How climate whiplash contributed to the severity of the California fires

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(LOS ANGELES) -- Hydroclimate whiplash -- the rapid shift between wet and dry conditions -- likely contributed to the severity of the wildfires burning in Southern California, according to experts.

In recent years, parts of the state shifted from a major drought to an extended period of above-average precipitation that allowed for abundant vegetation growth. After that, a stretch of intense, record-breaking heat dried out much of that vegetation and provided ample fuel for large and fast-growing wildfires.

The Los Angeles region experienced two "extraordinarily wet" winters -- in 2023 and 2024 -- followed by dry conditions that began in February, Edith de Guzman, a water equity and adaptation policy cooperative extension specialist at the University of California, Los Angeles, told ABC News. Since May 6, Los Angeles has only seen 0.16 inches of rain, so the region’s rainy season is off to an unusually dry start.

"Right now, we essentially have had no measurable precipitation since last spring, which has dried out all of that vegetation that grew happily over the last two wet winters," De Guzman said.

The shrub cover that popped up as a result of the extra precipitation later dried out -- providing large volumes of fuel for a fire, De Guzman said.

Combined with the highly flammable materials many of the houses were constructed with, such as wood frames, it was a recipe for disaster, De Guzman said.

In Southern California, dry conditions are also now more likely to last later into the fall, leaving the region more vulnerable during high wind events, according to Daniel Swain, a climate scientist with both UCLA and UC Agriculture and Natural Resources.

"Climate change is increasing the overlap between extremely dry vegetation conditions later in the season and the occurrence of these wind events," Swain said.

Hydroclimate variability has always been a staple of California's natural climate, leaving it particularly vulnerable to wildfires.

Among all of the states in the continental U.S., California has the most year-to-year variability between wet and dry conditions.

"As you move down into Southern California, that variability increases even more," Julie Kalansky, climate scientist and deputy director of operations at the Center for Western Weather and Water Extremes at the University of California, San Diego's Scripps Institution of Oceanography, told ABC News.

However, some climate experts point to growing evidence that shows climate change has increased the volatility between very dry and very wet conditions around the world, like moving from a devastating drought to record-breaking precipitation and then back to a drought. These rapid swings between extreme weather events will amplify many of the associated hazards and contribute to devastating wildfire events.

Climate change could also be making wild weather swings more common and more extreme, according to new research published in Nature Reviews Earth & Environment and the Fifth National Climate Assessment, a breakdown of the latest in climate science coming from 14 federal agencies, published in November 2023.

"These hotter, dry conditions that are driven by climate change have created a tinderbox," said Rachel Cleetus, policy director for the Climate and Energy Program at the Union of Concerned Scientists. "We have this dried out vegetation, very dry landscapes."

But hydrovariability alone didn’t lead to the devastating fires over the past week. A "confluence" of events allowed the fires to explode instantly, Cleetus said.

It was the wind that spread the fires so rapidly once they were ignited. An exceptionally strong mountain wave wind event, with northerly 80 mph to 100 mph gusts, spread the fires faster than anyone could stop them.

"We experienced the most intense Santa Ana winds in nearly 15 years," De Guzman said.

Conditions higher up in the atmosphere helped to further enhance winds at the surface.

Cold, dense air associated with a low pressure system in the upper atmosphere was moving over Baja California. That air was positioned at a favorable north-northeast to northeast trajectory over the region allowing for the colder air located higher up in the atmosphere to come rushing down towards the surface and enhance the winds already blowing.

This brought surges of powerful winds across the Los Angeles and Ventura County Mountains -- including in some places that don't typically see winds that strong, like Burbank and in the foothills of the Pacific Palisades.

The wind direction and topography played a major role as well. The San Gabriel Mountains and the wind orientation interacted to produce a damaging wind event that doesn't occur often. The mountains can also make the winds more erratic because additional whirls of wind, known as wind eddies, can form as the air moves across the peaks and through the canyons.

"They were extremely strong and fast, but they were also erratic," De Guzman said. "They typically are narrower and a little bit more predictable in direction."

ABC News' Matthew Glasser, Dan Manzo and Ginger Zee contributed to this report.

