A day after California Gov. Gray Davis criticized embattled Congressman Gary Condit's conduct in the case of missing intern Chandra Levy, Condit's two adult children resigned from their jobs with Davis's administration. "I am disheartened that Congressman Condit did not speak out more quickly or more fully," Davis said Monday in the aftermath of interviews Condit gave to ABC's Connie Chung and to PEOPLE. On Tuesday, Chad Condit, 34, who worked as a Davis liaison in the Central Valley (Gary Condit's congressional district), and Cadee Condit, 26, who worked as a special assistant in the governor's executive office, tendered their resignations. "There is no honor in kicking somebody when they're down," Chad told CNN's Larry King on Monday night in reaction to Davis's comments. When the resignations became public on Tuesday, Davis issued a statement saying, "These are two extraordinary young adults who did an outstanding job for the Office of the Governor. I regret their decision to leave, but am convinced they will be successful in whatever they choose to do." Meanwhile, flight attendant Anne Marie Smith, who maintains that she had a 10-month-long affair with Gary Condit (a relationship he denied to Chung), told ABC's "Good Morning America" on Tuesday, "I feel really bad about the position he's in right now . . . because I think if he would have been honest and forthcoming in the very beginning he probably wouldn't be in (this) situation." She said that she was hurt to see him deny they had a relationship. "It wasn't the Mr. Condit that I knew," she said of the man interviewed by Chung. When asked how she remembered Condit, she replied: "Comfortable, relaxed, joking around." But when Condit faced Chung, said Smith, "I could see anger. He was very angry."