The Evening: Cases dismissed
Also, remembering Jimmy Cliff
The Evening
November 24, 2025

Good evening. Here’s the latest at the end of Monday.

  • Judge dismisses Comey and James cases
  • Ukraine responds to peace plan
  • Plus, remembering Jimmy Cliff
Side-by-side photos of James Comey, left, and Laetitia James.
James Comey and Letitia James. Monica Jorge for The New York Times; James Estrin/The New York Times

Judge dismisses Comey and James cases

A federal judge tossed out separate criminal charges against the former F.B.I. director James Comey and New York’s attorney general, Letitia James. The judge said the charges were invalid because the prosecutor who signed the filings, a loyalist installed by President Trump, had been put into her job unlawfully.

The two rulings left open the possibility that another prosecutor could refile the charges against both Comey and James. And many legal experts believe that the dismissals could be appealed to the Supreme Court. (Read the Comey ruling and the James ruling.)

The orders by the judge, Cameron McGowan Currie, a Clinton appointee from South Carolina, center on Trump’s unorthodox decision to appoint the prosecutor, Lindsey Halligan, in an interim capacity. She replaced Trump’s previous pick, who was also serving in a temporary role. The law does not permit the appointment of successive interim prosecutors, the judge said, or else a president could keep installing pliant appointees and get around the constitutional requirement for the Senate to confirm them.

In other Trump administration news:

Three people walk on a wet street in front of a ruined brick building. Red-and-white tape surrounds debris on the ground.
After a Russian missile attack in Ternopil, western Ukraine, yesterday. Mauricio Lima for The New York Times

Ukraine offered its changes to a peace plan

Ukrainian and U.S. mediators emerged from two days of talks today with a slimmed-down peace framework to end the war with Russia. The new proposal shifts some of the most contentious issues onto a separate negotiating track. Trump, who is pushing Ukraine to agree to a settlement by Thanksgiving, said that “something good just may be happening.”

The initial 28-point plan, drafted by the Trump administration with Russian input, called for Ukraine to cede land, shrink its army and forswear membership in NATO. U.S. officials declined to say what parts of the proposal were adjusted in Geneva. Volodymyr Zelensky, Ukraine’s president, said that Kyiv had “managed to keep extremely sensitive points on the table,” including the release of all Ukrainian prisoners of war and the return of Ukrainian children abducted by Russia.

For more: In our newsletter The World, Katrin Bennhold talked to Andrew Kramer, our Ukraine bureau chief, and Anatoly Kurmanaev, a longtime correspondent in Russia, about what each side wants in a deal.

Analysis: Vladimir Putin still believes time is on his side.

In other diplomacy news: Trump said he would visit Beijing in April.

An image from a video showing a prison guard kicking an inmate, Robert Brooks, on a gurney.
After this fatal 2024 attack on Robert Brooks, an inmate at Marcy Correctional Facility, 10 prison guards were charged. New York State Attorney General office, via Associated Press

N.Y. prison guards’ brutality has increased

Even in a system known for its brutality, the deaths of two handcuffed inmates at the hands of New York State prison guards caused something of a reckoning this year. Now, a Times investigation reveals that guards have been credibly accused of engaging in such behavior far more often than previously known.

Drawing on court records, disciplinary data and interviews with current and former inmates, our journalists identified more than 120 instances in the past decade in which restrained inmates were assaulted. Prisoners and prisoners’ advocates said that an uptick in more egregious abuse has occurred since 2021, when the state began limiting guards’ use of solitary confinement.

A photo illustration shows a school desk on a tiny square of grass. The desk casts a long shadow. The image is against a beige background.
Photo illustration by Ricardo Tomas

In the classroom, evidence of why children are struggling

Nearly 32 percent of adolescents have been diagnosed at some point with anxiety. More than one in 10 have experienced a major depressive disorder. Screens get a lot of blame. But what about where children spend most of their time?

There is growing evidence that school itself is essential to understanding the rise in mental health issues among the young. It can cause stress that exacerbates anxiety or depression, and it’s also where disorders often first show up. We took a closer look at the research.

Related: A study found that young adults who engaged in a social media “detox” reported reductions in depression, anxiety and insomnia.

More top news

TIME TO UNWIND

Close-up portrait of Jimmy Cliff looking up at the camera, wearing a jacket with a wide, light-colored collar.
Shepard Sherbell/Corbis, via Getty Images

Jimmy Cliff, a breakthrough reggae star, dies at 81

In 1972, Jimmy Cliff, a young R&B and ska singer with a couple of hits in his native Jamaica and the U.K., took a role in a low-budget movie about a struggling musician who turns to a life of crime. It was called “The Harder They Come,” and it became a cult hit in the U.S., running for years in midnight slots at theaters.

The film also introduced much of the world to reggae and made Cliff a figurehead of the genre. He became the second reggae musician inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, preceded only by a star Cliff had scouted as a teenager: Bob Marley. Cliff’s wife announced today that he had died at 81.

For more: Listen to eight essential Jimmy Cliff songs.

An illustration of an older person sitting in a chair emitting glowing bubbles depicting stories from their life. Two younger people sit on the floor listening intently.
Iryna Korshak

For holiday family time, consider an interview

Family gatherings over the holidays are a chance to catch up and tell stories. If there’s anything you’ve ever wanted to know about the lives of your older relatives, consider interviewing them — it’s quality time together now, a window into the past and the preservation of memories for the future.

Here are five questions to start you off.

Mary Steenburgen holds Ted Danson around the waist in front of a gradient photo backdrop.
Sela Shiloni for The New York Times

Dinner table topics

WHAT TO DO TONIGHT

A baking dish filled with corn pudding and drizzled with sour cream.
Christopher Testani for The New York Times

Cook: This street-corn pudding adopts the flavors of elotes.

Listen: Andrew Lloyd Webber, Sara Bareilles and other musical theater experts recommended songs to make you love the genre.

Watch: Wong Kar-wai’s 30-episode series “Blossoms Shanghai” premieres on the Criterion Channel tonight.

Read: These holiday romance books are pure magic.

Carry: This season’s must-have accessory is a chain bag.

Game: Ghost of Yotei is a violent revenge story tempered by tender moments and beautiful terrain.

Save: Try these six ways to save money on skiing.

Test yourself: Take the latest Flashback history quiz.