Current:Home > FinanceEx-NYC COVID adviser is fired after video reveals he attended parties during pandemic -MoneyStream
Ex-NYC COVID adviser is fired after video reveals he attended parties during pandemic
View
Date:2025-04-11 14:30:40
NEW YORK (AP) — A former New York City official who helped coordinate the city’s response to the pandemic was fired from his private-sector job after a recording showed him talking about attending a sex party and other private gatherings when the city was urging people to practice social distancing.
Dr. Jay Varma was terminated from his position as executive vice president and chief medical officer at SIGA Technologies, the New York-based pharmaceutical company disclosed in a filing Monday with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
Varma served as a senior public health adviser to then-Mayor Bill de Blasio from April 2020 to May 2021. He regularly appeared with the Democratic mayor at press briefings discussing the city’s COVID-19 response and helped develop programs and strategies to combat the virus, including encouraging people to wear masks in public, get tested regularly and get vaccinated, once vaccines were available.
A hidden-camera video posted last week by a conservative podcaster shows Varma speaking casually to a woman about attending gatherings even as he served as a face of the city’s pandemic response.
“I did all this deviant, sexual stuff while I was on TV and people were like, ‘Aren’t you afraid? Aren’t you embarrassed?’” he said at one point in the edited recording. “And I was like, no, I really like being my authentic self.”
Varma also acknowledged how disastrous his actions would have been to the city’s efforts had they been exposed at the time.
“It would have been a big deal,” he said at another point in the video. “It would have been a real embarrassment.”
Former British Prime Minister Boris Johnson resigned in 2023 after a yearslong government inquiry revealed he and members of his administration attended parties in government offices in violation of COVID-19 lockdown rules at the time.
Democratic California Gov. Gavin Newsom faced criticism for flouting his own pandemic rules when he attended a friend’s birthday party at the swanky French Laundry restaurant in Napa Valley in November 2020.
Varma declined Tuesday to comment on his firing, but acknowledged the authenticity of the video in a statement provided by a spokesperson.
“I take responsibility for not using the best judgment at the time,” he wrote, adding that the recordings were from private conversations that had been “secretly recorded, spliced, diced, and taken out of context.”
Varma didn’t elaborate on the events he referenced in the video, but acknowledged attending at least three private gatherings during his City Hall tenure.
Varma, in the video, said one party took place in a hotel room in August 2020 with about 8 to 10 people, including his wife, who were naked and taking the recreational drug molly, or ecstasy.
By then, New York’s governor had begun easing restrictions, with indoor gatherings of up to 10 people permitted months earlier. Varma said he still took precautions to make sure he wasn’t caught.
“I had to be kind of sneaky about it,” he said. “I was running the entire COVID response for the city.”
He also attended a drug-fueled dance party with roughly 200 people in a space under a Wall Street bank in May or June of 2021, according to the recording. In mid-May, New York state had raised the limit on indoor gatherings to 250 people and by mid-June, it had lifted most pandemic restrictions.
Varma, who left his City Hall position around that time but continued to serve as a part-time consultant, according to his LinkedIn bio, recalled being worried about being spotted at the party at the time.
“This was not COVID-friendly,” he said in the video, which appears to have been stitched together from recordings made secretly during a number of different social encounters with an unidentified woman, who is off camera.
A spokesperson for SIGA Technologies didn’t respond to emails seeking comment.
Mayor Eric Adams, a Democrat, declined to wade into the controversy Tuesday during his regular City Hall briefing with reporters. Some local conservatives called for a government inquiry.
“The hypocrisy is outrageous,” said City Council Member Robert Holden, a Queens Democrat, who applauded Varma’s firing. “Millions were impacted by their heavy-handed policies, and the public deserves accountability.”
Varma in his statement defended his efforts to respond to the pandemic and denounced the video as part of “dangerous extremist efforts to undermine the public’s confidence” in vaccines.
“Facing the greatest public health crisis in a century, our top priority was to save lives, and every decision made was based on the best available science to keep New Yorkers safe,” he wrote.
___
Follow Philip Marcelo at twitter.com/philmarcelo.
veryGood! (3)
Related
- How to watch new prequel series 'Dexter: Original Sin': Premiere date, cast, streaming
- CIA publicly acknowledges 1953 coup it backed in Iran was undemocratic as it revisits ‘Argo’ rescue
- Bombarded by Israeli airstrikes, conditions in Gaza grow more dire as power goes out
- John Cena's Super-Private Road to Marrying Shay Shariatzadeh
- Tarte Shape Tape Concealer Sells Once Every 4 Seconds: Get 50% Off Before It's Gone
- English Football Association to honor the Israeli and Palestinian victims at Wembley Stadium
- Lions LB Alex Anzalone’s parents headed home from Israel among group of 50+ people from Florida
- Indiana woman charged after daughter falls from roof of moving car and fractures skull, police say
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- ACT test scores decline for sixth straight year, which officials say indicates U.S. students aren't ready for college work
Ranking
- Sam Taylor
- Vermont police release sketch of person of interest in killing of retired college dean
- Olympics legend Mary Lou Retton continues to fight for her life in ICU, daughter says
- Russian President Putin arrives in Kyrgyzstan on a rare trip abroad
- At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
- Five officers shot and wounded in Minnesota, authorities say
- NATO member Romania finds more drone fragments on its soil after Russian again hits southern Ukraine
- Mexico’s president calls 1994 assassination of presidential candidate a ‘state crime’
Recommendation
'Kraven the Hunter' spoilers! Let's dig into that twisty ending, supervillain reveal
Former West Virginia House Democratic leader switches to GOP, plans to run for secretary of state
Early morning storms leave path of damage from Tampa Bay into north Florida. No injuries reported
Mexico celebrates an ex-military official once arrested on drug smuggling charges in the US
Alex Murdaugh’s murder appeal cites biased clerk and prejudicial evidence
What to know about the Social Security cost-of-living adjustment
Company drops plan for gas power plant in polluted New Jersey area
New York City woman speaks of daughter's death at music festival in Israel: The world lost my flower