Attorney General
Gillibrand Endorses AG’s Rx Drug Database
Jan 24th - 10:56 am
U.S. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand today is backing Attorney General Eric Schneiderman’s proposal to create an online database that would track and report controll substances.
The bill, known as I-STOP, comes after the attorney general’s office issued a report showing that prescription-drug abuse is on the rise.
“Abuse of addictive painkillers has increased drastically in the last decade, but our state’s regulation and monitoring of these powerful drugs has not kept up,” said U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand. “I strongly support Attorney General Schneiderman’s I-STOP bill, which would help to rein in doctor shopping, prevent the use of forged prescriptions, and identify patients in need of addiction treatment. It’s the right solution to tackle the growing epidemic of prescription drug abuse.”
Schneiderman’s report found that prescriptions for painkillers like hydrocodone and oxycodone have ballooned over the last decade in all corners of the state.
“From national leaders like Senator Gillibrand to law enforcement officials and health care advocates, support is growing every day to create the I-STOP database to address the epidemic of prescription drug abuse here in New York,” said Attorney General Schneiderman. “The time is now to streamline communication between health care providers and pharmacists to better serve patients, stop prescription drug trafficking, and provide treatment to those who are addicted.”
Forty-three states have some form of prescription monitoring, according to the attorney general’s office.
Schneiderman’s Foreclosure Program Wins Plaudits
Jan 12th - 2:56 pm
As New York braces for what’s expected to be a new wave of foreclosure this year, Attorney General Eric Schneiderman announced a $1 million program designed to stem that potential tide.
“As our state faces another tight budget year, we must be creative and aggressive in our efforts to support working families who are struggling to stay in their homes,” Schneiderman said. “This funding will provide thousands of New Yorkers with the legal expertise they desperately need to defend their rights and avoid falling prey to unscrupulous mortgage servicers or foreclosure mill law firms filing fabricated or robosigned documents. My office will continue to use every tool available to us to protect homeowners and all vulnerable New Yorkers.”
The money is coming from a 2006 settlement (when Eliot Spitzer was still office) with Ameriquest Mortgage Co. The investigation at the time found that the company was engaged in predatory lending practices and misrepresenting loan terms.
The settlement required Ameriquest to pony up $295 million in restitution, with about $22 million going back to New York. The announcement immediately got support from advocacy groups.
“We wholeheartedly thank Attorney General Schneiderman for making this new funding available for foreclosure prevention services. This builds nicely on the gap funding the Governor and the Legislature made available for the Foreclosure Prevention Services Program in the tax reform package passed in December. The Attorney General’s funding will make a significant difference for the programs that receive it, ”Kristin Brown Lilley, Director of Policy Advocacy for Empire Justice Center said.
The announcement also comes as Department of Financial Services launches a foreclosure prevention unit and crackdown on possible abuses within the system.
“We’re also going to consider every regulatory tool in our toolbelt to try and see what we can do to deal with the foreclosure problem,” DFS Superintendent Ben Lawsky told reporters earlier this month
Schneiderman Recaps First Year
Dec 29th - 12:09 pm
Attorney General Eric Schneiderman’s office recapped its first year in a lengthy news release and — spoiler alert! — concludes the Democrat’s freshman year was a success.
Schneiderman highlights dozens of programs, initiatives and cases that have proved fruitful and here’s a smattering:
*The formation of the “unique” Taxpayer Protection Bureau;
*Exposing a non-profit devised by state Sen. Shirley Huntley that funneled money to aides (the AG’s office says that case is ongoing).
*Successfully upheld the state’s handgun licensing statute
*He alludes to his staunch opposition a settlement with major mortgage lending institutions that resulted in getting kicked off a panel of attorneys general. The episode made Schneiderman something of a hero for a progressive movement disappointed with the Obama administration. The statement refers to it as, “Protected homeowners as a national leader by fighting for a fair 50-state mortgage settlement.”
Schneiderman is following two tough acts: Eliot Spitzer and Andrew Cuomo, but the mortgage settlement case in particular has helped the new AG stand apart.
“We’ve worked diligently this year to restore New Yorkers’ faith in the public and private sectors, and I am proud of the progress we’ve made for the people of this state,” Schneiderman said. “From cracking down on corruption in government, to rooting out fraud against taxpayers, to protecting consumers from financial crimes, and keeping our streets safe, each day we’ve moved closer to fulfilling the goal of building the best public law firm in the country to serve and protect all New Yorkers.”
Schneiderman: Member Item Case ‘Straightforward and Graphic’
Dec 22nd - 11:38 am
The case against the Democratic Senate aides charged with siphoning member item money is “straightforward and graphic,” Attorney General Eric Schneiderman said in an interview for WAMC Northeast Public Radio’s Alan Chartock.
