The judge warned Attorney General Pam Bondi to temper her statements about Luigi Mangione to ensure a fair trial on charges of killing a health insurance executive.
“For that which you have done, you simply deserve no mercy,” a judge told Ryan Cato, who beat a 10-year-old boy to death in 2021.
The killing occurred after the man got into a fight with his assailant on a downtown No. 5 train during the morning rush hour, officials said.
Haji Najibullah’s plea was heard in a civilian court in Manhattan. He helped abduct David Rohde, then a New York Times reporter, in Afghanistan in 2008.
When the rent is high and the vacancy rates are low, sharing your space with others becomes a must.
Years ago, Vladimir Kanevsky’s floral sculptures started turning up in Manhattan’s most elegant living rooms. Now his work is on display alongside masterpieces.
The former congressman George Santos could receive a prison term of more than seven years.
With 1,320 rental apartments and a host of amenities, 25 Water Street is the country’s largest office-to-residential conversion to date.
This surprisingly entertaining film examines the 1975 fiscal crisis that nearly led the city to bankruptcy. The movie’s conclusions remain relevant today.
The New York Historical prepares to examine the campaign against Communism that once shook Hollywood and beyond.
An abandoned rail line in central Queens may or may not be the city’s next tourist destination.
Ryan Hemphill was arraigned Thursday afternoon on a 116-count indictment. Authorities say he tortured, drugged and filmed women in his Midtown apartment.
These three restaurants don’t stick to the script, and it makes them worth visiting again and again.
The goal is to make the school’s programs more accessible and to ease the burden on graduates pursuing careers in the arts.
This year’s colorful and wide-ranging edition of the Association of International Photography Art Dealers fair is a bursting capsule history of the medium.
The Chinese artist’s commentary “on what is unfolding politically and culturally in our time” has a lighthearted note: cat-patterned camouflage. The work inaugurates a new art series at the park.
After Andre Brown’s 40-year sentence was overturned, he went free. The Bronx district attorney appealed, and now he might return to prison and leave his wife and children.
Forecasters had warned that the air in the city could become unhealthy for some because of a fire that has been burning in the Pine Barrens since Tuesday.
The detectors have to be installed in every kitchen with a gas stove. But battery-operated ones are hard to come by.
This week’s properties are in Greenwich Village, Kips Bay and Riverdale.
Smooth floors. Public restrooms. A built-in audience: The lower level of Moynihan Hall doubles as a rehearsal space for a variety of dance groups, including K-pop, salsa and Brazilian Zouk.
But the number of sales is also rising, according to a Q1 market report, seemingly unaffected by prices.
Henry Clay Frick, aggressive in art collecting as well as business, acquired many of the masterpieces of the museum, whose renovated Fifth Avenue mansion recently reopened.
Zohran Mamdani, who won attention for a series of online campaign videos, is the first candidate to launch a broadcast ad in the Democratic primary race.
Zohran Mamdani, who won attention for a series of online campaign videos, is the first candidate to air a broadcast ad in the Democratic primary race.
With more than 900,000 students, New York’s public school system is the biggest in the United States, but it has received scant attention from candidates.
The $160 million Davis Center, with upgrades to six bucolic acres and a lake, writes a new chapter for the Harlem end of the park.
The F.A.A. allows many of these popular flights to operate under less stringent rules than other commercial aviation, opening the door to dangers like pilot fatigue.
Excenia Mette, 61, walked out of her apartment building and into the middle of a shootout. She was an active member of the National Action Network.
Before it was a legal dispensary where the mayor hoped to raise campaign funds, the site held an illicit weed shop raided by the city. Some of its operators are still around.
He brought farm-grown produce to the city’s streets, creating the largest network of farmers’ markets in the country and helping to revive neighborhoods.
The singer summoned fans on her social media to an impromptu performance in Washington Square Park Tuesday night.
Ms. Adams, the City Council speaker, won endorsements from Letitia James, the state attorney general, and from three major unions including District Council 37.
A Parks Department official scours the shoreline looking for vessels that owners left behind. There are hundreds of them.
Jack Sivan started his namesake men’s wear business after freelancing for luxury labels like the Row.
Stranded astronauts and celebrity space tourism have piqued interest in space — and a photography exhibition in the museum is making the most of it.
As the busy summer rental season approaches, The New York Times wants to hear your must-haves and absolutely-nots when you’re looking for a place to live.
