Survivor describes secrecy surrounding female genital mutilation in Minnesota
More than half a million women and girls in the United States are living with the physical and psychological scars of female genital mutilation — including many in Minnesota, home to a large Somali community from a country where roughly 98% of women have undergone the procedure, according to United Nations data.
Yet despite a state law that makes performing the procedures a felony, Minnesota has never secured a single criminal prosecution under its law — raising questions about enforcement, and whether cases could be going on undetected.
Female genital mutilation, or FGM, involves the cutting or removal of parts of a female’s genital organs, typically for cultural rather than medical reasons. The practice is irreversible.
“It’s hidden — it’s a cultural practice, and who is doing the cutting could be a family member or a doctor who is also in that same culture,” Minnesota Republican state Rep. Mary Franson told Fox News Digital, noting it may be carried out within tight-knit communities. She said the secrecy surrounding the practice makes it exceptionally difficult to detect and confront.
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For some within Minnesota’s Somali community, the issue is less about public crime statistics and more about private silence — a practice survivors say is carried in secrecy, shame and fear.
The lack of prosecutions comes amid broader scrutiny of how Minnesota agencies handle oversight failures, including high-profile welfare and daycare fraud cases in which prosecutors allege billions of taxpayer dollars were siphoned off while warning signs went unaddressed. Investigators and watchdogs later concluded that officials were reluctant to probe deeply in culturally sensitive contexts — a reluctance, critics say, allowed large-scale violations to persist in plain sight.
The estimate of more than half a million survivors in the United States comes from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s most recent national analysis, published in 2016.
Together, the scale of the issue and the difficulty of detection have raised questions about whether Minnesota’s ban on FGM is being effectively enforced when the crime is often carried out in secrecy.
Survivor warns of lasting harm
Ayaan Hirsi Ali, a Somali-born activist and author who survived FGM, described the lasting physical and psychological damage she endured and called for legal accountability.
“Female genital mutilation is violence against the most vulnerable — children,” Hirsi Ali told Fox News Digital. “It causes infection, incontinence, unbearable pain during childbirth and deep physical and emotional scars that never heal. Religious or cultural practices that deliberately and cruelly harm children must be confronted. No tradition can ever justify torture.”
Hirsi Ali, who founded the AHA Foundation as a means to end FGM, said that the pressure placed on parents in these groups to enforce the practice poses an overwhelming risk to girls.
“Only legal accountability can help reduce that risk,” Hirsi Ali said. “I survived female genital mutilation and I carry its scars with me. But I refuse to accept that another girl in America must endure what I did in Somalia.”
‘I remember being held down’
Zahra Abdalla, a Minnesota-based Somali survivor of female genital mutilation, told Fox News Digital that the practice survives in secrecy, shielded by family pressure and silence.
Abdalla, who spoke to Fox News Digital on camera but asked that her face be blurred, said she was between six and seven years old when she was forcibly restrained in a refugee camp in Kenya while adult women in her community carried out the procedure without anesthesia, using a razor blade.
“They tied my hands and my legs,” Abdalla said. “I remember being held down. I remember the pain — and knowing I could not escape.”
Abdalla said she was “lucky” because she fought back during the procedure, kicking one of the women who was pregnant at the time. The disruption, she said, caused the cutting to stop before it was fully completed. She said the wound was later washed with salt water.
“That pain — I thought I was going to pass out,” she said.
The damage followed her into adulthood, she said, later requiring surgery and, in her view, contributing to multiple miscarriages. She also said intercourse was very difficult.
She said the practice is often driven by marriage expectations, adding that in some communities men are reluctant to marry women who have not undergone the procedure.
“It’s tied to dowry. It’s tied to marriage,” she said, referring to the financial and social expectations placed on families when arranging marriages. “It’s tied to what men expect,” she said. “Families believe it protects a girl’s value.”
She said silence remains one of the biggest barriers to enforcement. She is the executive director of the nonprofit Somaliweyn Relief Agency (SRA), which seeks to raise awareness about the practice.
“You don’t talk about it,” she said. “You’re told to stay quiet.”
While she said she cannot confirm specific cases inside Minnesota, she said she believes some families take girls back to Somalia during school breaks to have the procedure performed.
No prosecutions despite felony law
Her warning mirrors how some of the only known U.S. cases have surfaced.
