Category: New York City
-

Brooklyn Medicaid Fraud Case Exposes How $68 Million Meant for the Vulnerable Was Looted
Two Brooklyn marketers pleaded guilty to a Medicaid fraud scheme that stole over $68 million aimed at aiding seniors and disabled individuals. Manal Wasef and Elaine Antao conspired to receive illegal kickbacks, leading to phantom service billing. They face up to 10 years in prison and have agreed to forfeit about $1 million.
-

NYC Self-Defense Case Ends in Prison Term, Reigniting Debate Over New York’s Gun Laws
A Queens retiree cleared in a fatal act of self-defense is now behind bars for illegal gun possession, reigniting debate over whether New York’s strict firearms laws punish ordinary citizens while failing to deter violent crime.
-

Former NYC Housing Liaison Charged in Bribery and PPP Fraud Case
Federal prosecutors have charged Anthony Herbert, a former New York City official, with bribery and fraud, alleging he exploited his position for personal gain. He faces six federal counts related to pay-to-play schemes totaling $16,000 and a fraudulent PPP loan application for over $20,000. Herbert, who pleaded not guilty, was released on bond.
-

Bronx ‘Model’ Building Exposes Early Cracks in Mayor Mamdani’s Housing Agenda
A Bronx apartment building praised by Mayor Zohran Mamdani as a model for nonprofit affordable housing has nearly 200 unresolved housing code violations—including dozens deemed immediately hazardous—raising early questions about accountability, oversight, and the city’s housing agenda just days into the new administration.
-

Brooklyn Family Court Ends Compulsion — But an Autistic Child Remains Missing
A Brooklyn Family Court ruling has relieved Jacqueline Pritchett of further obligations regarding her missing son, Jacob, an autistic boy last seen in 2025. Despite constitutional protections upheld, child safety remains at risk, and authorities lack information or leads in a case raising concerns about parental accountability and systemic failures in child welfare.
-

NYC Council Passes COPA Housing Law, Setting Up Showdown Over Property Rights and Affordability
New York City’s newly passed Community Opportunity to Purchase Act gives nonprofit housing groups priority access to certain distressed apartment buildings—but critics warn it could delay sales, chill investment, and infringe on private property rights.
-

Eric Adams’ City Hall: A Modern Scandal Machine That Rivals New York’s Worst Political Eras
Eric Adams’ mayoral administration unraveled under an unprecedented wave of indictments, investigations, and resignations, drawing comparisons to New York’s darkest political eras. From a historic federal indictment of a sitting mayor to widespread cronyism and campaign finance probes, the Adams years left City Hall defined more by scandal than stability.
-

Staten Island Talks Secession—Again—After a Mayor the Borough Didn’t Choose
Following Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s election in 2025, Staten Island’s call for secession from New York City has resurfaced due to feelings of neglect and misrepresentation. While past attempts have failed, a renewed push for independence highlights local frustrations over governance, safety, and services, challenging citywide decisions that differ from Staten Island’s values.

