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Tag: New York City

  • Toddler’s death at New York City day care caused by fentanyl overdose, autopsy finds

    Toddler’s death at New York City day care caused by fentanyl overdose, autopsy finds

    4th person arrested in day care fentanyl death


    Husband of day care owner arrested in NYC fentanyl death probe

    01:52

    The death of a 1-year-old boy at a day care in New York City’s Bronx neighborhood earlier this month was caused by a fentanyl overdose, an autopsy has determined.  

    Nicholas Dominici’s cause of death was acute fentanyl intoxication, the New York City medical examiner’s office announced Friday. His manner of death was deemed a homicide.

    Nicholas Dominici
    Nicholas Dominici

    Photo provided


    On the afternoon Sept. 15, Dominici and three other children at the day care were rushed to a hospital after being reported unresponsive. Three of the children were administered Narcan, federal prosecutors said.

    NYPD investigators later determined that the children had been exposed to fentanyl, and said the day care was being used as a fentanyl mill.

    Prosecutors said a kilogram of fentanyl, along with multiple fentanyl presses used to process the drugs, were found in a closet of the day care. Officers executing a search warrant later also discovered a trap door with a secret compartment that contained more than five kilograms of fentanyl and other drugs, police said.

    A total of four people have been arrested on federal drug charges in the case, including the owner of the day care, 36-year-old Grei Mendez, who also faces state murder charges.

    Her husband, Felix Herrera-Garcia, was captured Tuesday in Mexico after fleeing New York City. According to a criminal complaint, Mendez called her husband before calling 911 when the children began to show signs of an overdose.

    Bronx Day Care Death
    Outside the day care in New York City’s Bronx neighborhood where a 1-year-old boy died of a fentanyl overdose. September 17, 2023. 

    Theodore Parisienne for New York Daily News via Getty Images


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  • State of emergency issued for NYC’s wettest day since Ida; rain, flooding expected to last hours

    State of emergency issued for NYC’s wettest day since Ida; rain, flooding expected to last hours

    A police officer from the NYPD Highway Patrol looks to motorists drive through a flooded street after heavy rains as the remnants of Tropical Storm Ophelia bring flooding across the mid-Atlantic and Northeast, at the FDR Drive in Manhattan near the Williamsburg Bridge, in New York City, U.S., September 29, 2023. 

    Andrew Kelly | Reuters

    A potent rush-hour rainstorm swamped the New York City metro area Friday, leaving streets and highways flooded, service on multiple subway lines suspended or heavily impacted, and flights delayed or canceled.

    More than five inches of rain fell in Central Park, starting overnight and stretching through Friday afternoon. The storms are set to last for hours still, with rain expected to keep falling well into the night and into Saturday. For some parts of the city, it was the wettest day on record; in Central Park, it was the most rainfall seen since the remnants of Ida swept through two years ago.

    More than six inches of rain had fallen in parts of Brooklyn by the afternoon, with some spots seeing more than 2.5 inches in a single hour, according to weather and city officials. The 7.88 inches of rain at JFK Airport surpassed a record set dating back to 1948, the National Weather Service said.

    Friday’s rain also officially made it the rainiest September on record, according to the NWS, with more than 12 inches for the month — shattering the previous record of 9.65 inches in 1975.

    A flood watch is in effect through 6 a.m. Saturday for the entire tri-state, with rainfall rates of 1-2 inches per hour expected at times. Flash flood warnings were issued for much of NYC and surrounding counties in New Jersey, the Hudson Valley and into Connecticut into the evening; many of those warnings are likely to be extended further.

    By midday, although there was a break in the downpour, Mayor Eric Adams urged people to stay put if possible.

    A woman walks through flood waters with her child during a heavy rain storm on September 29, 2023, in Hoboken, New Jersey. 

    Gary Hershorn | Corbis News | Getty Images

    “It is not over, and I don’t want those gaps in heavy rain to give the appearance that it is over,” he said at a news briefing. He and Hochul, both Democrats, declared states of emergency.

    No storm-related deaths or critical injuries had been reported by the afternoon, city officials said. But residents struggled to get around the waterlogged metropolis.

    Virtually every subway line was at least partly suspended, rerouted or running with delays. The Metro-North commuter railroad was suspended, the Long Island Rail Road was snarled, and even bus service was severely disrupted, according to transit officials.

    “There is only extremely limited subway service available because of heavy flooding. Service is suspended at many stations,” the MTA’s subway account posted on X, formerly Twitter.

    People walk under umbrellas amid heavy rain on September 29, 2023 in the Flatbush neighborhood of Brooklyn borough New York City. 

    Michael M. Santiago | Getty Images

    Traffic hit a standstill, with water above cars’ tires on a stretch of the FDR Drive, which was shut down at one part of the day. Across the city and beyond, drivers abandoned their cars after getting stuck in floodwaters that quickly became too deep to get through.

    On a street in South Williamsburg, Brooklyn, workers were up to their knees in water as they tried to unclog a storm drain while cardboard and other debris floated by. The city said that it checked and cleared key drains, especially near subway stations, ahead of the storm. But that was little comfort to Osman Gutierrez, who was trying to pry soaked bags of trash and scraps of food from a drain near the synagogue where he works.

    “The city has to do more to clean the streets,” he said. “It’s filthy.”

    As the rain briefly slowed at some point in the afternoon, residents emerged from their homes to survey the damage and begin draining the water that had reached the top of many basement doors. Some people arranged milk crates and wooden boards to cross the flooded sidewalks, with water close to waist-deep in the middle of some streets.

    A Brooklyn school was evacuated because its boiler was smoking, possibly because water had gotten into it, Schools Chancellor David Banks said at the news briefing. Environmental Protection Commissioner Rohit Aggarwala said that more than 2.5 inches of rain fell in a single hour at the Brooklyn Navy Yard, overwhelming the surrounding drainage systems.

    Heavy rain forecasted over the Northeast of U.S. on Sept. 29th, 2023.

    NOAA

    Virtually every subway line was at least partly suspended, rerouted or running with delays, and the Metro-North commuter railroad was suspended.

    Flights into LaGuardia were briefly halted Friday morning, and then delayed, because of water in the airport’s refueling area. Flooding also forced the closure of one of the airport’s three terminals.

    Hoboken, New Jersey, and other cities and towns around New York City also experienced flooding. Hoboken declared a state of emergency, as did other cities in the area. New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy called state offices to close at 3 p.m., except for essential personnel.

    The deluge came less than three months after a storm caused deadly floods in New York’s Hudson Valley and left Vermont’s capital, Montpelier, submerged. A little over two years ago, the remnants of Hurricane Ida dropped record-breaking rain on the Northeast and killed at least 13 people in New York City, most of whom were in flooded basement apartments.

    A vehicle sits submerged after it got stuck in high water on the Prospect Expressway during heavy rain and flooding on September 29, 2023 in the Brooklyn Borough of New York City. 

    Spencer Platt | Getty Images

    Friday’s flooding wasn’t nearly as bad as that event two years ago, but was enough to flood basement apartments — city officials said they received reports that six basement apartments had flooded Friday, but all the occupants got out safely. Hochul pleaded with residents to evacuate their homes if the water starts to rise.

    “People need to take this extremely seriously,” the governor said.

    “We anticipate, we warn, we prepare. But then when it hits and you have 5 inches in the last 12 hours — 3 in the last hour this morning — that’s a scale that we’re not accustomed to dealing with,” Hochul said in a television interview. But she added that New Yorkers “have to get used to this” because of climate change.

    And more downpours were expected.

    New York City Department of Environmental Protection workers attempt to clear blocked drains after heavy rains as the remnants of Tropical Storm Ophelia bring flooding across the mid-Atlantic and Northeast, at the FDR Drive in Manhattan near the Williamsburg bridge, in New York City, U.S., September 29, 2023. 

    Andrew Kelly | Reuters

    NYC issues travel advisory for Friday and Saturday

    The New York City Emergency Management Department issued a travel advisory for all day Friday and for Saturday morning.

    “All New Yorkers need to exercise caution,” said NYC Emergency Management Commissioner Zach Iscol in a statement. “If you must travel, consider using public transportation and allow for extra travel time, and if you must drive, do not enter flooded roadways. If you live in a basement apartment, especially in a flood prone area, be prepared to move to higher ground.”

    The city enacted a flash flood plan and will have crews inspecting catch basins and roads in areas prone to flooding.

    The Mets vs. Phillies game at Citi Field on Friday was postponed and will be played as part of a doubleheader on Saturday.

    The rain also led to the postponement of Friday night’s preseason game between the New York Rangers and New York Islanders on Long Island. It will be played Saturday night instead.

    So how long will the rain and nasty conditions stick around? Luckily it won’t be too much longer, though they will linger into Saturday morning. The showers stop around then and the rest of the weekend looks pleasant — particularly Sunday, which is expected to feature sunny skies and temperatures in the mid 70s.

    After that, warmer and rain-free weather will dominate the week. Temperatures stay in the mid 70s, although Tuesday could see highs around 80s degrees — a blast of summer-like feels during the first week of October.

    A school bus drives at the FDR Drive in Manhattan near the Williamsburg bridge after heavy rains as the remnants of Tropical Storm Ophelia bring flooding across the mid-Atlantic and Northeast, in New York City, U.S., September 29, 2023. 

    Andrew Kelly | Reuters

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  • Man arrested after hauling 40 pounds of fentanyl on New York City subway, police say

    Man arrested after hauling 40 pounds of fentanyl on New York City subway, police say

    Man arrested after hauling 40 pounds of fentanyl on New York City subway, police say – CBS News


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    A suspect accused of running a drug mill out of a Bronx apartment was arrested Tuesday after authorities said he rode on the New York City subway with 40 pounds of fentanyl. Lilia Luciano has more.

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  • Behind The Multifamily Numbers: Affordable Housing In New York City Attracts Big Money

    Behind The Multifamily Numbers: Affordable Housing In New York City Attracts Big Money

    Affordable housing accounted for approximately 43% of New York City’s $3.91 billion in multifamily sales in 2Q 2023, according to Ariel Property Advisors’ Q2 2023 Multifamily Quarter in Review report.

    Major mission-driven investors including Nuveen, The Vistria Group, Tredway and Asland Capital Partners in association with Goldman Sachs made sizable affordable housing acquisitions across the boroughs in the second quarter, which contributed to the significant boost in dollar volume. In addition to preserving and producing affordable housing, investments in this asset class are attractive because they offer access to dedicated capital, value creation opportunities, property tax incentives, agency financing and scale, all of which have contributed to their substantial growth.

    Mission-Driven Investors Step Up

    Nuveen is one of the nation’s largest institutional managers of affordable housing and recently made a strategic decision to buy in New York City. Nuveen oversees more than $1.1 trillion in assets of which $6.4 billion is comprised of 161 affordable housing investments with approximately 32,000 units that primarily serve low-income residents earning 60% of area median income (AMI) or less.

    Nuveen’s partial-interest acquisition of an affordable portfolio from Omni Holding Company for an estimated $956 million was the largest multifamily transaction in New York City in the second quarter and accounted for nearly 60% of the dollar volume invested in affordable housing during this period. The deal included 72 properties (tax lots) spread across 5,900 units in the Bronx (66% of the units), Brooklyn (21% of the units), Queens (10% of the units), and Northern Manhattan (2% of the units).

