Inside the Money Race for the 2025 New York City Mayoral Primary
Mayor Eric Adams is facing a competitive Democratic primary next June. His challengers are sprinting to raise money.
By Emma G. Fitzsimmons and
Mayor Eric Adams is facing a competitive Democratic primary next June. His challengers are sprinting to raise money.
By Emma G. Fitzsimmons and
New York City community boards are known for rejecting development. In Manhattan, one politician is revamping them with appointees who say they are committed to easing the housing crisis.
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Attorney General Letitia James wants a monitor appointed to oversee the gun group’s accounts after millions in misspending.
By Danny Hakim and
A neighborhood in Queens, New York, turned 1.3 miles of a regular road into an open street for pedestrians, cyclists and playing children, with aims to make some of it into a park.
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Dr. Ruth, Longtime Manhattanite, Is Remembered as a Neighborhood ‘Anchor’
Ruth Westheimer, the sex therapist, lived in the same Washington Heights apartment for more than half a century. Her neighbors said she was gregarious, funny and unabashedly herself.
By Anusha Bayya and
Migrants Find Joy and a Taste of Home in a Manhattan Church Kitchen
At a volunteer-run center, migrants come together across cultures and religions to share flavors from their homelands amid a polarizing crisis. But funding is running low.
By Winnie Hu and
A city program will offer eight designs that developers can use to make ubiquitous scaffolding more attractive.
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After Dismissal of Bankruptcy Case, Here’s What’s Next for Giuliani
Without the protection of Chapter 11, the former mayor and Trump lawyer could have his assets seized and sold by creditors.
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Fire Commissioner Laura Kavanagh to Step Down
Ms. Kavanagh, the first woman to oversee the New York Fire Department in its nearly 160-year history, gave no explanation for her departure.
By Maia Coleman, Chelsia Rose Marcius and
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Forecasters said that temperatures could feel more like 100 degrees in parts of New Jersey and New York City on Monday and into the mid and upper 90s for the rest of the region.
By Johnny Diaz and David Waldstein
A new immersive piece of theater from the producers of “Sleep No More” transports visitors to the Gilded Age through a retrofitted skyscraper in Manhattan.
By Alexis Soloski and Hiroko Masuike
An unscheduled stop on the M72, an unusual signal for help and more reader tales of New York City in this week’s Metropolitan Diary.
His photograph of five young people lounging on the Brooklyn waterfront as smoke engulfed Manhattan mesmerized viewers and stirred controversy.
By Trip Gabriel
The highly contagious disease was detected in a shelter in Brooklyn, according to the health department. More cases of measles have been reported in the city this year than in all of 2023.
By Hurubie Meko
American Oystercatchers are attacking drones that have been deployed to scan for sharks and swimmers in distress.
By Michael Levenson
A look behind the scenes at the illumination of the pieces on display. The so-called lampers strike a delicate balance between accentuating the art and protecting it from the effects of light.
By Sopan Deb and Hiroko Masuike
Wayne LaPierre stepped down on the eve of the first phase of the trial. In the second act, the stakes will be far higher.
By Danny Hakim
In 1975, New Jersey’s Supreme Court ordered every town in the state to make way for multifamily housing. It’s been a long journey.
By Roshan Abraham
Rabbi Sharon Kleinbaum, the senior rabbi at Congregation Beit Simchat Torah in Manhattan, is retiring at a challenging time for the gay rights movement.
By James Estrin
A Utica, N.Y., officer’s fatal shooting of a 13-year-old provokes anger among the city’s Karen residents, members of an ethnic group from Myanmar.
By Hurubie Meko
George Gaffney, the top concierge at the Beekman hotel, goes restaurant hopping for breakfast with his family, then helps tourists find the best brunch spots.
By David Gardner
Senator Robert Menendez is charged with 16 separate crimes, including bribery, obstructing justice and acting as an agent of a foreign government.
By Benjamin Weiser and Tracey Tully
L’Alliance New York will celebrate the 14th of July with festivities marking the 235th anniversary of the famous storming of a Paris prison.
By James Barron
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Chicky was beloved by her whole neighborhood. When she was killed by a speeding Jeep, we confronted a cold reality: Her death was considered a property crime.
By Ginia Bellafante
For many Black women, summertime calls for braids. Pricing for knotless braids, which are faster to braid, feel lighter and have gotten more popular, depends on the length and size of each braid and color blend, and whether hair used in the boho style is human or synthetic.
By Lola Fadulu and Naima Green
The university’s former president sued the school, saying a former board chairman harassed his wife. A law firm the university hired said no witnesses substantiated the claims.
By Christopher Maag
A recent Supreme Court ruling should nullify the guilty verdict in Donald Trump’s Manhattan trial, his lawyers said. The argument could be a long shot.
By Ben Protess, William K. Rashbaum and Kate Christobek
A muckraking journalist, he helped write a revisionist account of Rudolph Giuliani’s role as mayor before and after the terrorist attacks.
