Tag: Letitia James

  • Attorney General James Sues Trump Administration to Protect Billions of Dollars for Childcare and Support for Vulnerable Families

    Attorney General James Sues Trump Administration to Protect Billions of Dollars for Childcare and Support for Vulnerable Families

    NEW YORK (TIP): New York Attorney General Letitia James today led a coalition of four other attorneys general in suing the Trump administration to stop the illegal withholding of over $10 billion in critical funds to their states that help ensure low-income families can afford childcare, housing, food, and more. On January 5 and 6, the administration sent letters to New York, California, Colorado, Illinois, and Minnesota announcing that the Administration for Children and Families (ACF) was freezing funding for three critical programs: the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF); Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF); and the Social Services Block Grant (SSBG). Attorney General James and the coalition argue that freezing these funds will immediately jeopardize some of the most important anti-poverty programs in the states, putting vulnerable families at risk. Attorney General James and the coalition are seeking a court order declaring the funding freeze unlawful and preventing the administration from implementing it.

    “Once again, the most vulnerable families in our communities are bearing the brunt of this administration’s campaign of chaos and retribution,” said Attorney General James. “After jeopardizing food assistance and health care, this administration is now threatening to cut off childcare and other critical programs that parents depend on to provide for their children. As New Yorkers struggle with the rising cost of living, I will not allow this administration to play political games with the resources families need to help make ends meet.”

    In New York, ACF funds provide essential support for hundreds of thousands of families every year. New York receives over $2.4 billion in TANF funds, which provide direct cash assistance to over 200,000 families throughout the state to help families pay for housing, food, and other essentials. For Grant Year 2025, New York received $638 million in CCDF funds, which provide childcare for low-income families. New York also receives $93 million in SSBG funds, which support foster care, childcare, and other critical social services to prevent neglect, abuse, and exploitation of children and vulnerable adults.

    If implemented, the funding freeze would be devastating for families in the coalition’s states. Families would lose access to reliable childcare, forcing parents and caregivers into an impossible choice of either missing work or leaving children in a potentially unsafe environment. Childcare providers would lose essential funding, and even children who do not receive ACF-funded care could lose access if facilities are forced to reduce staff or shut down. Employers would lose valuable workers, hurting states’ economies, and families would lose critical cash assistance to help them afford essentials like gas, groceries, and rent.

    Attorney General James and the coalition assert that the administration has provided no legitimate justification for freezing these funds. While the letters sent to states claim that the freeze is necessary to prevent “potential” fraud, the administration has failed to provide any evidence of this fraud. Attorney General James and the coalition argue that the administration’s actions – which ignore the detailed legal requirements for imposing sanctions under these programs – violate the law and the Constitution. The administration’s actions also ignore the laws and regulations governing these ACF programs and violate Congress’s power over spending and the constitutional principle of separation of powers. Attorney General James and the coalition are seeking a court order declaring the funding freeze illegal and preventing it from being implemented.

    Joining Attorney General James in filing this lawsuit are the attorneys general of California, Colorado, Illinois, and Minnesota.
    (Based on a Press Release issued by NY AG office)

  • Mamdani vows to “govern as a democratic socialist”

    Mamdani vows to “govern as a democratic socialist”

    Revokes executive orders issued after former mayor Eric Adams had been indicted on corruption charges

    • I.S. Saluja

    NEW YORK CITY (TIP): Zohran Mamdani was formally sworn in as New York City’s 112th Mayor in a private ceremony held just moments into the New Year in an old subway station here. The 34-year-old Indian-descent Queens state assemblyman became the first South Asian and Muslim elected to helm the largest city in the US. Mamdani was sworn in at the old City Hall subway station at a private ceremony attended only by his family and close advisers, held around the stroke of midnight as the city ushered in the New Year.

    He was sworn in on a Quran as the city’s 112th mayor — and its second-youngest — by state Attorney General Letitia James on Thursday, January1 morning below City Hall Park in a grand, abandoned old subway stop with his wife, artist Rama Duwaji, by his side.

