1
U(D54G1D)y+=!.!=!$!# It was opening day for Coney Is- land’s famed amusement parks, long shuttered during the pan- demic, and Andrew Yang — the 2020 presidential candidate who has shifted his personality-driven campaign to the New York City mayoral race — was in his ele- ment. “Coney Island is open for busi- ness!” he declared on Friday, pumping his fists as he made his way down a windswept board- walk. “New York City! Can you feel it?” What it felt like was a campaign event, and Mr. Yang was not the only mayoral candidate to take ad- vantage. Scott M. Stringer, the city comptroller, mingled along the midway, playing games with his family; Kathryn Garcia, the for- mer sanitation commissioner, rode bumper cars and visited small businesses. New York faces immense chal- lenges on the road to recovery from the pandemic. Thousands of deaths, economic devastation, ris- ing violent crime and deep racial and socioeconomic inequality complicate the city’s path forward at every turn, making the upcom- Race for Mayor Is Gearing Up As City Is, Too By KATIE GLUECK CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: JAMES ESTRIN/THE NEW YORK TIMES; BENJAMIN NORMAN FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES; JOHN MINCHILLO/ASSOCIATED PRESS; GABRIELA BHASKAR FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page A12 Top contenders in New York City’s mayoral race are, clockwise from top left: Andrew Yang, a 2020 presidential candidate; Scott M. Stringer, the city comptroller; Eric Adams, Brooklyn’s borough president; and Maya D. Wiley, a former counsel to Mayor Bill de Blasio. Rory Levin, a sixth grader in Bloomington, Minn., used to hate going to school. He has a health condition that often makes him feel apprehensive around other students. Taking special-educa- tion classes did little to ease his anxiety. So when his district created a stand-alone digital-only program, Bloomington Online School, last year for the pandemic, Rory opted to try it. Now the 11-year-old is en- joying school for the first time, said his mother, Lisa Levin. He loves the live video classes and has made friends with other on- line students, she said. In December, Bloomington Public Schools decided to keep running the online school even af- ter the pandemic subsides. Ms. Levin plans to re-enroll Rory for this fall. “It is such a good fit for him,” she said. “We’re really hoping they can continue it for the rest of his school career.” A year after the coronavirus set off a seismic disruption in public education, some of the remote programs that districts intended to be temporary are poised to out- last the pandemic. Even as stu- dents flock back to classrooms, a subset of families who have come to prefer online learning are push- ing to keep it going — and school systems are rushing to accommo- date them. After Covid, Some Students Will Still Learn Online, by Demand By NATASHA SINGER Continued on Page A14 LAKE MARY, Fla. — Long be- fore the F.B.I. began to scrutinize a tax collector in Florida named Joel Greenberg — and long before his trail led them to Representa- tive Matt Gaetz — he amassed an outlandish record in the mundane local public office he had turned into a personal fief of power. Records and interviews de- tailed a litany of accusations: Mr. Greenberg strutted into work with a pistol on his hip in a state that does not allow guns to be openly carried. He spent hundreds of thousands of taxpayer dollars to create no-show jobs for a relative and some of his groomsmen. He tried to talk his way out of a traffic ticket, asking a police officer for “professional courtesy.” He played police officer himself, putting a flashing light on his car to pull over a woman and accuse her of speeding. He published an anti-Muslim Facebook post. He solicited help to hack critics on the county commission. Stalking a rival candidate got him arrested. Federal agents look- ing into the matter found at least five fake IDs in his wallet and backpack, and kept digging. Their inquiry culminated in 33 federal charges against Mr. Greenberg, 36, including sex traf- ficking of a minor, bribery, fraud and stalking — and led to a mush- rooming political scandal that burst into national news in recent days and ensnared Mr. Gaetz, who is a close ally of President Donald J. Trump, and other influential Florida Republicans, with the in- vestigation continuing. Behind Gaetz Case, a Problematic Tax Collector This article is by Patricia Mazzei, Michael S. Schmidt