In a high-profile federal case in Michigan in 2017, prosecutors alleged that two young girls were taken from Minnesota to undergo female genital mutilation. The case later collapsed because the judge ruled that Congress did not clearly have the constitutional authority, at the time, which expanded federal jurisdiction in cases involving interstate or international travel.
That ruling prompted Congress to strengthen the statute, a change signed into law by President Donald Trump in 2021 under the Stop FGM Act, which expanded federal jurisdiction in cases involving interstate or international travel.
However, a Fox News Digital review of publicly available Minnesota court records, enforcement announcements and professional licensing disciplinary records found no documented prosecutions or sanctions tied to FGM. The Minnesota Attorney General’s Office said prosecutions for state crimes like female genital mutilation are handled by county attorneys and did not identify any FGM cases. County prosecutors contacted for this story also did not identify any prosecutions.
Those provisions, however, have not resulted in documented criminal prosecutions.
Minnesota criminalized female genital mutilation in 1994, classifying the practice as a felony.
The Minnesota Department of Health told Fox News Digital that it does not track specific data on female genital mutilation, underscoring how difficult the practice is to monitor or enforce.
Global context, local uncertainty
Around the world, FGM is most prevalent in parts of Africa and the Middle East.
Somalia has among the highest prevalence rates in the world, with United Nations data estimating roughly 98% of women ages 15 to 49 there have undergone the procedure. The United Nations, World Health Organization and UNICEF classify FGM as a human rights violation rooted in efforts to control female sexuality and enforce gender inequality, and the UN observes an annual day of awareness in February to combat the practice globally.
Those figures describe conditions in Somalia and are not proof the procedure is occurring in Minnesota, but they help explain why risk is acknowledged even as the practice remains difficult to detect.
Medical experts say the procedure can cause chronic pain, severe bleeding, infections, urinary problems, sexual dysfunction, childbirth complications and, in some cases, death. Because it permanently alters genital tissue, the harm cannot be undone. Survivors often require repeated medical care and carry lasting psychological trauma.
Critics say the gap between the law and enforcement is fueled by silence.
Survivors often do not report the practice out of fear, stigma, family pressure or concern about involving authorities — even when mandatory reporting laws exist. Medical professionals, particularly OB-GYNs, are often the first to encounter adult survivors, placing clinicians near the center of any enforcement effort that has yet to materialize.
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The CDC has not released a newer national estimate, and there is no data on the number of people in Minnesota who are victims. However, a CDC-supported Women’s Health Needs Study conducted from 2019 to 2021 included Minneapolis as one of four U.S. metro areas documenting a significant survivor population.
The study did not track where procedures occurred or whether anyone was charged, underscoring how little the public knows about enforcement.
Fox News Digital also contacted multiple Minnesota clinics that provide reproductive and women’s health services asking whether clinicians encounter patients with physical evidence of female genital mutilation. None responded.
Lawmakers push task force amid accountability questions
Some Minnesota state lawmakers have introduced legislation this session to establish a “task force on prevention of female genital mutilation” — a step that Rep. Mary Franson said reflects concerns raised by women in the community that the practice may be occurring or going undetected in Minnesota.
Franson said the legislation was prompted by concerns raised by women in the Somali community. The bill’s chief author is Rep. Huldah Momanyi-Hiltsley, a Democrat of Kenyan heritage, and it is co-sponsored by Franson along with Democratic Reps. Kristin Bahner, Kristi Pursell and Anquam Mahamoud, who is Somali-American. None of them responded to multiple Fox News Digital requests for comment.
Franson said she became a focal point of opposition once she became publicly associated with the bill.
“The bill was brought forward by women in the Somali community. I was the chief author, but then Democrats told one of the DFL women that if I carried the bill, they would not support it,” Franson said. “Of course, it’s because they believe I am a racist.”
Franson, who is white, first introduced FGM-related legislation in 2017 that would have classified the practice as child abuse and clarified parental accountability. That effort stalled and never became law.
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At the federal level, Congress criminalized female genital mutilation in 1996 and later expanded federal jurisdiction in 2018 under legislation signed by then-President Donald Trump, explicitly covering cases involving interstate or international travel.
Even so, prosecutions nationwide have remained rare, with the only widely cited state-level conviction occurring in Georgia in 2006, where a woman was convicted under Georgia state law for performing FGM on a minor.
In Minnesota, where the practice has been a felony since 1994, there is no public record of a single criminal prosecution — raising an unavoidable question: with laws on the books and a documented survivor population, who is responsible for enforcing the ban, and why have prosecutions not followed?
Armed man shot and killed after allegedly breaching Mar-a-Lago gate has been identified
A man in his early 20s was shot and killed early Sunday after allegedly breaching the secure perimeter of President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Florida, the U.S. Secret Service announced.
The Secret Service said the incident occurred around 1:30 a.m. when the suspect made an “unauthorized entry” at the property.
The individual was observed near the north gate carrying what appeared to be a shotgun and a fuel can.
Agents and a deputy from the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office (PBSO) confronted the man who was pronounced dead at the scene.
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Sheriff Ric Bradshaw confirmed to Fox News that the suspect was 21-year-old Austin Tucker Martin of North Carolina.
No Secret Service or PBSO personnel were injured, and no Secret Service protectees were present at the location during the time of the incident, officials said. Trump was also not in Florida when the shooting occurred.
The FBI, Secret Service and Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office are investigating, including the man’s background, actions and potential motive, as well as the use of force.
Bradshaw said at a press conference that a deputy and two Secret Service agents on the detail went to investigate after an individual made his way onto the “inner perimeter” of Mar-a-Lago.
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“They confronted a white male that was carrying a gas can and a shotgun. He was ordered to drop those two pieces of equipment that he had with him – at which time he put down the gas can, raised the shotgun to a shooting position,” Bradshaw told reporters. “At that point in time, the deputy and the two Secret Service agents fired their weapons and neutralized the threat.”
He said the suspect did not exchange any words with law enforcement officers who instructed the man to “drop the items.”
FBI Miami Special Agent in Charge Brett Skiles said the bureau is assisting in the investigation because the shooting occurred in an area under Secret Service protection.
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He said the FBI’s evidence response team is processing the scene and collecting evidence, and urged residents who live nearby to review their exterior cameras for footage from Saturday night into early Saturday morning.
“If you see anything that looks suspicious or out of place, please contact us,” he told reporters.
FBI Director Kash Patel said in a post on X that his agency “is dedicating all necessary resources in the investigation of this morning’s incident,” and “will continue working closely with @SecretService as well our state and federal partners and will provide updates as we are able.”
Rhode Island issues statewide travel ban, many in NJ without power as blizzard ‘bomb’ nears
- Blizzard Warnings in effect: Blizzard Warnings are in effect for major hubs including New York City, Philadelphia, and Boston, affecting more than 40 million people. This is the first blizzard warning for NYC since 2017.
- Snow amounts:
Widespread accumulations of 12 to 24 inches are expected across the I-95 corridor. The heaviest snow is forecast for Sunday night into Monday morning, with rates occasionally reaching 2 to 3 inches per hour. - Dangerous winds & visibility: Wind gusts of 50 to 70 mph will create life-threatening whiteout conditions and near-zero visibility.
- States of Emergency: Governors across 6 states have declared States of Emergency. State leaders are telling everyone to stay at home until conditions improve.
- Major transit disruptions: NYC and other communities have announced mandatory travel bans starting Sunday evening. Over 9,000 flights have already been canceled through Tuesday. Amtrak has modified its Northeast Corridor schedule, and NJ Transit has announced service suspensions starting this evening.
- Power outage risk:
The combination of heavy, wet snow and high wind load is likely to cause numerous to widespread power outages and tree damage throughout the region. - Coastal flooding: A storm surge of 2 to 4 feet could cause moderate coastal flooding and beach erosion from Delaware Bay to Cape Cod during high tide cycles.
- Classes canceled: New York City and Boston Public Schools have called off all classes for Monday. Numerous other school districts are closing down and telling students to stay home due to the storm.
Air travel has ground to a virtual standstill in the Northeast as the historic blizzard begins its relentless assault.
FlightAware data now confirms that more than 15,000 U.S. flights have been disrupted through Tuesday, a staggering number that reflects the sheer scale of the blizzard’s impact on major aviation hubs.
The grounding is near-total at critical hubs including JFK, LaGuardia, Newark, and Boston Logan.
At LaGuardia alone, over 90% of Monday flights were canceled preemptively as airlines scrambled to keep aircraft and crews from being stranded.
While more than 9,240 flights have been completely canceled, another nearly 6,000 have faced significant delays, with these numbers expected to climb further as the storm reaches its peak tonight.
Road conditions across New York City are deteriorating at a dangerous pace as heavy snow bands finally begin to coat even the most heavily trafficked corridors.
EarthCam’s view from Mulberry Street shows the iconic neighborhood quickly disappearing under a white blanket, with visibility dropping and surfaces becoming treacherous just as the citywide travel ban takes effect.
Power outages are beginning to surge along the Jersey Shore as the bomb cyclone brings its most violent conditions to the coastline.
According to PowerOutage.com, Ocean County is currently the hardest-hit area in New Jersey, with 3,765 customers already in the dark. Monmouth County is following closely behind with 3,753 outages, while Atlantic County reports over 2,500 homes and businesses without power.
Rhode Island Governor Dan McKee has declared a State of Emergency and issued a mandatory statewide travel ban as the region prepares for a high-impact blizzard.
The FOX Forecast Center warns that the state could be buried under 18 to 24 inches of heavy, wet snow, with wind gusts reaching up to 60 mph.
As of 5 p.m. ET, all commercial vehicle travel is prohibited on all roads statewide. At 7:00 p.m., a total restriction on all motor vehicle travel goes into effect for all roads statewide until further notice.
We’re asking Rhode Islanders to take this storm seriously and stay home.
Rhode Island State Police have deployed extra troopers to monitor highways, and the Governor has authorized the activation of the Rhode Island National Guard to support the state’s emergency response.
All non-essential state government offices will be closed on Monday. The University of Rhode Island is closing all offices and canceling all classes for Monday. Major school districts, including Newport Public Schools, have also announced closures for Monday.
“We’re asking Rhode Islanders to take this storm seriously and stay home,” Governor McKee said during the announcement, emphasizing that the most dangerous whiteout conditions are expected between 1:00 AM and noon on Monday.
Meadow Bluff, West Virginia, has just reported a significant 6.0 inches of snow as the storm’s initial wave continues to pile up across the Mid-Atlantic.
This total matches the highest reported accumulation so far today, putting Meadow Bluff on par with Wintergreen, Virginia, as the Northeast prepares for even heavier bands tonight.
Snow intensity is ramping up significantly across the Tri-State area as the historic blizzard enters its most dangerous phase.
The National Weather Service in Upton indicates that Newark (EWR), JFK, and Islip (ISP) all recorded snow rates of 1 inch per hour during the window between 5:00 p.m. and 6:00 p.m. ET.
Due to the historic blizzard and significant snow accumulations expected across the state, NJ Transit is implementing a series of major service suspensions beginning this evening.
Transit officials are prioritizing the safety of both passengers and employees as blizzard conditions intensify.
- Bus, Light Rail, and Access Link: All services are now suspended.
- Rail Service: Service will be suspended systemwide by 9 p.m. tonight.
Winds are accelerating across the Northeast as the coastal low-pressure system begins its explosive “bomb out” phase.
The central pressure is forecast to plummet to near 970 MB by dawn, a rapid deepening that acts like an atmospheric vacuum, pulling in ferocious wind gusts that could soon reach hurricane force.
Wind gusts could reach 75 mph near Boston and out on the Cape as the storm blasts the coastline.
The rare and dramatic phenomenon of thundersnow is now a distinct possibility as the historic blizzard undergoes explosive intensification off the coast.
Thundersnow typically occurs in the most intense parts of a winter storm, where powerful rising air or extreme lift creates the same atmospheric instability seen in summer thunderstorms—just with snow instead of rain.
The FOX Forecast Center has identified several high-risk zones for thundersnow during the overnight and early Monday morning hours:
- The “jackpot” snow bands: Thundersnow will likely occur where the radar shows the highest intensities, specifically in areas where snow rates reach a staggering 2 to 4 inches per hour.
New York City and Long Island: Forecasters are closely monitoring the potential for thundersnow overnight in the Tri-State area as the core of the bomb cyclone passes just offshore.
- Coastal New England: The National Weather Service in Boston has noted “exceptionally strong lift” early Monday morning, particularly for Rhode Island and Southeastern Massachusetts, which could trigger lightning and thunder within heavy snow bands.
- The Jersey Shore: Coastal areas from Atlantic City to Sandy Hook are in the direct path of the most violent frontogenetic forcing, clashing air masses that will create enough atmospheric energy, making them prime candidates for thundersnow.
Because heavy snow effectively muffles sound, you may not hear a distant roll of thunder; instead, it often sounds like a sudden, sharp thunderclap that can only be heard within about three to five miles of the lightning strike.
If you see a flash of light followed by a dull rumble, it is a sign that you are in the heart of the storm’s most extreme snow, where rates are at their highest and visibility is at its lowest.
Air travel has ground to a virtual standstill across the country as the historic “bomb cyclone” begins its relentless assault on the Northeast.
FlightAware now reports confirms that more than 14,000 U.S. flights have been disrupted through Tuesday, a staggering number that reflects the sheer scale of the blizzard’s impact on the nation’s aviation hubs.
The scale of the grounding is staggering, with over 8,858 U.S. flights canceled so far and thousands more delayed.
Major hubs including JFK, LaGuardia, Newark, and Boston Logan are seeing near-total shutdowns.
At LaGuardia alone, more than 90% of Monday flights were canceled preemptively as airlines scrambled to keep aircraft and crews from being stranded in the storm’s path.
With the once-in-a-generation blizzard now bombing millions along the East Coast, we know everyone is itching to grab a yardstick and see how their town stacks up against the forecast.
However, as 70 mph winds whip through the I-95 corridor, getting a true reading is about more than just poking a ruler into the nearest drift.
To help you report the most accurate ground truth to the National Weather Service (NWS) and FOX Weather, follow this official guide to snow measurement.
- Choose the right spot:
Location is everything. Avoid measuring in the grass, as individual blades can prop up the snow and artificially inflate your totals by an inch or more. You also want to stay away from buildings, trees, or fences, which can cause shadowing or unnatural accumulation. The gold standard is a snowboard—a flat, white-painted wooden board (ideally 16″ x 16″) placed in an open area away from your house. If you don’t have one, a level picnic table or a deck far from the siding will work in a pinch. - Measure from the ground up: Use a ruler or yardstick and push it straight down until it hits your measuring surface. Always record your measurements to the nearest tenth of an inch (e.g., 8.3″) rather than rounding to the nearest whole number.
- The 6-hour rule: clear the board periodically:
For a long-duration event like this blizzard, the NWS recommends measuring and clearing your board every 6 hours. This prevents the snow from compacting under its own weight, which can happen quickly with heavy, wet accumulation. Pro Tip: Never clear your board more than four times in a 24-hour period, as doing so too often will grossly inflate your final storm total. - Take an average: In high-wind events, snow is never distributed evenly. To get an accurate reading, take multiple measurements in different representative spots around your yard—avoiding the massive drifts—and average them together. If you have three readings of 10″, 12″, and 11″, your average report is 11 inches.
- Avoid drifts and windblown areas:
During a blizzard, undercatch and drifting are your biggest enemies. If your snowboard is scoured bare by the wind or buried under a four-foot drift, move to a more sheltered, level area. Official snow depth (the total amount currently on the ground) is different from snowfall (the new accumulation) and should be reported to the nearest whole inch.
Snow is officially beginning to stack up across the Baltimore region as the historic nor’easter intensifies off the East Coast.
After a day of chilly rain, temperatures have begun to plummet toward the freezing mark, allowing the precipitation to change over to a heavy, wet snow that is now accumulating on all surfaces.
Heavy snow bands are rolling into Midtown Manhattan, where plunging temperatures are finally allowing the snow to stick to the streets and sidewalks of Times Square.
This rapid accumulation marks the beginning of the storm’s peak intensity, with the FOX Forecast Center warning that visibility will vanish as snow rates climb toward 2 inches per hour tonight.
The latest mesoscale analysis from the FOX Forecast Center shows the nor’easter reaching a dangerous new phase as it moves up the coast.
A large corridor stretching from Washington through Philadelphia and into New Jersey is now experiencing consistent snow rates of 1 to 2 inches per hour.
Meteorologists are highlighting a specific “red zone” along the Delmarva Peninsula and the Jersey Shore, including Chincoteague, Lewes, and Atlantic City, as the area with the best chance for full blizzard conditions over the next few hours.