    “Our goal is to meaningfully invest in the preservation and expansion of high-quality affordable housing to support the well-being of rent-burdened residents within local communities,” said Pamela West, Senior Portfolio Manager of Impact Investing at Nuveen Real Estate in a company announcement. “With the Omni transaction, we can develop and manage properties across the U.S. and achieve the desired outcomes for residents and investors.”

    The Vistria Group, a private investment firm, ventured into New York City’s affordable housing market for the first time in June by making a $174 million investment in a portfolio with 1,290 units across five rent stabilized buildings; four in the Bronx and one in Northern Manhattan. The transaction was financed through a Freddie Mac originated loan by Keybank.

    Eleonora Bershadskaya, Principal, Real Estate, for the Vistria Group, who was a panelist at Ariel Property Advisors’ recent Coffee and Cap Rates event, said the acquisition was appealing because the buildings have undergone significant capital improvements over the last decade and they benefit from an Article 11 tax abatement, which will be in place for the next 30 years.

    “One of the most important factors was the level of affordability that will persist for a long time across the portfolio, especially in the Bronx which has seen pretty significant rent growth in the last five years,” Bershadskaya said. “Also, there are development opportunities in the borough, so having a haven of affordability in that area was important to us both from an impact and financial perspective.”

    The Vistria Group, which expanded its Healthcare, Knowledge & Learning Solutions, and Financial Services sector focus last year to include affordable, mixed-income and workforce multifamily housing nationwide, is taking a long-term view when acquiring affordable housing assets as it seeks to meet a double bottom line.

    “First, it’s incredibly important for us to help address the affordable housing crisis in this country,” Bershadskaya said. “Second, financially it also makes sense because when we provide that level of affordability, we have a sticky renter base with low turnover and high occupancy, which translates into lower cost and better economics for the asset.”

    Tredway, a prominent New York City-based affordable housing owner-operator-developer, partnered with Gilbane Development Company and ELH Mgmt in May to acquire the Sea Park Portfolio, an affordable housing portfolio comprised of three former Mitchell Lama elevator buildings with a total of 818 units and an 89,357 square foot parcel. Ariel Property Advisors arranged the $150 million ($156/SF) sale.

    The multifamily buildings include 589 units that serve households with a maximum yearly income of 60 percent of AMI, 159 units that serve those with a maximum income of 50 percent of AMI and 65 homes that serve households earning up to 80 percent of AMI. The 2023 AMI for the New York City region is $127,100 for a three-person family (100% AMI). The various regulatory agreements placed on each property are a blend of New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA) and New York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD) voucher units, non-voucher units and market rate units.

    Tredway and its partners plan to embark on a multimillion-dollar rehabilitation of the entire Sea Park complex focused on quality-of-life improvements as well as strengthening its resiliency and improving the property’s energy efficiency. Of the units, 90 apartments will be set aside for formerly homeless residents and three will be reserved for superintendents. The development team also intends to build 250 new units of holistic affordable housing at the site catering to seniors.

    “We are pleased to protect, preserve and produce new affordable homes at Sea Park, a framework that will increase access to opportunity for all current and future residents,” said Will Blodgett, CEO & Founder, Tredway, in the company’s announcement. “The investments we are making will lead to a more affordable, connected, diverse, healthy and vibrant community and foster economic stability for the thousands of New Yorkers who call Sea Park and the wider Coney Island neighborhood home.”

    Asland Capital Partners, a private real estate investment firm specializing in multifamily and mixed-use investments, has partnered with the Urban Investment Group within Goldman Sachs Asset Management to launch the Asland Sustainable Housing Fund. In June, Asland and Goldman Sachs announced the Asland Sustainable Housing Fund’s first acquisition of the Heighliner Portfolio, an affordable housing portfolio located in Upper Manhattan and the Bronx, which includes five assets, 334 residential units, and several community focused retailers spanning nearly 250,000 square feet. Ariel Property Advisors arranged the $45.2 million transaction.

    Asland and Goldman Sachs have developed a comprehensive strategy to ensure the long-term financial and physical sustainability of the Heighliner Portfolio assets that includes addressing deferred maintenance, implementing sustainability upgrades and providing resident services such as free broadband and credit-building technology. In exchange for preserving affordability, the portfolio will benefit from a long-term property tax exemption.

    “We are thrilled to have successfully acquired the Heighliner Portfolio and continue on our mission of preserving affordable housing,” said James H. Simmons, III, Founder and CEO of Asland Capital Partners, in an announcement article in Citybiz. “Through our strategic collaboration with Goldman Sachs, the New York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD) and New York City Housing Development Corporation (HDC), we are confident in our ability to enhance the quality of living for our residents while ensuring the long-term viability of these valuable properties.”

    This Heighliner Portfolio transaction represents the seed investment in a broader strategy for the Asland Sustainable Housing Fund, which aims to deploy an initial $250 million towards Core Plus acquisitions of Section 8, Low-Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) Preservation, and mixed-income transactions, with a national mandate and an initial emphasis in New York City.

    Affordable Housing Drivers

    The increased demand for affordable housing illustrates how mission-driven capital sources are increasingly drawn to this sector because of its strong underlying fundamentals and incentives which include:

    • Satisfying investors’ double bottom line of integrating financial success with social accountability.
    • Property tax incentives and in some cases subsidies.
    • Value-add opportunities in the way of increasing rents, specifically with vouchered tenants whose rents are tied to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Fair Market Rent schedule for each unit size.
    • The ability to leverage agency lenders (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and HUD) and city programs offered by HPD, HDC is a distinct advantage considering the scrutiny regional banks are facing since Signature Bank closed earlier this year. As a result, financing has become challenging for some multifamily deals, especially for rent stabilized assets.

    My partner Victor Sozio summed up the appeal of affordable housing this way, “Not only does affordable housing continue to attract capital for CRA (Community Reinvestment Act) purposes, capital that’s designated for affordable housing, but there are still tools to work with to add value while also achieving the objectives of the respective agencies that govern and restrict these properties.”