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Top Democrat presses Hegseth on supporting accused war criminals that Trump pardoned

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(WASHINGTON) -- Pete Hegseth told senators on the committee investigating his qualifications to be secretary of defense on Tuesday that "restrictive rules of engagement" have "made it more difficult to defeat our enemies" as Democrats on the panel suggested he undervalued the laws of war.

Hegseth, President-elect Donald Trump's pick to lead the Department of Defense, told Sen. Jack Reed, the top Democrat on the committee, that it would be his priority "that lawyers aren't the ones getting in the way" of military effectiveness.

Reed said Hegseth's advocacy for pardons for convicted war criminals when he was a Fox News host raised questions about his respect for the military judicial process as the members of the committee questioned the nominee.

Reed referenced three acts of clemency Trump took at the end of his first administration and for which Hegseth made a public case for, including two convictions by courts martial, saying that in "two of these cases, the military personnel who served in combat with these convicted service members were not supportive of the pardons."

"They did their duty as soldiers to report war crimes," Reed said. "Your definition of lethality seems to embrace those people who do commit war crimes, rather than those who stand up and say, 'This is not right.'"

Shortly before Trump's pardons in November 2019, Hegseth said the president could take "imminent action" on the convictions of Army Lt. Clint Lorance and Green Beret Maj. Matt Golsteyn for war crimes and the demotion in rank of Navy SEAL Eddie Gallagher, who was acquitted of killing a wounded Islamic State captive but sentenced to four months confinement and a reduction in rank for posing with a corpse during a 2017 deployment to Iraq.

"I've thought very deeply about the balance between legality and lethality," Hegseth told Reed in Wednesday's confirmation hearing, "ensuring that the men and women on the frontlines have the opportunity to destroy...the enemy, and that lawyers aren't the ones getting in the way."

Pressed later by independent Sen. Angus King, Hegseth agreed that the Geneva Convention was the "law of the land," but that such laws of war existed "above reality" and there was a "tactical distinction" between international laws and fighting on the ground.

"By the time it trickles down to a company or a platoon or a squad level, you have a rules of engagement that nobody recognizes. And then it makes you incredibly difficult to actually do your job on the battlefield," the combat veteran said.

"We follow rules. But we don't need burdensome rules of engagement [that] make it impossible for us to win these wars," he said.

Reed, also an Army veteran, asked Hegseth, "You've already disparaged in writing the Geneva Convention, the rules of law, all of these things. How you be able to effectively lead a military in which one of the principal elements is discipline, respect for lawful authority?"

The senator also demanded a derogatory term Hegseth used to describe Army lawyers in the Judge Advocate General's Corps, or JAGs, whom he called "jagoffs" in his book "War on Warriors."
"No infantrymen like Army lawyers," Hegseth wrote at the time.

Hegseth first refused to elaborate when asked, but, pressed a second time by Reed, offered the term referred to "a JAG officer who puts his or her own priorities in front of the warfighters, their promotions, their medals, in front of having the backs of those are making the tough calls on the front lines.
Reed replied sarcastically, "Interesting."

Hegseth acknowledged that the Uniform Code of Military Justice is formed by "laws ... set by Congress" when Sen. Elissa Slotkin asked if he'd seek to change them.

Slotkin noted Sen. Lindsey Graham, a South Carolina Republican, was a "JAG officer for most of his life."

Hegseth said he was only "speaking about particular JAG officers I've had to deal with" in his earlier writing.

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LA mayor issues housing executive order amid wildfires, crisis

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(LOS ANGELES, Calif.) -- Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass has issued an executive order to rebuild homes and businesses that the city lost in the ongoing LA County fires that overall have so far burned more than 40,000 acres and destroyed more than 12,000 structures

The executive order calls for city agencies to expedite temporary occupancy approvals for 1,400 housing units that are near completion, and the establishment of a "Debris Removal Task Force" and "Watershed Hazards Task Force" to respectively develop plans for debris removal and mitigate the risks and dangers of post-fire flash floods, mudslides and debris flows.

The order also calls for city agencies to collectively expedite the building permit review process, calling for reviews to be done in 30 days following the submission of an application. Inspections by the Department of Building and Safety are to be conducted in two business days of a submitted request, according to the order.

For structures being rebuilt, city agencies will be required to process necessary clearances and releases related to building permit applications and certificates of occupancy within five business days, the order states.

The order notes that eligible rebuilds under these requirements must be rebuilt at the same location where they previously existed, used for the same use as the previous structure and are not to exceed 110% of the floor area, height, and bulk of the previous structure.

“This unprecedented natural disaster warrants an unprecedented response that will expedite the rebuilding of homes, businesses and communities,” Bass said in a statement. “This order is the first step in clearing away red tape and bureaucracy to organize around urgency, common sense and compassion. We will do everything we can to get Angelenos back home.”

Bass received criticism for being away from the city on a planned diplomatic trip to Ghana when the Palisades Fire first erupted and has been hit by critics for her leadership, particularly from her 2022 Republican mayoral opponent Rick Caruso who claimed Bass was "abandoning her post" during the tragedy in an interview with Politico.

Bass, who posted a warning about the windstorm on social media ahead of the wildfires, told reporters Wednesday, Jan. 8, the day after the fire started, that she took the "fastest route back, which included being on a military plane."

The wildfires have been predicted by financial analysts to "be the costliest wildfire event in California history," with Goldman Sachs estimating total losses at $40 billion.

With families displaced across the county, the wildfires have put pressure on communities already facing housing crises. California, and specifically Los Angeles County, has some of the highest rent and home costs in the country, according to the California Legislative Analyst's Office, with mid-tier homes priced more than twice as high as an average mid-tier home in the United States.

According to Apartments.com, renters also face challenges: the average rent in Los Angeles is 39% higher than the national average rent, the real estate research organization states.

High housing and living costs are highlighted by the state's troubles tackling homelessness, with more homeless residents than any other state.

According to the U.S. Office of Housing and Urban Development, the availability of housing for individuals and families experiencing homelessness in the area led to a decline in homelessness for the first time in 7 years.

Los Angeles County’s point-in-time estimate of homelessness declined by 0.27%, while the city estimated a decline of 2.2%. The unsheltered homeless population decreased by larger margins, with the county decreasing it by 5.1% and the city decreasing it by 10.4%.

Addressing homelessness and the lack of affordable housing in the region was a key piece of Bass' campaign, though not without controversy and hurdles.

In December 2022, Bass declared a state of emergency concerning homelessness on her first day in office.

Bass' Executive Directive 1, aimed at expediting thousands of affordable housing projects, was also criticized by some residents for targeting areas with rent-controlled apartments that had tenants in place who would be displaced by demolition and construction or for potentially impacting wealthier, designated historic districts.

The plan was recently updated in the summer of 2024 to restrict where these projects can be built by avoiding historic districts or displacing current tenants. The moves have been criticized for ultimately hindering efforts to build more affordable housing and leaving low-income housing in the balance, according to local news outlets.

Bass' latest order does not note how it may impact the creation of these affordable housing projects.

Since the start of her tenure, she founded Inside Safe, a program to house homeless residents in local hotels and motels. According to local reports, the program faced pushback from hotel and motel owners tasked with housing the participants and was criticized for the poor living conditions faced by those being sheltered.

The program's website states it has placed more than 3,600 people in temporary housing and more than 700 in permanent housing so far.

Overall, Bass' office states it has moved 23,000 homeless residents into temporary housing and doubled the number of residents it has moved into permanent housing.

ABC News' Ivan Pereira contributed to this report.

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Inmate firefighters: Over 1,000 prisoners deployed to battle Los Angeles fires

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(LOS ANGELES, Calif.) -- As brush fires continue to spread across Los Angeles County, more than 1,000 prisoners, working as "incarcerated firefighters," are among the emergency responders fighting the blazes, the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation confirmed to ABC News.

The prisoners, who voluntarily sign up to be a part of the Conservation (Fire) Camps Program, are embedded with the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, or Cal Fire, crew members.

Participating individuals are typically paid between $5.80 and $10.24 per day plus $1 an hour when responding to active emergencies, according to the CDCR.

Those responding to the Los Angeles fires and working 24-hour shifts are earning $26.90 per day, according to the law enforcement agency.

