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Showing posts with label harassment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label harassment. Show all posts

Thursday, August 5, 2021

NYS Attorney General Finds Governor Andrew Cuomo Abused and Harassed Multiple Women. Cuomo Must Resign-and Does, August 10, 2021

 

Dani Lever (right) helped Gov. Andrew Cuomo leak confidential files about a woman who accused
him of sexual harassment, according to the attorney general’s bombshell investigation.


State Assembly Report Finds Cuomo Used State Resources to Enrich Himself


UPDATE: CUOMO RESIGNS AUGUST 10, 2021

Andrew Cuomo joins long list of big New York political scandals

Former NYS Governor Andrew Cuomo

Previously:

NY Governor Andrew Cuomo must resign or be impeached. His brother Chris Cuomo should be fired from CNN. We do not believe that giving Gov. Cuomo "a second chance" or a minute more in office will do anything but create more harm and endanger the lives of many. He must go. Now.

Chris Cuomo of CNN appears in report on Governor Cuomo’s behavior.




'A distraction': Democratic chairs in Cayuga, other NY counties want Cuomo to resign

National Public Voice posts previously published on Andrew Cuomo

Betsy Combier
betsy.combier@gmail.com
Editor, Advocatz.com
Editor, NYC Rubber Room Reporter
Editor, Parentadvocates.org
Editor, New York Court Corruption
Editor, National Public Voice
Editor, NYC Public Voice
Editor, Inside 3020-a Teacher Trials


Facebook executive helped Cuomo smear sex-harassment accuser: AG report

August 5th, 2021

Facebook Executive Dani Lever reportedly helped Gov. Andrew Cuomo fight sexual assault allegations by leaking confidential messages about an accuser.

Lever worked on Cuomo’s press team from 2014 to 2020, then leaving to join Facebook as communications manager.

The New York Attorney General’s bombshell report revealed that Rich Azzopardi, Cuomo communications director, sent Lindsey Boylan's confidential personnel files to several journalists in what investigators called an attempt to “discredit and disparage” her. 

The report concluded that Cuomo sexually harassed multiple women in violation of state and federal law and indicated that Lever helped Cuomo’s team disseminate the files.

“Ms. Lever coordinated with some of the reporters who received the documents to let them know that the Executive Chamber would be sending them,” the report reads. 

The report adds that Lever was part of a “team of advisors from within and outside the Chamber [who] had ongoing and regular discussions about how to respond to the allegations publicly,” including Cuomo’s brother, CNN host Chris Cuomo.

“None of them was officially retained in any capacity by the Executive Chamber or any of the individuals involved,” the report notes of Lever, Chris Cuomo, and other outside advisors. “Nonetheless, they were regularly provided with confidential and often privileged information about state operations and helped make decisions that impacted State business and employees — all without any formal role, duty, or obligation to the State.”

“Ms. Lever coordinated with some of the reporters who received the documents to let them know that the Executive Chamber would be sending them,” the report reads. 

The report adds that Lever was part of a “team of advisors from within and outside the Chamber [who] had ongoing and regular discussions about how to respond to the allegations publicly,” including Cuomo’s brother, CNN host Chris Cuomo.

“None of them was officially retained in any capacity by the Executive Chamber or any of the individuals involved,” the report notes of Lever, Chris Cuomo, and other outside advisors. “Nonetheless, they were regularly provided with confidential and often privileged information about state operations and helped make decisions that impacted State business and employees — all without any formal role, duty, or obligation to the State.”

Lever’s name is mentioned 25 times in the report.

Ironically, Lever initially declined to sign on to a letter that included complaints against Boylan as well as her interactions with co-workers. Lever said the letter amounted to “victim shaming,” but later signed a different statement in support of Cuomo that denied Boylan’s allegations.

Cuomo is no stranger to heinous acts, committing seniors who tested positive for COVID-19 to nursing homes, resulting in the deaths of thousands.

Cuomo attorneys push back on Boylan retaliation claims following sex harass report

Sunday, November 17, 2019

Michal Bloomberg Apologizes For Setting Up His Discriminatory Harassment Policy Known as "Stop and Frisk"

There is no chance that Mike Bloomberg will/could/would win the Presidency of the United States, in our opinion. 

Of course this is the same thing people said about Donald Trump before he was elected. But there is one big difference: Bloomberg openly showed his disdain for African Americans in his highly discriminatory policy called "Stop and frisk" in New York City when he was mayor.

I spoke with many African American professionals and non-professionals in the past several days (ergo, not a scientific study) and 100% told me they would NEVER vote for Bloomberg because of "Stop and frisk".

I do not think that Mike's apology in all the major media today, November 17, 2019, will help him.






Credit...Mary Altaffer/Associated Press
Michael Bloomberg Apologizes for Stop-and-Frisk: ‘I Was Wrong’
New York Times, November 17, 2019

Ahead of a possible Democratic run for president, the former mayor of New York City reversed himself before an important party constituency: black voters.


Ahead of a potential Democratic presidential run, former Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg of New York reversed his longstanding support of the aggressive “stop-and-frisk” policing strategy that he pursued for a decade and that led to the disproportionate stopping of black and Latino people across the city.

