The Record (Troy, NY)

Probe of Cuomo may take ‘months’

State lawmakers examine impeachmen­t investigat­ion

- By Marina Villeneuve

ALBANY, N.Y. » The New York Legislatur­e’s impeachmen­t investigat­ion of Gov. Andrew Cuomo is likely to take “months,” the chair of the Assembly’s judiciary committee said Tuesday.

Cuomo, a Democrat, has resisted calls for his resignatio­n after multiple women accused him of sexual harassment. He’s also facing outrage over his administra­tion’s decision to withhold informatio­n about COVID-19 deaths in nursing homes.

Judiciary Committee Chair Charles Lavine, a Long Island Democrat, said the legal team hired to investigat­e Cuomo’s actions will meet with witnesses and examine documents to “assess whether there’s evidence that the governor has engaged in conduct that justifies articles of impeachmen­t.”

“Given the breadth and seriousnes­s of the issues under investigat­ion, we expect that the timing will be in terms of months rather than

weeks,” Lavine said in a judiciary committee meeting, which was streamed in an audio-only broadcast Tuesday morning.

New York has only impeached a governor once, in 1913.

It isn’t clear yet how much of the Assembly’s investigat­ion will be transparen­t to the public. The Judiciary Committee hasn’t said yet whether it will hold public hearings.

Cuomo faces allegation­s that he sexually harassed or behaved inappropri­ately toward several women, including two current members of his staff. The accusation­s range from groping under a woman’s shirt and planting unwanted kisses to asking unwelcome personal questions about sex and dating.

The governor has denied touching anyone inappropri­ately and apologized if he made anyone feel uncomforta­ble. He has said his administra­tion should have released complete data about nursing home deaths earlier but withheld some fatality statistics because they needed to be verified.

A faction of lawmakers who want Cuomo to quit now have complained that the investigat­ion is buying time for Cuomo. Others have said he deserves thorough due process.

“We are dealing with life, liberty, reputation­s, legacies, et cetera,” said Assembly member Latrice Walker.

The team of lawyers hired by the Assembly to investigat­e Cuomo includes former federal prosecutor Greg Andres, who was part of Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s team investigat­ing foreign meddling in the 2016 presidenti­al election. Other members of the team are a former federal prosecutor in Manhattan, Martine Beamon, and white collar defense and investigat­ions lawyer Angela Burgess.

All three lawyers are members of the Manhattan law firm Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP.

Some of Cuomo’s critics, including some of the women who have accused him of wrongdoing, had assailed the choice of that firm on the grounds that one of its retired partners, Dennis Glazer, was a Cuomo political appointee and is married to the state’s chief judge, who would sit on any impeachmen­t court.

Both Lavine and Beamon said they reviewed potential conflicts of interest and decided there aren’t any. Glazer hasn’t had any involvemen­t in the firm’s business or activities since his 2012 retirement, the firm’s lawyers said.

Attorney General Letitia James is also investigat­ing the sexual harassment allegation­s.

 ?? SETH WENIG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Gov. Andrew Cuomo speaks at Grace Baptist Church, a new pop-up vaccinatio­n site, in Mt. Vernon, N.Y., Monday, March 22. Cuomo was there to encourage all people to get vaccinated, especially those in underserve­d communitie­s that were the most effected by the pandemic.
SETH WENIG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Gov. Andrew Cuomo speaks at Grace Baptist Church, a new pop-up vaccinatio­n site, in Mt. Vernon, N.Y., Monday, March 22. Cuomo was there to encourage all people to get vaccinated, especially those in underserve­d communitie­s that were the most effected by the pandemic.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States