Text size: increase text sizedecrease text size

Cuomo taking Tankleff case has plenty of precedents

It happened upstate in the racially charged Tawana Brawley case, when civil rights advocates questioned the objectivity of the local district attorney to investigate rape charges.

It happened when the Bronx District attorney said his personal feelings about capital punishment made him uneasy about seeking a death sentence for an accused cop killer.

And it happened in North Carolina when the district attorney prosecuting three Duke lacrosse players charged with gang rape became the subject of an ethics panel.

Now, at the request of Suffolk District Attorney Thomas Spota and others, the state attorney general has been asked to be the prosecutor in the Martin Tankleff case -- reinvestigating the evidence and looking into the possibility that the killer, or killers, of Tankleff's parents are still at large.

In this case, Tankleff's supporters have made the request because they question Spota's objectivity. Spota has asked for one to investigate new evidence Tankleff has brought forward.

Picking the office of Andrew Cuomo, New York state's top law enforcement officer, to handle the case is rare, though not unprecedented, said Stephen Gillers, legal ethics professor at New York University Law School.

"It's convenient. It's got a big staff. It's got a big budget," Gillers said. "This case has attracted substantial notoriety. Cuomo has to make sure that whatever he concludes is able to win public acceptance as legitimate."

The choice of the attorney general -- the job Spitzer held before becoming governor -- "shows how significant the issues are in Tankleff," said Barry Kamins, president of the New York City Bar.

"I think it signifies the importance that the governor has placed on the Tankleff case by virtue of putting Cuomo on it," Kamins said.

"The governor could have chosen any person. It didn't even have to be a prosecutor. It could have been a former prosecutor."

An outside counsel is typically appointed when circumstances in a case create a perception of a possible conflict of interest for the original prosecutor to go forward. Former Nassau District Attorney Denis Dillon, a strident abortion foe, would send abortion-related cases to a neighboring jurisdiction. Cuomo's father, Gov. Mario Cuomo, appointed Charles Hynes, now Brooklyn district attorney, special prosecutor in the Howard Beach race case because victims refused to cooperate with the Queens district attorney.

In all those cases, the governor's authority to appoint a special prosecutor came from his constitutional duty to "take care that the laws are faithfully executed" as well as a provision of the Executive Law allowing the jurisdiction of local prosecutors to be superseded.

Depending on the order commissioning them -- either by the governor or a court official -- special prosecutors can convene grand juries, issue subpoenas, bring charges and have similar powers to local prosecutors.

Related topic galleries: Prosecution, Thomas Spota, New York University, Rape, Regional Authority, Howard Beach, Lawyers

Get breaking news | Most popular stories | Dining and Travel deals all via e-mail!

Newsday Special Reports

Lawyers getting full-time benefits
Lawyers Getting Full time benefits

In districts across Long Island, attorneys have been improperly reported as state employees - and are raking in big pensions as a result.

READ MORE >
Superintendent double-dippers
Superintendent Double-Dippers

It's called "double-dipping." School administrators retire with big pensions from one district and then collect a big salary from a new district.

READ MORE >
special districts
Special Districts

Across the region, scores of independent special districts provide high salaries and other benefits - and operate with little oversight.

READ MORE >

Special Projects

The Katie Trebing story The fight for civil rights

Local leaders, then and now, reflect on doing their part to push for equality.

The Katie Trebing story The Katie Trebing story

A daughter with a deadly disease, an extraordinary chance to save her...create the perfect sibling.

They Failed to Act They Failed to Act

Since 1995, the Long Island Rail Road has logged nearly 900 gap incidents at stations from Penn to Bridgehampton.

Born to Serve Born to Serve

Michael P. Murphy's actions in June, 2005 earned him, posthumously, the nation's highest military award.

Coram station Fire Alarm

The only comprehensive look at the last large public service on Long Island impervious to outside scrutiny - the fire system.

Coram station Remembering Flight 800

On the beach at Smith Point County Park is a monument with the names of the 230 passengers and crew from Flight 800.

Our Fallen Our Fallen

Soldiers from Long Island killed in uniform reflect the face of our communities. Newsday remembers their sacrifice.


What you are looking for


Famous deaths
Obituaries
Lottery Results
Comics
Op Ed/Letters to the editor
Offbeat News
Horoscopes
Sudoku
Crossword
DJIA NASDAQ SPX

My Long Island

Long Island user photos
Your life in photos

Your faces. Your cameras. Your life. Upload your photos now.