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Bloomberg Gets Hammered Over Ex-Deputy Mayor's Domestic Violence Arrest

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Former deputy mayor Stephen Goldsmith on the day he was appointed by Mayor Bloomberg (NYC Mayor's Office)

Mayor Bloomberg was probably thinking he could discuss his praiseworthy Hurricane Irene preparations during his weekly radio show today. Instead, he cancelled his appearance over the controversy of how former Deputy Mayor Stephen Goldsmith resigned his position: While the Mayor's office said that Goldsmith was pursuing "private-sector opportunities in infrastructure finance," Goldsmith actually resigned because he had been arrested for domestic violence in Washington D.C.

According to the arrest report (see below), his wife Margaret called the police to their Georgetown townhouse on July 3 ("C-1 reports she got into a verbal altercation with S-1, her husband. C-1 stated to S-1 'I should have put a bullet through you years ago'. At that time S-1 shoved C-1 into the kitchen counter. C-1 stated to S-1 'Your not going to do this to me again, I'm calling the police.' S-1 then grabbed the phone from C-1's hands and threw it onto the ground, breaking the phone."). Goldsmith spent two days in jail and his wife did not press charges. Margaret Goldsmith told the Post yesterday that the arrest was a "big mistake. I can only tell you it was an enormous misunderstanding. It just got out of control," and insisted that her husband wasn't planning on resigning from the Bloomberg administration before the incident but he felt it would have been distracting to the Mayor.

Since Goldsmith immediately told Bloomberg about the arrest, other officials are upset that the mayor got to whitewash the reason why Goldsmith departed. Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer said, "I am deeply troubled by the news that one of the Mayor's highest-ranking aides resigned weeks ago after being arrested in a reported domestic violence incident, and spent two nights in jail -- but we are only learning this today, in a belated newspaper account. The Mayor and his staff should give a full accounting of what they knew and when they knew it.... The Deputy Mayor for Operations isn't just another aide -- the position is directly responsible for oversight of the NYPD and other law enforcement agencies that routinely confront the issue of domestic violence.

City Comptroller John Liu chimed in, "It appears the Mayor was not upfront with New Yorkers. He should take the next opportunity to level with the City about the events surrounding the Deputy Mayor’s resignation.” And there was also NYC Public Advocate Bill de Blasio: "While Deputy Mayor Goldsmith’s resignation was more than appropriate given the circumstances, New Yorkers deserve a full airing of the facts known to the Administration." Keep in mind, these three are 2013 mayoral hopefuls.

A domestic violence advocate, Liz Roberts of Safe Horizon, told the NY Times, "If we are going to hold the regular people of New York City accountable for not being violent in their relationships, we need to hold our senior leaders and officials, too," and called this incident "troubling."

Mayor spokesman Marc La Vorgna said, "We have nothing to add to Mrs. Goldsmith's account of the incident, but it was clear to the Mayor and Mr. Goldsmith that he could no longer serve at City Hall, regardless of his guilt or innocence."

Stephen Goldsmith Arrest Report

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Comments [rss]

  • To play devil's advocate, if Christine Quinn were to get arrested for allegedly beating her spouse, and then resigned "to spend more time on private sector opportunities", would you still refuse to be outraged at the lie?

    And what lies is it OK for the mayor to tell? As you mentioned, it's all public record (though only the Post had the guts to break the story, apparently). He's a public figure (former mayor of another major city), he's a highly-paid public employee, so yes, when he gets thrown in jail, it's the public's business. I could also point out that, if the mayor had been out of town when this went down, it's not good for the city when the number two person in the administration to be cooling his heels behind bars. 

  • petercow

    This guy's arrest had nothing to do with his job. He resigned. It's his business.

  • Um, no. When the second most important official in a city of 8 million spends a night (two nights?) in jail, it's our business. And when the mayor lies through his teeth about why an important official "resigns", it's our business. And when it turns out that a deputy mayor (one who is getting a huge salary) never even moved to NYC? Yes, that's our business, too.

  • petercow

    I disagree. It's none of your business, or mine, and Christine Quinn might take offense at your characterization of his importance.

    And he clearly spent the majority of time in NYC. Was he a legal resident - I don't know. Is that required? I don't know. Was there anything that precluded you from finding any of that stuff out - no.
    If he was arrested for embezzling city funds, that would be my business, and yours. Otherwise, it's not.

  • GalBklyn

    Bloomberg runs New York like its a private company (his private company). This is nothing new. We've been in the dark for years.

    However, his time is just about up and ultimately, it's not the crime, but the slow drop by drop etching against the stone of people really getting tired of the same old BS. 

    One day soon (if he hasn't already) Mike will see the reason why third terms are never a good idea.

  • BrassMonkeyBallz

    this reminds me of the weiner cover up

  • Militant Conformist

    I'm trying to give a damn but I just can't seem to work up any faux outrage over how a guy no one cares about resigns. 

  • jbrez

    It's not the crime, it's the cover-up.

  • Cover up? Do you get a daily email with all the arrests happening all over the United States? Because I don't.

  • The cover up was that the mayor lied about why Goldsmith was fired.

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