Black Employees Accuse Fire Department of Discrimination A lawsuit claims that African-American civilian employees of the New York Fire Department, on the whole, are paid lower wages than white employees with the same jobs. By COLIN MOYNIHAN
Can El Museo’s Leader Build a Bridge to Its Latino Future? Patrick Charpenel, a curator and philosopher, faces a rocky road, including the competition for financing in New York. By COLIN MOYNIHAN
Gifts Tied to Opioid Sales Invite a Question: Should Museums Vet Donors? The issue of how museums raise their money has resurfaced in the case of the Sacklers, a family of philanthropists whose company developed OxyContin. By COLIN MOYNIHAN
A Struggling Historic Library Says It Needs to Sell Its Art To the dismay of some residents of Jamestown, N.Y., its historic library is selling a respected collection of art because it needs additional funds. By COLIN MOYNIHAN
Court Blocks Berkshire Museum’s Sale of Rockwell Works and Other Art The museum has said the sale is necessary for its financial survival. By COLIN MOYNIHAN
Disputed Sale of Rockwells by Museum Can Go Forward, Judge Says The works are among those that the financially strapped Berkshire Museum plans to sell at an auction Monday at Sotheby’s in New York. By COLIN MOYNIHAN
Painter’s Ex-Assistant Charged With Stealing His Works Arturo Rucci, who worked for the artist Sean Scully, has been charged with stealing paintings valued at about half a million dollars. By COLIN MOYNIHAN
El Museo del Barrio to Close for Several Months During Renovations Renovations will include upgraded heating and cooling systems. There will be a new glass entryway and a mechanized lift for the orchestra pit. By COLIN MOYNIHAN
Ancient Limestone Relief Is Seized at European Art Fair Prosecutors and police officers seized a $1.2 million relief of a Persian soldier from a dealer’s booth on Friday afternoon at the Park Avenue Armory. By JAMES C. McKINLEY Jr
Protesters Deface Roosevelt Statue Outside Natural History Museum A group said it splashed red liquid on the statue because it views Theodore Roosevelt as a white supremacist. By COLIN MOYNIHAN
Chelsea Bomb Suspect Guilty in Attack That Sowed Terror Across Region Ahmad Khan Rahimi was convicted of carrying out a two-day bombing spree in New York and New Jersey in September 2016. The worst damage occurred on West 23rd Street. By MICHAEL WILSON
Looted Antiquity, Once at Met Museum, to Return to Lebanon Collectors agreed to lift their objection to the return of an ancient marble sculpture of a bull’s head after seeing evidence that it had been stolen By COLIN MOYNIHAN
How Police Surveillance Units Became Unlikely Historians Photographs and film shot by officers in the 1960s and 1970s document a turbulent era and some debated police practices. By COLIN MOYNIHAN
How the Bomb Squad Disabled a Second Explosive in the Chelsea Bombing On the witness stand, a detective recounted how the police disabled a bomb in Chelsea last year, four blocks from the site of an explosion earlier that night. By MICHAEL WILSON
Key Evidence in Chelsea Bombing Trial: Articles on Building Bombs Jurors at the trial of Ahmad Khan Rahimi, the suspect in last year’s bombing in Chelsea, were shown articles found on his laptop about how to make explosives. By MICHAEL WILSON
In Chelsea Bombing Trial, Witnesses Tell of Blood and Blindness On the first day of Ahmad Khan Rahimi’s trial, jurors viewed videos of the blast, and witnesses recounted the injuries they suffered as a result. By MICHAEL WILSON and COLIN MOYNIHAN
Village Voice Lays Off 13 of 17 Union Employees The cuts are a manifestation of tensions that some staff members said have roiled the newsroom for the last few months. By COLIN MOYNIHAN
Former Artistic Director Says Geffen Playhouse Forced Him Out In a lawsuit in Los Angeles County Superior Court, Randall Arney claims that his departure was a result of age and disability discrimination. By COLIN MOYNIHAN
Martin Shkreli Was ‘His Own Worst Enemy,’ Juror Says The jury thought Mr. Shkreli committed fraud, a juror said, but did not find “that he had the intent and purpose” to cause anyone to lose money. By STEPHANIE CLIFFORD and COLIN MOYNIHAN
A Tranquil Swimming Hole Is Overwhelmed by Its Own Internet Fame Since gaining popularity on Instagram and travel sites, the Blue Hole in the Catskills has been overrun by crowds and trash. Now state officials are trying to protect it. By COLIN MOYNIHAN
