Joe Biden’s DOJ has dropped the probe, meaning Gov. Cuomo has dodged a bullet
Republican representatives are criticizing the Justice Department’s refusal to open a civil rights inquiry into New York’s COVID-19 response at its state-run nursing home.
The department wrote to GOP Rep. Steve Scalise, and other Republicans, stating that it would not open an investigation. The department declined to investigate any allegations made in Pennsylvania or Michigan.
The request for data from nursing homes was made in the past due to concerns about whether New York and other states had increased the COVID-19 death rate by requiring facilities to admit residents who have been hospitalized for COVID-19.
“The facts, victims & public interest warrant so much better than today’s decision by Biden’s DOJ not to investigate Andrew Cuomo’s deadly nursing home order & cover-up,” Rep. Lee Zeldin of Long Island tweeted about the Justice Department’s decision.
Scalise and upstate New York Rep. Elise Stefanik, the No. 2 and 3 ranked Republican leaders in the House, also criticized the decision.
“Where is the justice for nursing home victims and their grieving families?” Scalise said. “These deadly orders contradicted the CDC’s guidance, and needlessly endangered the most vulnerable among us to the deadly COVID-19 virus.
“Even worse, Governor Cuomo in New York intentionally tried to cover up the true death toll resulting from his mandate. Grieving families deserve answers and accountability. It’s unconscionable that Biden’s Department of Justice refuses to investigate the deadly actions that went against CDC’s medical guidance taken in these states.”
New York Attorney General Letitia James reported in January that an investigation found that a larger number of residents of the state’s nursing homes died from COVID-19 than the state department of health’s data reported: “and may have been undercounted by as much as 50 percent.”
“Based on these findings and subsequent investigation, Attorney General James is conducting ongoing investigations into more than 20 nursing homes whose reported conduct during the first wave of the pandemic presented particular concerns,” the attorney general’s office reported back in January.