New York
Adams Taps Close Associate for Top Public Safety Job
Mayor Eric Adams of New York has chosen Kaz Daughtry, a deputy police commissioner known for his combative social media presence and close relationship with the mayor, to be deputy mayor for public safety, according to two people familiar with the matter.
Mr. Daughtry will replace Chauncey Parker, a former prosecutor who announced his resignation this week alongside three other deputy mayors.
The resignations followed a push last week by the Justice Department to drop corruption charges against Mr. Adams, an effort that the former acting U.S. attorney in Manhattan criticized as a quid pro quo to secure Mr. Adamsâs cooperation with the Trump administrationâs immigration crackdown.
As deputy mayor for public safety, Mr. Parker was deeply involved in decisions about the cityâs role in Mr. Trumpâs deportation efforts. He attended a meeting last week with Mr. Adams and Thomas Homan, Trumpâs border czar.
Mr. Daughtry had been a detective in the Police Department until Mr. Adams became mayor in 2022. Under the Adams administration, he was elevated to high-ranking positions despite a lack of policy, administrative or supervisory experience.
Mr. Daughtry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
A spokeswoman for Mr. Adams, Kayla Mamelak Altus, declined to discuss the appointment, saying: âPersonnel announcements are not official until we make them.â
Last month, Mr. Adams discussed Mr. Daughtryâs swift rise within the department in a YouTube interview with Corey Pegues, a retired deputy inspector.
Mr. Pegues asked Mr. Adams about internal âfrictionâ Mr. Daughtryâs elevation had caused.
âLove Kaz, man,â said Mr. Adams, a former police captain. âHe has lived up to everything that I expected of him.â
He added: âYes, people may look at it and say, well, you know, this guy has jumped quickly. Heâs not the first.â
Mr. Adams pointed to Jack Maple, who was a lieutenant with the cityâs transit police when Commissioner William J. Bratton appointed him as a deputy commissioner in 1994. Mr. Maple, who died in 2001, was considered the architect of the departmentâs Compstat program, helping to script the departmentâs crime control strategy.
Unlike Mr. Maple, however, Mr. Daughtry never supervised a unit before he was promoted. He joined the department in 2006 as a patrol officer in Brownsville, Brooklyn, and had become a detective before his promotion to assistant commissioner in July 2023. He was promoted to deputy commissioner of operations in February 2024.
His rise was widely attributed within the department to his close relationships with the mayor and the former chief of department, Jeffrey Maddrey. Mr. Daughtry has served as Mr. Maddreyâs driver and, later, as his chief of staff and City Hall liaison.
Mr. Daughtry had been close to Mr. Maddrey since Mr. Daughtry was a boy.
In an interview with The New York Times in August, Mr. Daughtry said it was Mr. Maddrey who encouraged him to become a police officer.
âI have the best teacher in the city,â he said. âI went to the University of Maddrey.â
Mr. Maddrey resigned in December after he was accused of coercing a female subordinate into sex in exchange for overtime opportunities. Mr. Maddrey has denied the allegations. He is now under federal investigation.
At the department, Mr. Daughtry quickly developed a reputation as a brash, confrontational executive, who slammed reporters and detractors on social media and exuded a tough, streetwise persona in videos posted by the departmentâs media relations office.
Videos have circulated of him commanding officers in Harlem to use a stun gun on a man who was already on the ground but appeared to be resisting arrest. In another video, made when he was still a detective, he was seen charging into a crowd of protesters in Lower Manhattan and throwing a demonstrator to the pavement.
More recently, Mr. Daughtry helped created a community response team, a specialized unit that focuses on quality-of-life issues such as illegal motorbikes and scooters.
Mr. Adams praised the team, but it has also been criticized for being too aggressive. In November, the Police Departmentâs inspector general issued a report saying that the 165-member unit had expanded quickly without providing a clear sense of its mission. The report said it was also marked by a lack of transparency that risked ânoncompliance with the law, ethical breaches and negative policing outcomes.â
During the interview with The Times in August, Mr. Daughtry downplayed his relationship with Mr. Adams.
âWeâre not friends,â he said. âHeâs the boss. Youâre not friends with the boss.â
Mr. Daughtry also dismissed the criticism that he lacked experience as a manager, saying his decisions are based on moving the department forward and acting in the best interest of police officers.
âI get criticized all the time,â he said. âPeople are always going to criticize every decision that I make. And I really, I really donât care.â
New York
Daniel Radcliffe, John Lithgow and Lesley Manville Pick Up Tony Nominations
A starry season on Broadway means a starry list of Tony nominees: John Lithgow, Daniel Radcliffe, Lesley Manville and Rose Byrne all picked up nods on Tuesday morning as the first groups of nominees were announced on CBS.
