Cuomo lawyer asks Albany sheriff to preserve records related to 'rouge investigation'

Glavin stated the governor has denied the allegations from the beginning and does not believe any politician has evidence proving otherwise.

News 12 Staff

Oct 30, 2021, 8:43 PM

Updated 1,078 days ago

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Andrew Cuomo’s attorney asked Albany County Sheriff Craig D. Apple, Sr. to “preserve everything relating to” its investigation into the former governor’s sexual misconduct case.
According to a letter sent by Rita Glavin, that would include phone records, text messages and email.
"In an attempt to deflect from his bizarre and unprofessional rouge investigation that resulted in a criminal charge 'erroneously' being filed against former Gov. Cuomo, Albany Sheriff Craig Apple claimed there was an 'overwhelming amount of evidence' gathered in this case. However, every item listed by his investigator only verifies uncontested facts that this employee was in and out of the governor's mansion as part of her job — there is zero corroborating evidence that a crime occurred."

Glavin stated the governor has denied the allegations from the beginning and does not believe any politician has evidence proving otherwise.
A New York sheriff on Friday defended his decision to file a criminal complaint against former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo without consulting prosecutors or the accuser, a woman who says the Democrat groped her late last year.
 
Sheriff Apple said on Friday he was confident in the strength of the case, which he said was based on witness interviews and voluminous records.
 
“I feel very confident that the district attorney is going to prosecute this,” he told reporters at a news conference in Albany, the state capital.
 
A court summons requires Cuomo to appear for an arraignment on Nov. 17, though that date could change.
 
He will be allowed to report voluntarily, but Undersheriff William Rice told The Associated Press the ex-governor will be booked at the sheriff's headquarters, including being photographed, fingerprinted and probably placed in handcuffs during a transport to court. Cuomo will not likely spend any time in a holding cell, Rice said.
 
The one-page complaint filed in Albany City Court accuses Cuomo of forcible touching by putting his hand under a woman’s shirt on Dec. 7.
AP Wire Services were used in this report.