Shadow Utility Company Accused of Installing Illegal Gas Meters in Brooklyn Among the defendants are National Grid employees, landlords and property managers who prosecutors say skirted safety rules in gentrifying areas. By ALAN FEUER
Date Rape Comments by Brooklyn Police Captain Are Condemned Peter R. Rose, a precinct commander, contrasted sexual attacks on acquaintances with “true stranger rapes,” which he called “the troubling ones.” By ALAN FEUER
Michael Skakel’s Murder Conviction Has Been Reinstated The Supreme Court of Connecticut said that the trial lawyer for Mr. Skakel, a nephew of Ethel Kennedy, was not deficient; the ruling could send him back to prison. By ALAN FEUER and KRISTIN HUSSEY
Inmate Seeks New Trial in 1993 Killing, Saying Ex-Detective Pressured Witness The case of Shawn Williams is connected to the former Brooklyn homicide investigator Louis Scarcella, who has been repeatedly accused of misconduct. By ALAN FEUER
Album A Communal Struggle on the Bus to Rikers Photographs by Salvador Espinoza capture the friends and family members of inmates, on their way to New York City’s largest jail complex. By ALAN FEUER
Prosecutors Drop Inquiry Into Charles Hynes, Former Brooklyn District Attorney Mr. Hynes had been accused of spending money seized from drug dealers on his failed re-election campaign in 2013. By ALAN FEUER
2 Ex-Chinese Diplomats Charged With Running Forced-Labor Ring They brought in Chinese workers on diplomatic visas, ostensibly to work on Chinese government buildings, then forced them to work on private homes, federal prosecutors in Brooklyn said.
Extremists Turn to a Leader to Protect Western Values: Vladimir Putin In retrospect, Donald J. Trump’s praise for Russia’s president seems to have been a shrewd dog whistle to a small but highly motivated part of the Trump base. By ALAN FEUER and ANDREW HIGGINS
Citing Ex-Detective’s ‘Malfeasance,’ Judge Overturns Conviction in ’91 Brooklyn Murder John Dwayne Bunn is the latest defendant to have a guilty verdict tossed out in a case related to Louis Scarcella, a retired detective. By ALAN FEUER
Brooklyn Prosecutor Accused of Using Illegal Wiretap to Spy on Love Interest Tara Lenich, a high-ranking prosecutor in the district attorney’s office, was arrested and fired after investigators learned she had spied on a police detective and a colleague, an official said. By ALAN FEUER and ELI ROSENBERG
Ken Thompson’s Successor: A ‘Pure District Attorney’ Working Under the Radar Eric Gonzalez says he wants to continue the work, especially in healing community relations, that Mr. Thompson championed before dying in October. By ALAN FEUER
Rudolph Giuliani’s Worldview Still Shaped by 9/11 Attacks Mr. Giuliani, who aides to Donald J. Trump said was the leading contender to become secretary of state, practiced his own local form of international relations as mayor of New York. By ALAN FEUER and MARC SANTORA
Rudy Giuliani, America’s Mayor, Rolls the Dice Mr. Giuliani’s critics said the former mayor of New York was crazy for vehemently supporting Donald Trump. Yes, his allies said. Like a fox. By ALAN FEUER
Sergeant Who Was Killed in the Bronx Is Recalled as a Genial Family Man Colleagues and neighbors of Sgt. Paul Tuozzolo, who was killed in a gunfight on Friday, expressed their condolences. By ALAN FEUER
Staffing Change in Eric Garner Inquiry Pushes It Into ‘Strange Territory’ After a dispute between prosecutors in Brooklyn and Washington led to an overhaul, experts say there could be complications in the case. By ALAN FEUER
Art Dealers Move Out of the Gallery and Into a Taco Bell Weary of the high-flying approach of big galleries, artists are looking to display art in smaller ways. That might even include an old Taco Bell. By ALAN FEUER
Times Reporter Can’t Be Compelled to Testify in Baby Hope Case, Court Rules An appeals court found that notes by the reporter, Frances Robles, from her interview with the suspect in the case were not “critical or necessary” to his prosecution. By ALAN FEUER
Fatal Police Shooting in Bronx Echoes One from 32 Years Ago The fatal shooting of Deborah Danner had much in common with the shooting of Eleanor Bumpurs in 1984. By ALAN FEUER
Cuomo Declines to Appoint Successor for Brooklyn District Attorney Eric Gonzalez, the chosen interim of Ken Thompson, who died of cancer this month, will continue running the office until elections are held next year. By ALAN FEUER
Baby Dies After Fall in Elevator Shaft at Troubled Brooklyn High-Rise The tower in Coney Island has been the subject of almost 20 complaints for out-of-service elevators since January 2015, city records show. By ALAN FEUER and EMILY PALMER
