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Tag: New York

  • ‘Brink of collapse’: NYC legal services provider says city owes $20M in backpay – amNewYork

    The city owes tens of millions of dollars to the legal nonprofits it relies on to fulfill its promise of free counsel to low-income and elderly New Yorkers facing eviction, landlord harassment and immigration issues.

    And, if the city doesn’t pay them by next month, some of those nonprofits say their operations will be thrown into crisis and they’ll have to stop providing services to thousands who are counting on them.

    “If we aren’t paid, it would create existential problems for our organization,” said Greg Klemm, the chief financial officer of Legal Services NYC, which provides tens of thousands of New Yorkers with counsel. 

    Klemm said the city owes his organization roughly $20 million for work attorneys have done over the past year and a half for city programs that provide the most vulnerable New Yorkers with free counsel as they fight to stay in their homes, through the citizenship or green card process or against landlord harassment and deportations. 

    The lag in payment has gone on for so long that it’s pushed Legal Services NYC to a breaking point, Klemm said, forcing it to max out its line of credit at $15 million to maintain its operations and pay staff, a practice that’s now racked up $370,000 in interest just this year — enough to fund the salaries of two and half full-time employees.

    Klemm said the city hasn’t provided a timeline to releasing payments, forcing the group, which gets 45% of its income from city contracts, to drain its reserves. 

    “It’s putting us in a bind,” he continued. “If they do not pay us at all for December or January, we wouldn’t be able to meet payroll at the end of January.”

    If bank accounts of multiple legal service providers dry up at once, Klemm said it would have a catastrophic ripple effect across the city’s courts.

    “That is a substantial number of people that would not get services,” Klemm said. “I couldn’t imagine the devastating impact it would have on low-income New Yorkers taking legal action against landlords who are not making sufficient repairs. There would likely be an increased threat of deportation and family separation. It would be devastating.”

    Legal Services NYC isn’t the only legal nonprofit the city’s left hanging. Legal Aid Society and New York Legal Assistance Group also reported late payments on city contracts, with Legal Aid saying it’s owed $16 million for work completed during FY 2025, which ended six months ago, and NYLAG reporting over $5.5 million in outstanding dues stretching as far back as Financial Year 2023. 

    Though the city provided Legal Aid with a 50% advance on its FY 2026 contract, the midway point has now passed, and the city hasn’t approved its FY26 budget or allowed it to submit invoices for payment for work on FY26 contracts, which began on July 1.

    The delay in payments severely impacts the Legal Aid Society’s cash flow and threatens our ability to make payroll for our staff and to pay vendors and subcontractors who are critical to service delivery,” a Legal Aid spokesperson told amNewYork Law. “LAS spends a significant amount of time just trying to get paid. [The city] has created unnecessarily complex processes and procedures that delay contract budget approval and invoice submission, this complexity not only delays a crucial payment process but also diverts limited staff time to attending to this rather than other crucial priorities.”  

    The New York Legal Assistance Group said that while it was “grateful” to the city for providing significant advances for its work, it was still experiencing delays and unapproved budgets that affect its financial stability and prevent it from providing vital services.

    “As we move into the second half of this fiscal year, budgets remain unapproved, we remain unable to invoice, and no additional advances have been provided,” the group’s CEO, Lisa Rivera, wrote in an email. “The costs of doing this work exist in real time, addressing contract registration and payment delays is crucial, and expanding the use of advances when those delays cannot be mitigated is essential.” 

    The city’s Department of Social Services, which handles the nonprofits’ contract payments, told amNewYork Law that payment delays “can be caused by numerous factors,” and that it was “continuing to work through all outstanding budget items with our legal services providers.”

    Ensuring all appropriate payments are made in a timely manner is a top priority and both the city and agency have made significant strides to address payment delays,” a DSS spokesperson wrote in an emailed statement. “This includes appointing a chief nonprofit officer to improve coordination with our nonprofit partners, streamline operations, and resolve payment issues; working with providers to identify and address pain points in the contracting process; and reforming procedures to minimize delays in registering contracts to ensure providers are receiving payment for the work they do.”

    The office did not respond to a direct question on when it planned to pay the money it owes the organizations. 

    Legal Services NYC said it has been in touch with the city’s contract managers, but hasn’t been able to establish any contact with upper leadership at DSS, despite trying for weeks. 

    “It is hard to tell whether it is stonewalling or incompetence, but there seems to be a general lack of willingness by them to move quicker,” Legal Services NYC communication director Seth Hoy told amNewYork Law in an email. He added that the organization was trying to get the city to release at least $2 million for one of their outstanding invoices this week, though it wasn’t clear if that would be successful.

    The organization says it has grown to meet the city’s demands, hiring staff and ramping up its caseload, only to be left destabilized by quick growth it can’t sustain without the money it was promised to fund that growth from the city that asked for it.

    “We have grown our organization to meet the city’s desperate need for eviction defense attorneys, and that means relying on the city’s promise to fulfill its end of our contracting bargain,” Hoy said. “Yet, year after year we find ourselves on the brink of collapse due to the city’s inability to pay legal service providers on time.” 

    If attorneys aren’t paid in January, Klemm fears staff quitting. He imagines it would take a significant period of time for the organization to bounce back, and would make it difficult to hire new staff if the group can’t pay its existing team.

    The fact that late payments aren’t a new phenomenon for nonprofit legal services providers, Klemm said, is both confusing and frustrating, arguing that the city doesn’t treat other contractors this way.

    “We estimate that we save the city over $350 million a year in averted shelter costs by keeping our clients in their homes, yet we have to continually beg to get paid for that work,” Klemm said. “It’s hard for me to speculate why it keeps happening, but it’s not okay.” 

    What he does know is that his organization needs the money the city promised it, quickly. 

    “The city has to make immediate payments on its nonprofit contracts,” Klemm said. “Time is running out.”

    Isabella Gallo

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  • US Judge Tosses Trump Challenge to New York Immigration-Related Law

    Dec 23 (Reuters) – ‌A ​federal judge ‌on Tuesday ​dismissed a lawsuit ‍the U.S. Department ​of ​Justice ⁠filed challenging a New York law that President Donald ‌Trump’s administration said was ​impeding immigration ‌enforcement.

    U.S. ‍District Judge ⁠Anne Nardacci in Syracuse rejected the Justice Department’s arguments that ​a New York law that bars the Democratic-led state from sharing vehicle and address information with federal immigration authorities violated ​the U.S. Constitution.

    (Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; ​Editing by Chris Reese)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Reuters

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  • Indian and Latin cuisines collide at Taco Mahal

    Danikkah Josan is the half-Indian, half-Puerto Rican chef and owner of Taco Mahal in New York City, where she serves mouth-watering fusion dishes like chicken tikka masala tacos and basmati rice bowls.

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  • Former New York State Prison Guard Sentenced For Inmate’s Death

    UTICA, N.Y. (AP) — A former New York state prison guard convicted of murder for his role in the brutal beating of an inmate that was captured on body-camera footage was sentenced Friday to 25 years to life in prison.

    David Kingsley also received a 25-year sentence for a manslaughter conviction in the case. He is the only former guard convicted of murder in the death of Robert Brooks, who was pummeled by corrections officers on the night of Dec. 9, 2024, at Marcy Correctional Facility. Five other guards charged in the 43-year-old Black man’s death have pleaded guilty to manslaughter.

    Video footage of Brooks in handcuffs being punched and stomped by guards triggered widespread shock and calls for reform in New York’s prisons.

    Six guards were indicted by a grand jury for murder charges brought earlier this year by the special prosecutor, Onondaga County District Attorney William Fitzpatrick, who also charged four others with lesser crimes. Three of the defendants charged with murder later pleaded guilty to first-degree manslaughter.

    Prosecutors said Kingsley deserved the maximum sentence because he refused to take responsibility for his actions and made Brooks’ family go through the trauma of a trial. Speaking in court before the sentence was imposed, Kingsley apologized to Brooks’ relatives for his role in the “senseless” actions that led to his death.

    The victim’s son, Robert Brooks Jr., said that he hopes the case will prevent similar incidents in the future. Brooks’ brother, Jared Ricks, added that while forgiveness is a long way off, justice being served is a step on that path.

    Kingsley, 45, was one of three guards tried before a jury in October on charges of murder and first-degree manslaughter. He was the only one of the trio found guilty. Body-camera footage played at the trial showed him holding Brooks by the neck and lifting him as multiple guards surrounded the handcuffed man.

