Politics & Government
Burrell Ellis Denies Dropping Vendor's Contract
Former DeKalb County CEO Burrell Ellis is on trial for 14 bribery and corruption charges. Closing arguments will come on Monday.

Day three of former DeKalb County CEO Burrell Ellis’ testimony Friday again had him refuting claims he demanded campaign contributions from companies doing business with the county.
Ellis faces 14 felony charges, ranging from bribery to theft, which he has consistently denied.
Much of the prosecution’s case rests on testimony given by DeKalb Purchasing Director Kelvin Walton, who told the jury Ellis questioned why firms receiving large contracts from the county didn’t donate to his campaign. Ellis refuted testimony by Walton and others when he took the stand.
Find out what's happening in Dunwoodyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Closing arguments in the case will be given on Monday.
DeKalb District Attorney Robert James played a wiretap that includes Ellis saying he Walton to drop a vendor - Austell-based Power and Energy Services – because company officials had refused to donate to his re-election effort, reports WABE. The exchange according to the radio station:
Find out what's happening in Dunwoodyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
James: You told Kelvin Walton to cut the contract, right?
Ellis: Yes, I’m on tape saying that. Yes. But I don’t believe I said that to Kelvin Walton, I think I misspoke there. Because if I had directed that the contract be cut, then the contract would have been cut.
Ellis told jurors the audio recording lacked context. During a previous campaign solicitation call, an employee of the vendor told Ellis they couldn’t donate. The employee at some point told him they weren’t interested in his services. Ellis testified he took that to mean the company wasn’t interested in working with the county.
Ellis began his testimony Wednesday denying that he ever penalized companies that wouldn’t contribute to his re-election campaign.
“I never asked anything in exchange for a campaign contribution. I never promised anything,” Ellis said, reports the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
Ellis asked for lists of county contractors, and their phone numbers, in order to ask for campaign donations, according to testimony from Walton. Walton recorded conversations he had with his boss to collect evidence for prosecutors, reports The Atlanta Journal Constitution.
The jury last week heard a recording of Ellis telling Walton to place a note in the file of Power and Energy Services so no other county work went to the company.
Walton testified he kept and regularly updated lists of vendors who had contracts with the county so Ellis could solicit the business owners for campaign contributions, FOX Atlanta reports. He said the CEO told him to let contracts expire if a donation wasn’t made to his 2012 re-election effort.
Ellis’ attorneys hammered on the lies Walton admits he told a special grand jury. They argued Walton cooperated with prosecutors to avoid facing corruption charges.
Ellis was indicted in the summer of 2013 by a DeKalb County grand jury on charges he illegally pressured contractors into giving him campaign contributions. He faces 14 felony charges that accuse him of shaking down county vendors for campaign donations and punishing those who did not give, reports the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
»Former DeKalb CEO Burrell Ellis in court. Credit: FOX Atlanta screenshot
Related:
Ellis Defense Hammers on Lies Told by Witness
Jurors Hear Ellis Demand Donations in Secret Recordings
Request for Mistrial Rejected in Burrell Ellis Bribery Trial
Juror Excused from DeKalb CEO’s Trial; Testimony Focuses on Campaign Cash
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.