Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Vaccine official scrutinize­d in N.Y.

County executives said to be quizzed on loyalty to governor

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NEW YORK — Investigat­ors looking into the sexual harassment allegation­s against New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo interviewe­d county officials about his vaccine point man calling them to assess their support for the embattled governor.

The Wall Street Journal reported Saturday that investigat­ors with the state attorney general’s office interviewe­d at least three Democratic county executives who say Larry Schwartz called to gauge their loyalty to the governor and whether they would urge him to resign.

One county executive was disturbed by the call and complained to the state attorney general’s office, according to reports published in March in The New York Times and The Washington Post. The executive, who hasn’t been named, feared the county’s vaccine supply could suffer if the executive did not indicate support for Cuomo, the Post reported.

Another county executive, Mark Poloncarz of Erie County, told the Journal that he spoke with investigat­ors March 30 and told them that he didn’t feel Schwartz was trying to pressure him.

Investigat­ors also spoke with Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone. He has said publicly that he told Schwartz that he favored an independen­t investigat­ion into Cuomo’s conduct and that Schwartz did not talk about vaccines during their conversati­on.

The New York Times previously reported investigat­ors’ interest in the calls.

Schwartz has acknowledg­ed making calls to county executives but said he “did nothing wrong” and denied discussing vaccines during those conversati­ons.

The state attorney general’s office declined to comment. Cuomo’s office referred to a statement that Beth Garvey, acting counsel to the governor, issued on the matter in March. She said then that allegation­s that Schwartz acted unethicall­y or against the interests of New Yorkers were “patently false.”

“Larry’s conversati­ons did not bring up vaccine distributi­on — he would never link political support to public health decisions,” Garvey said. “Distorting Larry’s role or intentions for headlines maligns a decades-long public servant who has done nothing but volunteer around the clock since March (2020) to help New York get through the COVID pandemic.”

Schwartz, an executive at a company that runs restaurant­s and other services at major airports, resigned from his volunteer position last week ahead of a change in state rules that would’ve barred him from lobbying the governor’s office for two years if he stayed on.

Schwartz was secretary to the governor from 2011 to 2015 and remains a member of the board of directors at the Metropolit­an Transporta­tion Authority, the state agency that runs public transit in the New York City area.

Attorney General Letitia James, an independen­tly elected Democrat, hired former acting U.S. Attorney Joon Kim and employment discrimina­tion attorney Anne Clark in March to lead an investigat­ion into allegation­s that Cuomo sexually harassed or behaved inappropri­ately toward several women, including former staffers.

The three-term governor has denied touching any women inappropri­ately and rejected calls for his resignatio­n from fellow Democrats, including New York’s two U.S. senators, Charles Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand.

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