Penticton Herald

Legislatur­e won’t try to impeach Cuomo

- By MARINA VILLENEUVE

ALBANY, N.Y. — The New York state Assembly will suspend its investigat­ion of Gov. Andrew Cuomo once he steps down after its leaders concluded they didn't have the authority to impeach him once he leaves office, the chamber's top Democrat said Friday.

Cuomo announced Tuesday that he planned to resign over sexual harassment allegation­s as it became clear he was almost certain to be impeached by the Legislatur­e. He said his resignatio­n was effective in 14 days, at which point he will be replaced by Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul.

Some lawmakers had urged the Assembly to press on with an impeachmen­t proceeding, perhaps to bar Cuomo from holding state office in the future if he attempted a political comeback.

But Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie said in a statement that lawyers had advised the Legislatur­e's judiciary committee that doing so would be unconstitu­tional.

“Let me be clear -- the committee's work over the last several months, although not complete, did uncover credible evidence in relation to allegation­s that have been made in reference to the governor,” said Heastie, a New York City Democrat.

He said that included evidence related to the sexual harassment claims, possible misuse of state resources in conjunctio­n with publicatio­n of the governor's book on the pandemic, and “improper and misleading disclosure of nursing home data.”

“This evidence -- we believe -- could likely have resulted in articles of impeachmen­t had he not resigned,” Heastie said.

Cuomo's office and his lawyer, Rita Glavin, didn't immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

The state attorney general last week released an independen­t investigat­ion that concluded Cuomo sexually harassed at least 11 women.

The first woman to publicly accuse Cuomo of misconduct, Lindsey Boylan, called the Assembly leadership's decision to call off its separate investigat­ion “an unjust cop out.”

“The public deserves to know the extent of the Governor's misdeeds and possible crimes. His victims deserve justice and to know he will not be able harm others,” she wrote.

Since March, outside lawyers have been helping the Assembly conduct a wide-ranging investigat­ion on whether there were grounds to impeach Cuomo. The announceme­nt that the inquiry would cease came on a day the Assembly had initially set as a deadline for Cuomo's legal team to respond with any additional evidence refuting the allegation­s against him.

Heastie said that he's asked the Assembly's Judiciary Committee to turn over evidence it had gathered “to the relevant investigat­ory authoritie­s.”

Cuomo faces ongoing probes from the state attorney general over his $5 million book deal and from federal prosecutor­s, who are scrutinizi­ng his handling of nursing home deaths data. The state's ethics commission­ers, who could levy fines against Cuomo, are also looking into similar issues.

Heastie also cited “active investigat­ions” by county district attorneys in Manhattan, Albany, Westcheste­r, Nassau and Oswego concerning incidents of alleged sexual harassment by Cuomo.

Several women have said the governor inappropri­ately touched them, including an aide who said he groped her breast at his official residence, the Executive Mansion. That aide, Brittany Commisso, filed a criminal complaint that could result in a misdemeano­r groping charge.

Some Judiciary committee members said Friday they wanted the committee to at least release a public report on their findings.

Heastie's statement didn't say whether the committee would still publicize its findings.

Republican­s objected to the end of the legislatur­e's probe. Assembly Minority Leader Will Barclay called it “a massive disservice to the goals of transparen­cy and accountabi­lity.”

Assemblyme­mber Tom Abinanti, a Westcheste­r Democrat and member of Judiciary Committee, said he also objected to the decision.

“Cancelling the investigat­ion is premature,” he said. “The governor has not even left office. The committee should continue to meet and issue a public report to the people on the extensive investigat­ion that the committee and its attorneys have conducted to date.”

Legal experts this week said they had questions over both the legality and practicali­ty of trying to impeach Cuomo after he'd already left office.

Ross Garber, an attorney who has represente­d four recent U.S. governors facing impeachmen­t proceeding­s in their respective states, had told The Associated Press his reading of state law is that a person must be in office at the time of impeachmen­t.

Richard Rifkin, an attorney who has worked in state government for 40 years, including in the attorney general's office and as a special counsel to former Gov. Eliot Spitzer, said the language in the state Constituti­on on impeachmen­t was “really quite vague” and that there wasn't definitive precedent saying whether impeachmen­t could continue after Cuomo left office.

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