Tag Archives: Cuomos

CNN Fires Chris Cuomo Over Role in Andrew Cuomo’s Scandal

As governor of New York, Andrew Cuomo was a leading national figure in the pandemic response. Chris Cuomo began interviewing him in prime time, and their teasing banter and emotional conversations became a hit with viewers. Ratings surged further after Chris Cuomo contracted the virus; he continued broadcasting, and interviewing his brother, from quarantine in the basement of his Long Island home. Mr. Zucker praised the segments for their “authenticity and relatability and vulnerability.”

“That’s what the brothers Cuomo are giving us right now,” Mr. Zucker told The Times in April 2020.

The next year, as Andrew Cuomo was facing a growing number of sexual harassment accusations, Chris Cuomo recused himself from reporting on the scandal, leaving a prime-time hole in CNN’s coverage of what was turning out to be a national news story.

At the same time, away from the anchor desk, Chris Cuomo was participating in strategy sessions with the governor’s top aides. It also emerged that Andrew Cuomo had arranged for his brother’s Covid tests to receive priority treatment by the state. CNN did not discipline Chris Cuomo, and at one point offered the anchor a leave of absence if he wished to more formally help his brother.

After Andrew Cuomo resigned, Chris Cuomo defended himself on the Aug. 16 episode of his program. “I’m not an adviser, I’m a brother,” the anchor said. “I never attacked nor encouraged anyone to attack any woman who came forward. I never made calls to the press about my brother’s situation.”

But the new batch of testimony and text messages suggested that Mr. Cuomo did function as an adviser and did reach out to journalists. “When asked, I would reach out to sources, other journalists, to see if they had heard of anybody else coming out,” he told investigators.

On May 20, Mr. Cuomo began his CNN program by apologizing to viewers about his conversations with his brother’s political team, declaring himself “family first, job second.”

“Being a journalist, and a brother to a politician, is unique, and a unique challenge, and I have a unique responsibility to balance those roles,” Mr. Cuomo said then. “It’s not always easy.”

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CNN’s Chris Cuomo suspended over role in ex-Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s sex scandal

LOS ANGELES, Nov 30 (Reuters) – CNN on Tuesday suspended its top news anchor, Chris Cuomo, for his role in defending his brother, former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, over sexual harassment allegations.

The cable news channel said in a statement the suspension followed the release of new court documents on Monday.

“These documents point to a greater level of involvement in his brother’s efforts than we previously knew. As a result, we have suspended Chris indefinitely, pending further evaluation,” CNN said.

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Andrew Cuomo was forced to step down as governor in August after multiple allegations of sexual misconduct. He has denied any wrongdoing.

CNN television news anchor Chris Cuomo poses as he arrives at the WarnerMedia Upfront event in New York City, New York, U.S., May 15, 2019. REUTERS/Mike Segar

Chris Cuomo did not immediately respond to a request for comment on his suspension.

Cuomo, who hosts CNN’s most-watched prime time news show, had admitted in May he breached some of the network’s rules in advising his brother how to handle the allegations from a public relations perspective. He also pledged not to report on the case on air.

CNN said on Tuesday that at the time it “appreciated the unique position he was in and understood his need to put family first and job second”, but said the new documents “raise serious questions.”

The documents released by New York Attorney General Letitia James showed text and other messages in which Cuomo sought to use his own sources in the media to find out information on the case and the women involved in it.

A criminal complaint charging Andrew Cuomo with a misdemeanor sex offense was filed on Oct. 29 in a New York court.

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Reporting by Jill Serjeant; editing by Jonathan Oatis and Leslie Adler

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Chris Cuomo coordinated with Andrew Cuomo’s top aide Melissa DeRosa as allegations spiraled, messages show

CNN anchor and journalist Chris Cuomo sought to help tailor former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo’s responses to allegations of sexual misconduct, according to documents released Monday by the state’s attorney general. Chris Cuomo has previously acknowledged involvement in his brother’s response to the allegations, but the new documents shed light on his day-to-day communications with a top aide to the governor.

