The e-mail messages were kept by Daniel Wiese, the New York Power Authority’s inspector general and a key figure facing scrutiny in Attorney General Andrew Cuomo’s investigation of the State Police.
It is no small matter to destroy evidence yet that is precisely what state At torney General Andrew Cuomo says someone at the New York Power Authority did. Question is: Why? What, exactly, were those responsible trying to hide by erasing e-mail messages from the Blackberry and computer of a top Power Authority official, Dan Wiese, as Cuomo says happened? Surely, nothing better suggests guilt and
Seeking to get Fred Knapp, assistant to the Dutchess County Legislature chairman, on the payroll, the Legislature and Knapp have filed a contempt of court charge against County Executive William Steinhaus and personnel chief Earl Bruno.
It's been ten months since the Spitzer administration fed information to the Times Union for a front-page story that claimed Senate Majority Leader Joe Bruno misused state aircraft.
The New York Power Authority announced Wednesday that it was switching its inspector general from paid to unpaid administrative leave, the same day the attorney general announced he was seeking the official's deleted work e-mails.
Messages deleted from computer of suspended state agency official Attorney General Andrew Cuomo is turning up the heat in his investigation of possible political interference by the State Police -- demanding that the New York Power Authority tell him who deleted e-mails belonging to former police Col. Daniel Wiese, the authority's now-suspended inspector general.Wiese, who was close to former
The New York Power Authority announced yesterday that it was switching its inspector general from paid to unpaid administrative leave, the same day the attorney general announced he was seeking the official's deleted work e-mails.
Attorney General Andrew Cuomo called on the New York Power Authority Wednesday to restore e-mails which were deleted because they are related to the so-called “Choppergate” investigation.
With New York’s maple syrup industry tapping into less than 1 percent of the state’s 289 million maple trees that have the potential to be tapped, U.S. Senator Charles E. Schumer unveil