Charges Filed Against Andrew Cuomo for Forcible Touching

The Albany Criminal Court issued a criminal summons charging Cuomo with a Class A misdemeanor.

Akash Mehta   ·   October 28, 2021
Governor Andrew Cuomo has been charged with forcible touching based on a December 2020 incident. | Governor's Press Office

The Albany Criminal Court issued a criminal summons for former governor Andrew Cuomo in connection with charges of “forcible touching,” a Class A misdemeanor, New York Focus first reported on Thursday. A court clerk said that the local sheriff’s department filed the charges.


On Thursday night, Albany County Sheriff Craig Apple confirmed that his office had filed a criminal summons with the court.


On Thursday, October 28, 2021, Sheriff's Investigators presented Albany City Court with evidence for their review to determine the most appropriate legal pathway moving forward on the investigation,” Apple said in a statement, adding that the criminal summons requires Cuomo to appear in court on November 17, 2021 at 2:30 p.m.


The specific charges are detailed in a misdemeanor complaint signed by Amy Kowalski, an investigator with the sheriff's department.


[documentcloud url="https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/21094881-misdemeanor-complaint-against-andrew-cuomo" width=693]


After New York Focus broke the news of the criminal summons, Albany Times Union reported that the summons was issued prematurely, after the sheriff’s office filed a summary of its investigation with the court but before the victim or her attorney had given consent. The New York Post later reported that Cuomo is expected to be arrested and formally charged next week.


Matt Toporowski, a criminal defense attorney in Albany, told New York Focus that it is likely that Cuomo will soon be arraigned in Albany Criminal Court and that the court will issue an order of protection.


“I wouldn’t be surprised if it happened tomorrow or Monday,” Toporowski said. “It could happen any day now at this point.”


In order to convict Cuomo, Toporowski said, the district attorney would have to prove both that the governor inappropriately touched the alleged victim and that he did so for the purpose of abusing her or degrading her for his own sexual gratification.”


He’ll be charged, and he’s presumed innocent,” Toporowski said. The district attorney is going to have to prove this charge.”


Albany District Attorney David Soares said in a statement that he was surprised to learn today that a criminal complaint was filed in Albany City Court by the Albany County Sheriff's Office against Andrew Cuomo.”


Cuomo's attorney, Rita Glavin, suggested that the charges were politically motivated.


Governor Cuomo has never assaulted anyone, and Sheriff Apple's motives here are patently improper," she said in a statement. Sheriff Apple didn't even tell the District Attorney what he was doing. But Apple's behavior is no surprise given (1) his August 7 press conference where he essentially pronounced the Governor guilty before doing an investigation, and (2) his Office's leaking of grand jury information. This is not professional law enforcement; this is politics.”


Rich Azzopardi, a spokesperson for the former governor, also questioned the sheriff's motive for filing the charges.


‘Accidentally’ filing a criminal charge without notification and consent of the prosecuting body doesn't pass the laugh test and this process reeks of Albany politics and perhaps worse,” he said in a statement, promising that the truth about what happened with this cowboy sheriff will come out.”


Cuomo resigned from office in August after Attorney General Letitia James released a report concluding that he had sexually harassed 11 women, including Brittany Commiso, an executive assistant. 


Commiso, who was the sixth woman to accuse Cuomo of sexually inappropriate conduct, filed a criminal complaint accusing Cuomo of groping her on August 5, just days before he announced his resignation on August 10. The complaint was made public on August 6, and Albany County Sheriff Craig Apple said at the time that the ensuing investigation could lead to Cuomo’s arrest and prosecution.


In a statement Thursday, James said the charges for forcible touching further validate the findings in our report.”


Additional reporting by Rebecca Klein, Sam Mellins, and Peter Sterne

BEFORE YOU GO, consider: If not for the article you just read, would the information in it be public?

Or would it remain hidden — buried within the confines of New York’s sprawling criminal-legal apparatus?

I started working at New York Focus in 2022, not long after the outlet launched. Since that time, our reporters and editors have been vigorously scrutinizing every facet of the Empire State’s criminal justice institutions, investigating power players and the impact of policy on state prisons, county jails, and local police and courts — always with an eye toward what it means for people involved in the system.

That system works hard to make those people invisible, and it shields those at the top from scrutiny. And without rigorous, resource-intensive journalism, it would all operate with significantly more impunity.

Only a handful of journalists do this type of work in New York. In the last decades, the number of local news outlets in the state has nearly halved, making our coverage all the more critical. Our criminal justice reporting has been cited in lawsuits, spurred legislation, and led to the rescission of statewide policies. With your help, we can continue to do this work, and go even deeper: We have endless ideas for more ambitious projects and harder hitting investigations. But we need your help.

As a small, nonprofit outlet, we rely on our readers to support our journalism. If you’re able, please consider supporting us with a one-time or monthly gift. We so appreciate your help.

Here’s to a more just, more transparent New York.

Chris Gelardi
Criminal Justice Investigative Reporter
Akash Mehta co-founded New York Focus and is the organization’s editor-in-chief. He grew up in New York City, and in another life he was a member of his local community board and a policy fellow at the City Council.
Also filed in Criminal Justice

Trump is poised to ramp up deportation activity in northern states like New York, which has few statewide policies limiting cooperation with federal immigration enforcement.

The state doesn’t publicize officer employment histories, making it impossible to track so-called wandering officers.

The police chief in Orange County’s Village of Chester claimed his department had no misconduct records. He was hiding an investigation into his own alleged malfeasance.

Also filed in New York State

Suozzi’s unreported financial interest in a promising healthcare startup highlights blurred lines between politics and profit.

Trump picked up some votes in New York this year. But Democrats lost far more.

Last month, we asked five questions about what would happen in the election. Here are the answers.