Eliot Spitzer

Eliot Spitzer

Morning Memo: Lindsay Lohan and Samantha Ronson Talk It Out; Guy Ritchie and Madonna Divorce Finalized; Eliot Spitzer's Bad Day

But they look so happy together.
Getty Images.
But they look so happy together.

The still "very much in love" Samantha Ronson and Lindsay Lohan have started attending couples therapy after a series of public fights. [P6]

At a divorce hearing yesterday, Guy Ritchie declined to go after soon-to-be ex-wife Madonna's money, opting instead to focus on obtaining joint custody of his children. [NYDN]

Ashlee Simpson and Pete Wentz named their son Bronx Mowgli. [Us Weekly]  read more »

PolitickerNY
A Complaint Against Bernard Spitzer

Bernard Spitzer will take the stand in his own defense in Bronx courtroom tomorrow against charges that four African-Americans were improperly fired  at one the building he owns, according to a plaintiff in the case.

Anthony Hayden, 43, of Brooklyn, one of the four plaintiffs, said he'll be at court tomorrow to see Spitzer, father of the former governor, testify.  read more »

Our Max Bialystock Victory

Charles Schumer, financial oracle.
Charles Schumer, financial oracle.

On Jan. 21, 2007, Michael Bloomberg, Charles Schumer and Eliot Spitzer stood below a portrait of Thomas Jefferson in City Hall and warned that New York could lose its status as the world’s preeminent financial center.

“The 20th century was the American century in no small part because of our economic dominance in the financial services industry, which has always been centered in New York,” Messrs. Bloomberg and Schumer had written as preface to a McKinsey & Co. report unveiled at the press conference.

“The industry,” the preface read, “will continue to experience rapid growth in the 21st century, which holds great promise for our nation—but only if we take seriously our competitors, who are rapidly gaining ground.  read more »

Dollinger Ad: Albany Has to Remember


Democratic State Senate candidate Rick Dollinger is out with a new ad that borrows heavily from the soaring music and nostalgic feel-good themes of the ads for Eliot Spitzer's 2006 gubernatorial bid.

“Albany won’t work until it remembers who it’s working for,” the announcer says in the Dollinger ad.

Dollinger is running for the seat he previously vacated and is now occupied by Democrat-turned-Republican Joe Robach.

Former Bloomberg Guy Hires Former Spitzer Guy

Eliot Brown reports that Michael Bloomberg's former deputy mayor, Dan Doctoroff, has hired Eliot Spitzer's former state director of operations for a big job over at Bloomberg L.P. 

Morning Memo: Richard Fuld Gets Hit; Amy Winehouse Maybe Sort Of Okay?; Clint Eastwood's Palin Proclivities

Lehman Bros. CEO Richard Fuld.
Getty Images.
Lehman Bros. CEO Richard Fuld.

Someone knocked Lehman Brothers CEO Richard Fuld "out cold" after the company's bankrupcy was announced. Seriously. [Radar]

Ashley Dupre now travels with three bodyguards (does Eliot Spitzer even still have a security detail?). [R&M

Iranian actress Golshifteh Farahani, who co-stars with Leonardo DiCaprio in the upcoming Body of Lies, may be barred from re-entering Iran because of her participation in the film. [R&M

One piece of good news on the Amy Winehouse front: She is not on an official suicide watch. [People]  read more »

Sheldon Silver and the State Senate Majority

Sheldon Silver.
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Sheldon Silver.

Yesterday, Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver announced that he would be open to reinstating the commuter tax.

The timing struck some people as unusual, since it gives Republicans an issue use against Democrats who are running for competitive State Senate seats, with only weeks to go before the election. (A poll earlier this week showed Democratic advantage in a number of those races.)

The tax, which was repealed in 1999, is opposed by suburban and upstate Republican lawmakers whose constituents don't want to have to pay to work in the city.

On his radio show this morning, host John Gambling asked Michael Bloomberg, “Do you find it unusual that maybe it came up now, and not after November 4th?”

“Um, you’ll have to ask the Speaker,” Bloomberg said.  read more »

Paterson Says No Thompson Endorsement for 2009


In a departure from the Spitzer-precedent, David Paterson said he’s not going to endorse in next year’s Democratic primary for mayor.

