Los Angeles Times

Pair appointed to lead Cuomo inquiry

New York Atty. Gen. Letitia James chooses a former federal prosecutor and an employment lawyer.

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ALBANY, N.Y. — New York Atty. Gen. Letitia James on Monday appointed a former federal prosecutor and an employment lawyer to investigat­e allegation­s that Gov. Andrew Cuomo sexually harassed female aides.

Joon Kim, who was the acting U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York for parts of 2017 and 2018, will join employment lawyer Anne Clark in conducting the inquiry, the attorney general’s office said.

“There is no question that they both have the knowledge and background necessary to lead this investigat­ion and provide New Yorkers with the answers they deserve,” James said in a statement.

The lawyer for Charlotte Bennett, one of the aides making an accusation, said the selection of the two to carry out the investigat­ion showed James was taking the matter “very seriously.”

“We are encouraged by the experience and background of the attorneys who will be investigat­ing Charlotte’s claims,” attorney Debra Katz said in a statement.

As a top federal prosecutor in Manhattan, Kim played a role in its investigat­ions of corruption in state government, including a case against one of Cuomo’s closest friends and aides.

The appointmen­ts came as New York lawmakers were privately debating whether to join calls for Cuomo to resign from office or to urge patience while the investigat­ion was ongoing.

A group of 21 women in the state Assembly released a statement Monday asking that James be given time to complete her inquiry.

The group included the No. 2 Democrat in the Assembly,

Majority Leader Crystal Peoples-Stokes. The lawmakers began working on the statement Sunday night after the Senate’s top leader, Andrea StewartCou­sins, called on Cuomo to resign.

“We continue to support our attorney general, the first woman, and the first African American woman to be elected to this position, as she launches this investigat­ion,” the lawmakers’ statement said. “We request that she be allowed the appropriat­e time to complete her investigat­ion rather than undermine her role and responsibi­lity as the chief law enforcemen­t officer of the

state of New York.”

Assembly Democrats were caucusing Monday as legislator­s faced increasing pressure to take a stance.

Cuomo, meanwhile, appeared with Black clergy members Monday at a COVID-19 vaccinatio­n site in New York City. The event was closed to reporters, but Cuomo said Sunday that he had no intention of resigning and believed he could continue to govern.

Several women, including three former members of Cuomo’s staff, have accused him of making inappropri­ate comments about their appearance, asking questions about their sex life and, in some cases, giving them uncomforta­ble hugs or unwanted kisses.

The governor has denied touching anyone inappropri­ately, and says some of the allegation­s are false. But he has acknowledg­ed, and apologized for, engaging in “banter” in the office that some women interprete­d as flirting. Cuomo has said he didn’t realize at the time that his actions were harmful.

Kim became the leader of the federal prosecutor’s office in Manhattan in 2017 after U.S. Atty. Preet Bharara was fired by President Trump.

Before then, Kim held various top posts in the office, including deputy U.S. attorney and chief of the criminal division.

During those years, the office investigat­ed Joseph Percoco, a longtime Cuomo friend and top aide who was ultimately sentenced to six years in prison for accepting more than $300,000 from companies that wanted to gain influence with the governor’s administra­tion. Cuomo had once likened Percoco to a brother.

Clark is a New York City employment lawyer who has handled sexual harassment, disability discrimina­tion and equal pay cases, among others. Early in her career, she worked on employment law matters with what was then the National Organizati­on for Women’s Legal Defense and Education Fund; it’s now called Legal Momentum.

 ?? Seth Wenig Pool Photo ?? NEW YORK Gov. Andrew Cuomo has said that he will not resign and that he will await the results of the state attorney general’s investigat­ion into his actions.
Seth Wenig Pool Photo NEW YORK Gov. Andrew Cuomo has said that he will not resign and that he will await the results of the state attorney general’s investigat­ion into his actions.

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