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ny210424212306 The income-driven plan known as SAVE was meant to become a permanent fixture of the federal student loan system, offering a more affordable path to repayment, particularly for lower-income borrowers. But two groups of Republican-led states have filed separate lawsuits to block the SAVE program Ñ including many of the states that challenged President Joe BidenÕs $400 billion debt cancellation plan, which was struck down by the Supreme Court last year. (Peter Gamlen/The New York Times/Fotoarena) Ñ FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY WITH NYT STORY SLUGGED STUDENT LOAN PLAN BY TARA SIEGEL BERNARD FOR APRIL 21, 2024. ALL OTHER USE PROHIBITED Ñ
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ny130424154707 The income-driven plan known as SAVE was meant to become a permanent fixture of the federal student loan system, offering a more affordable path to repayment, particularly for lower-income borrowers. But two groups of Republican-led states have filed separate lawsuits to block the SAVE program ? including many of the states that challenged President Joe Biden?s $400 billion debt cancellation plan, which was struck down by the Supreme Court last year. (Peter Gamlen/The New York Times/Fotoarena) ? FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY WITH NYT STORY SLUGGED STUDENT LOAN PLAN BY TARA SIEGEL BERNARD FOR APRIL 13, 2024. ALL OTHER USE PROHIBITED ?
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ny080424145107 Alabama State Rep. Marilyn Lands at her home in Madison, Ala., on April 4, 2024. Last month, Lands flipped an Alabama State House seat that Republicans had held for more than two decades; she used the story of her own abortion, as well as an Alabama State Supreme Court ruling to turn the northern Alabama district blue. (Micah Green/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny160324165907 Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.) and his wife, Nadine Menendez, arrive at federal court in Manhattan, March 11, 2024. By leaving the door open to re-election, Menendez is able to continue raising campaign funds that can be used to pay the two prominent law firms hired to represent him and his wife. (Jefferson Siegel/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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RC2GY5A11MJ3 Lawyer David Cortman speaks with the media next to his client Liam Morrison, after arguments before a federal appeals court concerning a middle school's decision to not allow him to wear a t-shirt that says, "There are only two genders", in Boston, Massachusetts, U.S., February 8, 2024. REUTERS/Nate Raymond
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RC2GY5AF121J Lawyer David Cortman speaks with the media next to his client Liam Morrison, after arguments before a federal appeals court concerning a middle school's decision to not allow him to wear a t-shirt that says, "There are only two genders", in Boston, Massachusetts, U.S., February 8, 2024. REUTERS/Nate Raymond
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ny130124172606 Neelam Krishnamoorthy shows photos used as evidence in the case of her two children, who died with 57 others in a fire at a movie theater, in New Delhi, Nov. 28, 2023. In a vast nation with no shortage of intractable problems, India?s staggeringly overburdened judicial system, with its ever-deepening court backlogs that deprive citizens of their rights and hamper business activity, is one of the longest-running and most far-reaching vexations. (Elke Scholiers/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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RC20B2ATWRAJ Law enforcement officers secure the area before Hunter Biden, son of U.S. President Joe Biden, arrives at federal court to plead guilty to two misdemeanor charges of willfully failing to pay income taxes in Wilmington, Delaware, U.S., July 26, 2023. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
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RC20B2A3RXBJ An officer speaks on the phone as law enforcement officers secure the area before Hunter Biden, son of U.S. President Joe Biden, arrives at federal court to plead guilty to two misdemeanor charges of willfully failing to pay income taxes in Wilmington, Delaware, U.S., July 26, 2023. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
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RC20B2A3WZM5 Law enforcement officers secure the area before Hunter Biden, son of U.S. President Joe Biden, arrives at federal court to plead guilty to two misdemeanor charges of willfully failing to pay income taxes in Wilmington, Delaware, U.S., July 26, 2023. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
