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New York advocates push to give survivors a chance to hold alleged sexual abusers accountable

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Survivors of sexual harassment, including one of the accusers of “Sex and the City” star Chris Noth, held a virtual news conference Thursday to urge legislators to pass a bill that would give victims the right to their day in court against their alleged abusers.

Known as the Adult Survivors Act, the measure would extend to adults the same rights that the state’s Child Victims Act gives to survivors of childhood sexual abuse. Victims in cases where the statute of limitations has ended would have a one-year lookback window to bring a civil suit against their alleged abuser.

Attorney Gloria Allred urged state lawmakers to approve the measure this year.

“New York’s laws were badly out of sync with the experiences of so many sexual assault survivors,” Allred said. “Outdated statutes of limitations mean that their opportunity to file a civil lawsuit has expired before they are ready or able to come forward.”

Allred represents numerous sexual assault survivors, including Lisa Gentile, whom said she was assaulted by “Sex and the City” and “Law and Order” star Chris Noth. Gentile said Noth forcibly kissed and groped her in her New York apartment in 1998, then warned her to keep quiet.

She said it’s taken her decades to overcome her fears of calling out a “powerful celebrity.”

“I do regret not seeking justice,” Gentile said. “But I was young, I was traumatized and I was afraid.”

Noth denies the allegations, as well as accusations from three other women.

The Senate and Assembly sponsors of the bill also joined the news conference. Senate sponsor Brad Hoylman said the bill is moving through the Judiciary Committee and is on track to be approved in the Senate for a second year in a row.

But the measure has stalled in the Assembly. A spokesman for Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie said earlier this year that the chamber’s sexual harassment working group is looking at the bill and other proposed anti-sexual harassment legislation.

Assembly sponsor Linda Rosenthal said she is lobbying her colleagues, and the measure now has 50 sponsors.

“We are discussing it,” Rosenthal said. “And hopefully soon, we will have some good news.”

Gov. Kathy Hochul has not actively pushed for the measure, though she has spoken out against sexual harassment and other inappropriate behavior in the workplace, saying it will not be tolerated in her administration. Hochul replaced former Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who resigned in August over a sexual harassment scandal.

Meanwhile, Cuomo’s lawyer continued to attack the credibility of three of the former governor’s accusers, saying there were inconsistencies in some of their stories.

Rita Glavin said Attorney General Letitia James’ report that Cuomo sexually harassed 11 women did not follow up on those discrepancies.

“The attorney general’s investigation was shoddy," Glavin said. “It was one-sided, and there was a predetermined outcome."

Glavin said Cuomo is looking at “legal options.”

Cuomo denies that he sexually harassed anyone. The women have said they stand by their accounts.

James has previously said that her report, conducted by a former acting United States attorney and an employment lawyer, speaks for itself.

Karen has covered state government and politics for New York State Public Radio, a network of 10 New York and Connecticut stations, since 1990. She is also a regular contributor to the statewide public television program about New York State government, New York Now. She appears on the reporter’s roundtable segment, and interviews newsmakers.