Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

'Crime' drama at the state Capitol

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A Daily News reporter is arrested for violating a cellphone ban in the lobby outside the Senate chamber.

A veteran political journalist for the New York Daily News was arrested Wednesday for violating a cellphone ban in the lobby of the state Senate, only to be quickly released by Gov. Andrew Cuomo.

Ken Lovett was handcuffed and taken into custody by state police after a Senate guard observed him speaking on his cellphone in the lobby, an ornate room immediatel­y outside the Senate chambers in the state Capitol.

Posted signs say phone calls are prohibited in the lobby. The Senate wasn’t in session at the time of the phone call or the arrest.

Shortly afterward, Cuomo, a Democrat, walked to the state police office near the Capitol and ordered Lovett’s release.

“Freedom of the press is alive and well in the city of Albany,” Cuomo told reporters.

Senate spokesman Scott Reif said that before the arrest, Lovett was asked to comply with the Senate’s rules and refused. He said “the incident escalated quickly” but that Senate officials “very much regret the incident.”

While the signs prohibitin­g phone calls are clearly visible in the lobby, the rules are commonly ignored by lobbyists, journalist­s and members of the public, especially when the Senate is not in session.

Lovett said he ended the phone call after the sergeant-at-arms demanded he

do so, but questioned the guard when he demanded that Lovett leave the lobby, a public space in a public building.

Lovett has covered state politics for more than two decades. After his release he told The Associated Press that he doesn’t use his phone in the lobby when lawmakers are in session but often takes calls when they’re not present. He said Senate guards have seen

him do so in the past and never asked him to stop.

He commended the state police for their profession­alism during his brief detention and said that the episode will “make a good bar story.”

Cuomo, who has an often testy relationsh­ip with the state Capitol press corps, joked to reporters that he offered his services to Lovett on a pro bono basis. The governor is an attorney.

“I know that Ken Lovett can be a dangerous man,” Cuomo joked. “It just does my heart good to say I freed Ken Lovett.”

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