    A final defendant is scheduled to stand trial Jan. 12 on a second-degree manslaughter charge. Another guard was released from prison this month as he attempts to withdraw his guilty plea to second-degree manslaughter.

    Fitzpatrick became the special prosecutor after state Attorney General Letitia James recused herself, citing her office’s representation of several officers in separate lawsuits. He also is prosecuting guards in the fatal beating of Messiah Nantwi on March 1 at a nearby prison, the Mid-State Correctional Facility. Ten guards were indicted in April, including two who are charged with murder, in Nantwi’s death.

    The prisons are about 180 miles (290 kilometers) northwest of New York City.

    This image provided by the New York State Attorney General office shows body camera footage of correction officers beating a handcuffed man, Robert Brooks, at the Marcy Correctional Facility in Oneida County, N.Y., Dec. 9, 2024. (New York State Attorney General office via AP, File)

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  • 3 Officers Wounded and Suspect Killed After Rochester, New York, Domestic Violence Call

    ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) — Three police officers responding to a domestic violence call were wounded and a suspect was killed Friday night in Rochester, New York, according to officials.

    “Multiple shots were fired” after Rochester Police Department officers responded, the city’s Police Chief David Smith said at a news conference. The suspect then fled and officers found the person again nearby, Smith said.

    The three wounded officers were in the hospital. Details on their conditions were not released.

    “This is always our biggest nightmare during this time of the year; these type of instances,” said Rochester Mayor Malik Evans.

    He asked everyone to pray for the officers.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – December 2025

    Associated Press

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  • Stefanik exits New York governor’s race after Trump stays neutral and worries flare about a bitter primary

    Republican Rep. Elise Stefanik dropped out of the New York governor’s race Friday, concluding that a potentially fractious GOP primary could hurt Republicans’ chances in an uphill statewide contest, as President Trump signaled he would not make an endorsement at this stage. 

    Stefanik pointed to the risks in a statement to supporters, writing: “While we would have overwhelmingly won this primary, it is not an effective use of our time or your generous resources to spend the first half of next year in an unnecessary and protracted Republican primary, especially in a challenging state like New York.”

    Stefanik’s political future is now unclear, as she said she is not planning to run for re-election in Congress. Stefanik, considered a rising MAGA leader, was initially set to leave Congress after Mr. Trump picked her in November 2024 for U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, before her nomination was pulled by the administration in March over concerns about a narrowing Republican majority in the House. 

    Two sources confirmed to CBS News that Stefanik spoke directly with President Trump on Thursday to discuss her decision to leave the gubernatorial race. Their conversation was first reported by The New York Times.

    Mr. Trump later issued a statement following her announcement applauding Stefanik, calling her “a fantastic person and Congresswoman from New York State” and describing her as “a tremendous talent.” He said she would have “great success” in whatever she chooses next and signaled his continued support.

    A Republican member of Congress with direct knowledge of the race told CBS News they believed Stefanik ultimately concluded that a contested Republican primary would be difficult and potentially damaging, even if she were likely to win. The other major candidate is Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman, another Trump ally.

    Under New York GOP rules, candidates must secure at least 25% of the weighted vote at the state party’s February convention to qualify for the June primary ballot, or otherwise submit nominating petitions.

    While Stefanik was believed to have early support representing well above that threshold — possibly more than 75% of the weighted vote due to early endorsements from local party officials — New York Republicans told CBS News that a challenge from Blakeman still risked becoming a prolonged intraparty fight.

    The eventual nominee is expected to face off against incumbent Democratic Gov. Kathy Hochul. New York hasn’t elected a Republican governor since 2002, though Hochul won her 2022 race by a single-digit margin of  6.4 percentage points, which spurred renewed interest among Republicans who viewed the result as a sign of potential Democratic vulnerability.

    “My gut tells me this is not the right political time,” Stefanik told New York Magazine in an interview on Friday. “This is not the sort of array of things lining up — which is so difficult in New York, which is incredibly difficult in a picture-perfect year–let alone with a primary and everything else.”

    “We viewed it as a waste of resources,” she said, also citing family considerations. “I have a 4-year old son, and that is a priority for our family.”

    A senior House Republican official also said Stefanik was frustrated that Mr. Trump declined to endorse her early and effectively clear the field for her, a move that Stefanik allies believed could have avoided a divisive primary. 

    Mr. Trump did call Blakeman after he entered the race, according to sources familiar with the phone call. He told the county executive that he did not like seeing “good Republicans” face each other in an electoral battle.

    Asked about the race on Dec. 10, the president repeatedly emphasized his reluctance to publicly intervene, stressing his personal relationships with both candidates and concern about collateral damage from a contested primary. 

    “First of all, he’s a friend. She’s a friend,” Mr. Trump told reporters at the White House. “These are two great people running. In a way, I hate to see them running against each other. I hope they’re not going to be damaging each other.”  

    Mr. Trump went on to praise both candidates, saying, “Elise is fantastic, and Bruce is. They’re two fantastic people, and I always hate it when two very good friends of mine are running.”

    Pointing to the state GOP convention, Trump said, “I think you’ll know pretty much at the end of February what’s going to happen. And I’ll probably have to, you know, do what I want to do.”

    “We have two very talented people. Either one should win against the Democrats,” he added.

    After Stefanik announced she would end her campaign, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt praised her record, calling her “an incredible advocate” for her Upstate New York district and “a true friend” to Mr. Trump. Leavitt, who previously worked for Stefanik as a top adviser, added that she is “a great leader, and an even better person.”

    Stefanik, a member of House Republican leadership and one of Trump’s closest allies in Congress, had been viewed by New York Republicans as a formidable contender given her national profile and fundraising strength — over $12 million raised. 

    But she faced an uphill battle in deep-blue New York, with a recent Siena College poll showing Hochul with a double-digit lead versus both Republicans at this stage of the race. 

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  • Former New York State Prison Guard Sentenced to up to Life in Prison in Inmate’s Death

    UTICA, N.Y. (AP) — A former New York state prison guard convicted of murder for his role in the brutal beating of an inmate that was captured on body-camera footage was sentenced Friday to 25 years to life in prison.

    David Kingsley also received a 25-year sentence for a manslaughter conviction in the case. He is the only former guard convicted of murder in the death of Robert Brooks, who was pummeled by corrections officers on the night of Dec. 9, 2024, at Marcy Correctional Facility. Five other guards charged in the 43-year-old Black man’s death have pleaded guilty to manslaughter.

    Video footage of Brooks in handcuffs being punched and stomped by guards triggered widespread shock and calls for reform in New York’s prisons.

    Prosecutors said Kingsley deserved the maximum sentence because he refused to take responsibility for his actions and made Brooks’ family go through the trauma of a trial. Speaking in court before the sentence was imposed, Kingsley apologized to Brooks’ relatives for his role in the “senseless” actions that led to his death.

    The victim’s son, Robert Brooks Jr., said that he hopes the case will prevent similar incidents in the future. Brooks’ brother, Jared Ricks, added that while forgiveness is a long way off, justice being served is a step on that path.

    Kingsley, 45, was one of three guards tried before a jury in October on charges of murder and first-degree manslaughter. He was the only one of the trio found guilty. Body-camera footage played at the trial showed him holding Brooks by the neck and lifting him as multiple guards surrounded the handcuffed man.

    A final defendant is scheduled to stand trial Jan. 12 on a second-degree manslaughter charge. Another guard was released from prison this month as he attempts to withdraw his guilty plea to second-degree manslaughter.

    Fitzpatrick became the special prosecutor after state Attorney General Letitia James recused herself, citing her office’s representation of several officers in separate lawsuits. He also is prosecuting guards in the fatal beating of Messiah Nantwi on March 1 at a nearby prison, the Mid-State Correctional Facility. Ten guards were indicted in April, including two who are charged with murder, in Nantwi’s death.

    The prisons are about 180 miles (290 kilometers) northwest of New York City.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – December 2025

    Associated Press

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  • Keeler: Deion Sanders isn’t enough. CU Buffs football needs a sugar daddy for Christmas.

    Omarion Miller finished Julian Lewis’ passes the way Meg Ryan finished Billy Crystal’s sentences in “When Harry Met Sally.”

    Alas, there won’t be a happy ending. Or a sequel.

    Miller — the CU Buffs’ leading receiver in 2025 — announced Wednesday that he was entering the transfer portal. And apparently Tawfiq Byard will have whatever Miller’s having. The Buffs safety, CU’s best defensive player this past fall despite playing much of it with just one working hand, also plans to transfer out of BoCo next month.