Former Gov. Andrew Cuomo is embracing a so-called Rose Garden strategy in his tightly controlled campaign for mayor of New York City.
Prosecutors and defense lawyers delivered their opening statements Wednesday in the sex-crime case of the fallen mogul Harvey Weinstein.
The singer summoned fans to an impromptu performance in Washington Square Park Tuesday night. She neglected to get a permit. But there was one more surprise to come.
Federal prosecutors charged six members of the Venezuelan gang and 21 members of a violent splinter group.
Three prosecutors resigned from the Southern District of New York on Tuesday rather than apologize for the work on the prosecution of Mayor Eric Adams of New York.
Some prospective jurors reacted with shock when they realized they might be selected for Mr. Weinstein’s latest trial. Opening statements lie ahead.
A charitable arm of the Bally’s Corporation will buy Preston High School’s buildings and lease them back to the Catholic school, a victory for foes of a plan to close the Bronx institution.
They had been placed on administrative leave after refusing to abandon the corruption case against Mayor Eric Adams. “We will not confess wrongdoing when there was none,” they wrote.
I’m Donut? offers its Japanese pastries in Times Square, a storied bagel shop plots a return and more restaurant news.
The pope visited the city in 2015, making stops that included Madison Square Garden, Central Park and a Harlem school.
An exhibition at Gagosian includes never-before-seen works from the personal collection of Paloma Picasso, who helped organize the show.
One of New York City’s minor yet annoying inconveniences is a line that forms when a restaurant or another business becomes wildly popular.
A leading sociologist, he explored American society up close — living in a Levittown at one point — to gain insight into issues of race, class, the media and even the Yankees.
His heavily textured paintings brought him renown in the 1980s. In the ’90s, Nick Nolte played a character inspired by him in a Martin Scorsese film.
At 82, the widely admired artist is getting the higher level of recognition she has sought for decades.
After meeting with President Trump’s border czar, Mayor Eric Adams supported allowing U.S. immigration authorities to reopen offices at Rikers Island.
The administration has demanded the tolling program end by late May, arguing that it unfairly burdens working-class commuters.
Two Democratic politicians said they had scheduled the town hall to hear from their constituents who are angry at Trump administration policies.
When luxury condos and artisanal bakeries move into New York City neighborhoods, Bond No. 9 sometimes follows.
Timmy Reen bien podría ser un caso médico único: un hombre con un trastorno grave que trabajaba en un entorno impredecible y de alto riesgo, totalmente inadecuado para sus compulsiones.
The New York Times sent a wide-ranging survey to candidates in the Democratic primary for mayor of New York City about affordability, public safety, President Trump, homelessness, congestion pricing, immigration, schools and their one big idea.
The disgraced producer has complained volubly about his treatment in jail on Rikers Island. Advocates for detainees say any attention to conditions there can’t hurt.
A new law that will require many landlords, and not renters, to cover broker fees is set to take effect in less than two months. It may change how New Yorkers move.
During his life, Willy Ley predicted the dawn of the Space Age with remarkable accuracy. How did his remains end up forgotten in a co-op on the Upper West Side?
Time for revelry, and a celebration of spring, on a Sunday in the city.
For decades, the share of American Catholics declined in the face in secularization. But in recent years, those numbers have stabilized, buoyed by growing communities and broader societal changes.
Vast swaths of the subway still rely on signal equipment from the Great Depression. A multibillion dollar plan, now at risk, hopes to bring the system into the 21st century
An up-and-down routine on the E, a pretzel and a Playbill, and more reader tales of New York City in this week’s Metropolitan Diary.
It was not immediately clear how long the two had been dead or how long the younger daughter had been surviving alone in the apartment.
In 1963, Mrs. King helped lead a march commemorating the second anniversary of Women Strike for Peace.
Transportation experts say a thorough renovation is likely to take several years to complete — unless emergency measures are employed.
At Richard Ye’s enormous monthly gatherings, where people play Exploding Kittens, Hues and Cues, and mahjong, New Yorkers find real-life connections and a little free fun.
Hekima Hapa runs around with her four children, teaches a sewing class in Brooklyn and ends her day by burning a little sage.
For decades, universities got billions in federal dollars for research. The relationship was mutually beneficial, until President Trump decided it wasn’t.
You might not guess what it is, but it makes a lot of sense.
The music program had been on WNYC for four decades. Listener contributions spared it from the ax.
As Thelma Golden and Lisa Phillips put finishing touches on their expanded buildings, they assess their legacies, and the cultural shift ahead.