Shadow Utility Company Accused of Installing Illegal Gas Meters in Brooklyn Among the defendants are National Grid employees, landlords and property managers who prosecutors say skirted safety rules in gentrifying areas. By ALAN FEUER
Date Rape Comments by Brooklyn Police Captain Are Condemned Peter R. Rose, a precinct commander, contrasted sexual attacks on acquaintances with “true stranger rapes,” which he called “the troubling ones.” By ALAN FEUER
Michael Skakel’s Murder Conviction Has Been Reinstated The Supreme Court of Connecticut said that the trial lawyer for Mr. Skakel, a nephew of Ethel Kennedy, was not deficient; the ruling could send him back to prison. By ALAN FEUER and KRISTIN HUSSEY
Inmate Seeks New Trial in 1993 Killing, Saying Ex-Detective Pressured Witness The case of Shawn Williams is connected to the former Brooklyn homicide investigator Louis Scarcella, who has been repeatedly accused of misconduct. By ALAN FEUER
Album A Communal Struggle on the Bus to Rikers Photographs by Salvador Espinoza capture the friends and family members of inmates, on their way to New York City’s largest jail complex. By ALAN FEUER
Prosecutors Drop Inquiry Into Charles Hynes, Former Brooklyn District Attorney Mr. Hynes had been accused of spending money seized from drug dealers on his failed re-election campaign in 2013. By ALAN FEUER
2 Ex-Chinese Diplomats Charged With Running Forced-Labor Ring They brought in Chinese workers on diplomatic visas, ostensibly to work on Chinese government buildings, then forced them to work on private homes, federal prosecutors in Brooklyn said.
Extremists Turn to a Leader to Protect Western Values: Vladimir Putin In retrospect, Donald J. Trump’s praise for Russia’s president seems to have been a shrewd dog whistle to a small but highly motivated part of the Trump base. By ALAN FEUER and ANDREW HIGGINS
Citing Ex-Detective’s ‘Malfeasance,’ Judge Overturns Conviction in ’91 Brooklyn Murder John Dwayne Bunn is the latest defendant to have a guilty verdict tossed out in a case related to Louis Scarcella, a retired detective. By ALAN FEUER
Brooklyn Prosecutor Accused of Using Illegal Wiretap to Spy on Love Interest Tara Lenich, a high-ranking prosecutor in the district attorney’s office, was arrested and fired after investigators learned she had spied on a police detective and a colleague, an official said. By ALAN FEUER and ELI ROSENBERG
Ken Thompson’s Successor: A ‘Pure District Attorney’ Working Under the Radar Eric Gonzalez says he wants to continue the work, especially in healing community relations, that Mr. Thompson championed before dying in October. By ALAN FEUER
Rudolph Giuliani’s Worldview Still Shaped by 9/11 Attacks Mr. Giuliani, who aides to Donald J. Trump said was the leading contender to become secretary of state, practiced his own local form of international relations as mayor of New York. By ALAN FEUER and MARC SANTORA
Rudy Giuliani, America’s Mayor, Rolls the Dice Mr. Giuliani’s critics said the former mayor of New York was crazy for vehemently supporting Donald Trump. Yes, his allies said. Like a fox. By ALAN FEUER
Sergeant Who Was Killed in the Bronx Is Recalled as a Genial Family Man Colleagues and neighbors of Sgt. Paul Tuozzolo, who was killed in a gunfight on Friday, expressed their condolences. By ALAN FEUER
Staffing Change in Eric Garner Inquiry Pushes It Into ‘Strange Territory’ After a dispute between prosecutors in Brooklyn and Washington led to an overhaul, experts say there could be complications in the case. By ALAN FEUER
Art Dealers Move Out of the Gallery and Into a Taco Bell Weary of the high-flying approach of big galleries, artists are looking to display art in smaller ways. That might even include an old Taco Bell. By ALAN FEUER
Times Reporter Can’t Be Compelled to Testify in Baby Hope Case, Court Rules An appeals court found that notes by the reporter, Frances Robles, from her interview with the suspect in the case were not “critical or necessary” to his prosecution. By ALAN FEUER
Fatal Police Shooting in Bronx Echoes One from 32 Years Ago The fatal shooting of Deborah Danner had much in common with the shooting of Eleanor Bumpurs in 1984. By ALAN FEUER
Cuomo Declines to Appoint Successor for Brooklyn District Attorney Eric Gonzalez, the chosen interim of Ken Thompson, who died of cancer this month, will continue running the office until elections are held next year. By ALAN FEUER
Baby Dies After Fall in Elevator Shaft at Troubled Brooklyn High-Rise The tower in Coney Island has been the subject of almost 20 complaints for out-of-service elevators since January 2015, city records show. By ALAN FEUER and EMILY PALMER