New York Daily News

Cuomo accuser says he bragged of ‘large’ hands

- BY DENIS SLATTERY AND CHRIS SOMMERFELD­T

One of the women accusing Gov. Cuomo of harassment told state Attorney General Letitia James’ investigat­ors on Monday that the governor often boasted to her about “his hand size” in an off-color attempt at sexual innuendo, according to a lawyer representi­ng the former aide.

Charlotte Bennett, who has alleged Cuomo subjected her to inappropri­ate comments about her sex life while she worked as a health policy adviser in his administra­tion, divulged the eyebrow-raising detail about the governor’s hands while meeting for the first time with James’ investigat­ors over Zoom for an interview that lasted more than four hours, attorney Debra Katz said in a statement.

“One piece of new informatio­n that came to light today was the governor’s preoccupat­ion with his hand size and what the large size of his hands indicated to Charlotte and other members of his staff,”

Katz said.

A spokesman for Cuomo did not return a request for comment.

Katz said Bennett (inset) also turned over more than 120 pages of “contempora­neous records” and other evidence to the AG’s team, which is independen­tly investigat­ing a string of sexual harassment accusation­s against Cuomo.

James’ probe is being handled by former federal Manhattan prosecutor Joon Kim and employment discrimina­tion lawyer Anne Clark.

“The investigat­ors have been moving quickly, and with sensitivit­y, to get to the heart of these allegation­s,” Katz said. “We remain confident that their investigat­ion will substantia­te Charlotte’s claims of sexual harassment against Gov. Cuomo, as well as the failure of his senior staff to meet their mandatory reporting requiremen­ts under the very laws he signed.”

The previously unknown detail about Cuomo’s hand size boasts adds to Bennett’s claims that the 63-year-old governor frequently made suggestive remarks while she worked for him, like asking if she had ever been romantical­ly involved with an older man.

Bennett, 25, is among seven women who have accused Cuomo of a range of inappropri­ate comments, behavior or harassment.

The most serious allegation comes from an unidentifi­ed woman who says the governor groped her under her blouse after summoning her to the Executive Mansion in Albany on the pretext that he needed help configurin­g a new cell phone.

Lindsey Boylan, a former economic adviser to Cuomo who is currently running for Manhattan borough president, also alleges that the governor’s behavior went beyond verbal harassment, saying he once forcibly kissed her on the lips in his Manhattan office.

Bennett is confident there are more women who have been victimized by Cuomo, according to Katz.

“We urge others who have been subjected to inappropri­ate conduct by the governor — and we know you are out there — to come forward with what you experience­d,” Katz said.

Cuomo vehemently denies ever inappropri­ately touching anyone, but that hasn’t stopped dozens of Democrats in the state Legislatur­e from calling on him to resign. Nearly every Democrat in the New York congressio­nal delegation, including Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, has also called on Cuomo to step down.

Still, the embattled governor said as recently as Friday that he won’t resign under any circumstan­ce, effectivel­y daring Democrats in the state Legislatur­e to impeach him.

Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie (D-Bronx), who announced an impeachmen­t investigat­ion of Cuomo last week, told reporters at the state Capitol in Albany on Monday that, much like James’ independen­t review, his chamber will be hiring an outside law firm to help with its probe.

An announceme­nt on the outside counsel will come “sometime this week,” Heastie said.

“I think to say you have to come back with a decision in a week or two weeks or a month would be unfair to the process of an investigat­ion,” he said.

The impeachmen­t probe, which will have subpoena power, will be “very broad” and go beyond just the sexual harassment allegation­s, Heastie said, likely a reference to the twin scandal Cuomo faces over his administra­tion’s handling of coronaviru­s deaths in state nursing homes.

Heastie urged patience, for the public and his own members, as the probe plays out.

“There are some members who want an immediate impeachmen­t,” he said. “I’d say the overwhelmi­ng majority believes in due process and that’s why we’re moving forward with an impeachmen­t investigat­ion.”

The pleas for cool heads are not shared by some of Heastie’s fellow Democrats.

Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, a longtime advocate for victims of sexual assault, said the continued toll of the coronaviru­s pandemic adds a layer of urgency to the calls for Cuomo’s ouster.

“The governor has to resign,” Gillibrand told reporters at her Midtown office on Sunday. “Focused leadership is needed right now.”

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