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Following the town hall meeting, Paterson told reporters he met with his personal attorney on Saturday as a result of the scandals. Paterson also defended Attorney General Andrew Cuomo, whom many Democrats prefer over Paterson as the candidate for governor and who is investigating the scandals. Paterson said appointing a special prosecutor would give up control over the cost and time spent on the case and he has confidence Cuomo will do a timely and fair job. Cuomo, a Democrat, is widely expected to run for governor. Paterson dropped his own bid for the Democratic nomination shortly after Cuomo started his investigation. The Siena poll found two-thirds of voters prefer an independent prosecutor for the case, but a majority of voters questioned also have faith in Cuomo's ability to be fair. Some in the legal community share that concern. "We live in times of extraordinary cynicism," said James Tierney, director of the National State Attorney's General Program at Columbia University. It's natural for citizens to view the political system with cynicism, he said, "but I see nothing at all in this case which indicates anything but the attorney general is proceeding in an absolutely appropriate manner." The Siena poll questioned 712 registered voters by phone on Sunday. It has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.7 percentage points.
[Associated
Press;
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