Schneiderman earlier this month indicted four people — two of whom work with Queens Democratic Sen. Shirley Huntley — accusing them of either stealing or fabricating documents relating to nearly $30,000 in taxpayer-funded earmarks diverted from a non-profit.
The interview will air on the Capitol Connection Friday at 10:30 p.m. and a repeat broadcast on Saturday at 1p.m.
The Democratic attorney general said the case demonstrated that his office is agnostic to political affiliations.
“It was a pretty straightforward and graphic case: two people who stole money and two people who helped them cover it up by fabricating documents,” he said. “I think it’s important to send the message, these are folks who are Democratic Senate staffers and I used to be a Democrat in the Senate, send a message that it doesn’t how powerful you are, it doesn’t matter what you’re party is, we are going to enforce the law.”
Schneiderman faced questions during the 2010 Democratic primary and general election that he wouldn’t be able to go after his Senate colleagues as attorney general, making the ongoing case something of a rebuke to that charge.
Schneiderman said in the interview more indictments are to come.
His office earlier this year requested expanded investigatory powers from the Cuomo administration, but were turned down (ex-Cuomo aide Steve Cohen denied a request was made).
Asked about the incident, Schneiderman parried to say that he does work with the administration on number of issues to begin with and again related his close effort with Comptroller Tom DiNapoli to investigate public fraud and corruption.
“There’s not really much to tell,” he said. “Our office is completely intertwined with the executive branch. I mean, the governor is my biggest client. Our staff attorneys are working with the folks in the state agencies all the time.”
Schneiderman took office a year ago, succeeding Andrew Cuomo. He told Chartock in the interview that being called by the honorary “general” still feels weird.
“I have to say ‘General Schneiderman’ doesn’t sound quite right to me,” he said. “Some of my colleagues around the country really insist you call them “general” but others don’t like it all. I’m more comfortable if you call me Eric.”
AG: Huntley Member Items Funneled To Aide (Update)
Dec 7th - 12:17 pm
Attorney General Eric Schneiderman and Comptroller Tom DiNapoli announced today that four people — including an aide to Queens Democratic Sen. Shirley Huntley — will be indicted for filing fraudulent documents in order to pocket $30,000 in member-item cash meant for a non-profit.
The indictments and ongoing investigation is the fruit of an agreement between their offices to audit and investigate public malfeasance. The indictments also help the attorney general contradict claims made by his primary and general election opponents last year that the then-state senator would not aggressively pursue his Democratic colleagues once he moves to the AG’s office.
The investigation found that the president and treasurer of the Parent Workshop, Inc. filed phony documents with the state in order to receive public money via a legislative member item. The indictment says that instead of using the money for public programs, two of the defendants pocketed about $29,950.
The indictment names the non-profit’s president, Patricia Savage, who also serves as an aide to Huntley, along with Lynn Smith, the organization’s treasurer who also shares a residence with Huntley. Officials allege that the defendants falsely claimed they would use the money for workshops and to conduct outreach to parents on the workings of the New York public school system.
“This personal profit-making scheme defrauded taxpayers, all the while depriving communities of much-needed funds. Now it’s time to hold those behind it accountable,” Schneiderman said in a statement. “The charges announced today send a strong message that those who abuse their positions to rip off taxpayers will be prosecuted. My office’s partnership with the Comptroller is designed to combat such corruption, and we will continue to work tirelessly to protect every penny of taxpayer money during these challenging economic times.”
Subpoenaed in the case is consultant David R. Gantt, who officials said falsified records in order to claim that he was paid in cash for conducting workshops.
Roger Scotland, the president of the Southern Queens Park Association, a separate non-profit organization, also created a false doucment, investigators allege. He was charged with first-degree falsifying business records.
It’s important to note several additional things here: Schneiderman has claimed that he wanted broader investigatory powers from Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s office, but was rebuffed. Cuomo’s former top aide claims no request was made by the attorney general’s office.
And the news comes as lawmakers are back in town today to take up Cuomo’s big economic package as well. Cuomo and Schneiderman are said to have a rocky relationship, but the attorney general said late last month that the relationship between their offices is professional.
Update: The good-government group Common Cause chimes in. Also, I’m told the Huntley is not in Albany today for the special session.
“The indictment against Senator Huntley’s staff is another disturbing reminder that member items are a prime target for abuse by unscrupulous individuals. Perhaps Senator Huntley will consider a bill to eliminate member items, and in so doing, the opportunity to abuse the public trust. Common Cause applauds the Attorney General and Comptroller for their commitment to public integrity, and urges them to continue their efforts,” said Susan Lerner, Executive Director of Common Cause/NY.
