Portrait of Kate Christobek

Kate Christobek

I focus on government investigations and trials in New York state and federal court. After practicing law for close to a decade, I transitioned to reporting in 2020. I harness my legal background to provide transparency and clarity to the justice system. Most days, that means I’m back in the same courthouses where I worked for years as a lawyer, but now providing live updates and analysis on Mr. Trump’s ongoing legal matters.

I served as an assistant district attorney in the Bronx, where I prosecuted economic crime, child exploitation and animal abuse. I also served as an assistant district attorney in the Office of the Special Narcotics Prosecutor in New York City and as an assistant attorney general for the State of Ohio. I also have experience in television news and worked as an on-air reporter in the Bronx and Brooklyn where I’d film, write and edit my own stories. I went to law school at Ohio State University and then got my master’s degree in journalism from Columbia University.

Like all journalists who write for The Times, I am committed to upholding the standards of integrity outlined in The Times’s Ethical Journalism Handbook.

Latest

  1.  
  2.  
  3.  
  4.  
  5.  
  6.  
  7.  
  8.  
  9.  
  10.  
  11.  
  12.  
  13.  
  14.  

    The Jury That Convicted Donald Trump

    They heard weeks of testimony in Donald J. Trump’s criminal trial. Then the 12 New Yorkers who made up the jury stuck to the task at hand.

    By Kate Christobek, Jesse McKinley, Olivia Bensimon, Anusha Bayya and Wesley Parnell

  15.  
  16.  
  17.  
  18.  
  19.  
  20.  
  21.  
  22.  
  23.  
  24.  
  25.  

    The Star Witness Who Never Testified at Trump’s Trial

    Donald J. Trump’s lawyers are expected to highlight the absence of Allen Weisselberg, Mr. Trump’s former finance chief. But he is in jail, serving time for perjury.

    By Ben Protess, Jonah E. Bromwich and William K. Rashbaum

  26.  
  27.  

    Trump Chooses Not to Take the Stand, and the Defense Rests

    Donald J. Trump’s lawyers mounted a minimal defense after prosecutors called 20 witnesses. Closing arguments in the first prosecution of an American president will take place May 28.

    By Ben Protess, Jonah E. Bromwich, Maggie Haberman and William K. Rashbaum

  28.  
  29.  
  30.  
  31.  
  32.  
  33.  
  34.  
  35.  
  36.  
  37.  
  38.  
  39.  
  40.  
Page 4 of 10