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Sexual harassment charges against senator reveal flaws in reporting systems

Shortly after sexual harassment allegations against Senate Independent Democratic Leader Jeff Klein emerged, numerous people started calling for an independent investigation. But under current law, there are few avenues available for launching a probe.

Klein, the leader of a group of eight breakaway Democrats and a key power broker in the state Senate, is accused by a former staffer of forcibly kissing her on March 31, 2015, outside an Albany bar. The woman made the allegations in an article in the Huffington Post. Klein said he is innocent and that the alleged incident never happened. 

The senator, speaking just before the article was published, said he’ll cooperate with any investigation. 

“I have nothing to hide,” Klein said. 

Gov. Andrew Cuomo – along with two Senate Democrats, including the Senate Democratic leader – is among those calling for an independent probe. But there are few options available under current law.

Cuomo proposed, in his State of the State speech, setting up an entirely new entity to independently review sexual harassment complaints. But that hasn’t happened yet, and even if the Legislature were to rapidly approve it, it could not apply retroactively to the complaint against Klein.

The leader of the state Senate, John Flanagan, said the chamber does not have the jurisdiction to investigate the charges because the accuser is no longer a Senate employee and no formal complaint has been filed.

Jean Bucaria with the National Organization for Women said the allegations need to be “investigated and taken seriously.” She said the case shows how badly New York needs a better system for dealing with sexual harassment complaints.

“There’s really not a clear pathway for victims to come forward and get the help that they need,” Bucaria said. “That needs to change.”

Flanagan did say that a probe of the accusations against Klein may be “within the scope of other entities.”

The one existing state agency that could investigate the allegations is the Joint Commission on Public Ethics, or JCOPE. No formal complaint needs to be filed, as long as eight of the 14 commissioners agree to launch a probe. The commissioners are appointed by Cuomo and the majority and minority leaders of the Senate and Assembly, as well as the state comptroller and attorney general.

A spokesman for JCOPE said as a matter of policy, he can’t comment on the existence of any investigations.

Susan Lerner, with the government reform group Common Cause, has long advocated for a better way to independently handle all types of misconduct charges against state officials. She said while JCOPE is a “step in the right direction,” it also is problematic because JCOPE can only make recommendations to the Legislature, leaving it to senators and Assembly members to decide whether to enforce a judgment against a colleague.

“That’s an inherent conflict,” Lerner said.

JCOPE also has a complex system of veto powers by commissioners, which makes it easier for factions or even members of the same political party to block an investigation that they don’t like.

Lerner said a new system needs to be created that is timely and fair to both the accused and the accuser.

The state Assembly also has dealt with several cases of alleged sexual harassment in recent years. Former Assemblyman and now Rensselaer County Executive Steve McLaughlin was accused of sexually harassing a legislative aide. The case took over a year to resolve, and was not made public until November 2017, 18 months after the complaint was first made. McLaughlin was sanctioned for sexual harassment but denies the charges.

The woman who made the allegations against Klein, Erica Vladimer, agreed to be identified in the Huffington Post article.

Vladimer also posted on Facebook on Thursday afternoon. She did not back down from her allegations against Klein, saying the senator violated “my body, and ultimately my mind and soul.” And she pledged to support others who find themselves saying “me too,” saying they do not have to go through it alone.

Late in the day on Thursday, Senator Klein wrote a letter to JCOPE, requesting that they conduct a formal inquiry into the matter. Klein said in the letter that the “alleged incident did not happen, period”. Klein also cited an investigation conducted by an attorney that he hired. The lawyer found no evidence of any wrong doing. The Senator says he’s “prepared to fully cooperate” with a probe.

Karen DeWitt is Capitol Bureau chief for the New York Public News Network, composed of a dozen newsrooms across the state. She has covered state government and politics for the network since 1990.