DETROIT (AP) — If ever a public figure should be down for the count, it is Kwame Kilpatrick.
Stripped of his job as Detroit’s mayor, locked in jail for 99 days and saddled with a felony record, he is legally prohibited from seeking the only occupation he ever wanted — elected leader. And his troubles keep coming. He’s on the hook now for paying court-ordered restitution to the city of Detroit that he says he can’t afford.
But if the 39-year-old Kilpatrick is a ruined man, he doesn’t seem to have noticed. When he returns to town for court appearances, he travels from his rented mansion outside Dallas, where he and his wife drive luxury vehicles and spend money on golf, restaurants, nail treatments and other amenities, according to government prosecutors.
His lawyer’s explanation for the inconsistency: To pay his debt to society, Kilpatrick has to maintain a certain lifestyle to woo clients in his new job as a software salesman.
Kilpatrick pleaded guilty in 2008 to misconduct tied to his lying under oath about an affair with a staff member in a whistle-blowers’ lawsuit. In addition to serving his sentence, he agreed to give up his law license and his political career and repay the city $1 million for settling an employment lawsuit related to his misdeeds.
But since then, he has fashioned a remarkable second act in the life of a disgraced official. It demonstrates that the talents that helped make him mayor — charm, a confidence bordering on arrogance, and the ability to inspire loyalty among friends and affluent supporters — haven’t failed him.
“When history records him, he will be considered, in spite of whatever mistakes he made, a great mayor,” said community activist Malik Shabazz, who is among the Detroit admirers who stand by him.
The question now is whether Kilpatrick’s rebound could soon be ending. The state Court of Appeals agreed to postpone a court hearing scheduled for Friday, but he still could face arraignment for violating his probation by missing a $79,011 restitution payment due last week. If the arrest warrant issued Thursday — and then suspended — is eventually served, he could wind up back in a cell overlooking the city he once led.
Kilpatrick often boasted over his 6½-years as mayor that he was from Detroit and the city was in him. A product of the mostly black, blue collar town, his mother is Democratic U.S. Rep. Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick. His father Bernard is a former county commissioner. He shares the politician’s gift for speaking well and for being at home in the limelight. He still has a following in the city even though he no longer lives there.
“He’s the center of attention wherever he goes,” said Janee Bradford while waxing and trimming a customer’s eyebrows at Clear Salon & Spa in Detroit. She has voted for him and followed his career. “He has presence and confidence,” she said.
Long his tenure as mayor, conversation at the salon still turns to Kilpatrick, she said.
Some of his admirers take delight in the style and resilience he has shown, and see racial overtones in the continuing prosecutions.
“In the street, in the hood it’s called ‘weather, traffic and Kilpatrick,’” Shabazz said. “The only thing I can feel is empathy. Enough is enough. Leave the brother alone and let him finish out his probation.”
Shabazz and others believe Kilpatrick’s troubles are steeped in Detroit’s legacy of mistrust between whites and blacks, and blacks and the system.
In their petition to the appeals court for the hearing delay, his lawyers touched on that theme. “The town is divided, with many of the opinion that Mr. Kilpatrick is nothing more than a darker version of Bill Clinton.”
Not all supporters are in the neighborhoods. Some are in the top ranks of Detroit’s business community. They have helped him land on his feet.
Manuel “Matty” Moroun, owner of the Ambassador Bridge, which spans the Detroit River between the city and Windsor, Ontario, gave Kilpatrick’s wife Carlita and their children a $50,000 gift in late 2008.
Compuware Corp. chief Peter Karmanos and three other businessmen gave Kilpatrick loans totaling $240,000 shortly after his 2009 jail release. Karmanos also arranged Kilpatrick’s job in Dallas as a software salesman for Compuware subsidiary Covisint, where he makes a $120,000 salary. Each was prominent in Detroit city affairs during Kilpatrick’s tenure.
In moving into his new life, Kilpatrick was able to move into a 5,800-square-foot, five-bedroom house in the exclusive Dallas suburb of Southlake that is bigger than Detroit’s official mayoral home.
The same good fortune hasn’t followed the former city aide who was implicated with Kilpatrick in the scandal that cost him the mayor’s position. Christine Beatty and Kilpatrick were both charged with lying under oath about their relationship after sexually explicit text messages contradicted their testimony in a whistle-blowers’ trial months earlier.
Both went to jail. But after her release, the divorced mother of two had trouble finding a job and was unemployed for nearly a year before recently finding work in Georgia.
When Kilpatrick received his well-paying job, the judge in his case set his monthly restitution payments to the city at 30 percent of his salary. That sum was later reduced, but the judge recently ordered him to make a specific $79,011 payment after concluding he had been untruthful about his finances.
Recently, Kilpatrick said he was unable to raise enough cash for the payment. Money orders and cashier’s checks totaling nearly $41,000 were given to the court on his behalf.
Kilpatrick’s attorneys insist he can’t afford to dial back his lifestyle so he can make the restitution payments.
In his job, “The clientele he must establish a rapport with are likely to be the privileged and the affluent,” said a petition filed late Tuesday. “The deals he must close to fulfill the restitution obligation require considerable time and he is going after sophisticated clients — burgers and beer at the local bar is not going to be sufficient.”
Kilpatrick’s allies and detractors and the Detroit legal community are watching the struggle play out.
“Do you put somebody in jail and never get the money, or do you try to work out something? We don’t have debtor’s prison,” said University of Detroit-Mercy law professor Peggy Costello.
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