"CDCR Fire Camp Program firefighters are proud to be embedded with CAL FIRE personnel to protect lives, property and natural resources in Southern California," the agency said in a statement.

Incarcerated firefighters have been working "around the clock" cutting fire lines and removing fuel from behind structures to slow fire spread, the CDCR said, adding that the program is a source of "crucial support" during emergencies.

The exact number of hours and shifts the incarcerated crew members have worked since brush fires erupted in Los Angeles on Jan. 7 was not immediately clear.

The agency said the program paves the way for professional emergency response certifications and job opportunities after an inmate's release. It also allows for criminal record expungement and opportunities to reduce their sentences, according to the CDCR.

Most incarcerated fire crew members receive two additional days off their sentence for every one day they serve on a fire crew, according to the agency, and camp volunteers, who work as support staff but not on a fire crew, receive one day off their sentence for every one day they serve.

The inmate firefighting program dates back to 1915 but largely expanded in California in the 1940s because of firefighter shortages during World War II, according to the CDCR.

The state's Assembly Bill 2147, which passed in 2020, allowed inmate firefighters to petition courts to dismiss their convictions after serving their time.

The Los Angeles fires have brought renewed attention to the program, drawing some criticism over the wages the inmate firefighters receive.

Kim Kardashian took to social media over the weekend to call for California Gov. Gavin Newsom to raise their wages. "I am urging @cagovernor to do what no Governor has done in 4 decades, and raise the incarcerated firefighter pay to a rate [that] honors a human being risking their life to save our lives and homes," Kardashian wrote.

In comparison, California firefighters typically earn a monthly base salary between $3,672 and $4,643 plus an additional $1,824 to $2,306 of extended duty week compensation every four weeks, according to Cal Fire.

The CDCR's inmate fire program operates 35 minimum-security facilities in 25 counties across California, including two camps designated for incarcerated women.

There are more than 1,800 incarcerated individuals staffing the camps across the state, according to the agency.

Participating prisoners have joined the thousands of federal, state and local emergency responders who are battling at least four active wildfires across Los Angeles County as of Tuesday.

The largest of the devastating blazes, the Palisades Fire in the Pacific Palisades, has scorched more than 23,000 acres, destroyed thousands of structures and remains at 17% containment as of Tuesday afternoon.

The Eaton Fire, in Altadena, has spread over 14,000 acres and is 35% contained, according to Cal Fire. There have been at least 24 deaths between the two fires -- a number officials warn may rise as emergency efforts continue.

Approximately 88,000 Los Angeles County residents are under evacuation orders Tuesday as another dangerous Santa Ana wind event is forecast to impact the already vulnerable region.

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Solar, battery capacity saved the grid; an uncertain future awaits

DALLAS — There is a growing risk that the solar power and utility-scale batteries the Texas power grid relied on last summer may be inadequate to meet an expected surge in electricity demand in coming years. Additionally, extreme cold poses different challenges for solar and battery output to overcome than extreme heat, according to a new study published by the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.

As the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) forecasts accelerated load growth due to anticipated data center construction and electrification trends, the current generation mix and market design should garner increased scrutiny, wrote the study’s author Garrett Golding, assistant vice president for energy programs at the Dallas Fed.

“Rising solar and battery output in ERCOT clearly enabled a summer of triple-digit heat without the close calls of previous summers and with lower prices to boot,” Golding wrote. “However, the ground is beginning to shift as load is poised for a long climb higher and expected generation installation gets pushed to its limits.”

Other key points in the post include:

Between 11a.m. and 2 p.m. in summer 2024, solar output averaged nearly 17,000 megawatts (MW) compared with 12,000 MW during those hours in 2023. Between 6 p.m. and 9 p.m., discharge from battery facilities averaged 714 MW in 2024 after averaging 238 MW for those hours in 2023.

On Aug. 20, when a new load record was set, battery discharge also set a record of 3,927 MW at 7:35 p.m. that evening. ERCOT avoided sending a conservation appeal on that day. Solar and battery output have continued to grow since then.

