Governor Andrew Cuomo has been walking a fine line when it comes to the multiple investigations he is facing, particularly one launched by State Attorney General Letitia James focusing on multiple allegations of sexual harassment.

Cuomo said he is eager for the truth to come out.

“I am very eager to get the facts to the people of this state," he said. "And I think when they hear the actual facts of what happened and how this situation has been handled, I think they are going to be shocked.”

But Cuomo and his team are also attacking the integrity of the investigation.

Rich Azzopardi, the governor’s senior adviser, has said repeatedly that James is politically motivated because she wants to run for governor herself, something he has produced little evidence to support.

Cuomo was careful on Monday to distinguish his own criticism of the James investigation from Azzopardi’s, saying he has an issue with the people James has hired to conduct the investigation, not James herself.

One of those attorneys is Joon Kim, who once worked for the U.S. attorney’s office, which investigated Cuomo on another matter.

“On the AG’s report, I said I have concerns as to the independence of the reviewers. That’s what I’ve said," Cuomo said. "And is this all happening in a political system? Yes. That is undeniable.”

Last week, the Biden Justice Department determined that it does not have enough evidence to conduct an investigation into nursing homes deaths in New York and other states, including Pennsylvania and New Jersey. But this does not affect a probe by the Brooklyn U.S. attorney’s office, the attorney general’s investigation or the Assembly’s impeachment probe into Cuomo’s conduct.

Cuomo seized on the Justice Department’s decision not to pursue an investigation, and gave his longest answer of the day to a question about it, where he attacked Republicans.

“The political environment has gotten so toxic. So toxic. So mean," he said. "It was an outrageous allegation.”

Cuomo is hardly out for the woods. Just last week, he sat down with investigators from the attorney general’s office for a formal interview, often a sign that the probe is wrapping up.