New York Daily News

THEY THROW THE ‘BOOK’ AT CUOMO

Group wants probe into memoir’s promotion

- BY DENIS SLATTERY NEWS ALBANY BUREAU CHIEF

ALBANY — Gov. Cuomo’s woes worsened Thursday as a national government watchdog group filed an ethics complaint against him, alleging his campaign illegally promoted his COVID-themed memoir.

Citizens for Responsibi­lity in Washington, known as CREW, filed a complaint with the state Board of Elections seeking an “immediate investigat­ion” into allegation­s that the governor violated election laws by including a link to purchase “American Crisis: Leadership Lessons from the Covid-19 Pandemic” in campaign emails.

“The law is clear that you cannot spend campaign funds for your own personal benefit,” CREW President Noah Bookbinder said in a statement. “The law only works when it applies to everyone, regardless of power or party.”

The complaint, which alleges

Cuomo likely earned a “significan­t income” from book sales, also points to social media posts made by the campaign featuring links to buy the book.

Cuomo’s deepening troubles come in the wake of reports that the governor enlisted staffers to assist him with the tome as well as an early manuscript.

He allegedly involved senior aides including Secretary to the Governor Melissa DeRosa, who helped pitch and edit the book, according to The New York Times.

Cuomo officials contend that no state resources were used in connection with the book, which has seen sales plummet amid the multiple scandals engulfing the governor.

Calls for the state’s top Democrat to resign have swelled in recent weeks in the wake of multiple sexual harassment allegation­s, which are being probed by outside investigat­ors working under Attorney General Letitia James.

The governor has denied claims that he sexually harassed or behaved inappropri­ately toward several women, including two current staffers.

The Assembly has launched an impeachmen­t investigat­ion into the allegation­s and is also looking at several other topics including the administra­tion’s handling of COVID deaths in nursing homes and issues with the bridge replacing the Tappan Zee span that Cuomo named for his father, the late Gov. Mario Cuomo.

Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins (D-Yonkers) publicly called on the governor to step down weeks ago, further complicati­ng ongoing budget negotiatio­ns. Cuomo is also taking heat over donations he received from the health care industry last year as a provision granting legal immunity to hospital and nursing home executives was added to the budget at the 11th hour.

Federal investigat­ors, already investigat­ing the administra­tion for obfuscatin­g the true death toll in nursing homes at the height of the pandemic, are reportedly looking into how the legal protection provision came about.

The committee running the Assembly impeachmen­t inquiry, meanwhile, launched a hotline Wednesday seeking informatio­n from the public about the governor’s various misdeeds.

Lawmakers have said the investigat­ion will also cover the administra­tion’s decision to withhold informatio­n about COVID-19 deaths in nursing homes and reports that Cuomo’s family and friends received VIP treatment and access to scarce coronaviru­s tests early on during the pandemic.

Anyone wanting to offer tips or evidence can call (212) 4503600, which is a contact number for Davis Polk & Wardwell, the law firm enlisted by lawmakers to lead the inquiry into the governor’s conduct

 ??  ?? A watchdog group claims Gov. Cuomo violated election laws in the promotion of his once-hot-selling memoir.
A watchdog group claims Gov. Cuomo violated election laws in the promotion of his once-hot-selling memoir.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States