate Kevin Kelley, did
little to stop Johnson’s actions. Only after the stories
appeared did Council seek an examination of reimbursements
and policies.
On Friday, Kelley disputed the stories, saying, “The minute
I learned about those reports, I put a stop to it. And I
proceeded to bring in an accounting firm to do a full audit
of the expense process. As Council president, I don’t sign
off on expense reports.”
During Johnson’s trial, prosecutors also alleged that
Johnson worked with John Hopkins, the one-time director of
the Buckeye-Shaker Square Development Corp., in steering at
least $100,000 to his adopted sons for work they did on a
landscaping project through the nonprofit. As a result, at
least $30,000 from his children’s checks ended up in
Johnson’s bank account.
The agency ran on money from other nonprofits and federal
dollars that flowed through City Hall. City provisions and
federal law do not allow relatives of employees from being
paid with the money.
Johnson testified that he donated tens of thousands of
dollars in appliances, uniforms and sports equipment to the
recreation center. He said he did not keep track of the
amounts he gave. Instead, he relied on others.
However, city officials said they had no record of any
donations from Johnson. He also overestimated two car
donations to Our Lady of the Wayside. He listed the first of
two, 1975 Buick LeSabres at $36,000. He valued the second at
$43,000. He said he donated the vehicles because it became
too difficult to obtain parts for them. He stressed,
however, that they were in “mint condition” and were quite
sentimental.
He only listed his estimates on his taxes, not the sales
that the Avon nonprofit sold them for, less than $3,000.
“It must be nice to write off a $43,000 deduction on your
taxes based on sentimental reasons,” Megan Miller, an
assistant U.S. attorney, told jurors during closing
arguments Thursday.
Less than an hour after the verdict Friday, Councilman
Michael Polensek spoke about his former colleague. The two
men served together for decades.
“I find the whole situation troubling,” Polensek said. “The
rec center was a base of operations. I’m extremely
disappointed. But when you behave in a way in which you lack
regard for the community, that’s what happens. The jury’s
verdict was the right decision.”
John
Kuntz, cleveland.com
© Copyright, 2021, The Plain Dealer |