    On the choice of the old subway station as the venue for his historic swearing-in, the New York Times quoted Mamdani as saying that when the Old City Hall Station first opened in 1904 — one of New York’s 28 original subway stations — “it was a physical monument to a city that dared to be both beautiful and build great things that would transform working people’s lives.” “That ambition need not be a memory confined only to our past, nor must it be isolated only to the tunnels beneath City Hall: it will be the purpose of the administration fortunate enough to serve New Yorkers from the building above.”

    The New York Public Library announced on Wednesday that Mamdani will use a Quran from the collections of the Schomburg Centre for Research in Black Culture to take the oath of office at the midnight swearing-in ceremony on New Year’s Eve.

    “This marks a significant moment in our city’s history, and we are deeply honored that Mayor-elect Mamdani has chosen to take the oath of office using one of the Library’s Qurans,” said Anthony W. Marx, President and CEO of The New York Public Library.

    “This specific Quran, which Arturo Schomburg preserved for the knowledge and enjoyment of all New Yorkers, symbolizes a greater story of inclusion, representation, and civic-mindedness.”

    NYPL termed the selection of the Quran by the incoming administration as highly symbolic, both because of its connection to one of NYC’s most groundbreaking scholars and for its simple, functional qualities.

    “The black and red ink, as well as the small, portable size, indicate this Quran was intended for an ordinary reader and everyday use. Although neither dated nor signed, the Quran’s minute naskh script and its binding, featuring a gilt-stamped medallion filled with a floral composition, suggest it was produced in Ottoman Syria in the 19th century,” it said.

    After working part of the night in his new office, Mamdani returned to City Hall in a taxicab around midday Thursday, January 1, for a grander public inauguration where US Sen Bernie Sanders, one of the mayor’s political heroes, administered the oath for a second time.

    “Beginning today, we will govern expansively and audaciously. We may not always succeed, but never will we be accused of lacking the courage to try,” Mamdani told a cheering crowd.

    “To those who insist that the era of big government is over, hear me when I say this: No longer will City Hall hesitate to use its power to improve New Yorkers’ lives,” he said.

    Throngs turned out in the frigid cold for an inauguration viewing party just south of City Hall on a stretch of Broadway known as the “Canyon of Heroes,” famous for its ticker-tape parades. Mamdani wasted little time getting to work after the event.

    He revoked multiple executive orders issued by the previous administration since September 26, 2024, the date federal authorities announced former mayor Eric Adams had been indicted on corruption charges, which were later dismissed following intervention by the Trump administration.

    Then he visited an apartment building in Brooklyn to announce he is revitalizing a city office dedicated to protecting tenants and creating two task forces focused on housing construction.

    ‘I will govern as a democratic socialist’

    Throughout the daytime ceremony, Mamdani and other speakers hit on the theme that carried him to victory in the election: Using government power to lift up the millions of people who struggle with the city’s high cost of living.

    Mamdani peppered his remarks with references to those New Yorkers, citing workers in steel-toed boots, halal cart vendors “whose knees ache from working all day” and cooks “wielding a thousand spices.”

    “I was elected as a democratic socialist and I will govern as a democratic socialist,” Mamdani said. “I will not abandon my principles for fear of being deemed radical.’”

    Before administering the oath, Sanders told the crowd that most of the things Mamdani wants to do — including raising taxes on the rich — aren’t radical at all.

    “In the richest country in the history of the world, making sure that people can live in affordable housing is not radical,” he told the crowd. “It is the right and decent thing to do.”

    Mamdani was accompanied on stage by his wife, Rama Duwaji. Adams was also in attendance, sitting near another former mayor, Bill de Blasio.

    Actor Mandy Patinkin, who recently hosted Mamdani to celebrate Hannukah, sang “Over the Rainbow” with children from an elementary school chorus. The invocation was given by Imam Khalid Latif, the director of the Islamic Center of New York City. Poet Cornelius Eady read an original poem called “Proof.” In addition to being the city’s first Muslim mayor, Mamdani is also its first of South Asian descent and the first to be born in Africa. At 34, Mamdani is also the city’s youngest mayor in generations.