972 MW of new thermal power plant capacity is expected to enter service within the ERCOT area by summer 2026 versus an additional 22,991 MW of new solar generation.

Peak load can occur early in the morning before the sun rises on cold winter days (when solar can’t contribute any output). Peak load can last for a longer period, too, straining the typical one- to two-hour discharge capacity of the current battery storage fleet within the ERCOT service area.

Market signals are required for development of adequate generating capacity to meet the highest load scenario, even if that scenario is just for one hour over the course of an entire year—or longer, Golding wrote.

“ERCOT’s energy-only market design and new incentive structures such as the Texas Energy Fund do not appear adequate for the magnitude and speed of load growth ERCOT forecasts,” Golding wrote.

‘Men have no place in women’s sports’: House GOP votes to roll back Title IX changes

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(WASHINGTON) -- The House passed the "Protection of Women and Girls in Sports Act," which could change Title IX protections and ensure only "biological females" participate versus biological females in athletics, on Tuesday on a vote of 218-206-1.

Two Democrats voted in favor of the House GOP's signature legislation: Reps. Henry Cuellar and Vicente Gonzalez. North Carolina Rep. Don Davis, a Democrat, voted present. The three bucked House Democratic leadership in doing so.

Republicans are now touting this bill as bipartisan even though only two Democrats crossed the aisle to vote in favor of the bill.

"Today was an improvement. It's bipartisan," Johnson said about the bill at his victory presser. "We had two Democrats join us."

Title IX is a federal law that prohibits sex discrimination in education programs. The landmark legislation led by Rep. Greg Steube, R-Fla., ensures that biological females are protected in women's sports that are operated, sponsored or facilitated by a recipient of federal funding.

"Men have no place in women's sports," Steube wrote in a statement. "Republicans have promised to protect women's sports, and under President Trump's leadership, we will fulfill this promise."

Steube's bill aims to ensure schools comply with a person's "reproductive" biology and genetics at birth, according to the bill. Therefore, if signed into law, it will be a violation for a man to participate in an athletic program that is intended for women or girls. If the House bill passes tomorrow, it could make its way to the Republican-held Senate and be ready to sign for President-elect Donald Trump when he returns to office this month. However, its unclear if the Senate will have the votes to pass the bill, even with its slim majority.

Critics have said they believe the GOP has undertaken an anti-transgender agenda fueling culture wars in American education. Twenty-five states already have laws banning transgender student-athletes from participating in sports consistent with their gender identity, according to the Movement Advancement Project.

The bill was a pipe dream for years when Democrats were in control of Washington. In 2023, under Republican control in the House, the same bill passed 219-203 on a party-line vote -- but was never taken up in the Senate. The House then passed Rep. Mary Miller's Congressional Review Act in 2024 as conservatives pledged to "roll back" President Joe Biden's expansions to Title IX, which ensured protections for transgender people. The resolution would have nullified the Biden-Harris administration's Title IX rule.

Meanwhile, protecting women and girls in sports, parents' rights and other education policies taken up in the House became winning issues on Trump's legislative agenda during the 2024 election cycle. Taking after former House Education and the Workforce Committee Chairwoman Virginia Foxx, newly elected Chairman Tim Walberg said men competing against women in sports "jeopardizes competition and fair play."

"Rep. Steube's Protection of Women and Girls in Sports Act will help stop attempts to include biological males in girls' and women's sports, ensuring fairness and a level playing field," Walberg wrote in a statement championing the bill.

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Bethesda Health Clinic receives 15K grant from American Heart Association

Bethesda Health Clinic receives 15K grant from American Heart AssociationTyler – Bethesda Health Clinic is pleased to announce a generous $15,000 grant from the American Heart Association’s Circle of Red. The grant money will be used to buy cardiology equipment, ensuring the clinic can continue to provide high-quality care to underserved patients in East Texas.

The grant, awarded as part of the American Heart Association’s Circle of Red initiative. The initiative will allow Bethesda Health Clinic to expand its cardiology services by acquiring advanced diagnostic tools and medical equipment. These resources will help medical professionals at the clinic better detect, treat,and manage heart disease, a condition that disproportionately impacts many in the local community.
Continue reading Bethesda Health Clinic receives 15K grant from American Heart Association

Private firefighters spark controversy amid devastating LA fires

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(LOS ANGELES, Calif.) -- Across the Pacific Palisades, where the current Los Angeles wildfires began on Jan. 7, homes and buildings have been reduced to rubble, the once-bucolic neighborhood left ashen and desolate.

