Cuomo accuser files criminal complaint against governor with Albany sheriff's office



A former assistant to New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) who has accused him of sexual harassment and misconduct has filed a criminal complaint with the Albany County Sheriff's Office, police said.

The criminal complaint was filed Thursday by a woman identified as "Executive Assistant #1" in the state attorney general's bombshell report alleging that Cuomo violated federal and state law by sexually harassing at least 11 women and creating a toxic work environment in the Executive Chamber.

This is the first known instance of the allegations against Cuomo being officially reported to a law enforcement agency. The independent investigation conducted by Attorney General Letitia James's office was a civil investigation and did not reach a conclusion as to whether the governor's conduct "amounts to or should be the subject of criminal prosecution."

Sheriff Craig Apple told the New York Post that the governor could be arrested if the allegations are substantiated.

"The end result could either be it sounds substantiated and an arrest is made and it would be up to the DA to prosecute the arrest," he said.

"Just because of who it is we are not going to rush it or delay it," the sheriff added.

According to the unknown victim, since late 2019 Cuomo engaged in a pattern of inappropriate conduct with her, including unwanted touching, kisses, close and intimate hugs, and inappropriate comments and jokes about the woman's personal life, her relationships, and questions about whether she would ever cheat on her husband.

She testified that Cuomo would ask for a hug "almost every time" before she left the Executive Mansion and that over time the hugs felt "closer and tighter."

"I knew I could feel him pushing my body against his and definitely making sure that he could feel my breasts up against his body. And was doing it in a way that I felt was obviously uncomfortable for me and he was maybe trying to get some sort of personal satisfaction from it," she told investigators.

She said she could feel the governor's hands running up and down her back during these hugs.

The alleged abuse culminated in an incident at the Executive Mansion in November 2020 when the victim says the governor pulled her in for a hug and then reached under her blouse and cupped one of her breasts.

"I have to tell you it was—at the moment I was in such shock that I could just tell you that I just remember looking down seeing his hand, seeing the top of my bra and I remember it was like a little even the cup—the kind of bra that I had to the point I could tell you doesn't really fit me properly, it was a little loose, I just remember seeing exactly that," she said.

The victim also told investigators that on December 21, 2019, in the governor's office at the Executive Mansion Cuomo groped her after asking her to take a "selfie" with him. While she was taking the picture, the governor allegedly "moved his hand to grab her butt cheek and began to rub it" for at least five seconds.

The report states that she was shaking so badly during the interaction that the first photos she took came out blurry.

The victim said the governor warned her not to share the photo with anyone, and that while she badly wanted to tell someone what happened, she feared she would lose her job if she reported the unwanted touching.

She told investigators that if either of Cuomo's top aides Stephanie Benton or Melissa DeRosa heard about the incident, she would be fired.

Cuomo impeachment probe is 'nearing completion,' top Democrat says



The top Democrat in the New York State Assembly committee conducting the impeachment investigation against Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) announced Thursday that the investigation is "nearing completion" and that the Assembly will soon take action to impeach the governor.

New York State Assembly Judiciary Committee Chairman Charles Lavine (D) said in a statement that the law firm hired by the committee to conduct its impeachment probe has told the governor's legal team to prepare to turn over materials for Cuomo's defense.

"We write to inform you that the Committee's investigation is nearing completion and the Assembly will soon consider potential articles of impeachment against your client," the lawyers wrote to Cuomo's counsel. "Accordingly, we invite you to provide any additional evidence or written submissions that you would like the Committee to consider before its work concludes."

"To the extent that you wish to share any such materials with the Committee, please do so by no later than 5:00 pm on August 13, 2021," they advised.

Lavine announced that the Judiciary Committee will meet at the state capitol in Albany on Monday to consider its next steps.

"Counsel for the Committee have previously requested that the Governor produce relevant documents in his possession. A subpoena was subsequently issued for such material. The Committee continues to expect full compliance from the Governor," Lavine said.

These actions by the Judiciary Committee are the clearest indication yet that Democrats in the state legislature will, in fact, move to impeach the third-term governor following a bombshell report from state Attorney General Letitia James that alleges Cuomo violated federal and state law by sexually harassing at least 11 women.

