Cuomo accuser speaks publicly for first time, details allegations in criminal complaint

Cuomo accuser speaks publicly for first time, details allegations in criminal complaint



The former executive assistant to New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) who filed a criminal complaint against him alleging he sexually harassed her is speaking publicly for the first time.

Brittany Commisso, 32, is the woman identified as "Executive Assistant #1" in New York Attorney General Letitia James' bombshell report alleging that Cuomo broke federal and state laws by sexually harassing at least 11 women and creating a hostile work environment in the Executive Chamber.

In an interview with "CBS This Morning" and the Times Union, Commisso described how her "dream job" was "turned into a nightmare" after Cuomo allegedly groped her on multiple occasions and engaged in a pattern of other inappropriate conduct towards her. Though she was not the first woman to come forward with allegations of sexual misconduct against Cuomo, her testimony appears first in the attorney general's report, and she believes this is because her accusations are the most serious.

"I believe that my story appears first due to the nature of the inappropriate conduct that the governor did to me," Commisso said. "I believe that he groped me, he touched me, not only once, but twice."

Commisso claims that Cuomo groped her the first time on Dec. 31, 2019, at the governor's mansion. She told CBS News that she was alone with the governor that night helping Cuomo with his upcoming State of the State address. She claimed that after she finished her draft of the speech, Cuomo suggested the they take a selfie together.

"He was to my left. I was on the right. With my right hand, I took the selfie," she said. "I then felt while taking the selfie, his hand go down my back onto my butt, and he started rubbing it. Not sliding it. Not, you know, quickly brushing over it — rubbing my butt."

Commisso repeated allegations made in the attorney general's report that Cuomo made her so uncomfortable she started to shake, causing the pictures she took to come out blurry.

"I was embarrassed," she said. "Not only embarrassed for what was going on, I was embarrassed that a governor wanted a selfie and I couldn't take it. I was so nervous. I remember looking at them, and when he said, 'Can I see them?' I showed him them. And he said, 'Oh, those aren't – those aren't good.'"

Commisso said that next Cuomo suggested they take a picture together on the couch, and she agreed because she thought he wouldn't be able to grope her butt if they were sitting down.

"So we sat down on the couch and in the photo I have my arm wrapped around his shoulder, almost as if we were taking a picture with a buddy. And I got a clear photo sitting down," she said. "And that is the one that has been blurred out that has been now released to the public."

Cuomo has denied that he ever touched Commisso inappropriately when they took the selfie together.

Commisso alleges Cuomo groped her a second time at the governor's mansion in November 2020.

In the attorney general's report, Commisso 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." During this particular encounter, she says Cuomo hugged her in a "sexually aggressive manner."

"It was then that I said, you know, governor, you know, you're — my words were 'you're going to get us in trouble.' And I thought to myself, that probably wasn't the best thing to say," Commisso told CBS News.

Commisso claims she was worried that someone might walk in, see what was happening, and get the wrong idea. But after she said as much to the governor, Cuomo "shut the door so hard to the point where I thought for sure, someone downstairs must think if they heard that, 'What is going on?'"

Then, she says, he reached under her blouse and cupped her breast.

"He came back to me and that's when he put his hand up my blouse and cupped my breast over my bra," she said. "I exactly remember looking down, seeing his hand, which is a large hand, thinking to myself, 'Oh, my God. This is happening.'"

"It happened so quick, he didn't say anything. When I stopped it, he just pulled away and walked away."

Commisso said the governor's behavior was as if he was "in a sexually aggressive state of mind" but was at a loss for words to explain how or why this happened.

Cuomo has adamantly denied this accusation, saying, "To touch a woman's breasts, who I hardly know, in the mansion with 10 staff around, with my family in the mansion, to say, 'I don't care who sees us.' I would have to lose my mind to do such a thing."

Commisso said Cuomo's denials were "disgusting."

"I know the truth. He knows the truth. I know what happened and so does he," she said. "I don't believe that there were 10 staff there that day. I don't believe his family was there that day. And if that's what he has to say to make himself feel better, I really, I feel sorry for him."

Until now, Commisso's identity had been unknown. She had wished to remain anonymous to protect her family. But she decided to come forward after Cuomo held a press conference in March 2021 during which he stated that he "never touched anyone inappropriately."

