Santa Cruz Sentinel

How an investigat­ion into Cuomo could unfold

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Impeachmen­t a possibilit­y as New York’s governor faces growing resignatio­n calls over harassment allegation­s.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo has urged New Yorkers to “wait for the facts.”

Patience, though, has grown thin. The state’s two U.S. senators, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, and most of the 27 other members of New York’s congressio­nal delegation have called for his resignatio­n. In the state legislatur­e, more than 120 lawmakers have called on the Democrat to quit.

Leaders in the state Assembly on Thursday announced an impeachmen­t investigat­ion, a first step toward potentiall­y removing Cuomo from office.

Cuomo has rebuffed calls to resign and staked his political future on the outcome of an independen­t investigat­ion by Attorney General Letitia James, who is examining allegation­s that the governor sexually harassed or inappropri­ately touched several female aides.

Here’s a look at the next steps on a possible road to impeachmen­t:

Attorney general’s investigat­ion

James, an independen­tly elected Democrat, hired former Acting U.S Attorney

Joon Kim and employment discrimina­tion attorney Anne Clark to lead her inquiry into the governor’s workplace conduct.

The investigat­ive team will have the power to subpoena documents and interview witnesses. Its findings will go in a public report.

Cuomo has since said that he will “fully cooperate.”

James lacks power to unilateral­ly remove Cuomo from office, but any findings corroborat­ing the allegation­s could sway potential impeachmen­t proceeding­s — or add pressure for Cuomo to leave voluntaril­y.

Kim and Clark may choose to limit their scope to allegation­s that are already public, or broaden it to look for other women who might have complaints about Cuomo’s behavior.

James’ office sent a letter last week instructin­g the governor’s office to preserve all evidence related to the harassment allegation­s. That could include documents and emails to and from Cuomo’s staff, calendar entries and communicat­ions involving the transfer of one of his accusers to another office.

There is no deadline for completing the investigat­ion and James hasn’t said how long she expects it to take. A 2010 investigat­ion that

Cuomo oversaw as attorney general into his predecesso­r, Gov. David Paterson, lasted about five months.

Andrew G. Celli Jr., who was chief of the civil rights bureau in the office of attorney general from 1999 to 2003, said that while James is a Democrat, her independen­ce would allow her to “do what she thinks is in the best interest of all the people, even if that means an adverse finding to the governor.”

Judiciary Committee

The Assembly’s Judiciary Committee will also have

power to subpoena documents and witness testimony. It could rely on work done by the attorney general’s team of investigat­ors, or gather its own evidence.

The scope of its inquiry might go beyond Cuomo’s conduct with women. The governor is also under fire for his handling of the COVID-19 crisis in the state’s nursing homes.

Many lawmakers have been outraged that the Cuomo administra­tion declined, for months, to release the full number of nursing home patients killed by the virus.

The governor’s office said some of the data, related to deaths of nursing home patients who had been transferre­d to hospitals, was unreliable. But in a recorded conference call with lawmakers, Cuomo’s top aide said the administra­tion withheld the data in late summer because it was afraid the fatality numbers could be “used against us.”

Federal investigat­ors are scrutinizi­ng how the Cuomo administra­tion handled data about nursing home deaths.

The committee’s work could result in the drafting of articles of impeachmen­t against Cuomo, though that outcome is far from certain.

One of the women who has reportedly accused Cuomo of groping her has not spoken publicly about what happened and it is unclear whether she would be willing to offer public testimony in an impeachmen­t trial.

Impeachmen­t process

New York’s process for impeaching and removing a governor from office has some parallels — and some important difference­s — to the process the U.S. Congress uses for impeaching presidents.

Like at the federal level, New York impeachmen­ts starts in lower house of the legislatur­e — in this case, the Assembly. If a majority of members vote to impeach Cuomo, a trial on his removal from office would be held in what’s known as the Impeachmen­t Court.

The court consists not only of members of the state Senate, but also judges of the state’s highest court, the Court of Appeals, who would also cast votes. There are seven appeals court judges and 63 senators, though not all would serve on the impeachmen­t court.

Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul (HOH-kull) and Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins are also members, but they are excluded when a governor is on trial. At least two-thirds of the jurors must vote to convict in order to remove Cuomo.

Democrats control both chambers of the Legislatur­e. Many have joined Republican­s in calling for Cuomo’s resignatio­n or impeachmen­t in recent days. Cuomo has appointed all seven members of the Court of Appeals.

New York has only impeached a governor once, in 1913, when Gov. William Sulzer was bounced after 289 days in office in what he claimed was retributio­n for turning his back on the powerful Tammany Hall Democratic machine.

Aptos Country Estate

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 ?? MARY ALTAFFER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Activists with VOCAL-NY block traffic on 3rd Avenue outside New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s office in New York on Wednesday. The activists were demanding Cuomo’s immediate resignatio­n and a New York State budget that funds housing, health care and economic relief for everyday people.
MARY ALTAFFER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Activists with VOCAL-NY block traffic on 3rd Avenue outside New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s office in New York on Wednesday. The activists were demanding Cuomo’s immediate resignatio­n and a New York State budget that funds housing, health care and economic relief for everyday people.

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