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#Lindsey Boylan husband
msclaritea · 2 years
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"More than 130 people, including Gloria Steinem, and organizations in the field of women’s rights advocacy and domestic violence and sexual assault awareness have signed an open letter to support Amber Heard, who lost a defamation suit this year brought by her ex-husband, Johnny Depp, for an op-ed in which she said she was a “public figure representing domestic abuse.”
The letter, which was exclusively shared with NBC News ahead of its public release Wednesday, was signed by groups like the National Organization for Women, the National Women’s Law Center, Equality Now and the Women’s March Foundation. It was written by a group of people who identify as domestic violence survivors and supporters of Heard."
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ORGANIZATIONS
Aidileys • Associazione Iroko Onlus • Chicago Alliance Against Sexual Exploitation (CAASE)  •  CCChat Magazine  • Custody Peace • Cyber Civil Rights Initiative • Center for Safety and Change  • Clearinghouse on Women's Issues  Crumiller  • The Feminist Litigation Firm •  Democratic Activists for Women Now •  Engendered Collective •  EnoughIsEnough Voter Project • Equal Rights Advocates • Equality Now • Esperanza United (formerly Casa de Esperanza: National Latin@ Network) •  Every Voice Coalition • Fearless! Hudson Valley, Inc. • Female Filmaker Fuse • Feminist Majority Foundation • Futures Without Violence • C.A. Goldberg, PLLC, Victims' Rights Law Firm • Hope's Door •  Know Your IX • LIFT: Living in Freedom Together, Worcester • Ms. Magazine •The National Organization for Women • The National Organization for Women: Virginia Chapter • National Women’s Law Center • Refuge: for Women & Children. Against Domestic Violence. •  Réseau International des Mères en Lutte • Sakhi for South Asian Women • Sanctuary for Families  • Sexual Violence Prevention Association • The Asian Feminist • The Mary Sue • The Safe Center LI • UltraViolet • Victim Focus • Violence Free Minnesota •  WeSpoke • Women's March Action • Women's March Foundation • Women’s Equal Justice Project •
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INDIVIDUALS
Renée B. Adams, 
Professor, University of Oxford
Dr. Esohe Aghatise, 
Executive Director, Associazione Iroko Onlus
Cheryl A. Alexander, 
L.I.C.S.W., RMT
Aisha Ali-Khan, 
British Women’s Rights Campaigner, Women United Organisation 
Sara Ahmed, 
Independent Scholar, Author, “Complaint!”
Kate Amber, 
PgCert, Founder, End Coercive Control USA
Dr. Adrienne Barnett, 
Reader in Law, Brunel Law School, Brunel University London
Dr. Nicole Bedera, 
Sociologist
Nicole Bell, 
Founder and CEO, LIFT Living in Freedom Together
Panayiota Bertzikis,
CEO/Founder Military Rape Crisis Center
Amy Betts,
Founder of Aidileys - Rights, Family Court Information Services   
Antoinette Bonsignore, J.D., 
Legal and Prosecutorial Analyst, Case Systems Training Review Program, Washington State Criminal Justice Training Commission
Anna Boucher, 
Associate Professor in Public Policy and Political Science (LSE) and admitted Solicitor, Supreme Court NSW, Australia
Lindsey Boylan, 
Women’s Rights Activist
Dr. Stephanie Ann Brandt MD, 
Faculty and Chairman, Ethics Committee, New York Psychoanalytic Institute New York, NY, Clinical Assistant Professor of Psychiatry, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, Experienced Forensic Evaluation and Testimony in Family, Supreme and Federal ( EDNY + SDNY ) Child focused Litigation
Susan J. Brison, 
Eunice and Julian Cohen Professor for the Study of Ethics and Human Values, Dartmouth College
Professor Ann Bartow, 
University of New Hampshire School of Law. 
Laura S Brown, Ph.D. 
