EditorialAn attack on a prisoner being held at Green Haven Correctional Facility led to a rare criminal conviction of a guard. (Edward Keating/The New York Times)
EditorialSnax Popcorn Challenge event for Candy Pop and Ryan Seacrest Foundation charity challenge, Hotel Ziggy, West Hollywood, Los Angeles, USA - 18 Nov 2022
EditorialAfter meeting with President Joe Biden, Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and other House Democrats discuss Ukraine policy outside the White House in Washington on Tuesday, May 10, 2022. (Doug Mills/The New York Times)
EditorialKathy Boudin, a former member of the radical group the Weather Underground, at the Bedford Hills Correctional Facility, where she was a model prisoner, in Westchester County, N.Y., Aug. 15, 2001. (Edward Keating/The New York Times)
EditorialTom Young and Pamela Kezios of Chicago, center, approaching the Brooklyn Academy of Music, where they paused at the eight-mile mark of the New York City Marathon on Nov. 14, 1993 to exchange their wedding vows. (Edward Keating/The New York Times)
EditorialJohn Keating, left, and Maeve Higgins in the play "Autumn Royal," at the Irish Repertory Theater in New York, Oct. 7, 2021. (Sara Krulwich/The New York Times)
EditorialAn undated photo of photographer Edward Keating. Edward Keating, who for more than a month did whatever it took, even disguising himself as a worker, to photograph the wreckage at ground zero after Sept. 11, 2001, contributing to a body of work that brought The New York Times a Pulitzer Prize for photography for its 9/11 coverage, died on Sunday, Sept. 26, 2021, in Manhattan. He was 65. His wife, Carrie Keating, said the cause was cancer, which he had attributed to the days and nights he spent inhaling toxic dust amid the ruins of the World Trade Center. (New YorkTimes)
EditorialEdward Keating, then a freelance photographer working for The New York Times, is carried after being beaten during the racial violence in the Crown Heights section of Brooklyn on Aug. 20, 1991. (Keith Meyers/The New York Times)
EditorialAudience members Missy Eldredge and Joel Keating react during a performance of material from the musical “Ever After” at Hotel Carmichael in Carmel, Ind., on Sunday, May 23, 2021. (Lee Klafczynski/The New York Times)
EditorialAudience members Missy Eldredge and Joel Keating react during a performance of material from the musical “Ever After” at Hotel Carmichael in Carmel, Ind., on Sunday, May 23, 2021. (Lee Klafczynski/The New York Times)