    In contrast, rent stabilized buildings, which only accounted for 10% of the second quarter multifamily sales, are seeing the lowest pricing metrics in almost two decades because the Housing Stability and Tenant Protection Act (HSTPA) of 2019 eliminated the ability to adequately increase rents to cover rising expenses and the renovation of vacant units.

    What to Expect

    Recent legislation, coupled with a city-driven commitment to preserving affordability, has created significant investment opportunities in affordable housing, which will result in steady returns for investors and improved living conditions for low-income housing tenants. We expect this trend to persist as investor demand remains robust for this multifamily sub-segment.

    Shimon Shkury, Contributor

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  • Ghost gun lab found in New York City daycare

    Ghost gun lab found in New York City daycare

    Ghost gun lab found in New York City daycare – CBS News


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    Three people have been arrested after a ghost gun printing operation was discovered inside a home-based daycare center in New York City’s Harlem neighborhood, police said Wednesday. Jericka Duncan reports.

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  • 9/26: CBS Evening News

    9/26: CBS Evening News

    9/26: CBS Evening News – CBS News


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    Trump and his company “repeatedly” violated fraud law, judge rules; New York City Ballet celebrates 75 years

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  • New York City Ballet celebrates 75th anniversary with show featuring dancers from first performance

    New York City Ballet celebrates 75th anniversary with show featuring dancers from first performance

    New York City Ballet celebrates 75 years


    New York City Ballet celebrates 75 years

    01:34

    One of the best-known dance companies in the world is taking a bow with the celebration of a major milestone.

    It was a joyful moment on stage when the New York City Ballet marked 75 years of excellence with a performance that included dancers from the program’s very beginning.

    Ruth Lawrence Doering was 16 when she starred in the ballet’s first performance in 1948.

    “Look how much the seats were, $3!” she exclaimed, looking at a cherished old program.

    But during that first show, her shoe broke mid-performance.

    “The show must go on. I mean, what am I gonna say? ‘Excuse me, please. I have to go off stage and fix my shoe?’ she said. “Yeah, no, you do what you have to do.”

    Doering said the applause from the audience on that first night was “thunderous.”

    The first performance was borne out of the creative genius of renowned choreographer and company co-founder George Balanchine. 

    The company’s first female associate artistic director, Wendy Whelan, a former principal dancer, now helps decide what’s performed.

    “Balanchine would commission female choreographers, always a little bit,” she told CBS News. “Now we have a full-on commitment to it. But especially to diverse women. That’s very, very important to me.”

    The company today is one of the world’s most prestigious.

    “Nobody knew it was gonna be this great company,” Doering said. “It’s wonderful.”

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  • New York City Ballet celebrates 75 years

    New York City Ballet celebrates 75 years

    New York City Ballet celebrates 75 years – CBS News


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    The New York City Ballet celebrated its 75th year with a special performance that included dancers from its very first show. Nancy Chen has the story.

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  • Husband of day care owner arrested in NYC fentanyl death probe

    Husband of day care owner arrested in NYC fentanyl death probe

    Husband of day care owner arrested in NYC fentanyl death probe – CBS News


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    The husband of the owner of a New York City day care where a 1-year-old died after allegedly being exposed to fentanyl has been arrested. Felix Herrera-Garcia, the fourth person arrested in the case, was taken into custody in Mexico. Jericka Duncan reports.

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  • Trump and company liable for fraud in New York lawsuit, judge rules

    Trump and company liable for fraud in New York lawsuit, judge rules

    A judge on Tuesday ruled that Donald Trump and his company are liable for fraud by misstating the true values of multiple real estate properties for years and thus grossly overstating the former president’s net worth by billions of dollars.

    Judge Arthur Engoron in his bombshell decision also canceled the New York business certificates of Trump, the Trump Organization, and the other defendants, including two of his sons, in a lawsuit by the state Attorney General’s Office.

    The judge said he would appoint an independent receiver to manage the dissolution of the corporate entities whose business certificates he canceled.

    It is not clear whether Engoron’s decision means the Trump Organization and related entities will have to completely cease doing business in New York, or whether the companies can be legally reconstituted later.

    A spokeswoman for Attorney General Letitia James declined to comment on that question.

    But Trump’s lawyer Chris Kise, who called the decision “outrageous,” said it “seeks to nationalize one of the most successful corporate empires in the United States and seize control of private property all while acknowledging there is zero evidence of any default, breach, late payment or any complaint of harm.”

    “While the full impact of the decision remains unclear, what is clear is that President Trump and his family will seek all available appellate remedies to rectify this miscarriage of justice,” Kise said.

    Engoron’s ruling, which also dismissed Trump’s request to dismiss the case, did not settle six other claims in dispute in the case whose defendants included him, the company and his sons Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump, as well as former Trump Organization Chief Financial Officer Allen Weisselberg, company executive Jeff McConney.

    Those issues remaining claims will be addressed at a nonjury trial due to begin Monday.

    James is seeking $250 million in damages in the case and wants Trump and his two adult sons barred from doing business in the state.

    Engoron, in granting partial summary judgment to James on the fraud claim, found that Trump made false and misleading valuations for multiple real estate assets in statements to insurers and banks for years as he sought more favorable terms on insurance coverage and loans.

    Because of those misstatements, Trump also inflated his true net worth in annual financial statements by billions of dollars, according to the decision.

    “In defendants’ world: rent regulated apartments are worth the same as unregulated apartments; restricted land is worth the same as unrestricted land; restrictions can evaporate into thin air; a disclaimer by one party casting responsibility on another party exonerates the other party’s lies,” Engoron wrote.

    “That is a fantasy world, not the real world.”

    Engoron also ordered sanctions of $7,500 for five attorneys who represented the Trump defendants for making frivolous and previously rejected arguments in court filings. Kise is among those fined by the judge.

