EditorialFederico Pignatelli, who blames a shattered mirror in his bathroom on his neighbor’s construction project, points to broken pieces of mirror in his bathtub in New York, May 8, 2023. (Yuvraj Khanna/The New York Times)
EditorialFederico Pignatelli, who blames a shattered mirror in his bathroom on his neighbor’s construction project, points to broken pieces of mirror in his bathtub in New York, May 8, 2023. (Yuvraj Khanna/The New York Times)
EditorialBarb Teron shows that her insurer was charged over $88,000 for the drug Humira over the past year in Brook Park, Ohio, Jan. 24, 2023. (Nic Antaya/The New York Times)
EditorialA home belonging to Jacqueline Huskey, a plaintiff in a lawsuit representing hundreds of State Farm customers who are suing the insurer for discrimination against Black customers. (Evan Jenkins/The New York Times)
EditorialMcKeel Hagerty, the eponymous chief executive of the classic car insurer, at a brunch in the boardroom at the New York Stock Exchange held to celebrate the first day of trading for his newly public company on Dec. 6, 2021. (Sinna Nasseri/The New York Times)
EditorialInsurer LV is expecting a rise in cancer related claims after the Covid crisis reduced access to screenings and urgent GP referrals, Westbourne, Dorset, UK - 03 Jul 2021
EditorialConductor James Levine leads the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra during a concert at Carnegie Hall in New York, May 18, 2016. (Robert Altman/The New York Times)
EditorialNick Gavrilides, owner of the Soup Spoon Cafe in Lansing, Mich., pays $12,002 in annual premiums to his insurer, which is refusing to pay his business interruption claims.?(Rachel Elise Thomas/The New York Times)
EditorialAn exhibition about Anne Frank at the Museum of Tolerance, the educational arm of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, in Los Angeles on Oct. 3, 2013. (Monica Almeida/The New York Times)
EditorialAn Illinois health insurer rejected out-of-state treatment for a 4-year-old?s rare disease five times. It relented, but why is getting an OK so hard?
EditorialAn Illinois health insurer rejected out-of-state treatment for a 4-year-old’s rare disease five times. It relented, but why is getting an OK so hard?