By Sam Roberts
The New York congresswoman was blamed for not being supportive enough of the Palestinian cause and efforts to end the war in Gaza.
By Nicholas Fandos
Chris Winkler went to trial after the government accused him of conspiring to sell illicit fish. Prosecutors said they were trying to preserve the bounty of the sea.
By Maia Coleman
She was an evangelist for older women having sex with younger men, and the health benefits that she said came with it.
By Penelope Green
The officer, Juan Perez, faces up to 364 days in jail for assault. The victim, who later killed himself in Kosovo, had been throwing water at passers-by.
By Lola Fadulu
Guo Wengui fled China and allied with the American right in a quixotic quest to end Communist rule. U.S. prosecutors say he stole over $1 billion from his followers.
By Michael Forsythe
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Amid soaring temperatures, hundreds of activists are staging boisterous blockades and solemn marches at banks and insurers that support fossil fuel projects.
By Somini Sengupta and Cara Buckley
This week’s properties are in Turtle Bay, on the Lower East Side and in Kingsbridge.
By Heather Senison
Extensive cuts totaling $16.5 billion have suspended crucial repairs and upgrades to New York City’s vast transit network.
By Keith Collins
This week’s properties are a three-bedroom in Nutley, N.J., and a four-bedroom in Thornwood, N.Y.
By Jill P. Capuzzo and Anne Mancuso
At CUNY’s Baruch College, Natale Cipollina talks about Roosevelt, Johnson and Nixon. He makes presidential history relevant to today, students say.
By James Barron
Bruce Blakeman, the Nassau County executive, is recruiting “special deputies” to deploy during disaster or unrest. Opponents say the move is dangerous.
By Corey Kilgannon
The bribery case against Senator Robert Menendez has revealed how foreign intelligence officials cultivated casual access to one of the most powerful Democrats in Washington.
By Tracey Tully
His innovative version of the chocolate chip cookie, studded with irregular pieces of dark Swiss chocolate, led to a chain of more than 100 stores worldwide.
By Florence Fabricant
Starting Jan. 1, large hotels will no longer be able to offer small containers of shampoo and conditioner. The bill is part of an effort to cut down on single-use plastic.
By Claire Fahy
For decades, the court has been reluctant to allow lawsuits against individual federal officials. Donald Trump’s fixer-turned-nemesis believes he has found an exception.
By Ben Protess and Maggie Haberman
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If the judge follows through, it would allow creditors to pursue foreclosures, repossessions and lawsuits that have been on hold as Rudolph Giuliani sought the protection of bankruptcy law.
By Eileen Sullivan
Senator Robert Menendez’s lawyers finished a six-hour closing statement on Wednesday afternoon.
By Maria Cramer and Maia Coleman
Her writing, from the late 1920s to the late ’40s, about sex, marriage, divorce, child rearing and work-life balance still resonates.
By Marsha Gordon
Fun is the main point of Carl Cofield’s stylish outdoor staging of Shakespeare’s comic fantasy for the Classical Theater of Harlem.
By Laura Collins-Hughes
Mr. Ryan, the eighth member of Congress to publicly call on President Biden to drop out of the race, said Mr. Biden seemed incapable of making a case against Donald Trump.
By Nicholas Fandos
A group is planning a celebration to mark July 4, 2026. The occasion, for short, is known as Semiquin.
By James Barron
The nonprofit organization that steers the popular greenway attraction on Manhattan’s West Side says building a casino in Hudson Yards could harm parkgoers’ experience.
By Stefanos Chen
Senator Robert Menendez is charged in an international corruption scheme. Prosecutors portrayed him as “Scrooge McDuck swimming in gold coins,” his lawyer told the jury.
By Benjamin Weiser, Nicholas Fandos, Tracey Tully and Maria Cramer
The lawsuit was part of a wave of litigation against universities over accusations of antisemitism related to campus protests over the war in Gaza.
By Sharon Otterman
Senator Robert Menendez’s corruption trial has featured testimony that ventured into offbeat territory.
By Tracey Tully
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The Manhattan district attorney’s office said it was “actively pursuing” a fresh prosecution against the disgraced movie producer. Prosecutors projected a fall trial.
By Hurubie Meko
A reporter and a visual journalist followed the Aguilar Ortega family during a dangerous journey to the United States.
By Shauntel Lowe
For months, two journalists documented a Venezuelan family’s journey to the United States, and the struggles they faced after they crossed the border.
By Luis Ferré-Sadurní
In the East Village, amid buzzy restaurants and high-end real estate, a troubled section of 14th Street reflects the city’s struggles to control intractable problems.
By Andy Newman and Chelsia Rose Marcius
George E. Norcross III, a widely feared political figure in New Jersey for years, is accused of manipulating property deals to benefit from government tax breaks.