Cuomo has been defiant in the face of calls to resign from nearly every prominent Democrat in New York state and President Joe Biden. He has denied all wrongdoing and accused those calling for his resignation of being political opportunists.

State lawmakers opened the impeachment probe against Cuomo in March after several of Cuomo's accusers went public with details of the alleged harassment they experienced. The probe is also considering whether the Cuomo administration covered up nursing home deaths related to COVID-19, whether he used state resources to write a book about his leadership during the pandemic, and whether the government covered up potential structural problems on the Gov. Mario M Cuomo bridge.

According to the Associated Press, at least 86 of the 150 members of the state Assembly have said they want to impeach Cuomo and remove him from office should he refuse to resign, 10 more than is necessary to pass articles of impeachment.

Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie said Wednesday that the governor "has lost the confidence of the Assembly Democratic majority and that he can no longer remain in office."

The Assembly can vote to impeach Cuomo with a simple majority vote. He would then be tried in the state Senate, where Democrats also hold a majority, and if convicted he would be removed from office and possibly barred from ever holding statewide political office in New York again. If he is removed or resigns, Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul will become governor.

REPORT: How CNN's Chris Cuomo HELPED his brother dodge sexual harassment allegations



Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) isn't the only Cuomo mentioned in the New York attorney general's bombshell report on his alleged sexual harassment spree. According to the investigation, CNN anchor Chris Cuomo actually helped write his brother's defense.

On the radio program Wednesday, Glenn Beck and Pat Gray discussed some of the report's key findings, including email communications that show Chris Cuomo wrote several of the lines included in Gov. Cuomo's response to the sexual harassments allegations released in late February.

"How is he still on the air?" Glenn asked, referring to Chris Cuomo. "He has no credibility ... because he was involved in all of the political maneuvering with his brother."

Watch the video clip below from "The Glenn Beck Program" to catch more of the conversation:


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Walls close in on Cuomo as NY prosecutors seek documents on alleged illegal conduct



New York prosecutors in Westchester County and Manhattan want to know if Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) engaged in criminal misconduct in their jurisdictions after the state attorney general released a bombshell report finding that Cuomo violated federal and state laws by sexually harassing multiple women.

On Tuesday, state Attorney General Letitia James announced the findings of an independent investigation into Cuomo's alleged misconduct. Investigators concluded that Cuomo sexually harassed 11 women, including employees, touching them without their consent and making inappropriate comments to them about their personal lives, relationships, and other explicit statements.

Responding to the report, Cuomo denied the allegations of illegal conduct in a pre-recorded video, saying that he never touched anyone inappropriately and that his comments and public conduct had been misinterpreted.

NBC News reported Wednesday that Westchester District Attorney Miriam Rocah sent a letter to the attorney general inquiring about Cuomo's reported conduct and whether he broke the law within her jurisdiction.

"I believe it is appropriate for my Office to conduct a further inquiry to determine if any of the reported conduct that is alleged to have occurred in Westchester County is criminal in nature," Rocah wrote to James.

Specifically, Rocah said that she is looking for information tied to the harassment and unwanted touching of a New York State trooper who was initially assigned to the governor's detail at his Mount Kisco, N.Y. residence, which is in Westchester County.

Rocah is requesting any investigative materials from James' office including notes, reports or transcripts involving this trooper as well as any materials involving any other alleged misconduct by the governor in Westchester. Rocah is a former legal analyst for MSNBC and a former contributor NBC News' THINK opinion section.

Rocah confirmed the report in a tweet sent Wednesday morning announcing that her office "formally requested investigative materials obtained by the AG's Office."

Statement from Westchester County District Attorney Mimi Rocah Regarding NYS Attorney General Letitia James' Final… https://t.co/qrbau6eAyb

— DA Mimi Rocah (@WestchesterDA) 1628086987.0

A spokesman for Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance told NBC News on Wednesday that his office is also looking into reports of Cuomo's illegal behavior and seeking materials from James' office.

"When our office learned yesterday that the Attorney General's investigation of the Governor's conduct was complete, our office contacted the Attorney General's Office to begin requesting investigative materials in their possession pertaining to incidents that occurred in Manhattan," the spokesman said.

