Cuomo Calls Corruption Allegations Against Former Confidant ‘Reprehensible'

There are no allegations of wrongdoing against the governor

What to Know

  • An attorney for Joseph Percoco, Cuomo's former executive deputy secretary, says his client is innocent
  • He resigned as Cuomo's executive deputy in 2014 to lead Cuomo's re-election campaign, rejoined the team and quit again in 2015
  • According to state financial disclosures, Percoco made as much as $125,000 by becoming a consultant for COR Development and CHA Consulting

Gov. Cuomo says allegations former confidant Joe Percoco solicited bribes are "reprehensible" and personally disappointing, given Percoco's long ties to the Cuomo family. 

The Democratic governor addressed the scandal in a speech Friday in Buffalo. He says the arrests of Percoco, SUNY Polytechnic Institute President Alain Kaloyeros and six other men won't slow efforts to revitalize the upstate economy. 

Federal prosecutors say the charges stem from bribery and bid-rigging related to lucrative state contracts, including ones for upstate jobs initiatives launched by Cuomo called the Buffalo Billion and Nano. 

Attorneys for Percoco and Kaloyeros say their clients are innocent. 

Percoco's state service dates back to the late Gov. Mario Cuomo. Andrew Cuomo says his father would have been heartbroken by the allegations.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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