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RC20B2AEYZ85 An officer looks on as law enforcement officers secure the area before Hunter Biden, son of U.S. President Joe Biden, arrives at federal court to plead guilty to two misdemeanor charges of willfully failing to pay income taxes in Wilmington, Delaware, U.S., July 26, 2023. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
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ny260723103705 Hunter Biden, President Joe Biden?s troubled son and the target of long-running Republican efforts to cast the first family as corrupt, walking into the U.S. District Courthouse in Wilmington, Del. on Wednesday, July 26, 2023. Biden is expected to plead guilty on Wednesday in federal court to two misdemeanor tax charges and accept an agreement that will allow him to avoid prosecution on a gun charge. (Kenny Holston/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny180423164506 Linda Clary, the mother of John Umberger, is embraced as she waits for the arraignment of Jayqwan Hamilton, who has been charged in her sonÕs murder, at State Supreme Court in Manhattan, April 18, 2023. Jayqwan Hamilton, 35, of Brooklyn, was arrested on Monday and charged with murder, grand larceny and other crimes in connection with the killings of Julio Ramirez and John Umberger, two men who were drugged at bars in Manhattan, robbed using facial recognition technology on their phones and later found dead of overdoses. (Jefferson Siegel/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny080423182006 FILE Ñ The U.S. Supreme Court in Washington, March 7, 2023. The dramatic dueling rulings by two federal district judges on Friday, April 7,about access to a widely used abortion pill set up a lower court conflict that legal experts say will almost certainly send the dispute to the Supreme Court. (Michael A. McCoy/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny231023195708 -- STANDALONE PHOTO FOR USE AS DESIRED WITH YEAREND REVIEWS -- A demonstratorÕs finger nails are painted with ÒNo More DebtÓ outside the Supreme Court, which is heard two cases about student debt, in Washington, Feb. 28, 2023. (Anna Rose Layden/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny230223144606 FILE -- Sam Bankman-Fried, the founder of the crypto firm FTX, exits court in Manhattan, Feb. 16, 2023. Prosecutors on Thursday, Feb. 23, accused Bankman-Fried and two unnamed people of making unlawful campaign donations using customers? money. (Sarah Blesener/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny211023044606 -- STANDALONE PHOTO FOR USE AS DESIRED WITH YEAREND REVIEWS -- Elisabeth Olander wipes tears from her eyes at a makeshift memorial for the seven victims of a mass shooting that occurred two days prior, including four at a mushroom farm and three more nearby at an agricultural nursery, in Half Moon Bay, Calif. on Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2023. The seven deceased victims were identified on Wednesday, hours before the suspect in the rampage, Zhao Chunli, was due to appear in court in Redwood City to face seven counts of murder and one charge of attempted murder.(Jim Wilson/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny270223194606 FILE ? The U.S. Supreme Court building, in Washington, Jan. 24, 2023. The Supreme Court seemed poised on Monday, Feb. 27, to limit the scope of a federal law that adds two years of prison time to sentences for a variety of felonies if the defendant engaged in identity theft in the process.(Haiyun Jiang/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny291222202706 The U.S. Capitol building in Washington, on Dec. 23, 2022. Democrats fell just short of an ambitious goal of confirming 100 new federal judges as time ran out on the 117th Congress but are optimistic they can continue to aggressively reshape the courts over the final two years of President Biden?s term. (Kenny Holston/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny201022182605 -- STANDALONE PHOTO FOR USE AS DESIRED WITH YEAREND REVIEWS -- A handcuffed Steve Bannon is led by law enforcement through a hallway at State Supreme Court in lower Manhattan after surrendering himself to authorities on Thursday, Sept. 8, 2022. The indictment, unsealed Thursday morning, charges Bannon with two felony counts of money laundering, two felony counts of conspiracy and a felony count of scheming to defraud in connection with his work with We Build the Wall Inc. (Jefferson Siegel/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny140423185006 FILE Ñ Mifepristone