Albany Times Union

FBI looking for false data

Agents question aides to Cuomo, health department officials, subpoena documents

- By J. David Goodman, Nicole Hong and Luis Ferré-sadurní

Agents question aides to Gov. Cuomo, health department officials and subpoena documents in the nursing home probe.

A federal investigat­ion into Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s handling of nursing homes during the pandemic has focused in recent weeks on whether the governor and his senior aides provided false data on resident deaths to the Justice Department, according to four people with knowledge of the investigat­ion.

Agents from the FBI have contacted lawyers for Cuomo’s aides, interviewe­d senior officials from the state Health Department and subpoenaed Cuomo’s office for documents related to the disclosure of data last year, the people said.

The interviews have included questions about informatio­n New York state submitted last year to the Justice Department, which had asked the state for data on COVID -19 cases and deaths in nursing homes, according to the people. False statements in such a submission could constitute a crime.

In some cases, agents traveled to the homes of state health officials to interview them about the data. In others, they spoke to officials by phone, according to the people, who requested anonymity to discuss the active investigat­ion.

The actions, which came in recent weeks, appeared to add to the legal pressure faced by Cuomo, as well as by his most senior aides, who may have played a role in withholdin­g the true count of nursing home deaths from the public for months.

A spokesman for the Eastern District of New York, which is overseeing the investigat­ion, declined to comment.

Elkan Abramowitz, an outside lawyer hired by the state to represent the governor’s office in the federal inquiry, said in a statement that “the submission in response to DOJ’S August request was truthful and accurate and any suggestion otherwise is demonstrab­ly false.”

Cuomo has faced scrutiny for months over his policies related to nursing homes. The question of how many nursing home residents had died — both in the facilities and after being treated at hospitals — became a political issue for Cuomo, a third-term

Democrat, as he came under criticism from both Democrats in Albany and from national Republican­s, including former President Donald Trump.

The state initially publicized only the number of residents who died of COVID -19 inside nursing homes, even after it became aware that thousands more residents had died after being transferre­d to hospitals.

Aides to the governor said they had not revealed data on residents who died in hospitals because the informatio­n was incomplete and needed to be vetted.

The state revealed the full count — which added thousands

of additional deaths — only in January, after a report by the state attorney general suggested an undercount, and after a state court ordered the data be made public in response to a lawsuit filed by the Empire Center, a conservati­ve think tank. As of this month, New York has recorded the deaths of more than 15,000 nursing home residents with COVID -19.

Melissa Derosa, Cuomo’s top aide, tried to explain why the administra­tion had withheld the data last year to state lawmakers in a conference call, saying she and others “froze” because of the federal request for data, which came in late August as the governor faced criticism over nursing homes.

But more than two months earlier, in June, Derosa and other aides removed such data from a report prepared by the Health Department, an investigat­ion by The New York Times found.

A chart included in an early draft of the report, which was reviewed by The Times, showed that the number of total deaths of nursing home residents would have been roughly 9,200 at the time, or 50 percent higher than what Cuomo’s administra­tion had publicly acknowledg­ed.

The governor’s aides have denied altering the report to withhold the data, arguing that they did not release the figures until they could be properly audited.

In her conference call with legislator­s, which took place last month, Derosa also said that the Cuomo administra­tion had fully cooperated with the Justice Department investigat­ion last year.

“They sent a letter asking a number of questions and then we satisfied those questions,” she said, according to a transcript of the conversati­on released by the governor’s office.

Federal investigat­ors also started questionin­g state officials this month about a provision in last year’s state budget that gave legal protection­s to hospitals and nursing homes during the pandemic, one of the people said.

Investigat­ors’ questions about the nursing home provision were first reported by The City, a local nonprofit newsroom.

The change made it difficult for families of residents who died or were infected by the coronaviru­s to sue nursing home operators or hospitals. The provision had been lobbied for by industry representa­tives.

Richard Azzopardi, a senior aide to Cuomo, said similar legislatio­n had passed in many other states and that New York’s measure “was passed by 111 members of the Legislatur­e.” He said the legal protection­s were needed to recruit out-of-state health care workers to help during the height of the surge last spring.

The federal investigat­ion has proceeded alongside a separate inquiry overseen by the state attorney general, Letitia James, into multiple accusation­s of sexual harassment and misconduct by Cuomo.

That investigat­ion has appeared to expand in recent days, as Joon Kim, a former federal prosecutor chosen by James to help lead the inquiry, has begun to ask about efforts to drum up support for the embattled Cuomo among Democratic county leaders, according to a person with knowledge of the investigat­ion.

Larry Schwartz, a senior adviser to Cuomo charged with overseeing vaccinatio­n planning, made a series of calls to county leaders in which, according to two Democratic county executives, he inquired about their loyalty to the governor. In at least one case, Schwartz pivoted from politics to a discussion of vaccine distributi­on.

One of the county executives complained to the attorney general about the calls, and in recent days, Kim has been looking into the matter, the person said.

A spokesman for the attorney general’s office declined to comment.

But amid the swirl of investigat­ions, those whose relatives died in nursing homes during the pandemic have worried that the federal inquiry has remained too narrow to adequately address their concerns over treatment in the nursing homes, and that the state inquiries were not addressing those concerns at all.

“The families have been waiting for an entire year for any semblance of an investigat­ion, a true, deep investigat­ion into what happened,” said Vivian Zayas, whose mother died in April after contractin­g the coronaviru­s in a nursing home on Long Island. “We’ve been asking for an investigat­ion with subpoena power at the state level, and the calls have fallen on deaf ears.”

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