The walls are closing in on Cuomo as prosecutors look for more information on his alleged illegal conduct and Democratic officials from the state legislature all the way to the White House are calling for his resignation.

Should he refuse to resign, the Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday that Democrats in the state Assembly have plans to add James' 165-page report on Cuomo's behavior to the evidence already collected in an ongoing impeachment probe. The Democratic majority in the legislature has reportedly reached a consensus opinion that Cuomo is no longer fit for office.

"It is abundantly clear to me that the governor has lost the confidence of the Assembly Democratic majority and that he can no longer remain in office," Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie (D) said.

The speaker controls legislative activity in the House and said the impeachment inquiry will conclude as quickly as possible.

Defiant Cuomo denies AG report finding he sexually harassed numerous women as Democrats demand his resignation or impeachment



New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) maintains that did not make sexual advances toward or touch anyone inappropriately, denying a report from the state attorney general's office that concluded he violated federal and state laws by sexually harassing multiple women.

"The facts are much different than what has been portrayed," Cuomo said in a pre-recorded video released Tuesday after Attorney General Letitia James announced the findings of the independent probe into the governor's behavior.

"I never touched anyone inappropriately or made inappropriate sexual advances," a defiant Cuomo said.

Hours earlier, James held a press conference announcing the findings of an independent investigation tasked with reviewing claims by multiple women that Cuomo made inappropriate sexual comments toward them or touched them in a sexual manner without their consent.

"The independent investigation has concluded that Governor Andrew Cuomo sexually harassed multiple women and in doing so violated federal and state law," the attorney general said. "Specifically, the investigation found that Governor Andrew Cuomo sexually harassed current and former New York State employees by engaging in unwelcome and nonconsensual touching and making numerous offensive comments of a suggestive and sexual nature that created a hostile work environment for women."

A 165-page report published by the attorney general's office stated that Cuomo created an office environment "filled with fear and intimidation" and that he had threatened at least one of the women who had publicly complained about his behavior. Several of the witnesses interviewed by investigators were hesitant to provide negative information about the governor for fear of "harm and retribution," acknowledging that Cuomo is known to have a "vindictive" nature.

The report detailed the allegations against Cuomo made by numerous women. Former Cuomo aide Charlotte Bennett alleges that during conversations she had with the governor in 2020, Cuomo asked her a series of inappropriate questions she interpreted as sexual advances. Bennett, who had told Cuomo she was a survivor of sexual assault, says the governor asked her about her dating life, whether she had been with older men, and if she was monogamous. She alleges that Cuomo also told her he'd be willing to date someone who was as young as 22 (he knew she was 25 at the time) and during the pandemic told her he was "lonely" and "wanted to be touched."

Responding to the allegations, Cuomo apologized to Bennett for making her feel uncomfortable and claimed that he was trying to help her recover from the trauma of sexual assault with his questions.

"I did ask her how she was doing and how she was feeling. And I did ask questions to try to see if she had positive support of dating relationships," Cuomo said. He claimed that a family member close to Bennett's age is also a sexual assault survivor and that he thought his personal experience with this person's trauma would enable him to comfort Bennett.

"I was trying to make sure she was working her way through it the best she could," the governor said.

"I have heard Charlotte and her lawyer and I understand what they are saying. But they read into comments that I made and draw inferences that I never meant. They ascribe motives I never had. And, simply put, they heard things that I just didn't say," he asserted.

"I was trying to help, obviously I didn't."

Cuomo also responded directly to an anonymous accuser who says he reached under her blouse and groped her breast in the Executive Mansion in November 2020. This accuser alleged that Cuomo engaged in a pattern of inappropriate conduct that included close and intimate hugs, kisses on the cheeks, forehead, and at least once on the lips, touching her butt during hugs, and inappropriate comments about her personal life and relationships.

"Let me be clear. That never happened," Cuomo said. "She wants anonymity, and I respect that, so I am limited by what I can say. But her lawyer has suggested that she will file a legal claim for damages. That will be decided in a court of law. Trial by newspaper or biased reviews are not the way to find the facts in this matter. I welcome the opportunity for a full and fair review before a judge and a jury because this just did not happen."