    Pain is a process. The gut says, “If we can go 3-9 with you, we can go 3-9 without you, dude.”

    The head says something else. Something along the lines of, “Man, Deion Sanders could really, really use a sugar daddy this Christmas.”

    Remember when the Buffs hired Coach Prime and finally got out ahead of the college football curve?

    That lasted about 16 to 18 months.

    Celebrity coaches are out.

    Celebrity investors are in.

    Texas Tech, per YahooSports.com, raised about $49 million for student-athletes from July 2024 to July 2025. A new Red Raiders donor group, called the Athletic Donor Circle, had already pledged roughly $35 million as of early November.

    Last week, Utah became the first Power 4 athletic department to formally partner with a private equity firm. ESPN.com reports that Otro Capital out of New York is ready to pump $400 million into the Utes.

    Texas Tech bought the best team on the planet, went 12-1, won the Big 12 title and earned a bye in the College Football Playoff. Utah posted a 10-2 record and beat the Buffs 53-7 in late October.

    CU athletics, meanwhile, is reportedly staring at a potential $27 million deficit for the 2025-2026 fiscal year, according to multiple outlets. Thank players and Prime, primarily.

    Sanders’ salary went up by nearly $5 million for 2025 after his new extension kicked in. The House vs. NCAA settlement required CU to share revenues with student-athletes starting this past July 1, with a cap of $20.5 million for this fiscal cycle. Yet it’s hard to imagine good players such as Miller and Byard taking pay cuts at their next ports of call, isn’t it?

    Buffs officials saw the train coming years ago, even as the bills keep piling up. Which is why the indoor practice facility is now sponsored by Mountain States Ford Stores. And why artificial turf was installed at Folsom Field — so the stadium could be utilized more often as a host to revenue-driving events outside the athletic calendar.

    Concerts and uniform sponsorships — UNLV will reportedly collect about $2.2 million annually over the next five years from Acesso Biologics, its new “Official Jersey Patch Partner” — will only cover so much. The student-athlete revenue sharing pool is expected to increase by 4% next year. Sanders is slated to make $11 million in 2027, $11 million in 2028 and $12 million in 2029.

    The Buffs can’t play at the same poker tables as the Red Raiders and Utes — or retain star players — without a serious influx of cash. Utah is pointing the way now. Not CU.

    College football is so broken. The system? The system — and by that, we mean greedy college presidents and the corporate suits they propped up as conference commissioners — for too long took advantage of student-athletes as a pool of indentured labor, as entertainment contractors on the cheap. A free market for talent was overdue. But the pendulum has swung so hard the other way that roster retention is the stuff of satire now.

    Bowls? Bowls are nothing more than three-hour infomercials for some random chamber of commerce or provincial company you’ve never heard of; exhibitions propped up by Disney stiffs to eat up programming blocks over the holidays. When Iowa State and Kansas State would sooner eat a million bucks in league fines than join in, that ship’s sailed. (Not you, Pop-Tarts Bowl. You’re weirdly perfect. And perfectly weird.)

    Fans? Fans are caught in the crossfire, casualties in the battle of dollars over sense. Ticket prices and point-of-entry fees will skyrocket. Pay-per-view will become more the norm than the exception. Universities will pass the cost to the consumer.

    The Buffs vow that they won’t cut sports — and with only 13 non-football options offered, they don’t have much room on that front to cut, anyway. They’ve vowed that they won’t lop student-athlete services, although outgoing athletic director Rick George laid off two track coaches last spring.

    Something’s gotta give. Of course, if Coach Prime wanted to help retain student-athletes, he could donate half of his $10 million salary to the revenue-sharing pool. That’s not happening.

    In an effort to slow the chaos, FBS scholarships could require a minimum of two years of service at your initial college of choice coming out of high school. But that’s not happening, either.

    As of early Friday morning, at least 11 CU players had expressed interest in transferring out. Among the Big 12 programs that didn’t change coaches (Kansas State, Iowa State, Oklahoma State), only West Virginia had seen more defections (19) as of mid-December than the Buffs.

    Sean Keeler

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  • Peter Greene, character actor known for role as the iconic villain in ‘Pulp Fiction,’ has died

    Peter Greene, character actor known for role as the iconic villain in ‘Pulp Fiction,’ has died

    Updated: 9:38 AM EST Dec 13, 2025

    Editorial Standards

    Peter Greene, a character actor best known for his role as the iconic villain Zed in “Pulp Fiction,” has died. He was 60.He died in his home in New York City, his manager, Gregg Edwards, confirmed on Friday. His cause of death was not immediately released.”He was just a terrific guy,” said Edwards. “Arguably one of the greatest character actors on the planet; Has worked with everybody.”Born in Montclair, New Jersey, Greene landed some of his first leading roles in “Laws of Gravity” in 1992 and “Clean, Shaven” in 1993, according to IMDb.In 1994, he played the memorable villain in Quentin Tarantino’s “Pulp Fiction.” That same year, he played another leading villain opposite Jim Carrey and Cameron Diaz in “The Mask.”Greene was working on two projects when he died, including a documentary about the federal government’s withdrawal of funding from the U.S. Agency for International Development, according to Edwards.”We’ve been friends for over a decade,” said Edwards. “Just the nicest man.”

    Peter Greene, a character actor best known for his role as the iconic villain Zed in “Pulp Fiction,” has died. He was 60.

    He died in his home in New York City, his manager, Gregg Edwards, confirmed on Friday. His cause of death was not immediately released.

    “He was just a terrific guy,” said Edwards. “Arguably one of the greatest character actors on the planet; Has worked with everybody.”

    Born in Montclair, New Jersey, Greene landed some of his first leading roles in “Laws of Gravity” in 1992 and “Clean, Shaven” in 1993, according to IMDb.

    In 1994, he played the memorable villain in Quentin Tarantino’s “Pulp Fiction.” That same year, he played another leading villain opposite Jim Carrey and Cameron Diaz in “The Mask.”

    Greene was working on two projects when he died, including a documentary about the federal government’s withdrawal of funding from the U.S. Agency for International Development, according to Edwards.

    “We’ve been friends for over a decade,” said Edwards. “Just the nicest man.”

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  • Samuel Sarmiento’s Ceramics Channel Universal Memory in His U.S. Debut

    Installation view: “Samuel Sarmiento: Relical Horn” at Andrew Edlin Gallery in New York. Courtesy of Andrew Edlin Gallery

    The ability of a given artwork to resist being stripped of meaning over time is most often the result of its link with a continuous heritage of symbolic and archetypal materials that humans have shared across centuries and geographies to explain the complexities of existence. As J. M. Coetzee suggests in his 1991 essay “What is a Classic?,” the works we call classics endure not because institutions protect them, but because they speak across time, finding new interlocutors in each era. A classic has a living presence, retaining dense symbolic meaning and demanding response and re-interpretation even as society changes.

    Engaging directly with the rich repertoire of symbols and myths of his native Venezuelan Caribbean and extending to cross-cultural resonances and similar narratives, artist Samuel Sarmiento engages with mythopoiesis directly using clay as a medium. A rich heritage of oral traditions and community storytelling is observable in his seductive kiln-fired ceramic sculptures: articulated, overlapping visual narratives and inscriptions like ancient tablets or natural fossilized traces. In the new works in his U.S. debut show at Andrew Edlin, “Relical Horn,” Sarmiento experiments with the elemental potential of clay, playing with the different transformations ceramics can undergo and embellishing his creations with patinas, glazes, pigments and even gold. His kiln’s searing heat yields kaleidoscopic, granular and liquid surfaces.

    An artist in a white lab coat points at ceramic artworks displayed on the wall in his studio. The sculptures, with vibrant and intricate details, sit on tables and carts in the foreground. A large, colorful mixed-media painting of abstract human figures is mounted on the wall, providing a contrasting backdrop to the handmade ceramics.An artist in a white lab coat points at ceramic artworks displayed on the wall in his studio. The sculptures, with vibrant and intricate details, sit on tables and carts in the foreground. A large, colorful mixed-media painting of abstract human figures is mounted on the wall, providing a contrasting backdrop to the handmade ceramics.
    Samuel Sarmiento. Photo: Gabrielle Vega

    Through these alchemical processes, artists and artisans have collaborated directly with the principle of entropy and the transformation of matter for thousands of years. Clay is fired at temperatures at which any organic substance would be pushed into extinction or fragmentation, but Sarmiento transforms ceramics into living cosmogonies that embody a rich reservoir of ancestral myth and cross-cultural archetypes, layering oral traditions, Caribbean cosmology and intuitive mark-making in fragile yet enduring vessels of memory.

