NYC Hospitals Bet Big on OpenEvidence AI for Doctors on the Front Lines
NewYork-Presbyterian and its academic partners are deploying OpenEvidence across hospitals and clinics to give clinicians research-backed answers at the point of care.
State Wants To Squeeze 3,950 Apartments Onto Slim Hudson Yards Sites
State planning documents show nearly 4,000 apartments on two parcels north of Hudson Yards, including about 1,185 affordable homes and a 400-key hotel. The state has opened environmental review.
Hochul Pours Nearly $1 Billion Into Brooklyn, Bronx And Chelsea Housing Overhaul
Nearly $1 billion in state funding will create or preserve about 2,754 affordable apartments, with big awards to Vital Brooklyn, Chelsea and the Bronx.
NYC Rats Out Extra Space In $1.7 Million Storage Showdown
New York City reached a $1.7M settlement with Extra Space after complaints of rats and surprise rent hikes. A $1M restitution fund will open for claims beginning Aug. 1.
NY Man ‘Breezy’ Gets 15 Years for Luring Group-Home Teens With Uber Rides
A New York man was sentenced to 15 years after prosecutors say he used rideshare trips to lure teenagers from a Connecticut group home. Authorities recovered videos on his phone and federal prosecutors tied the case to Project Safe Childhood.
Garden of Woe: Madison Square Garden Sued Over Alleged Face Data Leak as One Case Is Dismissed
A federal suit said Madison Square Garden left millions of visitors' facial biometric data exposed after a ShinyHunters leak, and multiple class actions followed — though one has since been voluntarily dismissed.
Nadine Menendez Loses Bid to Delay Prison, Must Report Friday Despite Cancer Care
A judge rejected Nadine Menendez’s bid to delay her July 10 prison surrender for additional cancer procedures, ordering her to report Friday as prosecutors argued the Bureau of Prisons can provide care.












