AG’s fall sudden, stunning
Having resigned amid allegations of abusing women, Schneiderman now faces criminal probe
NEW YORK » Less than three months ago, New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman went before the news cameras to announce a lawsuit accusing movie mogul Harvey Weinstein and his former studio of abusing and intimidating a multitude of women.
“We have never seen anything as despicable as what we’ve seen here,” Schneiderman declared.
Now, in a stunning turn rife with seeming hypocrisy, Schneiderman’s own career has imploded, collapsing just three hours after the 63-year-old Democrat was accused of choking, slapping, threatening or otherwise abusing four women during intimate encounters.
The allegations, which Schneiderman contests but which led him to resign, emerged Monday in an article in The New Yorker, a publication he hailed just last month for reporting on Weinstein and starting a “critical national reckoning” on sexual misconduct by powerful men.
It was a dizzying fall for a politician who put himself at the fore of the #MeToo movement and had cast himself as a defender of women ever since
he worked at an abortion clinic at 17.
He is now facing a criminal investigation by the same district attorney’s office looking into Weinstein’s behavior.
Schneiderman’s disgrace stunned women’s groups, which suddenly found themselves deploring a man they had embraced as a proven and powerful ally.
“This was someone who many of us held up as a supporter and champion of the fight against gender violence,” said Judy Harris Kluger, executive director of Sanctuary for Families, which aids domestic violence victims. She stood
beside Schneiderman when he announced a settlement last year with a hospital that had been billing rape victims for exams.
“A tremendous betrayal. There’s no other way to put it,” Kluger said.
Sonia Ossorio, president of the New York chapter of the National Organization for Women, said she was “shell-shocked” at the news. “When you have so few (male leaders) that prioritize women’s rights,” she said, “it hits like a ton of bricks.”
The National Institute for Reproductive Health, an abortion rights group, said it was “appalled and horrified”
at the alleged behavior of a man it honored as a “champion of choice” just last week at a luncheon.
The accusations rocked the state and added another chapter to its history of political sex shockers, including the prostitution scandal that felled Democratic Gov. Eliot Spitzer in 2008 and the serial sexting that ultimately put former Democratic Rep. Anthony Weiner in prison last fall.
Schneiderman denied assaulting anyone or engaging in nonconsensual sex — “a line I would not cross,” said the divorced father of a daughter. Contradicting his accusers, he characterized
his behavior as “roleplaying and other consensual sexual activity.”
In an interview with CNN, Ronan Farrow, coauthor of the New Yorker story, disputed Schneiderman’s account. The women, Farrow said, made clear “that this was not role-playing, that this was not ‘Fifty Shades of Grey.’ It wasn’t in a gray area at all.”
On Monday night, Schneiderman said he would resign at the close of business Tuesday because the claims will “effectively prevent me from leading the office’s work at this critical time.”
Among that work: investigating, at the governor’s request, how the Manhattan district attorney’s office handled a 2015 sexual assault complaint against Weinstein that resulted in no charges. Weinstein denies any nonconsensual sex.
The same district attorney’s office said it will now investigate Schneiderman. Authorities in Suffolk County on Long Island, where one of the women detailed alleged abuse by Schneiderman after a party in the Hamptons, also are investigating.
Before the scandal, Schneiderman had been running for a third fouryear term in the fall.