ATLANTA (AP) — Beverly Hall, the former superintendent of Atlanta Public Schools charged in what prosecutors had called a broad conspiracy to cheat on state exams, has died. Hall's attorney J. Tom Morgan confirmed her death in an email on Monday. She was among more than 30 APS educators indicted in March 2013 in the scandal, which prosecutors called a widespread conspiracy to inflate state test scores in search of bonuses and other benefits. Hall was set to be tried with 12 other former educators who had not agreed to plea deals starting in 2014, but her attorneys successfully argued that the former superintendent could not defend herself while being treated for breast cancer.