INSIDE
It’s decision time In just 10 days, voters will decide the mayor and City Council that will shape DeKalb County’s newest municipality. Section B
EAST ATLANTA • DECATUR • STONE MOUNTAIN • LITHONIA • AVONDALE ESTATES • CLARKSTON • ELLENWOOD • PINE LAKE • REDAN • SCOTTDALE • TUCKER
Copyright © 2017 CrossRoadsNews, Inc.
March 11, 2017
Volume 22, Number 46
www.crossroadsnews.com
DA picks team to prosecute officer who killed naked vet By Jennifer Ffrench Parker
the case against Olsen, who was indicted on two Dist ric t Attorne y counts each of felony Sherry Boston will be murder and violation of pursuing the case against oath by a public officer former DeKalb Police Ofand aggravated assault ficer Robert Olsen, who and making a false stateis accused in the death of ment in connection with Anthony Hill, a mentally Hill’s death. Robert Olsen ill Air Force veteran who Olsen shot and killed was shot to death while Hill, 27, on March 9, 2015, when he answered Sherry Boston naked and unarmed. a call about a naked man behaving erratically Boston said March 8 that she has as- and running around his Heights at Chamblee sembled a new team of attorneys to prosecute apartments on Chamblee Tucker Road.
Olsen said he shot Hill because he felt threatened. A DeKalb grand jury indicted him on Jan. 21, 2016. Boston said the prosecution team comprises skilled, veteran prosecuAnthony Hill tors, including Chief Assistant District Attorney Pete Johnson, who will serve as lead prosecutor; Deputy Chief Assistant District Attorney Anna Cross; Deputy Chief Assistant District Attorney
Lance Cross; and Senior Assistant District Attorney Buffy Thomas. She introduced the team to the victim’s family during a case briefing this week, days before the second anniversary of Hill’s death. Olsen’s case is currently on appeal in the Georgia Supreme Court. Boston’s office said the case has been docketed and a ruling is pending following attorney briefs. “The matter will be scheduled for pretrial proceedings and, eventually, trial, upon return to the Superior Court of DeKalb County,” she said in the March 8 statement.
DeKalb contractors helped build new stadium Minority share of contracts tops initial mandate By Terry Shropshire
Atlanta’s reputation for sharing city contracts to include a healthy dose of qualified minorities – dating back to Mayor Maynard Jackson’s pioneering efforts 40 years ago – continues to this day as a diverse blend of contractors helped build one of the most expensive sports arenas ever in America, the spectacular Mercedes-Benz Stadium that is replacing the Georgia Dome in downtown Atlanta. Minority contractors from DeKalb County are among them. A report for the project that was released in February shows 36.4 percent of contracts to build the $1.5 billion NFL home of the Atlanta Falcons went to black-, minority- and women-owned firms. This surpasses the Atlanta City Council’s initial mandate of 31 percent minority participation before construction began on the stadium on Northside Drive and Ivan Allen Boulevard. The project team, headed by Holder Construction, has a minority participation of 36.4 percent. As of Thursday, $944.18 million has been awarded to all contractors overall. Of that, $343.41 million has gone to minority firms: 15.8 percent to African-American enterprises; 16.4 percent to female-owned businesses; and 4.2 percent went to other minority-owned companies, including Asian, Pacific and Hispanic, according to the Atlanta Business Chronicle. More than a dozen of the contractors working on the stadium project call DeKalb County home, including Billy Freeman, owner and co-founder of the Decatur-based Technique Concrete Construction with his father, the late Billy Freeman Sr. Freeman praised the project team leader and the process of inclusion. “They bent over backward to help,” said Freeman, who has made more than $8 million from several contracting jobs thus far.
A report for the Mercedes-Benz Stadium project shows 36.4 percent of contracts went to black-, minority- and women-owned firms.
“They were always asking, ‘How can we help, how can we do more?’ They went as far as [providing] super-easy pay times for people getting paid faster than 30 days. They made it easier for the smaller guy and those without a lot of financing to get contracts. They made it easier for the little guys to get their projects out there.” Freeman, who also does a lot of concrete contracting at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport and other states, added that he couldn’t see how Holder could have been more fair on the Mercedes-Benz Stadium “because the more you split up the contracts, the more difficult it is to manage it. Not only did they make it easier for the smaller companies to [be awarded] contracts, they took the hit for it,” said Freeman, who
More than a dozen of the contractors working on the stadium call DeKalb County home.
was one of the first concrete construction companies awarded a contract and has been working on other parts of the stadium for the past two-and-a-half years. “Because instead of managing five or six contracts, Holder managed 10 or 11 because some of the contracts are so small, but they
still had to manage it. So the burden was on them and they made it easier on the minority guys. And you can’t do anything but commend them for that.” The numbers help to allay initial fears that diverse companies would not be awarded their fair share of contracts on the new sports arena. Because the city is a part of the financing plan to build the stadium, the Atlanta City Council made it clear that Falcons’ owner Arthur Blank and the lead construction firm adhere to the city’s Equal Business Opportunity standards. The stadium is being built by a joint venture called HHRM, comprising Holder Construction Co., Hunt Construction Group, H.J. Russell & Co. and C.D. Moody Construction Co.