NYPD preparing for potential unrest after Trump indictment
An expert says we can expect to see a security level similar to Times Square on New Year's Eve.
Ali Bauman has served as a general assignment reporter for CBS News New York since spring 2016.
Prior to joining CBS News New York, Ali was a one-man-band reporter for News 12 the Bronx and News 12 Brooklyn, where she shot, wrote and edited all of her own stories.
Ali graduated Magna Cum Laude from S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications at Syracuse University with dual majors in Broadcast & Digital Journalism and Political Science. She speaks Spanish and spent a semester abroad in Madrid, Spain.
Between classes, Ali worked part-time as a multimedia journalist for WBNG-TV Action News in Binghamton, New York.
Never one to shy away from a challenge, Ali was the first and only undergraduate student to be accepted to the 2014 Newhouse Capstone in Washington, D.C. where she was the Capitol Hill correspondent for WETM-TV in Elmira, New York.
Ali is a proud millennial who embraces social media for storytelling to bring news to a new generation of viewers.
An expert says we can expect to see a security level similar to Times Square on New Year's Eve.
The indictments are part of two different patterns across the city where thieves are targeting people in bars.
This week, the Anti-Defamation League said 2022 saw the most antisemitic incidents ever recorded in the U.S.
Released body-camera footage shows police shooting Seabrooks, as he was having a mental health crisis.
Investigators are trying to determine if she was slipped a toxic cocktail of drugs in order to steal from her.
Authorities are investigating if the suspect actually fired his weapon.
A large inflatable was brought to the street below, where people nervously watched the drama unfold.
"We want President Trump to know he has our support. We stand behind him," a protester named Chelsea said.
The fire forced more than 90 families from their homes, including one who is now fearing for their child's health.
She told CBS2 her 15-year-old daughter was hit in the face by another student and suffered a broken nose.
Officers also found materials typically used in explosives, which can also be used in manufacturing narcotics.
It was about to become a Sister City with a Hindu nation, but there was one problem -- the nation doesn't exist.
The man has hit at least four bodegas, including one last week where he killed a beloved clerk.
Julio Ramirez, 25, and John Umberger, 33, were both found dead last year in separate incidents.
The city agreed to pay each defendant $21,500, plus an additional $2,000 if they were arrested and ticketed.