and Katie Ben- ner. Former Florida Official Seemed to Hold Law in Little Regard Continued on Page A13 French curators had worked for a decade to prepare a major exhi- bition marking the 500th anniver- sary of the death of Leonardo da Vinci. When it opened, though, the most talked-about painting they had planned to show — “Salvator Mundi,” the most expensive work ever sold at auction — was no- where to be seen. Plucked from shabby obscurity at a New Orleans estate sale, the painting had been sold in 2017 as a rediscovered “lost” Leonardo and fetched more than $450 million from an anonymous bidder who kept it hidden from view. The chance to see it at the Louvre mu- seum’s anniversary show two years later had created a sensa- tion in the international art world, and its absence whipped up a storm of new questions. Had the Louvre concluded that the painting was not actually the work of Leonardo, as a vocal handful of scholars had insisted? Had the buyer — reported to be Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mo- hammed bin Salman, though he had never acknowledged it — de- clined to include it in the show for fear of public scrutiny? The tanta- lizing notion that the brash Saudi prince might have gambled a for- Clash of Wills Kept a Leonardo From Being Seen at the Louvre By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK and ELAINE SCIOLINO Continued on Page A10 DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES Hideki Matsuyama of Japan became the first Asian-born player to win the Masters. Page D1. A Blast of History at Augusta After a bloody election, the government of Yoweri Museveni appears intent on breaking the opposition’s back. PAGE A9 INTERNATIONAL A6-10 Torture Campaign in Uganda “Concrete Cowboy” is set amid the sta- bles of Philadelphia’s Fletcher Street, a hub for Black equestrians. PAGE C1 ARTS C1-6 Riding Horses on a City Street Taiwan is going to great lengths to keep water flowing to its all-important semi- conductor industry, including shutting off irrigation to rice growers. PAGE B1 BUSINESS B1-7 Tech vs. Farmers in a Drought Local officials across the country are stepping back from elected office. Many offer the same explanation: Covid fatigue has sapped them of their reser- voirs of energy. PAGE A11 NATIONAL A11-15 Mayors Head for the Exit Some have regrets over unfinished business. For others, the end of an unhappy and complicated relationship just comes as a relief. An essay. PAGE A4 TRACKING AN OUTBREAK A4-5 Grieving the Estranged Farhad Manjoo PAGE A19 EDITORIAL, OP-ED A18-19 Men’s sheds became a model for aiding “old boys.” Now, women are starting their own. Australia Dispatch. PAGE A6 Welcome to the Women’s Shed Pivoting in months off an important event, the Speed Museum offers a new model. Critic’s Notebook. PAGE C1 An Art Show for Breonna Wayne LaPierre has led the National Rifle Association for 30 years, but his implacable image looked threadbare during a round of testimony in bank- ruptcy court in Dallas. PAGE A15 An N.R.A. Chief in Disarray Public health experts say the vaccine’s benefits far outweigh the risk of a clot- ting disorder for most people. PAGE A5 Rare Reaction to AstraZeneca Holding the Games in a pandemic isn’t the only dire issue for the Olympic move- ment, Kurt Streeter writes. PAGE D2 SPORTSMONDAY D1-6 Carrying a Torch for Change WASHINGTON — Members of Congress have begun a frenzy of lobbying to ensure that their pet projects and policy priorities are included in President Biden’s $2 trillion infrastructure and jobs plan, eager to shape what could be one of the most substantial public works investments in a genera- tion. Officials across the country are dusting off lists of construction projects and social programs, hoping to secure their piece of a plan aimed at addressing what the administration estimates is at least $1 trillion worth of back- logged infrastructure improve- ments, as well as economic and ra- cial inequities that have existed for decades. Senior lawmakers have started collecting lists of requests from their colleagues for what should be included in the bill, while top White House officials are fielding a torrent of calls from rank-and- file lawmakers, all of whom have their own ideas. “My phone is blowing up,” Pete Buttigieg, the transportation sec- retary, said in an interview. Nearly every lawmaker “can point to a road or a bridge or an airport” in his or her district that is in dire need of repair. “There’s a ton of interest