But standing tall among the wreckage -- almost entirely unscathed -- remains Palisades Village, the outdoor mall owned by Rick Caruso, billionaire real estate developer and former Republican mayoral candidate.

To protect the high-end shopping center, several private water tankers, equipped with 3,000 gallons of water in each, were brought in to fend off the encroaching blaze, ABC News has reported.

"Our property is standing," Caruso told The New York Times on Wednesday. "Everything around us is gone. It is like a war zone."

Caruso did not immediately respond to a request for comment from ABC News. On Sunday, he posted on X that he was committing $5 million to the Los Angeles Fire Department Foundation.

Amid the devastation of the fires, in which thousands of Californians have lost their homes, private firefighting companies have provoked controversy and ire, a symbol of the gaping disparity between the lives of the city's wealthiest residents and those left struggling to rebuild.

The majority of private firefighters don't actually work to serve individual customers, experts told ABC News. In most cases, they're contracted by the government, aiding local firefighting crews, or by insurance companies, typically working to avert damage.

But some private firefighters offer their services to individuals, a practice that has shocked and infuriated many as its existence has entered the public eye. In 2018, so-called "concierge" firefighters saved Kim Kardashian and Kanye West's Hidden Hills mansion -- along with several neighbors' homes -- during the Woolsey wildfire, according to reports at the time.

On Tuesday, real estate investor Keith Wasserman sparked widespread anger after posting to X about it.

"Does anyone have access to private firefighters to protect our home? Need to act fast here. All neighbors houses burning. Will pay any amount," he wrote in a now-deleted post.

Wasserman's post inspired backlash, with users slamming the businessman as out of touch. He later deleted his account. Wasserman did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Due to the private nature of these services, it's not yet clear how widespread the use of private firefighters has been in battling the Los Angeles fires. Prices are not openly listed, and can vary widely, likely costing several thousand a day, The New York Times reported.

"I'll be honest with you, we get a lot of calls in circumstances like this from private landowners who are interested in hiring some private resources to help mitigate fire risk," Deborah Miley, executive director of National Wildfire Suppression Association, an organization representing over 300 private firefighting companies, told ABC News.

Though most private firefighting companies focus solely on work for the government and insurance companies, some openly offer their services to individual customers. Allied Disaster Defense, which the Los Angeles Times reported had sent staff to fight the recent fires, has a page on its website advertising "private client services." The company offers to sign non-disclosure agreements for providing their services, which they recommend for "high-net worth individuals, and even celebrities."

Aside from public backlash, the employment of private firefighters during such serious wildfires can be "extremely dangerous," Cal Fire battalion chief David Acuña told ABC News.

"Where it becomes a problem is they don't fall under our chain of command. We don't know what personal protective equipment they have, and we don't have radio contact," Acuña said.

Acuña said he has no problems with private firefighters working in advance to prevent fire damage -- but during a disaster like the one that's ongoing, they can get in the way of official firefighters doing their jobs.

"All of those people are folks that we are going to have to come in and rescue if they stay in the area too long, and that takes away from us being able to attack the fire," he said.

As the wildfires continue their brutal rampage, Acuña emphasized that local fire departments will remain on the ground working to battle the flames.

"We have a responsibility to the public -- not to a customer," he said.

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Controlled explosion planned for East Texas power plant

Controlled explosion planned for East Texas power plantHARRISON COUNTY— Residents near the H.W. Pirkey Power Plant in Hallsville can expect to hear a loud explosion on Wednesday morning.

However, the Harrison County Sheriff’s Office has advised residents this is a planned and controlled explosion. Our news partner, KETK reports that officials say this is not open for the public to view. Residents are urged to avoid the area. “This is part of a scheduled maintenance procedure and is being done with the utmost safety precautions in place,” county officials said. “There will be minimal disruption, but please be aware of some noise in the area.”