Democrats, AG Score Win In Prison Count Suit (Update)
Dec 2nd - 4:18 pm
Senate Republicans were dealt a blow in their fight against a law that requires prisoners be counted as residents of their last known address during the contentious legislative redistricting process.
The ruling — which is sure to be challenged in the case known as Little v. LATFOR — is also a big win for Attorney General Eric Schneiderman’s office. Recall that the Gov. Andrew Cuomo suggested that his successor may not be able to defend the suit, given Schneiderman’s role in shaping the legislation as a state senator.
“Today’s decision by Judge Devine is a victory for fundamental fairness and equal representation,” Schneiderman said in a statement. “The court affirmed the legality of counting incarcerated individuals in their home communities for the purposes of redrawing district lines, rather than the districts where they are in prison.”
“As a lawmaker, I fought to end the practice of prison-based gerrymandering that distorted the democratic process and undermined the principle of ‘one person, one vote.’ This decision affirms and applies a fair standard to the drawing of state legislative districts and makes it easier for counties to do the same by providing them with an accurate data set.”
In a ruling handed down by Supreme Court Judge Eugene Devine and obtained by Capital Tonight, there’s no criticism of the way the 2009 law was passed, which was inserted into a budget bill over Republican objections.
Rather Devine writes that the law follows the one person, one vote rule for redistricting.
From the ruling:
“Though inmates may be physically found in locations of their respective correctional facilities at the time the census is conducted, there is nothing in the record to indicate that such inmates have any actual permancy in these locations or have an intent to remain. In fact it is undisputed that the inmates are transferred at the discretion of DOCCS and plaintiffs have not proffered any evidence that inmates have substantial ties to the communities in which they are involuntarily and temporarily located.”
Senate Republicans, who hold a narrow 32-30 majority, stand the most to lose from the law being upheld. Most state and federal prisons are in the upstate region, which is predominantly represented by Republican senators.
The Assembly released a look at what the new population count would mean for Senate districts, with 26 of 30 seats held by Democratis receiving a population gain.
Democrats pushed the measure into the law while they were in the Senate majority in 2010, partially as a means of insurance during the redistricting process.
LATFOR, the lawmaker-led commission charged with redrawing state and federal boundaries, has said it would draw lines based on the new law, though initially members hesitated citing the lawsuit.
The ruling is good news for Senate Democrats, who hope that the shifting district counts will give them a leg-up in the redistricting process next year.
“The time for delay is over,” spokesman Mike Murphy said. “The Senate Republicans and LATFOR must immediately comply with the law. Any further delay is an outrageous and illegal assault on Democracy.”
UPDATE: Senate GOP spokesman Scott Reif said: “We will review the judge’s decision, but regardless of the final outcome of this lawsuit Republicans will expand our majority in the Senate next year.”
Plaintiffs in the case have indicated that they will indeed appeal. In addition, Sen. Mike Nozzolio, LATFOR’s Republican co-chair, said in October the GOP would comply with the prisoner-counting law, regardless of the lawsuit’s outcome, and always intended to do so. The Democrats aren’t buying that, however, and have accused the Republicans of dragging their feet.
Relationship With Cuomo ‘Good’ Says Schneiderman
Nov 30th - 2:08 pm
At his first major Albany news conference since taking office, Attorney General Eric Schneiderman characterized the relationship with Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s office as being “good” and a professional one, despite his public disagreement over granting special investigatory powers to his office.
“It’s good,” the attorney general said at a news conference. “We have an ongoing working relationship. Our offices interact everyday — probably every business day of the year. Our counsels work with state agencies all the time and we have a very good working relationship.”
Schneiderman was in Albany this afternoon for a news conference on an undercover operation his office conducted that found firearm sellers at gun shows fail to provide background checks.
He wouldn’t go into details on his conversations with the governor’s office on seeking broader investigatory powers to prosecute corruption, a so-called “blanket referral” that would give his office legislative and state agency oversight. But Cuomo’s former top aide, Steve Cohen, denied the attorney general’s office ever made the request. Cuomo’s office maintains that such a move would require legislative approval and that an executive order would be illegal.
The disagreement, highlighting the rough relationship between the two men, was chronicled in a virtuoso piece by Jimmy Vielkind earlier this month.
At the time, the attorney general’s office didn’t provide details and today Schneiderman similarly didn’t go into specifics.
“I don’t want to really get into private discussions that we are having,” Schneiderman said. “We both have a very strong committment to public integrity and to restoring public confidence in the state government.”
The attorney general’s office and the executive chamber frequently clash, regardless ofwho is in office. Cuomo, Schneiderman’s predecessor, has had a mixed relationship with Eliot Spitzer to say the least.
Schneiderman added that he’s sought to expand public corruption probes under his watch by expanding the public integrity unit, deploying local ethics watchdogs in his district offices around the state and forming an anti-corruption partnership with Comptroller Tom DiNapoli.