Regarding other accusations of inappropriate or nonconsensual touching, Cuomo attributed his behavior to his Italian heritage, "generational" and "cultural" differences that he learned from "my mother and from my father." His video includes a montage of him hugging and kissing people of all ages and sexes, which he used to insist that he treats everyone like so and did not intend to sexually harass anybody.

"I do kiss people on the forehead. I do kiss people on the cheek. I do kiss people on the hand. I do embrace people. I do hug people. Men and women," Cuomo said.

"I now understand that there are generational or cultural perspectives that, frankly, I hadn't fully appreciated," he said.

The governor also said he's hired an independent consultant to design a new sexual harassment policy for his office and that he and other employees would receive additional sexual harassment training.

Attorney General James described Cuomo's office as a "toxic workplace" for women. Responding, Cuomo acknowledged that his office is "a demanding place to work." But then he said complaints filed against female managers in his office smacked "of a double standard," indicating these complaints were "sexist."

Cuomo concluded the video by chastising his political opponents for purportedly using the numerous, credible sexual harassment allegations against him to "score political points."

"At the end of the day we get good things done for people and that is what really matters," the governor said. "And for those who are using this moment to score political points or seek publicity or personal gain, I say they actually discredit the legitimate sexual harassment victims."

Despite Cuomo's protestations of innocence, various Democratic officials in the state of New York renewed calls for him to resign, though the governor has shown no inclination towards doing so.

"Andrew Cuomo committed sexual assault and sexual harassment, and intimidated a whistleblower. It is disqualifying. It is beyond clear that Andrew Cuomo is not fit to hold office and can no longer serve as Governor. He must resign, and if he continues to resist and attack the investigators who did their jobs, he should be impeached immediately," New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, who has often feuded with the governor, said.

New York Democratic U.S. Sens. Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand released a joint statement calling the accusations against Cuomo "profoundly disturbing, inappropriate and completely unacceptable."

"The New York State Attorney General has conducted an independent, thorough and professional investigation that found the Governor violated state and federal law, had a pattern of sexually harassing current and former employees, retaliated against at least one of the accusers and created a hostile work environment," the senators said.

"No elected official is above the law. The people of New York deserve better leadership in the governor's office. We continue to believe that the Governor should resign."

Assemblyman Ron Kim, a Democratic state lawmaker who has led calls for impeaching Cuomo over his mishandling of the COVID-19 pandemic in nursing homes, said the attorney general's report shows the governor is "wholly unfit to serve and must be removed from office immediately."

Kim claimed in February that Cuomo had attempted to intimidate and bully him for criticizing how the governor underreported COVID-19 deaths in nursing homes.

"Today's report from Attorney General Letitia James confirms what we have long suspected: Governor Cuomo used his office to sexually assault, harass, intimidate, and humiliate his employees. He is wholly unfit to serve and must be removed from office immediately. There is no measure left to hide this truth: the governor broke the law so we must hold him accountable," Kim said.

"We must return to session immediately and begin the impeachment proceedings."

CNN amazingly defends Chris Cuomo for seeking preferential COVID treatment from governor brother



CNN amazingly defended one of its anchors, Chris Cuomo, on Thursday saying it's "not surprising" that "he turned to anyone he could" for help after it was revealed he received prioritized at-home coronavirus testing early on in the pandemic based solely on his family relation to Democratic New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo.

What are the details?

The Albany Times-Union first reported the news Wednesday that Gov. Cuomo and Health Commissioner Dr. Howard Zucker had ordered high-level health department officials "to conduct prioritized coronavirus testing on the governor's relatives as well as influential people with ties to the administration" in March 2020, at a time when coronavirus tests were extremely hard to come by.

The report noted that "members of Cuomo's family including his brother [Chris Cuomo], his mother and at least one of his sisters were also tested by top health department officials — some several times."

Swift backlash ensued following the revelations as many critics of the embattled governor perceived that the prioritized testing amounted to preferential treatment for his relatives. Yet in the face of scandal, CNN opted to step in and defend its anchor, essentially arguing that anyone in his position — with his access — would do the same.

"We generally do not get involved in the medical decisions of our employees," CNN spokesman Matt Dornic said in a statement. "However, it is not surprising that in the earliest days of a once-in-a-century global pandemic, when Chris was showing symptoms and was concerned about possible spread, he turned to anyone he could for advice and assistance, as any human being would."