Among the other nominees for performances in leading roles are two longtime Broadway favorites: Nathan Lane and Kelli OâHara. This is OâHaraâs ninth Tony nomination (she has won once).
The race for best new musical â traditionally the category with the greatest financial impact â came down to four shows, all of which could use a box-office boost: âThe Lost Boys,â âTitanĂque,â âSchmigadoon!â and âTwo Strangers (Carry a Cake Across New York).â
For best new play, the nominees include Bess Wohlâs âLiberation,â which on Monday won the Pulitzer Prize for drama, as well as âThe Balusters,â by David Lindsay-Abaire; âGiant,â by Mark Rosenblatt; and âLittle Bear Ridge Road,â by Samuel D. Hunter.
Lane (âDeath of a Salesmanâ), Lithgow (âGiantâ) and Radcliffe (âEvery Brilliant Thingâ) were all nominated as best actor in a play, alongside Will Harrison (âPunchâ) and Mark Strong (âOedipusâ). Byrne and OâHara, co-starring in a revival of âFallen Angels,â will face Carrie Coon (âBugâ), Susannah Flood (âLiberationâ) and Manville (âOedipusâ), in the race for best leading actress in a play.
The nominees for best leading actress in a musical are all first-time nominees: Sara Chase (âSchmigadoon!â), Stephanie Hsu (âThe Rocky Horror Showâ), Caissie Levy (âRagtimeâ), Marla Mindelle (âTitanĂqueâ) and Christiani Pitts (âTwo Strangersâ). The race for best leading actor in a musical, dominated throughout the season by Joshua Henry of âRagtime,â also features Nicholas Christopher (âChessâ), Luke Evans (âThe Rocky Horror Showâ), Sam Tutty (âTwo Strangersâ) and Brandon Uranowitz (âRagtimeâ).
The nominations are being announced in New York by the actors Uzo Aduba and Darren Criss. A half-dozen top categories were first made public on âCBS Mornings,â and the full slate is set to be read at 9 a.m. on the Tony Awards YouTube channel.
The nominations announcement begins a monthlong award period as the 857 Tony voters â mostly people who work in theater or who help finance Broadway shows â finish seeing the latest productions, while the productions, constrained by newly restrictive rules limiting campaigning and promotion, look for ways to remind voters about the strengths of their nominees. The awards ceremony will take place on June 7 at Radio City Music Hall, hosted by the musician Pink and broadcast on CBS.
The season has been a mixed bag for Broadway. Overall attendance and grosses are up over last season, but profitability rates are low because of skyrocketing production costs, and there is rising consumer concern about ticket prices. Only six new musicals opened this season, down from 14 last season.
The Tony Awards, which honor plays and musicals performed in the 41 Manhattan theaters that make up Broadway, are presented by the Broadway League and the American Theater Wing. This year, 19 plays and 11 musicals are eligible for awards because they opened on Broadway between April 28, 2025, and April 26, 2026.
The nominees were chosen by a committee of 55 people with theater expertise or experience, but who do not work on, or have a financial interest in, the seasonâs shows.
Some noncompetitive awards have already been announced.
Lifetime achievement awards will go to André Bishop, who last year stepped down after leading Lincoln Center Theater for 33 years; Jules Fisher, a lighting designer; and James Lapine, the playwright and director. Mary-Mitchell Campbell, a music director, will receive the Isabelle Stevenson Award, which honors volunteerism.
This yearâs Tony Honors for Excellence in the Theater will go to the 1/52 Project, which supports early career designers, as well as to Jake Bell, a production manager; Kenn Lubin, a signage designer; and Loren Plotkin, an entertainment lawyer.
New York
Four Epstein Victims Ask N.Y. Lawmakers to Open His Estate to Lawsuits
Seated before an array of New York State senators on Monday, Lara Blume McGee was asked by one lawmaker why it had taken her so long to go public with the details of how Jeffrey Epstein had abused her.
She paused for a moment, another victim of Mr. Epsteinâs by her side, and leaned forward to speak into the microphone in the State Capitol.
âFear,â said Ms. Blume McGee, who had been 17 and an aspiring model when Mr. Epstein abused her. It took her about 20 years to come forward.
âJeffrey Epstein was a great manipulator,â she added, explaining that she feared being sued and having her life ruined by his capacity for retribution.