In one series of March 2021 text messages between Chris Cuomo, who is the former governor’s younger brother, and Melissa DeRosa, the aide, Cuomo offered critical notes on a statement previously released on the governor’s behalf. 

“Please let me help with the prep,” he texted DeRosa on March 3, two days after he sent the notes and his own version, which he told DeRosa was what the then-governor “should have said.”  

DeRosa’s next text, on March 4, was a forwarded email from a CBS News producer who was seeking comment about the network’s upcoming interview with Charlotte Bennett, a former staffer who told CBS Evening News anchor and Managing Editor Norah O’Donnell that she was sexually harassed by the governor.

Cuomo replied four minutes later: “Thoughts?” DeRosa did not respond.

Three days later, DeRosa asked Chris Cuomo for help.

“Rumor going around from politico 1-2 more ppl coming out tomorrow,” DeRosa texted Chris Cuomo. “Can u check your sources.”

“On it,” he replied minutes later. Approximately 40 minutes later, he sent another text: “No one has heard that yet.” 

In the texts, DeRosa also asks Chris Cuomo if he has “intel” about an upcoming New Yorker article written by Ronan Farrow. In his deposition, Cuomo told investigators he had contacted “another journalist” to find out when the story would be published, but denied doing anything to influence the outcome of the story. 

Cuomo told investigators he did not tell anyone at CNN that he had reached out to a journalist about Farrow’s upcoming piece, stating that it was “not something that would be out of the ordinary.”

“There was going to be an article about my brother. So I’m interested,” he said, according to the documents. “I wasn’t going to call the person writing it.  I wasn’t going to try to influence any of the stories.” 

A spokesperson for CNN said Monday that the new documents “deserve a thorough review and consideration.”

“We will be having conversations and seeking additional clarity about their significance as they relate to CNN over the next several days,” the spokesperson said.

Isabelle Kirshner, an attorney who represents Chris Cuomo and attended his deposition, told CBS News on Monday that Chris Cuomo was “honest” with investigators.

“He’s never worked on a source for his brother. He’s been definitive about that,” Kirshner said. 

Kirshner also criticized the release of the deposition and exhibits.

“I think this undermines one’s trust in the system when you are told this is secret and then it’s released to the public,” she said.

Andrew Cuomo has repeatedly denied the allegations against him, both in public and in his own lengthy interview with investigators.

Rich Azzopardi, a spokesperson for Andrew Cuomo, also criticized New York Attorney General Letitia James in a statement Monday, accusing her of “abusing her government power.”

“To the surprise of no one, Tish James continues abusing her government power to leverage her political future — prosecutorial misconduct, ethics and integrity be damned,” Azzopardi said.

In May, Chris Cuomo apologized on air for what he called “inappropriate” conversations with his brother’s staff. The text messages with DeRosa revealed Monday depict an involvement that raises more serious ethical questions, according to Jane Kirtley, who is the director of the University of Minnesota’s Silha Center for the Study of Media Ethics and Law.

“We have things going on behind the scenes where it appears that Chris is not only helping them strategize on their messages, but agreeing to do investigative work for them, to help them get information,” Kirtley said. “As a journalist, at some point you have to say, ‘No, I can’t do these things, even though you’re my brother. My journalistic ethics preclude me from getting this involved.'”

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Chris Cuomo Played Outsize Role in Andrew Cuomo’s Defense

In a statement after Monday’s release, Richard Azzopardi, a spokesman for the former governor, accused Ms. James, who is now running for governor, of acting out of political malice toward Mr. Cuomo — a stance that he and the former governor’s lawyers have repeatedly taken in the months since the report was issued in an attempt to undermine its conclusions.

“To the surprise of no one, Tish James continues abusing her government power to leverage her political future — prosecutorial misconduct, ethics and integrity be damned,” Mr. Azzopardi said. “Today’s manipulated release of handpicked witness testimony with selective redactions is typical.”