    “One of the primary purposes of ceramics is containment,” Sarmiento tells Observer. “Initially, ceramic objects held valuable resources such as water, food and currency.” He recounts an ancient tale about the medium’s origins. According to a Caribbean myth, in the earliest days of humanity, it was nearly impossible to store water because it was both difficult to contain and extremely scarce. “Humans attempted to make vessels from tree leaves or wood, but both materials deteriorated over time. They decided to speak with the Goddess of the Forest, who recommended they dig a large hole next to a river, where they would find a new kind of material.” When humans obeyed the Goddess and dug near the great river, they discovered clay. When they asked what to do with it, “she instructed them to shape the clay into vessels. By firing these vessels, they would be able to store water successfully.”

    A large curved ceramic sculpture covered in painted female faces, star-like dots and clusters of small modeled objects shows a central figure with red hair surrounded by planets, shells and textured forms, with two additional faces at the top corners and one at the bottom edge.A large curved ceramic sculpture covered in painted female faces, star-like dots and clusters of small modeled objects shows a central figure with red hair surrounded by planets, shells and textured forms, with two additional faces at the top corners and one at the bottom edge.
    Samuel Sarmiento, The Origin of the Stars, 2025. Courtesy the artist and Andrew Edlin Gallery

    For hundreds of years, ceramics have served as markers of the time they inhabit, Sarmiento reflects. “They have remained one of the principal mediums for deciphering a people’s ethnography because they can withstand the passage of time.” This idea of time—of encapsulating mythological and spiritual heritage in a vessel capable of preserving and carrying it across generations—is at the heart of his practice. His ceramic works function as artifacts of collective memory, shared wisdom and mythical imagination, helping humans better understand their place in the cosmos and within the relentless flow of time.

    Sarmiento notes how French writer Roger Caillois, in The Writing of Stones (1970), argues that rocks and minerals, like landscapes themselves, have the capacity to harbor memory. “The artistic exercise of taking clay, which is part of the landscape, shaping it into forms like crowns, shells, nests, or ornaments and simultaneously using it to contain information creates a symbolic refuge,” Sarmiento explains. “Through this alchemy, an artwork can help humanity preserve what little wisdom we have left.”

    Examining the dense narratives that adorn the surfaces of his sculptures, it’s almost impossible not to read his practice through a Jungian lens: his work is a conduit through which archetypes and ancestral symbologies—shared across cultures—reemerge from the collective unconscious. “I believe visual artists and writers alike are collectively searching to connect with the invisible,” Sarmiento says, pointing out that this urge becomes even more pressing in periods when truth is most difficult to discern.

    “In my artistic practice, I utilize ancestral narratives from the Caribbean and South America, and sometimes Africa—not for exoticism, but simply to exalt the human condition,” he explains, noting that this often takes the form of rites of passage. “We are beings in constant movement.”

    A gallery corner displays a long ceramic piece on a pedestal decorated with painted mountain shapes, while two ceramic wall works hang on adjacent white walls under soft lighting.A gallery corner displays a long ceramic piece on a pedestal decorated with painted mountain shapes, while two ceramic wall works hang on adjacent white walls under soft lighting.
    Born in 1987 and based in Aruba, Sarmiento investigates the fictional possibilities of history, the force of oral traditions,and the pliancy of time. Courtesy of Andrew Edlin Gallery

    A recurring element in his work is the female figure. Whether mermaids or spirit guides, they guard the narratives that appear on the surface. In many cases, these figures can be associated with nature or feminine deities like Yemayá, who represents the sea, Sarmiento says. They are figures of healing, protection and renewal in a world that needs external intervention due to humanity’s inability to resolve itself to the present.

    Across centuries and geographies, the female figure has been associated with birth, life and protection, mothering the world in a relentless cycle of generation, transformation, decay and renewal. And it is in times of great despair and chaos that these figures and the mythological world they inhabit can guide us into a metaphorical realm that helps us see beyond the present moment and reconnect with something deeper and universal.

    A self-taught artist who has only recently begun to engage with the broader international art world, Sarmiento preserves a raw and primordial visual lexicon that appears to have escaped the influences of both art-historical tradition and contemporary art market trends. The apparent simplicity or naivety of his language results from a spontaneous and intuitive process of channeling, in which ancient symbols, myth and memories emerge from the collective unconscious and are translated into new forms through a contemporary practice.

    As Michael Meade explains, to see with mythic imagination is to see metaphorically—referring to the old Greek word metaphor, which means not just to see beyond, but to be carried beyond the limits of linear time and literal thinking. “The new territory or new world only comes into view and becomes conscious to us when a new vision arises from the darkness around us and from the unseen depths of our own unconscious,” he said in a recent podcast, which profoundly resonates with what Sarmiento is pushing with his art: not a new world but a new vision in which past, present and future coexist.

    A pair of tall, narrow ceramic slabs displayed side by side depict a dense forest of palm trees, small animals and dotted patterns, with textured, shell-like ridges and touches of gold glaze along the top edges.A pair of tall, narrow ceramic slabs displayed side by side depict a dense forest of palm trees, small animals and dotted patterns, with textured, shell-like ridges and touches of gold glaze along the top edges.
    Samuel Sarmiento, Transit (Heraclitus River), 2024. Courtesy the artist and Andrew Edlin Gallery

    The sensibility of the work lies in synthesizing and connecting seemingly disparate references to create new poetics, Sarmiento explains, walking us through a richly layered ecosystem of references that idiosyncratically exist in his work, spanning from Jorge Luis Borges’ short story “The Circular Ruins” (1940) to Robert Smithson’s Spiral Jetty (1970) and the movie Fitzcarraldo. As an exercise in argumentation, he takes these primary ideas and pairs them with Caribbean concepts and mythologies. Some of the show’s pieces reference the legend regarding the origin of the continents, which are said to have emerged from ruins and furrows located on the seabed.

    Living for more than 13 years in the Dutch Caribbean has allowed Sarmiento to accumulate a vast library of oral narratives. Having been born in Venezuela, a country with a rich literary tradition and also multicultural connections, Sarmiento was motivated to approach art through universal stories. “All these references converge in a single object—whether a two- or three-dimensional sculpture—which often possesses geomorphic characteristics resembling sea coral or honeycombs,” he explains.

    Sarmiento’s encyclopedic lexicon fluidly draws from ancient oral tales as well as more recent books. He mentions Guns, Germs, and Steel (1997) by Jared Diamond and The Invention of Nature (2015) by Andrea Wulf as part of his contemporary references. “One of the fundamental characteristics of oral narratives is their ability to explain complex processes through simple images or stories,” he elaborates. Tropes can be accessible at different levels—what Homer once expressed, Disney later embraced.

    As in a geological process of sedimentation and development, found in both natural and cultural realms, “If we look at narratives ranging from the Homeric fables to South American legends, we see that archetypal symbols such as life, death, the journey, the encounter and exile are often repeated,” Sarmiento says. “Part of my artistic exercise is to recontextualize these archetypal and universal symbols in an era of anachronisms.” Although we have information from every time and geography at our fingertips, humans often lack the capacity to recognize historical coincidences or similarities in sociopolitical processes.

    A wide three-panel ceramic piece features densely written text, small drawings and map-like diagrams framed by dark blue and gold protruding spikes, with each panel joined side by side on the wall.A wide three-panel ceramic piece features densely written text, small drawings and map-like diagrams framed by dark blue and gold protruding spikes, with each panel joined side by side on the wall.
    Samuel Sarmiento, Untitled (WB, 1973 – 1983 – 1993). Courtesy the artist and Andrew Edlin Gallery

    He aims to demonstrate that while authors and languages vary across history, the story of humanity is the sum of a few core metaphors, in a continuous cycling of archetypal tropes. “This process is an exercise I have only been able to refine through reading and building visual archives,” Sarmiento says. Repetition plays a crucial role in his gestures, whether in clay or drawing. “As Hans-Georg Gadamer noted in The Relevance of the Beautiful, we tend to repeat what brings us pleasure,” he reflects. “In many cases, this repetition creates complex languages that lead us toward new interpretations and developments.”