Robert De Niro acts opposite himself in new ‘The Alto Knights’ trailer

Warner Bros. Pictures

There's double the Robert De Niro in the new trailer for The Alto Knights.

The Oscar winner plays two roles — Vito Genovese and Frank Costello — in the upcoming Warner Bros. Pictures film. It arrives in theaters on March 21.

Helmed by Oscar-winning director Barry Levinson, the film follows two of New York City's most notorious organized crime bosses "as they vie for control of the city’s streets. Once the best of friends, petty jealousies and a series of betrayals place them on a deadly collision course that will reshape the Mafia (and America) forever," according to the film's official logline.

"Where do I start?" De Niro's Frank Costello asks in the trailer. "You're going down a very dangerous road."

"And we ain't been down dangerous roads before? That's the risk you take. Me, I take that risk," the Vito Genovese De Niro responds.

The film was inspired by the true story of the mob boss who brought about the downfall of the American mafia, according to the trailer. It was written by Goodfellas screenwriter and Oscar nominee Nicholas Pileggi, and produced by Oscar winner Irwin Winkler, who also produced Rocky and Goodfellas.

Debra Messing, Cosmo Jarvis, Katherine Narducci, Michael Rispoli, Michael Adler, Ed Amatrudo, Joe Bacino, Anthony J. Gallo, Wallace Langham, Louis Mustillo, Frank Piccirillo, Matt Serviet and Robert Uricola also star.

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Garbage truck driver airlifted to hospital after train crash in Panola County

Garbage truck driver airlifted to hospital after train crash in Panola CountyPANOLA COUNTY— Two people have been hospitalized following crash between a truck and train on Tuesday morning in Panola County.

According to the Panola County Sheriff’s Office and reports from KETK, a call came in from a passenger in a trash truck who said he and the driver were involved in a collision with a train on the County Road 129 and County Road 127 crossing in Gary.

Once authorities arrived at the scene, both occupants were taken to a local emergency room and the driver was airlifted for a higher level of care. The crash remains under investigation by the Texas Highway Patrol and BNSF Railroad Police.

Husband arrested for murder after wife’s body found in dumpster

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(COOPERSBURG, Pa.) -- A man has been arrested in the murder of a New Jersey woman whose body was found in a Coopersburg, Pennsylvania, dumpster over the weekend.

Rolando Corte, 42, was charged with first-degree murder in the death of Lucrecia Jadan Sumba, 39, from Elizabeth, New Jersey, according to the Union County Prosecutor's Office.

Sumba was reported missing by friends and family on Jan. 9 to the Elizabeth Police Department. Sumba was killed last Wednesday, according to prosecutors.

Corte was identified and arrested on Sunday. He is being held at the Union County Jail in New Jersey and is scheduled to appear in court on Thursday.

If found guilty, he could face up to life in prison.

It's unclear if the suspect and victim had any connection or what led police to identify Corte as a suspect.

The woman was found in a dumpster on S. 3rd Street in Coopersburg just before 6 p.m. on Saturday, according to police.

Coopersburg, a suburb of Allentown, is about 80 miles west of Elizabeth.

An autopsy revealed Sumba's cause of death was sharp force injuries and her death was ruled a homicide, according to the county coroner.

"A joint investigation conducted by the Union County Prosecutor’s Office Homicide Task Force, Elizabeth Police Department, Coopersburg Police Department, and the Lehigh County District Attorney’s Office led to the identification and arrest of Corte," according to the prosecutor's office.

Coopersburg Police did not immediately respond to ABC News' request for comment.

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New Orleans attack suspect searched for Germany truck-ramming incident hours before carrying out attack: FBI

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(NEW ORLEANS) -- The man who is suspected of committing the New Years Day vehicle-ramming attack in New Orleans searched online for information about the Christmas market car-ramming attack in Germany, just hours before carrying out his own attack on Bourbon Street, according to the FBI.

In a report released Tuesday, the FBI said a search of Shamsud-Din Jabbar's "electronics" showed that he "conducted many online searches" related to the New Orleans attack "as late as mid-November," including "how to access a balcony on Bourbon Street" and information about Mardi Gras, which occurs in March.