and misoprostol, two medications that are used in a common drug regimen to terminate pregnancies, at a clinic in Fort Myers, Fla., May 9, 2022. Mifepristone, a drug that a majority of Americans had not heard of, according to a survey earlier this year, is now at the center of an abortion case headed to the Supreme Court. (Gabriela Bhaskar/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny220223162505 Daniel Kelly, one of two conservative judges running in Wisconsin?s Supreme Court primary election, delivers a victory speech to supporters in Okauchee Lake, Wis. on Feb. 21, 2023. Kelly narrowly defeated Jennifer Dorow, the other conservative judge, and will move on to the general election against liberal judge candidate Janet Protasiewicz on April 4, 2023. (Jamie Kelter Davis/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny060422213105 Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-MS), Committee Chair, gives remarks during a House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the U.S. Capitol hearing to recommend that the House of Representatives cite Peter Navarro and Daniel Scavino, Jr. for criminal contempt of Congress, in Washington, on Monday, March 28, 2022. The House on Wednesday, April 6, voted to recommend criminal contempt of Congress charges against Peter Navarro and Dan Scavino Jr., two close allies of former President Donald Trump, after the pair defied subpoenas from the special committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol. (Jason Andrew/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny230124230207 FILE ? Police officers and demonstrators during a trucker protest in Ottawa, Canada, on Feb. 18, 2022. A Canadian court found that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau?s use of the country?s Emergencies Act to end a truck convoy protest that had paralyzed the capital, Ottawa, two years ago was an unjustified infringement of civil rights, including the protection against unreasonable search and seizure, and, in some instances, the freedom of expression as well. (Brett Gundlock/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny191022051106 -- STANDALONE PHOTO FOR USE AS DESIRED WITH YEAREND REVIEWS -- FILE ? Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson in her office at the federal appeals court in Washington on Jan. 28, 2022. President Joe Biden has selected Jackson as his nominee to the Supreme Court, two people familiar with his decision said, choosing a well-regarded federal appeals court judge who if confirmed would make history by becoming the first Black woman to serve as a justice. (Erin Schaff/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny261122140906 FILE Ñ Inside one of the two villas where about 30 surrogates, including Hun Daneth, were arrested in 2018, in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Jan. 17, 2022. In CambodiaÕs weak legal system, surrogacy exists in a gray market, endangering all involved when political conditions suddenly shift and criminal charges follow. (Nadia Shira Cohen/The New York Times/Fotoarena) -- FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY WITH CAMBODIA-SURROGACY BY HANNAH BEECH ON SAT. NOV. 26, 2022. ALL OTHER USE PROHIBITED.
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ny021022222105 FILE Ñ Demonstrators rally in support of voting rights in Atlanta, Jan. 11, 2022. In the new term for the U.S. Supreme Court, which begins on Monday, Oct. 3, 2022, the justices will hear two election cases, one involving voting maps and another the power of state legislatures. (Nicole Craine/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny110122141605 Jeffrey Moyo, second from left, conferring with his lawyers, Doug Coltart and Beatrice Mtetwa, outside the courtroom in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe, on Tuesday, Jan. 11, 2022, as Moyo?s wife, Purity, second from right, listens. Jeffrey Moyo, a freelance reporter who works for The New York Times, has been accused of helping two journalists for The New York Times enter Zimbabwe from South Africa using bogus credentials. The trial is scheduled to begin on Wednesday, Jan. 12, 2022. (The New York Times)
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ny110122141405 Jeffrey Moyo, a freelance reporter who works for The New York Times, outside the courthouse in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe, on Tuesday, Jan. 11, 2022. Jeffrey Moyo, a freelance reporter who works for The New York Times, has been accused of helping two journalists for The New York Times enter Zimbabwe from South Africa using bogus credentials. The trial is scheduled to begin on Wednesday, Jan. 12, 2022. (The New York Times)