"He almost has this smirk that he thinks that he's untouchable," Commisso said. "I almost feel like he has this sense of almost a celebrity status and it just — that was the tipping point. I broke down. I said 'He is lying.'"

"I felt like he was personally saying it to me, that 'I never touched anyone inappropriately,'" Commisso explained. "And, yes, you did."

Commisso says that the governor would also hug her inappropriately and once kissed her on the lips without her consent. Cuomo has responded to allegations of inappropriate or nonconsensual touching by attributing his behavior to his Italian heritage, claiming that "generational" and "cultural" differences he inherited from "my mother and from my father" caused people to misinterpret his actions.

"These were not hugs that he would give his mother or his brother," Commisso emphasized. "These were hugs with the intention of getting some personal sexual satisfaction out of. Then they started to be hugs with kisses on the cheek. Then there was at one point a hug, and then when he went to go kiss me on the cheek, he quickly turned his head and he kissed me on the lips."

"Maybe to him, he thought this was normal. But to me and the other women that he did this to, well, it was not normal," she added. "It was not welcomed. And it was certainly not consensual."

Commisso said Cuomo was lying when he claimed that he only hugged her because she initiated the contact. She said she filed a criminal complaint because "it was the right thing to do. The governor needs to be held accountable."

"What he did was a crime," she said. "He broke the law."

Cuomo has denied all accusations of sexual harassment made against him and has stubbornly refused calls to resign made by virtually every Democratic official in New York and President Joe Biden.

The Albany County Sheriff's Office said Saturday that it is in the "very infant stages" of investigating the criminal complaint against Cuomo. Sheriff Craig Apple said that if any charges are brought against the governor, they will likely be misdemeanors.

The New York State Assembly Judiciary Committee is meeting Monday to discuss the next steps in its impeachment probe against Cuomo. Should Cuomo refuse to resign, it is all but certain the legislature will move to impeach and remove the governor from office.

Concluding the interview with CBS News, Commisso called on Cuomo to resign and to tell the truth:

"There was a speech that he gave less than a month ago, and in his speech, he said, 'If you give New Yorkers the truth and you give New Yorkers the facts, the good, the bad, the ugly, they will do the right thing.' I would say, Governor, this is the truth. These are the facts. And it's your turn to do the right thing. And that right thing is to resign and to tell the truth."

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.

Gov. Cuomo says 'feeling uncomfortable' isn't harassment, contradicting harassment law he signed



Facing allegations of sexual misconduct from multiple women, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) attempted to defend himself Thursday, saying that making someone "feel uncomfortable" is not harassment.

During a news conference, City & State NY reporter Rebecca Lewis asked the governor about the statement he made after Charlotte Bennett, a former Cuomo aide, accused her ex-boss of making inappropriate sexual advances toward her.

"I never meant to make anyone feel uncomfortable," Cuomo said in response. "I never said anything that I believe is inappropriate. You can leave this press conference today and say, 'Oh, the governor harassed me.' I would say I never said anything that I believed was inappropriate. I never meant to make you feel that way. You may hear it that way, you may interpret it that way. And I respect that, and I apologize to you if I said something that you think is offensive."

But Lewis pressed him on the legal definition of sexual harassment, saying, "The harasser's intention doesn't matter. You can apologize if you make someone feel uncomfortable. I'm just wondering — do you acknowledge that, according to the law, it doesn't matter?"

"Harassment is not making someone feel uncomfortable," Cuomo insisted. "That is not harassment. If I just made you feel uncomfortable, that is not harassment. That's you feeling uncomfortable."

This exchange between Cuomo and my City & State colleague Rebecca Lewis is a great example of why he was avoiding i… https://t.co/XrcoMY3YTN

— Zach Williams (@ZachReports) 1620930075.0

Cuomo's response raised eyebrows in the room and drew condemnation from anti-sexual harassment activists and Bennett, one of his accusers.

"When @NYGovCuomo propositioned me for sex, he broke the law," Bennett said. "It is very simple: the issue is about his actions, it is not about my feelings. He broke the law (you know, the one he signed). Apologies don't fix that, and neither do denials."