By Elise Young
The body of Yazmeen Williams, 31, had been found on a Manhattan curb, wrapped in a sleeping bag. The police took a man in a wheelchair into custody.
By Chelsia Rose Marcius and Dean Moses
In a closing statement, a prosecutor said the Menendez home was awash in cash and walked jurors through what the government has called a complicated web of corruption.
By Benjamin Weiser, Tracey Tully, Nicholas Fandos and Maria Cramer
With three children and a dog, the Aguilar Ortega family trekked through the jungle, hopped freight trains and toured Times Square. Significant challenges still lay ahead.
By Luis Ferré-Sadurní and Juan Arredondo
New York City officials, including the comptroller, Brad Lander, are weighing whether to challenge Eric Adams, potentially creating openings in other races.
By Emma G. Fitzsimmons
Nemat Shafik, the university president, called the sentiments in the text messages “unacceptable and deeply upsetting.”
By Katherine Rosman
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Remote work and online shopping have hurt retailers who occupy space leased by the Metropolitan Transportation Authority.
By Matthew Haag
Years before they ascended to influential leadership roles, they worked at the Public Theater and became cheerleaders for each other’s professional dreams.
By Peter Marks
They checked into a motel room in upstate New York, with a gas canister and a plan to end her decades of physical pain.
By Ed Shanahan
Soon, dining sheds around the city will be dismantled — no matter how attractive they are.
By Dodai Stewart
His clients included antiwar protesters and terror suspects. His practice “not only defended needy people, it propelled social movements,” a colleague said.
By Trip Gabriel
Twenty years after opening in Williamsburg, Catbird is expanding across America.
By Misty White Sidell
Fifty years ago, my father’s friend was taken at gunpoint on Long Island. Then he went on with his life — and that’s the part that haunts me.
By Taffy Brodesser-Akner
Abbe Lowell, a lawyer for Senator Robert Menendez, met with prosecutors last fall to plead his case. Days later, the senator was indicted on bribery charges.
By Benjamin Weiser
Nearly 75 percent of shops operated by the Metropolitan Transportation Authority are vacant.
By Matthew Haag
Looking up in Inwood Hill Park, talking hip-hop on Bleecker Street and more reader tales of New York City in this week’s Metropolitan Diary.
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Visitors were mostly unaffected by the third and fourth drownings at New York City beaches this season, matching the total number of swimming deaths last summer.
By Alyce McFadden and Julian Roberts-Grmela
New York officials believe a robotic companion called ElliQ, which can discuss complicated subjects, is helping older residents feel less alone. Critics are concerned about data collection.
By Erin Nolan
She makes children laugh during the week, but on Sundays it’s her turn to enjoy herself: movies, fancy treats and museum trips with her 6-year-old son.
By Lia Picard
The girls, ages 17 and 18, went into the water near the Coney Island boardwalk as thunderstorms rolled in. It was the second pair of drownings off the city’s beaches in two weeks.
By Victoria Kim and Anusha Bayya
Hearing echoes of Independence Day a century ago, when Americans were clashing over race, religion, immigration and presidential candidates.
By Dan Barry
In Williamsburg and Manhattan, robbers have stolen watches worth tens of thousands of dollars before fleeing on motorbikes.
By Maia Coleman
A mysterious former Republican’s victory over Mondaire Jones in a third-party primary could help shape one of the nation’s most important congressional swing races this fall.
By Nicholas Fandos
At least 11 people who were celebrating the July 4 holiday were struck by the truck on the Lower East Side, the authorities said.
By Livia Albeck-Ripka, Julian Roberts-Grmela and Victoria Kim
Police officers arrived at a Jamaica apartment to find a 21-year-old man holding his father at knife point and an 8-year-old fatally wounded, officials said.
By Grace Ashford and Gaya Gupta
A cover band from Toronto brings some 2000s nostalgia to the home city of their indie rock heroes.
By Alex Vadukul
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This week’s properties are in Sutton Place, Gramercy Park and Flatbush.
By Heather Senison
This week’s properties are a three-bedroom in Weston, Conn., and a five-bedroom in Stony Brook, N.Y.
By Claudia Gryvatz Copquin and Alicia Napierkowski
Mr. Bertoletti won the title, succeeding the 16-time champion Joey Chestnut, who was barred from the July 4 spectacle. In the women’s contest, Miki Sudo ate 51 hot dogs, a record.
By Liam Stack
Despite highly publicized attacks, most major offenses are down. But quality-of-life problems tarnish the “Crossroads of the World,” the city says.
By Maria Cramer
Senator Robert Menendez of New Jersey is accused of a wide-ranging international bribery conspiracy. Jurors are likely to begin deliberating next week.
By Benjamin Weiser and Tracey Tully
She painted and sculpted, but she was best known for her oversized still lifes, painted from photographs and crowded with color and detail.
By Will Heinrich
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