from Congress,” he said. On Monday, Mr. Biden is set to meet at the White House with a group of Republicans and Demo- crats to discuss the plan, part of a push to forge a bipartisan compro- mise that may ultimately prove fu- tile given G.O.P. resistance to the scope of the package. The five cab- inet officials tapped to navigate the infrastructure package through Congress, including Mr. Buttigieg, are continuing to dis- cuss the plan with both Republi- cans and Democrats. “The door is open,” Speaker Nancy Pelosi of California said on Sunday on CBS’s “Face the Na- tion.” “Our hand is extended. Let’s find out where we can find our common ground. We always have a responsibility to strive for bi- partisanship.” The process is crucial to Mr. Bi- den’s strategy for maneuvering the far-reaching plan through a Congress where his party has mi- nuscule majorities, at a time when the space for a bipartisan compro- mise is narrow and even Demo- crats differ on how to structure and pay for such a huge package. Mr. Buttigieg said Sunday on Fox News that Mr. Biden wanted to see “major progress in Congress” by Memorial Day, and lawmakers are eager to weigh in. Representative Mikie Sherrill, Frenzied Push To Put Projects In Building Bill Congress Weighs Ideas for Infrastructure This article is by Emily Cochrane, Pranshu Verma and Luke Broadwa- ter. Continued on Page A14 A power failure that appeared to have been caused by a deliber- ately planned explosion struck Iran’s Natanz uranium enrich- ment site on Sunday, in what Ira- nian officials called an act of sabo- tage that they suggested had been carried out by Israel. The blackout injected new un- certainty into diplomatic efforts that began last week to salvage the 2015 nuclear deal repudiated by the Trump administration. Iran did not say precisely what had caused the blackout at the heavily fortified site, which has been a target of previous sabo- tage, and Israel publicly declined to confirm or deny any responsi- bility. But American and Israeli in- telligence officials said there had been an Israeli role. Two intelligence officials briefed on the damage said it had been caused by a large explosion that completely destroyed the in- dependent — and heavily pro- tected — internal power system that supplies the underground centrifuges that enrich uranium. The officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to de- scribe a classified Israeli opera- tion, said that the explosion had dealt a severe blow to Iran’s abil- ity to enrich uranium and that it could take at least nine months to restore Natanz’s production. If so, Iran’s leverage in new talks sought by the Biden admin- istration to restore the nuclear agreement could be significantly compromised. Iran has said it will take increasingly strong actions prohibited under the agreement until the sanctions imposed by President Donald J. Trump have been rescinded. It was not immediately clear how much advance word — if any — the Biden administration re- ceived about the Natanz opera- tion, which happened on the same morning that the American de- fense secretary, Lloyd J. Austin III, was visiting Israel. But Israeli officials have made no secret of their unhappiness over Mr. Bi- den’s desire to revive the nuclear agreement that his predecessor renounced in 2018. Ali Akbar Salehi, the head of Iran’s Atomic Energy Organiza- tion, described the blackout as an act of “nuclear terrorism” and said the international community must confront the threat. “The action this morning against the Natanz enrichment site shows the defeat of those who oppose our country’s nuclear and political development and the sig- nificant gains of our nuclear in- dustry,” Mr. Salehi said, according to the Iranian news media. “The incident shows the failure of those who oppose Iran negotiating for sanctions relief.” Israel, which considers Iran a dire adversary, has sabotaged Iran’s nuclear work before, with tactics ranging from cyberattacks EXPLOSION ROCKS NUCLEAR CENTER, INFURIATING IRAN SABOTAGE IS SUSPECTED Attack May Hurt Efforts to Reboot 2015 Deal With the U.S. This article is by Ronen Bergman, Rick Gladstone and Farnaz Fassihi. Continued on Page A10 Late Edition VOL. CLXX .... No. 59,026 © 2021 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, MONDAY, APRIL 12, 2021 Today, mostly cloudy, rain, cooler, high 52. Tonight, overcast, stray showers, low 45. Tomorrow, clouds breaking for some sunshine, milder, high 61. Weather map is on Page B8. $3.00