    Sarmiento’s process involves a tense yet generative exchange between intuition and control; he embraces the unexpected results that emerge from the interaction between energetic and psychic presence and the unpredictable reactions of clay and glaze. Despite the presence of figures or engravings, his narratives—which cover the entire surface as in a horror vacui without any precise order—form a kind of flow of thought-forms that defy any linguistic or visual codification. Like  Surrealist automatic writing, these visual mythologies are the result of an intuitive reconnection with the language of a shared subconscious, to which the artist reconnects through his practice, finding new forms for the invisible. By bypassing rational control, the result is an epiphanic image—a strange revelation of forms carved and crystallized on the surface of the clay.

    “Although I am self-taught with only brief experiences in guided workshops, the driving force behind my work is purely intuitive,” Sarmiento explains. “Still, the symbols and figures that emerge are resources drawn from years of researching oral histories, essays, and fantastical stories, driven by an intention to communicate with people from all walks of life.”

    A rectangular ceramic relief with spiky protrusions around the edges shows a central drawing of a horned animal inside a circular fenced area, surrounded by palm-like plants, dotted textures, two large eye shapes at the bottom corners and a painted flower near the center.A rectangular ceramic relief with spiky protrusions around the edges shows a central drawing of a horned animal inside a circular fenced area, surrounded by palm-like plants, dotted textures, two large eye shapes at the bottom corners and a painted flower near the center.
    Samuel Sarmiento, The Hunt of the Unicorn, 1495 – 1505, 2025. Courtesy of the artist and Andrew Edlin Gallery

    At one point, Sarmiento shares how, feeling a spontaneous connection with Jung and his thinking, he applied some years ago to a post-academic program in Switzerland. “My goal was to further my artistic research, develop a broader vision of the symbols and archetypal figures in my work, visit Carl Jung’s house, and access the literature and resources offered by the program,” he says. Yet the jury’s response was that there was no reason he needed to visit that specific location, stating that any information I required about Jung could be found on the internet. “My practice was ultimately not considered part of a contemporary discourse,” he points out, noting how one of the greatest challenges for artists from the Caribbean and South America is finding spaces where their artistic languages are appreciated through horizontal dialogue—not as exotic elements meant to fill a program’s minority quota.

    Sarmiento’s work is a message of universality, celebrating and protecting the cross-cultural patrimony of stories and myths that might still guide humans toward a better notion of the future. He offers something beyond the Western paradigm of knowledge—ancestral and primordial—that has been suppressed or mostly forgotten but still resonates in the subconscious as something understood by the entirety of humanity.

    His symbolic language reminds us how much we share across cultures, and how this universal ancestral heritage can help guide us into the future. “Never before have we lived in an age with more imaginary borders,” Sarmiento concludes. It is art such as his that can help us see beyond them. Never before, he adds, has humanity seemed so fragile, unable to generate collective solutions. “Through my artwork, I am seeking to create classics and objects capable of holding solutions or information for future generations.”

    A gallery wall shows two small ceramic wall pieces on the left and a larger text-covered ceramic sculpture on a white pedestal to the right under the title “Samuel Sarmiento: Relical Horn.”A gallery wall shows two small ceramic wall pieces on the left and a larger text-covered ceramic sculpture on a white pedestal to the right under the title “Samuel Sarmiento: Relical Horn.”
    Sarmiento taps into a historical record shared across cultures and communities. Courtesy of Andrew Edlin Gallery

    Samuel Sarmiento’s Ceramics Channel Universal Memory in His U.S. Debut

    Elisa Carollo

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  • Crypto mogul Do Kwon sentenced to 15 years in prison for $40 billion stablecoin fraud

    NEW YORK (AP) — Onetime cryptocurrency mogul Do Kwon was sentenced Thursday to 15 years in prison after a $40 billion crash revealed his crypto ecosystem to be a fraud. Victims said the 34-year-old financial technology whiz weaponized their trust to convince them that the investment — secretly propped up by cash infusions — was safe.

    Kwon, a Stanford graduate known by some as “the cryptocurrency king,” apologized after listening as victims — one in court and others by telephone — described the scam’s toll: wiping out nest eggs, depleting charities and wrecking lives. One told the judge in a letter that he contemplated suicide after his father lost his retirement money in the scheme.

    Judge Paul A. Engelmayer said at a daylong sentencing hearing in Manhattan federal court that the government’s recommendation of 12 years in prison was “unreasonably lenient” and that the defense’s request for five years was “utterly unthinkable and wildly unreasonable.” Kwon faced a maximum sentence of 25 years in prison.

    “Your offense caused real people to lose $40 billion in real money, not some paper loss,” Engelmayer told Kwon, who sat at the defense table in a yellow jail suit. The judge called it “a fraud on an epic, generational scale” and said Kwon had an “almost mystical hold” on investors and caused incalculable “human wreckage.”

    More than the combined losses in FTX and OneCoin cases

    Kwon pleaded guilty in August to fraud charges stemming from the collapse of Terraform Labs, the Singapore-based firm he co-founded in 2018. The loss exceeded the combined losses from FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried and OneCoin co-founder Karl Sebastian Greenwood’s frauds, prosecutors said. Engelmayer estimated there may have been a million victims.

    Terraform Labs had touted its TerraUSD as a reliable “stablecoin” — a kind of currency typically pegged to stable assets to prevent drastic fluctuations in prices. But prosecutors say it was an illusion backed by outside cash infusions that came crumbling down after it plunged far below its $1 peg. The crash devastated investors in TerraUSD and its floating sister currency, Luna, triggering “a cascade of crises that swept through cryptocurrency markets.”

    Kwon tried to rebuild Terraform Labs in Singapore before fleeing to the Balkans on a false passport, prosecutors said. He’s been locked up since his March 2023 arrest in Montenegro. He was credited for 17 months he spent in jail there before being extradited to the U.S.

    Kwon agreed to forfeit over $19 million as part of his plea deal. His lawyers argued his conduct stemmed not from greed, but hubris and desperation. Engelmayer rejected his request to serve his sentence in his native South Korea, where he also faces prosecution and where his wife and 4-year-old daughter live.

    “I have spent almost every waking moment of the last few years thinking of what I could have done different and what I can do now to make things right,” Kwon told Engelmayer. Hearing from victims, he said, was “harrowing and reminded me again of the great losses that I have caused.”

    Victims say losses ruined their lives, harmed charities

    One victim, speaking by telephone, said his wife divorced him, his sons had to skip college, and he had to move back to Croatia to live with his parents after TerraUSD’s crash evaporated his family’s life savings. Another said he has to “live with the guilt” of persuading his in-laws and hundreds of nonprofit organizations to invest.

    Stanislav Trofimchuk said his family’s investment plummeted from $190,000 to $13,000 — “17 years of our life, gone” during what he described as “two weeks of sheer terror.”

    Chauncey St. John, speaking in court, said some nonprofits he worked with lost more than $2 million and a church group lost about $900,000. He and his wife are saddled with debt and his in-laws have been forced to work well past their planned retirement, he said.

    Nevertheless, St. John said, he forgives Kwon and “I pray to God to have mercy on his soul.”

    A prosecutor read excerpts from some of more than 300 letters submitted by victims, including a person identified only by initials who lost nearly $11,400 while juggling bills and trying to complete college. Kwon had made Terra seem like a safe place to stash savings, the person said.

    “To some that is just a number on a page, but to me it was years of effort,” the person wrote. “Watching it evaporate, literally overnight, was one of the most terrifying experiences of my life.”

    “What happened was not an accident. It was not a market event. It was deception,” the person added, imploring the judge to “consider the human cost of this tragedy.”

    Kwon created an “illusion of resilience while covering up systemic failure,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Sarah Mortazavi told Engelmayer. “This was fraud executed with arrogance, manipulation and total disregard for people.”

    ___

    Associated Press reporter Anthony Izaguirre contributed to this report.

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  • NY may lose $73M in federal highway funds over flawed immigrant commercial driver’s licenses

    New York routinely issues licenses to immigrants that may be valid long after they are legally authorized to be in the country, U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said Friday and he threatened to withhold $73 million in highway funds unless the system is fixed.

    New York officials said they are following all the federal rules for the licenses and has been verifying drivers’ immigration status.

    New York is the latest state Duffy has targeted in his effort to make sure truck and bus drivers are qualified to get licenses, a campaign he launched after a truck driver who was not authorized to be in the U.S. made an illegal U-turn and caused a crash in Florida that killed three people. But the rules on these licenses have been in place for years.

