Jackson Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba, who leads Mississippi’s largest and capital city, confirmed Wednesday he has been indicted by a federal grand jury in a sweeping corruption probe.
The charges come after undercover FBI agents posing as real estate investors invited the mayor to a fundraiser in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, on April 3, according to public records. They said they wanted to develop property in downtown Jackson and help fund the mayor’s 2025 reelection campaign.
“My legal team has informed me that federal prosecutors have, in fact, indicted me on bribery and related charges,” Lumumba said in a video statement shared with reporters on Tuesday. “To be clear, I have never accepted a bribe of any type. As mayor, I have always acted in the best interests of the citizens of Jackson.”
The feds had enlisted the help of an unsuspecting Hinds County District Attorney Jody Owens, who dabbles in real estate and business consulting. The agents created a company called Facility Solutions Team and got Owens to deliver campaign contributions to the mayor on their behalf, according to federal charges recently filed against Owens’ cousin and associate.
The FBI sting involved a proposed hotel development project in downtown Jackson across from the convention center — a vacant property that has produced a nearly 20-year saga of failed bids and political consternation. In partnership with Owens, the undercover FBI agents created a proposal earlier this year to submit in response to the city’s Statement of Qualifications (SOQ), a document that spells out a city’s needs and solicits interested developers but does not guarantee a contract with the city.
For the government to establish a bribe — known as a “quid pro quo” — a public official must agree to take an official act in exchange for the benefit. Lumumba’s official act, according to federal court documents, was directing a city employee to move up a deadline on the SOQ to an earlier date.
Lumumba had already been in conversation with the city’s Planning and Development Director Jhai Keeton about when to end the bid because they originally chose to extend it by about a month and a half in late February, Keeton said. Originally, FST was the only developer to express interest in the project, Keeton said, and he had wanted to give developers more time to respond.
While Lumumba was in South Florida meeting with the undercover agents, he called Keeton and told him to move the deadline back two weeks to April 16. Keeton didn’t think too much of it, he said, because the mayor had already expressed that “we don’t want to lose anyone we’ve got hoping to get new people.”
“There were still two weeks available to create more competition.” Keeton said.
Two other companies handed in their responses on the day of the deadline. The planning department did not select a winner.
The undercover sting operation has already yielded federal charges against another local elected official. Former Jackson City Councilwoman Angelique Lee pleaded guilty to bribery charges related to the sting in August and promptly resigned from the council.
The feds also raided the businesses of Owens in May. Owens’ cousin Sherik “Marve” Smith pleaded guilty to conspiracy charges in October, admitting that he acted as the middleman between an unindicted co-conspirator and two public officials — also unindicted co-conspirators.
Lumumba, who has for years shrugged off public accusations of corruption and has already announced his 2025 reelection bid, preempted official announcement of the federal indictment with his own statement issued to reporters on Tuesday afternoon.
“We believe this to be a political prosecution against me, primarily designed to destroy my credibility and reputation within the community,” Lumumba said in the video statement on Tuesday. “There is no coincidence in its timing being just before the upcoming mayoral race. My legal team will vigorously defend me against these charges. While I am disappointed, I am not deterred, so I ask for your patience and your prayers during this process.”
Lumumba is expected to be arraigned in federal court on Thursday. A spokesperson for the mayor said he has no plans to resign. The U.S. attorney’s office for the southern district of Mississippi did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The FBI has been poking around Jackson City Hall for years.
Former council member D’Keither Stamps said federal agents interviewed him in 2014, not long after he took office, seeking information about a 2012 water billing and meter installation contract city entered with Germany-based engineering firm Siemens. The bungled contract contributed to the city losing millions in water revenue. In 2021 and 2022, infrastructure failures left residents without water for days and weeks.
A former city employee said the FBI interviewed her in 2015 about alleged bid-steering in the public works department under the city’s former administration.
Sources close to a federal investigation say the FBI has been examining a long-running dispute between the mayor and council over the city’s selection of a garbage collection vendor, which resulted in a 17-day trash pile up in the spring of 2023.
In December 2023, a former Lumumba administration appointee Keyshia Sanders was sentenced after pleading guilty to federal wire fraud charges related to her work as the city of Jackson’s constituent service manager.
‘The city is built for corruption. The system is built to be manipulated,” said Stamps, who left city council in 2021 and now serves as public service commissioner for Mississippi’s central district.
The post Jackson Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba indicted in federal corruption probe appeared first on Mississippi Today.
- Bribery trial begins for former Hinds County interim sheriff - November 6, 2024
- Jackson Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba indicted in federal corruption probe - November 6, 2024
- Ole Miss, State post record enrollments as more students pursue college in Mississippi - November 6, 2024