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The Lincoln Tunnel is Phasing Out Cash — Permanently This Time

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The Lincoln Tunnel is Phasing Out Cash — Permanently This Time

Beneath the town’s plan, the minimal hourly price would apply to a employee’s complete “journey time” every week, which might be calculated from the second a employee accepts an order to the second the supply is full. It will embrace the time it takes the deliverer to go to a restaurant and the time she or he spends ready to select up the order, in addition to the time spent in site visitors on the best way to creating the supply. The speed can be phased in over two years, beginning at $17.87 per hour subsequent 12 months.

The app companies would additionally need to pay the minimal hourly price on the whole quantity of “on-call time” that every one the supply staff collectively spend ready for orders every week.

The app companies say the town’s plan would enhance their labor and supply prices, which may imply increased costs for patrons and fewer orders for eating places. In addition they preserve that it may imply much less versatile schedules for staff. “These staff are going to be pitted towards one another to get one of the best time and site,” Josh Gold, a spokesman for Uber Eats, advised my colleague Winnie Hu.

At the moment, app-based meals supply staff earn a median of $14.18 an hour, together with ideas and funds from the apps, in accordance with a metropolis report. However their bills run $3.06 per hour, and their take-home pay can drop to as little as $4.03 per hour with out ideas.

The proposed $23.82 hourly price contains $2.26 an hour to cowl bills and one other $1.70 an hour as a result of deliverers should not have staff’ compensation insurance coverage. The bottom price of $19.86 per hour is meant to match the minimal pay price for Uber and Lyft drivers.

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William Medina, a supply employee in Queens who’s a member of Los Deliveristas Unidos, is all too conscious that point is cash, particularly when he waits. And waits. Thirty minutes can go by with out an order. Generally he waits longer. And if there isn’t any order, there isn’t any cash.

“I’m all the time prepared,” mentioned Medina, an immigrant from Colombia who makes a median of $150 to $200, principally in ideas, for working as much as 12 hours a day. He rides a used moped that he purchased for $3,800 and spends about $300 a month on bills, together with gasoline and GPS monitoring in case it’s stolen.

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New York

Video: Trump Supporters Rally Outside New York Courthouse

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Video: Trump Supporters Rally Outside New York Courthouse

new video loaded: Trump Supporters Rally Outside New York Courthouse

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Trump Supporters Rally Outside New York Courthouse

Pro-Trump protesters gathered near the Manhattan courthouse where the former president’s criminal trial is taking place.

Crowd: Donald Trump did nothing wrong. Donald Trump did nothing wrong. Donald Trump did nothing wrong.

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Recent episodes in U.S. Courts

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Who Are Key Players in the Trump Manhattan Criminal Trial?

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Who Are Key Players in the Trump Manhattan Criminal Trial?

On Monday, Donald J. Trump is set to become the first former U.S. president to face a criminal trial. Manhattan prosecutors charged him last year with 34 felony counts of falsifying business records, accusing Mr. Trump of covering up a sex scandal with the porn star Stormy Daniels around the 2016 presidential election. Mr. Trump, the presumptive Republican nominee for president, has pleaded not guilty.

The Court

Justice Juan M. Merchan

Presiding Judge

Justice Merchan presided over the 2022 criminal trial and conviction of the Trump Organization and some of its executives, fining the company the maximum penalty of $1.6 million. A 17-year veteran of the court, Justice Merchan has been subject to verbal attacks by Mr. Trump, who has also targeted the judge’s family.

Central Figures

Stormy Daniels

Porn Director, Producer and Actress

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Just before the 2016 election, Ms. Daniels received a $130,000 hush-money payment from Mr. Trump’s attorney, Michael Cohen, in exchange for her silence about her story of a 2006 sexual encounter with Mr. Trump. The former president has denied the encounter, and has frequently attacked Ms. Daniels since the payment became public in 2018.

Michael Cohen

Former Trump Lawyer and “Fixer”

Mr. Cohen has said that the hush-money payment he made to Ms. Daniels was paid at Mr. Trump’s direction. He has also said that Mr. Trump covered up the deal through a series of reimbursements to Mr. Cohen, in order to avoid a sex scandal during and after the 2016 election. Mr. Cohen later served time in prison after pleading guilty in 2018 to federal campaign finance charges related to the hush-money scheme. Mr. Trump has called Mr. Cohen a liar and tried to block his testimony in this case by accusing him of perjury.

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David Pecker

Former Publisher of The National Enquirer

Leading up to the 2016 election, Mr. Pecker, who was the publisher at the time, agreed to work with Mr. Cohen to suppress negative stories about Mr. Trump, a practice known in the tabloid world as “catch and kill.” Mr. Pecker, a longtime Trump friend, brokered the hush-money deals with Ms. Daniels and a former former Playboy model, Karen McDougal, who said she had an affair with Mr. Trump.

Dylan Howard

Former Editor of The National Enquirer

In the effort to bury negative stories about Mr. Trump before the 2016 election, Mr. Howard, who was the editor at the time, connected Mr. Cohen with a lawyer for Ms. Daniels, setting the hush-money deal in motion.

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Karen McDougal

Former Playboy Model

As part of the scheme to suppress negative stories about Mr. Trump before the 2016 election, American Media Inc., the parent company to the National Enquirer, paid Ms. McDougal $150,000 for the rights to her story of an affair with Mr. Trump in order to bury it. Mr. Trump denies the affair.

