I was in the neighborhood, so I decided to stop by Eliot
Spitzer's tony yellow brick apartment building on Fifth Ave.,
across from Central Park and adjacent to the Metropolitan Museum of
Art. About a dozen photographers were huddled outside on a windy
day in Manhattan, and a little after three Spitzer's wife Silda
walked out of the building and was whisked away by a black SUV. She
was prettier in person than on television, which made her husband's
hooker habit slightly more perplexing to me. Spitzer himself has
been holed up inside his luxury apartment since returning from his
morning press conference, a journalist who has been staking out the
place for the past few days told me. Apparently people have been
visiting and bringing him food. Meanwhile, tourists passing by the
building have been taking photos of themselves outside his
residence as if it were just another sightseeing stop. Such is life
for the former "Sheriff of Wall Street" and one-time rising star in
the Democratic Party. A "steamroller" no more.
topics:
Television