Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Trooper’s suit says Cuomo, aide, agency violated rights

- MARINA VILLENEUVE

ALBANY, N.Y. — A New York state trooper who testified that former Gov. Andrew Cuomo sexually harassed her filed a lawsuit Thursday asking a federal court to declare that Cuomo, a top aide and state police violated her civil rights.

The trooper’s name was not disclosed in the lawsuit filed against Cuomo, the New York State Police and Cuomo’s former top aide Melissa DeRosa. The suit seeks attorney fees, damages for “severe mental anguish and emotional distress,” and a declarator­y judgment that Cuomo, DeRosa and the state police violated civil laws on the federal, state and city level prohibitin­g sexual harassment.

Cuomo resigned in August, days after an independen­t probe found that he sexually harassed nearly a dozen women and that he and aides worked to retaliate against one of his accusers. Those accusers included the unnamed state trooper on his security detail, who said he allegedly subjected her to sexual remarks and on occasion ran his hand or fingers across her stomach and her back.

“As with his other victims, the governor used his physical proximity to Trooper 1 to touch her inappropri­ately,” the lawsuit alleges.

“He commented on her appearance [‘why don’t you wear a dress?]; wanted to kiss her [‘can I kiss you?’]; asked her to find him a girlfriend who could ‘handle pain;’ and steered their conversati­ons towards sex ‘[why would you want to get married? … your sex drive goes down’],” the suit said.

Several district attorneys in New York said they found Cuomo’s accusers “credible,” but that the available evidence wasn’t strong enough to press criminal charges against him.

Cuomo spokespers­on Rich Azzopardi blasted the trooper’s lawsuit.

“Gov. Cuomo will fight every attempt at cheap cash extortions and is anxious to have the dirty politics stop — we look forward to justice in a court of law,” Azzopardi said Thursday.

Cuomo told investigat­ors that he would hug the female trooper hello and that he “may have touched her shoulder.” He said he didn’t remember running his fingers down her back or touching her stomach.

“If I did, it was incidental, and I don’t remember doing that,” he said.

The trooper’s lawsuit claims that DeRosa helped “cover up” Cuomo’s sexual harassment.

DeRosa’s attorney Paul Schectman said his client interacted with the trooper only to say “hello and goodbye,” calling the lawsuit “beyond frivolous.”

A spokespers­on for the New York State Police declined to comment Thursday.

The lawsuit also claims that Cuomo and DeRosa tried to silence the trooper and other women who alleged harassment.

In November, DeRosa tweeted that the trooper “attempted to extort me for money.” The lawsuit alleges that by doing so, DeRosa “retaliated” against the trooper, whose attorney in September sent a letter “asserting her legal rights” to Cuomo and DeRosa.

Cuomo recently announced that he’ll file ethics charges against the independen­t investigat­ors who led the probe, and that he would alert local prosecutor­s about alleged “perjury” and “witness tampering.”

“The Governor and his enablers have threatened criminal charges against his victims and ethics charges against their attorneys in a blunt — but transparen­t — effort to dissuade them, including Trooper 1, from seeking to vindicate their legal rights under civil laws that prohibit sexual harassment,” the lawsuit reads.

Cuomo championed a 2019 law that lowered the state’s civil standard for sexual harassment to conduct above “petty slights and trivial inconvenie­nces.”

Civil penalties for sexual harassment in New York include monetary damages, fines, attorney fees and orders requiring employers to take action to stop harassment.

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