    “Today, a judge ruled in our favor and found that Donald Trump and the Trump Organization engaged in years of financial fraud,” James wrote in a post on the X social media site.

    “We look forward to presenting the rest of our case at trial,” James added.

    Trump, the front-runner for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, separately faces a total of 91 felony charges in four criminal cases. Two of those cases relate to efforts to reverse his re-election defeat in 2020. Another case involves his retention of classified government documents at his Mar-a-Lago club in Florida, a property that is mentioned in Engoron’s ruling Tuesday.

    In the fourth criminal case, Trump is charged with falsifying business records related to a 2016 hush money payment to porn star Stormy Daniels.

    He has pleaded not guilty to all of the charges.

    Engoron in his ruling wrote that James’ office in its civil fraud suit “has prevailed on liability on its first cause of action … as against all defendants.”

    The judge added that if liability for fraud is established under New York law, that statute allows the attorney general to obtain an order enjoining defendants from continuing to do business or “any fraudulent or illegal acts.”

    Even after Engoron appointed an independent financial monitor for the Trump Organization last year, “defendants have continued to disseminate false and misleading information while conducting business,” the judge wrote.

    “This ongoing flouting of this Court’s prior order, combined with the persistent nature of the false [statements of financial condition] year after year, have demonstrated the necessity of canceling the [defendants’ business] certificates … as the statute provides,” the judge wrote.

    Engoron’s 35-page ruling details how Trump fraudulently valued his Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, once by more than 2,000%, Trump Park Avenue and 40 Wall Street in New York City, his Seven Springs property in Westchester County, New York, and his golf course in Aberdeen, Scotland.

    “Time and time again, the Court is not comparing one appraisal to another; it is comparing an independent professional appraisal to a pie-in-the-sky dream of concocted potential,” Engoron wrote.

    After noting that Trump submitted statements falsely claiming that the Trump Tower apartment in which he resided for decades was nearly three times its actual size, and was worth a whopping $327 million, the judge wrote, “a discrepancy of this order of magnitude, by a real estate developer sizing up his own living space of decades, can only be considered fraud.”

    “The documents here clearly contain fraudulent valuations that defendants used in business,” Engoron wrote.

    “Defendants respond that: the documents do not say what they say; that there is no such thing as ‘objective’ value; and that, essentially, the Court should not believe its own lying eyes,” the judge noted.

    Kise, the Trump attorney, said Engoron’s “outrageous decision is completely disconnected from the facts and governing law.’

    “The Court ignored fully the Appellate Division mandate and basic legal, accounting and business principles,” Kise said. “Without even conducting a trial, the Court substituted its own judgment for that of nationally recognized experts from the NYU Stern School of Business and beyond.  More importantly, the Court disregarded the viewpoint of those actually involved in the loan transactions who testified there was nothing misleading, there was no fraud, and the transactions were all highly profitable.”

    Another Trump attorney, Alina Habba, in a statement said, “It’s important to remember that the Trump Organization is an American success story and the fact that a judge without trial would say there is no question of fact and issue a decision like this in summary judgement is concerning.”

    Habba who was among the attorneys sanctioned by Engoron.

    Trump responded to Engoron’s ruling by reposting a statement on social media attacking James and the judge, while doubling down on his claims of having a much higher net worth than what was displayed on the financial statements at the center of the fraud case.

    “It is very unfair, and I call for help from the highest Courts in New York State, or the Federal System, to intercede,” Trump wrote in a post on his Truth Social site.

    In a tweet Tuesday, Eric Trump, who runs the Trump Organization with Donald Trump Jr., wrote, “In an attempt to destroy my father and kick him out of New York, a Judge just ruled that Mar-a-Lago, in Palm Beach Florida, is only worth approximate ‘$18 Million dollars’ “

    “Mar-a-Lago is speculated to be worth [well] over a billion dollars making it arguably the most valuable residential property in the country. It is all so corrupt and coordinated,” Eric wrote.

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  • Want to live in London or New York? Good luck if you’re renting | CNN Business

    Want to live in London or New York? Good luck if you’re renting | CNN Business


    London
    CNN
     — 

    In May, Viveca Chow hurriedly transferred $3,700 over her phone while standing in the lobby of a building in Queens, New York. She made the upfront payment to secure an apartment minutes after seeing it.

    It was a moment the 28-year-old lifestyle influencer — forced to leave her previous accommodation after the landlord increased her monthly rent by $1,000 — described to CNN as “dystopian.”

    Yet it is something that Chow, along with millions of renters in big cities, has come to expect as part of the fight for affordable housing. Her realtor urged her to pay the holding deposit on the spot to secure the one-bedroom unit.

    In many urban centers, an influx of workers and students after the pandemic has collided with a lack of accommodation for rent, high levels of inflation, and rising interest rates that are trapping some people in the rental market when they would otherwise be buying a home.

    Average rents in New York and Sydney grew by an inflation-busting 4.7% and 6.9% respectively in the year to August, according to real estate firm Knight Frank. While growth in rental costs in both cities has slowed compared with its pandemic peaks, average rents are still at all-time highs.

    In other places, rents are rising even faster. In London, the average annual rise in the cost of a rental property exceeded 17% in April and again last month, the biggest jumps since real estate agency Hamptons started collecting the data in 2014.

    That runaway growth far exceeds both inflation and pay raises in the United Kingdom.

    Many are struggling to meet the costs.

    According to property website Realtor.com, affordability in the New York metropolitan area deteriorated the most out of the 50 largest US metro areas in the year to July. The share of median household income in the New York area eaten up by the median rent rose from 35% to 37% in that time.

    Based on one approach, housing costs are judged affordable if they account for no more than 30% of the typical household income, Realtor.com said. This is also the benchmark used by the UK Office for National Statistics when assessing private rents.