ABPP, psychologist in private practice, past President, APA Division of Trauma Psychology and Society for The Psychology of Women
Dr. Kari Brozowski 
Associate Professor, Wilfrid Laurier University 
Twiss Butler, 
Feminist
Rachel Camp, 
Professor from Practice and Co-Director, Georgetown University Domestic Violence Clinic (title for identification purposes only)
Nancy Chi Cantalupo, 
Associate Professor of Law, Wayne State University Law School (title and institution provided for identification purposes only)
Kali Casab, 
The Voices and Faces Project
Lauren B. Cattaneo, 
Associate Professor, Department of Psychology, George Mason University
Gillian Chadwick, 
Professor of Law, Washburn University School of Law
Debra Chopp, 
Clinical Professor of Law, University of Michigan Law School
Seo-Young Chu 
Associate Professor Queens College, CUNY
Andrew Thomas Cicchetti, 
Ph.D. LCSW-R
Dr. Christine Marie Cocchiola, 
DSW, LCSW Coercive Control Advocate, Educator, Researcher & Survivor
J.V. Connors 
Ph.D. New Mexico licensed psychologist 
Dr. Elizabeth Dalgarno, 
SHERA Research Group
Michele Landis Dauber, 
Frederick I. Richman Professor of Law, Stanford Law School (title and institution for identification purposes only)
Ella Dawson, 
Author
Drew Dixon, 
Producer, Activist
Margaret B. Drew, 
Associate Professor of Law, UMass Law School
Prof. Dr. Jennifer Drobac
Danielle Pelfrey Duryea
Boston University School of Law (institution for identification purposes only)
Erin Dwyer-Frazier, 
Attorney and Domestic Violence Advocate
Heidi Eilers, Ph.D.,
BCBA-D, CCTP, Board Certified Behavior Analyst-Doctoral, Certified Clinical Trauma Professional
Aliaa Magda Elmahdy,
Egyptian internet activist and women's rights advocate  
Deborah Epstein, 
Agnes Williams Sesquicentennial Professor of Gender, Violence, and Law, Georgetown Law University Center
Ray Epstein, 
President/Founder of Student Activists Against Sexual Assault at Temple University
Heidi Li Feldman, 
Professor of Law, Georgetown University Law Center
Bill Flack, 
Professor of Psychology, Bucknell University
Professor Michael Flood
Queensland University of Technology
Terry Forliti, 
Communication Coordinator for Upside Sex Trafficking Initiative, Minneapolis, Minnesota
Jaclyn Friedman, 
editor of “Yes Means Yes” and “Believe Me”
Professor Aisha K. Gill, Ph.D. 
CBE | Professor of Criminology
Professor Leigh Gilmore, 
Ohio State University, Author, “The #MeToo Effect: What Happens When We Believe Women”
Lisa Goodman, 
Ph.D., Professor, Boston College
Leigh Goodmark, 
Marjorie Cook Professor of Law and Co-Director, Clinical Law Program
Cynthia A. Graham, 
PhD, C. Psychol, Professor of Sexual and Reproductive Health  
Gretchen Grappone,
LICSW PTSD Clinician & Trainer  
Julie Green, 
Research Assistant, Violence Against Women and Children team, Department of Social Work, The University of Melbourne
Min Grob, 
Founder CCChat Magazine 
Kit Gruelle, 
Advocate, Survivor, Film Subject for HBO Documentary Private Violence
Emiliana Guereca, 
Founder and Executive Director Women's March Action and Women's March Foundation
Kayla Harder 
Founder, Survivors Righting Wrongs 
Yasmeen Hassan, 
Global Executive Director, Equality Now
Tirion Havard, 
Associate Professor, England UK
Judith L. Herman, M.D., 
Professor of Psychiatry (Part Time), Harvard Medical School
CarlLa Horton, M.P.A., 
Executive Director, Hope’s Door
Emily Mia Hughes-Smith,
MBACP. BSc(hons) dip. Sup
Doreen Hunter, 
Co-Founder, Americas Conference to End Coercive Control (ACECC)
Holly Jacobs, PhD 
Founder, Board Member, Cyber Civil Rights Initiative
Hans Johnson, 
President, East Area Progressive Democrats
Sheherezade Kara
International Human Rights Jurist and Consultant, human-writes.org 
Dr. Emma Katz, Ph.D., 
Senior Lecturer, Liverpool Hope University, UK
Mara Keire 
Senior Research Fellow, Rothermere American Institute, University of Oxford, UK
Dr. Margaret Kertesz, 
Senior Research Fellow, University of Melbourne
Farrah Khan, 
CEO Possibility Seeds 
Amanda Kippert, 
Editor-in-Chief, DomesticShelters.org, Co-Host, Toxic the Podcast
Judge Judy Harris Kluger, 
Executive Director, Sanctuary for Families
Dean Laurie Kohn, 
George Washington Law School 
Kellyann Kostyal-Larrier, 
Executive Director, Fearless! Hudson Valley, Inc.
