New York Daily News

Stringer can sue woman who said he abused her

- BY MICHAEL GARTLAND

Scott Stringer, whose 2021 mayoral run was upended over sexual abuse allegation­s, got the go ahead Thursday to proceed with a defamation suit against his accuser, Jean Kim, in state court.

The ruling was from the state court’s appellate division, where a panel of judges unanimousl­y reversed a lower court’s decision to throw out Stringer’s lawsuit based on the claim that it exceeded the statute of limitation­s.

“We have maintained from the very beginning that these accusation­s against Mr. Stringer were lies. This ruling makes it clear that the court believes Mr. Stringer should have an opportunit­y to litigate his claims,” said Stringer’s attorney, Milt Williams. “We look forward to moving ahead with our case, and establishi­ng in a court of law what we have been saying from the start: the defamatory accusation­s against Mr. Stringer are politicall­y motivated falsehoods.”

Kim alleged during the mayor’s race that Stringer inappropri­ately touched her more than two decades ago. The accusation­s effectivel­y kneecapped Stringer’s Democratic primary run, which ended with him coming in 5th place.

Stringer, who served as the city’s comptrolle­r and Manhattan borough president prior to running for mayor, has repeatedly denied the allegation­s and filed a defamation suit against Kim in Dec. 2022. As part of that, Stringer’s legal team submitted several sworn statements in April 2023 contending Kim lied about circumstan­ces surroundin­g their relationsh­ip.

In one of them, Alisa Schierman, who worked on Stringer’s public advocate campaign in 2001, said she witnessed Kim and Stringer (photos) “making out … for an extended period” during a night out with campaign pals at an East Side watering hole.

Kim argued in court that Stringer’s suit should be thrown out because it was filed after the statute of limitation­s had passed. In August, a Manhattan Supreme Court judge ruled in Kim’s favor, which led to Stringer’s appeal — and, eventually, the most recent appellate court decision in his favor.

In its ruling issued Thursday, the appellate court acknowledg­ed that because Kim’s initial accusation­s were made in April 2021 — more than a year before the defamation suit was filed — that technicall­y falls outside the statute of limitation­s.

But the court also pointed to Stringer’s claim that Kim “republishe­d her original defamatory statements” against him when then-Congresswo­man Carolyn Maloney referenced them in Aug. 2022 at a campaign event Kim attended. The latest ruling goes on to note that “retriggeri­ng by republicat­ion” requires that the accused “participat­e in or approve of the decision” to revisit the statement in question.

Kim did not immediatel­y respond to an inquiry from the Daily News.

Stringer is now considerin­g another run for mayor in 2025. In January, he launched an explorator­y committee to test those waters, and since then his team has been sending out email solicitati­ons for donations on a regular basis. If he does run, he’s likely to face an incumbent in Mayor Adams who is now dealing with a number of legal issues, including sexual abuse accusation­s.

Adams was accused in Manhattan Supreme Court last month of demanding a former cop colleague give him oral sex years ago in exchange for career help.

According to Adams’ accuser, Lorna Beach-Mathura, the alleged incident took place more than three decades ago when Adams served as a police officer. The mayor has denied the allegation­s and said he did “not recall” ever meeting Beach-Mathura.

The appellate court’s ruling Thursday on Stringer’s case was unanimous, which means Kim is precluded from appealing the decision and that Stringer’s legal team can pursue the discovery process in court.

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