Student caught with loaded handgun at NYC high school
Digest more
An NYPD sergeant was hit with criminal charges for killing an Upper East Side doorman during a drunken wrong-way crash on a state parkway, the New York Attorney General’s Office said Monday. Tiffany Howell allegedly had a blood alcohol content of .
New York City Department of Education employee Naya Brown has been charged with murder, according to the NYPD. Brown, 26, was off-duty when she was arrested at 7:55 a.m. earlier today, March 3. Another individual, Pernell Warren, was arrested in connection to the same crime last month, Feb. 1.
New York Attorney General Letitia James said Tiffany Howell was indicted on multiple charges connected to the crash in Mount Pleasant.
An 18-year-old Manhattan man was charged with harassment and obstruction Wednesday in the cowardly snowball-pelting attack on NYPD cops at Washington Square Park, police said. Eric Wilson, Jr., who turned himself in to cops,
NYPD officials said 88-year-old Osvaldo Acosta was last seen around 4:30 p.m. Sunday as he left his home at NYCHA’s Elliott Houses on West 25th Street and 10th Avenue in Chelsea. Acosta has dementia and was wearing a white medical bracelet at the time, according to authorities.
BROOKLYN, N.Y. (PIX11) — The NYPD is searching for the attacker in an antisemitic hate crime on board a Brooklyn subway. A 54-year-old MAN was on board an N train at the Atlantic Avenue subway station when he was approached by the attacker on March 2 at around 10:45 a.
New York Attorney General's office says off-duty NYPD cop's BAC was 3 times legal limit in fatal wrong-way crash.
Manhattan Institute fellow analyzes how Mayor Zohran Mamdani's response to "Snowballgate" and Queens shooting signals lack of support for NYPD officers.
An NYPD spokesman said the most expensive payouts were made to resolve cases involving wrongful convictions from many years ago.
New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani is calling on New Yorkers to treat police with respect after video shows some officers getting pelted with snowballs Monday.
New York City has paid out more than $117 million in the past year to resolve police misconduct lawsuits, with the total reaching nearly $800 million over the last seven years, according to a new analysis. These substantial payouts come as the city grapples with a significant budget shortfall.