The newly released records included copies of text and email messages, as well as transcripts of depositions with many of Mr. Cuomo’s closest aides, including Ms. DeRosa, as well as current and former legal counselors like Steven M. Cohen, Alphonso David and Jill DesRosiers.

Replete with stories of screaming matches, cursing and deep mistrust, they collectively paint a portrait of the kind of toxic work culture that many of those testifying before the attorney general’s team were trying to undercut as they fought to maintain their boss’s job and their own.

“I trust no one,” Ms. DeRosa told many of her closest confidants in a text exchange, by way of explaining why she — and not an assistant — was sharing call-in details for a strategy call. In another message released by investigators, Ms. DeRosa describes berating two people, including one nicknamed “sponge” who was among Mr. Cuomo’s accusers.

“I’m on a real roll,” she said, adding: “In my defense, everyone sucks.”

In one instance, investigators asked Mr. Azzopardi to say whether or not the governor had ever pelted him with apricots in a fit of rage. He claimed the story, which was relayed in the testimony of another unnamed staff member, was false.

“Are you serious?” Mr. Azzopardi said. But he also testified: “He’s yelled at me. I’ve yelled back at him, but it was fine.”

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MSNBC avoids covering Chris Cuomo’s sexual harassment scandal plaguing CNN

MSNBC strangely avoided covering the sexual harassment scandal plaguing its direct liberal competitor, CNN. 

Veteran TV producer Shelley Ross alleged in a New York Times guest essay published Friday morning that CNN anchor Chris Cuomo grabbed her buttock at an event in 2005 when the two of them worked at ABC News. She even included an email he sent to her at the time apologizing for the incident. Cuomo reiterated his apology to his former boss in a statement to the Times. 

However, MSNBC turned a blind eye to the newly-emerged controversy, avoiding any mention of it throughout the day’s programming, according to Grabien transcripts. 

CHRIS CUOMO SILENT ON HIS OWN SEXUAL HARASSMENT SCANDAL DURING CNN SHOW FOLLOWING BROTHER’S SAGA

MSNBC and CNN rarely address each other’s embarrassing headlines. MSNBC offered minimal coverage of Cuomo’s involvement in the scandals of his brother, former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, which range from aiding his brother’s response to sexual misconduct accusers to receiving VIP COVID tests in the early months of the pandemic. 

The Peacock Network also completely avoided the awkward return of CNN’s chief legal analyst and Zoom masturbation star Jeffrey Toobin, per Grabien.

CNN, in return, almost never covers MSNBC’s controversies and the outlandish commentary. More recently, CNN harped on Nicki Minaj’s tweets expressing vaccine hesitancy but managed to avoid mentioning the viral spat the rapper superstar had with MSNBC host Joy Reid. 

Cuomo took a page from MSNBC’s playbook and stayed silent during Friday night’s “Cuomo Prime Time.”

CNN has yet to publicly acknowledge the scandal hitting its biggest star. The only mention from any of Cuomo’s colleagues was buried in Brian Stelter’s “Reliable Source” newsletter. 

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The new allegation against the CNN anchor was foreshadowed in a leaked audiotape obtained by “Tucker Carlson Tonight” in September 2020 of comments he made to ex-Trump lawyer Michael Cohen about his days at ABC News. 

“Do you know how many f—ing phone calls I’ve gotten from people at ABC who say that reporters are calling and lying about things they heard about me to try to get stories about me when I was at ABC? Guys calling and saying, ‘I heard he’s the Charlie Rose of ABC, used to invite women to the hotel and open up his bathrobe.’ Do I look like the kind of f—ing guy who’s gotta do that?” Cuomo said.

“Sure. Why not?” Cohen replied with a chuckle.

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Cuomo’s daughter used state police SUV to move from governor’s mansion: sources

Gov. Cuomo’s daughter used an unmarked police SUV to take herself and her belongings from the state’s Executive Mansion, a possible misuse of state resources, sources said.

Michaela Kennedy-Cuomo, 23, was spotted last week lugging a large cardboard box and bags out of the Albany residence days after her father announced he was resigning.

