He accused Dicker of working for Cuomo and had to be restrained by Caputo.
Caputo, in a blistering statement,
accused Dicker of deliberately provoking a confrontation, saying he was acting on Cuomo's behalf — a claim the reporter, in the video, vehemently denied.
As you'll recall, Paladino
accused Dicker of sending a Post photographer to shoot through the bedroom window of the 10 - year - old daughter he fathered outside his marriage — a charge Post Editor - in - Chief Col Allen denied.
• Paladino's campaign manager, Michael Caputo, steps in, trying to separate the men and
accusing Dicker of doing Cuomo's dirty work.
Not exact matches
Here are some clips of Roger Stone and Tom Ognibene expressing their dismay during separate «Inside City Hall» interviews over the turn Carl Paladino's campaign took last week when the candidate got into a fight with Fred
Dicker and
accused his opponent, Andrew Cuomo, of having affairs.
Paterson teed off on two media figures by name,
accusing The Post's veteran State Editor Fredric
Dicker, who is white, of attacking him «every single week.»
Before Paladino and
Dicker were hauled off to their separate quarters, the Post Albany Bureau chief was pressing the candidate about an interview he gave to POLITICO, in which he
accused Cuomo of being unfaithful to his ex-wife, Kerry Kennedy.
But then Caputo continued to lay into
Dicker,
accusing him of «working for Cuomo» and calling him a «terrible journalist.»
To quote
Dicker's item: «Kolb has repeatedly and conspicuously refused to criticize Silver since becoming the Assembly's GOP leader in 2009 despite a series of scandals and allegations of ethical transgressions including the speaker's highly controversial approval of a secret $ 100,000 - plus settlement paid to female staff members of former Brooklyn Assemblyman Vito Lopez, whom they
accused of sexual harassment.
[49] Prior to Pataki's departure, New York Post political writer Fred
Dicker wrote a scathing critique of Pataki's tenure,
accusing the Governor of broken promises, inattentiveness to his duties, and a focus on maintaining power.