“I was wrong,” Mr. Bloomberg declared. “And I am sorry.”

The speech, Mr. Bloomberg’s first since he re-emerged as a possible presidential candidate, was a remarkable concession by a 77-year-old billionaire not known for self-doubt that a pillar of his 12-year mayoralty was a mistake that he now regrets.

Speaking before the congregation at the Christian Cultural Center, a black megachurch in Brooklyn, Mr. Bloomberg delivered his apology in the heart of one of the communities most impacted by his policing policies and at a location that nodded to the fact that should he decide to run, African-American voters are a crucial Democratic constituency that he will need to win over.

Until Sunday, Mr. Bloomberg had steadfastly — and his critics say stubbornly — defended stop-and-frisk, which gave New York police officers sweeping authority to stop and search anyone they suspected of a crime. Mr. Bloomberg stood behind the program even after a federal judge ruled in 2013 that it violated the constitutional rights of minorities and despite the fact that crime continued to drop even after the program was phased out in recent years.

Mr. Bloomberg’s policing record is seen as one of his biggest vulnerabilities in 2020, given that black voters have helped determine the winner in the last nomination contests, elevating Barack Obama in 2008 and Hillary Clinton in 2016.

Moments after services ended, Mr. Bloomberg called the Rev. Al Sharpton, a prominent civil-rights leader who sparred with Mr. Bloomberg over stop-and-frisk during his mayoralty, to ask if he had watched his speech.

“You can’t expect people like us to forgive and forget after one speech,” Mr. Sharpton said he told Mr. Bloomberg, promising to hold him to the same standard as other politicians, such as former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr., who has walked back his past support for tough-on-crime drug legislation.

At the peak of stop-and-frisk, the racial disparities in its enforcement were jarring. Of 575,000 stops conducted in 2009, black and Latino people were nine times as likely as white people to be targeted by the police (even though, once stopped, they were no more likely to actually be arrested). In 2011, police stopped and questioned 684,330 New Yorkers; 87 percent of those stopped were black or Latino.

Proudly technocratic and data-driven, Mr. Bloomberg had long resisted what the numbers showed so starkly: Even as the stops were phased out toward the end of his administration and decreased sharply under his successor, Mayor Bill de Blasio, crime rates continued to plunge new lows unseen since the 1950s.

“I now see that we should have acted sooner, and acted faster,” Mr. Bloomberg said on Sunday.

Mr. Bloomberg acknowledged that the program had led to an “erosion of trust” and said that he hoped to “earn it back.”

“Over time, I’ve come to understand something that I long struggled to admit to myself: I got something important wrong,” he said. “I got something important really wrong. I didn’t understand back then the full impact that stops were having on the black and Latino communities. I was totally focused on saving lives — but as we know: good intentions aren’t good enough.”

After Mr. Bloomberg stepped down from the pulpit and returned to his seat in the front row, the church’s pastor, the Rev. A. R. Bernard, a longtime ally and former adviser to Mr. Bloomberg, shook the former mayor’s hand.

“Come on C.C.C., show some love and appreciation,” Rev. Bernard said, amid tepid applause.

For 2020, the critical question is whether Mr. Bloomberg’s reversal will be received in the black community as one of pure political expediency or genuine remorse.

“After years of running the Apartheid-like policy of stopping and frisking millions of people of color throughout New York City, and then defending it every day in office, then every day he was out of office up until this week, @MikeBloomberg now admits he was wrong,” Shaun King, a racial justice activist and a supporter of Senator Bernie Sanders in the presidential race, said on Twitter.

“You defended it for a whole generation,” he said. “Now you know you need Black votes and you have a change of heart.”

Mr. Bloomberg did not shy away from the fact that he was reconsidering his record in his last job as he eyed a potential new one. “In recent months, as I’ve thought about my future, I’ve been thinking more about my past — and coming to terms with where I came up short,” he said.

Mr. Bloomberg had consistently stood behind the program until now. “I think people, the voters, want low crime,” Mr. Bloomberg told The New York Times last year. “They don’t want kids to kill each other.”

In fact, Mr. Bloomberg had gone to this very same church, located in East New York, in 2012 to defend the stop-and-frisk program and answer mounting criticism around it.

“There is no doubt those stops have saved lives,” Mr. Bloomberg declared then. He tried to link the stops to a 34 percent crime rate drop at the time. “When you consider that 90 percent of all murder victims are black and Hispanic, there is no doubt most of those victims would have come from communities like this one,” he said then.

But on Sunday, he acknowledged that the community around the church had experienced the program very differently. The church is situated at the edge of the 75th Precinct in New York, which the New York Civil Liberties Union said led the city with 265,393 stops between 2003 and 2013.

“Our focus was on saving lives,” Mr. Bloomberg said. “But the fact is: Far too many innocent people were being stopped while we tried to do that. And the overwhelming majority of them were black and Latino. That may have included, I’m sorry to say, some of you here today, perhaps yourself, or your children, or your grandchildren, or your neighbors or your relatives.”

The reversal on stop-and-frisk was the starkest in a series of steps that Mr. Bloomberg has taken in the last two weeks to lay the groundwork for entering the Democratic presidential primary, a step that appears increasingly imminent.

