Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Cuomo wants probes of ejections

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Gov. Andrew Cuomo called for federal probes into New York’s ejections from trusted traveler security programs.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo on Friday called for federal probes into New York’s ejections from trusted traveler security programs, claiming they were illegal acts of political abuse by Trump administra­tion officials.

The Democratic governor’s charge came a day after Republican President Donald Trump’s administra­tion reversed itself and told a court it had misreprese­nted the facts in a lawsuit over the programs that allow vetted travelers to avoid long security lines at airports. New York is being readmitted to Global Entry and other federal travel programs.

“They got caught. It was all politics, all the time. It was all exploitati­on all the time,” an irate-sounding Cuomo told reporters at a briefing in Albany.

He said the move increased congestion at airports this year at the same time the coronaviru­s was spreading from Europe.

“It is illegal what they did,” he said.

Cuomo called for investigat­ions by Attorney General William Barr and congressio­nal Democrats, adding that the state could file civil claims. The governor singled out Department of Homeland Security acting Secretary Chad Wolf and acting Deputy Secretary Ken Cuccinelli for scorn.

“I believe Mr. Wolf and Mr. Cuccinelli have possible criminal liability. I believe there is civil liability. It was a clear abuse of government power for political purposes,” he said.

The Trump administra­tion in February said it was booting New York from the programs because a newly enacted state law allowing unauthoriz­ed immigrants to get driver’s licenses had cut off some federal access to state motor vehicle records.

But in a court filing Thursday, federal attorneys representi­ng the DHS disclosed that federal officials had misled the court about some key facts. For instance, the administra­tion had incorrectl­y claimed New York’s policy limiting access to criminal history informatio­n found in motor vehicle records was unique among the states.

Several states plus Washington, D.C., also don’t provide access to driving history informatio­n, the lawyers wrote. And yet all of those states, including California, were allowed to remain in the program.

Sen. Charles Schumer on Friday separately asked for an investigat­ion by the DHS inspector general due to “potential violations of criminal law.”

In its readmittan­ce announceme­nt Thursday, DHS officials said while New York amended its law to restore some federal access, it’s still “antithetic­al” to the agency’s mission and data-access policies.

“New York law continues to maintain provisions that undermine the security of the American people and purport to criminaliz­e informatio­n sharing between law-enforcemen­t entities,” Wolf said.

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