    Mamdani insisted in his inaugural address that he will not squander his opportunity to implement the policies he promised in his election campaign.

    “A moment like this comes rarely. Seldom do we hold such an opportunity to transform and reinvent. Rarer still is it the people themselves whose hands are on the levers of change. And yet we know that too often in our past, moments of great possibility have been promptly surrendered to small imagination and smaller ambition,” he said.

    In his speech, Mamdani acknowledged the task ahead, saying he knows many will be watching to see whether he can succeed.

    “They want to know if the left can govern. They want to know if the struggles that afflict them can be solved. They want to know if it is right to hope again,” he said. “So, standing together with the wind of purpose at our backs, we will do something that New Yorkers do better than anyone else: We will set an example for the world.”
    Mamdani was born in Kampala, Uganda, the son of filmmaker Mira Nair and Mahmood Mamdani, an academic and author. His family moved to New York City when he was 7, with Mamdani growing up in a post-9/11 city where Muslims didn’t always feel welcome. He became an American citizen in 2018.

    He worked on political campaigns for Democratic candidates in the city before he sought public office himself, winning a state Assembly seat in 2020 to represent a section of Queens.

    Now that he has taken office, Mamdani and his wife will depart their one-bedroom, rent stabilized apartment in the outer-borough to take up residence in the stately mayoral residence in Manhattan.

    The new mayor inherits a city on the upswing, after years of slow recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic. Violent crime has dropped to pre-pandemic lows. Tourists are back. Unemployment, which soared during the pandemic years, is also back to pre-COVID levels.

    Yet deep concerns remain about high prices and rising rents.

    In opening remarks to the crowd, U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez praised New Yorkers for choosing “courage over fear.”

    “We have chosen prosperity for the many over spoils for the few,” she said.

    During the mayoral race, President Donald Trump threatened to withhold federal funding from the city if Mamdani won and mused about sending National Guard troops to the city.

    But Trump surprised supporters and foes alike by inviting the Democrat to the White House for what ended up being a cordial meeting in November.

    “I want him to do a great job and will help him do a great job,” Trump said.

    Still, tensions between the two leaders are almost certain to resurface, given their deep policy disagreements, particularly over immigration.

    Several speakers at Thursday’s inauguration criticized the Trump administration’s move to deport more immigrants and expressed hope that Mamdani’s City Hall would be an ally to those the president has targeted.

    Mamdani also faces skepticism and opposition from some members of the city’s Jewish community over his criticisms of Israel’s government.

    Still, Mamdani supporters in Thursday’s crowd expressed optimism that he’d be a unifying force.

    “There are moments where everyone in New York comes together, like when the Mets won the World Series in ‘86,” said Mary Hammann, 64, a musician with the Metropolitan Opera. “This feels like that — just colder.”
    (With inputs from PTI, AP)

  • Attorney General James Takes Action to Protect Immigrant Workers

    Attorney General James Takes Action to Protect Immigrant Workers

    NEW YORK (TIP): New York Attorney General Letitia James joined today a coalition of 18 other attorneys general in suing the Trump administration to protect the H-1B visa program, which allows highly-trained immigrants to temporarily work in the United States and fill critical roles in health care, education, technology, and other fields. In September, the administration suddenly announced that a $100,000 fee would be imposed on all new H-1B applications, a massive increase over the visa’s typical fees, which have historically been just several thousand dollars. H-1B visa holders fill essential roles as teachers, nurses, doctors, researchers, engineers, and more in communities across the country. The new fee threatens to completely upend the program and make it effectively inaccessible for government and nonprofit employers who rely on H-1B visa holders to provide essential services. In a lawsuit filed today in the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts, Attorney General James and the coalition argue that imposing this new fee is unlawful and violates the Administrative Procedure Act.