He has already filed to be on the primary ballot in two states, Arkansas and Alabama. His advisers have outlined a strategy that would circumvent the four states that vote first in the 2020 nomination contest in favor of the broader map on Super Tuesday, when he could leverage his personal fortune.

And he announced plans to spend $100 million on digital ads against President Trump in key general election battleground states, blunting criticism that he could spend his money better elsewhere. Those ads would not feature him, advisers said, and the spending would be in addition to what he might spend on his own candidacy.

Mr. Bloomberg played coy about his plans from the pulpit. “I don’t know what the future holds for me,” he said.

Credit...John Locher/Associated Press

Where Michael Bloomberg Stands on the Issues

Wednesday, May 9, 2018

Next Step in the #MeToo Movement: Finding Solutions

 And seeking diversity in the voices.

Betsy Combier
Advocatz.com
betsy@advocatz.com


TheAtlantic.com
Is This the Next Step for the #MeToo Movement?

A just-announced collective of more than 300 women in Hollywood is attempting to fight sexual harassment in their own industry—and, crucially, far beyond
 For the most part, powerful women. For the most part, wealthy women. For the most part, white women. #MeToo, for all the progress it has made in exposing sexual harassment and abuse—and in exposing the contours of systemic sexism more broadly—has been, from the outset, largely limited in its scope: a movement started, in this iteration, by the famous and the familiar, a movement unsure of how to convert itself from stories into action. The question quickly became: How do you broaden it? How do you move the #MeToo movement beyond the provinces of privilege to be more inclusive, more systematized, more politically effective? How can #MeToo, essentially, move from the realm of the “me” to the realm of, more fully and more meaningfully, the “we”?

One possible answer: Shift its orientation, collectively, intentionally. Move from identifying the problem to actively solving it. On Monday, as 2017 gave way to 2018, more than 300 women in Hollywood—executives, actors, agents, writers, directors, and producers—announced the formation of Time’s Up, an effort to counter systemic sexual harassment not just in the entertainment industry, but also in industries across the country. It is an effort, significantly, that aims to combat workplace sexism at its foundations: through legal recourse. Through improved representation in board rooms and beyond. Through the changing of norms. “We just reached this conclusion in our heads that, damn it, everything is possible,” Shonda Rhimes, who has been closely involved with Time’s Up, told The New York Times of the effort. “Why shouldn’t it be?”
 
The initiative includes efforts to create legislation that will penalize companies that tolerate harassment, and that will discourage the use of the nondisclosure agreements that have helped to silence victims of abuse. It has embraced a mission to reach gender parity at Hollywood studios and talent agencies. And, perhaps most significantly, it includes a legal defense arm that will be administered by the National Women’s Law Center’s Legal Network for Gender Equity and that will connect victims of sexual harassment with legal representation. To that end, Time’s Up has established a GoFundMe effort aimed at raising $15 million—from Hollywood honchos and the public at large—to provide legal support to women and men who have experienced sexual harassment, assault, or abuse in the workplace. “Access to prompt and comprehensive legal and communications help,” the campaign notes, “will mean empowerment for these individuals and long term growth for our culture and communities as a whole.” (As of this writing, the campaign has raised nearly $14 million.)
 
 
The formation of Time’s Up was announced via a full-page advertisement in the Times and via an ad in La Opinion, a Spanish-language newspaper. The ads were accompanied by a detailed news report in the Times, and also by a social-media campaign—#TimesUp—that included participation from many of Hollywood’s most powerful voices, among them Rhimes, Eva Longoria, Rosario Dawson, Jennifer Lawrence, America Ferrera, Emma Stone, Uzo Aduba, Reese Witherspoon, Jill Soloway, Kerry Washington, Tina Tchen, Rashida Jones, Ashley Judd, Natalie Portman, Ava DuVernay, and many, many more.
 
The simple shift in hashtag, #MeToo to #TimesUp, is telling: While the former has, thus far, largely emphasized the personal and the anecdotal, #TimesUp—objective in subject, inclusive of verb, suggestive of action—embraces the political. It attempts to expand the fight against sexual harassment, and the workplace inequality that has allowed it to flourish for so long, beyond the realm of the individual story, the individual reality. (Reese Witherspoon: “We have been siloed off from each other. We’re finally hearing each other, and seeing each other, and now locking arms in solidarity with each other, and in solidarity for every woman who doesn’t feel seen, to be finally heard.”) One of the prevailing ethics of #MeToo has been the opt-in nature of the movement: To share one’s own story, with all the costs that accompany it, that ethic has acknowledged, is both an act of bravery and an act of privilege. While many have spoken up and spoken out, and should be commended for it, many more have not: The risks of doing so are too severe.
 
As a result, implied among all the stories that have formed #MeToo’s emerging portrait—all those splashes of color and light—have been all the stories that have remained in the darkness: the long shadows cast by all the people who lack the privileges of publicity. The known unknowns. #TimesUp, though—and Time’s Up, the organization—is an attempt to change that. It was inspired, its collaborators note, not just by the stories of celebrities, but also by a letter sent in November from the Alianza Nacional de Campesinas, an organization of farmworker women and women from farmworker families: a letter of solidarity to Hollywood actors who were speaking up and acting out. “Even though we work in very different environments,” the organization, representing some 700,000 workers, noted, “we share a common experience of being preyed upon by individuals who have the power to hire, fire, blacklist, and otherwise threaten our economic, physical, and emotional security.”
 