Ms. Blume McGee was among four women who testified in the State Capitol about the trauma Mr. Epstein inflicted upon them and the lasting damage he did to their lives. The appearance of two of the women â Ms. Blume McGee and Carine Silva De Deus â had been expected, but two other women â Glendys Espinal and Alexandra Golematis â also came forward. Both said they were speaking publicly for the first time about their experiences with Mr. Epstein.
Their testimony comes as State Senator Zellnor Myrie, a Democrat from Brooklyn, seeks support for legislation intended to update state sex-trafficking laws. The goal, Mr. Myrie said, was to better equip the state to handle the kinds of crimes that Mr. Epstein was accused of committing by criminalizing the actions of people who helped perpetuate his behavior.
If passed, the laws would also allow Mr. Epsteinâs victims to sue his associates and his estate in state court for punitive damages. State law prevents people from seeking punitive damages from the estate of someone who has died.
âTrafficking is not sustained by one single actor. It is not just Jeffrey Epstein,â said Kathryn Robb, a lawyer who has been pushing for these sorts of legislative changes across the country.
âIt is a network that includes financial backers, businesses and other intermediaries, who often escape accountability,â she added. âThis bill will disrupt that.â
Ms. Espinal, a Bronx native, said she first met Mr. Epstein during her sophomore year of high school, when she was brought in to give him massages. The demands from the financier quickly escalated, and she said she still has post-traumatic stress disorder from these interactions, which occurred between 2005 and 2008.
âWhat was going through my head at the time was just pure shame and intimidation,â she said.
Mr. Myrieâs bill, which has no companion legislation in the Assembly as of yet, is not state lawmakersâ only effort to reckon with Mr. Epsteinâs legacy and the pain he caused hundreds of women.
Assemblywoman Pamela Hunter, a Democrat from the Syracuse area, and Senator Liz Krueger, a Democrat representing parts of Manhattan, have introduced a bill that would close what they call the âEpstein loophole.â In the stateâs laws relating to prostitution, the buyers of a sex workerâs services, or those facilitating them, are excluded from punishment under the statute relating to people being punished for âadvancing prostitution.â
âNew York should act quickly and close the Epstein loophole, which would have prevented men like Jeffrey Epstein and Sean âDiddyâ Combs from being charged with trafficking at the state level,â Ms. Hunter said in a statement last month.
âThis bill is necessary to ensure that traffickers and sex buyers are held accountable, while survivors of sexual exploitation are given the care and support they need,â she added, explaining that the law would also reduce punishments for those who perform sex work.
Mr. Epstein and his estate have settled several lawsuits with victims in recent years. The New York Times reported in February that a recent court filing showed that his estate was valued at $120 million, though the estimate might be an undercount.
Nathan Werksman, a lawyer for the women who testified on Monday, said that time was of the essence to change the law and give Ms. Blume McGee and others the chance to seek financial damages from Mr. Epsteinâs estate.
Mr. Myrieâs bill, which the Senate Codes Committee passed on Monday, creates a one-year look-back period so that people can sue for actions that fall outside the statute of limitations. In this manner, it resembles the Adult Survivors Act, which in 2022 opened a one-time window in New York permitting people to file sex-abuse lawsuits after the statute of limitations had expired.
âThe Epstein Estate is a finite amount of money that is dwindling every day, every week, and every month,â Mr. Werksman said.
âJeffrey Epstein was able to escape criminal accountability, and his estate can escape civil liability if the estate dwindles down to nothing,â he added.
Lawyers for Mr. Epsteinâs estate did not respond to emails seeking comment.
New York
How a Hairdresser and Painter Lives on $70,000 a Year in Chelsea
How can people possibly afford to live in one of the most expensive cities on the planet? Itâs a question New Yorkers hear a lot, often delivered with a mix of awe, pity and confusion.
We surveyed hundreds of New Yorkers about how they spend, splurge and save. We found that many people â rich, poor or somewhere in between â live life as a series of small calculations that add up to one big question: What makes living in New York worth it?
For almost 32 years, Gerald DeCockâs life in New York City has revolved around his apartment in the Hotel Chelsea. His 750-square-foot studio is where he paints, does yoga every morning, meets clients for haircuts and never, ever cooks â all for $2,700 a month, a steal for the prime Manhattan location. Rooms in the recently renovated hotel typically start at about $500 a night.
That may all be about to change. After a yearslong legal battle, the hotelâs owners may evict Mr. DeCock, who believes he has the only unit that is not rent-stabilized in the residential side of the building.
He isnât ready to think about starting over. He knows it will be difficult to find a place he can afford downtown, near his friends and his favorite restaurants.
