B
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J
ESS
B
RAVIN
Free-Speech Cases
Given Wider Path
Cecily Myart-Cruz, president of United Teachers Los Angeles, shown last August.
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VID
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ANE/
SCNG/ZUMA
PRES
S
Gov. Andrew Cuomo
SETH
WENIG
/PRES
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POOL
New York Attorney General
Letitia James appointed for-
mer acting Manhattan U.S. At-
torney Joon Kim and employ-
ment-discrimination attorney
Anne Clark to lead an investi-
gation into alleged sexual ha-
rassment by Gov. Andrew
Cuomo.
The appointment on Monday
of two veteran lawyers marked
an important new development
in the controversy enveloping
the Cuomo administration since
several women have accused
the governor of inappropriate
touching and remarks.
Mr. Kim and Ms. Clark will
be given the power to issue
subpoenas, conduct deposi-
tions and analyze relevant
data and information as they
investigate the circumstances
surrounding the sexual-harass-
ment allegations, including
how Mr. Cuomo’s administra-
tion handled them, the attor-
ney general’s office said.
“We are committed to an
independent and thorough in-
vestigation of the facts,” Ms.
James, a Democrat like Mr.
Cuomo, said in a statement.
Mr. Kim, a partner at firm
Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamil-
ton LLP, was acting U.S. attor-
ney for the Southern District
of New York from March 2017
to January 2018. During his
time leading the office, Mr.
Kim oversaw the trial and con-
viction of Las Vegas gambler
William “Billy” Walters, who
was found guilty of insider
trading and sentenced to five
years in prison.
Ms. Clark is a partner at
Vladeck, Raskin & Clark PC,
where she practices employ-
ment law.
Three women have said the
governor asked about their
personal lives and behaved in-
appropriately toward them
while they worked on his staff.
Ana Liss, 35, told The Wall
Street Journal last week that
Mr. Cuomo once kissed her
hand while she was getting up
from her desk at the Capitol.
Mr. Cuomo said Sunday
that he never meant to make
anyone uncomfortable. He
asked people to reserve judg-
ment until the completion of
Ms. James’s review. The gov-
ernor also rebuffed calls for
his resignation by Republicans
and a growing number of his
fellow Democrats in Albany.
“These are serious allega-
tions that demand a rigorous
and impartial investigation,”
said Mr. Kim, in a statement
provided by the attorney gen-
eral’s office. Ms. Clark said the
people of New York deserve an
exhaustive and independent
investigation.
Debra Katz, a lawyer repre-
senting one of Mr. Cuomo’s ac-
cusers, Charlotte Bennett, said
the appointment of Mr. Kim
and Ms. Clark shows the attor-
ney general’s office “is taking
this matter very seriously.”
Sunday, Senate Majority
Leader Andrea Stewart-Cous-
ins, a Democrat, became the
highest-ranking state law-
maker to call for Mr. Cuomo’s
resignation.
Assembly
Speaker
Carl
Heastie, a Democrat, said Mr.
Cuomo should “seriously con-
sider whether he can effec-
tively meet the needs of the
people of New York.”
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