NY Assembly Ends Cuomo Impeachment Proceedings Following Resignation
'This has been a tragic chapter in our state's history'
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo (D) is allegedly trying to interfere with the state attorney general's investigation into several women's claims of sexual harassment, a lawyer for one of the women said Monday.
CNBC News reports Debra Katz, an attorney representing former Cuomo staffer Charlotte Bennett, wrote a letter to Attorney General Letitia James objecting to a report that Cuomo's office had staff meet with "in-house attorneys" before they were questioned by investigators.
"It is my understanding that these attorneys are also 'debriefing' staffers after their interviews with investigators," wrote Katz.
"This is highly improper and we object in the strongest possible terms to this obvious interference with what you have stated would be a 'thorough and independent' investigation."
She charged that Cuomo's in-house lawyers "will almost certainly deter those with relevant information about" the allegations of sexual harassment made by Bennett and others from coming forward.
Katz demanded that James order Cuomo's office "to cease this highly improper practice."
She further said that having Cuomo's office's lawyers accompany staff to interviews "will have a chilling effect on potential witnesses or other accusers" who may otherwise cooperate with the probe. These staffers may "fear job-related retaliation if they tell the investigators about the Governor's sexual harassing behavior and misconduct of those around him."
According to Katz, several witnesses have already admitted to fear of retaliation should they fail to cooperate with Cuomo's lawyers.
"We believe this offer of counsel constitutes a deliberate attempt by the Governor to interfere with your office's investigation," Katz wrote.
The New York State Attorney General's Office has hired independent lawyers to investigate claims by Bennett and several other women that Cuomo sexually harassed them with inappropriate touching or comments. The most serious accusation comes from an unidentified current aide to the governor who says Cuomo, 63, reached underneath her blouse and groped her while they were alone in the governor's mansion last March.
Most recently Alyssa McGrath, a current Cuomo staffer and friend of the women who claims Cuomo groped her, came forward Sunday and accused the governor of "ogling her body, remarking on her looks, and making suggestive comments to her and another woman in his office."
Governor Cuomo has vigorously denied all the accusations made against him and has insisted that people wait for the investigators' report to be completed before drawing conclusions from the accusations.
Multiple state Democratic leaders, including a majority of the New York Democratic congressional delegation, have demanded that Cuomo resign.
The governor has steadfastly refused to resign.
State Assembly Democrats have opened an impeachment inquiry against the governor.
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) on Friday once again refused to resign even as seven women have now accused him of sexual harassment and state Democratic lawmakers have opened an impeachment investigation against him. Cuomo called those lawmakers "reckless" and "dangerous" during a phone conference with reporters and vowed that he would not bow to "cancel culture."
The majority of House Democrats from New York stunned the political world Friday by making coordinated announcements calling for Cuomo's resignation after Democrats in the state Assembly launched an impeachment investigation the day before. On the same day, a female reporter named Jessica Bakeman became the seventh woman to come forward with accusations of sexual harassment against the governor, writing in New York magazine that Cuomo touched her inappropriately and that "he uses touching and sexual innuendo to stoke fear in us. That is the textbook definition of sexual harassment."
Cuomo is also under investigation by an independent probe appointed by the New York State attorney general's office and is still facing criticism over his mishandling of the coronavirus pandemic and his executive orders sending COVID-19-positive patients from hospitals to nursing homes and group homes for people with disabilities.
Addressing the sexual harassment allegations, the governor reiterated his position that New Yorkers should wait for the investigations to be completed before forming an opinion of the facts.
"There are often many motivations for making an allegation. And that is why you need to know the facts before you make a decision. There are now two reviews under way. No one wants them to happen more quickly and more thoroughly than I do. Let them do it," Cuomo said.
"I'm not going to argue this issue in the press. That is not how it is done; that is not the way it should be done. Serious allegations should be weighed seriously, right? That's why they are called serious," Cuomo lectured reporters, adding that there's a difference between "facts" and "opinions."
"Politicians who don't know a single fact but yet form a conclusion and an opinion, are in my opinion, reckless and dangerous," he charged. "The people of New York should not have confidence in a politician who takes a position without knowing any facts or substance. That, my friends, is politics at its worst."
Continuing, he said politicians take positions for "political expediency," among other reasons.
"People know the difference between playing politics, bowing to cancel culture, and the truth," Cuomo said. "Let the review proceed. I'm not going to resign. I was not elected by the politicians; I was elected by the people.
"Part of this is that I am not part of the political club, and you know what? I'm proud of it," Cuomo, the son of Mario Cuomo, a former governor of New York and ex-husband of Kerry Kennedy, the third daughter of the late Robert F. Kennedy, audaciously claimed.
He further denied the allegations against him, saying he has "been in the public eye my entire life" and won multiple elections under public scrutiny. He reiterated that voters should wait for the completed reports from the attorney general's independent probe, saying "an opinion without facts is irresponsible."
After fielding questions from reporters, Cuomo concluded, "Politics is part of all of this. But I just will focus on my job. In the meantime, I want to make it clear that what is being alleged just did not happen. The last allegation is not true and I've not had a sexual relationship that was inappropriate, period."
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