Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Quislings of Albany scandal

- MAUREEN DOWD

“Pamela; or Virtue Rewarded” by Samuel Richardson is an 18thcentur­y British novel about a powerful man who makes life a horror for a pretty young maidservan­t by constantly harassing and assaulting her.

In the most shuddersom­e passage, he is aided in his efforts by Mrs. Jewkes, his housekeepe­r, who holds down Pamela in bed while the master tries to have his way with the teenager.

“Mrs. Jewkes, abhorrent creature!” Pamela writes to her parents, calling the housekeepe­r a “vile procuress.” Women who help men prey have been around forever. There may have been a brief period at the dawn of feminism when women thought the bonds of sisterhood would overcome this kind of behavior. But our culture has seen many disturbing examples of it in recent years.

Pushing back on a phone call with two journalist­s from The Times Union last March, Melissa DeRosa, Cuomo’s imperious top adviser, can be heard bristling at the suggestion that the governor’s office was set up so that he had attractive young women in his line of sight. She rejected the idea that she was the friendly face who left Charlotte Bennett, a 25-year-old executive assistant, to endure Creepy Cuomo Time.

“Am I Ghislaine Maxwell in this situation?” she demanded of the journalist­s, adding, “So then when you presented it as, like, Melissa Ghislaine DeRosa introduces herself to the poor innocent Charlotte Bennett as she walks through the door with the governor and the place is lined up to look at them. And there’s a predatory figure in Christian Louboutins saying, ‘Nice, I’m so glad you’re here.’”

DeRosa, 38, daughter of a powerful Albany lobbyist, who prides herself on her work on women’s issues, is right. She’s no Ghislaine. At least she confronted the governor about the reckless nature of his unsettling conversati­on with Bennett, a sexual assault survivor.

“I can’t believe you put yourself in a situation where you would be having any version of this conversati­on,” she angrily told Cuomo in a car, jumping out at a traffic light, according to the report.

But as Ross Barkan, author of a new book on Cuomo, wrote in New York magazine, “At every turn, DeRosa and her colleagues enabled Cuomo’s predation.”

Indeed, she helped lead efforts to discredit Lindsey Boylan, a former Cuomo aide and the first accuser to go public.

After Boylan tweeted that the governor was “one of the biggest abusers of all time,” DeRosa got Boylan’s confidenti­al personnel file, which contained complaints against her, and sent it to reporters, including the two at The Times Union, who told her they didn’t want it. Investigat­ors called DeRosa’s move unlawful retaliatio­n. The 168-page report makes it clear that DeRosa enforced a culture of secrecy, loyalty, fear and retaliatio­n.

One former Cuomo assistant, who testified that he grabbed her breast, kissed her on the lips and called her and a friend “mingle mamas,” told investigat­ors that it “was almost as if he knew he could get away with it because, if we were to say anything to anyone, he wasn’t the one that was going to get in trouble or go anywhere; it was going to be us.”

DeRosa directed a former staffer to call and record the conversati­on with a state employee who had tweeted her support of Boylan, in what the attorney general called a “fishing expedition” to see what other damaging informatio­n might be out there.

The report describes a draft of an op-ed that the governor wrote in response to Boylan that would have smeared her. Aides tried to defang it just enough to be acceptable. DeRosa’s lawyer, Roberta Kaplan, read the letter to the head of Time’s Up, and both women thought, with stipulatio­ns against shaming women, it could be good to go.

This part of the report, in which an organizati­on, founded amid the #MeToo furor supposedly to support victims of sexual harassment, was freelance editing for the sexual harassing governor, was cringewort­hy.

Along with the governor’s brother, Chris Cuomo of CNN, and Alphonso David, president of the Human Rights Campaign, Time’s Up was part of a trio of liberal facilitato­rs that helped the governor behind the scenes and ended up enmeshed in the scandal.

Andrew Cuomo couldn’t get a handle on his ego or stop indulging in Albany droit du seigneur. Now comes a mudslide that may wash away him, his brother’s reputation, the careers of DeRosa and company, and his family’s legacy.

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