    In London, the destination for many UK college students looking for work after graduating, renting has become “entirely unaffordable” for that cohort, said SpareRoom, the UK’s biggest room search site, in a recent analysis.

    The platform used the ONS’s measure of affordability in its study and the average graduate starting salary of £29,000 ($36,000) a year. According to SpareRoom’s latest Quarterly Rental Index, average monthly room rent reached £971 ($1,190) in the second quarter, up by almost a fifth compared with the same period in 2022.

    Barnaby Scudds is feeling the pain. The public relations executive moved to London in March after graduating last year and now pays £975 ($1,195) a month to rent a room, which gobbles up more than half of his monthly paycheck.

    “I’m paid well for the work that I do, and yet it’s still difficult,” he told CNN.

    Even at those prices, rooms get snapped up fast.

    “It is very difficult because properties come on at about six o’clock in the morning generally, and they are normally gone by six o’clock in the evening,” he said.

    A property for rent in London, seen in August.

    Matt Hutchinson, communications director at SpareRoom, told CNN that the UK’s chronic lack of supply of rental properties was to blame.

    Beyond problems afflicting most global cities, such as a proliferation of short-term rentals offered through platforms like Airbnb, the shortage of places for long-term rent in London is exacerbated by local factors.

    Since 2016, the UK government has increased taxes on purchases of second homes and cut the amount of tax landlords can claim back. Put simply, being a landlord in the UK isn’t as lucrative as it used to be.

    “[It] is a much more tight-margin experience than it was six, seven years ago. And a lot of people are just selling up and leaving the market,” Hutchinson said, adding that rising interest rates, as well as higher costs for labor and materials, had discouraged many from investing in rental properties.

    In a recent note about rental markets in 10 cities worldwide, Liam Bailey, global head of research at Knight Frank, concluded: “Affordability of housing is set to become the leading political issue within the next 12 months.”

    London’s mayor, Sadiq Khan, last month reiterated his call for rent control, urging the UK government to impose a two-year rent freeze for the capital’s 2.7 million private tenants. It is a version of a policy proposed by politicians and campaigners over the years as a way out of the affordability crisis.

    But rental caps, while instinctively appealing, are generally “a bad idea,” Nikodem Szumilo, director of the Bartlett Real Estate Institute at University College London, told CNN.

    “It benefits people who live in the rent control unit and maybe the politicians who impose the policy, but nobody else,” Szumilo said, noting that rental caps discouraged home builders from investing in new units, which in turn limited supply growth in places where demand might be rising.

    A better way, Szumilo argues, is to simply make it easier to build more homes. Tokyo, the world’s most populous city, housing more than 37 million people, has a “very deregulated market” where rents are “relatively stable,” he said.

    Lifestyle influencer Viveca Chow feels lucky to have found a rent-stabilized apartment in New York City.

    Policies that help people become homeowners — for example, offering subsidies on down payments or on mortgages for first-time buyers, as the UK government has done — are also effective, Szumilo said, because they help ease demand in the rental market.

    Still, Chow in New York is grateful for rent control.

    She and her partner live in one of the city’s coveted rent-stabilized units, which means the $3,700 they pay each month can’t increase by more than 3.75% if they renew the lease for another year. That’s below the 4.7% annual increase in rental costs in the city recorded by Knight Frank at the start of August.

    That “doesn’t necessarily mean it’s cheap,” Chow said, but the cap provides a welcome safety net after the instabilities — and indignities — of her last place.

    “We didn’t even have a kitchen, a proper kitchen. It was like a kitchen nailed to the wall. So I was like, you’re not raising $1,000 on me!”

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  • Bus carrying high school band overturns off New York highway, killing 2 adults

    Bus carrying high school band overturns off New York highway, killing 2 adults

    Bus carrying high school band overturns off New York highway, killing 2 adults – CBS News


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    Two adults were killed and several teenagers were injured after their bus overturned on its way to band camp Thursday afternoon. New York Gov. Kathy Hochul said the charter bus rolled into a ravine about 70 miles northwest of New York City. Doug Williams from CBS News New York has the latest.

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  • 11 Chic Ways the NYC Fashion Set Is Wearing Denim Skirts This Fall

    11 Chic Ways the NYC Fashion Set Is Wearing Denim Skirts This Fall

    If you were to take a look at my closet, you’d know I’m all about statement tops, eye-catching accessories, and elevated pieces that feel modern, yet timeless enough to wear throughout the year. Now that fall is approaching and I’m shuffling out my easy-to-wear linen pants and denim shorts that went with nearly everything in my colorful wardrobe, I’m pulling out my tried-and-true item that goes with almost everything I’m putting on for the rest of the year: the simple, classic, denim skirt.

    Just like the rest of the NYC fashion set, I’ve resorted to styling my denim skirt dozens of ways to keep my outfits feeling fresh. From trendy accessories to statement outwear, these NYC girl-approved styling methods are sure to be everywhere this fall. Shop the best denim skirt outfits below, along with some of our editors’ favorite trendy picks.

    Ana Escalante

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  • Secret compartment containing fentanyl found in New York City day care, officials say

    Secret compartment containing fentanyl found in New York City day care, officials say

    Secret compartment containing fentanyl found in New York City day care, officials say – CBS News


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    The NYPD announced Thursday that investigators have found a trap door with a secret compartment in the playroom of a New York City day care where a toddler died and several more children were sickened after being exposed to fentanyl last week. Two people, including the woman who ran the day care, have been arrested in the case.

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  • Prince William visits New York for Earthshot prize summit

    Prince William visits New York for Earthshot prize summit

    Prince William visits New York for Earthshot prize summit – CBS News


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    Prince William was in New York on Tuesday for his Earthshot prize summit to announce the finalists for the 2023 prize. The prizes go to people who offer “evidence-based solutions” to climate challenges. Meg Oliver reports.

