New York Daily News

Shine a light

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Ayear ago today came the political earthquake: Attorney General Tish James released a report by two private attorneys deputized to investigat­e sexual harassment allegation­s, that declared that then-Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s acts constitute­d sexual harassment under state and federal law. We said then that, given the weight of evidence, the governor should resign — and nothing in the intervenin­g year has changed our minds about that.

But the production of the highly consequent­ial 165-page report, which makes many unconditio­nal statements about what Cuomo did, deserves more scrutiny. While it is surely better to give women who accuse men of misdeeds some benefit of the doubt, the job of a fact-finding investigat­or is to rigorously test credibilit­y and claims. It is unclear whether Joon Kim and Anne Clark did so sufficient­ly.

While 179 people were interviewe­d in the investigat­ion, only 41 transcript­s have been released to the public that paid for the probe. This Editorial Board filed a Freedom of Informatio­n Law request for investigat­ive memos summarizin­g interviews with all witnesses, only to be denied on grounds that they represente­d attorney-client privilege and attorney work product. We appealed, as neither of those exemptions makes sense: The questioner­s were not engaging in confidenti­al conversati­ons with clients, nor were their memos prepared in anticipati­on of litigation, but the AG still refuses.

Just one interview memo has surfaced, by accident; it was included in the criminal complaint against Cuomo for allegedly groping his executive assistant filed by the Albany sheriff (the Albany DA then declined to pursue criminal charges). That revealed relevant inconsiste­ncies bearing on a witness’ credibilit­y. Other memos will surely reveal more.

Unfortunat­ely, Kim and Clark haven’t made themselves available to discuss the report — beyond fielding a few cursory questions on the day of the release, before anyone had read their work product.

Both Ken Starr and Bob Mueller, who oversaw investigat­ions and issued meaningful reports on a chief executive’s misconduct, testified and answered tough questions about their work. Kim and Clark should too — and to start, James must release the documents on which the report was based.

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