Keith Davidson

Stormy Daniels’s Lawyer

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In October 2016, Mr. Davidson negotiated the hush-money deal with Mr. Cohen to buy Ms. Daniels’s silence about the sexual encounter she said she had with Mr. Trump.

Hope Hicks

Former Trump Spokeswoman

Ms. Hicks, who worked on Mr. Trump’s 2016 campaign and served in the White House until 2018, spoke with Mr. Trump and Mr. Cohen in 2016 on the day they learned that Ms. Daniels wanted money for her story, and again with Mr. Cohen on the day after he wired the $130,000 payment to Ms. Daniels’s lawyer.

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Jeffrey McConney

Former Trump Organization Controller

Mr. McConney facilitated payments to Mr. Cohen – which served as reimbursement for the $130,000 paid to Ms. Daniels – that were falsely described as “legal expenses” in Trump Organization payment records.

Alan Garten

Trump Organization Chief Legal Officer

Mr. Garten previously told a federal judge that payments by the Trump Organization to Mr. Cohen in 2017 were to reimburse him for a settlement payment to Ms. Daniels, and to compensate him for private counsel services for Mr. Trump.

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Prosecution Team at Manhattan District Attorney’s Office

Alvin Bragg

District Attorney

Out of various Trump investigations he inherited when he took office in 2022, Mr. Bragg zeroed in on the hush-money deal and resurrected the case, leading last year to Mr. Trump’s first criminal indictment. Now Mr. Bragg is set to be the first criminal prosecutor to put Mr. Trump on trial, which has made him a frequent target of the former president’s attacks.

Matthew Colangelo

Senior Counsel

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A former high-ranking official at the New York attorney general’s office, Mr. Colangelo previously led a civil inquiry into Mr. Trump and oversaw an investigation into the Donald J. Trump Foundation, which led to its dissolution.

Joshua Steinglass

Senior Trial Counsel

After helping to lead the effort to convict the Trump Organization in 2022, Mr. Steinglass was recently added to the prosecution team. He typically prosecutes significant violent crime and secured a conviction against two Proud Boy extremists for a violent brawl in 2019.

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Christopher Conroy

Investigations Division Senior Advisor

Mr. Conroy, who has been at the Manhattan district attorney’s office since 1996 and previously led the major economic crimes unit, has worked on the investigations into Mr. Trump longer than any other member of the team.

Rebecca Mangold

Assistant District Attorney

She joined Mr. Bragg’s major economic crimes unit in 2022 after clerking for a U.S. District Court judge in New Jersey and working in private practice on criminal and regulatory investigations.

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Defense Team

Todd Blanche

Trump Lawyer

A former federal prosecutor, Mr. Blanche left a large law firm to defend Mr. Trump in this case. He is also representing Mr. Trump in the federal classified documents case and the federal election interference case.

Susan Necheles

Trump Lawyer

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A lawyer for Mr. Trump since 2021, Ms. Necheles also represented the Trump Organization in the criminal tax fraud trial in Manhattan, which resulted in a conviction and $1.6 million fine. She previously represented defendants in major organized-crime and public-corruption cases.

Gedalia M. Stern

Trump Lawyer

As a law partner to Ms. Necheles, Mr. Stern also defended the Trump Organization in its criminal tax fraud trial and has previously represented clients charged with bribery, fraud and conspiracy.

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The newest addition to Mr. Trump’s trial team, Mr. Bove served as a federal prosecutor in New York before turning to private practice where he has represented defendants charged with white-collar crimes.

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New York

Read Manhattan District Attorney’s Filing on Potential Trump Trial Delay

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Read Manhattan District Attorney’s Filing on Potential Trump Trial Delay

light of the distinctive circumstances described below, the People do not oppose a brief adjournment of up to 30 days to permit sufficient time for defendant to review the USAO productions.

Regarding the 73,000 pages of records produced by the USAO as of the date of defendant’s motion, the People’s initial review indicated that those materials were largely irrelevant to the subject matter of this case, with the exception of approximately 172 pages of witness statements that defendant would have adequate time to review and address before trial. Yesterday afternoon, however, the USAO produced approximately 31,000 pages of additional records to both the People and the defense in response to defendant’s subpoena, and also indicated that an additional production would follow by next week.

We note that the timing of the current production of additional materials from the USAO is a function of defendant’s own delay. The People diligently sought the full grand jury record related to Cohen’s campaign finance convictions from the USAO last year, including exculpatory material and (1) grand jury minutes and tapes; (2) witness lists and other documents identifying the names or identities of grand jury witnesses; (3) any grand jury subpoenas and documents returned pursuant to those subpoenas; (4) exhibits presented to the grand jury; (5) to the extent within the scope of Rule 6(e), summaries of witness interviews occurring outside the grand jury; and (6) to the extent within the scope of Rule 6(e), search warrant affidavits or other applications that contain evidence from the grand jury, and evidence seized pursuant to those warrants. In response, the USAO produced a subset of the materials we requested, which we timely and fully disclosed to defendant on June 8, 2023, more than nine months ago. Despite having access to those materials since June, defendant raised no concerns to the People about the sufficiency of our efforts to obtain materials from the USAO before last week; instead, defendant waited until January 18,

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