Churchill: Cuomo for AG? Oh, let the fun begin
Joe Biden won t pick New York governor to be his attorney general. Bet on it.
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Gov. Andrew Cuomo, shown speaking to members of New York state s Electoral College this week, has been mentioned as a possible U.S. attorney general nominee. (Photo by Hans Pennink / AFP)HANS PENNINK/Getty
ALBANY For reasons that defy easy logic, Andrew Cuomo s next job is a frequent topic of speculation. I ll concede that I m as guilty as the next speculator.
Will the Democrat run for president? Will he be made ambassador to Lithuania? Will he become the sous chef at a commune in Oregon? The questions come and go like tides.
Churchill: Cuomo for AG? Oh, let the GOP s fun begin
Chris Churchill
For reasons that defy easy logic, Andrew Cuomo’s next job is a frequent topic of speculation. I’ll concede that I’m as guilty as the next speculator.
Will the Democrat run for president? Will he be made ambassador to Lithuania? Will he become the sous chef at a commune in Oregon? The questions come and go like tides.
For some of us who follow politics in Albany, the conjecture might stem from the continually frustrated hope that New York’s governor is on his way out of town. We want the cloud over the Capitol to lift, bathing state government in glorious sunlight.
East Greenbush school shooter Jon Romano released from prison
DOCCS records show the now 33-year-old was set free Tuesday
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Jon Romano, the Columbia High School shooter, left, listens to his attorney E Stewart Jones, right, appears in Rensselaer County court for an arraignment on Wednesday morning, Feb. 18, 2004, in Troy, N.Y. (Steve Jacobs/Times Union)STEVE JACOBSS/DG
Jon Romano, who as a teen in 2004 fired a 12-gauge shotgun at students and teachers inside East Greenbush s Columbia High School, was released from state prison on Tuesday, according to records kept by the state Department of Corrections and Community Supervision.
East Greenbush school shooter Jon Romano released from prison
DOCCS records show the now 33-year-old was set free Tuesday
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1of5Jon Romano, the Columbia High School shooter, left, listens to his attorney E Stewart Jones, right, appears in Rensselaer County court for an arraignment on Wednesday morning, Feb. 18, 2004, in Troy, N.Y. (Steve Jacobs/Times Union)STEVE JACOBSS/DGShow MoreShow Less
2of5Still from video courtesy of Capital News 9, : Columbia High School student Jon Romano is lead into the East Greenbush Police Station Monday 2/9/04. Romano is suspected of shooting special education teacher and girls basketball coach Michael Bennett on earlier Monday, February 9, 2004 in the high school in East Greenbush, NY. Show MoreShow Less