
Cómo protegerse cuando hace frío extremo
Los expertos ofrecen consejos de seguridad ante los peligros habituales para la salud cuando bajan las temperaturas.
By Karen Zraick
Karen Zraick covers federal law enforcement, courts and criminal justice on the Metro desk of The New York Times.

Los expertos ofrecen consejos de seguridad ante los peligros habituales para la salud cuando bajan las temperaturas.
By Karen Zraick

In this airstrike, Israel was targeting a senior Hamas leader. Dozens of people in a residential neighborhood were killed in the attack.
By Anjali Singhvi, Bora Erden, Helmuth Rosales, Mika Gröndahl, Rumsey Taylor, Josh Williams and Abu Bakr Bashir

This was featured in live coverage.
By Karen Zraick

Beleaguered Gazans, having fled the territory’s north, emerged from a night of bombardment wondering where to go next for safety.
By Patrick Kingsley, Rawan Sheikh Ahmad and Thomas Fuller

This was featured in live coverage.
By Patrick Kingsley, Rawan Sheikh Ahmad, Iyad Abuheweila, Karen Zraick and Peter Baker

Israel has released a total of 240 Palestinian prisoners and detainees during a weeklong pause in hostilities.
By Elena Shao, Karen Zraick, Anushka Patil and Gaya Gupta

This was featured in live coverage.
By Karen Zraick and Samar Abu Elouf

This was featured in live coverage.
By Karen Zraick and Iyad Abuheweila

Hamas freed two dozen hostages, Israel released 39 imprisoned Palestinians, and more than 130 aid trucks reached Gaza over the first day of a tense, temporary truce after seven weeks of war.
By Patrick Kingsley, Christina Goldbaum, Rami Nazzal and Alan Yuhas

Families that waited outside a prison for the release of people detained by Israel said the conflict in Gaza and the rising death toll had cast a pall over any celebration.
By Christina Goldbaum and Rami Nazzal

This was featured in live coverage.
By Karen Zraick and Iyad Abuheweila

Officials in Qatar, which helped broker the deal, said 13 hostages were expected to be released on Friday. An Israeli official said Palestinians in Israel’s custody would be freed first.
By Karen Zraick, Aaron Boxerman and Isabel Kershner

This was featured in live coverage.
By Karen Zraick and Iyad Abuheweila

Both sides announced a four-day pause in the war between Israel and Hamas, but details were still being worked out.
By Patrick Kingsley, Ronen Bergman and Hiba Yazbek

This was featured in live coverage.
By Karen Zraick and Josh Holder

The agreement calls for a pause in the fighting and for Hamas to free 50 of the captives it seized in its Oct. 7 raid on Israel. Hamas said Israel would release 150 Palestinians held in Israeli prisons.
By Patrick Kingsley

Negotiations have centered on releasing women and children held in Israel.
By Karen Zraick

Some said they were ordered to evacuate Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City. The military said it had agreed to a request by the hospital director to help people leave safely.
By Ameera Harouda, Aaron Boxerman and Karen Zraick
This was featured in live coverage.
By Karen Zraick

This was featured in live coverage.
By Karen Zraick

The discovery at Al-Shifa Hospital did not seem to settle the question of whether Hamas has been using the complex to hide weapons and command centers, as Israel has said.
By Philip P. Pan, Patrick Kingsley and Thomas Fuller

This was featured in live coverage.
By Karen Zraick

This was featured in live coverage.
By Aaron Boxerman

The Israeli military said troops had uncovered a Hamas tunnel shaft underneath the Al-Shifa Hospital complex, as well as a vehicle on the hospital grounds packed with weapons.
By Patrick Kingsley and Thomas Fuller

This was featured in live coverage.
By Karen Zraick and Iyad Abuheweila

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel would be at risk of another major attack if it did not remain engaged in the Palestinian enclave.
By Isabel Kershner, Karen Zraick, Victoria Kim and Michael Levenson

Hundreds of thousands of people are still in the region, despite Israel’s bombing, ground invasion and evacuation directive. Many say the trip to the south is too dangerous.
By Karen Zraick, Vivian Yee and Emma Bubola

A missile attack on an ambulance convoy has drawn severe criticism, including from the U.N., but Israel says it was transporting Hamas fighters.
By Adam Entous and Thomas Fuller

This was featured in live coverage.
By Gaya Gupta and Catherine Porter

This was featured in live coverage.
By Karen Zraick

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel appeared to rebuff the Biden administration’s request, saying that any cease-fire would be contingent on the release of Israeli hostages taken by Hamas.
By Adam Entous and Thomas Fuller

The Israeli military said it targeted an ambulance “being used by a Hamas terrorist cell.” At the time, Palestinians said, a convoy of ambulances was preparing to take wounded people to the Gaza border.
By Karen Zraick and Iyad Abuheweila

This was featured in live coverage.
By Aaron Boxerman

This was featured in live coverage.
By Hiba Yazbek and Karen Zraick

Gazans under bombardment say there is a surge of severely injured children entering hospitals, doctors operating without anesthesia and morgues overflowing with bodies.
By Hiba Yazbek and Karen Zraick

