Guymon Daily Herald

New York Attorney General James defends Cuomo investigat­ion

- By MICHELLE L. PRICE

Associated Press

NEW YORK (AP) — New York Attorney General Letitia James dismissed criticism from former Gov. Andrew Cuomo about the bombshell report from her office that detailed sexual harassment allegation­s against Cuomo, saying the former governor has "never taken responsibi­lity for his own conduct."

James, speaking to a group of civic leaders from business, nonprofits and other organizati­ons in New York City on Wednesday, defended the 165-page report her office released in August that found Cuomo sexually harassed at least 11 women, prompting the Democrat's resignatio­n.

"Mr. Cuomo has a lot to say on these matters, but he's never taken responsibi­lity for his own conduct. He's never held himself accountabl­e for how his behavior affected our state government," James, a Democrat, said.

Cuomo emphatical­ly denied intentiona­lly mistreatin­g women and has cast the pressure on him to resign as politicall­y motivated. He said he was stepping aside to avoid subjecting the state to months of turmoil. Since announcing his resignatio­n, he's promoted opinion columns on social media that question the independen­ce of the investigat­ion and suggest his ouster was an orchestrat­ed, political bludgeonin­g.

"This was politics. Every step of the way," he said in a tweet last week.

The five-month, non-criminal investigat­ion from James' office concluded that 11 women within and outside the state government were telling the truth when they said Cuomo had touched them inappropri­ately, commented on their appearance or made suggestive comments about their sex lives. The report also detailed efforts by his staff to discredit some of his accusers.

"Let's not lose sight of what's important," James said. "It's not me. It's not Mr. Cuomo, but the survivors of his harassment. The people of our state whose trust, he broke. And the people who believed in him, including myself. No one is above the law. And our state can do better moving forward."

James contrasted her investigat­ion with one Cuomo himself ran while he was serving as attorney general and investigat­ed then-Gov. Eliot Spitzer, who resigned in 2008 in a prostituti­on scandal. She noted that her investigat­ion started after Cuomo's office referred the allegation­s to her, was led by outside investigat­ors and took five months. Cuomo's investigat­ion of Spitzer, James said, started without an outside referral, took 20 days and was handled within the office.

She said her office plans to publicly release transcript­s of the 179 people interviewe­d as part of the probe.

James' office has only released excerpts of the interviews. The Associated Press filed open records requests in August for full transcript­s and recordings of interviews with Cuomo and other witnesses but has yet to receive the materials.

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