"Just hours before the attack on Bourbon Street, he also searched for information about the car that rammed into innocent victims in a Christmas market in Germany just ten days before," the FBI report said.

On Dec. 21, 2024, a man drove into a crowded German Christmas market, killing five and injuring 200, according to German authorities.

In the early hours of New Years Day, Jabbar, whom the FBI previously said had recorded videos "proclaiming his support for ISIS" and mentioning he had joined the terrorist group earlier in the year, drove a rented truck down Bourbon Street, killing 14 and injuring 57. He died in a shootout with police while he was reaching to detonate coolers filled with explosives, according to investigators.

"A total of 136 victims have been identified, including two businesses that suffered damages," the FBI's report said, updating the official number of victims.

The FBI report also provided more detail about Jabbar's visits to the city prior to the attack.

"On November 10, 2024, Jabbar took a train from Houston, Texas to New Orleans and returned to Texas that evening on a bus," the report said. "While in the city, Jabbar looked at an apartment for rent on Orleans Street. Just days after his travel he applied to rent the apartment but later told the landlord he changed his mind."

Jabbar at the time lived in Houston, Texas. The FBI on Tuesday also released an image they said is of Jabbar in New Orleans on November 10.

"Thanks to the overwhelming response from the public, the FBI is closer to getting answers for those families who lost loved ones and the other victims of the New Year’s Day attack," the FBI report said.

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Michelle Obama to skip Trump inauguration

Rob Carr, Pool via AFP via Getty Images, FILE

(WASHINGTON) -- Former first lady Michelle Obama will not attend President-elect Donald Trump's inauguration on Monday, her office confirmed to ABC News.

"Former President Barack Obama is confirmed to attend the 60th Inaugural Ceremonies. Former First Lady Michelle Obama will not attend the upcoming inauguration," the Office of Barack and Michelle Obama said in a statement.

This is the second presidential event in two weeks that the former first lady will have missed. She was noticeably absent from former President Jimmy Carter's funeral on Thursday, Jan. 9, at Washington National Cathedral, where she would have been assigned to sit next to Trump.

Michelle Obama's planned absence was first reported by the Associated Press.

Michelle Obama has attended every inauguration since 2009, including Trump's first swearing-in ceremony in 2017.

Former Presidents Barack Obama, George W. Bush and Bill Clinton will attend the inauguration, as will former first ladies Laura Bush and Hillary Clinton. They all also attended Carter's funeral service.

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Texas lawmakers will have $24B surplus to work with

TEXAS – The Houston Chronicle reports that Texas lawmakers will return to Austin this week with a budget surplus of nearly $24 billion, buoyed by growing tax revenue and a stalled school funding increase, Texas Comptroller Glenn Hegar said Monday. “Texas is in good financial shape,” Hegar said when he announced the 2026-2027 biennium revenue estimate on Monday. Lawmakers will have $194.6 billion in funds available for general-purpose spending this session, a roughly 1% decrease from the money available during the 2024-2025 biennium. Last session, lawmakers convened with a “once-in-a-lifetime” cash surplus, much of which they spent on property tax relief for homeowners. Now, Hegar said, the Texas economy “will continue to normalize after the profound disruptions of the pandemic, dramatic recovery when COVID restrictions were lifted, and high inflation that accompany a booming economic growth.”

Hegar attributed much of the state’s surplus to “prudent decisions by the Legislature last session to do one time expenses, not spend all the dollars, to be cautious,” he said. Some of the state’s nearly $24 billion cash surplus comes from $4.5 billion that was set aside last session for school funding and a school voucher program but never enacted. Gov. Greg Abbott has said creating a voucher program is his top legislative priority, and he has refused to take up increased public school funding until it passes. In 2023, state lawmakers allocated $18 billion to property tax relief, and they are likely to consider passing further tax breaks onto homeowners this session. Lawmakers have also signaled they will tackle the skyrocketing cost of home insurance, which is now among the most expensive in the country. Hegar noted that insurance tax collections, which make up a small share of the state’s revenue, skyrocketed in the past two years, jumping by nearly 16% in 2022 and more than 30% in 2023, compared to roughly 5% growth in prior years.