She placed the goods in a black SUV, which a source identified as a state police vehicle, and was driven away.

“If there are legitimate security concerns for his family, they could provide security, but not moving services,” said Blair Horner, executive director of the New York Public Interest Research Group, a state watchdog. 

Horner said unless the state’s Joint Commission on Public Ethics approved, “it could be an improper use of state resources.”

Michaela Cuomo may have misused state resources when she moved out of the Executive Mansion.
Daniel William McKnight for NY Post

Betsy Gotbaum, executive director of Citizens Union, said “government resources should be used for government business.”

“Using a state vehicle for personal business is improper. Surely there are moving companies in the Capitol region that could help the Governor’s family move. It’s not fair to ask taxpayers to foot the bill,” Gotbaum said.

A State Police spokesman said Cuomo’s protective detail “provides security for the governor and his immediate family … that includes transports for immediate family.”

Cuomo’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The governor, who is a car fanatic, was seen driving himself in a black Dodge Charger Saturday, as he left his midtown office after a press briefing on Hurricane Henri. He headed toward the East River.

Cuomo is already under probe by state Attorney General Letitia James for allegedly having state employees work on his book about the coronavirus pandemic.

Mayor de Blasio was similarly criticized for having his security detail help his daughter move from Brooklyn to Gracie Mansion in 2018.

Former state Health Commissioner Antonia Novello took a plea deal in 2009 for having state workers drive her on personal errands and do household work.

And former State Comptroller Alan Hevesi resigned in 2006 as part of a plea deal related to having state workers drive around his sick wife.

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Chris Cuomo strolls off lavish Hamptons dock, ignores questions about brother Andrew Cuomo’s resignation

EXCLUSIVE — CNN star Chris Cuomo spent four or five hours on his speedboat Tuesday as his brother, New York Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo, was forced to resign from office amid a storm of sexual harassment allegations, smoothly returning to the dock before dusk where he was met by a Fox News reporter. 

“Have you spoken to your brother today, sir?” a Fox News reporter asked the CNN host as he stepped onto the gravel at the tony Sag Harbor Yacht Yard Thursday, in boat shoes and shorts with a row of mega yachts behind him.

EXCLUSIVE FOX NEWS PICTURE
(EXCLUSIVE FOX NEWS PICTURE)

“Of course I have,” Cuomo replied.

“Did you advise him to step down?”

The CNN star did not respond. 

GOV. ANDREW CUOMO RESIGNS AMID SEXUAL HARASSMENT SCANDAL: WHAT’S NEXT FOR CNN AND CHRIS CUOMO?

The soon-to-be-former governor’s younger brother has a slip and private parking spot for his double engine speedboat, “Heartstrong,” at the marina, which was established all the way back in 1797. He pulled in without incident Tuesday evening, even as the occupants of the neighboring slip had trouble tying up.

In the parking lot, he stopped to sarcastically claim his brother would be down at the Sag Harbor Yacht Yard in “five minutes, if you wait around.” Earlier, off camera, he implied he could have the Fox News reporter arrested by state troopers, stating he “called to tell them not to get you.”

“I think you have a job, and I’m gonna let you do it,” Cuomo said as he approached his truck.

EXCLUSIVE FOX NEWS PICTURE
(EXCLUSIVE FOX NEWS PICTURE)

Then he stepped into a black Ford F-150 SVT pickup with an American flag sticker on the tailgate, without answering whether he believed the women, was continuing to advise the outgoing governor or if there should be an investigation at CNN.

Cuomo is away from the network, on what’s being called a long-planned vacation to the posh Hamptons area east of New York City, as his brother announced on Tuesday that he would step down as governor amid a sexual harassment scandal. The younger Cuomo sibling is also caught up in the scandal after he was revealed to be part of a group of loyalists who advised the soon-to-be-former governor as accusations poured in, which people throughout the journalism industry have poo-pooed as wildly unethical. 