During an African-American Day parade in Harlem yesterday, Paterson made several references to City Comptroller Bill Thompson possibly being the next mayor of the city (as he does in the clip above).

After the parade, I asked Paterson what role he might play in the primary.

“I think everybody knows Bill’s a good friend of mine. Our fathers served in the State Senate together. But I think Bill Thompson is perfectly capable of winning on his own. He doesn’t need me, and the other candidates have been very supportive me.  read more »

There's Love for the Sun; Spitzer Calls Paper 'Spectacular'

There's Love for the <i>Sun</i>; Spitzer Calls Paper 'Spectacular'
via nysun.com

The New York Sun published a story today that quoted ex-politicians and a few semi-retired journalists saying that it would be a terrible thing if the newspaper closed later this month. In his first public interview since resigning, Eliot Spitzer says, "The Sun has been a spectacular addition to the city's political discourse and is one of the finest papers in terms of editing, writing, and analysis that one can find anywhere." (The Sun was one of the few outlets sympathetic towards Mr. Spitzer when he found himself engulfed in scandal in March.)

Also quoted:

  • Mario Cuomo
  • George Pataki
  • John Bolton, former American ambassador to the UN
  • Philippe de Montebello, the outgoing director of Metropolitan Museum of Art
  • Peter Kann, former publisher of The Wall Street Journal
  • Sir Harold Evans, former editor of The London Times
  • Peter Osnos, former editor at The Washington Post
  • Nat Hentoff, columnist for Village Voice

The paper still, however, needs to find money.  read more »

Bruno Says Obama's Like Spitzer: 'Glib, Articulate, Fancy, Dancey, Prancey'

Bruno Says Obama's Like Spitzer: 'Glib, Articulate, Fancy, Dancey, Prancey'
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MINNEAPOLIS—At a breakfast for the New York delegation to the R.N.C., Joe Bruno called Barack Obama a “wimp” and implied that, like Eliot Spitzer, there may be a side to him voters don't know yet.

The attack by the former State Senate majority leader got a standing ovation.

Bruno called Spitzer “glib, articulate, fancy, dancey, prancey, all of those kind of things,” and said it was those qualities that helped him earn 70 percent of the vote when he was elected governor in 2006. “Broke a record, OK," Bruno said. "Why? Because of marketing. Selling. Think about it. Was that him? Was that for real? Was it? No—hell no.  read more »

Morning Memo: Whitney Port's Already Working for DVF; Pirates Attack a Real Estate Investor's Yacht; Samantha Ronson's New Book

Whitney Port at a US Open <br>party last Friday.
Getty Images.
Whitney Port at a US Open
party last Friday.

The Hills' Whitney Port may have already started her new job working as in-house PR for Diane von Furstenberg. [NY Daily News]

Gotham magazine editor and socialite Cristina Greeven Cuomo is reportedly next in line to make an appearance on Gossip Girl. [P6]  

Jonathan Leitersdorf--real-estate investor and former owner of Noho's Sky Studios, an 11,000 square foot event space where the Seinfelds got married and several episodes of Sex and the City were shot--owns a 178-foot yacht that was just attacked by pirates off the coast of Corsica. The men were carrying "rifles and guns" and made off with $200,000 in cash, jewelry, and art work.  read more »

Paterson to Legislature: 'Great Work'

Speaking to reporters on the third floor of the Capitol in Albany this morning, David Paterson praised the Legislature for returning to deal with the budget.

"This legislature is converting to full-time," he said, and added that if the economy continued to struggle, "it would not be a problem to get this Legislature to come back and deal with it."

Late last month Paterson apologized to state lawmakers for saying, in a speech about the state's dire economic situation, that the Legislature was on "vacation."

“I am not going to have an acrimonious relationship with the Legislature," he said at the time, likely hoping to avoid the kind of combative relationship Eliot Spitzer had with state elected officials.  read more »

Spitzer Ad Man Gets Deja Vu

David Paterson is facing a $1.5 million ad campaign funded by groups opposed to his plan to cap property taxes. And ad man Jimmy Siegel knows how it feels.