Time’s Up, for its part, is, significantly, leaderless: It is run by volunteers and comprised of working groups. (One of those groups oversaw the creation of the commission, led by Anita Hill, that is tasked with creating strategies to end sexual harassment in show business.) And Time’s Up emphasizes the crucial need to move beyond an ad-hoc approach to solving the systemic problems of harassment—the firings of abusers, the earnest promises of executives and leaders to do better—with solutions that are fittingly systematized. Time’s Up is also attempting to offer more quotidian solutions to workplace sexism. It has forged alliances with other organizations aimed at improving representation in the workplace, among them 50/50 by 2020, a group dedicated to achieving gender parity in Hollywood boardrooms. And Time’s Up’s mission statement includes several answers to the question of “What You Can Do”:
  1. Don’t be part of the problem. For starters, don’t harass anyone.
  2. If a person who has been harassed tells you about it, believe them. Don’t underestimate how hard it is to talk about these things.
  3. If you know someone who has been harassed, connect them to resources who can help, such as the ones found here.
  4. If you are a witness or bystander and see a harassing situation, you can help the person being harassed. You could actually intervene. You could confront the harasser. You could also help the person get out of the harassing situation. If you cannot do any of these things, you can still support the harassed person by corroborating and confirming the account of what happened.
  5. You can support those affected by sexual harassment by donating to the Time’s Up Legal Defense Fund.
  6. If you are part of an organization, look at the workforce and the leadership (management, officers, board of directors). Does it reflect the market where you operate and the world we live in? If not, ask why not and do something to move it closer to that goal.
  7. Acknowledge that talent is equally distributed, but work and career opportunities are not. Mentor someone from an underrepresented group in your industry. If you are in a position to do so, hire someone who can diversify the perspectives included in your organization; your team will be better and stronger for it.
  8. You can vote with your wallet: in your purchasing, in your investing, and in your charitable giving. Spend or give to companies and organizations who have more equitable leadership and opportunities for all.
Time’s Up, in all this, suggests an effort to bring one kind of full-circling to #MeToo: an attempt to move the movement, in a revealing reversal of bell hooks’s phrase, from the center to the margin. It is an effort to bring centrifugal forces to bear on #MeToo’s momentum, helping the movement to radiate out from beyond the privileged few. Is it, in that, fully, satisfyingly inclusive? Is it, on its own, enough? No. No, of course not. (One of the recommendations put forward by the group, according to the Times, is that “women walking the red carpet at the Golden Globes speak out and raise awareness by wearing black”—a “solution” that is well-meaning but, compared to the others, notably lacking in political rigor.) But Time’s Up, too, is a way to begin. It embraces the trajectory that forward movement so often adopts, in culture and in politics: a path not of smooth inevitability, but of change that comes in fits and starts. With stories that are shared and then—eventually—converted into action. As Shonda Rhimes summed it up: “If this group of women can’t fight for a model for other women who don’t have as much power and privilege, then who can?”

Sunday, April 29, 2018

New Sexual Harassment Policies Are Enforced - or Not

The saying goes: "a law is only as good as its' implementation".

At least that is what my dad, assistant attorney general under Louis Lefkowitz and others for 30 years, told me, over and over again.

So what we are seeing in America is the door swung wide open to women who claim sexual harassment by the men they worked for or with. Whether their stories are correct or not is still up in the air somewhere.

I think the hysterics have gone too far, for many reasons, but certainly one in particular. At this time, any person can make any claim about anyone, get the social media and news to pick it up, and boom....suddenly, the person who allegedly did the bad acts, is tainted for life, or at least until there is a proper investigation and which gets the facts to appear above the rumors in a Google search.

The NY POST asked me to comment on what I thought of NYC Mayor DeBlasio's claim that as far as sexual assault claims are concerned, "The Department of Education led the way with 471 complaints, of which only a mere seven, or a little over 1 percent, were substantiated."

My response is here:
NYC Department of Education headquarters, Tweed Courthouse
Department of Education stifled sex harassment claims: ex-union rep
 , April 26, 2018


It was set up to fail.
 The Department of Education office that substantiated just 1.5 percent of 471 sexual harassment claims was established to keep complaints from going to the more forceful federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, according to a veteran union rep.
 
