Andrew Cuomo speaks during a news conference in Albany (Office of the Governor of New York/AP) Expand

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Andrew Cuomo speaks during a news conference in Albany (Office of the Governor of New York/AP)

Andrew Cuomo speaks during a news conference in Albany (Office of the Governor of New York/AP)

Andrew Cuomo speaks during a news conference in Albany (Office of the Governor of New York/AP)

The New York state Assembly will suspend its impeachment investigation into Governor Andrew Cuomo once he steps down, the chamber’s top Democrat said.

Mr Cuomo announced his resignation on Tuesday over sexual harassment allegations, days after he faced increasing pressure to resign or face the possibility of being ousted by the Democratic-controlled Legislature through the impeachment process.

He said at the time that it would not take effect for 14 days.

The state attorney general last week released an independent investigation that found Mr Cuomo sexually harassed at least 11 women.

Speaker Carl Heastie said in a statement that the Assembly Judiciary Committee had heard from its lawyers that it cannot impeach and remove an elected official no longer in office.

Nevertheless, Mr Heastie said, the evidence the committee had gathered “could likely have resulted in articles of impeachment had he not resigned”.

Since March, outside lawyers have been helping the committee conduct a wide-ranging investigation on whether there were grounds to impeach Mr Cuomo, a Democrat.

The announcement came on a day the Assembly had initially set as a deadline for Mr Cuomo’s legal team to respond with any additional evidence refuting the allegations against him.

Some Democrats, including Assembly member Ron Kim, had urged the Assembly to impeach Mr Cuomo anyway to prevent him from running for office again in New York.

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Mr Heastie said that he has asked Judiciary Committee Chair Charles Lavine to turn over “to the relevant investigatory authorities all the evidence the committee has gathered”.

Some Judiciary committee members, including Democrats Phil Steck and Kenneth Braunstein, said they wanted the committee to at least release a report of their findings to the public.