The Governor and the Darkness
With David Paterson officially sworn in as Governor of New York State, New York Magazine has taken an extensive look at the epic fall of Eliot Spitzer.
It is with no small amount of irony that the clandestine, covert operations that he built his career around ended up being the 48-year-old’s undoing.
A 30-year-old ADA charged with investigating mob control of trucking in New York’s garment district, Eliot Spitzer found joy in the undercover.
Spying on the Gambinos was worlds away from Riverdale, where he’d grown up the son of a real estate mogul, and from Princeton and Harvard Law School.
It was all in service of a noble cause, of course, like ending the “mob tax” on clothing manufacturers. The Gambino crime family was clearly evil.
The whole investigation took three years, and every chance he got, Eliot Spitzer would slip on the headphones and listen to tapes from the wire.
Ever since, Eliot Spitzer has been hooked on the clandestine.
She couldn’t stop crying. Barely a day earlier, the man she’d been married to for two decades, the father of her three daughters, stunned Silda Spitzer with the revelation that he’d been sleeping with a prostitute, Ashley Dupre.
Now here were Eliot and Silda Spitzer, on a cloudy Monday afternoon in March, in a warren of state-government offices on the 39th floor of a midtown building, huddled among shell-shocked and tearful staffers.
The New York Times had just broken the story on its website. She hated what he’d done, hated the idea of being seen as a “stand by your man” wife. Silda had even said in the past that she would never go the route of Hillary Clinton.
But maybe appearing together today would somehow help their daughters - all teenagers - through this incredible nightmare.
And Silda Spitzer, an experienced lawyer herself, had somehow been able to think objectively about what her absence might say to federal prosecutors.
Continue reading in New York Magazine …









NATIONAL



