N.Y.U. Says It Will Discipline Students Who Remain in Encampment
The university had set a noon deadline for an end to overnight stays at the site, but students remained there on Monday afternoon.
By Maia Coleman and
The university had set a noon deadline for an end to overnight stays at the site, but students remained there on Monday afternoon.
By Maia Coleman and
Michael D. Cohen’s lawyers took on OAN over the false story. The settlement came as right-wing news outlets face a barrage of defamation suits.
By Maggie Haberman and
Sandra Doorley, the district attorney of Monroe County, N.Y., refused to pull over and responded angrily to the officer who confronted her, body camera footage showed. Now she faces calls to resign.
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Pro-Palestinian student activists say their movement is anti-Zionist but not antisemitic. It is not a distinction that everyone accepts.
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Student Protester Is Suspended After Anti-Zionist Video
Khymani James, a Columbia University student, was barred from campus after his January video resurfaced online last week.
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Homelessness Is Especially Hard on Children. Making Music Helps.
Therapists from the Brooklyn Conservatory of Music have found that teaching homeless children to make beats and write songs is a way to heal trauma.
By Andy Newman and
Columbia Protests: The Musical
Students at the university staged “Mayday,” a show that satirizes the administration, especially the beleaguered president, Nemat Shafik.
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The Aggressive and Expensive Legal Team Defending Mayor Adams
With Mayor Eric Adams and his top aides facing several investigations, he is amassing a team of high-powered lawyers paid by his donors and city taxpayers.
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What’s So Funny About a Dead Comedian?
Kenny DeForest was beloved among his fellow stand-ups. After his sudden death, they came together to grieve — and to confront comedy’s eternal question: Too soon?
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Students in the encampment were told they would be suspended if they did not leave before the deadline.
University officials gave the pro-Palestinian demonstrators a 2 p.m. deadline and threatened to suspend them if they did not leave.
By Sharon Otterman and Sarah Maslin Nir
A New York State forest ranger who worked in the Adirondacks, she died after falling about 1,000 feet from a peak at Denali National Park and Preserve in Alaska.
By Gaya Gupta
Blade, after a decade of flying passengers to eastern Long Island on helicopters, is getting into the luxury coach business.
By Andrew Zucker
Missing a morning ritual, an accidental act of recycling and more reader tales of New York City in this week’s Metropolitan Diary.
A new jury would hear from only one or both of the women whom he was convicted of assaulting, in what analysts say will be a much narrower and weaker case.
By Jan Ransom and Hurubie Meko
The testimony of David Pecker, the former publisher of The National Enquirer, included stories of celebrity encounters and his own wild journalistic tactics.
By Michael Rothfeld
The movie producer won his appeal in New York on Thursday. But his story, at its core, is about work, and it can’t be measured by a criminal court.
By Jodi Kantor
An illustrator in New York City imagines the personalities of some local bookshops and how they might be embodied.
By Aubrey Nolan
Each day before and after court proceedings, the former president stepped out in front of the cameras and offered his version of the case.
By Linda Qiu
Donald J. Trump demands praise and concedes no faults, denying his lawyers time-honored defense tactics.
By Ben Protess, Jonah E. Bromwich, Maggie Haberman and William K. Rashbaum
Before Mr. Cato gets ready for his week with Stephen Colbert, he’s playing games with his daughter, hiding in hoodies and making music of his own.
By Tammy LaGorce
Mr. Kim, the New Jersey congressman, has become the odds-on favorite to win Robert Menendez’s Senate seat. His strategy? Don’t ask anyone for permission.
By Christopher Maag
The first week of testimony has ended in Donald J. Trump’s criminal trial. Jonah Bromwich, a criminal justice reporter at The New York Times, gives his takeaways.
By Jonah E. Bromwich, Rebecca Suner and Gabriel Blanco
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The students had been among more than 100 who were suspended for participating in an encampment at Columbia University.
By Claire Fahy
Harvey Weinstein faced similar sex crimes charges in New York and California, but the arguments used to overturn one case may not help in the other.
By Karen Zraick, Maia Coleman and Lauren Herstik
A tabloid publisher’s testimony dominated a week that began with opening statements setting the stage for the first prosecution of a president.
By Kate Christobek and Jesse McKinley
Donald J. Trump’s lawyer has said he arranged a hush-money payment through First Republic Bank, where Gary Farro worked.
By Michael Rothfeld
Experts say the partisan political context in Washington is a driver behind the spread of protests at American universities even as overseas campuses have stayed relatively calm.
By Amanda Taub
David Pecker, who was the keeper of Donald J. Trump’s secrets, insisted he had testified truthfully about his dealings with the former president.