INFURIATING IRAN NUCLEAR CENTER, EXPLOSION ROCKS1 day ago · Clash of Wills Kept a Leonardo From Being Seen at the Louvre By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK and ELAINE SCIOLINO Continued on

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Page 1: INFURIATING IRAN NUCLEAR CENTER, EXPLOSION ROCKS1 day ago · Clash of Wills Kept a Leonardo From Being Seen at the Louvre By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK and ELAINE SCIOLINO Continued on

C M Y K Nxxx,2021-04-12,A,001,Bs-4C,E1

U(D54G1D)y+=!.!=!$!#

It was opening day for Coney Is-land’s famed amusement parks,long shuttered during the pan-demic, and Andrew Yang — the2020 presidential candidate whohas shifted his personality-drivencampaign to the New York Citymayoral race — was in his ele-ment.

“Coney Island is open for busi-ness!” he declared on Friday,pumping his fists as he made hisway down a windswept board-walk. “New York City! Can youfeel it?”

What it felt like was a campaignevent, and Mr. Yang was not theonly mayoral candidate to take ad-vantage. Scott M. Stringer, the citycomptroller, mingled along themidway, playing games with hisfamily; Kathryn Garcia, the for-mer sanitation commissioner,rode bumper cars and visitedsmall businesses.

New York faces immense chal-lenges on the road to recoveryfrom the pandemic. Thousands ofdeaths, economic devastation, ris-ing violent crime and deep racialand socioeconomic inequalitycomplicate the city’s path forwardat every turn, making the upcom-

Race for MayorIs Gearing UpAs City Is, Too

By KATIE GLUECK

CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: JAMES ESTRIN/THE NEW YORK TIMES; BENJAMIN NORMAN FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES; JOHN MINCHILLO/ASSOCIATED PRESS; GABRIELA BHASKAR FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page A12

Top contenders in New York City’s mayoral race are, clockwise from top left: Andrew Yang, a 2020 presidential candidate; Scott M.Stringer, the city comptroller; Eric Adams, Brooklyn’s borough president; and Maya D. Wiley, a former counsel to Mayor Bill de Blasio.

Rory Levin, a sixth grader inBloomington, Minn., used to hategoing to school. He has a healthcondition that often makes himfeel apprehensive around otherstudents. Taking special-educa-tion classes did little to ease hisanxiety.

So when his district created astand-alone digital-only program,Bloomington Online School, lastyear for the pandemic, Rory optedto try it. Now the 11-year-old is en-joying school for the first time,said his mother, Lisa Levin. Heloves the live video classes andhas made friends with other on-line students, she said.

In December, Bloomington

Public Schools decided to keeprunning the online school even af-ter the pandemic subsides. Ms.Levin plans to re-enroll Rory forthis fall.

“It is such a good fit for him,”she said. “We’re really hopingthey can continue it for the rest ofhis school career.”

A year after the coronavirus setoff a seismic disruption in public

education, some of the remoteprograms that districts intendedto be temporary are poised to out-last the pandemic. Even as stu-dents flock back to classrooms, asubset of families who have cometo prefer online learning are push-ing to keep it going — and schoolsystems are rushing to accommo-date them.

After Covid, Some Students Will Still Learn Online, by Demand

By NATASHA SINGER

Continued on Page A14

LAKE MARY, Fla. — Long be-fore the F.B.I. began to scrutinize atax collector in Florida namedJoel Greenberg — and long beforehis trail led them to Representa-tive Matt Gaetz — he amassed anoutlandish record in the mundanelocal public office he had turnedinto a personal fief of power.

Records and interviews de-tailed a litany of accusations: Mr.Greenberg strutted into work witha pistol on his hip in a state thatdoes not allow guns to be openlycarried. He spent hundreds of

thousands of taxpayer dollars tocreate no-show jobs for a relativeand some of his groomsmen. Hetried to talk his way out of a trafficticket, asking a police officer for“professional courtesy.” Heplayed police officer himself,putting a flashing light on his carto pull over a woman and accuseher of speeding. He published ananti-Muslim Facebook post. He

solicited help to hack critics on thecounty commission.

Stalking a rival candidate gothim arrested. Federal agents look-ing into the matter found at leastfive fake IDs in his wallet andbackpack, and kept digging.

Their inquiry culminated in 33federal charges against Mr.Greenberg, 36, including sex traf-ficking of a minor, bribery, fraudand stalking — and led to a mush-rooming political scandal thatburst into national news in recentdays and ensnared Mr. Gaetz, whois a close ally of President DonaldJ. Trump, and other influentialFlorida Republicans, with the in-vestigation continuing.

Behind Gaetz Case, a Problematic Tax CollectorThis article is by Patricia Mazzei,

Michael S. Schmidt and Katie Ben-ner.