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  • Federal drug charges filed in New York City day care death

    Federal drug charges filed in New York City day care death

    Federal drug charges filed in New York City day care death – CBS News


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    Federal drug conspiracy charges were filed Tuesday in connection with the death of a child who authorities say was exposed to fentanyl at a New York City day care. Officials say the day care center was being used as a front to distribute drugs. Jessica Moore reports.

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  • Bronx day care death linked to fentanyl, police say

    Bronx day care death linked to fentanyl, police say

    Bronx day care death linked to fentanyl, police say – CBS News


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    A 1-year-old boy who died at a home-based day care in the Bronx was exposed to fentanyl, police say. Two people are facing murder charges and police are looking for a third suspect in connection with the alleged drug exposure that affected three other children. Jessica Moore reports.

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  • Prince William Just Did The 1 Thing Most New Yorkers Would Never Do

    Prince William Just Did The 1 Thing Most New Yorkers Would Never Do

    NEW YORK ― Prince William touched down in New York on Monday and immediately did the one thing most New Yorkers would never dream of doing.

    The Prince of Wales walked into the East River ― waders and all ― with the Manhattan skyline in the background.

    While most city dwellers actively try to avoid coming into contact with the water, William walked in as part of an event put on with the Billion Oyster Project. The nonprofit is working to restore 1 billion oysters to the New York Harbor by 2035.

    The visual of the royal going into and being in the water is very important, according to Agata Poniatowski, the public outreach manager for the Billion Oyster Project. Poniatowski waded into the water alongside the prince, who she said was “really, really excited” about the activity.

    “Having the prince join us here in the water in New York changes that perspective of the water, where people think it’s so dirty, it’s so gross,” she told reporters, including HuffPost, after the outing. “But really, you know, the water is swimmable on certain days of the week. We want to work on that change in perspective, and the prince really helped us with that.”

    The Prince of Wales walks into the East River.

    Cindy Ord via Getty Images

    Checking out the oysters with members of the Billion Oyster Project.
    Checking out the oysters with members of the Billion Oyster Project.

    Cindy Ord via Getty Images

    The royal’s outing with the organization first took him to Governor’s Island by boat on Monday, just after his commercial flight landed from the U.K.

    After meeting with restaurateurs, volunteers, staff and students involved with the project on the island, he took another boat over to Brooklyn Bridge Park, where he hopped in the water to look at the oysters.

    He then met with 12-year-old students from Harbor Middle School and measured the oysters with them.

    The Prince of Wales meeting with some of the middle schoolers, who didn't know they were meeting the prince as their "special guest" until their teacher surprised them with the news.
    The Prince of Wales meeting with some of the middle schoolers, who didn’t know they were meeting the prince as their “special guest” until their teacher surprised them with the news.

    Cindy Ord via Getty Images

    The prince is in town on behalf of his environmental initiative, The Earthshot Prize. The 15 finalists for this year’s awards will be unveiled on Tuesday at the Earthshot Prize Innovation Summit, which is being co-hosted by former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s Bloomberg Philanthropies.

    During the Prince of Wales’ time in New York ― which also coincides with New York Climate Week ― the heir to the throne met with the U.N. secretary-general on Monday ahead of the 78th session of the U.N. General Assembly.

    Upon landing at Newark airport, the royal said that it was “so good to be back in the United States.”

    “No one does optimism and ingenuity like the American people, so it’s only right we unveil this year’s Earthshot finalists in New York City,” he said.

    William is also expected to meet with first responders in Manhattan on Tuesday. The royal, who was an emergency first responder during his time as a helicopter pilot, is expected to speak to the firefighters about their work and mental health.

    “He’s conscious that he’s doing this visit only a few days after September 11th, where many of the people that he will be meeting tomorrow were remembering those that were lost on 9/11 itself,” a Kensington Palace spokesperson said Monday morning.

    The Prince of Wales said it was "so good to be back in the United States" after he landed at Newark airport on Monday.
    The Prince of Wales said it was “so good to be back in the United States” after he landed at Newark airport on Monday.

    Cindy Ord via Getty Images

    The Prince of Wales was originally set to visit New York last September, but his trip was canceled due to the death of his grandmother Queen Elizabeth.

    The palace spokesperson said that the prince was excited to meet with New Yorkers this week, and appreciated their understanding when his trip was called off last year.

    “As he remarked previously, the prince was incredibly appreciative for the love and support shown by the American people during that time,” the spokesperson said. “And he is grateful and continues to be. And he is very much looking forward to being back in New York this week and hopefully meeting as many New Yorkers as possible.”

    The Prince of Wales last visited New York in 2014 with his wife, Kate Middleton.

    Both the Prince and Princess of Wales also made it to the U.S. last year, when they visited Boston in November. HuffPost covered their royal tour, which also included attending the 2022 Earthshot Prize ceremony.

    Ahead of the awards show in Boston, William also wrote an exclusive essay for HuffPost in which he said he is a “stubborn optimist” when it comes to the Earth’s future.

    “Dire predictions about our natural world aren’t the only side to this story and they don’t have to be our future,” he wrote at the time. “In this critical decade, I invite you all to be optimistic, to support the game-changers and to believe in the power of human ingenuity.”

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  • Singapore’s birth rate is falling and ‘throwing money’ at the problem won’t solve it

    Singapore’s birth rate is falling and ‘throwing money’ at the problem won’t solve it

    Data from the Institute of Policy Studies showed that women aged 20 to 24 are now less likely to give birth than women aged 35 to 39.

    Mai Yo | Klaud9 | Getty Images

    SINGAPORE — Almost two decades ago, Loh and her husband made a decision not to have children.

    Today, 17 years later, the two of them are convinced they made the right choice.

    “I may feel differently when I’m on my deathbed and have to die alone, but at the moment, the choice seems right to us,” said the 46-year-old who works in the tech industry.