By Jesse McKinley and Jonah E. Bromwich
Lynija Eason Kumar also faces manslaughter charges in the killing of Jalayah Eason, who was found bruised and unconscious in her family’s apartment last May.
By Erin Nolan
Few people knew Donald J. Trump like Ms. Graff, a Queens native who made a career serving the defendant.
By Matthew Haag
A cluster of downtown buildings has served as the borough’s “epicenter of criminal justice in New York since the 1830s,” said a lawyer who has led walking tours of Manhattan courthouses.
By Matthew Mpoke Bigg
The confrontational strategy adopted by the lawyer, Emil Bove, did not seem to work with David Pecker, the former publisher of The National Enquirer.
By Matthew Haag
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The parody show was scheduled to begin performances in July at the Helen Hayes Theater.
By Michael Paulson
Transit officials announced the start of the program, which they have said will ease some of the nation’s worst traffic.
By Ana Ley and Winnie Hu
After video surfaced on social media, the student, Khymani James, said on Friday that his comments were wrong.
By Katherine Rosman
Dua Lipa and Patrick Mahomes are red carpet stars at an event that brought together Oscar winners and thought leaders.
By Jacob Bernstein and Krista Schlueter
The decision by the New York Court of Appeals is linked to legal weaknesses in the case, our reporter says.
By James Barron
New York officials had said that those who jumped the line to cash in on cannabis would not be rewarded over those who played by the rules.
By Ashley Southall
David Pecker, former publisher of The National Enquirer, testified that Donald J. Trump thanked him for burying stories during the 2016 campaign. Jonah Bromwich, a criminal justice reporter at The New York Times, gives takeaways from Pecker’s testimony.
By Jonah E. Bromwich, Gabriel Blanco, Claire Hogan and Rebecca Suner
Worried about the repercussions of a censure vote, the group may offer a watered-down proposal.
By Stephanie Saul
David Pecker told jurors of a universe in which favors for celebrities were demanded and dispensed. His cross-examination will continue Friday.
By Jesse McKinley and Kate Christobek
The Court of Appeals overturned Harvey Weinstein’s 2020 conviction on sex crimes charges in New York, but he is not a free man. Here’s what to know.
By Maria Cramer
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Jodi Kantor, investigative reporter for The New York Times, explains the overturning of Harvey Weinstein’s 2020 conviction on felony sex crime charges in New York.
By Karen Hanley and Jodi Kantor
David Pecker, former publisher of The National Enquirer, testified that Donald J. Trump thanked him for burying stories.
By Jonah E. Bromwich, Ben Protess and Michael Rothfeld
The publisher of the The National Enquirer said he was called upstairs at Trump Tower to a postelection meeting where Donald J. Trump introduced him to future White House figures.
By Michael Rothfeld
They called Donald J. Trump “the boss.” The desire to avoid his fury drove many decisions made by those around him.
By Matthew Haag
Read the ruling from New York’s top court that overturned the 2020 conviction of Harvey Weinstein on felony sex crime charges in Manhattan, with context and explanation by New York Times journalists.
After a tape emerged of Donald J. Trump discussing how he groped women, she quickly struck a deal.
By Michael Rothfeld
Sending in the police to arrest students only inflamed tensions on campus then. Why would this time be different?
By Ginia Bellafante
The judge in his criminal case is already considering whether to punish the former president for statements about jurors and witnesses in the case.
By Matthew Haag
New York’s highest court tossed out the 2020 sex crime convictions of Harvey Weinstein in a reversal of a case that ignited the #MeToo movement.
By Jan Ransom
New York’s highest court overturned a conviction on Thursday that tested how #MeToo cases could be tried.
By Jodi Kantor
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Karen McDougal sold the rights to her story. Donald J. Trump and the publisher of The National Enquirer decided what would happen to it.
By Michael Rothfeld
Marchers closed down a street calling for the former president to face justice.
By Nate Schweber
In a staggering 4-to-3 decision, the state’s highest court overturned the conviction of the disgraced movie producer, who in 2020 was found guilty of two felony sex crimes.
By Michael Wilson, Jonah E. Bromwich, Jan Ransom and Nicole Hong
The $6.1 billion for Micron, to shore up the domestic supply of semiconductors, comes after a key union endorsement and passage of an aid bill central to the president’s foreign policy agenda.
By Madeleine Ngo and Zolan Kanno-Youngs
This week’s properties are a five-bedroom in New Canaan, Conn., and a four-bedroom in Chappaqua, N.Y.
By Alicia Napierkowski and Anne Mancuso
This week’s properties are on Sutton Place, in Hamilton Heights and Forest Hills.
By Heather Senison
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