MEDIA INSIDERS REACT TO CNN’S CHRIS CUOMO CRISIS WITH PITY, CRITICISM: ‘SAD’ TO SEE THIS ‘CLOWN SHOW’

But CNN’s Cuomo didn’t appear to be in crisis mode himself. Cuomo spent the afternoon on his lavish boat, in the extravagant waters of Sag Harbor, New York where the ultra-wealthy flee to escape the concrete jungle of Manhattan. 

The “Cuomo Prime Time” host has a long history with the ritzy area, as he famously broke coronavirus quarantine at one of his Hamptons properties where he had an altercation with a local bicyclist who called him out. 

(EXCLUSIVE FOX NEWS PICTURE)

The CNN anchor bizarrely staged his own re-emergence from the basement of his other Hamptons home after his the outdoor scuffle was widely reported.

CNN’s Don Lemon is also known to own a vacation home in the posh town of Sag Harbor – which is also where a bartender accused him of a sexually charged assault in 2019.

Months after women began going public with accusations of harassment, inappropriate touching and inappropriate comments by the governor, New York Attorney General Letitia James released a report into the allegations last week. The scathing report alleged violations of state and federal law, as well as the governor’s own internal policies. Cuomo initially resisted calls to step down but reversed course on Tuesday as state lawmakers were mulling impeachment proceedings.

“New York tough means New York loving, and I love New York and I love you,” Cuomo said. “I would never want to be unhelpful in any way, and I think given the circumstances, the best way I can help now is if I step aside and let government get back to governing, and therefore, that’s what I’ll do.”

Gov. Cuomo has denied wrongdoing. He will be replaced by Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul in two weeks.

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The “Cuomo Prime Time” host has not spoken publicly about the report and CNN forbids him from covering scandals related to his big brother. It remains to be seen if the network will allow him to cover political figures who called for his brother to step down, such as President Biden and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. 

CNN did not immediately respond to a series of questions, including whether or not Chris Cuomo will be allowed to address his brother’s resignation or whether the network will allow “Cuomo Prime Time” to cover politicians who called for the soon-to-be-former governor to step down. 

Fox News’ Joseph A. Wulfsohn contributed to this report. 

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Andrew Cuomo’s name signed by aide, not him, on 2019 harassment training form: report

In 2018, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo signed into law a bill requiring all employers in the state to offer annual training to employees on workplace harassment issues.

But an October 2019 “attestation” form, which claims the governor underwent such training himself, includes the handwritten name “Andrew Cuomo” and a scrawled signature at bottom – both written by an aide, not Cuomo, a report says.

The use of an aide to sign the form on the governor’s behalf raised the question of whether Cuomo really participated in the harassment training program, The Journal News of New York state’s Lower Hudson Valley region reported.

The newspaper’s report emerged following a New York Post story this week claiming Cuomo had skipped work Wednesday to work on a strategy for salvaging his political career, and coincided with an Albany (N.Y.) Times Union story on Friday, claiming that Cuomo’s most trusted advisers, past and present, have worked on plans for Cuomo to fight off the sexual harassment allegations against him.

CUOMO LAWYERS BLAST AG REPORT, SAYING EVIDENCE WAS LEFT OUT: ‘DOESN’T PASS MUSTER’

Some former aides, however, have been stunned by Cuomo’s refusal to step aside, Politico reported.

The aide who signed the training form for Cuomo was identified as Stephanie Benton in New York state Attorney General Letitia James’ recently released 165-page report, which accuses Cuomo of sexually harassing 11 women.

Cuomo, who faces a torrent of calls to resign – as well as pledges from many New York lawmakers that they will impeach the Democrat if he doesn’t – has denied the allegations.

‘She was the one’

“(In) her sworn testimony, Ms. Benton admitted that she was the one who signed the 2019 sexual harassment training attestation form for the Governor, after they both claimed the Governor reviewed the training material,” James’ report says, according to The Journal News.

“Ms. Benton admitted that she was the one who signed the 2019 sexual harassment training attestation form for the Governor, after they both claimed the Governor reviewed the training material.”

