
Gov. Hochul, Mayor Adams pitch DNC for nominating convention in NYC
Party poohbahs are here to be wined and dined and see for themselves why the Big Apple is the place to be in 2024.
Watch CBS News
Marcia Kramer joined CBS News New York in 1990 as an investigative and political reporter. Previously, she was the City Hall bureau chief at the New York Daily News.
Her reports on the local, national, and international level have garnered her multiple honors, including a George Foster Peabody award, two Edward R. Murrow awards, nine Emmy awards, two New York Press Club Golden Typewriter awards, and a first-place award from the Associated Press for her investigative reports. Her work has been recognized in editorials in the New York Times and the New York Post, as well as in a piece entitled "Marcia Kramer: Journalism at its Best," which ran in the New York Observer in March 1998.
Kramer broke a story exposing the improper use of lights and sirens by city government officials. Her story led to Mayor Michael Bloomberg's crackdown resulting in the removal of lights and sirens from hundreds of vehicles. Other credits include a report on people stealing school supplies and selling them on the black market, a story on schools that served old food past its freshness date, and a film exposing school board members vacationing in Las Vegas on taxpayer dollars. She has also been cited for her reports on the Swiss banks and Nazi gold that culminated in a decision by the Swiss to finally give back the money. Kramer is also known for her 1992 interview with President Bill Clinton in which he confessed he "never inhaled."
Party poohbahs are here to be wined and dined and see for themselves why the Big Apple is the place to be in 2024.
Bragg, who has a reputation as a progressive, soft-on-crime prosecutor, is really on the hot seat in this case.
"We do see a number of people that we are re-arresting for the same offenses over and over again," NYPD Commissioner Keechant Sewell said.
Eric Gonzalez has often been at the forefront of innovative programs to deal with crime. Now he wants to tie gun violence education to mental health programs in schools.
Dramatic video shows the raids mounted by a joint fugitive task force made up of U.S. Marshals and NYPD officers.
Hizzoner says the drivers with paper license plates are often up to no good, using the cars to commit violent acts.
The governor says the new law that will severely limit the places New Yorkers can carry weapons.
Many argue the most effective way to cut down crime is to stop it before it even happens. The answers on how to do that might lie with the people who have personally been there before.
Despite New York's strict gun laws, Joint Firearms Task Force is being kept busy confiscating trafficked weapons.
Shootings spiked in June and July of 2020, reaching record levels not seen since 2006. We examine the reasons why.
The high court ruled guns could be banned in "sensitive places," but it wasn't clear about what locations qualify.
She is focusing on Thursday's special session of the Legislature to find ways to limit the effect of the Supreme Court ruling.
Gov. Hochul will take on two challengers for the Democratic nomination, and there's a four-way Republican free for all.
In a blue state like New York, political experts say the ruling is the political equivalent of manna from heaven.
New York could very well become the country's abortion capital.