    The Transportation Department has said it is auditing these non-domiciled licenses nationwide, but so far the only states he has threatened to sanction are all led by Democratic governors. But Duffy said Friday that this effort is not political. He said it is about making sure everyone behind the wheel of an 80,000-pound truck is qualified and safe.

    Duffy said federal investigators found that more than half of the 200 licenses they reviewed in New York were issued improperly with many of them defaulting to be valid for eight years regardless of when an immigrant’s work permit expires. And he said the state couldn’t prove it had verified these drivers’ immigration status for the 32,000 active non-domiciled commercial licenses it has issued. Plus, investigators found some examples of New York issuing licenses even when applicants’ work authorizations were already expired.

    “When more than half of the licenses reviewed were issued illegally, it isn’t just a mistake — it is a dereliction of duty by state leadership. Gov. (Kathy) Hochul must immediately revoke these illegally issued licenses,” Duffy said.

    New York has 30 days to respond to these concerns. State DMV spokesperson Walter McClure defended the state’s practices.

    “Secretary Duffy is lying about New York State once again in a desperate attempt to distract from the failing, chaotic administration he represents. Here is the truth: Commercial Drivers Licenses are regulated by the Federal Government, and New York State DMV has, and will continue to, comply with federal rules,” McClure said.

    Immigrants account for about 20% of all truck drivers, but these non-domiciled licenses only represent about 5% of all commercial driver’s licenses. The Transportation Department also proposed new restrictions that would severely limit which noncitizens could get a license but a court put the new rules on hold.

    Duffy has threatened to withhold millions from California, Pennsylvania and Minnesota after the audits found significant problems under the existing rules like commercial licenses being valid long after an immigrant truck driver’s work permit expired. That pressure prompted California to revoke 17,000 licenses.

    Josh Funk | The Associated Press

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  • Ex-Abercrombie & Fitch CEO Fit To Stand Trial For Sex Trafficking: Officials

    NEW YORK (AP) — Federal prison officials say the former CEO of Abercrombie & Fitch is fit to stand trial on federal sex trafficking charges after he was hospitalized with Alzheimer’s disease, Lewy body dementia and a traumatic brain injury.

    Michael Jeffries had been ordered to be hospitalized in May. But in a letter filed in federal court in New York on Wednesday, Blake Lott, the acting warden at the Federal Medical Center in Butner, North Carolina said the 81-year-old is “now competent to stand trial.”

    Lott didn’t provide further details in the letter but said the center has provided a report to the judge handling the case. Jeffries had been discharged from FMC-Butner on Nov. 21, according to previous filings in the case.

    Brian Bieber, an attorney for Jeffries, responded that other doctors had previously found his client incompetent to proceed.

    “A doctor from the Bureau of Prisons is of a different opinion,” he said in an email Wednesday. “We look forward to the Judge hearing the medical evidence, and deciding on the appropriate course of action moving forward.”

    The letter comes as prosecutors and Jeffries’ lawyers are expected to confer by phone Thursday with U.S. District Court Judge Nusrat Choudhury on the status of the case.

    Jeffries pleaded not guilty last year to federal charges of sex trafficking and interstate prostitution.

    His lawyers had argued that the former executive required around-the-clock care and was unable to understand the nature and consequences of the case against him or to assist properly in his defense.

    They had said at least four medical professionals concluded that Jeffries’ cognitive issues were “progressive and incurable” and that he would not “regain his competency and cannot be restored to competency in the future.”

    Jeffries’ lawyers and prosecutors had requested that he be hospitalized in federal Bureau of Prisons custody so he could receive treatment that might allow his criminal case to proceed.

    Choudhury agreed, ordering him placed in a hospital for up to four months. Before then, Jeffries had been free on a $10 million bond.

    Prosecutors say Jeffries, his romantic partner and a third man used the promise of modeling jobs to lure men to drug-fueled sex parties in New York City, the Hamptons and other locations. The charges echoed sexual misconduct accusations made in a civil case and the media in recent years.

    Jeffries left Abercrombie in 2014 after more than two decades at the helm. His partner, Matthew Smith, has also pleaded not guilty and remains out on bond, as has their co-defendant, James Jacobson.

    Follow Philip Marcelo at https://x.com/philmarcelo

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  • Hochul has extended higher taxes on wealthy individuals, corporations

    Rep. Elise Stefanik began her campaign to unseat Gov. Kathy Hochul by claiming the Democratic incumbent has raised taxes. 

    Stefanik, a Republican, said in a Fox News interview that Hochul is “open to raising taxes, on top of the taxes she’s already raised for New Yorkers.” 

    Hochul says she will not raise personal income taxes in her next budget proposal, due in January, though she has not ruled out raising corporate taxes.

    We checked Stefanik’s claim that Hochul has raised taxes.  

    Since Hochul’s swearing in as governor in August 2021, she has proposed and negotiated budgets in 2022, 2023, 2024 and 2025. She frequently talks about maintaining the lowest middle-class personal income tax rate in 70 years in the state, and while we have rated a similar claim Mostly True, PolitiFact has covered the problems with comparing tax rates across decades.  

    Going into her first budget, she benefitted from tax increases on high-income earners and businesses that took effect in 2021, before she became governor. These increases led to strong tax collections in her first year in office.    

    There have been some tax increases during her tenure, and extensions of existing taxes, though many of these actions affect only certain tax filers, such as high income earners, some corporations, New York City businesses with large payrolls, and smokers. An extension of a tax dating back to the mid-1990s is broader, affecting people who purchase health insurance.    

    The budget enacted in April included one of the more significant tax increase extensions. A tax increase for the state’s highest earners that had been enacted as a temporary measure in 2021 was extended for five years. This affects married couples who file jointly with taxable incomes above $2.2 million. But this increase was paired with a counter measure for people in the lowest five tax brackets. Personal income tax rates went down for married couples earning $323,000 or less, according to an analysis from the Empire Center, a conservative think tank. 

    The 2023-24 budget also included an extension of an increase in the corporate franchise tax rate until 2027. Businesses with incomes of more than $5 million began paying 7.25% in 2021, and that rate was extended in the budget passed in 2023. The budget also increased the top rate of a tax that funds public transportation, known as the Metropolitan Commuter Transportation Mobility Tax.. This top rate increased for employers and self-employed workers in the five counties of New York City, and it was meant to fund operations for the Metropolitan Transit Authority, which saw steep declines in ridership during the pandemic. Employers and individuals in the seven other downstate counties contained in the Metropolitan Commuter Transportation District were not affected by the change.   

    In the budget passed in 2023, there was an extension of a tax on health insurance, known as Health Care Reform Act taxes. These taxes have been extended routinely since 1996, and add hundreds of dollars per year to the cost of health insurance for the average family, according to the Empire Center. This is the state’s third-largest revenue source after income and sales taxes.   

    In 2025, taxes that fund public transportation, known as the payroll mobility tax, went up by less than 1 percentage point on downstate companies with payrolls of more than $10 million, but went down for smaller employers and were eliminated for self-employed workers making $150,000 or less. Revenue was reinvested in the Metropolitan Transportation Authority.  

    There were much narrower tax changes too, such as a $1 increase in excise taxes on packs of cigarettes and little cigars in 2023, which only affect smokers. 

    In 2025, the state levied a tax on group health plans, known as the managed care tax, which the conservative Empire Center called “a tactic for exploiting Medicaid’s financing system.” The tax was intended to be revenue-neutral for managed care organizations, which receive other payments from the state, and were levied to draw in more federal revenue to the state. The federal government has told the state it must end the tax in March.  

    We approached Stefanik’s campaign for evidence of her claim, which provided some of the examples mentioned above.  

    Representatives from Hochul’s office maintain extensions of existing taxes are not tax increases, and that it’s standard for changes in the tax code to be subject to renewal.

    Hochul’s office said that it’s not correct to call the increased rates for high income earners enacted in 2021 under Gov. Andrew Cuomo “temporary.” However, in a review of the 2021-22 budget, the Office of the State Comptroller noted that the top rate will increase from 8.82% to as much as 10.9%: “The change will be in effect for tax years 2021 through 2027; in 2028 and thereafter, the rate will revert to 8.82 percent.” The 2027 expiration was also described in Cuomo’s budget materials at the time.

    E.J. McMahon, adjunct fellow at the conservative Manhattan Institute for Policy Research, called Hochul’s pre-emptive extension (it was passed in 2025 instead of 2027) “a tax increase by any standard.”

