Saturday, March 7, 2026
Beyond the Crime Scene
  • Home
  • News
  • True Crime Stories
  • Videos
  • Podcast
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • True Crime Stories
  • Videos
  • Podcast
No Result
View All Result
Beyond the Crime Scene
No Result
View All Result
Home News

NYC to shut down last migrant hotel after shelling out $170 million to crime-ridden shelter

by
August 9, 2025
in News
0
NYC to shut down last migrant hotel after shelling out $170 million to crime-ridden shelter
190
SHARES
1.5k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter



It’s the end of an error.

New York City’s last-standing — and most notorious — migrant hotel will soon stop housing illegal border crossers, The Post has learned.

The once-four-star Row NYC hotel on Eighth Avenue in Midtown was repurposed in October 2022, so its 1,331 rooms could be used as a shelter while the Big Apple dealt with the crippling migrant crisis, but Mayor Eric Adams confirmed the city’s $5.13 million-a-month contract with the hotel won’t be renewed in April.

The deal has allowed the hotel — which is owned by Boston-based real estate titan Rockpoint Group — to already rake in more than $170 million.

New York City’s last-standing and most notorious migrant hotel – the Row NYC — will soon stop housing illegal border crossers. The city’s $5.13 million-a-month contract with Row NYC expires in April and will not being renewed. Luiz C. Ribeiro for New York Post

It’s unclear what the future holds for the establishment, which once charged $414 to $435 per weeknight for standard rooms before becoming a shelter. Reps for the company did not return messages.

“We are proud to share that we will be closing another site — the Row Hotel, the last hotel in the city’s emergency shelter system — marking yet another major milestone in our administration’s recovery from this international humanitarian crisis,” Adams told The Post Friday.

The Row, which boasts on its website that it is “more New York than New York,” was the first hotel to be enlisted by the city to take in migrants after Adams declared the city’s existing homeless shelter system had reached a “breaking point.”

NYPD officers arresting two migrants at the Row Hotel in Midtown Manhattan. Luiz C. Ribeiro for New York Post

Since then, it’s been magnet for stabbings and other crimes, with rowdy Tren de Aragua-linked gangbangers among its tenants, including one 25-year-old Venezuelan migrant who allegedly broke into a Manhattan prosecutor’s apartment, robbed her at gunpoint and pleasured himself in front of her.

Other thugs staying there also attacked cops on numerous occasions, including a July 2024 incident where one officer was bitten and another had a moped hurled at them.

Workers there have also complained the hotel has become a wild “free-for-all” of sex, drugs and violence after the city began housing migrants there.

The Midtown South Precinct, that includes Row NYC and the Times Square area, has long had among the highest crime rates in the city. Although the precinct saw a nearly 10% decline in crime this year compared to 2024, burglaries are up nearly 16% and felony assaults 2%, NYPD data as of Aug. 3 show

Rooms inside The Row Hotel, which the city turned into a migrant shelter, included squalid conditions. Dennis A. Clark

The migrant crisis has cost city taxpayers more than $8 billion since spring 2022 to provide food, shelter and other services to over 238,000 migrants who flooded into the country because of former President Joe Biden’s lax border policies.

Local residents and workers in the Times Square business district hailed the news Saturday that the migrants would soon be leaving Row NYC.

“Hallelujah. I’m happy that it’s happening,” said a resident of The Camelot rental apartment complex across the street.  “We pay a lot of money to live here, and it doesn’t seem fair.”

“There are people sitting here all day, littering, leaving food waste, water bottles…,” the resident said.  “A lot of them have children, and there are women sitting around here smoking weed all day, the children are just playing on the street, on the bike lanes.

Rob Jejenich / NY Post Design

“It’s killed a lot of the business in this neighborhood. I would much rather see the Row filled with tourists who are supporting business rather than migrants who are draining it.”

Others who work for local businesses blamed the migrants’ arrival on declining profits, with one security guard saying he started wearing a wedding ring to fend off migrant hookers living at the hotel because they’ve propositioned him twice.

At its peak, NYC used 220 hotels and other contracted sites to house the newcomers.

As of June 25, 2024, the city was operating 193 migrant shelters of which 153, or nearly 80%, were former hotels and other lodging establishments like The Roosevelt in Midtown that were being subsidized by taxpayer dollars, according to an internal list active shelters then reviewed by The Post.

One of the junk filled rooms at The Row Hotel after it became a migrant shelter. Dennis A. Clark

Others included houses of worship, recreation centers, and controversial pop-up “tent city” complexes, including one erected to house 3,000 migrants on Randall’s Island; nearly 2,000 at Floyd Bennett Field in Brooklyn; and another 1,000 outside Creedmoor Psychiatric Center in Queens.

However, the city is now down to just four contracted shelters, with the Row NYC being the last remaining lodging establishment.

The Department of Homeless Services has slowly absorbed remaining migrants into the city-run shelter system, which as of last week was caring for 92,000 residents, including 35,400 migrants.

“Three years ago, thousands of migrants and asylum seekers began streaming into our city every week — and the Adams administration stepped up,” the mayor said Friday.  

“We opened hundreds of emergency migrant shelters to ensure no family slept on the street. Since then, we have successfully helped more than 200,000 migrants leave our shelter system and take the next step toward self-sufficiency, the migrant population in our care continues to decline, and we have closed 64 emergency migrant sites, including all of our tent-based facilities.”

“We have skillfully and humanely managed a national humanitarian crisis — and have done what no other city could do,” he added.

Additional reporting by Khristina Narizhnaya



Source link

Related articles

Suffolk County Police car.

