Charity Busters
Geoffrey Gray |
Why Attorney General Eliot Spitzer’s nonprofit crackdown may not be all it’s cracked up to be.
Why Attorney General Eliot Spitzer’s nonprofit crackdown may not be all it’s cracked up to be.
Harlem city council candidate claims he was strong-armed by a public official during his campaign.
It’s not easy being a small manufacturer in New York City. Now a pending federal budget cut could make it even tougher.
City council candidate Abraham Wasserman use public financing for his ill-fated campaign–and paid out thousands to his own wife and kids.
City council incumbent Vincent Gentile accuses his Republican opponent, Pat Russo, of unfairly cashing in on public campaign funds.
Kermit Eady, founder of the Black United Fund of New York, was recently canned amid allegations of fiscal impropriety. As he fights for his job, BUFNY slowly unravels.
The D.A.’s Narcotics Eviction Program helps landlords evict drug dealers from apartment buildings. It’s been enormously successful. It also kicks out tenants who’ve done nothing wrong.
Bank of America and developer Douglas Durst already have preliminary approval for $650 million in Liberty Bonds for the bank’s new midtown headquarters. But guess what? The deal may be getting even sweeter.
City pols demand more thorough inspections from the Department of Housing Preservation and Development.