In 2019, Cuomo signed a sweeping law that strengthened protections against sexual harassment and lowered the bar for a victim to prove harassment took place. The law defines sexual harassment as "unwelcome verbal or physical behavior based on a person's gender."

When @NYGovCuomo propositioned me for sex, he broke the law. It is very simple: the issue is about his actions, it… https://t.co/gFzPjOEPz6

— Charlotte Bennett (@_char_bennett_) 1620924891.0

The Sexual Harassment Working Group, an activist organization comprised of former New York legislative staffers that fights harassment in the state Capitol, issued a statement blasting Cuomo's "self-delusion."

"Today Andrew Cuomo's self-delusion reached impressive new heights & our response is very simple: Just because you believe you can't make anyone 'feel' harassed by your actions, doesn't make it legally true. If the Governor tried that before a judge he'd get laughed out of court," the group said. "We accept his original confirmation of Charlotte Bennett's account of him breaking the New York Human Rights Law he signed, by creating a hostile work environment and grooming her for sex."

"We eagerly await the Attorney General's investigation and look forward to the Governor being held accountable for his actions: Not anyone's feelings," the group added. "We are not going away and Cuomo will not silence victims."

Cuomo faces accusations of sexual harassment from nearly a dozen women following the first accusation from Lindsey Boylan, a former aide. State Attorney General Letitia James (D) opened an investigation into the allegations earlier this year. At the same time, Cuomo is also under investigation for allegedly covering up nursing home deaths, tying vaccine access to political support, and misusing state resources to write and promote his pandemic book.

The New York State Assembly has also opened an impeachment inquiry into Cuomo, though Republicans have criticized what they say is a "stalled" investigation that has only provided two updates since it began more than two months ago.

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez calls for 'full investigation' of Gov. Cuomo's COVID-19 nursing home scandal



Squad leader Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) has joined a growing chorus of New York lawmakers calling for a full investigation into how Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) mishandled the coronavirus pandemic in nursing homes.

On Wednesday, the Albany Times Union reported that the FBI and the U.S. attorney's office for the Eastern District of New York have opened an investigation into the Cuomo administration's coronavirus task force and the crisis in New York nursing homes.

"I support our state's return to co-equal governance and stand with our local officials calling for a full investigation of the Cuomo administration's handling of nursing homes during COVID-19," Ocasio-Cortez said in a statement. "Thousands of vulnerable New Yorkers lost their lives in nursing homes throughout the pandemic. Their loved ones and the public deserve answers and transparency from their elected leadership, and the Secretary to the Governor's remarks warrant a full investigation."

New statement: ⁦@AOC⁩ calls for “full investigation of the Cuomo administration’s handling of nursing homes” https://t.co/OMwqsKGOQA
— Katie Glueck (@Katie Glueck)1613760541.0

The Cuomo administration has faced scathing public criticism from New York lawmakers ever since a top Cuomo aide privately admitted last week that the state government withheld data on COVID-19 nursing home deaths from the legislature out of fear President Donald Trump would wield Cuomo's failure as a political weapon.

On the same day, the Associated Press published a bombshell report revealing that thousands more coronavirus patients were sent to nursing homes than Cuomo previously admitted.

During a news conference Monday in Albany, Cuomo blamed nursing home staff for spreading the virus and repeated his insistence that his policy of sending coronavirus patients to nursing homes was not responsible for the wave of nursing home deaths.

The governor is also under fire for privately threatening a Democratic state lawmaker who publicly criticized him, telling him "you will be destroyed." That lawmaker, Assemblyman Ron Kim, went public with Cuomo's threat and inspired a renewed wave of criticism of the governor.

"We are deeply disturbed by the Governor's attacks on our colleague — a fellow Democrat — Assemblymember Kim," said 12 Democratic lawmakers in a joint statement condemning Cuomo's actions. They also announced support for legislation sponsored by Kim to strip Cuomo of his pandemic-related emergency powers.

"As a co-equal branch of government, the Legislature is well within its rights to seek oversight of executive action. In fact, we have a duty to seek that oversight," the lawmakers wrote in their statement.

"It is our job to represent our constituents and seek answers to the tragedies that took place in nursing homes around the State. We have no interest in name calling — we aim to restore the proper balance of power between the Legislature and Executive" branches of state government.