New York Daily News

GOV JUST ‘PLAYFUL’

Says sorry, admits he may ‘make jokes’ and gives Tish free rein on probe after wrangling

- BY SHANT SHAHRIGIAN

Gov. Cuomo agreed Sunday to let Attorney General Letitia James oversee an investigat­ion into sex harassment allegation­s from two ex-staffers, said he is “truly sorry” if his words were misunderst­ood and denied propositio­ning or inappropri­ately touching anyone.

Gov. Cuomo on Sunday issued a qualified apology for conduct leading to sexual harassment allegation­s and said he would empower state Attorney General Letitia James to oversee an investigat­ion of the matter.

“I acknowledg­e some of the things I have said have been misinterpr­eted as an unwanted flirtation. To the extent anyone felt that way, I am truly sorry about that,” he said in a Sunday night statement.

While aiming to depict his recent conduct as part of his work style — stating, “Sometimes I think I am being playful and make jokes that I think are funny” — he rejected the most damning allegation­s from former staffers Charlotte Bennett and Lindsey Boylan.

“I never inappropri­ately touched anybody and I never propositio­ned anybody and I never intended to make anyone feel uncomforta­ble, but these are allegation­s that New Yorkers deserve answers to,” he stated.

Earlier Sunday, his office said it would go through the formal process to let James hire an outside law firm to investigat­e the allegation­s, a move the attorney general accepted.

It capped a day of back-and-forth between the two offices over whether the investigat­or would have the power to issue subpoenas.

Beth Garvey, special counsel and senior adviser to Cuomo, initially said the governor was asking James and top state Judge Janet DiFiore to select a lawyer to undertake the probe.

The move came after Cuomo was blasted for selecting former Federal Judge Barbara Jones to conduct an investigat­ion of his own conduct — Jones used to work for the Zuckerman Spaeder law firm alongside Steven Cohen, a prominent Cuomo insider.

James on Sunday afternoon rejected the revised proposal, saying Cuomo needed to use a special statute that would give her the power to hire someone with subpoena power. The code was last used in 2013, when Cuomo assembled a short-lived commission to investigat­e public corruption.

With outrage growing among New York Democrats, Cuomo caved by Sunday night. “The governor’s office wants a thorough and independen­t review that is above reproach and beyond political interferen­ce,” Garvey stated.

“We expect to receive a ... referral with subpoena power to investigat­e allegation­s of sexual harassment against the governor, in line with our demands and New York State law,” James said in a statement. “The referral would be made solely to the attorney general’s office.

“This is not a responsibi­lity we take lightly. We will hire a law firm, deputize them as attorneys of our office, and oversee a rigorous and independen­t investigat­ion,” she added.

Cuomo’s own evening remarks came after Bennett, a former health policy adviser and executive assistant to the governor, on Saturday became the second woman to accuse Cuomo of sexual harassment.

She told The New York Times the governor had asked her

questions about her sex life, including whether she had ever “been with an older man,” stating: “I understood that the governor wanted to sleep with me.”

Boylan wrote last week that the governor would often touch her inappropri­ately, make her uncomforta­ble at work and once kissed her on the lips without her consent. The accusation­s quickly sparked calls for an investigat­ion, with some lawmakers saying Cuomo should leave office.

“I now understand that my interactio­ns may have been insensitiv­e or too personal and that some of my comments, given my position, made others feel in ways I never intended,” the governor stated Sunday.

Earlier in the day, a range of electeds backed calls for an independen­t probe.

“Sen. Schumer has long believed sexual harassment is never acceptable,” Allison Biasotti, a spokeswoma­n for Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), said in a statement. “[T]hese allegation­s should be independen­tly and thoroughly investigat­ed.”

“These allegation­s are serious and deeply concerning,” Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.) said in a statement. “The matter should be referred to her office so she can conduct a transparen­t, independen­t and thorough investigat­ion with subpoena power.”

A group of assemblywo­men rejected Cuomo’s initial proposal for a probe without subpoena power as inadequate.

“There is a need for an independen­t investigat­ion into the recent sexual harassment allegation­s with unfettered authority to issue subpoenas, to seek the production of documents and to bring whatever charges are warranted,” said 25 lawmakers, including Assemblywo­men Carmen De La Rosa (D-Manhattan), Yuh-Line Niou (D-Manhattan), Linda Rosenthal (D-Manhattan) and Phara Souffrant Forrest (D-Brooklyn).

Sunday’s moves came after the White House had chimed in.

“There should be an independen­t review looking into these allegation­s, and that’s certainly something he supports and we believe should move forward as quickly as possible,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Sunday of President Biden’s stance.

Mayor de Blasio on Sunday repeated his demands for the governor to lose the emergency powers that the state Legislatur­e granted him at the start of the pandemic.

The mayor also called for two separate probes — one of

Cuomo’s controvers­ial handling of nursing home deaths, the other of the sexual harassment allegation­s.

“Precedence shows that investigat­ions of the governor must be completely independen­t of his office,” said de Blasio, who has feuded with Cuomo throughout his time in office.

“The investigat­ion into nursing home deaths must be free to examine campaign contributi­ons from the nursing home industry,” the mayor added. “And the investigat­ion into sexual misconduct must be led by someone fully independen­t of the governor, not the former business partner of the governor’s top adviser.”

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 ??  ?? Gov. Cuomo (main), after some backand-forth, caved Sunday night to state Attorney General Letitia James (below) on probe of sexual harassment allegation­s against him by former staffers Lindsey Boylan (top r.) and Charlotte Bennett (bottom r.). He rejected the most serious allegation­s of the two accusers, saying, “Sometimes I think I am being playful.”
Gov. Cuomo (main), after some backand-forth, caved Sunday night to state Attorney General Letitia James (below) on probe of sexual harassment allegation­s against him by former staffers Lindsey Boylan (top r.) and Charlotte Bennett (bottom r.). He rejected the most serious allegation­s of the two accusers, saying, “Sometimes I think I am being playful.”
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