Dr. Ingeborg Kraus, 
Clinical Psychologist, Psychotraumatologist
Lauren Krouse, 
Writer & Survivor-Victim Advocate  
Afsana Lachaux, 
Activist & British Women’s Rights Campaigner.
Dr Rhiannon Lane, 
Research Fellow in Sociology, Cardiff University
Julianna Lee, 
Clinical Assistant Professor of Law, University of Michigan Law School
Geraldine Lee-Treweek ,
Professor of Social Justice at Birmingham City University, UK, specialist in Abuse Studies and Psychotherapist. 
Dorchen A. Leidholdt, Esq., 
Director, Center for Battered Women’s Legal Services at Sanctuary for Families
Edward Lloyd, 
Evan M. Frankel Clinical Professor Emeritus in Environmental Law, Columbia University School of Law
Dr. Laura E. Ludtke, 
Independent Scholar
Linda MacDonald, 
Persons Against Non-State Torture, co-author "Women Unsilenced Our Refusal To Let Torturer-Traffickers Win"
Catharine A. MacKinnon, 
Elizabeth A. Long Professor of Law at Michigan Law, and the long-term James Barr Ames Visiting Professor of Law at Harvard Law School (all titles for identification purposes only)
David Mandel, 
Executive Director, Safe and Together Institute
Jane Manning, 
Director, Women’s Equal Justice Project
Omny Miranda Martone, 
Founder & CEO of Sexual Violence Provention Association 
Joan Meier, 
National Family Violence Law Center, Professor of Clinical Law, George Washington University Law School
Carolyn Modeen, 
Sun Cities West Valley NOW
Amy Myers, 
Acting Director, Gender Justice Clinic, Washington College of Law (for identification purposes only)
Natalie Nanasi, 
Associate Professor, SMU Dedman School of Law, Director, Judge Elmo B. Hunter Legal Center for Victims of Crimes Against Women
Laura Beth Nielsen, JD, Ph.D., 
Professor & Chair, Department of Sociology, Northwestern University, Research Professor, American Bar Foundation, President, Law and Society Association, Author, “License to Harass: Law, Hierarchy, and Offensive Public Speech” (titles for identification purposes only)
Emer O'Toole, Ph.D., 
Professor, Concordia University
Natalie Page, 
#TheCourtSaid Founder, Survivor Family Network Director
David Palumbo-Liu, 
Louise Hewlett Nixon Professor, Stanford University
Reena Parikh, 
Director of Civil Rights Clinic, Boston College Law School (title for identification purposes only)
Moira Penza,
Attorney, Former federal prosecutor, Eastern District of New York; led NXIVM investigation and trial  
Jaime Cabeza Pereiro, 
Professor of Labor and Social Security Law, University of Vigo
Mary Peterson, 
PhD candidate & Activist Specialising in Fighting Sexual Harassment in Academia 
Alison Phipps, 
Professor of Sociology, Newcastle University
Christie Pitts
Alexa Polar,
Writer, Producer, Director & Founder of Female Filmakers Fuse 
Nicole Prause, Ph.D., 
Senior Statistician, University of California, Los Angeles (title for identification purposes only)
Dr. Charlotte Proudman, 
Barrister and Academic
Dr Shivaun Quinlivan
Associate Professor, University of Galway
Professor Tracey Raney, 
Toronto Metropolitan University, Toronto, Canada
Anne K. Ream, 
Activist and Founder of The Voices and Faces Project
Laura Richards 
BSc, MSc, MBPsS, Criminal Behavioural Analyst 
Jennifer Robinson, 
Australian human rights lawyer and barrister at Doughty St Chambers, U.K. counsel to Amber Heard, author of How Many More Women? 
Diane Rosenfeld, 
Lecturer on Law, Director, Gender Violence Program, Harvard Law School
Lily Kay Ross, MDiv, Ph.D. 
Feminism and Ethics Research Fellow, Psymposia
David A. Santacroce, 
Clinical Professor of Law, University of Michigan Law School
Jeanne Sarson, 
co-author, “Women Unsilenced Our Refusal To Let Torturer-Traffickers Win,” Co-Founder Persons Against Non-State Torture.