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ny181021183305 FILE Ñ The U.S. Supreme Court in Washington, Oct. 11, 2021. In two unsigned decisions without noted dissents, the Supreme Court on Monday, Oct. 18, ruled in favor of police officers accused of using excessive force. The rulings were a signal that the court continues to support the doctrine of qualified immunity, which can shield police misconduct from lawsuits seeking damages. (Stefani Reynolds/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny100421155604 A guarded gate outside the Hennepin County Government Center in Minneapolis on Friday, April 9, 2021, where Derek Chauvin is on trial. Chauvin, a former Minneapolis police officer is accused in the death of George Floyd while in police custody last year. In the second week of the trial, witnesses addressed two key issues: what caused George FloydÕs death, and whether Chauvin violated police policies on the use of force. (Joshua Rashaad McFadden/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny151020191104 Judge Amy Coney Barrett testifies at her Supreme Court confirmation hearing in Washington, Wednesday, Oct. 14, 2020. Over two long days of questioning Barrett took a particularly rigorous approach to the strategy used by all modern Supreme Court nominees: Avoiding saying anything about issues that could turn into court cases and almost nothing about cases that courts have already decided. (Anna Moneymaker/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny151020190904 The Supreme Court building in Washington, Oct. 12, 2020, the first day the confirmation hearing for Judge Amy Coney Barrett, President Donald Trump's Nominee for Supreme Court. Over two long days of questioning Barrett took a particularly rigorous approach to the strategy used by all modern Supreme Court nominees: Avoiding saying anything about issues that could turn into court cases and almost nothing about cases that courts have already decided. (Anna Moneymaker/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny200522224405 FILE Ñ Dominic Thiem of Austria lays on the court after coming back from two sets down to beat Alexander Zverev of Germany at the U.S. Open in New York on Sept. 13, 2020. On a trial basis, the four major tennis tournaments will begin playing their matches under the same regulations. (Chang W. Lee/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny190522173705 FILE -- Protesters during a Black Lives Matter protest in Manhattan following the death of George Floyd, June 2, 2020. An appeals court on May 19, 2022, reinstated a New York City law forbidding police officers from compressing a suspect?s diaphragm, the latest turn in a protracted legal struggle over the measure passed two years ago. (Demetrius Freeman/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny121020193405 Harvey Weinstein's walker is rolled from the State Supreme Court in Manhattan on Monday morning, Feb. 24, 2020, after a jury found Weinstein guilty of two felony sex crimes. The jury found Weinstein guilty of rape and criminal sexual act but acquitted him of three other counts, including the two most serious charges against him - that he is a sexual predator. (Sarah Blesener/The New York Times/Fotoarena) -- STANDALONE PHOTO FOR USE AS DESIRED WITH YEAREND REVIEWS --
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ny100320144104 FILE -- Harvey Weinstein on his way into court in New York, Feb. 24, 2020. Previously sealed court documents reveal that In the days following reports about how he used his power to sexually assault women, Weinstein made a desperate plea for help in emails to two dozen influential people, including the billionaires Michael Bloomberg and Jeff Bezos. (Sarah Blesener/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny020120160904 -- PHOTO MOVED IN ADVANCE AND NOT FOR USE - ONLINE OR IN PRINT - BEFORE SUNDAY, JAN. 5, 2020. -- Nathan Smith in Hindman, Ky. on Nov. 11, 2019, with a guitar he made. He apprenticed at the Appalachian School of Luthiery through a drug court program and now works at the Troublesome Creek Stringed Instrument Company. He has been off drugs for more than two years. (Mike Belleme/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny020320003304 FILE -- Ken Cuccinelli, the acting director of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, speaks to reporters outside of the White House in Washington, Sept. 27, 2019. A federal judge ruled on March 1, 2020, that Cuccinelli was unlawfully appointed to lead the agency and that two policies he put in place that limited asylum seekers? access to counsel should be nullified. (Tom Brenner/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny220919222004 **EMBARGO: No electronic distribution, Web posting or street sales before MONDAY 2 A.M. ET SEPT. 23, 2019. No exceptions for any reasons. EMBARGO set by source.