After Manhattan Truck Attack, Sessions Says U.S. Will ‘Use All Lawful Tools’ Against Terrorists Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ remarks came a day after President Trump threatened to send the suspect to the military prison at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. By BENJAMIN MUELLER
Finding a Rootless Life in U.S., Sayfullo Saipov Turned to Radicalism The man charged in the Manhattan truck attack won the immigration lottery when he came to the United States in 2010. But a life of disappointments awakened “monsters inside.” By KIM BARKER, JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN and MICHAEL SCHWIRTZ
Sayfullo Saipov, the Suspect in the New York Terror Attack, and His Past The authorities spent Tuesday digging into the past of Mr.Saipov, an Uzbek national who was named in the Manhattan attack that killed eight. By COREY KILGANNON and JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN
Indictment Issued in Case of 18-Year-Old Who Said 2 Officers Raped Her The charges stem from an encounter in September in which a woman says that two detectives handcuffed her and assaulted her. By AL BAKER, ALAN FEUER and JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN
Suffolk Prosecutor Charged With Obstructing Police Assault Investigation Thomas J. Spota, the Suffolk County district attorney, was indicted on charges of trying to derail an inquiry into James Burke, the former Suffolk County police chief. By JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN and ALAN FEUER
Brooklyn Judge Seeks to Examine Prevalence of Police Lying In an unusual move, a federal judge in Brooklyn has told the city to prepare for a court hearing that will examine whether police lying goes largely unpunished. By JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN
The Case Against an N.Y.P.D. Detective Detective Kevin Desormeau has made hundreds of arrests in his decade on the force. But prosecutors now say he struggled with one aspect of police work: telling the truth. By NILO TABRIZY and JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN
He Excelled as a Detective, Until Prosecutors Stopped Believing Him Detective Kevin Desormeau’s indictment on perjury charges adds to the growing belief that lying is a persistent problem for the New York Police Department. By JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN
The Daily Listen to ‘The Daily’: The A.C.L.U. and the Alt-Right A decision to defend the organizer of a white supremacist rally has provoked soul-searching within the civil-liberties group. By MICHAEL BARBARO
After 78 Killings, a Honduran Drug Lord Partners With the U.S. Devis Leonel Rivera Maradiaga led a brutal drug gang that ferried tons of cocaine north. Then he approached the Drug Enforcement Administration for a deal. By JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN and BENJAMIN WEISER
Foreman Killed by Fired Worker at Manhattan Construction Site The gunman, who was fired two days ago, shot and killed a foreman at the site on 59th Street before killing himself, the police said. By JEFFERY C. MAYS and AL BAKER
After Charlottesville, A.C.L.U. Braces for the Next Alt-Right Case With the decision to defend the organizer of a white supremacist rally still reverberating internally, the group considers its role for the future. By JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN
Discrimination Based on Sex Is Debated in Case of Gay Sky Diver Donald Zarda was fired from his job as an instructor after telling a female student he was gay. Lawyers for the federal government have opposing positions on the federal discrimination law. By JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN
Police Release Body Camera Footage of Shooting Death in Bronx The shooting of Miguel Richards on Sept. 6 was the first fatal police shooting captured by the video recording devices worn by officers in New York. By ASHLEY SOUTHALL and JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN
Police Likely to Release Body Camera Footage in Fatal Bronx Shooting, Commissioner Says The encounter last week was the first fatal police shooting in New York City captured by body cameras. By JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN
New York to Welcome Supersize Cargo Ship Into its Waters The Bayonne Bridge has been raised and New York Harbor has been dredged to accommodate the giant container vessels. By JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN
After Backing Alt-Right in Charlottesville, A.C.L.U. Wrestles With Its Role The group’s defense of a planned rally in Virginia, before the violence, has parallels to its seminal role in a proposed neo-Nazi gathering in Skokie, Ill., in 1977. By JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN
Federal Jail in Brooklyn Faces a String of Sexual Assault Cases The Metropolitan Detention Center has relatively few female inmates. Yet it accounts for a disproportionate number of sexual assault cases involving them. By JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN
To Curb Violence, Start Time of Caribbean Festival Is Changed The annual J’ouvert event in Brooklyn, often marred by shootings, will begin at 6 a.m. instead of 4 a.m. this Sept. 4. By ELIZABETH A. HARRIS
Daughter of Slain Police Officer Is Born, 2 Years After Father’s Death His widow had asked the hospital to preserve his sperm hours after he died. On Tuesday, a daughter was born to the widow of Officer Wenjian Liu. By JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN
After Manhattan Truck Attack, Sessions Says U.S. Will ‘Use All Lawful Tools’ Against Terrorists Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ remarks came a day after President Trump threatened to send the suspect to the military prison at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. By BENJAMIN MUELLER
Finding a Rootless Life in U.S., Sayfullo Saipov Turned to Radicalism The man charged in the Manhattan truck attack won the immigration lottery when he came to the United States in 2010. But a life of disappointments awakened “monsters inside.” By KIM BARKER, JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN and MICHAEL SCHWIRTZ
Sayfullo Saipov, the Suspect in the New York Terror Attack, and His Past The authorities spent Tuesday digging into the past of Mr.Saipov, an Uzbek national who was named in the Manhattan attack that killed eight. By COREY KILGANNON and JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN
Indictment Issued in Case of 18-Year-Old Who Said 2 Officers Raped Her The charges stem from an encounter in September in which a woman says that two detectives handcuffed her and assaulted her. By AL BAKER, ALAN FEUER and JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN
Suffolk Prosecutor Charged With Obstructing Police Assault Investigation Thomas J. Spota, the Suffolk County district attorney, was indicted on charges of trying to derail an inquiry into James Burke, the former Suffolk County police chief. By JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN and ALAN FEUER
Brooklyn Judge Seeks to Examine Prevalence of Police Lying In an unusual move, a federal judge in Brooklyn has told the city to prepare for a court hearing that will examine whether police lying goes largely unpunished. By JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN
The Case Against an N.Y.P.D. Detective Detective Kevin Desormeau has made hundreds of arrests in his decade on the force. But prosecutors now say he struggled with one aspect of police work: telling the truth. By NILO TABRIZY and JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN
He Excelled as a Detective, Until Prosecutors Stopped Believing Him Detective Kevin Desormeau’s indictment on perjury charges adds to the growing belief that lying is a persistent problem for the New York Police Department. By JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN
The Daily Listen to ‘The Daily’: The A.C.L.U. and the Alt-Right A decision to defend the organizer of a white supremacist rally has provoked soul-searching within the civil-liberties group. By MICHAEL BARBARO
After 78 Killings, a Honduran Drug Lord Partners With the U.S. Devis Leonel Rivera Maradiaga led a brutal drug gang that ferried tons of cocaine north. Then he approached the Drug Enforcement Administration for a deal. By JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN and BENJAMIN WEISER
Foreman Killed by Fired Worker at Manhattan Construction Site The gunman, who was fired two days ago, shot and killed a foreman at the site on 59th Street before killing himself, the police said. By JEFFERY C. MAYS and AL BAKER
After Charlottesville, A.C.L.U. Braces for the Next Alt-Right Case With the decision to defend the organizer of a white supremacist rally still reverberating internally, the group considers its role for the future. By JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN
Discrimination Based on Sex Is Debated in Case of Gay Sky Diver Donald Zarda was fired from his job as an instructor after telling a female student he was gay. Lawyers for the federal government have opposing positions on the federal discrimination law. By JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN
Police Release Body Camera Footage of Shooting Death in Bronx The shooting of Miguel Richards on Sept. 6 was the first fatal police shooting captured by the video recording devices worn by officers in New York. By ASHLEY SOUTHALL and JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN
Police Likely to Release Body Camera Footage in Fatal Bronx Shooting, Commissioner Says The encounter last week was the first fatal police shooting in New York City captured by body cameras. By JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN
New York to Welcome Supersize Cargo Ship Into its Waters The Bayonne Bridge has been raised and New York Harbor has been dredged to accommodate the giant container vessels. By JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN
After Backing Alt-Right in Charlottesville, A.C.L.U. Wrestles With Its Role The group’s defense of a planned rally in Virginia, before the violence, has parallels to its seminal role in a proposed neo-Nazi gathering in Skokie, Ill., in 1977. By JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN
Federal Jail in Brooklyn Faces a String of Sexual Assault Cases The Metropolitan Detention Center has relatively few female inmates. Yet it accounts for a disproportionate number of sexual assault cases involving them. By JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN
To Curb Violence, Start Time of Caribbean Festival Is Changed The annual J’ouvert event in Brooklyn, often marred by shootings, will begin at 6 a.m. instead of 4 a.m. this Sept. 4. By ELIZABETH A. HARRIS
Daughter of Slain Police Officer Is Born, 2 Years After Father’s Death His widow had asked the hospital to preserve his sperm hours after he died. On Tuesday, a daughter was born to the widow of Officer Wenjian Liu. By JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN