East Cleveland City Hall on Euclid Avenue.
East Cleveland City Hall on Euclid Avenue. Credit: Jessie Deeds for Signal Cleveland

The day after a jury convicted Mayor Brandon King of theft in office, East Cleveland moved to cut off his paycheck. Sandra Morgan, who was appointed interim mayor during Kingโ€™s suspension, told the finance director in an email to stop paying King. 

โ€œHe is effectively no longer Mayor of East Cleveland, and as such, is no longer entitled to salary payments,โ€ Morgan wrote. โ€œHe is officially separated from employment at the City of East Cleveland.โ€

That email is now evidence in the court battle over who succeeds King. Lateek Shabazz, the council president, said he is now the mayor. His attorney argued that Morganโ€™s email supports his case.ย 

Shabazzโ€™s argument is this: If King is no longer a city employee, then East Clevelandโ€™s charter dictates that the council president is next in the line of succession. The principle of home rule should take precedence over the state law that triggered Kingโ€™s suspension and Morganโ€™s appointment, Shabazzโ€™s lawyer wrote. 

Morgan contended that she is still the interim mayor. She pointed to Probate Judge Anthony Russoโ€™s order appointing her. The order said Morgan will serve as mayor until King is reinstated by an appeal, until he is acquitted, until the charges are dropped or until a new mayor is elected. Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Michael Oโ€™Malley has taken Morganโ€™s side in the court fight.ย 

Meanwhile, Morgan has switched up her legal team. Initially, Assistant Law Director Heather McCollough represented her. But this week, two attorneys from Akron-based law firm Roetzel & Andress told the court that they had taken on Morganโ€™s case.ย 

(Shabazz, writing on letterhead identifying himself as the mayor of East Cleveland, released a memo in early June telling McCullough that she was fired.)

Ohioโ€™s Eighth District Court of Appeals has yet to rule on who rightfully should get the keys to East Cleveland City Hall. The court wonโ€™t have the last word, however. This is a mayoral election year in East Cleveland. Both Shabazz and Morgan have made the ballot.

Government Reporter
I follow how decisions made at Cleveland City Hall and Cuyahoga County headquarters ripple into the neighborhoods. I keep an eye on the power brokers and political organizers who shape our government. I am a graduate of the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University and have covered politics and government in Northeast Ohio since 2012.