Several notable things happened in NYC yesterday and last night, mostly centered on a large protest in Midtown plus some developing local news.

Major protest in Midtown

  • Thousands of people marched in Manhattan on Sunday to protest ICE and the recent killing of Renee Nicole Good, a 37‑year‑old mother of three who was shot by an ICE agent in Minneapolis.
  • The crowd gathered near Central Park and moved down Fifth Avenue toward Trump Tower, carrying signs against deportations and broader domestic and foreign policies under President Donald Trump.
  • The demonstration was largely peaceful, though it caused significant traffic disruption around Midtown, especially near Trump Tower and East 40s–50s.

Police and safety developments

  • At least one person was reported detained after a small confrontation between pro‑Trump counter‑protesters and remaining demonstrators as the march dispersed near 42nd Street.
  • Local TV coverage highlighted ongoing NYPD responses to violence city‑wide, including a separate incident where officers shot and killed a man armed with a knife inside a Brooklyn hospital (covered in the same news cycle, though not necessarily “last night” specifically).

City services and looming disruptions

  • New York coverage last night also focused on the city bracing for a possible large nurses’ strike, with roughly 16,000 nurses preparing to walk out amid a severe flu season, which officials warn could strain hospitals if no agreement is reached.
  • The governor has already declared a state of emergency tied to the anticipated strike and urged both sides to keep negotiating to avoid major disruption to care in NYC hospitals.

Online chatter and neighborhood feel

  • In local forums, New Yorkers continued to vent about feeling worn down by street disorder and safety concerns, even as official crime statistics show a more mixed picture.
  • Commenters also tied the tense mood in the city to national politics, with frustration over having Donald Trump back in the White House and the general “always something happening” atmosphere in NYC.

If you tell a specific neighborhood (e.g., Brooklyn, Queens, Midtown), a more focused rundown of what likely affected that area last night can be added. Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.