“They wanted control over these complaints, so they invented a subsidiary of the DOE to control the initiation and outcome of a case,” said Betsy Combier, a former United Federation of Teachers rep who now advises teachers facing charges by the Department of Education. “The [DOE Office of Equal Opportunity] is there to make sure no one goes to the EEOC, where the case would actually get an independent hearing.”
A rep for the EEOC said New York City agencies may refer cases to it, but he could not provide numbers for how many actually were.
The DOE office substantiated just seven of 471 sex harassment claims it investigated between July 2013 and 2017.
Mayor Bill de Blasio defended the paltry number Wednesday, claiming there is a “hyper-complaint dynamic” and a culture of people lodging complaints with ulterior motives.
Advocates slammed de Blasio on Thursday for the retrograde defense.
“What he should have said is that addressing sexual harassment and sexual assault are top priorities and that, as the leader of our city, he is fully committed to restoring women’s trust and ensuring their safety,” said the National Organization for Women’s New York City chapter president Sonia Ossorio, adding de Blasio’s remarks were “disappointing” and a “disservice.”
A lawyer who represents sexual harassment victims said it was hard to believe the mayor’s comments came from the same guy who travels around the country to spread a progressive agenda.
“That’s crazy. You may expect that more from a large corporation than from a man who considers himself the most liberal person on the planet,” said Maimon Kirschenbaum of Joseph & Kirschenbaum LLP, which handles discrimination cases.
City officials insisted all harassment complaints are “thoroughly” investigated.
“The DOE’s Office of Equal Opportunity and Diversity Management treats every allegation of discrimination with the utmost seriousness and thoroughly investigates complaints,” said spokeswoman Toya Holness.
The city is hiring 11 new OEO investigators, which will bring the total to 18, officials said."
And there's the rub. Where are the facts? Let me give you a current example.

Veteran NBC Reporter Tom Brokaw was recently accused of sexual misconduct with a former News staffer Linda Vester. Suddenly, more than 60 female journalists came forward with a signed letter of support for him. We, the public, don't know what happened, but everyone "knows" that people can be found guilty or innocent depending on how the media coverage tells the "story" - if indeed there was one in the first place:
from Linda Stasi, NY Daily News April 29, 2018:
BROKAW, UNDER FIRE, HAS FEMALE SUPPORTERS
"Maybe you too but not #MeToo. More than 60 female journalists signed a letter of support for Tom Brokaw in response to allegations of sexual misconduct by his former colleague, Linda Vester.
Rachel Maddow, Maria Shriver and Andrea Mitchell were among those signing the statement that he "treated each of us with fairness and respect."
Brokaw meantime, called Vester's claims, "an ambush," which is pretty much what she said of him.
Bottom line? Just because he didn't try to kiss them doesn't mean he didn't try to kiss her. Just saying."

This is what is wrong with the #Me Too movement - my opinion as a woman - before, not after the media gets to say what really happened, please let's get the facts straight. Lets get professional investigators who know how to get to the "real" story, are trained in how to do that, and start from a neutral place where no side is favored. Let's stop the mobbing as a way to create facts.

Then we have laws that we can trust and lawmakers who can show us their mettle in standing up to a mob and say "stop".

Betsy Combier
betsy@advocatz.com
ADVOCATZ.com


Patricia Gunning’s retaliation complaint against her boss at a New York State agency was routed through several different investigative bodies and has yet to be resolved — a common fate for harassment complaints against state officials. CreditKarsten Moran for The New York Times

Sex Harassment Complaints in New York Fall Into an Enforcement Maze


In early April, with hundreds of New York City’s elite gathered at a power breakfast at Cipriani Wall Street, Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo extolled the merits of the state’s new sexual harassment policies, calling them a model that would be “binding on every government in the State of New York.”

But while Mr. Cuomo and other lawmakers have lavished praise upon the new reforms, little has been said about a less glamorous question: Who, exactly, will enforce them?

There is no single investigative body or agency charged with hearing complaints of sexual harassment or abuse by state officials. Nor is there a uniform statewide definition of sexual harassment.

What exists is a tangle of commissions, offices and agencies, many with overlapping jurisdictions but different procedures and enforcement powers — and no clear framework for reconciling them.

In three recent harassment complaints against top state officials, no fewer than six different groups conducted investigations, an examination by The New York Times shows. All the cases were reviewed at least three times, sometimes with conflicting results.

In one case, an allegation went from the state’s Justice Center for the Protection of People with Special Needs to the Governor’s Office of Employee Relations and then to the state inspector general.

In another, an allegation was handled by the inspector general’s office, then by the Division of Criminal Justice Services, and then by the Joint Commission on Public Ethics. In the third, it went from the Office of General Services to the governor’s employee relations office to the inspector general, and finally to the public ethics commission.

The cases show that bringing a complaint in New York State government can be a clunky, unpredictable process. What policies do exist are not always followed. And for all the sleek uniformity that officials have promised in recent weeks, none of the new policies fully address how, in practice, it will be achieved.

Mr. Cuomo’s aides say the multiple reviews of each of the three complaints demonstrate how seriously they were treated.

“Complainants should have as many options as possible,” Alphonso David, the governor’s counsel, said in a recent interview. “If I’m a victim of discrimination, I want to have as many options available to me to seek redress.”

But ethics experts said the lack of clarity around procedure could undermine accountability and public trust.

“When jurisdiction becomes so bifurcated or attenuated that the ball just keeps bouncing from one agency to the next, that can become a tool for delay,” said Paula Franzese, a professor at Seton Hall Law School and former chairwoman of New Jersey’s state ethics commission. “That can promote delay and studied inaction and certainly inefficiency.”

