Nashville mayor resigns in plea deal after affair with bodyguard

Nashville’s embattled mayor Megan Barry resigned Tuesday as part of a plea deal on a felony theft charge, about a month after she admitted to an extramarital affair with her bodyguard.

When Barry first admitted January 31 to having an affair with Sgt. Robert Forrest, she said she planned to stay in office.

But on Tuesday morning, she entered the guilty plea and was sentenced to three years’ probation and a fine.

Image: Mayor of Nashville Megan Barry speaks onstage during the CRS 2016 at Omni Hotel on Feb. 8, 2016 in Nashville, Tennessee. Image: Mayor of Nashville Megan Barry speaks onstage during the CRS 2016 at Omni Hotel on Feb. 8, 2016 in Nashville, Tennessee.

Then-Nashville Mayor Megan Barry speaks last year in Nashville, Tennessee. Rick Diamond / Getty Images

The revelation of the affair derailed the first term of a mayor who was seen a rising star among Democrats.

Forrest also pleaded guilty on Tuesday to theft of property shortly after Barry.

According to a statement from District Attorney Glenn Funk, Forrest was sentenced to three years of probation. Forrest also must reimburse the city for $45,000 in pay he received for times he wasn’t performing his duties as part of Barry’s security detail.

Earlier this year, Barry had apologized to the people of Nashville, saying at the time that she remained firmly committed to working hard to serve them. The popular mayor, who was elected in 2015, said progress has been made to offer affordable housing, improve to public education and promote better transportation options, but there’s more work to be done.

In the January news conference, she insisted nothing illegal happened and no policies were violated. Her office released records of her text messages, calendar and travel expenses and records, and Barry said she will be transparent in cooperating with possible investigations.

“I know that God will forgive me, but that Nashville doesn’t have to,” Barry said. “And I hope that I can earn their trust and I can earn your trust back, and that you will forgive me.”

Image: Robert Forrest Image: Robert Forrest

Former Nashville Mayor Megan Barry’s ex-bodyguard Sgt. Robert Forrest. Courtesy of WSMV

The first-term mayor’s admission follows the painful loss of the Barrys’ only son, Max, in July after an overdose on a combination of several drugs, including two opioids.

“This is a very bad day. And I’m going to have several more bad days. But this is not my worst day,” Barry said. “And I will tell you I know the difference between a mistake — I made a serious mistake — but this is not a tragedy.”

Barry said the affair began several months after she came into her administration. She said it was discovered through conversations between their two spouses and personal conversations.

She would not say when the affair ended, only saying that it’s over.

Barry accumulated more than $33,000 in travel expenses combined between her and Forrest from January 2017 to late October 2017, and said all of the trips were business-related.

Forrest said on January 17 that he would retire Wednesday after 31-plus years with Metro Nashville Police. He spent 14 years of that tenure supervising the mayor’s security detail over three administrations.

In his own statement earlier this year, Forrest said he never violated his oath as a police officer or engaged in actions that would abuse the public trust. The retired officer asked for privacy as he seeks to rebuild the trust of those he loves the most.

“I deeply regret that my professional relationship with Mayor Barry turned into a personal one,” Forrest said. “This has caused great pain for my wife, my family, friends and colleagues.”

Barry also said she doesn’t want the affair to “muddy” the “Me Too” women’s movement.

“The ‘Me Too’ movement is about women who have been sexually harassed and economically disadvantaged for hundreds of years,” Barry said. “This is about two middle-aged, consenting adults who had feelings for each other, and were human and had failings.”