Now, Mr. DeCock is hoping for a miracle â or at least a check from the buildingâs owners that can help him land on his feet. (The hotelâs press representatives did not reply to requests for comment.)
Between cutting hair and selling paintings, Mr. DeCock, who is 67, made $70,000 last year.
No ConEd Bills
Mr. DeCock arrived in New York in the early 1990s after a stint in Paris, doing hair for photo shoots. He bounced around apartments in Chelsea before a friend told him about a newly available unit in the hotel, where she lived at the time.
The $2,000 per month studio was small, but had high ceilings. It looked like the somewhat sterile hotel room it had been, with white walls and not much else to it, except for an old stove that never got especially hot.
He moved in on Oct. 1, 1994, and has been there ever since.
There is no sign that any corner of the walls was ever bare. The apartment is a riot of color, with every inch, including the floors and one side of the oven, painted in bursts of hot pink and gold and purple. His paintings line the walls, and there is always incense burning. All the other doors on the floor are painted a muted black. He has papered his with overlapping triangles of fuchsia, silver and bright blue.
Over the years, as Mr. DeCock has decorated and redecorated, he has made his apartment the hub of his social life and his workplace.
He sees clients for haircuts at his home, or sometimes meets them in their own homes, so he does not have to rent space at a salon. He charges $150 to $200 per haircut and has been seeing some of the same clients for decades. Last month, he made about $6,000 on haircuts alone.
The apartment is warm and well-insulated in the winter, because itâs on a high floor. Though the studio tends to get stuffy in the summer, the air conditioning bill has always been covered by the hotel, because itâs impossible to sort out whether the residents or hotel guests who share the hotelâs floors are using the energy.
Mr. DeCock doesnât think heâs ever seen a ConEd bill for this apartment.
Home Is Where the Fumes Are
The walls are covered in a patchwork of paintings he has created on his kitchen table or on the floor, largely motifs of moons, suns, crosses and other âspiritualâ symbols.
Most of his paintings are done on 16 inch by 20 inch canvases and sell for $500, though he has one 10 foot by 10 foot piece he is hoping to sell for $20,000.
He sold a package of 21 paintings to the hotel, at a 20 percent discount, for about $8,680 total. He sees the sale as a good reason for the hotelâs owners to keep him in his home, even though they could turn his apartment into a large hotel room. âIâm your brand, man,â he said, referring to the owners. âWhat are you doing?â
As Mr. DeCock has started to face the likelihood that heâll soon have to move, he hosted a sale to empty out dozens of paintings. He made about $6,000 over a few days, as friends, neighbors and at least one local celebrity streamed in and out of his apartment, toting paintings under their arms as they left.
Mr. DeCock tries to keep the cost of his painting materials low. He sticks to inexpensive canvasses from Michaels or Blick Art Materials right across the street, where a pack of twenty 16 x 20 inch canvasses sells for $51.49. And he uses only acrylic paint, which is less expensive than oil-based paint. It also gives off fewer fumes, which is helpful, since he paints a few feet away from his lofted bed.
âI call this place the vortex,â Mr. DeCock said of his apartment. âIt brings out the creative juices.â
In My Neighborhood
Mr. DeCock hasnât left New York in as long as he can remember. He barely even goes to Brooklyn.
âEverything I do is in the neighborhood,â he said. Itâs where he meets friends, eats his meals and takes long walks on the piers by the Hudson River.
What Mr. DeCock doesnât do, he said, is buy clothes or shop for much of anything, including groceries. He does not drink coffee at home. His fridge is empty save for a bag of grapes recently brought over by a friend, and he stores his paint bottles above the freezer. There is a sole bottle of vinegar in the pantry.
Mr. DeCock, who is a vegetarian, stopped cooking after the pandemic, when he admitted to himself that he was terrible at it.
Now, he goes out for almost every meal â although he often skips lunch or dinner without noticing. He might run across the street for an order of the $27 seitan scaloppine at his favorite vegan restaurant, or walk a few blocks to a Mexican restaurant, where heâll order the vegetarian enchiladas for $24.50.
When Mr. DeCock is home and not working or sleeping, heâs often watching television. His big splurge is cable, his Spectrum bill is $250 a month. He also pays for Netflix, $19.99 a month, and Hulu, $18.99 a month. A Colorado native, Mr. DeCock sometimes misses nature, so he compensates by watching reality television shows about people who have to survive in the wilderness.
It reminds him that heâs happy to live in New York and really happy to be in his apartment at the Chelsea.
âIâve had a life here,â he said. âItâs defined me.â
We are talking to New Yorkers about how they spend, splurge and save.
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