N.Y. AG ERIC SCHNEIDERMAN, #METOO CHAMPION ACCUSED OF VIOLENCE, RESIGNS

N.Y. AG Schneiderman resigns after accusations
New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman declined to open an investigation into the illegal spending of $1.4 million by an association linked to the Yonkers firefighters union.
Ricky Flores/The Journal News

ALBANY, N.Y. — New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman, who positioned himself as a combatant of sexual harassment and abuse in the #MeToo era and a major opponent of President Donald Trump, abruptly announced his resignation Monday after four women accused him of physical violence and illicit drug and alcohol use.

Schneiderman, a Democrat, stepped down hours after a New Yorker article was published Monday evening detailing allegations that he repeatedly slapped, choked and degraded women with whom he had been romantic. 

The article was based on similar-but-separate stories from four women who had relationships or encounters with the state attorney general.

All four accused Schneiderman of striking them in various ways, with at least three of them saying Schneiderman slapped them forcefully across the face and two saying he choked them, according to the article.

Schneiderman denied ever assaulting anyone but said he would step down at the close of business Tuesday. 

"In the last several hours, serious allegations, which I strongly contest, have been made against me," Schneiderman said in a statement around 9:45 p.m. ET. "While these allegations are unrelated to my professional conduct or the operations of the office, they will effectively prevent me from leading the office’s work at this critical time."

Two of the women — Michelle Manning Barish and Tanya Selvaratnam — told their stories on the record, while a third spoke under the condition of anonymity and a fourth told her story to Manning Barish and Selvaratnam.

Manning Barish told The New Yorker she and Schneiderman had been clothed and getting ready for bed after drinking one night when he backed her to the edge of the bed before abruptly slapping and choking her. 

"All of a sudden, he just slapped me, open handed and with great force, across the face, landing the blow directly onto my ear,” Manning Barish says. 

Selvaratnam also told The New Yorker that Schneiderman had slapped her, leading her to seek medical treatment for her ear.

In an initial statement before announcing his resignation, Schneiderman denied committing assault but acknowledged he had  "engaged in role-playing and other consensual sexual activity" in romantic relationships.

"I have not assaulted anyone," he said. "I have never engaged in non-consensual sex, which is I line I would not cross." 

Gov. Andrew Cuomo, Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, New York GOP Chairman Ed Cox and Manny Alicandro, Schneiderman's Republican opponent, had all called on Schneiderman to step down within hours of the article posted, as did UltraViolet, a women's advocacy group.

In a statement, Cuomo — a Democrat like Schneiderman and Gillibrand — said he would soon ask a district attorney to investigate the allegations.

"My personal opinion is that, given the damning pattern of facts and corroboration laid out in the article, I do not believe it is possible for Eric Schneiderman to continue to serve as Attorney General, and for the good of the office, he should resign," Cuomo said Monday night.

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Schneiderman had positioned himself as a champion of the #MeToo movement, suing Harvey Weinstein and The Weinstein Company in the wake of the sexual-harassment scandal that spurred a national reckoning over the way men treat women.

The attorney general was also in the midst of a review of Manhattan District Attorney Cy Vance's handling of a sexual-assault complaint against Weinstein. Schneiderman received an official referral for the review from Cuomo late last month.

"Every New Yorker has a right to a workplace free of sexual harassment, intimidation, and fear," Schneiderman said when he filed the Weinstein lawsuit in February.

It will be up to state lawmakers to fill the remainder of Schneiderman's term, which runs through the end of the year.

The state Legislature will vote to name his successor — which essentially puts it in the hands of Assembly Democrats, who control 104 of the Legislature's 213 seats. 

A Manhattan resident, Schneiderman, 63, was first elected in 2010 after previously serving as a state senator. 

He led the Senate's expulsion of then-Sen. Hiram Monserrate in 2010 when Monserrate was convicted of a misdemeanor after he was charged with slashing his girlfriend with glass.

Now in his second term as attorney general, Schneiderman has been a vocal opponent of Trump, often touting the more than 100 actions his office has brought against Trump's administration. 

His dispute with Trump dates back to 2013, when Schneiderman sued Trump over his Trump University real-estate seminar, a case that became a major issue in the 2016 presidential race and ultimately ended with a $25 million settlement. 

Trump's administration and family reveled in the news of the accusations against Schneiderman, seizing on past tweets from Schneiderman that hailed the national reckoning over sexual harassment and promised to hold Trump accountable to the law.

Follow Jon Campbell and Joseph Spector on Twitter: @JonCampbellGAN and @GannettAlbany

MET GALA 2018: THE MOST EXTRA CELEBRITY LOOKS, FROM SARAH JESSICA PARKER TO KATY PERRY

Met Gala 2018: Most extra celebrity looks

Life-size angel wings. Twin Jesuses in matching Gucci. Face-obscuring headdresses. 

This year's Met Gala was an overall sartorial success, with an army of celebrities arriving with best dressed list-ready looks. And for the stars who wanted to go above and beyond, the night's Catholic imagery theme opened the door for plenty of outrageous possibilities.

Below, find the best and worst of the night's most eye-popping looks. 

Madonna

A Met Gala focused on Catholicism seemed tailor-made for Madonna to own. And own it she did, in a goth-chic Jean Paul Gaultier gown accessorized with a veil, a crown of crosses and a bouquet of black flowers. It was way too much, and it was perfect.

More Met Gala: Best dressed looks from Rihanna, Amal Clooney, Lena Waithe and more

Like a prayer.
Neilson Barnard, Getty Images

Katy Perry

Perry needed a way to out-crazy her tulle-enshrouded Margiela look from last year's Met Gala, so she donned a pair of enormous Versace wings and showed up as a literal angel.

Just like a white-winged dove.
ANGELA WEISS, AFP/Getty Images

Sarah Jessica Parker

Rihanna wasn't the only papal figure on the Met Gala red carpet, with SJP looking more like Alice in Wonderland's Queen of Hearts than any figure from the Bible with her towering headdress and gold-verging-on-gaudy Dolce & Gabbana Alta Moda gown.

Sarah Jessica Parker
Frazer Harrison, FilmMagic

Cardi B

Cardi also channeled the pope in her inaugural Met Gala look, and she gets props for taking on a daring Moschino design while heavily pregnant.

Designer Jeremy Scott and Cardi B
Frazer Harrison, FilmMagic

Greta Gerwig

Not too many celebrities went the "nun habit" route at this year's Met Gala, so thank goodness for Gerwig, doing the Lord's work in a so-frumpy-it's-chic gown from The Row.

Frances McDormand

McDormand was an absolute delight on the carpet, writhing around and hamming it up in her similarly bizarre-but-brilliant Valentino look.

Grimes and Elon Musk

Was that a Tesla choker on the neck of Grimes as she and her new beau, the company's CEO, made their debut on the Met Gala carpet? Musk also sported a matching Tesla pin, with neither of the couple's looks interesting enough to make up for the night's clunkiest case of corporate synergy.

Lana Del Rey and Jared Leto

Leave it to Lana to attend the Met Gala flanked by a pair of Jesuses. The two bearded men who accompanied her on the carpet were Jared Leto and Gucci's Alessandro Michele, wearing gold crowns to match her towering winged headpiece and stabbed-heart ornament.

Shailene Woodley 

Woodley intended to pay homage to Joan of Arc with her Ralph Lauren Met Gala look, though it came out a little more like Shrek's Lord Farquaad.