** A boater in the town of Pescara, which sits on the Adriatic Sea on Italy?s eastern coast, Sept. 18, 2019. The use of Europe?s ?right to be forgotten? privacy law has broadened, forcing the former editor of a news website, PrimaDaNoi, to delete a story online about a stabbing involving two Italian brothers at a restaurant in Pescara. (Gianni Cipriano/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny220919221804 **EMBARGO: No electronic distribution, Web posting or street sales before MONDAY 2 A.M. ET SEPT. 23, 2019. No exceptions for any reasons. EMBARGO set by source.** A church in the seaside resort town of Pescara, Italy, Sept. 18, 2019. The use of Europe?s ?right to be forgotten? privacy law has broadened, forcing the former editor of a news website, PrimaDaNoi, to delete a story online about a stabbing involving two Italian brothers at a restaurant in Pescara. (Gianni Cipriano/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny220919221504 **EMBARGO: No electronic distribution, Web posting or street sales before MONDAY 2 A.M. ET SEPT. 23, 2019. No exceptions for any reasons. EMBARGO set by source.** Alessandro Biancardi, the former editor of the Italian news website PrimaDaNoi, and his wife, Alessandra Lotti, in front of the courthouse in Pescara, Italy, Sept. 17, 2019. The use of Europe?s ?right to be forgotten? privacy law has broadened, forcing Biancardi to delete a story online about a stabbing involving two Italian brothers at a seaside restaurant. (Gianni Cipriano/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny220919221704 **EMBARGO: No electronic distribution, Web posting or street sales before MONDAY 2 A.M. ET SEPT. 23, 2019. No exceptions for any reasons. EMBARGO set by source.** Alessandro Biancardi, the former editor of the Italian news website PrimaDaNoi, and his wife, Alessandra Lotti, in front of the courthouse in Pescara, Italy, Sept. 17, 2019. The use of Europe?s ?right to be forgotten? privacy law has broadened, forcing Biancardi to delete a story online about a stabbing involving two Italian brothers at a seaside restaurant. (Gianni Cipriano/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny140719204404 The microphone used for recording the podcast "In The Dark," at American Public Media in St. Paul, Minn., July 1, 2019. So far, the podcast has completed two seasons and its episodes have been downloaded about 50 million times ? and some of the facts brought to light by the project have made their way to the Supreme Court. (Tim Gruber/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny080619162604 In an undated booking photo, Devon Robinson, who faces three first-degree murder charges in Detroit.. Officials said Robinson shot the victims ? two of whom were gay and one who was a transgender woman ? on May 25. Two other victims of the attack survived; it is unclear whether Robinson knew them. (Wayne Co. Prosecutor's Office via The New York Times) -- FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY --
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ny291019135104 Mario Batali steps off an elevator at the courthouse as he arrives for his arraignment in Boston on May 24, 2019. The celebrity chef entered a plea of not guilty to indecent assault and battery of a woman he met in a local bar two years ago. (Ruby Wallau/The New York Times/Fotoarena) -- STANDALONE IMAGE FOR USE AS DESIRED WITH YEAREND ROUNDUPS --
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ny130720125904 FILE -- A makeshift memorial on March 25, 2019, to the victims of last year's mosque shooting in Christchurch, New Zealand. An Australian white supremacist who pleaded guilty to killing 51 worshipers at two mosques plans to represent himself at a sentencing hearing in August, a court heard on Monday, July 13, 2020, raising concerns that he might use the proceedings to push his views and traumatize the survivors once again. (Adam Dean/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny150621163105 FILE -- Two Vietnam War veterans, Bobby Sutton, left, and Louis Huffman, outside federal court in Brooklyn as Judge Jack Weinstein presided over a class-action suit by veterans who had been sickened by the military's use of the herbicide Agent Orange during the war, Aug. 9, 1984. Weinstein, a legal scholar and famously independent federal judge in Brooklyn who led the legal system into an era of mass tort litigation, changing the way huge classes of people claiming injuries from toxins, pollutants and faulty products could get redress in the courts, died on Tuesday, June 15, 2021. He was 99. (Chester Higgins Jr./The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny031018153304 John Bolton, the national security adviser, takes questions during a press briefing at the White House in Washington, Oct. 3, 2018. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced on Wednesday that the United States was pulling out of a six-decade-old treaty with Iran that had provided a basis for normalizing relations between the two countries, including diplomatic and economic exchanges. (Tom Brenner/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny031018153503 John Bolton, the national security adviser, takes questions during a press briefing at the White House in Washington, Oct. 3, 2018. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced on Wednesday that the United States was pulling out of a six-decade-old treaty with Iran that had provided a basis for normalizing relations between the two countries, including diplomatic and economic exchanges. (Tom Brenner/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny040918122403 Karolina Pliskova of the Czech Republic on the practice courts at the U.S. Open in New York with her coach Conchita Martinez on Monday, Sept. 3, 2018. Pliskova, a former No. 1, has faltered in the past year but hiring two female coaches has changed her attitude. (Ben Solomon/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny031018144304 FILE -- Secretary of State Mike Pompeo testifies before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, July 25, 2018. Pompeo announced on Oct. 3, 2018, that the United States was pulling out of a six-decade-old treaty with Iran that had provided a basis for normalizing relations between the two countries, including diplomatic and economic exchanges. (Erin Schaff/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny050618130111 Harvey Weinstein appears in criminal court in Manhattan, June 5, 2018. Weinstein on Tuesday morning pleaded not guilty to the sexual assault charges lodged against him last month. It was Weinstein?s first time back in court since his May 25 arrest on charges that he sexually assaulted two women in New York. (Steven Hirsch/Pool via The New York Times) -- FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY. --
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ny070618133711 Virginie Dollat, a Parisian painter of fine art, uses a pen filled with white paint to write the results of the French Open at Roland Garros in Paris, May 29, 2018. The grounds at Roland Garros are undergoing an expansion, and sometime in the next two years, Le Tableau?s wall will be torn down to make way for a new pavilion. (Simone Perolari/The New York Time)
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ny050418212911 Shenidegabier Rodriguez Iliaz, from Honduras, holds his two-year-old daughter Ixamar after their release from federal detention, where they were processed after crossing the U.S. border, in McAllen, Texas, April 4, 2018. Immigrants crossing illegally and scooped up by Border Patrol agents, after being detained for a few days, are given a court date and an ankle-bracelet monitoring device, and then led by volunteers to the nearby relief center. (Ilana Panich-Linsman/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny300318184310 Steinway Street in New York, March 30, 2018. New York State?s highest court told the New York Police Department that it was free to use the ?neither confirm nor deny? phrase in response to inquiries from citizens who want access to their police files to learn if they have been the subject of surveillance. The case that gave the Police Department permission to use the phrasing concerns two Muslim men who were trying to learn whether they had been under police surveillance. (Uli Seit/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny140518174512 FILE ? Yoselyn Ortega during her murder trial in New York, March 2, 2018. Ortega, a former nanny convicted of fatally stabbing two young children inside of their Manhattan apartment, was sentenced on May 14 to life in prison without possibility of parole.(Jefferson Siegel/Pool via The New York Times) ? FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY
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ny180418173811 FILE -- Yoselyn Ortega during the second day of her murder trial in state Supreme Court in New York, March 2, 2018. The former nanny who killed two children in her care was found guilty on April 18 of murder, after a Manhattan jury rejected her claim that she was too mentally ill to understand her actions or know they were wrong. (Jefferson Siegel/Pool via The New York Times) ? FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY
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ny160418222011 FILE -- Yoselyn Ortega during the second day of her murder trial in state Supreme Court in New York, March 2, 2018. During closing arguments April 16, a prosecutor said Ortega stabbed two children in her care to spite their mother, while her lawyer argued that the nanny suffered psychosis. (Jefferson Siegel/Pool via The New York Times) ? FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY
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ny270318220411 FILE -- Yoselyn Ortega, during the second day of her murder trial in state Supreme Court in New York, March 2, 2018. A nanny who fatally stabbed two small children in her care, she has pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity ? one of the most controversial, misunderstood and hard-to-grasp concepts in criminal law that a jury can be asked to consider. (Jefferson Siegel/Pool via The New York Times) -- FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY --
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ny301117195511 In an undated handout photo, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey arrives to address supporters at the Parliament in Ankara, Turkey. Erdogan personally ordered that two Turkish banks be allowed to participate in an oil-for-gold scheme that violated United States sanctions on Iran, according to testimony on Nov. 30, 2017, by a Turkish-Iranian gold trader in a federal trial in New York. (Presidential Palace via The New York Times) -- EDITORIAL USE ONLY --
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ny241117213814 Defendants accused of trespassing on a top-secret military base operated by the United States protest with supporters in Alice Springs, Australia, Nov. 16, 2017. In November, six Christian demonstrators were convicted in two separate trials of breaching Joint Defense Facility Pine Gap's security perimeter and face the possibility of seven years in prison. (David Maurice Smith/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny130218182511 An undated handout photo of Ahmad Khan Rahimi. Rahimi, an Afghan-born immigrant who worked quietly behind the counter of his family?s fast-food restaurant before building and planting the bomb that exploded in Manhattan in 2016, was sentenced on Feb. 13, 2018, to two life terms in prison. (Union County Prosecutor's Office via The New York Times) -- FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY. --
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ny210917203904 PHOTO MOVED IN ADVANCE AND NOT FOR USE - ONLINE OR IN PRINT - BEFORE SEPT. 24, 2017. ? The tennis broadcaster Mary Carillo, third left, with cast and crew of ?The Last Match,? at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in New York, Sept. 11, 2017. The upcoming play takes place in the minds of two men contesting a United States Open semifinal. From left: Wilson Bethel, Anna Ziegler, Carillo, Zoë Winters, Alex Mickiewicz and Natalia Payne. (Cole Wilson/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny230617174403 An undated handout photo of Genene Jones, a Texas nurse who is in prison for the 1984 killing of a toddler and the injury of another. Jones, who is suspected of killing up to 60 children, has been indicted June 21, 2017, on murder charges in the deaths of two children in 1981, which come ahead of her planned release from prison in March 2018. (Texas Department of Criminal Justice via The New York Times) -- FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY --
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ny241017121812 President Donald Trump visits an art exhibit with King Salman, center right, at the Royal Court Palace in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, May 20, 2017. The two also presided over ceremony where they signed a joint strategic vision declaration. (Stephen Crowley/The New York Times/Fotoarena) -- PART OF A COLLECTION OF STAND-ALONE PHOTOS FOR USE AS DESIRED IN YEAREND STORIES AND RECAPS OF 2017 --
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ny090517132504 Supporters of Basuki Tjahaja Purnama are emotional after a court found the Christian governor of the countryÕs capital guilty of blasphemy against Islam in Jakarta, Indonesia, Tuesday, May 9, 2017. The court sentenced him to two years in prison in a case widely seen as a test of religious tolerance and free speech in a secular democracy with the worldÕs largest Muslim population. (Bay Ismoyo/Pool via The New York Times) -- FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY.