Purna Sen, 
Ph.D. Visiting Professor, Child and Woman Abuse Studies Unit, LMU Special Advisor to the Prosecutor at the International Criminal Court
Dr. John Simister, 
Ph.D., Domestic Violence and Economics Researcher, Senior Lecturer, Business School Manchester Metropolitan University
Ann Simonton, 
Founder Director of Media Watch: For Improving image of Women in Media
Rita Smith, 
National Expert on Violence Against Women, Former Executive Director of the National Coalition Against Domestic Violence (NCADV)
Rachel Louise Snyder, 
Professor, American University, Author, “No Visible Bruises”
Evan Stark, Ph.D., MSW, 
Professor Emeritus, Rutgers University
Gloria Steinem, 
Writer, Activist
Leslie Morgan Steiner, 
Advocate, Author, “Crazy Love”
Ruth Silver Taube, 
Adjunct Professor of Law, Santa Clara University, Legal Services Co-Chair, South Bay Coalition to End Human Trafficking, Delegate, Santa Clara County’s Human Trafficking Commission (all titles for identification purposes only)
Dr. Jessica Taylor, 
Chartered Psychologist, CEO of Victim Focus
Alison Turkos, 
Survivor + Advocate
Vanessa Tyson, 
Associate Professor of Politics, Scripps College
Robin West, J.D., 
Professor of Law, Georgetown Law School
Merle Weiner, Philip H. Knight Professor of Law,  University of Oregon (title for identification purposes only)
Constance Wu,
Actor and author
Sophia Yen, M.D., 
Adolescent Medicine Specialist, CEO/Founder of Pandia Health
Amy Ziering, 
Filmmaker
SO MANY ORGANIZATIONS ARE MERELY FRONTS FOR VARIOUS AGENDAS OR TAX SCAMS. AT LEAST NOW I KNOW WHY WRITERS FROM THE MARY SUE HAVE JOINED IN HARASSING BENEDICT CUMBERBATCH. AMBER HEARD IS A TRAINED PROSTITUTE/KOMPROMAT COLLECTOR.
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nghubs1 · 4 years
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Lindsey Boylan Biography, Age, Career and Net Worth
Lindsey Boylan Biography, Age, Career and Net Worth
Lindsey Boylan is an American politician and democrat. She was the former deputy secretary for economic development and special adviser to New York Governor Andrew Cuomo. She ran to represent the New York’s 10th congressional district but lost in the party primaries. Lindsey Boyla was born on 5th April 1984. Educational Background Lindsey Boylan attended Robinson Secondary School. She holds a…
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garudabluffs · 3 years
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Timeline: 7 years of Cuomo's alleged sexual misconduct
A timeline of the allegations based on the attorney general’s report shows incidents often occurred within days or weeks of one another and that Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo asked multiple women similar...
The allegations in this timeline are based on the findings of an investigation conducted by the state attorney general's office. Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo disputes that he sexually harassed or inappropriately touched women.
Around May 2014 Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo kisses Ana Liss on the cheek and slips his arm around her lower waist at a work party. He frequently flirts with her and comments on her appearance on other occasions while she works as an Empire State Fellow.
Jan. 6, 2016 At an event in New York City, Cuomo spends time with Lindsey Boylan, who works in state economic development, and wraps his hands around both sides of her hands in a way she thinks is "creepy."
Nov. 1, 2016 A senior Cuomo aide emails Lindsey Boylan's boss to ask if she'll be at an event Cuomo is attending. Cuomo had previously emarked on Boylan's appearance, and her boss said he thought Cuomo had a crush on her.
Dec. 12, 2016 The first time he meets Kaitlin, a lobbyist, the governor pulls her by the hand into a dance pose for a photo and then tells her he is going to have her work in state government. (Kaitlin is identified in the report by first name only.)
Around Dec. 14, 2016 Cuomo notes to Lindsey Boylan her resemblance to Lisa Shields, who he had dated a decade earlier, and then calls her "Lisa" later.
December 2016 Cuomo tours Lindsey Boylan around his office and shows her a cigar box from former President Bill Clinton. She wonders if it is a reference to Clinton's affair with Monica Lewinsky.
Dec. 21, 2016 Although she did not share her contact or apply for a job in the Executive Chamber, Kaitlin is offered an interview at the governor's direction.
December 2016 Kaitlin is offered a job with her requested salary of $120,000 and she accepts the position.