    “H-1B visas allow talented doctors, nurses, teachers, and other workers to serve communities in need across our country,” said Attorney General James. “The administration’s illegal attempt to ruin this program will make it harder for New Yorkers to get health care, disrupt our children’s education, and hurt our economy. I will keep fighting to stop this chaos and cruelty targeting immigrant communities.”

    Since the 1950s, the United States has had a visa program that allows skilled workers to temporarily live in the U.S. and work in specialized fields. The current version of the H-1B program was created in the 1990s and allows employers to petition to hire workers in a “specialty occupation” for a maximum of six years. H-1B workers are employed in a variety of fields in both the public and private sectors, and the program plays a crucial role in filling labor shortages in medicine, education, and other highly skilled industries.

    Attorney General James and the coalition argue that the administration’s new fee on H-1B visas will severely restrict states’ ability to hire new workers under the program to address labor shortages, disrupting access to education, health care, and other critical services. This shortage of workers would be particularly devastating for rural and underserved communities already facing shrinking workforces. In New York’s 16 rural counties, there are currently four primary care physicians for every 10,000 people. New York’s hospitals already face a pervasive nursing shortage estimated to reach 40,000 nurses by 2030. A reduction in H-1B visa holders would only exacerbate this shortage, as over a third of all health care workers in New York are immigrants. Nationwide, the American Medical Association estimates the United States will face a shortage of 86,000 physicians by 2036 – a shortage that H-1B workers will be critical in filling.

    Limiting H-1B visas will also cause a shortage of teachers, researchers, and other workers critical to the country’s education system. Across the country, at least 930 colleges and universities employ staff on H-1B visas. More than half of these institutions are public four-year universities, and more than 10 percent are medical schools. In New York, the State University of New York (SUNY) employs 693 employees on H-1B visas, including many who serve students in rural and suburban areas of New York state. As Attorney General James and the coalition argue, limiting access to H-1B visas will lead to more crowded classrooms for students and disrupt critical research at leading universities. Other critical industries in New York, such as technology, finance, and the arts, also rely on H-1B visa holders to fill essential roles. Across the state, more than 13,000 people on H-1B visas work in these sectors.

    Attorney General James and the coalition argue that the administration’s attempt to restrict the H-1B program with a sudden massive increase in fees contravenes the Immigration and Nationality Act, which established the program, as well as the Administrative Procedure Act. H-1B fees must be set by Congress or the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) after undergoing the proper rulemaking process. Neither of those happened in this case. In fact, the administration’s imposition of the new $100,000 fee was made without any advance notice to the public or input from affected groups. The lawsuit seeks an order declaring the administration’s actions unlawful and preventing the $100,000 fee policy from being enforced.

    Joining Attorney General James in filing this lawsuit are the attorneys general of Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, North Carolina, New Jersey, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and Wisconsin.

  • US attorney Erik Siebert under pressure to charge New York AG Letitia James in mortgage fraud case is resigning, say sources

    US attorney Erik Siebert under pressure to charge New York AG Letitia James in mortgage fraud case is resigning, say sources

    WASHINGTON, D.C. (TIP): Erik Siebert, a federal prosecutor in Virginia whose monthslong mortgage fraud investigation into New York Attorney General Letitia James has not resulted in criminal charges, is resigning under pressure from the Trump administration, two people familiar with the matter told The Associated Press on Friday, September 19.

    Siebert is leaving his position amid a push by Trump administration officials to bring charges against James, a perceived adversary of the president who has successfully sued him for fraud. The people who confirmed his plans to resign spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the matter.

    It was not immediately clear Friday afternoon who would replace Siebert, who was nominated by Trump to the top job in the office after having worked there for more than a decade.

    It comes shortly after Trump said Siebert should be removed as head of the prestigious Eastern District of Virginia U.S. office. Siebert’s top deputy, Maya Song, is also leaving her position as first assistant U.S. attorney and will work as a line prosecutor, one of the people familiar with the matter said.

    Trump administration officials have been aggressively pursuing allegations against James arising from alleged paperwork discrepancies on her Brooklyn townhouse and a Virginia home. The Justice Department has spent months conducting the investigation but has yet to bring charges, and there’s been no indication that prosecutors have managed to uncover any degree of incriminating evidence that could support bringing an indictment.

