Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch confirmed that three improvised explosive devices, one planted in a vehicle on Sunday, were discovered after an attempted attack near Gracie Mansion in New York—thankfully without injury. She attributed the incident…
After two self-radicalised teenagers lobbed homemade TATP explosives—mercifully inert—during a protest near Gracie Mansion, the NYPD found bomb-making materials in a Hyundai parked on Manhattan’s East End Avenue. The alleged would-be bombers, Ibraham Kayumi and Emir Balat, remain under scrutiny as police piece together who owned the taped-up energy drink and why so much “Mother of Satan” keeps showing up in New York politics.
Breaking NYC News & Local Headlines | New York Post
New York’s Gracie Mansion saw more fireworks than usual after an improvised explosive device—“football-sized” and packed with shrapnel—was tossed during a weekend protest by supporters of far-right figure Jake Lang and met by 125 counterprotesters. Police arrested two young men linked to the explosive, and the FBI is now poking around. Fortunately, Mayor Zohran Mamdani was out—along with his luck, it seems, for a quiet Saturday.
The FBI raided the plush Pennsylvania homes of Ibraham Kayumi and Emir Balat after they allegedly lobbed homemade bombs—mercifully duds—during a fracas outside Gracie Mansion between rival protesters. With parents hailing from Afghanistan and Turkey, the pair’s taste in real estate outstripped their bomb-making skills. Local critics grumble that Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s reluctance to call it terrorism suggests a city still finessing its definitions.
Breaking NYC News & Local Headlines | New York Post
We note that U.S. authorities are probing a device—reportedly built for lethal effect—that spewed smoke during Saturday’s protest outside Gracie Mansion in Manhattan, rattling nerves but harming none. Investigators, citing unnamed sources, suggest this was no garden-variety smoke bomb. For now, the only casualty appears to be the city’s patience with dramatic outbursts in the mayoral backyard.
A protest outside Gracie Mansion spiraled on Saturday when a counterdemonstrator lobbed a homemade explosive into the crowd—a device, New York police said, that could have caused severe harm but ultimately fizzled harmlessly near officers. Two young suspects were taken into custody (charges pending), as both the NYPD and FBI combed Upper East Side streets for other devices—a real exercise in civic inconvenience, if not bombast.
After bombs were thrown outside Gracie Mansion during rival protests, Manhattan Borough President Brad Hoylman-Sigal mistakenly fingered white Christian nationalists before facts revealed two pro-Muslim counter-protesters—Emir Balat and Ibrahim Kayumi—were arrested. Hoylman-Sigal withdrew his first salvo, citing “evolving” information. Federal officials and NYPD are on the case; New York’s politicians, it seems, remain far quicker with tweets than with facts.
Breaking NYC News & Local Headlines | New York Post
After two suspicious devices appeared outside Gracie Mansion during a far-right, anti-Muslim protest led by Jake Lang, New York’s first Muslim mayor, Zohran Mamdani, condemned the act as "reprehensible" and praised police who "ran toward danger without hesitation." Though the NYPD found no actual nail bombs, six arrests followed—ample evidence that passions in the city remain as combustible as the devices themselves.
New York police arrested six people after improvised explosive devices were thrown near Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s home during a modest anti-Muslim protest led by Jake Lang—described by the mayor’s office using words unfit for polite company. The NYPD and FBI are probing whether the taped jars full of hardware were dangerous or merely theatrical. Neither Mamdani nor his wife was home, presumably missing the main event.
Section Page News - Crain's New York Business
Sign up for the top stories in your inbox each morning.