    Loh, who did not want to give her full name, is not alone.

    Singapore’s birth rate hit a record low in 2022, after years of decline.

    Live births last year plummeted by 7.9%, to usly expensive it is to live in Singapore, and the high cost of living that continues to steer many away from expanding their family, analysts told CNBC.

    Having a child is tied to many things — the affordability of a house, a spouse, and the maturity of the job market that makes you feel secure enough to do it.

    Jaya Dass

    Asia-Pacific managing director, Ranstad

    Birth rates increased slightly in 2022 to 1.12 from 1.1 the year before when people stayed home during Covid and had more children.

    Still, fertility trends have shown women are also choosing to have children later in life, or not at all.

    Data from Singapore-based think tank Institute of Policy Studies showed that women between the ages of 20 and 24 are now less likely to give birth than women between 35 to 39 years old.

    “Having a child is tied to many things — the affordability of a house, a spouse, and the maturity of the job market that makes you feel secure enough to do it,” Jaya Dass, Ranstad’s Asia-Pacific managing director.

    “The attractiveness of wanting to have a child has actually reduced significantly because of how life has matured and changed,” Dass said.

    Money isn’t the solution

    Already grappling with an aging population, Singapore is also facing one of the world’s lowest fertility rates, prompting the government to dole out incentives and “bonuses” to encourage people to have children.

    Couples with babies born from Feb. 14 will receive 11,000 Singapore dollars ($8,000) each for their first and second child, and S$13,000 for their third child and beyond — that’s a 30% to 37% jump from before.

    Women in Singapore are choosing to have children later in life, or not at all.

    D3sign | Moment | Getty Images

    Government-paid paternity leave was doubled, increasing from two to four weeks for fathers of babies born from 2024. 

    Although there are a slew of government policies aimed at encouraging more couples to have children, “throwing money” at the problem will not solve it, said Wen Wei Tan, analyst at the Economist Intelligence Unit.

    “Tackling the fertility rate will require us to confront some of the weakness of the underlying systems … Which means not only addressing demographic challenges, but also helping to build social cohesion, and perhaps look at how we can foster healthier attitudes towards risk taking,” EIU’s Tan said.

    Most expensive city

    In 2022, the EIU ranked Singapore as the most expensive city to live in, sharing the top spot with New York City. 

    Owning a home together is also a challenge for young couples. 

    House prices in the city-state continue to rise rapidly, increasing by 7.5% year-on-year in June 2023, CEIC data showed. 

    Public housing apartments — known locally as HDB flats — are in high demand but supply is not catching up, said Tan from the EIU.

    Construction came to a standstill during the pandemic, as labor shortages and the high cost of raw materials delayed housing projects, and couples had to wait twice as long for their apartments, causing some to marry later.

    This, however, is just one part of the problem, as there are many other costs associated with raising children in Singapore, according to Mu Zheng, assistant professor at the department of sociology and anthropology at the National University of Singapore.

    “There is a sense of instability is dragging people further away from having children,” Zheng told CNBC.

    Working mothers

    The high cost of living in Singapore is leading to more couples with two incomes and no kids —  sometimes referred to as Dinks, a slang for “dual income, no kids.”

    That is also due to a mindset change and more couples being willing to put their career ahead of marriage and having kids. 

    “Once women have children, they’re going to see a slowdown in their career progression. Many make the decision to wait till they feel secure and stable in their jobs so there won’t serious threat to their income if they take time away from work,”  Tan said.

    More couples are willing to put their career ahead of marriage and having kids.

    Carlina Teteris | Moment | Getty Images

    Delaying marriage means people may get more opportunities to pursue higher education, leading some to be more selective and have greater expectations of their future partners, said Dass. 

    In 2022, 36.2% of residents who were 25 years and above had a university degree — that’s compared to 25.7% a decade ago.

    However, Dass highlighted that this is not necessarily a bad thing because “the minute education and literacy increases among women, their ability to come into the workforce and contribute to the economy increases.” 

    Shrinking labor force

    A declining birth rate, coupled with an aging population, will have repercussions on Singapore’s labor force. 

    “Having fewer children means you have a smaller workforce that can contribute to the economy. And with Singapore’s high life expectancy, the dependency ratio will increase,” said EIU’s Tan. 

    Singapore’s population is ageing rapidly and 1 in 4 Singaporeans will be over 65 years old by 2030.

    Jayk7 | Moment | Getty Images

    Tan warned that a shrinking workforce could hurt the government’s tax revenues and exacerbate the problem, especially when coupled with the challenges of an aging population.

    “You’re collecting less money from a smaller workforce. So the government has less fiscal resources to channel to economic purposes that the country might need,” Tan said, citing examples of upgrading infrastructure and investing in research and development. 

    “So it’s more taxes for those in the workforce, and more financial burden to care for the elderly. And if one gets married and has children, there are more financial considerations at play.”

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  • “Rich NYC Mom” Is My Fall Vibe, and $100 Is My Budget—Here’s What I’m Shopping

    “Rich NYC Mom” Is My Fall Vibe, and $100 Is My Budget—Here’s What I’m Shopping

    After a summer filled with obsessing over quiet-luxury looks, it seems that the focus for fall is on the same track. You guessed it—I’m still trying to look rich. While my obsession is growing daily, my budget isn’t, but not to worry. As a shopping editor, finding expensive-looking items that don’t break the bank is my superpower. H&M, Reformation, and Nordstrom are three of my go-to retailers when I’m looking for something that elevates my look. I figured I should use my powers for good and round up the best of the best when it comes to chic items for fall. They’re all under $100 and scream, “Yeah, I’m rich.”

    Keep scrolling to see the expensive-looking under-$100 items I’m ordering for the upcoming season.

    Grace O’Connell Joshua

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