    James has long been a particular source of outrage for Trump, in part because of a lawsuit she filed against him and his company that resulted in a massive financial penalty. That penalty was thrown out last month by an appeals court that narrowly upheld a judge’s finding that Trump had engaged in fraud by exaggerating his wealth for decades.

    The case has taken a series of unorthodox turns. It emerged last month that Ed Martin, who helms the Justice Department’s Weaponization Working Group and is helping coordinate the investigation, had sent a letter urging James to resign from office “as an act of good faith” after starting his mortgage fraud investigation of her. He later turned up outside James’ Brooklyn townhouse in a “Columbo”-esque trench coat. A New York Post writer at the scene observed him tell a neighbor: “I’m just looking at houses, interesting houses. It’s an important house.”

    James’ lawyer, Abbe Lowell, told Martin in a letter that the request for James’ resignation defied Justice Department standards and codes of professional responsibility and legal ethics.

    The Justice Department “has firm policies against using investigations and against using prosecutorial power for achieving political ends,” Lowell wrote. “This is ever more the case when that demand is made to seek political revenge against a public official in the opposite party.”

    A former District of Columbia police officer, Siebert joined the Eastern District of Virginia, an elite Justice Department prosecution office with a history of sophisticated national security and criminal cases, in 2010. He was nominated to the role of U.S. attorney by Trump this year with the backing of the state’s two Democratic senators, Mark Warner and Tim Kaine.
    (With inputs from AP )

  • Trump strips security clearance from political foes, including Tish James, Alvin Bragg

    Trump strips security clearance from political foes, including Tish James, Alvin Bragg

    WASHINGTON, D.C. (TIP): President Trump has revoked security clearances and access to classified information from a slew of his political opponents, including New York Attorney General Letitia James and Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg.

    “I have determined that it is no longer in the national interest for the following individuals to access classified information,” Trump announced in a presidential memo issued late Friday night before directly naming 15 of his most vocal critics, as well as the entire Biden family.

    The list notably includes all three Democrats who ran against him in the 2016 and 2024 elections: Hillary Clinton, Joe Biden and Kamala Harris. It also names former U.S. representatives Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger — two high-profile, anti-Trump Republicans — along with the two top law enforcement officials in New York, both of whom took the president to court and won. Attorney General James has brought multiple lawsuits against Trump and his businesses. In February 2024, a judge ruled in favor of her office in a civil fraud case against Trump, his sons and the Trump Organization, ordering them to pay more than $450 million she said they illegally obtained.

    When celebrating the “tremendous victory” for New York and the nation, James criticized the then-former president’s “fraudulent” and unjust ways to enrich himself and his family.

    “While he may have authored the ‘Art of the Deal,’ our case revealed that his business was based on the art of the steal,” James said at the time.

    Three months later, a jury in Manhattan found Trump guilty of falsifying business records in a hush-money scheme to conceal damaging information during the 2016 presidential election.

    “Trump went to illegal lengths to lie repeatedly in order to protect himself and his campaign,” Bragg said when announcing the all-count trial conviction, adding his office has a “solemn responsibility to ensure equal justice under the law regardless of the background, wealth or power of the accused.”

    On Friday, Trump appeared to remind James, Bragg and several of his opponents that he may, indeed, use power against his perceived adversaries — even if symbolically.

    In the memo, the president instructed the heads of federal agencies to “take all necessary actions, consistent with existing law,” to immediately revoke security clearances and access to classified information from those individuals.

    Along with preventing them from receiving classified briefings and obtaining information from members of the intelligence community, the action also revokes their “unescorted access to secure United States Government facilities.”

    While it’s unclear what type of security clearance those individuals had, the revocation is largely being perceived as symbolic.

    “It’s another petty, performative move designed to punish his perceived enemies, regardless of reality,” Kinzinger said Saturday, calling out the president’s “latest stunt.”

    “Reports are circulating that he’s decided to revoke my security clearance. The only problem? I don’t have one.”