— New York state AG’s report on Gov. Cuomo

On July 28, the attestation form, and 17 pages of harassment training material, were provided to the newspaper after USA Today Network New York, which includes The Journal News, requested the documents from the state in March, the newspaper reported.

The training material describes examples of workplace behavior that is deemed inappropriate, the newspaper’s report said.

GOV. CUOMO ACCUSER FILES CRIMINAL COMPLAINT WITH ALBANY COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE

The Journal News notes that just several days after Cuomo purportedly reviewed the training documents, they became outdated because a new law took effect Oct. 11, 2019, that lowered the standard for proving sexual harassment. No longer would the behavior need to be “severe or pervasive” in order to be illegal, the report said.

The new, lower standard was signed into law by Cuomo prior to the date he purportedly underwent training, according to Anne Clark, a private lawyer who helped lead James’ investigation into the governor, the newspaper reported.

‘Meets and far exceeds’

Cuomo’s alleged conduct with his accusers, as described in James’ report, “clearly meets and far exceeds this standard,” Clark told The Journal News, referring to the updated standard.

Cuomo told James’ office that he did not recall undergoing sexual harassment training in any year other than 2019, the newspaper reported.

Charlotte Bennett, one of Cuomo’s accusers, told investigators she overheard a conversation in 2019 in which Benton claimed to have undergone the training in place of Cuomo – but both Benton and Cuomo testified that the governor himself completed the training, The Journal News reported.

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After James released her report on Cuomo’s alleged misconduct, the Democrat’s response this week included a pledge to improve sexual harassment training in the state.

“Now, the state already has an advanced sexual harassment training program for all employees, including me,” Cuomo said. “but I want New York state government to be a model of office behavior, and I brought in an expert to design a new sexual harassment policy and procedures, and to train the whole team, myself included. I accept responsibility and we are making changes.”



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Majority of New York congressional Democrats call for Gov. Cuomo’s resignation

Thirteen House Democrats from New York on Friday said Cuomo must resign, arguing that the allegations have impeded his ability to effectively govern and serve the people of New York.

Addressing the allegations Friday, Cuomo said in a news conference to “let the review proceed. I’m not going to resign.”

“I did not do what has been alleged, period. I won’t speculate about people’s possible motives,” he continued.

He also, without naming names, attacked the lawmakers who have called on him to resign, saying politicians who take positions “without knowing the facts” are “reckless and dangerous” and bowing to “cancel culture.”

A source familiar with the conversations that preceded Friday’s coordinated call for Cuomo’s resignation said the group has been in touch as the allegations mounted, but only agreed to move forward together on Thursday. They decided to wait until Friday morning to go public so as not to step on President Joe Biden’s speech Thursday night.

The source said the tipping point for the members had been a combination of the most recent developments, including State Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie’s announcement on Thursday that Democrats there would begin an impeachment investigation. The decision to go in, nearly all at the same time, was also an acknowledgement that when one made the call, it would up the pressure on all the rest.

House Judiciary Committee Chair Jerry Nadler said in a statement that Cuomo has “lost the confidence of the people of New York” and House Oversight Committee Chair Carolyn Maloney said Cuomo’s resignation would be in the “best interest of all New Yorkers.”

They join Rep. Kathleen Rice, who earlier this month became the first out of the 19 Democrats in the New York House delegation to call for Cuomo to step down.

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and freshman Rep. Jamaal Bowman said they agreed with others “who have concluded that Governor Cuomo can no longer effectively lead in the face of so many challenges.”
“These allegations have all been consistent and highly-detailed, and there are also credible media reports substantiating their accounts,” Ocasio-Cortez and Bowman said in a joint statement, adding that they “believe these women” who have come forward with sexual harassment allegations against Cuomo.

In separate statements Friday, fellow Democratic Reps. Grace Meng, Nydia Velázquez, Yvette Clarke, Adriano Espaillat, Mondaire Jones, Antonio Delgado, Sean Patrick Maloney, Brian Higgins and Paul Tonko also urged Cuomo to step down as governor.

Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney, who also chairs the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, argued that New Yorkers need a governor “laser-focused” on getting them through the Covid-19 pandemic.

Cuomo’s administration underreported the number of Covid deaths among New York’s long-term care patients by approximately 50%, according to a state attorney general report from January, and then delayed sharing that potentially damaging information with state lawmakers.

The administration left out Covid-19 deaths of residents who had been transferred out of the facility or to hospitals, a statement from Attorney General Letitia James’ Office said. While the report found that the overall number of deaths did not change, it led to a misrepresentation of the Covid-19 death toll in New York’s long-term care facilities.

Cuomo and his administration defended their decision, arguing that with both the Justice Department and New York state lawmakers asking questions, the federal inquiry became their priority. The governor denied any suggestion of wrongdoing.

Amid the mounting criticism, Cuomo also faces accusations from multiple women of sexual harassment or inappropriate behavior. The scandal, which has consumed New York politics over the past two weeks, began on February 24, when former aide Lindsey Boylan alleged in a Medium post that Cuomo kissed her on the lips against her will in 2018 after a brief, one-on-one meeting in his New York City office.
Last week, Cuomo offered an apology to the women and said he never knew he “was making anyone feel uncomfortable” and denied touching anyone inappropriately.

Nadler said Friday that the allegations against Cuomo are “serious” and credible, and Cuomo is “guaranteed due process under law,” but the question of confidence in New York’s leader is one of “political judgment.”

“The bravery individuals have shown in coming forward to share their experiences with Governor Cuomo is inspiring, and I stand with them in support,” he said. “The repeated accusations against the Governor, and the manner in which he has responded to them, have made it impossible for him to continue to govern at this point.”

Several of the Democrats on Friday said New York State Attorney General Letitia James’s investigation into Cuomo’s behavior should continue.

On Thursday, more than 50 Democrats of the New York state Senate and Assembly said in a letter that “it’s time for Governor Cuomo to resign,” arguing that he is “ineffective in this time of most urgent need.” The top Democrat in the state Senate, Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins, on Sunday had said “for the good of the state Governor Cuomo must resign.”

Democrats who support an investigation

Friday’s outpouring of calls for Cuomo’s resignation also puts new focus on New York Sens. Chuck Schumer, the majority leader in the US Senate, and Kirsten Gillibrand, who in 2017 was the first to call on former Minnesota Sen. Al Franken to resign after multiple women accused him of touching them inappropriately.

Appearing on ABC’s “The View” Thursday, Schumer said the allegations against Cuomo were “very troubling” and must be thoroughly investigated by the state attorney general, but stopped short of saying Cuomo should leave office.

Gillibrand also has not called for Cuomo’s resignation and backs the New York attorney general’s investigation. On Wednesday, she refused to discuss with CNN why she views allegations against Cuomo differently than the accusations Franken faced.

She, however, has called Cuomo’s behavior “completely unacceptable” and said that every allegation of sexual harassment “must be taken seriously and be reviewed.”

Democratic Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, who also serves as Democratic Caucus Chair, told CNN last week that he did not think Cuomo should resign, instead calling for “a full, fair, complete independent investigation.”

Asked Friday in light of his colleagues’ push for Cuomo to resign, Jeffries’ spokeswoman Christie Stephenson told CNN that the congressman’s position has not changed.

Rep. Tom Suozzi said Cuomo “must seriously consider whether he can effectively continue to govern” and if he comes to the conclusion he cannot, “he should resign.”

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said the White House had no updates when asked if Biden believes Cuomo should resign, in light of the steady stream of New York officials and lawmakers calling for the governor to step down.

“The President believes that every woman who’s come forward… deserves to have her voice heard, should be treated with respect and should be able to tell her story,” Psaki said, adding that Biden believes the independent investigation should move forward.

Cuomo rejects calls to resign

During his conference call later Friday, Cuomo made clear he would not be resigning from office despite the public pressure.

“I am not going to resign. I was not elected by the politicians, I was elected by the people,” he said, insisting that “New Yorkers know me.”