Black Employees Accuse Fire Department of Discrimination A lawsuit claims that African-American civilian employees of the New York Fire Department, on the whole, are paid lower wages than white employees with the same jobs. By COLIN MOYNIHAN
Can El Museo’s Leader Build a Bridge to Its Latino Future? Patrick Charpenel, a curator and philosopher, faces a rocky road, including the competition for financing in New York. By COLIN MOYNIHAN
Gifts Tied to Opioid Sales Invite a Question: Should Museums Vet Donors? The issue of how museums raise their money has resurfaced in the case of the Sacklers, a family of philanthropists whose company developed OxyContin. By COLIN MOYNIHAN
A Struggling Historic Library Says It Needs to Sell Its Art To the dismay of some residents of Jamestown, N.Y., its historic library is selling a respected collection of art because it needs additional funds. By COLIN MOYNIHAN
Court Blocks Berkshire Museum’s Sale of Rockwell Works and Other Art The museum has said the sale is necessary for its financial survival. By COLIN MOYNIHAN
Disputed Sale of Rockwells by Museum Can Go Forward, Judge Says The works are among those that the financially strapped Berkshire Museum plans to sell at an auction Monday at Sotheby’s in New York. By COLIN MOYNIHAN
Painter’s Ex-Assistant Charged With Stealing His Works Arturo Rucci, who worked for the artist Sean Scully, has been charged with stealing paintings valued at about half a million dollars. By COLIN MOYNIHAN
El Museo del Barrio to Close for Several Months During Renovations Renovations will include upgraded heating and cooling systems. There will be a new glass entryway and a mechanized lift for the orchestra pit. By COLIN MOYNIHAN
Ancient Limestone Relief Is Seized at European Art Fair Prosecutors and police officers seized a $1.2 million relief of a Persian soldier from a dealer’s booth on Friday afternoon at the Park Avenue Armory. By JAMES C. McKINLEY Jr
Protesters Deface Roosevelt Statue Outside Natural History Museum A group said it splashed red liquid on the statue because it views Theodore Roosevelt as a white supremacist. By COLIN MOYNIHAN
Chelsea Bomb Suspect Guilty in Attack That Sowed Terror Across Region Ahmad Khan Rahimi was convicted of carrying out a two-day bombing spree in New York and New Jersey in September 2016. The worst damage occurred on West 23rd Street. By MICHAEL WILSON
Looted Antiquity, Once at Met Museum, to Return to Lebanon Collectors agreed to lift their objection to the return of an ancient marble sculpture of a bull’s head after seeing evidence that it had been stolen By COLIN MOYNIHAN
How Police Surveillance Units Became Unlikely Historians Photographs and film shot by officers in the 1960s and 1970s document a turbulent era and some debated police practices. By COLIN MOYNIHAN
How the Bomb Squad Disabled a Second Explosive in the Chelsea Bombing On the witness stand, a detective recounted how the police disabled a bomb in Chelsea last year, four blocks from the site of an explosion earlier that night. By MICHAEL WILSON
Key Evidence in Chelsea Bombing Trial: Articles on Building Bombs Jurors at the trial of Ahmad Khan Rahimi, the suspect in last year’s bombing in Chelsea, were shown articles found on his laptop about how to make explosives. By MICHAEL WILSON
In Chelsea Bombing Trial, Witnesses Tell of Blood and Blindness On the first day of Ahmad Khan Rahimi’s trial, jurors viewed videos of the blast, and witnesses recounted the injuries they suffered as a result. By MICHAEL WILSON and COLIN MOYNIHAN
Village Voice Lays Off 13 of 17 Union Employees The cuts are a manifestation of tensions that some staff members said have roiled the newsroom for the last few months. By COLIN MOYNIHAN
Former Artistic Director Says Geffen Playhouse Forced Him Out In a lawsuit in Los Angeles County Superior Court, Randall Arney claims that his departure was a result of age and disability discrimination. By COLIN MOYNIHAN
Martin Shkreli Was ‘His Own Worst Enemy,’ Juror Says The jury thought Mr. Shkreli committed fraud, a juror said, but did not find “that he had the intent and purpose” to cause anyone to lose money. By STEPHANIE CLIFFORD and COLIN MOYNIHAN
A Tranquil Swimming Hole Is Overwhelmed by Its Own Internet Fame Since gaining popularity on Instagram and travel sites, the Blue Hole in the Catskills has been overrun by crowds and trash. Now state officials are trying to protect it. By COLIN MOYNIHAN