What else?

CNN's tone-deaf response, like the news about the preferential treatment in the first place, was met with immediate criticism.

Washington Post media critic Erik Wemple tweeted, "I am happy that Chris Cuomo made a quick and full recovery. But he needs to step forward and detail whatever special treatment he received via his family connection to the NYS government. This is a big story and his own colleagues are competing for it."

Former CNN sports correspondent Keith Olbermann quipped, "HOO boy who thought THIS would help?"

HOO boy who thought THIS would help? https://t.co/ZVmz5zatO2
— Keith Olbermann (@Keith Olbermann)1616641333.0

According to the Times-Union, prioritized at-home testing was not the only preferential treatment that Cuomo's family received. One source with knowledge of the matter reportedly told the outlet that people close to the governor had their samples expedited through testing labs, where they were referred to as "critical samples."

The Washington Post reported that the governor's family and other "well-connected figures" were known as "specials" or "VIPs."

But, according to CNN, Chris Cuomo was simply a desperate infected person looking for help anywhere he could find it.

Anything else?

This latest incident is far from the first time Cuomo and CNN collectively have been scrutinized for unusual behavior, to say the least, surrounding the coronavirus pandemic. The network was repeatedly called out last year for allowing Cuomo to interview his older brother amid the governor's scandal-laden management of the pandemic in New York.

Also, in April, the network staged Cuomo "emerging" from a weekslong basement quarantine following his recovery from the illness — despite the fact that he had been out in public only days before.

New York lawmaker: Gov. Cuomo asked 'me to lie and cover everything up' but I wouldn't do it



New York Democratic Assemblyman Ron Kim on Monday repeated his calls for Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) to be removed from office, accusing the governor of asking him to "lie and cover everything up" regarding the COVID-19 deaths in nursing homes.

During an interview on Fox News' "Fox & Friends," Kim said he felt obligated to challenge the governor after Cuomo allegedly threatened to "destroy" him for speaking out about how the Cuomo administration covered up nursing home deaths.

"It wasn't the bullying," Kim told Fox News. "The moment he crossed that line and ordered me to issue a statement that covered up what his top aide's admission of obstructing justice, that's what really motivated and pushed me to come out in public and push back."

In February, the New York Post reported that top Cuomo aide Melissa DeRosa apologized to Democratic lawmakers for hiding data on COVID-19 deaths in nursing homes to shield Gov. Cuomo from political fallout for his executive order placing positive COVID-19 patients in those homes. Assemblyman Kim, whose uncle died in a nursing home in April after suffering the coronavirus symptoms, became one of Cuomo's fiercest critics.

"I've fought along with [Fox News'] Janice Dean and others for 10 months to give these families the voice that they lacked and then in one second the governor wanted me to lie and cover everything up to protect him. And I wasn't going to have that," Kim said.

"In a private meeting [DeRosa] admitted that there was a cover-up and she implicated all of us, not just the members but the institutions, the Senate and the Assembly, and the moment she did that it no longer became a private conversation," he added. "The public had right to know and we have a duty to report to the public that this is what's going on with the executive and we need to check the governor and we need to do our jobs to get to the truth."

Cuomo has denied the allegation that he threatened Kim over the phone and accused the lawmaker of being a liar.

Kim pointed out that Cuomo is, in fact, the one who has been caught in a lie. The New York Times recently reported leaked audio audio of a 2018 phone conversation Cuomo had with Bill Lipton, the leader of the Working Families Party in New York. On the phone call, Cuomo castigated Lipton for the party's messaging that Cuomo is "better than a Republican," saying, "if you ever say, 'Well he's better than a Republican' again then I'm going to say, 'You're better than a child rapist' — how about that."

Text of the conversation had been previously reported in February. At the time, Cuomo's office said the report was not true.

"First they denied it, they lied" and claimed he never said that, Kim said. "And then when they get caught red-handed they punt and they deflect and come up with something else. The point is they lie, they deflect, and they cover up. And the public has had enough.

"We've had enough of his abusive behaviors, abuse of power, and he needs to be removed so we can get back to protecting the people of New York."