A collection of indelible photographs, maps and “intimate guides” from 1807 to 1940 went beyond extolling the virtues of the city.
Demonstrators rallied on Columbia’s campus and marched in Manhattan, three days after Mohsen Mahdawi was detained by immigration officials after arriving for a U.S. citizenship appointment.
Attorney General Pam Bondi moved forward aggressively and ordered prosecutors to seek the death penalty. Mangione also faces state charges in the Manhattan shooting.
Judge Lewis J. Liman struck down several arguments in various lawsuits seeking to undo the New York City tolling program. Though weakened, the court cases continue.
The Elizabeth Street Garden in Lower Manhattan was going to be razed to make way for affordable housing for older New Yorkers. Now the plan may be on hold.
The head of the federal Department of Transportation promised on Thursday to take away control of the project from the Metropolitan Transportation Authority.
Lunch for a courthouse wedding? Fresh cookies after 6 p.m.? We have answers.
The artist’s first major museum survey fills Frank Lloyd Wright’s spiral with a rich mix of media, a view of the polymathic flux of a 25-year career, and a sense of healing.
La oficina del médico forense de Nueva York determinó la causa y forma de su muerte tras revisar los resultados de las pruebas toxicológicas, dijo una portavoz.
Thomas Oliemans came to New York to sing at the Metropolitan Opera. While he was here, he took a musical walking tour.
Three years after opening its visual jolt of a new headquarters, the Brotherhood Sister Sol has become even more of a haven for the young people it serves.
This week’s properties are in the financial district, Lenox Hill and Woodside.
This week’s properties are a two-bedroom lake house in Ridgefield and a four-bedroom home Bronxville.
Bar owners say 4 a.m. liquor licenses are increasingly difficult to obtain, leaving revelers to settle for earlier bed times.
For years, Timmy Reen tried to hide his compulsions and rituals from everyone at his New York City firehouse — until his secret was forced out in the open.
Parents are fed up, and the candidates for mayor appear to be paying attention. Many have built campaigns on a promise to make New York more affordable, with child care as a centerpiece.
Senator Chuck Schumer had said he would block the permanent appointment of Jay Clayton, the president’s choice to head one of the nation’s most prestigious prosecutor’s offices.
The New York City medical examiner’s office determined the cause and manner of her death after reviewing toxicology test results, a spokeswoman said.
The federal charges against Mayor Eric Adams were dropped. Now he owes millions in legal expenses and must navigate a complex relationship with President Trump.
Mayor Eric Adams reversed $167 million in cuts to preschool programs, as some of his rivals in the competitive New York City mayor’s race criticize him for doing too little to help families.
The head of a U.S. housing agency told prosecutors that Letitia James appeared to have falsified real estate records, a move that could be the start of an investigation of a key Trump adversary.
The chef Karina Garcia of the New York restaurant Cocina Consuelo celebrated by cooking for family and friends, and even making her own cake.
Astoria arrived on the East Side and spent the night on someone’s balcony. She had followed a similar pattern last spring before returning to her regular home on Roosevelt Island.
Nydia Velázquez and six other Democrats framed the endorsements of Adrienne Adams, Brad Lander and Zohran Mamdani as a way of electing a “steady hand” to lead New York City.
There are thousands of species of fungus in the city, with names like American dyeball, dingy twiglet and devil’s dipstick. Some even glow in the dark.
A lawsuit argues that an executive order that City Hall issued last week is “part of a corrupt quid pro quo bargain” between Mayor Eric Adams of New York and President Trump.
After closing in 2020 following a revival by Gabriel Stulman, it’s now backed by the partners of St. Jardim.
Is she seeking excitement? Danger? A date? The birders who look after her just want her to go home.
Astoria, a wild turkey, seen living free on Roosevelt Island in New York.
The music mogul has been in the Metropolitan Detention Center for nearly seven months.
The disgraced Hollywood producer will face a new trial for sex crimes in New York after a previous conviction was reversed last year.
Shujun Wang worked for a pro-democracy organization while passing information about dissidents to China, prosecutors said. He was sentenced to three years of supervised release.
Former Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s 29-page housing plan included a garbled section with incomplete sentences and a link to a citation retrieved by ChatGPT.
Former Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo’s bid for New York City mayor was endorsed by two of the city’s largest unions, Local 32BJ and the Hotel and Gaming Trades Council.