Siegel made ads for Eliot Spitzer last year when the governor was trying to reduce health care spending.

When I played the ad for him, he said, “I got such déjà vu. I remember the first ad 1199 ran was exactly like that. It got worse, but they started with, basically, ‘Hey, everybody knows we got to do something to bring down Medicaid costs, but Eliot Spitzer’s plan is the wrong one. So, call and tell Eliot it’s the wrong one.  read more »

Paterson Picks a Good Fight to Lose

Paterson Picks a Good Fight to Lose
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As part of his crusade to reform the state's finances, Governor David Paterson outlined a proposal yesterday to cut an additional $1 billion from this year’s budget, plus $1.6 billion next year. Doing so put him at odds with fellow Democrats, and it's unlikely to turn into a legislative coup for the governor. How it will play politically, however, is a different story.

The governor's first dramatic warnings about the state budget, which included a rare televised speech and a trip to Washington, were met with some skepticism from state Democrats, and a series of proposals for reducing the budget by $1.  read more »

Soares Looks Beyond Spitzer Probe

Albany County District Attorney David Soares, whose handling of the Eliot Spitzer investigation has been severely criticized, is hoping that after releasing 8,562 pages of documents, folks will move on.

In a statement from his office, Soares said:

"Today, the two people who began this controversy are no longer a part of our government, but the spotlight on the political theater created is still just as bright as the investigations are wrapping up, and as the investigation of the investigations continues.

“Thousands of hours have been expended over the past year to uncover that no laws were broken and that politicians will always attempt to undermine their political enemies.  read more »

8,562 More Pages of Troopergate: Spitzer Aides Stonewalled

Eliot Spitzer authorized two of his aides to submit written testimony rather than speak directly to the Albany County District Attorney during the investigation of Spitzer's use of state police to discredit former Senate Majority Leader Joe Bruno.

That’s according to the first round of news coming from newly released, 8,562-page report from David Soares office. (I haven’t gotten my hands on a copy of the paperwork yet, since it was released in Albany this morning and it's not available electronically. Sigh.)

The fact that Spitzer OK'd his aides stonewalling the investigation isn't really news anymore, but it about a year ago, when another report on the same issue was released. To his credit, Fred Dicker did once try, somewhat unsuccessfully, to confront Spitzer about it.

Paterson Makes a Washington Joke

Paterson Makes a Washington Joke
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Here's more of that characteristic David Paterson humor:

Speaking at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C., just now, Paterson was asked what lessons about the fallibility of politicians he had learned from his unusual rise to the governorship--a pretty direct reference to Eliot Spitzer, who met with a high-priced call girl at the Mayflower Hotel in D.C. before he resigned.

Paterson, pausing for a moment, told the audience, "Be careful when you come to Washington."

Morning Memo: Dupre's Friend; Spitzer's Wardrobe Malfunction; Sharpton's Regrets

Spitzer
Getty Images
Spitzer

Thomas Earle, the asphalt heir, told his wife that Ashley Dupre tricked him into checking into the Gramercy Hotel with her and his wife believed him (!). But, Mr. Earle was reportedly bragging to his friends at a Jersey bar about being able to score with Ms. Dupre and told his wife he was on a business trip in Colorado when he snuck out to the city for his 24-hour date. [NYP]

Meanwhile, Eliot Spitzer got bullied on the Upper East Side for wearing a T-shirt that said, "New York Attorney General." [P6]

Al Sharpton reportedly turned down invitations to appear on Dancing With the Stars and Celebrity Apprentice.  read more »

Spitzer's Knew-Nothing Troopergate Testimony

Spitzer's Knew-Nothing Troopergate Testimony
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Say one thing for Eliot Spitzer, in light of newly released testimony from the Troopergate affair: He knows how to stick to a story.

The former governor was spared, from a legal standpoint, because, according to the State Commission on Public Integrity: "[t]he failure to supervise subordinates, without more, does not violate the Public Officers Law." (The commission made public some 277 pages of sworn testimony it took from Mr. Spitzer on May 9 in Manhattan, and found that four of Mr. Spitzer's aides violates ethics law.)

