The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Woman says Cuomo forcibly kissed her cheeks in 2017

- By Marina Villeneuve and Michael Hill

An upstate New York woman said Monday that New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo grabbed her face and kissed her cheek at her home during a visit to inspect local flood damage, becoming the latest woman to accuse the embattled governor of inappropri­ate behavior.

Sherry Vill made the allegation­s during a Zoom news conference with attorney Gloria Allred, describing a spring 2017 visit to her Rochester-area home after flooding near Lake Ontario. Cuomo kissed both of her cheeks in front of family members while inspecting her flood-damaged home in what Vill felt was a “highly sexual manner.”

Then, Vill said, the governor “stopped and turned to me and said, ‘You are beautiful.’” He then inspected the damage with his staff and kissed her cheek again outside her home. “While still holding one of my hands, he forcibly grabbed my face with his other big hand and kissed my cheek,” Vill said.

“I felt like I was being manhandled,” said Vill, now 55. Vill, who is about 5 feet (1.5 meters) tall, said the governor towered over her.

“The way he looked at me and his body language made me very uncomforta­ble,” she said. “I felt he was acting in a highly flirtatiou­s and inappropri­ate manner, especially in front of my family and neighbors.”

There was no immediate comment from the Cuomo administra­tion.

A series of women, some who worked for Cuomo, have accused him of using his position of authority to sexually harass them with unwanted touching including hugs or kisses, inappropri­ate remarks about their looks and comments they interprete­d as gauging their interest in sexual relations. Among his accusers are two aides who still work in the governor’s office. One, who has yet to speak publicly, reportedly said the governor groped her at the Executive Mansion last summer.

Cuomo has denied touching anyone inappropri­ately but said he’s sorry if he made anyone uncomforta­ble. The governor has said his tendency to hug and kiss people as a greeting stems from his Italianame­rican heritage.

But Vill said she “felt embarrasse­d and weird about him kissing me,” and said her Italian family doesn’t kiss strangers.

“I have been in business for many years and routinely interact with male customers and vendors,” she said. “I know the difference between an innocent gesture and a sexual one. I never felt as uncomforta­ble as I did the day Gov. Cuomo came to my home.”

Many Democrats who have called for his resignatio­n said the governor, who’s touted New York’s sweeping 2019 sexual harassment law that mandated anti-harassment training for employees, has acknowledg­ed behavior that he should know constitute­s sexual harassment.

New York’s definition of sexual harassment hinges on whether the behavior is of a sexual nature and someone feels uncomforta­ble or humiliated — not whether the alleged perpetrato­r intended to do so. Allred said all New Yorkers should be treated with dignity and respect even if they’re the governor’s employees.

The Democratic governor has brushed off widespread calls for his resignatio­n and asked that people wait for the results of an investigat­ion overseen by state Attorney General Letitia James.

Allred said Vill would cooperate with James’ investigat­ion, and that Vill will wait to see the results of the investigat­ion before weighing in on what should happen next.

The state Assembly is conducting a separate investigat­ion into whether there are grounds to impeach the governor. Allred said Vill has no plans to alert the law firm leading the Assembly judiciary committee’s investigat­ion and is focusing on the attorney general’s office.

“We’ll have to see what if anything she’s willing to do after that,” Allred said. “This is not easy for Sherry. As I said, she’s been very brave. She’s never been involved in a situation like this before.”

Allred said Vill has long wanted to report the Democratic governor’s conduct, but her family was worried he would “use his power to retaliate against her and her family.”

Vill shared a copy of a July 19, 2017, letter she received from the governor in which he said he’ll help homeowners affected by the flooding.

“It was a pleasure to meet you recently,” he wrote.

The letter was only addressed to Vill, who questioned why it wasn’t addressed to her son or longtime husband, whom the governor also met.

She said she received a phone call “within days” from a female employee on the governor’s staff who said the governor was having an event in town and asked if Vill would like to attend.

“Notably she didn’t say my husband and I, or my family and I, only specifical­ly me,” she said. “I purposely did not respond to the invitation. I felt very uneasy about the call. I was the only one who received the call and the personal invite form the governor.”

 ?? CARLO ALLEGRI—ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo speaks at an event at the new Settlement Community Center in the Bronx borough of New York, Friday, March 26, 2021.
CARLO ALLEGRI—ASSOCIATED PRESS New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo speaks at an event at the new Settlement Community Center in the Bronx borough of New York, Friday, March 26, 2021.

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