Dec. 31, 2016 At a subway opening in NYC, Cuomo singles out Lindsey Boylan and her husband for a greeting among a crowd, which her husband feels is odd.
Feb. 14, 2017 Through his staff, the governor sends Lindsey Boylan along with other female senior staffers a rose on Valentine's Day. She finds it creepy.
May 2017 At a conservation event, Cuomo meets Virginia Limmiatis, touches the letters on her shirt over her breasts and then whispers next to her cheek, "I'm going to say I see a spider on your shoulder." Limmiatis tells her sister about the governor's behavior about two days later.
Around October 2017 On his plane, Cuomo suggests to Lindsey Boylan they play strip poker. She does not think it is a literal offer, but an inappropriate sexual inneundo. Cuomo staffers claimed the governor never made the remark, though state development official Howard Zemsky told investigators that he remembered the governor saying it, and that it had been directed at Boylan.
Nov. 4, 2017 Trooper #1 meets the governor in New York City while escorting his motorcade. They have a short conversation, and the next day there is talk of her joining his detail.
Later in November 2017
Trooper #1 was at first told she was not eligible to apply to serve on the governor's security detail due to a minimum requirement of three or more years in the State Police. Then a trooper asks her to apply because the minimum had been changed from three years to two specifically for
Around December 2017 Cuomo makes suggestive comments and remarks on Kaitlin's appearance while she is working for him, but over time she feels she fell out of his favor. She is then "pushed onto" another state agency by the Executive Chamber.
January 2018 Trooper #1 joins the governor's State Police Protectice Service Unit.
January 2018 Lindsey Boylan tells a government lawyer she was not subjected to sex discrimination, harassment or retaliation while working in the administration.
July 2018 Lindsey Boylan repeatedly tries to resign from state government including after one incident where top Cuomo aide Melissa DeRosa yelled and cursed at her.
September 2018 Cuomo offers to give Trooper #1 a tour of his residence in Mount Kisco unless "it (is) against protocols" and snickers.
Sept. 26, 2018 Lindsey Boylan meets with a government lawyer after a conflict arose between her and another employee. Although the lawyer says she is not being asked to resign, fired or pushed out in any way, Boylan resigns. Cuomo later tells investigators she called him for help but he did not answer.
Early 2019 At work, Gov. Andrew M.Cuomo asks executive assistant Alyssa McGrath if she speaks Italian. She says no and he grins and says a phrase she later learned means she is beautiful. He later says things to her in Italian she did not understand.
Early 2019 The governor looks down Alyssa McGrath's shirt as she leans over and then comments on a necklace under her shirt. Cuomo later tells investigators he did not recall this incident.
May 16, 2019 Cuomo asks Charlotte Bennett, an executive assistant, about her previous relationships and whether she "honored her commitments." Later he asks her to sing "Danny Boy."
Summer 2019 Cuomo asks permission to kiss Trooper #1 in his driveway. She says "sure." He kisses her cheek.
Aug. 9, 2019 Cuomo asks Charlotte Bennett to lift weights with him in his mansion gym and asks whether she has a boyfriend.
Aug. 13, 2019 Cuomo asks Trooper #1 "Why don't you wear a dress?" while they are driving. After she mentions the remark to another trooper, Trooper #1's superior says that comment "stays in the truck."
September 2019 Cuomo grabs the rear end of State Entity Employee #1 while posing for a photo with her at a work event. She immediately tells her supervisor who does not respond. She subsequently tells her family about the incident with the governor and has a discussion with Human Resources about how to report sexual harassment without revealing her specific allegation. Cuomo has denied this happened.
Sept. 14, 2019
At a wedding, Cuomo places his hand on Anna Ruch's back, where her dress has a cutout, and she pulls his hand away. He says, "Wow you're aggressive." He then kisses her cheek as she turns away. This is their first meeting.
Sept. 23, 2019 Cuomo sweeps his hand from Trooper #1's belly button to her hip, while she holds the door open for him. In testimony, Cuomo denies this happened.
Oct. 4, 2019 The governor sings the chorus of "Do You Love Me" by the Contours to Charlotte Bennett several times. He later tells investigators he doesn't recall singing it to her ("I don't even know that song," he says).
Oct. 14 2019 Cuomo asks Charlotte Bennett to do push-ups in front of him. She does approximately 20.
Mid-to-late October 2019 Cuomo asks to kiss Trooper #1 again. She tells him she is sick and he looks disgusted.
