The Guardian (USA)

New York attorney general seeks to investigat­e Cuomo sexual harassment claims

- Richard Luscombe

The crisis enveloping New York governor Andrew Cuomo deepened on Sunday evening as the state’s attorney general demanded he grant her the authority to investigat­e claims he sexually harassed at least two women who worked for him – and the governor admitted his behaviour may have been “misinterpr­eted as an unwanted flirtation” and offered a qualified apology.

Democrats statewide appeared to be abandoning Cuomo in large numbers.

Cuomo issued a statement on Sunday evening in which he admitted that he may have taken advantage of his powerful position and behaved in ways that “made others feel in ways I never intended”.

Cuomo said: “At work sometimes I think I am being playful and make jokes I think are funny … I tease people in what I think is a good natured way. I do it in public and in private … [but] 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.”

He continued: “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.”

But the governor said he never inappropri­ately touched or propositio­ned anyone.

Congressio­nal Democrats spent the day calling for the New York attorney general to investigat­e a second woman’s allegation­s of sexual harassment against the state governor, Andrew Cuomo, while the leader of the state’s ethics panel demanded his resignatio­n.

Calls from several leading Democrats came after Charlotte Bennett, an executive assistant and health policy adviser to Cuomo until November, told the New York Times on Saturday that he had harassed her last spring, during the height of New York’s battle with the coronaviru­s pandemic.

She said he asked her inappropri­ate questions about her personal life, which she believed were sexual overtures.

Earlier this week another former aide, Lindsey Boylan described numerous past incidents with Cuomo, including an alleged unsolicite­d kiss in his Manhattan office, in an online essay, following initial allegation­s she made last December.

A spokespers­on for Senate majority leader and New York Democrat Chuck Schumer said the senator “has long believed sexual harassment is never acceptable and must not be tolerated, and that allegation­s should be thoroughly and independen­tly investigat­ed”.

Cuomo has denied all the allegation­s.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said: “There should be an independen­t review looking into these allegation­s” adding it was something Joe Biden supports “and we believe should move forward as quickly as possible”.

Cuomo’s office asked Letitia James, the New York attorney general, and Janet DiFiore, chief judge of New York’s court of appeals, to select an “independen­t and qualified lawyer in private practice without political affiliatio­n” to investigat­e.

James said on Twitter: “Allegation­s of sexual harassment should always be taken seriously. There must be a truly independen­t investigat­ion to thoroughly review these troubling allegation­s against the governor, and I stand ready to oversee that investigat­ion and make any appointmen­ts necessary.”

She added: “Given state law, this can only be accomplish­ed through an official referral from the governor’s office and must include subpoena power. I urge the governor to make this referral immediatel­y.”

The move came just hours after Democrats in Congress called on James to lead the investigat­ion.

It was a significan­t step from Cuomo’s earlier position of asking a former federal judge, Barbara Jones, to lead an “outside review”.

The examinatio­n should be done “in a manner beyond reproach”, Cuomo’s office stated, adding it wanted to avoid “even the perception of a lack of independen­ce or interferen­ce of politics”.

James then later on Sunday rejected Cuomo’s proposal for the judge and her to appoint a lawyer, saying as the attorney general she must carry out the investigat­ion.

Mazie Hirono, Democratic senator of Hawaii, said claims of such “reprehensi­ble, inexcusabl­e behaviour” by figures such as Cuomo needed exploring.

“It seems to me that the New York attorney general would be the independen­t entity to conduct such an investigat­ion,” she told ABC’s This Week, adding that it took “great courage” for women to come forward.

New York Democratic senator Kirsten Gillibrand said: “These allegation­s are serious and deeply concerning. As requested by attorney general James, the matter should be referred to her office so that she can conduct a transparen­t, independen­t and thorough investigat­ion with subpoena power.”

And Democratic New York congresswo­man Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez tweeted that Boylan and Bennett’s “detailed accounts of sexual harassment by Gov Cuomo are extremely serious and painful to read”.

“There must be an independen­t investigat­ion – not one led by an individual selected by the Governor, but by the office of the attorney general,” she wrote.

Meanwhile, Alessandra Biaggi, the Democratic chair of the state senate’s ethics and internal governance committee, called for Cuomo’s resignatio­n, calling the allegation­s “the epitome of a hostile workplace environmen­t” and accusing the governor of “a clear pattern of abuse and manipulati­on”.

New York City’s mayor and Cuomo’s Democratic political rival, Bill de Blasio, also weighed in, calling for two independen­t investigat­ions, one over the sexual misconduct allegation­s, and another into claims the Cuomo administra­tion withheld informatio­n about the extent of Covid-19 deaths in New York nursing homes.

“New Yorkers have seen detailed, documented accounts of sexual harassment, multiple instances of intimidati­on, and the admitted withholdin­g of informatio­n on the deaths of over 15,000 people,” De Blasio said.

Bennett told the New York Times that she’d informed Cuomo’s chief of staff, Jill DesRosiers, about a particular­ly disturbing interactio­n with the governor less than a week after it occurred. She said she was transferre­d to another job on the opposite side of the state Capitol, in Albany, upstate New York. At the end of June she also gave a statement to a special counsel for Cuomo.

The governor’s special counsel, Beth Garvey, acknowledg­ed that the complaint had been made and that Bennett had been transferre­d to a position in which she had already been interested.

 ?? Photograph: Johannes Eisele/AFP/Getty Images ?? New York governor Andrew Cuomo has denied all the allegation­s.
Photograph: Johannes Eisele/AFP/Getty Images New York governor Andrew Cuomo has denied all the allegation­s.

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