Former Florida OfficialSeemed to Hold Law

in Little Regard

Continued on Page A13

French curators had worked fora decade to prepare a major exhi-bition marking the 500th anniver-sary of the death of Leonardo daVinci. When it opened, though, themost talked-about painting theyhad planned to show — “SalvatorMundi,” the most expensive workever sold at auction — was no-where to be seen.

Plucked from shabby obscurityat a New Orleans estate sale, thepainting had been sold in 2017 as arediscovered “lost” Leonardo andfetched more than $450 millionfrom an anonymous bidder whokept it hidden from view. Thechance to see it at the Louvre mu-

seum’s anniversary show twoyears later had created a sensa-tion in the international art world,and its absence whipped up astorm of new questions.

Had the Louvre concluded thatthe painting was not actually thework of Leonardo, as a vocalhandful of scholars had insisted?Had the buyer — reported to beSaudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mo-hammed bin Salman, though hehad never acknowledged it — de-clined to include it in the show forfear of public scrutiny? The tanta-lizing notion that the brash Saudiprince might have gambled a for-

Clash of Wills Kept a LeonardoFrom Being Seen at the Louvre

By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK and ELAINE SCIOLINO

Continued on Page A10

DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES

Hideki Matsuyama of Japan became the first Asian-born player to win the Masters. Page D1.A Blast of History at Augusta

After a bloody election, the governmentof Yoweri Museveni appears intent onbreaking the opposition’s back. PAGE A9

INTERNATIONAL A6-10

Torture Campaign in Uganda“Concrete Cowboy” is set amid the sta-bles of Philadelphia’s Fletcher Street, a hub for Black equestrians. PAGE C1

ARTS C1-6

Riding Horses on a City StreetTaiwan is going to great lengths to keepwater flowing to its all-important semi-conductor industry, including shuttingoff irrigation to rice growers. PAGE B1

BUSINESS B1-7

Tech vs. Farmers in a Drought

Local officials across the country arestepping back from elected office. Manyoffer the same explanation: Covidfatigue has sapped them of their reser-voirs of energy. PAGE A11

NATIONAL A11-15

Mayors Head for the ExitSome have regrets over unfinishedbusiness. For others, the end of anunhappy and complicated relationshipjust comes as a relief. An essay. PAGE A4

TRACKING AN OUTBREAK A4-5

Grieving the Estranged

Farhad Manjoo PAGE A19

EDITORIAL, OP-ED A18-19Men’s sheds became a model for aiding“old boys.” Now, women are startingtheir own. Australia Dispatch. PAGE A6

Welcome to the Women’s ShedPivoting in months off an importantevent, the Speed Museum offers a newmodel. Critic’s Notebook. PAGE C1

An Art Show for Breonna

Wayne LaPierre has led the NationalRifle Association for 30 years, but hisimplacable image looked threadbareduring a round of testimony in bank-ruptcy court in Dallas. PAGE A15

An N.R.A. Chief in DisarrayPublic health experts say the vaccine’sbenefits far outweigh the risk of a clot-ting disorder for most people. PAGE A5

Rare Reaction to AstraZeneca

Holding the Games in a pandemic isn’tthe only dire issue for the Olympic move-ment, Kurt Streeter writes. PAGE D2

SPORTSMONDAY D1-6

Carrying a Torch for Change

WASHINGTON — Members ofCongress have begun a frenzy oflobbying to ensure that their petprojects and policy priorities areincluded in President Biden’s $2trillion infrastructure and jobsplan, eager to shape what could beone of the most substantial publicworks investments in a genera-tion.

Officials across the country aredusting off lists of constructionprojects and social programs,hoping to secure their piece of aplan aimed at addressing what theadministration estimates is atleast $1 trillion worth of back-logged infrastructure improve-ments, as well as economic and ra-cial inequities that have existedfor decades.

Senior lawmakers have startedcollecting lists of requests fromtheir colleagues for what shouldbe included in the bill, while topWhite House officials are fieldinga torrent of calls from rank-and-file lawmakers, all of whom havetheir own ideas.

“My phone is blowing up,” PeteButtigieg, the transportation sec-retary, said in an interview.Nearly every lawmaker “canpoint to a road or a bridge or anairport” in his or her district thatis in dire need of repair.

“There’s a ton of interest fromCongress,” he said.

