The Evening: Reiners’ son to be charged with murder
Also, the unemployment rate rose.
The Evening
December 16, 2025

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

  • Prosecutors plan to charge a son of Rob Reiner with two counts of murder
  • The U.S. backs a plan to defend Ukraine
  • Plus, an organist invites you to bliss out
A bald man with a white beard with his arm around a young man with thick black hair and glasses.
Rob and Nick Reiner in 2016. Laura Cavanaugh/FilmMagic, via Getty

Son to be charged in killing of Rob and Michele Reiner

Nick Reiner will be charged this evening with two counts of first-degree murder in the killing of his parents, the celebrated Hollywood director Rob Reiner and his wife, Michele, prosecutors said. Check here for the latest updates.

The charges carry a maximum sentence of the death penalty, or of life in prison without the possibility of parole. But prosecutors have not yet decided whether they will pursue the death penalty, according to the Los Angeles County district attorney, who announced the charges.

The police said that Nick Reiner, 32, was arrested “without incident” on Sunday night. He had spoken over the years about his struggles with drug abuse and periods of homelessness that began in his teenage years. He had also worked with his father on a movie loosely inspired by his early life, “Being Charlie.” The film and its making revealed a complex, fraught relationship between the gregarious director and his introverted son, people who worked on it told The Times.

A person who attended a holiday party at the home of the comedian Conan O’Brien on Saturday night said that Rob and Nick Reiner had argued there, and two attendees said that Nick Reiner had alarmed guests with his behavior. The Obamas had plans to see Rob and Michele Reiner on the day they were found dead.

Soldiers in camouflage alternately stand and lie down on a bare field as part of a training exercise.
Ukrainian soldiers during a live-fire training exercise in the Dnipro region. Laetitia Vancon for The New York Times

U.S. and Europe backed a plan to ensure Ukraine’s security

American and European diplomats have largely signed off on a plan to defend Ukraine once the current war ends. The proposal, my colleagues reported today, would include an enhancement of the Ukrainian military, a vow to protect Ukraine from a future invasion, the deployment of European forces inside the country and increased use of American intelligence.

The security plans, hammered out this week during more than eight hours of discussions in Berlin with President Volodymyr Zelensky and his aides, are designed to serve as the cornerstone of a cease-fire agreement. They are also intended to persuade Ukraine to concede territory, as Russia has demanded. Zelensky expressed wary optimism about the plan, but so far the Kremlin has shown little willingness to negotiate.

For more: This is a pivotal week for Kyiv. In addition to the peace proposal, European leaders are trying to decide on a plan to fund Ukraine using frozen Russian assets.

A chart of the unemployment rate showing a large pandemic spike, a decline and then a very gradual rise from approximately 2023 to a current rate of 4.6%.
Note: Data is seasonally adjusted. The Bureau of Labor Statistics did not release an unemployment figure for October 2025. Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics. Jacqueline Gu/The New York Times

New data offered a warning sign for the economy

The unemployment rate increased last month to 4.6 percent — the highest it has been since September 2021, when the economy was emerging from the pandemic. The data, which was released today, was a concerning sign for people in search of jobs, but the White House insisted that it was nothing to worry about.

In the same report, the government found that employers added 64,000 jobs, fueled largely by the health care sector and partly reversing a decline from the previous month. In total, the data failed to offer the kind of clarity that economists had hoped for after months of conflicting signals.

An old black-and-white photograph of Jeffrey Epstein. He is wearing a suit and is sitting before a window overlooking Manhattan.
Jeffrey Epstein as Cosmopolitan magazine’s “bachelor of the month” in July 1980. Stephen Ogilvy

The untold story of how Jeffrey Epstein got rich

The life and death of Jeffrey Epstein has become an American obsession. But how a college dropout from a working-class family amassed hundreds of millions of dollars has remained a sort of mystery.

Today, a monthslong investigation from my colleagues revealed the truth about Epstein’s rise: He built his wealth and reputation through scams, theft and lies. Here are six takeaways from their findings.

For more: A former girlfriend of Epstein shared her diary with us. It provides a window into how he sought to use their relationship for his advantage.

More top news

TIME TO UNWIND

A man in a baseball hat pointing his finger from behind a camera.
Rob Reiner on the set of “When Harry Met Sally …” in 1989. Columbia Pictures, via Everett Collection

Rob Reiner gave us great reasons to go to the movies

As the son of Carl Reiner, Rob Reiner grew up attending parties featuring the cream of comedy — Mel Brooks, Norman Lear, Neil Simon. And when Reiner became a director himself, he began with an astonishing run of movies that, in their variety and generosity, recalled the appeal of Old Hollywood.

In just eight years, Reiner made cherished films as different as the delightful mockumentary “This Is Spinal Tap,” the coming-of-age drama “Stand By Me,” the charming fairy tale “The Princess Bride” and the military courtroom drama “A Few Good Men.” It’s the kind of career, our critic Manohla Dargis writes, that’s inconceivable today.

In Opinion: Stephen King writes why he hugged Reiner after watching “Stand By Me.”

Rotating breakup lines: “It’s not you, it’s us”; “Why aren’t you crying?” my soon-to-be ex said after breaking up with me; “The problem with us is that we both need a wife”; “You deserve someone who loves Taylor Swift as much as you do”; “Your success is humiliating to me.”
The New York Times

The best real-life breakup lines

The winter holidays are an especially popular time to break up. So, to mark the occasion, our Modern Love team asked people around the world for their most striking parting words. Some were funny; others were sad; many were evocative. Read through them here.

“You deserve to find someone who likes Taylor Swift as much as you do,” one reader was told.

Another watched the movie “Wall-E,” and then turned to her boyfriend of five years and said: “Those robots are in love — we’re not.”

Two older women in leather seats look out the window of a train. A sign reads “Saint Louis, MS”
Camille Lenain for The New York Times

Dinner table topics

WHAT TO DO TONIGHT

A stack of four cookies with lots of pine nuts, with a fifth cookie leaning against it.
Ryan Liebe for The New York Times

Cook: Indulge a bit with these pignoli cookies.

Watch: My colleague highlighted four true crime picks that are worth checking out.

Listen: These 11 new holiday albums just might make you sway along with them.

Wear: Take inspiration from our fashion photographer’s look of the week.

Learn: Scientists aren’t sure why rosacea gets worse with age. But there are ways to manage it.

Plan: We have tips for avoiding an Airbnb fail on your next vacation.

Play: Here are today’s