  • Judge Halts Access to Treasury Payment Systems by Elon Musk’s Team

    Judge Halts Access to Treasury Payment Systems by Elon Musk’s Team

    NEW YORK (TIP): A federal judge temporarily restricted access by Elon Musk’s government efficiency program to the Treasury Department’s payment and data systems, saying there was a risk of “irreparable harm”, New York Times reported.

    Trump administration’s new policy of allowing political appointees and “special government employees” access to these systems, which contain highly sensitive information such as bank details, heightens the risk of leaks and of the systems becoming more vulnerable than before to hacking, U.S. District Judge Paul A. Engelmayer said in an emergency order.

    Judge Engelmayer ordered any such official who was granted access to the systems since Jan. 20 to “destroy any and all copies of material downloaded from the Treasury Department’s records and systems.” He also restricted the government from granting access to these categories of officials.

    The defendants — President Trump and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent — should show cause on Feb. 14 before Judge Jeannette A. Vargas, who is handling the case on a permanent basis, Judge Engelmayer said.

    The order came in response to a lawsuit filed on Friday by Letitia James of New York along with 18 other Democratic state attorneys general, charging that when President Trump gave Mr. Musk the run of government computer systems, he had breached protections enshrined in the Constitution and “failed to faithfully execute the laws enacted by Congress.”

    The attorneys general said the president had given “virtually unfettered access” to the federal government’s most sensitive information to young aides who work for Mr. Musk, who runs a program the administration calls the Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, though it is not an actual department.

    While the group was supposedly assigned to cut costs, members are “attempting to access government data to support initiatives to block federal funds from reaching certain disfavored beneficiaries,” according to the suit. Mr. Musk has publicly stated his intention to “recklessly freeze streams of federal funding without warning,” the suit said, pointing to his social media posts in recent days. Efforts to reach press officers at the White House were not immediately successful.

    Mr. Musk’s team was given access to the government’s most fundamental computer data, including the U.S. Treasury Department’s payment system, which is used to disburse funds including Social Security benefits, veteran’s benefits and federal employee wages.

    The system — which channels about 90 percent of the payments for the U.S. government, which spent about $6.75 trillion last fiscal year — pays funds directly to people in the states, as well as to state governments, the suit says.

    Before President Trump took office last month, access was granted to only a limited number of career civil servants with security clearances, the suit said. But Mr. Musk’s efforts had interrupted federal funding for health clinics, preschools, and climate initiatives, according to the filing.

    The money had already been allocated by Congress. The Constitution assigns to lawmakers the job of deciding government spending.

    “President Trump does not have the power to give away Americans’ private information to anyone he chooses, and he cannot cut federal payments approved by Congress,” Ms. James said in a statement. “Musk and DOGE have no authority to access Americans’ private information and some of our country’s most sensitive data.”

    The lawsuit was filed in concert with the attorneys general of Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, North Carolina, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont and Wisconsin. It is one of many resisting Mr. Trump’s aggressive actions since he took office last month.

    Three unions this week sued the U.S. Office of Personnel Management, the government’s human resources division, to block an effort to persuade roughly two million federal employees to resign.

    Two anonymous sets of F.B.I. agents and employees sued to keep the Trump administration from releasing the identities of people who worked on investigations into the Capitol riots on Jan. 6, 2021. They won an order on Friday requiring the administration to keep their names secret.

    Ms. James and other attorneys general challenged Mr. Trump’s executive order attempting to end birthright citizenship. This week, she warned New York hospitals that complying with a White House executive order seeking to end gender-affirming medical care for young people could violate state law. The actions of DOGE — bulldozing through the federal government — have been confounding and concerning Democratic lawmakers and federal employees.

    With license from Mr. Trump, Mr. Musk’s mandate appears to be vast: His team has tried to shut down the U.S. Agency for International Development, a key international source of foreign assistance. On Friday, a federal judge in Washington ordered a pause on an effort to put 2,200 U.S.A.I.D. employees on leave and rapidly withdraw employees stationed abroad.

