having said that, we can't just take the report and say there is nothing to see here. very impressive, intelligent, and amazing, you know, individual. i am very uncomfortable with a process, wherein you have a report that's issued. i think the governor has a right, through his attorney and through his own bidding, should he choose, to speak to the issues of why this contradicts the behavior he's engaged in. What we now do and what's important to the process is that report be challenged. but it's a report that was put together by investigators. it references the 74,000 documents, e-mails, text messages. many, not under oath, right? i think 40 some odd were interviewed under oath. the report, of course, notes the 170-some-odd witnesses who were interviewed. and when we start talking about the criminal nature of this, i think it's important to note the following. there is a distinction, obviously, between the civil nature of this and the criminal nature of this. does that give the lawyer for andrew cuomo - um - ammunition here? > i think it does. the lawyer for the executive assistant, this accuser, says that that date is wrong. but also, i mean, you know, we talked about the date of executive assistant one. but, joey, what was your take on this? i mean, she, again, was focusing on the credibility. It could take years, which is why the governor had signed that. are you married? why don't you marry him? when are you going to have kids? but the governor does engage in that, as well. he routinely is talking to staffers about their personal lives. senator schumer - looking a "new york times" article from 2012. he does ask people question about their personal lives. he will say darling, he will say sweetheart. which is that, you know, he does make the mistake. > when you say he does slip, what do you mean by that? > oh, he said it in his video - he said it in his video statements. and he's also talked about how he needs to, you know, he does slip, at times. and the way he may have treated, you know, people he's had longer relationships. and you have, you know, younger staffers. and i don't - you know, you do have to appreciate, when you are in a position of power. Glavin earned her undergraduate degree magna cum laude from Middlebury College.Governor of the state of new york. She has been a Director for Fordham Law School’s Alumni Association Board since 2008. Glavin is a graduate of Fordham Law School, where she served as Editor-in-Chief of the Fordham Law Review and graduated Order of the Coif. Rita began her legal career as a Law Clerk to the Honorable John F. As a prosecutor she handled and supervised hundreds of criminal matters. Attorney in the Southern District of New York for seven years and serving as the head of DOJ’s Criminal Division in 2009 where she supervised more than 400 attorneys. Department of Justice, including working as an Assistant U.S. She has also represented dozens of indigent criminal defendants as a member of the Criminal Justice Act panel for the Southern District of New York.īefore entering private practice, Rita spent almost 12 years as a federal prosecutor with the U.S. City & State NY recently listed her amongst the Albany Power 100. She has been named a white collar “trailblazer” by The National Law Journal, among the 500 “Leading Lawyers in America” by the Law Dragon, and a “National Practice Area Star” and “Top 250 Women in Litigation” for white collar by Benchmark Litigation. Rita has tried more than 20 cases to verdict and was named a Law360 “White Collar MVP” after shepherding the former executive director of the Dewey & LeBoeuf law firm to acquittals on all counts after a 14-week jury trial on fraud charges. Companies have called on her to handle sensitive internal investigations involving employee misconduct. Rita is a trusted advisor to clients navigating issues involving cybersecurity, the securities laws, Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, False Claims Act, and Bank Secrecy Act. Rita’s clients have included executives, hedge funds, elected officials, traders, public companies, and foreign nationals in a variety of investigations by state and federal authorities including the DOJ, SEC, CFTC, New York State Attorney General’s office, the Manhattan D.A.’s Office, and the New York Department of Financial Services. Quoting her peers, Rita has been described in Chambers USA as “an absolutely fantastic attorney and fierce advocate,” an “experienced trial lawyer who gets terrific results in high-profile cases,” and “one of the best trial lawyers I have ever seen.” The New York Law Journal described her as “formidable and quick on her feet” in the courtroom. Glavin is a nationally recognized attorney in white collar defense and government investigations, who represents individuals and companies in sensitive and high-profile investigations, trials, and internal investigations.
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