Jackson Free Press logo

This story originally appeared in the Jackson Free Press. It was added to the Mississippi Free Press website in 2025.
Note that any opinions expressed in legacy Jackson Free Press stories do not reflect a position of the Mississippi Free Press or necessarily of its staff and board members.

Mayor Frank Melton stands outside of his house, which has a large addition he hasn't reported. Credit: Pat Butler

Jackson Mayor Frank Melton has not been paying taxes on a large home addition to his northeast Jackson house for several years, according to a Hinds County Tax appraiser. โ€œWe had suspicions about (Meltonโ€™s unreported) home addition,โ€ said Hinds County Tax Appraiser Benny Keys on Friday. โ€œWeโ€™re working on that right now, or at least we had been.โ€

An addition to Meltonโ€™s house at 2 Carterโ€™s Grove, which appears to almost double his homeโ€™s size in aerial photographs, were not cleared with the cityโ€™s Planning and Development division, an official with the department confirmed. The department had on record a 2001 permit for electrical and air-conditioning renovation at 2 Carters Grove, but has no record of a construction permit for the home since it was built in 1988.

A search through county records on Parcel 572-190 reveals a brick-on-wood home containing a 56-by-42 foot basement, a 56-by-56-foot first floor and a 47-by-36-foot second floor. However, a top-down photograph of the same house shows a predominate addition on the eastern side of the complex. First-hand accounts inside the home describe the addition containing an enclosed, heated swimming pool on the ground floor, as well as a massive upstairs bedroom and private theater.

Keys told the Jackson Free Press that the county had inklings of a possible 60-by-40, two-story addition to Meltonโ€™s home after the mayor filed the 2001 permit for electrical and environmental changes.

โ€œThose electrical and air-conditioning permits were what tipped us off,โ€ Keys said.

Jackson homeowners looking to add square footage to their house must file a permit with the city. The city then forwards the resulting information to the county, which adjusts the new price of the home and reassesses the subsequent increase in taxes the addition means to the homeowner.

Melton never filed the construction permit, however, and Keys said the county could never confirm the construction, even though aerial photos of Meltonโ€™s gated property, available online, clearly indicate changes in the original 1988 floor plan.

โ€œTrying to get out there and get in stopped us from confirming the addition. You canโ€™t get in through the fences. There was a recent issue with one of our appraisers and a judge. We donโ€™t go on property anymore without permission,โ€ Keys said. He would not confirm whether Melton had refused appraisersโ€™ requests to investigate his property.

Keys said it was impossible to verify how much more Melton should have been paying in taxes because of the addition, though Keys felt the cost would be significant. โ€œIf you take all (Meltonโ€™s) land and everything heโ€™s got up there, itโ€™s a pretty stiff price,โ€ he said. โ€œWeโ€™re trying to work diplomatically with Melton, and thereโ€™s so much going on, and then it came out that he was behind on taxes. We definitely didnโ€™t want to go out there and make a big deal out of this issue when that got out.โ€

The Jackson Free Press reported last month that Melton was four months behind on his county taxes, which were due in February. He owes more than $9,000 for his $352,820 home.

Hinds County Tax Assessor Charles Stokes said the mayor may owe the county least three years of back taxes. The county, said Stokes, only seeks back taxes for three years. If Melton built the addition in 2001, the county will seek no taxes on the years predating 2005.

In recent weeks, Melton has been involved in a controversy involving his last-minute plan for the city to use taxpayer money to pay local businesses to employ youth for the remaining weeks of the summer. When City Council voted down his $1.2 million plan due to insufficient funds, Melton threatened to cut taxes by more than a million dollars next year.

Melton did not return calls to the Jackson Free Press on Friday.

[Click on photos below for a slide show from inside Meltonโ€™s home.]

Previous Comments

I said this when issues about Melton being behind on his taxes came out: he should resign as mayor because if he can’t manage the affairs of his own home, he definitely cannot manage the affairs of a city (which he has already proven true). And then he expected people to their fines they owe to the city. Of course, his cult followers will say that the media is digging dirt on him in an effort to keep him down.


I’d just have to agree with GE there. Too bad he runs the city, and there’s no one with the guts to stand up to him.


Surely it was an oversight because the mayor didn’t know he was ‘spose to report it. I do not believe a mayor who loves the chiluns would try to cheat the City of Jackson which he needs to employ the chiluns. This isn’t consistent with the mayors proclaimed love for Jackson or his high standards. Surely, our next mayor will be someone who can do more than talk skit with the best of them.


There are a few people, Iron. Just not enough.


In this Ledger story today about Melton’s house, its wacky how much it focuses on the impressive size of his house without a hint of irony, considering the above story by Adam: Breeland Speaks, a 12-year-old going into seventh grade at Powell Middle School, was one of a dozen kids splashing around in the mayorโ€™s indoor pool. โ€œItโ€™s fun being in a big house like this,โ€ he said. […] In Meltonโ€™s garage, a group of girls watched as the guys shot billiards. Kids in wet bathing suits and towels ran in and out of the pool house and even more gathered around a large grill waiting for burgers and barbecued chicken. Curtis Claxton, 14 and a soon-to-be freshman at Jim Hill High School, and his friend Antoine Seals, 16 and a rising sophomore at Provine High School, both said their parents made them join PALS. โ€œIt was free,โ€ Claxton said. But he and Seals both said they soon found themselves enjoying it and were awe struck being by the mayorโ€™s house. โ€œThis is a big house,โ€ Seals said. โ€œWhen I get home, Iโ€™m telling everybody I was here.โ€


This is this first time I’ve read or heard about girls being at the house. Perhaps it was a family event or some of the boys’ girlfriends?

MFP Solutions Lab logo

The Mississippi Free Press produced this story through the MFP Solutions Lab, supported by the Solutions Journalism Network. This series digs into Mississippiโ€™s systemic issues and sheds light on responses to them in other communities. Beyond just reporting on problems, these stories interrogate their causes and inspect potential solutions.