The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Former Cuomo appointee exonerated

- By Chris Carola

A state ethics panel said it found no evidence that William Hoyt sexually assaulted his accuser.

ALBANY, N.Y. » A New York state ethics panel said it found no evidence to back a woman’s claims that a former Cuomo administra­tion appointee sexually harassed and assaulted her after finding her a place to live and helping her land a job with the state.

The Joint Commission on Public Ethics said it reviewed hundreds of re- cords while investigat­ing Lisa Marie Cater’s allegation­s stemming from her personal relationsh­ip with William “Sam” Hoyt starting in late 2015.

In a letter sent last Thursday to Mark Glaser, Hoyt’s Albany attorney, JCOPE said it found no evidence that Hoyt harassed or assaulted her. The panel also said it found no evidence that Hoyt had threatened Cater’s employment at the Department of Motor Ve- hicles in Buffalo, as she had claimed, or that he violated the state’s public officers law.

“The Commission does not find Ms. Cater or any of her claims to be credible,” JCOPE’s letter said. “Indeed, Ms. Cater was, more often than not, evasive and unresponsi­ve, initially refusing to meet with and then refusing to answer many questions or provide additional documents to the Commission.”

Hoyt, a former state assemblyma­n from Buffalo, was appointed a regional president for Empire State Developmen­t by Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo in 2011. He resigned in October 2017, a day before Cater’s sexual harassment claims emerged.

After resigning, Hoyt said he had a relationsh­ip with Cater that he described as short-term and consensual. He helped her find housing and assisted her effort to get a DMV job before their relationsh­ip soured in 2016. Later, he agreed to pay her $50,000 in exchange for Cater’s silence on the relationsh­ip.

The Governor’s Office of Employee Relations opened an investigat­ion after Cater filed a complaint against Hoyt in October 2016. The state Inspector General’s Office also investigat­ed before forwarding the probe to JCOPE.

“As far the state is con- cerned, this is done,” Glaser said Monday.

Cater has named Hoyt in a lawsuit she filed last fall in federal court in Manhattan. In the lawsuit, she claims Hoyt assaulted her and that the governor knew of the abuse but did nothing to stop it. Cuomo’s office denied the allegation.

Paul Liggieri, the attorney representi­ng Cater in the federal lawsuit, wasn’t available to comment on JCOPE’s findings.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States