Chattanooga Times Free Press

Prosecutor in groping case against Cuomo seeking more time

- BY MICHAEL HILL

ALBANY, N.Y. — A prosecutor investigat­ing accusation­s that former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo groped a woman asked a judge for more time to evaluate the evidence, saying the criminal complaint filed last week by the local sheriff was “potentiall­y defective,” according to a letter released Friday.

The request from Albany County District Attorney David Soares throws the high-profile case into further turmoil a week after Cuomo was charged with committing a misdemeano­r sex crime. The one-page complaint filed in Albany City Court by a sheriff’s office investigat­or accuses Cuomo of forcible touching by putting his hand under a woman’s shirt on Dec. 7.

Soares, who has said he was caught off guard by the filing, said in a letter to Judge Holly Trexler on Thursday his office had been investigat­ing the matter for several months.

“We were in the middle of that investigat­ion when the Sheriff unilateral­ly and inexplicab­ly filed a complaint in this court,” Soares wrote in the letter. “Unfortunat­ely, the filings in this matter are potentiall­y defective in that the police-officer-complainan­t failed to include a sworn statement by the victim such that the People could proceed with a prosecutio­n on these papers.”

The district attorney said the sheriff’s complaint, as filed, only included part of the woman’s testimony, but left other parts out, including sections that could possibly be “exculpator­y,” meaning potentiall­y helpful to Cuomo’s defense.

Soares said his office still had hundreds of hours of videotaped testimony to review and that it anticipate­s receiving more material with deadlines for a speedy trial approachin­g.

Cuomo had been summoned to appear for an arraignmen­t Nov. 17. Soares asked for that to be put off for 60 days. Cuomo’s attorneys joined in the request.

“The purpose of this adjournmen­t is to give my office time to continue with our independen­t and unbiased review of the facts of this case,” Soares wrote.

The court granted a delay until Jan. 7, 2022, a spokespers­on for Soares said in an email.

A call was made to Albany County Sheriff Craig Apple seeking comment. The sheriff acknowledg­ed last week that the court paperwork had been processed more quickly than he intended, before he’d gotten a chance to consult with the district attorney. But he said he was confident in the strength of the case.

There was no immediate comment from Cuomo’s spokespers­on.

The complaint did not name the woman, but she has identified herself as Brittany Commisso, who worked as one of Cuomo’s executive assistants before he resigned amid sexual harassment allegation­s in August.

Forcible touching is a misdemeano­r in New York, punishable by up to a year in jail, though many cases for first-time offenders are resolved with probation or a shorter jail sentence.

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