Trump Moves to Overturn Manhattan Conviction, Citing Immunity Decision
Former President Donald J. Trump took the action hours after a U.S. Supreme Court ruling granted him immunity for official acts committed in office.
By Ben Protess and
![Donald J. Trump cited a new Supreme Court ruling in seeking to overturn his criminal conviction.](https://cdn.statically.io/img/static01.nyt.com/images/2024/07/01/multimedia/01trump-sentencing-lwhj/01trump-sentencing-lwhj-thumbLarge.jpg?auto=webp)
![Donald J. Trump cited a new Supreme Court ruling in seeking to overturn his criminal conviction.](https://cdn.statically.io/img/static01.nyt.com/images/2024/07/01/multimedia/01trump-sentencing-lwhj/01trump-sentencing-lwhj-threeByTwoMediumAt2X.jpg?auto=webp)
Former President Donald J. Trump took the action hours after a U.S. Supreme Court ruling granted him immunity for official acts committed in office.
By Ben Protess and
After a second course of treatment, the tennis Hall of Famer is optimistic about life, and vocal about the importance of early testing.
By
The passengers, including a 10-year-old and a 12-year-old, had traveled to Cooperstown for a baseball tournament, the authorities said.
By Alexandra E. Petri and
The Trump adviser was sentenced to four months for refusing to honor a subpoena from a committee investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol riot. He rallied supporters in his last minutes of freedom.
By Jesse McKinley and
One Neighborhood’s ‘Bizarre Culture War’ Over Bike Lanes
A kerfuffle erupts over sharing the street in Queens, New York, where new bike lanes have replaced some parking spaces in residential areas.
By
‘He Talked About Wanting to Be a Doctor and Ate His Chopped Cheese’
Stopping for food in the Bronx, a windy day on Third Avenue and more reader tales of New York City in this week’s Metropolitan Diary.
Hochul Is Pressed to Resurrect Congestion Pricing With Lower Toll
In conversations, New York legislators have suggested a way to bring back the program, possibly with a toll below $15.
By Dana Rubinstein and
13-Year-Old Boy Shot and Killed by Police After Chase
Officers in Utica, N.Y., believed the boy had brandished a handgun. The police chief said on Saturday that it was a pellet gun.
By
‘It’s a Cuban Thing’: Menendez’s Sister Says Their Parents Also Hid Cash
Senator Robert Menendez’s sister testified that their father stored cash in a grandfather clock in Havana, Cuba.
By Tracey Tully and
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The Trump adviser was sentenced to four months for refusing to honor a subpoena from a committee investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol riot. He rallied supporters in his last minutes of freedom.
By Jesse McKinley and Gaya Gupta
The model-turned-actress-turned-businesswoman is the new president of Actors’ Equity. In an interview, she explained what she’s doing there.
By Michael Paulson
The campaign of Dao Yin, a Democratic candidate for State Assembly, submitted fake donations and forged signatures to obtain much of the matching funds he received.
By Jay Root and Bianca Pallaro
After a second course of treatment, the tennis Hall of Famer is optimistic about life, and vocal about the importance of early testing.
By David Waldstein
An officer in Utica, N.Y., fatally shot the boy, Nyah Mway, after he brandished what the officer believed was a gun. At a community meeting, residents called the killing “an injustice.”
By Hurubie Meko
The passengers, including a 10-year-old and a 12-year-old, had traveled to Cooperstown for a baseball tournament, the authorities said.
By Alexandra E. Petri and Victor Mather
The New York City Pride March, now in its 54th year, attracted tens of thousands in Manhattan. It was interrupted by pro-Palestinian demonstrators.
By Lola Fadulu and Gaya Gupta
In New York’s suburban and rural communities, where L.G.B.T.Q. people can feel more isolated, Pride events often hold special meaning.
By Liam Stack, Camille Baker, Nate Schweber and Emma Rose Milligan
Stopping for food in the Bronx, a windy day on Third Avenue and more reader tales of New York City in this week’s Metropolitan Diary.
Officers in Utica, N.Y., believed the boy had brandished a handgun. The police chief said on Saturday that it was a pellet gun.
By Hurubie Meko
The police say the man was driving while intoxicated and ran his S.U.V. into the salon, killing four people and injuring 10. His own injuries were not life-threatening.