    “If she had done nothing, it would have ended two years from now,” McMahon said.  

    Hochul’s spokespeople also point to actions that reduced taxes on New Yorkers, including accelerating middle-class tax cuts to fully implement them in 2023 instead of 2025, and child tax credits for low- to moderate-income families. They also noted inflation refund checks for low- to moderate-income filers.  

    It’s a toll, not a tax, and therefore does not affect the rating of this claim, but we will note that perhaps the most controversial fee enacted during Hochul’s administration is congestion pricing, in which vehicles are charged for entering areas of Manhattan south of 60th Street. Hochul has praised the program, which took effect in January, for reducing congestion, increasing transit ridership and raising money for regional transit improvements.  

    Our ruling

    Hochul, backed by the State Legislature, has extended existing taxes for wealthy corporations and individuals, as well as health insurance companies. She has also cut taxes for the middle class. Other new increases, such as transit taxes on large businesses, were paired with cuts for smaller businesses. 

    Stefanik claimed Hochul has raised taxes on New Yorkers. That claim could lead every New Yorker to believe their taxes have gone up because of Hochul. But the new tax increases did not affect every New Yorker, and income taxes on the middle class went down. Extensions mostly affected select groups. A broad tax on health insurance was extended, but that has been in place since 1996. 

    This claim has some truth to it, but it lacks important context. We rate this Half True.  

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  • What Happened in Apartment 4C?



    Watch CBS News



    When a man goes missing, his friends turn to social media to track his final hours. What they learn is horrific. “48 Hours” correspondent Erin Moriarty investigates.

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  • Crypto Mogul Do Kwon to Be Sentenced for Misleading Investors Who Lost Billions in Stablecoin Crash

    NEW YORK (AP) — Cryptocurrency mogul Do Kwon is scheduled to be sentenced Thursday for misleading investors who lost billions when his company’s crypto ecosystem collapsed in 2022.

    Kwon, known by some as “the cryptocurrency king,” pleaded guilty in Manhattan federal court in August to fraud charges stemming from Terraform Labs’ $40 billion crash.

    The company had touted its TerraUSD as a reliable “stablecoin” — a kind of currency typically pegged to stable assets to prevent drastic fluctuations in prices. But prosecutors say it was all an illusion that came crumbling down, devastating investors and triggering “a cascade of crises that swept through cryptocurrency markets.”

    Kwon, who hails from South Korea, has agreed to forfeit over $19 million as part of the plea deal.

    While federal sentencing guidelines would recommend a prison term of about 25 years, prosecutors have asked the court to sentence Kwon to 12 years. They cited his guilty plea, the fact that he faces further prosecution in Korea and that he has already served time in Montenegro while awaiting extradition.

    “Kwon’s fraud was colossal in scope, permeating virtually every facet of Terraform’s purported business,” prosecutors wrote in a recent memo to the judge. “His rampant lies left a trail of financial destruction in their wake.”

    Kwon’s attorneys asked that the sentence not exceed five years, arguing in their own memo that his conduct stemmed not from greed, but hubris and desperation.

    In a letter to the judge, Kwon wrote, “I alone am responsible for everyone’s pain. The community looked to me to know the path, and I in my hubris led them astray,” while adding, “I made misrepresentations that came from a brashness that is now a source of deep regret.”

    Authorities said investors worldwide lost money in the downfall of the Singapore crypto firm, which Kwon co-founded in 2018. Around $40 billion in market value was erased for the holders of TerraUSD and its floating sister currency, Luna, after the stablecoin plunged far below its $1 peg.

    Kwon was extradited to the U.S. from Montenegro after his March 23, 2023, arrest while traveling on a false passport in Europe.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – December 2025

    Associated Press

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  • Justice Department moves to drop charges in international soccer corruption case

    Federal prosecutors in New York moved Tuesday to drop charges against Hernan Lopez, a former Fox employee who was convicted of paying tens of millions of dollars in bribes to secure broadcasting rights to the World Cup and other top soccer matches, as well as the company involved in the scandal.  

    The move would end a yearslong legal battle by past Justice Departments to preserve the convictions, which are currently caught in a slate of appeals. 

    In a letter dated Tuesday to U.S. District Judge Pamela Chen, who oversaw the case, U.S. Attorney in the Eastern District of New York Joseph Nocella said the charges against Lopez and Full Play Group, the Argentine sports media rights company involved in the scandal, should be dismissed “in the interests of justice.”

    In a Supreme Court filing relating to Lopez’s ongoing appeal to the high court filed Tuesday, the Solicitor General’s Office wrote that dismissal of the case is warranted for the same reason, and that the court should hear Lopez’s appeal, reverse an appeals court decision that reinstated the conviction, and return the case to a New York federal judge who could dismiss the case. 

    Former Fox executive Hernan Lopez (center) arrives at court in Brooklyn on Jan. 19, 2023.

    YUKI IWAMURA/AFP via Getty Images


    Lopez was convicted in 2024 by a jury in Brooklyn on charges of money laundering, conspiracy and wire fraud conspiracy. Full Play was convicted of two additional counts of wire fraud conspiracy and money laundering relating to the World Cup and Copa America. 

    Earlier this year, a federal appeals court ordered the reinstatement of the convictions of Lopez and Full Play after Chen granted a motion for acquittal in 2024. The Biden-era Justice Department appealed that ruling. 

    CBS News has attempted to reach Lopez’s representatives. Lawyers for Full Play Group declined to comment.

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  • Attorneys allege Rikers staff prevents them from speaking with detained clients – amNewYork

    A New York City Department of Correction officer forged the signature of a person incarcerated on Rikers Island to prevent him from meeting with his defense counsel, according to testimony provided at a Wednesday New York City Council hearing where attorneys said they are subject to hostile treatment by officers. 

    Attorneys from the Legal Aid Society, New York County Defender Services, Neighborhood Defender Services and The Bronx Defenders said getting to meet with a client in a timely manner at Rikers Island frequently felt like “sheer luck” because of hours-long wait times and officers fabricating detainee refusals to meet with their attorneys.

    Julia Tedesco, an attorney with the New York County Defender Services, said she was told her client refused to meet with her at a scheduled Nov. 12 televisit and was provided with a refusal slip apparently bearing the client’s signature. When she went to visit her client in person on Rikers Island on Nov. 20, officers told her he refused again. She found it suspicious, questioned officers further on the matter and was told about half an hour later that her client was “no longer refusing” to meet.

    “When we spoke, he told me unequivocally that he never refused a visit that morning, so there was no refusal,” Tedesco said of her client. “He also said that he never signed a refusal slip on Nov. 12. I compared that signature to the documents he signed in front of me on Nov. 20. They did not match. A correction officer forged my client’s signature.” 

    Tedesco said officers lying about clients refusing to meet with her and other attorneys violated their constitutional rights.

    “Pretrial detention is dehumanizing. We know this, and the persistent denial of counsel access through fabricated refusals is a direct violation of the Sixth Amendment right to counsel,” Tedesco said. “This is not a clerical error or misunderstanding. It is a deliberate obstruction when Rikers staff fabricate refusals. They do not merely inconvenience attorneys. They silence crimes and sever one of the few lifelines available to people to take pretrial. They prohibit clients’ opportunity to meaningfully participate in their own defense.”

    When asked about this situation, a DOC representative said the department is exploring options to improve visitors’ experiences.

    “The Department is both reviewing visit operations and implementing improvements to upgrade the process and experience for all who visit our facilities,” the DOC said in an emailed statement. “We have made numerous improvements to our visitor experience in recent years, including through partnerships with nonprofit organizations to provide opportunities to connect with loved ones both on and off Rikers Island. We know there is more work to do, and it remains a priority for our staff to get it done.”

    Tedesco’s experience with DOC officers fabricating client refusals is not an isolated incident, Tahanee Dunn, an attorney with The Bronx Defenders attested.

    “Recently, I had a client whose case was in a hearing and trial posture. Thus, visiting him was essential,” Dunn said. “His legal team and I went on three consecutive occasions and were told he refused our visit…When we spoke to him later, he assured us that he had not refused. Rather, no one had come to his housing area to notify him of the visit.” 

    Dunn said this happened to her on “many” visits, sometimes cutting her and her team off from their clients for over a month. 

    “I receive dozens and dozens of complaints from our staff and our clients every month [about this,” she said. “It is appalling.”

    City Council Members Sandy Nurse and Gale Brewer listen to attorney testimony at Wednesday’s hearing.