Placing a preschool or day care center in a building can help sell the development to the community. It also makes the city stronger.
Raf’s, occupying the site of a decades-old bakery in NoHo, is thriving as a clubroom for the fashion crowd while mostly flying under the radar of social media.
Nadine Menendez’s breast cancer diagnosis has held a powerful grip on the government’s bribery case against her and her husband, Robert Menendez, New Jersey’s disgraced former senator.
Only a small portion of the city’s restaurants have applied for permits to set up dining structures under new regulations. Owners say the process is complex and expensive.
All six people on board the craft, operated by New York Helicopter Tours, died when it crashed into the Hudson River on Thursday.
The helicopter did not have any flight recorders, officials said. The investigation into the cause of the crash, which killed six people, is continuing.
His stark and stunning work for Playboy, The New York Times and Manhattan’s underground papers heralded a new era of conceptual illustration.
The aircraft had flown tourists in New York City thousands of times before crashing Thursday with a Spanish family aboard. Passengers who had flown earlier that day are processing the shock.
Help with a heavy door, a grocery spill on the subway and more reader tales of New York City in this week’s Metropolitan Diary.
Ms. Garcia finished second in the 2021 Democratic mayoral primary in New York City. Her supporters could be an important factor in this year’s race.
Step into the artist’s fantastical “Empathic Universe” at the Museum of Arts and Design in New York, where everything seems moving and alive.
For fathers in search of friendship, a growing group has emerged: the Brooklyn Stroll Club.
Back on Broadway for “Old Friends,” the actress reflects on the art she saw with Sondheim and the delights of the High Line and Central Park.
The charter firm whose helicopter plunged into the Hudson River, killing the pilot and a family of five, had been struggling financially, records show.
The F.B.I. director saw sales of his book about the government’s “deep state” rise by nearly 800 percent after Mayor Eric Adams lavished praise on it.
Francisco Guzman Parra’s relatives worried that he was the driver killed when a stolen car rammed into an Upper Manhattan building. It took several days to find out.
Brandon Kazen-Maddox makes time for mud massages, meditation and aerial hoop adventures.
An award-winning director, he created ads for brands like Diet Pepsi (starring Michael J. Fox) by bringing a Hollywood sensibility to the small screen.
Seankese Johnson, 36, was killed along with five passengers when the sightseeing helicopter he was flying suddenly crashed into the Hudson River near Jersey City.
The mother of the actress Gabourey Sidibe, she spent decades singing full time as an underground busker in New York City.
Agustín Escobar y Mercè Camprubí Montal murieron el jueves en el accidente frente a la ciudad de Nueva York junto con sus tres hijos y el piloto.
Agustín Escobar and Mercè Camprubí Montal, both executives from Spain, died on Thursday in a crash near New York City along with their three children and the pilot.
The aircraft was carrying a family of five on a sightseeing tour when it went down on Thursday, killing the family and the pilot.
New York City is facing a shortage of preschool programs. Real estate developers have discovered that providing day care in their buildings can be good for business.
New York City voters have nine Democrats to consider in this year’s mayoral primary, a crowded race made more complicated by the return of ranked-choice voting.
An executive from Spain, his wife and three children died in the crash, along with the helicopter’s pilot, officials said.
At least twice before in the past 12 years, aircraft operated by the firm New York Helicopter Charter failed while in flight.
Authorities say the industry has a roughly $50 million annual impact on the city, but the number of tourist helicopter flights has halved since 2016.
Funcionarios confirmaron la identidad de los cinco turistas a bordo de la aeronave.
The Trump administration is discussing asking a judge to enforce any deal it reaches with the school, which the White House says has not done enough to address antisemitism.
His work on the interiors of the Time-Life Building helped set the tone for postwar office style and provided a model for the set of “Mad Men.”
The law will require the city to double its number of public restrooms by 2035.
And pretend you’re the little boy from “Matilda.”
Five people have been pulled from the water, according to two people briefed on the rescue efforts. Their condition was not yet known.
New York’s subways have been the subject of debate, with politicians using them to paint the city as out of control and dangerous to residents and visitors.
The new Quality of Life division will investigate things like homeless encampments and public urination. Critics say the program is a license to harass the poor.
Among a collection of daguerreotypes for sale at Christie’s is one made by Samuel F.B. Morse, the inventor of the telegraph, who briefly ran a portrait studio in New York City.
This week’s properties are in Carnegie Hill, Greenwich Village and Greenpoint.