November 2019 Executive Assistant #1 starts to assist the governor in the office and at the Executive Mansion. He comments on her appearance and clothing and called her "flirtatious."
November 2019 Cuomo comments on Charlotte Bennett's hair, which is in a bun, and then repeatedly calls her "bun."
December 2019 At a holiday party, Cuomo told Trooper #1 "don't tell anyone about our conversations."
December 2019 At the Executive Chamber holiday party, the governor kisses Executive Assistant #1 and Alyssa McGrath on the cheeks and then poses for a photo with his hands firmly around their ribcages, right below their breasts.
Dec. 31, 2019 At the Executive Mansion, Cuomo asks Executive Assistant #1 for a selfie and grabs her rear end, rubbing it for five seconds while she takes the photo. Cuomo told her not to show anyone the photos.
Jan. 19, 2020 Charlotte Bennett talks to Cuomo about her sexual assault and why it motivates her to work in politics. She finds some of his comments insensitive but appreciates his interest.
January or February 2020 Cuomo says he wishes he could go out in Saratoga Springs with Executive Assistant #1 and Alyssa McGrath, who is getting divorced. In his testimony, Cuomo denied he said this.
Early 2020 The governor asks executive assistant #1 and Alyssa McGrath if they plan to "mingle" with men on their Florida vacation. He calls them "mingle mamas."
March 2020 After Cuomo changed the requirements to get a candidate on the ballot, Lindsey Boylan, who is running for office, texts his staff the change was "not helpful" and she "will find ways to respond." Cuomo's team later accuses Boylan of going public with her harassment allegations for political reasons.
March 17, 2020 State Entity Employee #2, a doctor, performs a COVID-19 test on Cuomo during a news conference. Prior to the event, he makes a comment she believes is a sexual inneundo and stands close to her. During the event, he says she made her gown "look good."
Mid-May 2020 The governor provides feedback on a speech on sexual assault that Charlotte Bennett plans to give and repeatedly says "You were raped" while pointing at her. She feels uncomfortable. He later says he wants to find a lady and drive off into the mountains with her.
June 5, 2020 Cuomo tells Charlotte Bennett he is lonely, wants a girlfriend in Albany and asks her when was the last time she had a "real hug." He also asks her about past relationships and if she'd been with older men, saying he'd date someone age 22 and up.
June 6, 2020 Alone in Cuomo's office, Cuomo tells Charlotte Bennett she looks like Daisy Duke in her jean shorts and asks if she had found him a girlfriend yet. Cuomo denied some but not all of these allegations.
June 10, 2020 Charlotte Bennett reports the governor's behavior to his chief of staff Jill DesRosiers, who offers to find her a new position. Bennett is transferred to the health policy team.
June 29, 2020 Charlotte Bennett tells other staff in the Executive Chamber about the harassment. One staffer then speaks to Jill DesRosiers about the allegations.
June 30, 2020 Charlotte Bennett talks to Jill DesRosiers and counsel Judy Mogul about her experiences with Cuomo after another staffer spoke up about what Bennett said. They advise her how to make a complaint, but do not say they would make a report.
July 1, 2020 Judy Mogul tells Charlotte Bennett she determined a report to the Governor's Office of Employee Relations, which investigates sexual harassment, is not needed. Bennett was "terrified" of an investigation.
Late July or early August Charlotte Bennett takes medical leave and then decides to quit her job because she was anxious and did not want to work for the governor. Senior staff offer to find her another job in state government.
November 2020 In his Capitol office, Cuomo asks Executive Assistant #1, “(H)ave you ever had sex with anyone other than your husband?” She says she had not.
November 2020 Cuomo grills Alyssa McGrath on the phone about her ex-husband, personal life and whether she was seeing anyone.
Nov. 16, 2020 Cuomo pulls Executive Assistant #1 in for a close hug and then grabs her breast over her bra at the Executive Mansion. Cuomo has denied touching her breasts in his testimony.
December 2020 The Times Union asks the New York State Police about Trooper #1 joining the governor's detail and whether she met the eligibility requirements. The Executive Chamber gives a misleading response and denounces the inquiry as sexist.
Dec. 5, 2020 Lindsey Boylan tweets in part, “Most toxic team environment? Working for @NYGovCuomo” and “I tried to quit three times before it stuck. ... That environment is beyond toxic.” She follows with more tweets on Dec. 8 suggesting she'd say more if other women came forward.
