Sign up for our special edition newsletter to get a daily update on the coronavirus pandemic.
Follow the Story
Never forget June 5 — the day the elites shattered America’s trust
Elise Stefanik demands Hochul reveal how many NYers were victimized by 2020 ‘Do not resuscitate’ order
Rep. Goldman asks CDC if Cuomo’s much-maligned COVID nursing home edict violated US policy
With no accountability for school lockdowns, freedom’s foes soldier on, a new doc reveals
Embattled Wuhan doctor and ex-prez of EcoHealth Alliance Peter Daszak left ‘unemployed’ and ‘poor’: lawsuit
House GOP asks RFK Jr., Dr. Oz if Andrew Cuomo’s nursing home order broke COVID safety rules
New York City reported another 744 new coronavirus deaths between Monday and Tuesday, a major spike that followed days of declines.
The terrifying pandemic has now claimed the lives of 14,427 New Yorkers who either tested positive for COVID-19 or exhibited many of its symptoms before their deaths, according to data released by the city’s Health Department.
A DOH spokeswoman said the increase in deaths “is due to us learning of more deaths, which took place on multiple days.”
New deaths Tuesday actually decreased to below 400 when the backlog is not factored in, the spokeswoman said.
The data showed that victims with positive tests accounted for 461 of the fatalities, just shy of two-thirds of Tuesday’s overall death toll.
The spike in fatalities came a day after the city recorded just 443 additional fatalities over 24 hours on Monday, the first time the figure had dropped below 500 in weeks.
On Sunday there were 528 new deaths, on Saturday there were 513 and on Friday there were 722, Health Department data shows.
By Tuesday 134,874 people across the five boroughs had tested positive for the coronavirus, up from 132,467 Monday.
Mayor Bill de Blasio said at his daily press briefing Tuesday that the pandemic is still “raging” across the city.
“We know we’re not out of the woods by any stretch of the imagination. We’ve got a lot more to do. And we also know that the impact of this disease is being felt right now,” he said.
Matthew McDermott