    The fabricated refusals are just part of a hostile culture attorneys experience when trying to meet and speak with clients detained on the island to develop cases, criminal defenders testified. 

    Elizabeth Bender, senior policy counsel with the Neighborhood Defender Services of Harlem, said a DOC officer threatened one of her colleagues who was attempting to conduct a client meeting. 

    “As [an officer] saw her approaching, he said, ‘Oh, it’s you. I have a chloroform-soaked rag behind my desk just for you,’” Bender said of her colleague’s recent experience at Rikers. “There is no circumstance under which a comment like that is acceptable, but everyone…who has spent time visiting Rikers Island will know that it is emblematic of a system that’s designed to make it as unpleasant, difficult and time-consuming as possible to visit our clients and provide them with the legal representation that they deserve.” 

    Bender said the DOC’s claims that attorneys could schedule client meetings online to bypass long waits and that legal visits should always start within 45 minutes of an attorney registering at the jail were “a joke.”

    She and others said that the long waits and a lack of privacy during client meetings prevented attorneys from seeing as many clients as they otherwise could, making it difficult to listen to vulnerable client stories and build the best case possible. 

    “Almost all of the visit areas force us to shout at our clients through plexiglas,” Bender said. “There are [officers] and sometimes other detained people very nearby who can see and probably hear everything that we are talking about in these immensely vulnerable conversations.”

    The attorneys’ testimony came in a hearing on visitation for both families and attorneys at Rikers held by the City Council Committee on Criminal Justice and Oversight and Investigations. A recently published investigation by the committee found many family members trying to visit their incarcerated loved ones on the island face similar issues of long wait times, potentially fabricated refusals and “rude” behavior from officers. 

    DOC representatives, who left before the attorneys provided council members their testimony, told the committee they were working on improving the visiting experience. 

    Commissioner Lynelle Maginley-Liddie said the department agreed current wait times were too long, was working to ensure officers treated visitors respectfully, was expanding programs that supported young children and families during the visiting process, is moving to increase televisits, improve signage and form a new 13-person team specifically committed to facilitating and improving the visiting experience. 

    Advocates, including Tanya Krupat, the vice president of policy and advocacy with the Osborne Association, who said the news of a team focused on improving the visiting experience made her “hopeful,” though there was a great deal of work to be done.

    “I am very excited to work with this new group of people,” Krupat said. “I really hope that they approach this collaboratively…and in a solutions-oriented way. We all want to improve the visiting process…It improves the correctional environment and improves outcomes. This is not an ‘us’ and ‘them’ issue. This is an ‘all of us’ issue.”

    Isabella Gallo

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  • Rioters throw trash, garbage cans at ICE vehicles in New York City; multiple arrests made

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    Police confirmed multiple arrests Saturday after anti-ICE agitators were caught on video throwing trash cans and debris at officers near a government building in New York City.

    The incident happened during an ongoing crackdown on illegal immigrants in Chinatown, which has spurred protests in the area for more than a month.

    Officers responded to Centre and Howard streets, near the U.S. General Service Administration building in Lower Manhattan, just before noon on a report of disorderly protesters, the New York City Police Department (NYPD) told Fox News Digital.

    Protesters in New York City battle NYPD officers with a barricade on Saturday, Nov. 29, 2025. (Stephanie Keith/Getty Images)

    ARRESTS MADE AS ANTI-ICE AGITATORS CAUGHT ON CAMERA CLASHING WITH FEDERAL OFFICERS OUTSIDE PORTLAND FACILITY

    When police arrived, they found people blocking the street and exits at different locations, the NYPD said.

    Video footage showed rioters pushing large potted plants in front of ICE vehicles, throwing trash at officers and screaming obscenities.

    Immigration activists block ICE vans during a protest against a purported ICE raid on Canal Street on November 29, 2025 in New York City. Activists assembled outside of a garage used by ICE and later they tried to block ICE vehicles as they traveled from the garage down Canal Street to the Holland Tunnel to exit Manhattan.

    Immigration activists block ICE vans during a protest against a purported ICE raid on Canal Street Nov. 29, 2025, in New York City.  (Stephanie Keith/Getty Images)

    PORTLAND ANTI-ICE DEMONSTRATORS CONFUSED WHEN PERSON IN FULL-SIZE ELMO COSTUME SHOWS UP

    They were also spotted hurling trash cans and recycling bins and pushing barricades against officers.

    Police said the protesters were told multiple times to disperse but did not comply.

    An NYPD officer kicks trash out of the way during an anti-ICE riot in New York City on Saturday, Nov. 29, 2025.

    An NYPD officer kicks trash out of the way during an anti-ICE riot in New York City Saturday, Nov. 29, 2025. (Stephanie Keith/Getty Images)

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    Multiple people were taken into custody, according to the NYPD.

    The total number of arrests has not yet been released.

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  • Watchdog group hits Letitia James with bar complaint after federal judge tosses case

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    A conservative-aligned watchdog group has filed a bar complaint accusing New York Attorney General Letitia James of professional misconduct tied to her Norfolk, Virginia, mortgage, allegations that were also at the center of her recently dismissed federal charges.

    The Center to Advance Security in America (CASA) filed the complaint with the state’s Attorney Grievance Committee, accusing James of engaging in “illegal and dishonest conduct” in connection with the mortgage she took out on the property, according to the New York Post.

    According to the complaint and related public statements, the group alleges that James’ actions raise concerns under the state’s Rules of Professional Conduct, the ethical standards that govern lawyers in New York.

    “Fraud, misrepresentation, honesty and trustworthiness are all factors that the Rules of Professional Conduct expressly consider when weighing whether to discipline an attorney,” Curtis Schube, the group’s director of research and policy, wrote in the four-page complaint, according to the outlet.

    A TALE OF TWO INDICTMENTS: TOP DEMS SAY ‘NO ONE IS ABOVE THE LAW’ ON TRUMP, BUT DECRY COMEY CASE

    New York Attorney General Letitia James attends a press conference in New York. (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

    “The Committee, therefore, should immediately investigate the allegations against James and, if by ‘preponderance of the evidence’ the allegations are substantiated, she should be disciplined accordingly.”

    A federal judge threw out the indictments against James and former FBI Director James Comey on Monday, finding they were illegitimate because they had been brought by an unqualified U.S. attorney.

    Judge Cameron Currie dismissed the bank fraud charges against James and the false statements charges against Comey without prejudice, meaning the charges could be brought again.

    White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told Fox News’ Martha MacCallum that the Department of Justice plans to appeal.

    “We believe the attorney in this case, Lindsey Halligan, is not only extremely qualified for this position, but she was in fact legally appointed,” Leavitt said. “And I know the Department of Justice will be appealing this in very short order.”

    special assistant to the president lindsey halligan

    Lindsey Halligan, special assistant to the president, speaks with a reporter outside the White House, Wednesday, Aug. 20, 2025, in Washington. (Jacquelyn Martin/AP)

    LETITIA JAMES VOWS TO CONTINUE TARGETING TRUMP AFTER YEARS IN THE COURTROOM: ‘TRUMP DERANGEMENT SYNDROME’

    Currie, a Clinton appointee based in South Carolina, was brought in from out of state to preside over proceedings about the question of Halligan’s authority because it presented a conflict for the Virginia judges. Comey’s and James’ challenges to Halligan’s appointment were consolidated because of their similarity.

    Halligan acted alone in presenting charges to the grand juries shortly after Trump ousted the prior interim U.S. attorney, Erik Siebert, and urged Attorney General Pam Bondi to replace him with Halligan, a former White House aide and insurance lawyer. Bondi complied, but Currie found the interim U.S. attorney term had already expired under Siebert and that the Virginia judges were now responsible for appointing a temporary U.S. attorney to serve until Trump could get one confirmed in the Senate. 

    James was indicted on Oct. 9 for allegedly falsifying mortgage documents to secure a $109,600 loan on the property. She was also charged with making false statements to a financial institution.

    White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt

    White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said that the Department of Justice plans to appeal the dismissal of the case against James.  (Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

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    James, a second-term Democrat, was accused of claiming the property as her principal residence in 2023 despite being a public office holder in New York at that same time.

    She has denied wrongdoing. She previously said she made an error while filling out a form related to the home purchase but fixed it. She noted that she had never tried to deceive the lender.

    Fox News Digital reached out to both the New York attorney general’s office and CASA but did not immediately receive a response.

    Fox News’ Ashley Oliver and Louis Casiano contributed to this report.

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