But the documents do show the way in which Mr. Spitzer held fast to his claim, even after he left office, that it was his staff and not he who ordered the state police to create and disseminate travel records of Joe Bruno, who was then majority leader in the State Senate and Mr.  read more »

Spitzer's Troopergate Testimony

Earlier today the state's Commission on Public Integrity settled their claims against two of the four people investigated in the Troopergate probe--and now the agency has published several of the sworn testimonies online, including Spitzer's.

It will take me a while to go through them all (the files are so large it will take me a while to even open them), so if you see anything of note put it in the comments section.

Also, testimonies from Christine Anderson, Darren Dopp, Daniel Wiese, William Howard and others are here.

UPDATE: While still trying to open Spitzer's testimony, I skimmed through the Ethics Commission summary, which makes this powerfully worded (if not self-evident) point rather clear:

"The Executive Chamber's actions were flatly ad odds with its duty to assist this Commission's investigation and the promises of Governor Spitzer that his Administration was cooperating fully with the Commission's investigation.  read more »

Soares, Dopp and the Blame Game

Some of the most significant collateral damage from Eliot Spitzer's implosion involves the reputations of two of his one-time allies: former communications director Darren Dopp (the original scapegoat for Troopergate) and David Soares, the Albany County District Attorney (who is the current scapegoat).

Dopp has been on the offensive trying to clear his name, speaking at length with the New York Times, and -- just this this morning -- providing the New York Post with his version of the testimony he gave to the state’s Public Integrity Commission.

The transcript Dopp provided undermines Soares’ initial report into the Troopergate incident, which alleged Dopp acted as a rogue agent and inappropriately ordered the state police to re-create travel records for state Senate Majority Leader Joe Bruno, who received protection from the police (as is customary for legislative leaders).  read more »

Cuomo: 'Grasso Case Is Over'

Andrew Cuomo announced he won't appeal the court's decision to side with Dick Grasso, further eroding Spitzer's legacy as attorney general. Here's the statement:

"We have reviewed the Court's opinion and determined that an appeal would not be warranted. Thus, for all intents and purposes, the Grasso case is over."

Yesterday, The Wall Street Journal editorial board called for Cuomo "to cut his – and taxpayer – losses" on the Grasso case.

Ho-time: Cable Channel Hard-Sells Belle du Bore

Ho-time: Cable Channel Hard-Sells Belle du Bore

When news broke that Eliot Spitzer had been patronizing a high-class prostitute, one thing everyone seemed to want to know was what, exactly, he’d asked his call girl to do. It was “unsafe,” in the words of “Kristen,” a.k.a. Ashley Alexandra Dupre—but could that have been an excuse she fabricated in hopes of unloading an undesirable client? Speculation was all over the map, from unprotected sex to anal to dangerous S&M to wearing socks in bed (not unsafe, sure, but certainly annoying). For a few days there, as we marveled over the amount of money earned by the girls at Emperors Club VIP and wondered over their wealthy clients and envied Ms. Dupre’s Flatiron apartment, hookers were on the brain. Are their lives better or worse than ours? At the top end, at least, their jobs actually sounded more like dating than whoring.  read more »

Cuomo Explains What He Does

Cuomo Explains What He Does
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Andrew Cuomo just held a press conference about an agreement he brokered with major internet providers to get them to block access to websites featuring child pornography.

It's the latest example of Cuomo taking (and succeeding with) an issue with national implications. (School loan industry, mortgage lenders, social networking sites, Credit Rating Agencies and now Internet providers.)

At the end of today’s press conference, a reporter asked why those companies - Verizon, Time Warner Cable, and Sprint - needed the attorney general to broker such a deal. Which, is another way of asking Cuomo, basically, what exactly is your strategy here, and why does it keep working?

“Why do you need the attorney general?” Cuomo asked, to some laughter.

“This question comes up, often, in different contexts,"

"Well, it’s not that easy,” he said. “They’re competitive companies--one is vying with the other. And to do an industry-wide reform, [to] get the main players to agree to simultaneously is very hard, if not impossible to do.  read more »

Spitzer Wants to Birth a Vulture

Spitzer Wants to Birth a Vulture

Eliot Spitzer's interested in taking his father Bernard's real estate firm to "the next level" by starting a distressed real estate fund (a.k.a. a vulture fund), according to today's New York Sun.