On Monday, Mr. Biden is set tomeet at the White House with agroup of Republicans and Demo-crats to discuss the plan, part of apush to forge a bipartisan compro-mise that may ultimately prove fu-tile given G.O.P. resistance to thescope of the package. The five cab-inet officials tapped to navigatethe infrastructure packagethrough Congress, including Mr.Buttigieg, are continuing to dis-cuss the plan with both Republi-cans and Democrats.

“The door is open,” SpeakerNancy Pelosi of California said onSunday on CBS’s “Face the Na-tion.” “Our hand is extended. Let’sfind out where we can find ourcommon ground. We always havea responsibility to strive for bi-partisanship.”

The process is crucial to Mr. Bi-den’s strategy for maneuveringthe far-reaching plan through aCongress where his party has mi-nuscule majorities, at a time whenthe space for a bipartisan compro-mise is narrow and even Demo-crats differ on how to structureand pay for such a huge package.Mr. Buttigieg said Sunday on FoxNews that Mr. Biden wanted tosee “major progress in Congress”by Memorial Day, and lawmakersare eager to weigh in.

Representative Mikie Sherrill,

Frenzied PushTo Put ProjectsIn Building Bill

Congress Weighs Ideasfor Infrastructure

This article is by Emily Cochrane,Pranshu Verma and Luke Broadwa-ter.

Continued on Page A14

A power failure that appearedto have been caused by a deliber-ately planned explosion struckIran’s Natanz uranium enrich-ment site on Sunday, in what Ira-nian officials called an act of sabo-tage that they suggested had beencarried out by Israel.

The blackout injected new un-certainty into diplomatic effortsthat began last week to salvagethe 2015 nuclear deal repudiatedby the Trump administration.

Iran did not say precisely whathad caused the blackout at theheavily fortified site, which hasbeen a target of previous sabo-tage, and Israel publicly declinedto confirm or deny any responsi-bility. But American and Israeli in-telligence officials said there hadbeen an Israeli role.

Two intelligence officialsbriefed on the damage said it hadbeen caused by a large explosionthat completely destroyed the in-dependent — and heavily pro-tected — internal power systemthat supplies the undergroundcentrifuges that enrich uranium.

The officials, who spoke on thecondition of anonymity to de-scribe a classified Israeli opera-tion, said that the explosion haddealt a severe blow to Iran’s abil-ity to enrich uranium and that itcould take at least nine months torestore Natanz’s production.

If so, Iran’s leverage in newtalks sought by the Biden admin-istration to restore the nuclearagreement could be significantlycompromised. Iran has said it willtake increasingly strong actionsprohibited under the agreementuntil the sanctions imposed byPresident Donald J. Trump havebeen rescinded.

It was not immediately clearhow much advance word — if any— the Biden administration re-ceived about the Natanz opera-tion, which happened on the samemorning that the American de-fense secretary, Lloyd J. AustinIII, was visiting Israel. But Israeliofficials have made no secret oftheir unhappiness over Mr. Bi-den’s desire to revive the nuclearagreement that his predecessorrenounced in 2018.

Ali Akbar Salehi, the head ofIran’s Atomic Energy Organiza-tion, described the blackout as anact of “nuclear terrorism” andsaid the international communitymust confront the threat.

“The action this morningagainst the Natanz enrichmentsite shows the defeat of those whooppose our country’s nuclear andpolitical development and the sig-nificant gains of our nuclear in-dustry,” Mr. Salehi said, accordingto the Iranian news media. “Theincident shows the failure of thosewho oppose Iran negotiating forsanctions relief.”

Israel, which considers Iran adire adversary, has sabotagedIran’s nuclear work before, withtactics ranging from cyberattacks

EXPLOSION ROCKSNUCLEAR CENTER, INFURIATING IRAN

SABOTAGE IS SUSPECTED

Attack May Hurt Effortsto Reboot 2015 Deal

With the U.S.

This article is by Ronen Bergman,Rick Gladstone and Farnaz Fassihi.

Continued on Page A10

Late Edition

VOL. CLXX . . . . No. 59,026 © 2021 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, MONDAY, APRIL 12, 2021

Today, mostly cloudy, rain, cooler,high 52. Tonight, overcast, strayshowers, low 45. Tomorrow, cloudsbreaking for some sunshine, milder,high 61. Weather map is on Page B8.

$3.00