Jennie Coughlin
@nytimes Metro audience editor, occasional running reporter, slow runner, Red Sox fan, herder of mobbed-up plot bunnies. Working on a data analysis/data viz master's at CUNY Grad Center
- Among the emails was a 2009 missive in which Mr. Ross responded supportively when Mr. Epstein told him he was contemplating funding an art exhibition, tentatively titled “Statutory,” that would showcase underage models dressed to look older than they were.
- By selecting Ms. Adams as her nominee for lieutenant governor, Ms. Hochul, 67, a Buffalo native, has created the first all-woman major-party ticket in New York State history, and has chosen someone who brings geographic balance and a shared political sensibility to the ticket.
- Hochul’s selection of Adams comes days before Democrats convene for their endorsement convention in Syracuse, and a day after Delgado announced his own running mate: India Walton, a democratic socialist who garnered national attention when she nearly toppled Buffalo’s long-serving mayor in 2021.
- The move to close the branch, on Ninth Avenue near Columbus Circle, comes as three of its former employees are set to appear in court on Wednesday for child endangerment and other charges. Bright Horizons, which has 31,000 employees worldwide, is also under broader scrutiny in the city.
- After three weeks of labor strife, it became clear over the weekend that both sides of the nurses' strike in New York City had re-engaged, with the two sides each sharing new offers and agreeing to resume negotiations today.
- As a strike involving nearly 15,000 nurses in New York City enters its fourth week, the strikers’ union and the major hospitals affected by the walkout have made only halting progress at the bargaining table. Here's a look at the major issues on the table:
- The strike has affected the long-term patients who live in hospitals and the nurses who care for them, sometimes for months and years on end. It has proved especially bewildering for the patients on Pedro’s floor, where children with cardiac and neurological problems are treated.
- Many hospital nurses in New York work 12-hour shifts, three days a week. Their work is high-stakes. Mistakes can endanger patients. Polls suggest that they are generally more trusted and regarded as more ethical than members of just about any other profession.
- A Manhattan federal judge on Friday ruled that prosecutors would not be able to seek the death penalty at the trial of Luigi Mangione, the 27-year-old man accused of assassinating UnitedHealthcare’s chief executive in 2024. We'll be updating the story with more details.
- In case you missed it, this was yesterday's Mangione news.
- “Heated Rivalry” was subsidized in part by Canadian tax revenue through a government policy that seeks to preserve the country’s distinct cultural creations and protect them from getting swallowed up by the bigger, richer U.S. entertainment industry.
- A man was arrested after he arrived at a federal jail in Brooklyn impersonating an F.B.I. agent while carrying a steel blade that resembled a pizza cutter and saying he had a court order to release Luigi Mangione, according to a criminal complaint and people familiar with the incident.
- Two teenage girls say that a teacher at Saint Ann’s School in Brooklyn who had pressured them to share naked photographs and videos sent “a revenge porn blast with dozens of explicit pictures” of them to his own students, according to a lawsuit filed by the girls in federal court on Thursday.
- The scandal has been roiling the school for nearly two years. Winston Nguyen, 39, was arrested in June 2024 outside of Saint Ann’s. He pleaded guilty last year to a felony charge of using a child in a sexual performance and five misdemeanors.
- Nguyen was sentenced to seven years in prison on the latest charges.
- The scandal at Saint Ann’s — an elite school that charges about $60,000 for tuition, boasts high Ivy League acceptance rates and is favored by celebrities, artists and Wall Street executives — generated enormous press attention, including this front page story in @nytimes.com