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ny090517132303 Basuki Tjahaja Purnama, center, the Christian governor of the countryÕs capital, speaks to his lawyers after he was found guilty of blasphemy against Islam in Jakarta, Indonesia, Tuesday, May 9, 2017. The court sentenced him to two years in prison in a case widely seen as a test of religious tolerance and free speech in a secular democracy with the worldÕs largest Muslim population. (Bay Ismoyo/Pool via The New York Times) -- FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY.
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ny141017170712 FILE ? Aaron Hernandez, the former NFL tight end, at his trial in the killings of two men in Boston, March 29, 2017. The family of Hernandez, who committed suicide in jail in April, has dropped its lawsuit against the National Football League, but left open the possibility of refiling it in a different court. (Elise Amendola/Pool via The New York Times) ? FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY
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ny011017163604 A dumpster mangled by an explosion along West 23rd Street and Sixth Avenue in the Chelsea neighborhood of New York, Sept. 18, 2016. The trial of Ahmad Khan Rahimi, accused of making four bombs -- two exploded and one injured people -- that were placed in various public spots in New York and New Jersey, begins Monday, Oct. 1, 2017. (Justin Lane/Pool via The New York Times) -- EDITORIAL USE ONLY
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ny230718222510 A photo provided by the New York Police Department of Keith Luncheon, who was recorded on video carrying a gun shortly after an aide to Gov. Andrew Cuomo was fatally shot at a Caribbean festival in 2015. On July 23, 2018, a jury found Luncheon not guilty of killing Gabay, but it remained deadlocked on two other defendants. (New York Police Department via The New York Times) -- FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY --
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ny081020201804 A photo provided by the U.S. Navy of then-commanding officer of Guantánamo Bay Naval Base Capt. John Nettleton, during a ceremony at the base on June 3, 2014. A federal judge sentenced Nettleton on Thursday, Oct. 8, 2020 to two years in prison for trying to cover up a drunken fight with a commissary worker who was later found dead in the bay. (U.S. Navy via The New York Times) -- FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY. --
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ny181017230712 FILE -- Sergio Cabral, the former Governor of Rio de Janeiro, in New York, Nov. 30, 2011. Prosecutors in Brazil said in a criminal complaint released Oct. 18, 2017. Prosecutors say a wealthy businessman paid bribes in a scheme orchestrated by Cabral and two others to get the 2016 Games to Rio and was later rewarded through his stake in a would-be Trump hotel. (Joshua Bright/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny150922183906 FILE Ñ The shadow of Roger Federer of Switzerland is cast upon the court during his match against Marc Gicquel of France, at the US Open tennis tournament in New York, Wednesday, Sept. 6, 2006. Federer, the elegant Swiss star who dominated menÕs tennis for two decades, announced his intent to retire on Sept. 15, 2022. ÒTennis has treated me more generously than I ever would have dreamed and now I must recognize when it is time to end my competitive career,Ó he said. (Robert Caplin/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny090517132518 Basuki Tjahaja Purnama, center, the Christian governor of the countryÕs capital, arrives at court, where he was later found guilty of blasphemy against Islam in Jakarta, Indonesia, Tuesday, May 9, 2017. The court sentenced him to two years in prison in a case widely seen as a test of religious tolerance and free speech in a secular democracy with the worldÕs largest Muslim population. (Bay Ismoyo/Pool via The New York Times) -- FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY.
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ny150317213603 In a photo released by the FBI, Federal Security Service officer Dmitry Dokuchaev, criminally charged for cyber offenses. The relationship between cyber criminal Alexsey Belan and two Russian FSB agents- Dokuchaev and Igor Anatolyevich Sushchin âÃî is described in an indictment unsealed on Wednesday, March 15, 2017, in federal court in San Francisco. (FBI via The New York Times) -- EDITORIAL USE ONLY --
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ny120117172703 In an undated handout photo, Christopher Wilkins, who was sentenced to death for two murders. The execution of Wilkins in Texas on Jan. 12 was the nationÕs first execution of 2017. (Texas Department of Criminal Justice via The New York Times) -- EDITORIAL USE ONLY
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