    On Friday, Mr. Trump said that Mr. Musk would turn his attention to the Pentagon, which has billions of dollars in contracts with companies Mr. Musk owns.

    The heart of the lawsuit filed by Ms. James’s coalition on Friday was focused on Mr. Musk’s access to the Treasury Department. The department’s system is a repository of some Americans’ most sensitive information, including Social Security numbers and bank account numbers, which the attorneys general said puts residents of their states at personal risk.

    In a video message on Friday, Ms. James said that the president “does not have the power to give our private information away to whomever he wants.” “As Democratic attorneys general, we’re suing to stop this unprecedented and unauthorized attack,” she said.
    (Source: New York Times)

  • T-Mobile Data Breach Sparks Alert From New York AG James

    T-Mobile Data Breach Sparks Alert From New York AG James

    The breach impacted more than 53 million customers, including more than 4 million New Yorkers.

    NEW YORK (TIP):  In an “urgent message,” New York Attorney General Letitia James confirmed that stolen sensitive customer information was put for sale on the dark web. James is advising all New Yorkers who believe they were impacted by the huge T-Mobile data breach to take appropriate steps to protect their personal information from identity theft. This comes after several customers received alerts that their information was circulating online following the August 2021 data breach.

    “I have an urgent message for T-Mobile customers and other consumers: Be aware of any misuse of your personal information and follow the guidance provided by my office to protect yourself from identity theft,” James said. “Information stolen in a massive data breach has fallen into the wrong hands and is circulating on the dark web. The guidance offered by my office can help prevent identity theft. I advise all New Yorkers to maintain their financial safety by following the guidance my office has laid out.”In August 2021, T-Mobile reported a massive data breach compromising the sensitive personal information of millions of current, former, and prospective T-Mobile customers. The breach impacted more than 53 million customers, including more than 4 million New Yorkers. Among other categories of impacted information, millions had their names, dates of birth, Social Security numbers and driver’s license information compromised.

    Recently, a large subset of the information compromised in the breach was discovered for sale on the dark web — a hidden portion of the Internet where cyber criminals buy, sell, and track personal information. Many individuals received alerts through various identity theft protection services informing them that their information was found online in connection with the breach, confirming that impacted individuals are at heightened risk for identity theft.

    James urged anyone who believes they were impacted by the T-Mobile breach to take the following steps to protect themselves:

    Monitor your credit. Credit-monitoring services track your credit report and alert you whenever a change is made, such as a new account or a large purchase. Most services will notify you within 24 hours of any change to your credit report.

    Consider placing a free credit freeze on your credit report. Identity thieves will not be able to open a new credit account in your name while the freeze is in place. You can place a credit freeze by contacting each of the three major credit bureaus:

    Equifax: visit online or call 1-888-766-0008

    Experian: visit online or call 1-888-397-3742

    TransUnion: visit online or call 1-800-680-7289

    Place a fraud alert on your credit report. A fraud alert tells lenders and creditors to take extra steps to verify your identity before issuing credit. You can place a fraud alert by contacting any one of the three major credit bureaus.

    Additional Resources. If you believe you are a victim of identity theft, go to identitytheft.gov for assistance on how to report it and recover from it. Consumers can also contact the New York Attorney General’s Office for help by completing and submitting a complaint with the Bureau of Internet and Technology or by calling (800) 771-7755.

  • New York State attorney general sues NYPD

    New York State attorney general sues NYPD

    NEW YORK (TIP): New York State Attorney General Letitia James is suing the New York City Police Department and its leadership over its “excessive, brutal and unlawful” handling of George Floyd protests, James said in a news release. The suit, filed Thursday, January 14,  in Manhattan federal court, comes after a monthslong investigation into the NYPD’s actions during protests over the killing of Floyd that found that officers allegedly used “indiscriminate, unjustified, and repeated use of batons, pepper spray, bicycles and a crowd control tactic known as ‘kettling’ against peaceful protestors,” the release said.James also wants to install an external monitor to oversee the department’s policing tactics.