ATLANTA - Atlanta's inspector general is being sued by a city contractor whose name surfaced during a year-long investigation by her office.
The vendor's attorney says Inspector General Shannon Manigault has overstepped her boundaries and is not following the law while trying to investigate possible financial connections between vendors and Atlanta officials.
Attorney Stephen Katz has filed an Open Records Act lawsuit against Manigault because he believes she has exceeded her authority.
"I see her role as weeding out corruption, but she must act within the law herself," Katz told FOX 5's Aungelique Proctor.
Katz represents Bernie Tokarz, a security contractor and lobbyist who also volunteered as the Finance Chair for Atlanta's Post 1 At Large Council person Michael Julian Bond.
The Office of the Inspector General released a report saying Tokarz should be banned from doing business with the city for alleged unethical behavior, but Katz is pushing back.
"She talks about alleged, unlawful activities in lobbying, but lobbying isn't even something that's within her bailiwick, that's the state ethics director," he said. "This is part and parcel of what's been going on with this inspector general. She keeps exceeding her authority on numerous things."
Katz says his client has a $3 million contract with the city of Atlanta to provide security at city parks and Grady Memorial Hospital.
He claims the Office of the Inspector General has refused to comply with his requests for several documents and that Manigault crossed many lines during her investigation into Tokarz.
"She went and got his banking information and that of several uninvolved parties and didn't notify anybody," Katz claimed. "She doesn't even have subpoena power to get that banking information."
Katz says the Atlanta City Council seems to be snubbing the IG's report.
"Her report has largely been ignored and discarded by the city because they renewed Mr. Tokarz's contract. The state ethics commissioner summarily dismissed her ethics complaint, and we've got a load of questions about the inspector general," he said,
The lawsuit comes less than a week after Manigault released a report alleging that officials showed favoritism during the bidding process for a 311 software system. She claimed that the vendor used its connections to Mayor Andre Dickens' transition team to gain access to city officials.
"We found that there were communications that had happened in advance of a request for proposal," Shannon Manigault, Atlanta's Inspector General, told FOX 5.
The city wrote a letter responding to the report, calling it "erroneous" and criticizing OIG’s investigative methods as "wholly unprofessional and inappropriate."
After city's response, OIG released five-page letter saying city's response was "uncivil" & full of "ad hominem attacks & accusations political bias" casting doubt on findings.
It is public record OIG & City had differences opinion related functioning office, letter read part.While discussion operations oversight new government entity ultimately help benefit taxpayers public not served unsupported statements City response OIG investigation conducted independently scrupulously good faith.