“I think we’ve gone a long way this session to restoring public confidence in the government,” Schneiderman said. “We’re both committed to pursuing that and I think we are looking for creative ways as we go forward.”
Gay Marriage Law Here To Stay, AG Vows
Nov 30th - 1:43 pm
Attorney General Eric Schneiderman is confident the same-sex marriage law in New York will be held, despite what he said were a “variety of challenges” to the measure.
In a ruling issued earlier this month, but was made known yesterday, a Livingston County court judge allowed a lawsuit against the state’s same-sex marriage law to continue, writing in scathing opinion that New York’s notoriously narrow Open Meetings Law could be reviewed in the case.
“I’m confident our position in the Open Meetings Law will be upheld,” he added.
The judge wrote that there was “clear arm-twisting” by Gov. Andrew Cuomo to get the law voted on by waiving the required three-day waiting period. The suit was filed by New Yorkers For Constitutional Freedoms, a conservative religious lobby.
“It is ironic that much of the state’s brief passionately spews sanctimonious verbiage on the separation of powers in the governmental branches, and clear arm-twisting by the Executive on the Legislative permeates this entire process,” Judge Robert Wiggins wrote.
Schneiderman, a staunch proponent of same-sex marriage and LGBT rights, added that he expected the lawsuit to continue through the court system.
“Obviously we disagree with the court’s interpretation of the Open Meetings Law, it’s an ongoing litigation, we expect it will go through the appellate process. The important thing for everyone to remember and for all of you to make clear since you’re writing about this, is the marriage equality law is validly in place. Same-sex marriages can take place in New York, there are a variety of challenges to the law that are making their way through the courts.”
Cuomo And More Power For AG, A Gray Area
Nov 22nd - 9:27 am
CapCon’s Jimmy Vielkind has a fascinating article in today’s TU about a dispute between AG Eric Schneiderman and Gov. Andrew Cuomo over expanding the AG’s power to probe public corruption.
It pretty much boils down to this: Schneiderman, through intermediaries, reportedly tried to get Cuomo to use his executive power to issue a so-called “blanket referral” that would give the AG subpoena power in corruption cases.
That’s something Schneiderman does not currently have on his own, though he has teamed up with state Comptroller Tom DiNapoli (another Democrat with a tricky, and sometimes contentious, relationship with Cuomo) and can piggyback on his power in certain instances.
The Cuomo camp, which denies anyone connected to Schneiderman ever made such an ask, argues that even if the governor wanted to expand the power of the office he used to hold, he couldn’t do so because acting unilaterally through executive order would be illegal.
Cuomo’s former top aide, Steve Cohen, (to whom, incidentally, the Schneiderman appeal was reportedly made through the AG’s top aide, Neal Kwatra), argued the following in a Nov. 26, 2010 response to a NY Times OpEd calling for the governor to empower Schneiderman:
“(C)alling for Governor-elect Andrew M. Cuomo to immediately and unilaterally empower the attorney general to investigate the Legislature is, I believe, wrong on the law and misguided in approach.”
“…In truth, what New York needs is wholesale reform of its ethics laws, not a jerry-rigged solution. This state is more likely to get real reform if the governor-elect can build consensus with the Legislature, rather than attacking it on Day 1 with an illegal proposal. We should all know by now that steamrollers don’t work in Albany.”
“Also, the governor does not have the legal authority to broadly delegate prosecution of corruption in the Legislature to the attorney general. The governor does, however, have legal options if the Legislature fails to act by passing real reform. For example, under the Moreland Act the governor could appoint a commission to investigate corruption.”
(That “steamroller” reference is, of course, a swipe at former Gov. Eliot Spitzer).
Schneiderman Launches Religious Rights Initiative
Nov 9th - 2:00 pm
Attorney General Eric Schneiderman announced today he was launching a project called the Religious Rights Initiative, part of the Civil Rights Bureau aimed at enforcing anti-discrimination laws and addressing religious rights issues.
The AG’s office said the project will be composed of public education, outreach and law enforcement — including litigation.
“Our state’s rich history of religious diversity is founded on our nation’s Bill of Rights and enshrined by laws that protect New Yorkers’ right to freely practice their faith,” Schneiderman said in a statement. “The Religious Rights Initiative will focus on violations of this fundamental freedom, ensure that religious rights are protected, and work with communities throughout the state to foster and promote religious tolerance.”
The AP reports that Schneiderman will lay out the initiative in a speech today before the Anti-Defamation League in New York City.
Discrimination cases in New York have more than doubled since 1997.
The initiative comes following a spate of incidents, including a nationally publicized incident this summer at Rye Playland. A group of Muslim women were told they couldn’t go on some rides while wearing headscarves and a tussel with security guards ensued.


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