By Alyce McFadden
Rising cocaine use and a drug supply tainted by fentanyl have become a deadly combination in Erie County, which includes Buffalo.
By Jesse McKinley
Dr. Alex Arroyo, a director of pediatric medicine in Brooklyn, gets to live out his “Star Wars” dreams, practice jujitsu and make a big mess while cooking for his family.
By Sarah Bahr
Officials did not immediately say what caused the crash, in Deer Park. Nine people were also injured.
By Alyce McFadden
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He carved out a niche by singing the music of living composers from his own country. He was praised by critics at home and abroad.
By Adam Nossiter
Mayor Eric Adams and the City Council reached a $112 billion budget deal that restored some unpopular cuts to key programs.
By Emma G. Fitzsimmons and Jeffery C. Mays
The state said that former President Donald J. Trump’s felony convictions may mean he does not have the moral character to serve drinks.
By Elise Young
After seven weeks of trial, lawyers for Senator Robert Menendez are expected to begin calling witnesses on Monday to rebut the government’s case.
By Benjamin Weiser and Tracey Tully
Senator Robert Menendez’s lawyers are expected to call witnesses who will describe his childhood and the rocky start to his relationship with his wife.
By Tracey Tully and Benjamin Weiser
The center marks the history of the Stonewall Inn and the uprising there in 1969 that inspired a new era of gay activism.
By Sarah Bahr
One quarter of all cultural institutions are dipping into their reserves or endowments to cover operating expenses. Mergers may be on the horizon.
By Zachary Small
Behind the opaque process that just selected the next pastor at Abyssinian Baptist Church.
By Ginia Bellafante
The number of people older than 65 who are living in shelters is growing quickly, in an unheralded sign of New York City’s affordable housing crisis.
By Andy Newman
While his peers were building Modernist towers, the architect Joseph Pell Lombardi devoted his life to restoring beautiful old buildings.
By William Falk
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The authorities were searching for the detainee, a 35-year-old man with a history of mental illness, after he eluded two guards at Bellevue Hospital Center.
By Jan Ransom and William K. Rashbaum
The watch, which was stolen in 1987, was returned Thursday to Sagamore Hill National Historic Site on Long Island.
By Christopher Maag
The City Council successfully pushed to reverse budget cuts that Mayor Eric Adams had proposed to libraries, cultural institutions and composting.
By Emma G. Fitzsimmons and Jeffery C. Mays
A co-founder of the Center School in Manhattan, she implemented once-radical ideas that put the students first. She retired four decades later, at 91.
By Clay Risen
Officials of the two transit agencies met in an impromptu meeting on Thursday called by New Jersey’s governor, Philip D. Murphy.
By Patrick McGeehan
A scramble for the Infowars host’s meager assets pits Sandy Hook victims’ families against one another in court.
By Elizabeth Williamson
The organization, which won this year’s best play revival Tony Award for “Appropriate,” has chosen Evan Cabnet as its next artistic director.
By Michael Paulson
“BOOP! The Betty Boop Musical” had a run in Chicago last year. It is slated to open at a Shubert theater in April.
By Michael Paulson
Police Commissioner Edward Caban has often relied on an obscure authority to intervene when officers are accused of serious wrongdoing, often handing out little to no punishment.
By Eric Umansky
This week’s properties are in NoMad, the East Village and Park Slope.
By Heather Senison
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This week’s properties are waterfront homes in Massapequa, N.Y., and Margate, N.J.
By Jill P. Capuzzo and Claudia Gryvatz Copquin
Gov. Kathy Hochul’s decision to halt the toll program could result in billions of dollars of cuts to planned subway improvements and the loss of over 100,000 jobs, according to new estimates.
By James Barron
New census numbers show the steepest drop in the city’s youngest age group in at least a decade as many families have left to live elsewhere.
By Winnie Hu and Troy Closson
Court papers said the “youth development specialists” took more than $50,000 in bribes to allow in items like razor blades, marijuana, alcohol and prescription pills.
By Karen Zraick
Juan Orlando Hernández connived with traffickers as his country became a base of operations for cocaine shipments to the United States.
By Colin Moynihan
The Metropolitan Transportation Authority said it is making drastic cuts to the transit system’s capital plan after Gov. Kathy Hochul’s halted the tolling program.
By Ana Ley
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