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FBI searched Joe Biden’s home, found more documents marked classified

WASHINGTON — The FBI searched President Joe Biden’s home in Wilmington, Delaware, on Friday and located additional documents with classified markings and also took possession of some of his handwritten notes, the president’s lawyer said Saturday.







Biden Classified Document

President Joe Biden speaks Jan. 20 in the East Room of the White House in Washington. The Justice Department has searched Biden’s home in Delaware and located more classification documents containing markings and also took possession of some of his notes, the president’s lawyer said Saturday.


Susan Walsh, Associated Press


The president voluntarily allowed the FBI into his home, but the lack of a

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Brooklyn News: A Park Slope Wood Frame Gets a Splash of Color

Top 10 Brooklyn Real Estate Listings of 2022: A Brooklyn Heights Manse, a Bay Ridge Row House

Looking back at the listings that readers were drawn to in 2022, there isn’t a single neighborhood that dominates and the properties reflect a fairly wide price range. While the most expensive is a budget-busting Brooklyn Heights manse at $13.75 million, much of the list is made up of properties under the $2 million mark.

Brooklyn News: A Park Slope Wood Frame Gets a Splash of Color

Photos clockwise from left: Shelley Victory by Lesley Unruh, Ty Cole, Paul Sue-Pat by David A. Land, Lesley Unruh

6 Creative Interiors Offer Some Brooklyn Living Inspiration

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How 19th Century Brooklynites Celebrated the New Year

Editor’s note: This post has been updated. Read the original post here.

For those following the Gregorian calendar, and that’s most of us, that magic moment when the old year ends in the last seconds of 11:59 on December 31 and the new begins at midnight on January 1 is celebrated with music, fireworks, noise makers , parties and a kiss.

And thus it has been for centuries, with Brooklyn being no exception.

After all, January is named after the ancient Roman god Janus. He is depicted with two faces — one facing backward, the other forward. He was the

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Ditmas Park West Digs With Woodwork, Mantels, Stained Glass Asks $2,650 a Month

In one of Brooklyn’s leafiest neighborhoods, a one-bedroom apartment benefits from taking up the first floor of a Ditmas Park West Edwardian, with copious polished details of the period, outdoor space fore and aft, and an abundance of nooks and crannies that includes a mudroom.

The standalone house with porch and garage at 512 Westminster Road was divided into a duplex over a simplex back in 1937, the certificate of occupancy shows. The property has been in the same hands since at least the 1970s, and the unit appears well kept, with a number of updates.

An entry hall leads

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Prewar With Marble Coat in Brooklyn Heights Brownstone Asks $729K

A tidy one-bedroom on the penultimate story of a Brooklyn Heights brownstone mixes original details with fun updates, including a minimalist kitchen with white cupboards and a blue counter. It’s located at 21 Monroe Place, an eight-unit co-op in an imposing five-story walkup likely built sometime around the 1870s.

Originally a single-family house of grand proportions, the 25-foot-wide building lost its stoop and distinctive ornament sometime after its early 20th century tax photo was taken. That image shows the house in full Neo-Grec splendor, with stoop intact, mansard roof, pronounced strappy cornice, columns, pediments and dormers as well as robust

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Dedicated Readers Braved Weather for Brooklyn Book Festival

Nonstop rainy weather threw a wrench in the plans of many fall festivals planned for the first weekend in October. But the gray days were perfect for people who love to stay in with a good book, and the Brooklyn Book Festival managed to draw a huge crowd of indoors to attend panel discussions, meet with authors and question the role of literature in today’s most pressing issues.

“We were lucky for 16 years to have wonderful weather,” said Liz Koch, co-producer and vice president of the BBF. “But Sunday, we just had to pivot.”

Dedicated Readers Braved Weather for Brooklyn Book Festival

People listen to the panel

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Class action lawsuit filed on behalf of

Investors can contact the law firm at no cost to learn more about recovering their losses

LOS ANGELES, June 29, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — The Portnoy Law Firm advises IonQ, Inc. (“IonQ” or “the Company”) (NYSE: IONQ) investors that are a class action filed on behalf of investors. IonQ investors that lost money on their investment are encouraged to contact Lesley Portnoy, Esq.

Investors are encouraged to contact attorney Lesley F. Portnoy, by phone 844-767-8529 or email: [email protected], to discuss their legal rights, or click here to join the case via www.portnoylaw.com. The Portnoy Law Firm can provide a complimentary

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Art Installation Honors Victims of Police Brutality

A new Fort Greene art installation, “Witnessing,” uses antiquated emergency call boxes to honor victims of modern-day police brutality. Six 7-foot-tall call boxes outfitted with screens and placed around the plaza at 300 Ashland broadcast video testimonials from victims and survivors of police violence.

The exhibit was originally created by Bradley McCallum over 20 years ago in collaboration with Jacqueline Tarry in response to the citywide protests following the police abuse of Abner Louima in 1997 and Amadou Diallo in 1999. The artist decided to revisit the project to reiterate the ongoing fight to end racism, violence and the abuse