Toddler hit and killed by pick-up truck in Long Island driveway: cops

December 9, 2025
Kenyon Dobie was good Sam trying to stop Oscar Solarzano: prosecutors

Kenyon Dobie was good Sam trying to stop Oscar Solarzano: prosecutors

December 9, 2025
Tags: crimeillegal immigrantsMetromidtownmigrantsUS News
Share76Tweet48
Previous Post

Trump to host news conference to ‘stop violent crime’ and make DC ‘one of the safest’ cities in the world

Next Post

LA County fire captain accused of faking work injury, claims $25K insurance payout

Related Posts

Suffolk County Police car.

Toddler hit and killed by pick-up truck in Long Island driveway: cops

by
December 9, 2025
0

A toddler was hit and killed by a pickup truck in a Long Island driveway on Saturday afternoon, Suffolk County...

Kenyon Dobie was good Sam trying to stop Oscar Solarzano: prosecutors

Kenyon Dobie was good Sam trying to stop Oscar Solarzano: prosecutors

by
December 9, 2025
0

The man stabbed by a homeless illegal migrant on a light rail train in North Carolina last week was a...

Once jailed Long Island corruption watchdog now preps convicted white-collar criminals for prison

Once jailed Long Island corruption watchdog now preps convicted white-collar criminals for prison

by
December 8, 2025
0

A disgraced Long Island ex-prosecutor is using his own experiences in the big house to peddle consultancy services to white-collar...

NYC ties record for longest stretch without a single homicide

NYC ties record for longest stretch without a single homicide

by
December 8, 2025
0

The Big Apple just went 12 days without a single homicide — matching a historical record set nearly a decade...

Nurses Say Staff Shortage Impacting Medical Care at Missouri Prison

Nurses Say Staff Shortage Impacting Medical Care at Missouri Prison

by
December 8, 2025
0

When Steven Caldwell-Bey wasn’t able to get a regular refill for his blood thinners, he began taking one pill a...

Load More
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
The horrifying rape, torture murder of eight-year-old Nurin Jazlin Jazimin : True Crime Diva

The horrifying rape, torture murder of eight-year-old Nurin Jazlin Jazimin : True Crime Diva

May 29, 2023
What I Learned From a Year of Reading Letters From Prisoners

What I Learned From a Year of Reading Letters From Prisoners

December 16, 2024
Drunk driver who killed mother and son blamed the victims, phone calls with father reveal

Drunk driver who killed mother and son blamed the victims, phone calls with father reveal

September 22, 2024
'Gulf Coast Stapletons' influencer sentenced for child porn

‘Gulf Coast Stapletons’ influencer sentenced for child porn

July 4, 2025
NJ man who chopped neighbor's trees fined $13K — and faces $1M bill

NJ man who chopped neighbor’s trees fined $13K — and faces $1M bill

February 27, 2024
Karen Styles: map of where a deer hunter found her body

The 1994 murder of Karen Styles

May 9, 2023
Sacks of USAID yellow peas in a storage facility.

USAID official pleads guilty to taking part in $550M bribery scheme: ‘Violated the public trust’

June 14, 2025
Karen Styles: map of where a deer hunter found her body

The 1994 murder of Karen Styles

0
Dwane Roy Dreher: photo of his 2nd wife, Lois Genzler Dreher at 16 years old

The 1955 disappearance of U.S. Navy veteran Dwane Roy Dreher

0
Alta Braun: professional photo taken when she was about 4 years old.

The 1917 unsolved murder of Alta Marie Braun

0
Vacation Nightmare: The gruesome murder of Janice Pietropola and Lynn Seethaler

Vacation Nightmare: The gruesome murder of Janice Pietropola and Lynn Seethaler

0
Kristi Nikle: photo of suspect Floyd Tapson

The 1996 disappearance of Kristi Nikle

0
Frank and Tessie Pozar: photo of their son, Frank Pozar, Jr.

Motel Mystery: What happened to Frank and Tessie Pozar?

0
Evil on The Road Part 4: Desmond Joseph Runstedler

Evil on The Road Part 4: Desmond Joseph Runstedler

0
Missing father found buried under family home after decades of searching

Missing father found buried under family home after decades of searching

December 26, 2025
Suffolk County Police car.

Toddler hit and killed by pick-up truck in Long Island driveway: cops

December 9, 2025
Kenyon Dobie was good Sam trying to stop Oscar Solarzano: prosecutors

Kenyon Dobie was good Sam trying to stop Oscar Solarzano: prosecutors

December 9, 2025
Once jailed Long Island corruption watchdog now preps convicted white-collar criminals for prison

Once jailed Long Island corruption watchdog now preps convicted white-collar criminals for prison

December 8, 2025
NYC ties record for longest stretch without a single homicide

NYC ties record for longest stretch without a single homicide

December 8, 2025
Nurses Say Staff Shortage Impacting Medical Care at Missouri Prison

Nurses Say Staff Shortage Impacting Medical Care at Missouri Prison

December 8, 2025
Former Georgia beauty queen Trinity Poague breaks down after being sentenced in murder of ex-boyfriend's toddler son

Former Georgia beauty queen Trinity Poague breaks down after being sentenced in murder of ex-boyfriend’s toddler son

December 8, 2025
Beyond the Crime Scene with Bee Astronaut

Categories

  • Featured
  • News
  • Podcast
  • True Crime Stories
  • Videos

Legal Pages

  • Home
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA)
  • DMCA

© 2023 All right reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • True Crime Stories
  • Videos
  • Podcast

© 2023 All right reserved.