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		Cuomo accuser rejects his public apology in TV interview
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		 [March 05, 2021] 
		By Dan Whitcomb 
 (Reuters) - The second of three women who 
		have accused New York Governor Andrew Cuomo of sexual misconduct 
		rejected his public apology on Thursday, a response likely to ratchet up 
		pressure on the embattled Democrat.
 
 Charlotte Bennett, a 25-year-old former aide to Cuomo who has said the 
		governor questioned her about her sex life with what she took as sexual 
		overtones, made her comments in an interview broadcast by CBS News.
 
 "It's not an apology. It's not an issue of my feelings. It's an issue of 
		his actions. The fact is that he was sexually harassing me and he has 
		not apologized for sexually harassing me and he can't even use my name," 
		Bennett said.
 
		
		 
		
 Three women including Bennett have come forward to accuse Cuomo, 63, of 
		sexually harassing them or making inappropriate remarks. He has denied 
		any misconduct and pledged to cooperate with a review by the state's 
		attorney general.
 
 On Wednesday he offered a lengthy and sometimes emotional public 
		apology, saying: "I feel awful about it and frankly I am embarrassed by 
		it."
 
 Lindsey Boylan, a 36-year-old former Cuomo aide who first spoke out in 
		December, has said the unwanted advances from the governor included an 
		unsolicited kiss on the lips.
 
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			The second of three women who have accused New York Governor Andrew 
			Cuomo of sexual misconduct rejected his public apology on Thursday, 
			a response likely to ratchet up pressure on the embattled Democrat. 
            
			 
            Boylan, a candidate for Manhattan borough president, also dismissed 
			the governor's apology. "How can New Yorkers trust you @NYGovCuomo 
			to lead our state if you "don't know" when you've been inappropriate 
			with your own staff?" she wrote on Twitter.
 The governor, who has rejected calls for his resignation that have 
			come even from prominent Democratic state lawmakers, has also 
			battled in recent weeks to respond to accusations that his 
			administration sought to downplay the number of nursing home 
			residents killed by COVID-19.
 
 Bennett, a former executive assistant and health policy adviser, 
			told the New York Times in February that Cuomo peppered her with 
			questions about her romantic life last year in what she viewed as an 
			effort to have sex with her.
 
 A third woman has told the New York Times that the governor made 
			unwanted advances and physical contact after meeting her at a 
			wedding in 2019.
 
 (Reporting by Dan Whitcomb; Editing by Daniel Wallis)
 
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