An Israeli military spokesman said that Israeli soldiers had surrounded Gaza’s largest city. White House officials said they would urge Israel to “pause” its bombardment on humanitarian grounds.
By Thomas Fuller and Aaron Boxerman

On Wednesday, the devastated neighborhood, where local officials say dozens were killed and hundreds were wounded in a Tuesday attack, was hit again.
By Karen Zraick and Hiba Yazbek

This was featured in live coverage.
By Karen Zraick

Israel said it killed a Hamas leader at a refugee camp, but many other people were wounded and killed, Hamas said. The assault came as fuel, food and water shortages pushed civilians to the brink.
By Matthew Mpoke Bigg, Karen Zraick and Emma Bubola

This was featured in live coverage.
By Karen Zraick and Emma Bubola

This was featured in live coverage.
By Matthew Mpoke Bigg, Karen Zraick and Aaron Boxerman

By Matthew Mpoke Bigg and Karen Zraick
This was featured in live coverage.
By Matthew Mpoke Bigg, Aaron Boxerman and Karen Zraick

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel did not describe the ground incursion as an invasion, but it was accompanied by an enormous aerial and artillery bombardment.
By Patrick Kingsley, Ronen Bergman and Thomas Fuller

This was featured in live coverage.
By Karen Zraick and Aaron Boxerman

Cellular and internet service abruptly vanished for much of the territory, stoking fears that a full-scale invasion was imminent — or already underway.
By Patrick Kingsley, Ronen Bergman, Karen Zraick and Hiba Yazbek

This was featured in live coverage.
By Karen Zraick

The United States has advised delaying a ground invasion, in part to get more desperately needed aid, which has flowed slowly, into Gaza.
By Nadav Gavrielov, Matthew Mpoke Bigg, Vivian Yee and Matina Stevis-Gridneff

This was featured in live coverage.
By Anna Betts and Karen Zraick

This was featured in live coverage.
By Karen Zraick, Abu Bakr Bashir and Monika Pronczuk

This was featured in live coverage.
By Karen Zraick and Iyad Abuheweila
This was featured in live coverage.
By Aaron Boxerman, Karen Zraick and Farnaz Fassihi

But the 20-truck shipment of food, water and medical supplies is only a fraction of what is needed to head off a catastrophe, officials say.
By Thomas Fuller and Vivian Yee

This was featured in live coverage.
By Karen Zraick

Israel, Egypt, the United Nations and others are still working out the details of delivering food, water and medicine, as Israel prepares a possible ground invasion.
By Vivian Yee and Matina Stevis-Gridneff

This was featured in live coverage.
By Karen Zraick and Iyad Abuheweila

This was featured in live coverage.
By Karen Zraick, Ainara Tiefenthäler, Haley Willis and Arijeta Lajka

Israel’s military acknowledged it had damaged the church site while targeting what it said was a Hamas command center nearby.
By Karen Zraick and Ameera Harouda

Civilians in Gaza face an unending nightmare of airstrikes and deprivation — if they manage to survive.
By Samar Abu Elouf, Yousef Masoud and Karen Zraick

One congregant remembered fleeing a war with Israel as a child. He mourned a new generation of children experiencing the same fear and violence.
By Karen Zraick
This was featured in live coverage.
By Raja Abdulrahim, Aaron Boxerman, Victoria Kim, Hiba Yazbek and Karen Zraick

As bombs fall and phone batteries run low, Palestinian American families caught in the Israel-Hamas war wonder whether the U.S. government will help them escape.
By Sharon Otterman, Anna Betts, Anushka Patil and Karen Zraick

Chris Winkler, a fisherman based in Montauk, N.Y., was accused of falsifying records to sell over-quota fish.
By Karen Zraick

There have been 21 gaps in government funding since 1976, though the level of shutdown has varied.
By Mihir Zaveri, Guilbert Gates and Karen Zraick

New York’s attorney general, Letitia James, sued the former president using a state law that grants her wide powers to pursue corporate wrongdoing.
By Karen Zraick, William K. Rashbaum, Jonah E. Bromwich and Kate Christobek

Practitioners who use the technique at a certain point in the upper back between the spine and shoulder blade risk puncturing a lung.
By Karen Zraick

Chris Winkler is on trial, accused of taking too many fish from the seas off gentrified Montauk. His former partners have pleaded guilty, and stand to make millions from the sale of their small seafood-themed empire.
By Karen Zraick and Karsten Moran

The French billionaire François-Henri Pinault’s deal for the talent agency CAA is driven by the belief that fashion increasingly needs celebrities.
By Andrew Ross Sorkin, Ravi Mattu, Bernhard Warner, Sarah Kessler, Michael J. de la Merced, Lauren Hirsch, Ephrat Livni, Benjamin Weiser and Karen Zraick

The tentative deal would end a lawsuit by detainees who endured gruesome conditions in a weeklong blackout during a polar vortex in the winter of 2019.
By Karen Zraick

The aide, Samuel Miele, impersonated Speaker Kevin McCarthy’s chief of staff in fund-raising appeals and was charged with wire fraud and identity theft.
By Michael Gold and Grace Ashford