‘He Should Just Watch It’

In 2016, Patricia Gunning had been at the Justice Center for the Protection of People with Special Needs for three years. As the agency’s special prosecutor, she was one of its highest-ranking officials, and after months of feeling that the agency’s acting director had created a “frat-house culture,” including having an inappropriate relationship with a staffer, she confronted him.

The retaliation was immediate, according to Ms. Gunning. In June of that year, after the director, Jay Kiyonaga, shouted at her so loudly that several colleagues sent her emails afterward asking if she was all right, she reported him to the Justice Center’s general counsel.

The subsequent inquiry found that “everyone confirmed” Ms. Gunning’s account of Mr. Kiyonaga “raising his voice and swearing at you,” according to a recording of a conversation, obtained by The Times, between Ms. Gunning and the counsel, Robin Forshaw.

But the incident “didn’t raise with us the idea” that it needed to be reported further, Ms. Forshaw said.

“We’ve told him he should just watch it, and not do that kind of thing,” she said.

The agency had written a memo about the incident, but it would not go in Mr. Kiyonaga’s file. If Ms. Gunning wanted to continue pursuing the complaint, Ms. Forshaw said, she could “make a report of discrimination or retaliation with our affirmative action officer, the Division of Human Rights, the E.E.O.C.

“You could also, I guess, potentially make a workplace violence complaint, if that’s what your concern is,” Ms. Forshaw added.

Under a 10-step procedure devised by the governor’s office for state agencies, internal complaints are supposed to be investigated by an affirmative action officer. But Ms. Gunning said she did not speak to the Justice Center’s affirmative action liaison until after Ms. Forshaw’s call.

Ms. Gunning contacted the liaison herself, and the liaison referred the complaint to the Governor’s Office on Employee Relations. Investigators there, working with the Office of General Services, determined the complaint was “without merit,” according to Christine Buttigieg, a Justice Center spokeswoman. (Ms. Gunning said she was never informed of the results of that investigation.)

Ms. Gunning then approached the governor’s office directly. In an Oct. 26, 2017, letter to Mr. David and the governor’s secretary, Melissa DeRosa, she asked them to review her complaint, offering to share the recorded conversation. Mr. David replied to say he had referred her inquiry to the inspector general.

That investigation is still open. Ms. Gunning said she had heard from the inspector general’s office only twice since October.

“Here you have the governor talking about all this stuff, but you don’t see many state employees coming forward, right, because why would you?” Ms. Gunning said. “Given that I was at the top of my agency — if you witnessed what happened to me, why would you ever come forward?”

Mr. David said it was inaccurate to suggest that the state was trying to skirt accountability by referring complaints to different agencies.

“If an agency conducts an investigation, and they make a determination that the claim is unsubstantiated, the reason why the case is referred to another agency is because the complainant doesn’t like the result,” he said.

But Ms. Gunning said she had no choice but to bring her story to multiple agencies, because no single one provided a fair, thorough investigation.

“I literally had no idea where to go,” she said. “The burden should not be on victims of sexual harassment, discrimination or abuse to wade through multiple inconsistent and unsafe options.”

Two Inquiries, Two Findings

At the Division of Criminal Justice Services, after complaints surfaced against a senior official there, the referral order was reversed.

Last December, the state inspector general, Catherine Leahy Scott, wrote a letter informing the criminal justice agency’s deputy commissioner that the official, Brian J. Gestring, had created an environment “rife with incidents of sexual harassment, ageism, racism, and threats of retaliation and physical violence.”

But while the inspector general’s office was conducting its investigation, the agency had been conducting its own.

The agency’s conclusions contrasted starkly with the inspector general’s. The inspector general’s office found that Mr. Gestring, the director of the agency’s Office of Forensic Science, had told employees they needed to “hump more” and had threatened to hurt a female employee. It recommended that the agency “take action as you deem appropriate” against Mr. Gestring, according to the letter, which was first reported by The Albany Times Union.

The criminal justice division’s investigation, in contrast, concluded that the allegations were unsubstantiated, according to an agency spokeswoman, Janine Kava.

One employee who had testified against Mr. Gestring, Kimberly Schiavone, was transferred to another office within the agency, and another, Gina Bianchi, was fired and then reinstated to a demoted position. Mr. Gestring remained in his position.

After the women announced their intention to sue the state for retaliation and equal protection violations, Mr. David said he referred the retaliation claims to the Governor’s Office of Employee Relations; the harassment claims, as well as the conflicting findings of the two previous investigations, went to the Joint Commission on Public Ethics. Both of those inquiries remain unresolved.

John W. Bailey, a lawyer for the women, said the inspector general’s findings should have stood.

“It is clear that certain people are not happy with the inspector general’s report,” he said. “They want someone else to say, ‘We’ve taken a look at this, and we don’t agree.’”

New York’s statutes offer little guidance as to how these various investigative bodies are to coexist, and which might get priority over another.

The public ethics commission is responsible for investigating violations of the state’s public officers law, which does not explicitly refer to sexual harassment but requires officials to follow a “course of conduct which will not raise suspicion among the public.” The inspector general’s office investigates allegations including “abuse” in executive agencies. The Division of Human Rights prosecutes “unlawful discriminatory practices,” and the Governor’s Office of Employee Relations “promotes and maintains a safe and healthy workplace.”

