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Former Gov. Andrew Cuomo will speak publicly “relatively soon” about the sexual harassment scandal that forced him from office — and has no plans to “move on,” his defense lawyer said Thursday.

Cuomo hasn’t set a date for his re-emergence after more than six months out of the spotlight, lawyer Rita Glavin said during a virtual news conference. But Glavin said, “I do expect you are going to be hearing from the governor relatively soon on this issue.”

“He will not let this go,” she said.

“It is insulting to tell someone, when they have been treated wrongly and unfairly, to just move on. He is not going to move on.”

Glavin also claimed that five criminal investigations proved Cuomo didn’t harass anyone, even though multiple district attorneys called his accusers “credible.”

“Five district attorneys reviewed the evidence and after looking at the evidence and looking at the law, those five district attorneys all announced that they’re not going to bring charges,” she said.

“That’s because Gov. Cuomo did not sexually harass anybody.”

Glavin also said of Cuomo’s accusers, “The evidence shows it’s not 11 women — it’s zero.”

“When you apply the evidence and the law, zero women were harassed,” she said.


  “When you apply the evidence and the law, zero women were harassed,” Rita Glavin said. AP Photo “When you apply the evidence and the law, zero women were harassed,” Rita Glavin said. AP Photo

Glavin’s assertions came after she previously acknowledged that some of the accusations against Cuomo may have had merit, when she wrote in October that “even if you were to accept every complaint as fact (which we do not), more than half of the complainant’s allegations do not meet the standard of sexual harassment set forth in law.”

Cuomo has also acknowledged that some of his actions were inappropriate, saying in his resignation speech, “In my mind, I’ve never crossed the line with anyone. But I didn’t realize the extent to which the line has been redrawn.”

During a Q&A with reporters, Glavin on Thursday all but admitted that Cuomo had violated the state’s policy against sexual harassment, saying, “The state policy is not the law.”

“And, you know, kissing someone on the cheek is not sexual harassment. It just isn’t. You have to look at the context, you have to look at the overall behavior, and in our view, the governor didn’t violate the law.”

Sexual harassment isn’t a crime under New York law, but district attorneys in Manhattan, Albany and Westchester, Nassau and Oswego counties all launched probes into allegations that he subjected various women to unwanted touching and kissing.


  Former Gov. Andrew Cuomo resigned amid a barrage of sexual harassment allegations in August 2021. AP Photo/Richard Drew, File Former Gov. Andrew Cuomo resigned amid a barrage of sexual harassment allegations in August 2021. AP Photo/Richard Drew, File

The accusations — including from a state trooper who was assigned to his protective detail — were outlined in the bombshell report from Attorney General Letitia James that forced Cuomo to resign under threat of impeachment in August.

The most serious allegation — that Cuomo, 64, groped 33-year-old aide Brittany Commisso in Albany’s Executive Mansion in December 2020 — led to the filing of a misdemeanor charge of forcible touching.

But that case was dropped by Albany County District Attorney David Soares, who said that although Commisso was “cooperative and credible, after review of all the available evidence we have concluded that we cannot meet our burden at trial.”

The other prosecutors also declined to prosecute Cuomo, with Oswego DA Gregory Oakes most recently saying there wasn’t “a sufficient legal basis to bring criminal charges.”

Oakes added, however, that “this decision is not an exoneration.”

Also during her news conference, Glavin said Cuomo “is going to personally make a complaint” alleging attorney misconduct by James and the lawyers she hired to investigate him, former acting Manhattan US Attorney Joon Kim and Anne Clark.

The complaint will involve what Glavin called “clear evidence of perjury and witness tampering” that she said was “based on the limited evidence uncovered to date” and “could expand as more evidence is uncovered.”

A James spokesperson said, “For months, Andrew Cuomo has been hiding behind his campaign lawyer and falsely crying ‘witch hunt’ despite previously admitting to this misconduct multiple times.”

“If he thinks he has a real legal case, he should go ahead and file it. These attacks are disgraceful and yet another desperate charade to mask the truth: Andrew Cuomo is a serial sexual harasser,” the spokesperson added.

Kim and Clark didn’t immediately return requests for comment.

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