He encouraged the public to let the state attorney general’s investigation play out and to “wait for the facts.”

“I am confident that when New Yorkers know the facts from the review, I am confident in the decision based on the facts,” he said. “But wait for the facts. An opinion without facts is irresponsible.”

He claimed that he has “not had a sexual relationship that was inappropriate, period.”

“I never harassed anyone, I never abused anyone, I never assaulted anyone,” he said.

Cuomo added that he will avoid “distractions” and focus on his job.

This story has been updated with additional information.

CNN’s Kristina Sgueglia, Manu Raju and Ali Zaslav contributed to this report.



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Andrew Cuomo’s accusers: Women who’ve made sexual harassment claims against NY governor

A succession of women have come forward to accuse New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo of sexual harassment since former aide Lindsey Boylan brought allegations against him in February.

These are all of the women who have made accusations so far.

LINDSEY BOYLAN

Cuomo’s former aide, Lindsey Boylan, 36, accused the governor of “sexual harassment and bullying” while she worked for him in a piece written for Medium in February. She has said he frequently made inappropriate comments to her, suggestively joking once they should play strip poker.

She alleges he also kissed her on the mouth once without consent. She said in the more than three years she worked for him, he “would go out of his way to touch me on my lower back, arms and legs.” Boylan was the first woman to come forward.

Lindsey Boylan is seen in New York City, June 17, 2019. (Getty Images)

Cuomo’s office has denied Boylan’s allegations.

CHARLOTTE BENNETT

Charlotte Bennett, 25, another former aide to Cuomo, has claimed the governor asked her questions about her sex life, whether she was monogamous in her relationships and if she had ever had sex with older men. She said she believed he was trying “to sleep with me” and reported the inappropriate comments last summer to Cuomo’s chief of staff.

“I thought, he’s trying to sleep with me,” she told CBS in an interview. “The governor is trying to sleep with me. And I’m deeply uncomfortable and I have to get out of this room as soon as possible.”

The governor has also denied making advances toward Bennett.

ANNA RUCH

Anna Ruch, 33, the third woman to come forward, has claimed Cuomo put his hands on her lower back at a wedding in 2019, then on her cheeks and asked to kiss her. “I was so confused and shocked and embarrassed,” Ruch said of the incident.

A friend who claims to have witnessed the alleged interaction said Cuomo appeared “aggressive” at the time. The friend said Ruch turned her head and Cuomo kissed her on the cheek.

Ruch, unlike Boylan and Bennett, has not worked for Cuomo.

KAREN HINTON

A former press aide, Karen Hinton, said Cuomo asked her to his “dimly lit” hotel room in 2000 — when Cuomo was Bill Clinton’s secretary of Housing and Urban Development — and embraced her, according to The Washington Post.

When she tried to pull away, she claimed he pulled her back into the embrace before she left the room.

Peter Ajemian, Cuomo’s director of communications, refuted the allegation, stating it “did not happen.” He called Hinton a “known antagonist” of Cuomo who was “attempting to take advantage of this moment.”

ANA LISS

Ana Liss, another former aide, said that when she worked for Cuomo as a policy and operations aide from 2013 to 2015, the governor at different times asked her if she had a boyfriend, touched her on her lower back and kissed her hand as she rose from her desk. She said he called her “Sweetheart.”

“It’s not appropriate, really, in any setting,” she told The Wall Street Journal.

While she said she thought his flirtations were at first harmless she soon realized they diminished her to “just a skirt.” 

Liss came forward on March 6, the same day as Hinton.

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In a statement issued by the governor regarding the first three allegations, he said: “At work sometimes I think I am being playful and make jokes that I think are funny. I do, on occasion, tease people in what I think is a good-natured way. … I now understand that my interactions may have been insensitive or too personal and that some of my comments, given my position, made others feel in ways I never intended. I acknowledge some of the things I have said have been misinterpreted as an unwanted flirtation. To the extent anyone felt that way, I am truly sorry about that.”

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