The vulture fund would basically find distressed properties nationwide, buy them, fix them up a bit, and flip them for quick profits. What better time to scrounge then during an economic downturn spurred in large part by a housing market collapse?  read more »

Lineup for June 4, 2008

Lineup for June 4, 2008
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John Koblin examines Bill Clinton's angry response to Vanity Fair's recent profile of him. "The responses from the former president and his camp are very saddening in their own ways,” according to VF editor Graydon Carter. Plus: Ana Marie Cox joins Radar.

Leon Neyfakh reports from Los Angeles' Book Expo America where Random House's new C.E.O., Markus Dohle said, “I am looking forward to becoming a real New Yorker."

Spencer Morgan talks to Rip Torn about Norman Mailer: “Norman always dressed to the nines... He always had a suit, vest, tie, sometimes a hat. And so behind the lamppost, he turned to me and said, ‘Why you always dressed like a fuckin’ bum! Dress up, put on a nice shirt and tie, and you’ll get more respect.’"

Plus: George Gurley at 40... Eliot Spitzer's new job... and Sex and Our City.

Client 9 to 5

Client 9 to 5
Getty Images

By all accounts, Eliot Spitzer never imagined that Spitzer Enterprises would be his life’s work. His father Bernie’s real estate empire, the one he built from scratch, would finance Eliot’s ambitions. Not circumscribe them.

But that was then. This is now. And apparently, the deposed governor is adjusting.  read more »

Bruno Sounds Off on Spitzer, God, Republicans


In this clip from last night’s state Republican fund-raising dinner, state party chair Joseph Mondello introduces Joe Bruno, who then proceeds to call Eliot Spitzer “demented” (at the 5:35 mark).

Around 3:48 mark, Bruno thanks priest Jim Lisante for “being on the side of the angels."

"And thank you for helping God understand what Republicans are all about,” he adds.

Cuomo Wins Against Dell

Cuomo Wins Against Dell
Getty Images

Attorney General Andrew Cuomo won a lawsuit against Dell computers for what Cuomo’s office called “false advertising, deceptive business practices, and abusive debt collection practices.”

Once again, it's a victory (and future talking point) for Cuomo over a corporate mischief-maker on Main Street, rather than Wall Street, where his predecessor made his mark.  read more »

Spitzer 2010 Refunds

Contributions made to Spitzer 2010 are being refunded.

A reader just passed along an email from Allyson Giard, the main fund-raiser behind the former governor’s re-election committee.

Giard wrote:

We intend to re-distribute the campaign's remaining funds on a
pro-rata basis to contributors who make an official request for a refund, either by email or letter. To expedite this process, we have set a deadline of June 15; in order to be honored, a refund request must be received by the campaign office by close of business on that date. After June 15, we will determine the rate at which we are able
to issue contribution refunds and will begin issuing checks. (We will not be able to honor any requests received after June 15.)

Here's the full email:

   read more »

Manhattan Media Acquires 'Harvard Lifestyle' Magazine 02138

Manhattan Media Acquires 'Harvard Lifestyle' Magazine <i>02138</i>
via ivygate.com

02138, the lifestyle magazine for alumni who attended college "near Boston—um, in Cambridge" has been sold to Manhattan Media, publishers of The New York Press, City Hall, The Chelsea Clinton News, and other papers. O1238 was launched in 2006 with the backing of Atlantic Media's David Bradley.  read more »

Harper's Bazaar Does Silda-Inspired Spread

Harper's Bazaar Does Silda-Inspired Spread

Finally someone is honoring Silda Wall Spitzer's mortifying role in her husband's debacle rather than criticizing her for it. Harper's Bazaarhas done a photo shoot titled "Stand By Your Man" inspired by the Spitzer sex scandal; it will appear in the magazine's June issue. The images, conceived by photographer Peter Lindbergh, portray the narrative of an uptown couple dealing with a very public political sex scandal. They even recreate the Podium Scene in which Ms. Wall stood beside the former governor with that infamous defeated look on her face. And check out the ascots!

Follow the jump for the rest of the "story."  read more »