Each state agency is also required to have its own procedures for addressing discrimination complaints.

Karl Sleight, the former executive director of the now-defunct New York State Ethics Commission, compared the development of state ethics bodies to the accumulation of shale.

“You have layer upon layer upon layer, and it’s reactionary. It’s by virtue of something happening — some kind of scandal,” he said. “That’s how these laws developed, how these agencies developed, and how their jurisdiction developed.

“It’s usually not with a clear central purpose. It’s to deal with the crisis du jour.”

Mr. David said that in the case of concurrent complaints, one agency might postpone its investigation until another’s had finished. But he acknowledged the potential for conflict.

“It may create confusion for an agency to do the same investigation where it’s interviewing the same people, reviewing the same documents, soliciting the same information,” he said.

And despite its investigative muscle, which includes subpoena power, the inspector general’s office has no enforcement authority; it can only recommend action. The public ethics commission can issue fines, but only for specific violations, such as improper financial disclosures. For others, including conduct that might “raise suspicion,” it too makes recommendations.

Mr. David conceded that the myriad complaint venues could have inadvertently negative effects. If two agencies arrived at different conclusions, complainants could lean on the one in their favor — “but be aware,” Mr. David said, that defendants could do the same.

“If you file a complaint with 30 different agencies, it may actually hurt you,” he said.

Turning a Blind Eye

In the third case, Lisa Marie Cater, an employee of the state’s Department of Motor Vehicles, dealt with multiple authorities after accusing Sam Hoyt, a regional president of the Empire State Development Corporation, New York’s main economic development arm, of sexual harassment and abuse. Ms. Cater filed a federal lawsuit against Mr. Hoyt and Mr. Cuomo in November, alleging the governor’s office had turned a blind eye to her complaint.

Mr. Hoyt, a former assemblyman from Buffalo, had previously been sanctioned after having an affair with an intern.

According to the lawsuit, Ms. Cater tried several times to report Mr. Hoyt’s harassment to the governor’s office but was consistently ignored.

Eventually, she was contacted by a lawyer with the Office of General Services, Noreen VanDoren. Ms. VanDoren, the lawsuit said, referred Ms. Cater to the inspector general’s office. From there, she was put in touch with the Joint Commission on Public Ethics.

The governor’s office, which has denied any wrongdoing, says it referred Ms. Cater’s complaint to the public ethics commission after she refused to cooperate with the inspector general’s office. It has consistently pointed to the multiple investigations as evidence that the lawsuit is baseless.

“The state launched three separate investigations in this matter, and any assertion to the contrary is patently and demonstrably false,” Mr. David said after the suit was filed.

The lawsuit is still active. The other complaints, too, remain unresolved.

Ms. Gunning resigned from the justice center last August. Ms. Schiavone and Ms. Bianchi remain in their demoted or transferred positions at the Division of Criminal Justice Services. Ms. Cater is on unpaid sick leave from the Department of Motor Vehicles.

Mr. Kiyonaga is now executive deputy commissioner of the Office for People with Developmental Disabilities, the state’s second-largest agency. Mr. Hoyt resigned from the state development corporation; after he announced his departure, top state officials, including the lieutenant governor, praised his work record.

Mr. Gestring, at the Division of Criminal Justice Services, was fired on March 22 — but not because of the inspector general’s findings, according to an agency spokeswoman.

He was fired, she said, for a separate set of “inappropriate remarks.”

Senator Andrea Stewart-Cousins, who leads the New York State Senate’s Democratic conference, is
among several leaders in Albany to propose legislation cracking down on sexual harassment; Gov.
Andrew M. Cuomo was the latest to do so. CreditNathaniel Brooks for The New York Times

A day before the start of what promises to be a contentious new legislative session, state policymakers signaled at least one area of possible agreement: cracking down on sexual harassment in New York government.

On Tuesday morning, a day before his annual State of the State address, Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo announced plans to propose legislation that would block government officials from using taxpayer dollars to settle sexual harassment claims, ban confidentiality agreements related to sexual harassment in state and local government, and standardize anti-harassment policies across government agencies.

The plan is among 21 proposals in Mr. Cuomo’s annual address that he has unveiled since December, including his most recent: calling on the Metropolitan Transportation Authority to look at improving transportation access to the Red Hook, Brooklyn area, including possibly extending subway service to a new station from Lower Manhattan. The governor also plans to preview legislation that would provide tax relief to property owners, a key issue in light of the federal move to reduce state and local property tax deductions.

The sexual-harassment proposals closely mirror others put forward by state lawmakers from both parties in recent weeks: In mid-December, Senators Catharine Young and Elaine Phillips, both Republicans, proposed bills that, in addition to banning secret settlements, would also codify the definition of sexual harassment in state law and expand harassment protections for independent contractors.

Also on Tuesday, the Senate Democratic Conference, led by Andrea Stewart-Cousins, put forward its own slate of similar bills, which would also more clearly outline state agencies’ and supervisors’ responsibilities to address harassment in their ranks.

All told, the nearly identical proposals reflect an unusual degree of consensus among the notoriously divided state Legislature. Policymakers said the agreement illustrates the extent to which there has been a recent national reckoning on workplace equality.