Dec. 8, 2020 Charlotte Bennett writes to Lindsey Boylan about the governor's harassment: "The verbal abuse, intimidation and living in constant fear were all horribly toxic — dehumanizing and traumatizing. And then he came onto me. I was scared to imagine what would happen if I rejected him, so I disappeared instead. My time in public service ended because he was bored and lonely. It still breaks my heart."
December 2020 A Cuomo aide, Rich Azzopardi, calls Ana Liss to ask if she'd spoken with Lindsey Boylan and requests she tell him if Boylan reached out.
Around Dec. 15, 2020 Cuomo writes the first draft of the letter that denies Lindsey Boylan's allegations and impugns her credibility. Then aides work on it. The letter later shifts to a positive letter of support for Cuomo that they attempt to get staff to sign. It is never published.
Mid-December 2020 Cuomo senior advisers probe various former staff for their own sexual harassment allegations and to see who might support Lindsey Boylan or speak to the news media.
December 2020 After Kaitlin tweets messages of support for Lindsey Boylan, a former staff member calls Kaitlin and surreptiously records the call at the insistence of top Cuomo aide Melissa DeRosa, who is looking for evidence of whether she is working with Boylan.
Mid-to-late December 2020 Cuomo asks Executive Assistant #1
not to “talk about anything to anyone else”
because “people talk around here” and he could “get in a lot of trouble.” She tells him she will not say anything.
+ 19 more > clocks
READ MORE https://www.timesunion.com/state/article/cuomo-sexual-harassment-report-timeline-16367561.php
"good enough for government work" raising the bar?
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sachwlang · 4 years
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Cuomo’s First Accuser Raises New Claims of Harassment and Retaliation
Cuomo’s First Accuser Raises New Claims of Harassment and Retaliation
On the morning of December 13, 2020, Lindsey Boylan sat in the passenger seat of her family’s car, with her husband at the wheel and her six-year-old daughter in the back. She began typing a series of tweets on her phone. Boylan, a former special adviser to New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, had felt increasingly troubled as press reports mentioned Cuomo as a potential Attorney General in the Biden…
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hbhughes · 5 years
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MaryJo Boylan Vancavage
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MaryJo Boylan Vancavage, 80, of Kingston passed away on Saturday, October 19th, at home surrounded by her loved ones.
MaryJo was born on June 2, 1939 in Kingston and was the daughter of the late Joseph and Mary (Jewell) Boylan.
She graduated from Sacred Heart High School, class of 1957.
MaryJo resided in Kingston. She had been employed as a secretary at Wilkes-Barre General Hospital and RCA Incorporated. She was a member of Saint Ignatius of Loyola Church, an extremely devoted grandmother and avid New York Yankee fan. 
MaryJo should be remembered for her deep love of family, friends, and her Irish heritage. She truly was happiest spending time with those she loved while listening and dancing to music. 
Preceding her in death are her parents, her brother, Patrick Boylan; sisters, Beth Miner, Cathy Walski; and her niece Karen Curtis.
Surviving are her husband of 44 ½ years, Edmund Vancavage; children, Marianne McKinley and husband, Troy, Lindsey Keating and husband, Brian, Robert Vancavage and wife, Donna, Debbie Macko and husband, Mark, Donna Caladie and husband, Tony; sisters, Rosalie Baur and husband, Frank, Margaret McDermott and husband, Andrew; brother, Kevin Boylan and wife, Janet; grandchildren, Adam, Caitlin, and Ali McKinley, Drew and Addison Keating, Rachel and Ryan Vancavage, Samantha and Sarah Macko, Anthony and Brett Caladie; great grandchildren, Grayson and Scarlett McKinley, Aiden and Julian Decker; and many nieces and nephews who adored her.
Funeral on Wednesday at 10 A.M. from the Hugh B. Hughes & Son, Inc., Funeral Home, 1044 Wyoming Avenue, Forty Fort, with the Mass of Christian Burial at 10:30 A.M. in Saint Ignatius of Loyola Church, Kingston, with Father Joseph Mosley, officiating. The entombment will be in Saint Mary’s Cemetery, Hanover Township.
Friends may call on Tuesday from 4 to 7 P.M. at the funeral home.
Memorial contributions, if desired, can be made to the Alzheimer’s Association.
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