“I don’t think anybody could have avoided this topic, as you saw person after person being put into the limelight because of questionable behavior,” Ms. Stewart-Cousins, the Senate minority leader, said in an interview on Tuesday. “It sounds like everybody’s talking about it, so it sounds like everybody wants to do something.”

Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie, a Democrat, and Senator Jeffrey Klein, the leader of the Independent Democratic Conference, a group of renegade Democrats who often collaborate with the Republicans, also signaled their willingness on Tuesday to tighten policies against workplace sexual harassment.

Albany has already been entangled in the recent surge of alleged sexual misconduct disclosures. In November, Lisa Marie Cater, a former state employee, filed a lawsuit against Sam Hoyt, a former Cuomo appointee and former Democratic assemblyman from Buffalo, accusing him of paying $50,000 to buy her silence after he sexually harassed her. Ms. Cater also accused Mr. Cuomo and the governor’s office of being “deliberately indifferent” to her complaints, a charge they deny.

When a public radio reporter asked Mr. Cuomo last month about the allegations against Mr. Hoyt and what he could have done differently to address such behavior in state government, Mr. Cuomo told the reporter, Karen DeWitt, that her question did a “disservice to women.”

“When you say it’s state government, you do a disservice to women, with all due respect, even though you’re a woman,” he told Ms. DeWitt.

After Mr. Cuomo’s comments attracted widespread criticism, his aides scrambled to clarify that he had meant to convey the prevalence of sexual harassment across sectors.

In a statement on Tuesday, Mr. Cuomo said the past year had brought a “long overdue reckoning.”

“This year, we saw brave men and women across the nation shatter this silence and create a moment of reckoning that through these reforms we seek to turn into permanent protections,” he said.

Many of the various proposals wade into the private as well as the public domain. Mr. Cuomo’s planned legislation would require any companies with state business to disclose the number of sexual harassment cases they had faced each year, and would bar employers from forcing their employees into private arbitration. One of the Democrats’ bills would expand protections for employees of small businesses.

Ms. Young said the focus on harassment by celebrities and public officials, both in New York and nationwide, threatened to overshadow victims of sexual harassment whose accused abusers were less well known. She said her proposal to allow independent contractors, in industries ranging from hair styling to real estate, to sue their employers for sexual harassment could ensure protections for up to 40 percent of New Yorkers, the percentage she said work on a freelance or contract basis.

“This tackles the serial sexual predators of the rich and famous but also helps everyday New Yorkers who may find themselves in terrible situations,” Ms. Young said.

Lawmakers said the question of who to hold accountable for sexual harassment in Albany had been a topic of concern for years, citing the example of Vito Lopez, a former assemblyman whom two former aides accused of serial harassment in 2013. In 2015, Mr. Lopez settled with the women for $580,000, with the state paying $545,000.

But they agreed that the fallout from the revelations about movie mogul Harvey Weinstein had forcefully reopened the discussion.

“I think it was clear that women realized that this was a moment to really assert ourselves,” Ms. Stewart-Cousins, who is the first woman to lead a state conference in New York, said. “As a legislator, as a woman lawmaker, I couldn’t let this moment pass.”

Follow Vivian Wang on Twitter: @vwang3
 
By Dean Meminger  |  April 26, 2018 @10:27 Prrest records
By Dean Meminger  |  April 26, 2018 @10:27 Lawsuit alleges NYPD illegally uses sealed LBy Dean Meminger  |  April 26, 2018 @10:27 PM
The New York City Police Department is being accused of using sealed arrest records without a judge's approval — records that in most cases should never be seen again because they involve cases that were dismissed or defendants cleared of wrongdoing.

"The NYPD is using them to target people for new charges, for surveillance, they are giving them to prosecutors," said Bronx Defenders Deputy Director Jenn Borchetta.

Public defenders in the Bronx filed a class action lawsuit against the NYPD, charging the police have violated the rights of thousands of people by illegally using their sealed arrest records.

Borchetta says the lead plaintiff had his sealed records, including a photo, used against him in a robbery case.

"The photo should have been destroyed years before but an NYPD detective put his photo into an array, the witness identified him and he faced those charges a year and a half before the prosecutor finally recommended dismissing the charges. And it left him scared and left him feeling like a criminal even though he was innocent," Borchetta said.

NYPD Deputy Commissioner of Legal Matters Lawrence Byrne says he is comfortable with the way police handle sealed material and that they follow state laws.

"We have to isolate it," said Byrnes. "And some of the records actually have to be destroyed as opposed to sealed."

But Bronx Defenders says it found several instances of sealed records turned over to other law enforcement agencies.

"I'm not aware of it, that is not something that has been brought to the attention of the NYPD previously," Byrnes said. "And now we are looking at it. We are going to reevaluate and make sure our procedures comply with the law and that the sealed records are treated the way they need to be."

Bronx Defenders say that's what they're asking for — that the NYPD get a court's permission before opening up the sealed information.
Cuomo Takes Ungainly Dip Into Sexual Harassment Debate DEC. 13, 2017

Reversing Course, Cuomo Will Return Weinstein’s Money OCT. 12, 2017