In these locations, powerful wind gusts are combining with heavy snow to reduce visibility to near zero.
This intense activity is expected to continue tracking north toward the New York City metro area as the evening progresses.
Snow totals are officially beginning to climb as the nor’easter moves into the New York City metro area.
The FOX Forecast Center has received the first batch of official 4:00 p.m. ET snow reports, marking the transition from a cold rain to accumulating snow across the region.
While these initial totals are modest, they represent just the first phase of what is expected to be a historic event. Meteorologists expect these numbers to surge over the next few hours as temperatures continue to fall and the storm’s most intense snow bands arrive. The next official update for these primary recording sites is scheduled for just after 7 p.m. ET.
Official snow accumulation as of 4:00 p.m.:
- LaGuardia (LGA) Airport: 0.5 inches
- Central Park: 0.4 inches
- Newark (EWR) Airport: 0.2 inches
- JFK Airport: 0.2 inches
- Islip (ISP): Trace
- Bridgeport (BDR): Trace
Intense snow bands are now pushing into the New York City metro area and Long Island, signaling a dangerous phase of this historic blizzard.
As temperatures fall below 32°F, the snow is beginning to stick to all surfaces, including roads that were previously just wet.
Snow rates will increase to .50-1.0 inch per hour through 8 p.m. ET, but these numbers are expected to climb significantly after sunset.
Forecasters in the FOX Forecast Center warn that the combination of plunging temperatures and heavy snow will make travel life-threatening within the next hour or two.
The massive bomb cyclone slamming the Northeast has effectively paralyzed air travel across the United States.
As of 4:15 p.m. ET today, FlightAware reports more than 13,400 U.S. flights have already been disrupted through Tuesday.
However, total disruptions are expected to continue to surge as the storm begins its assault.
The scale of the grounding is staggering, with over 8,662 U.S. flights canceled so far and thousands more delayed.
Major hubs including JFK, LaGuardia, Newark, and Boston Logan are seeing near-total shutdowns, with JFK reporting 82% of Monday flights canceled and LaGuardia canceling 91%.
Even international travel has been hit, with carriers grounding services to New York and Newark, while disruptions in the Northeast corridor are causing ripple effects as far away as Costa Rica.
The “generational” tag on this blizzard is rapidly moving from hyperbole to reality as the storm begins explosive bombogenesis off the East Coast, with more than 40 million people now under Blizzard Warnings.
The FOX Forecast Center warns that while the afternoon began with a deceptive calm, conditions are set to deteriorate violently tonight as snow rates jump to a staggering 2 to 3 inches per hour.
Combined with hurricane-force wind gusts of up to 75 mph, this “bomb cyclone” will create a total whiteout along the I-95 corridor that has already triggered mandatory travel bans in New York City, Connecticut, and Philadelphia.
With up to two feet of snow “locked in” for major hubs like Boston and NYC, the sheer intensity of the overnight window—especially between 2:00 a.m. and 6:00 a.m.—is expected to paralyze the region and potentially lead to widespread, long-duration power outages.
The FOX Forecast Center has finalized its snow forecast for the Interstate 95 corridor, confirming that a historic and life-threatening event is now in its early stages.
As the nor’easter undergoes rapid intensification off the coast, a massive swath of the Northeast is “locked in” for debilitating snow totals through Monday.
The latest data shows a significant jackpot zone where totals will likely exceed two feet:
- 2-3 feet: Boston, Hartford, and much of Rhode Island and Eastern Massachusetts, and the Jersey Shore are expected to see the most intense snow.
- 18–24 inches: A wide corridor including New York City and Philadelphia is expected to see up to two feet of accumulation.
- 12–18 inches
: Significant totals will extend farther south toward Maryland and north toward Portland and Bangor, Maine.
The FOX Forecast Center says some spots could even see more than 3 feet of snow if a mesoscale snow band develops and parks itself over localized areas.
- Download the FOX Weather App to see your local forecast
- Check interactive radar to track the snow as it moves in to your hometown
The latest reports from the FOX Forecast Center show that snow is already piling up across the Mid-Atlantic and parts of New York as the historic blizzard intensifies.
Wintergreen, Virginia, currently holds the top spot with 6.0 inches of accumulation recorded over the past 24 hours.
Close behind is Colonie, New York, which has already seen 5.6 inches as the storm’s northern edge begins to take hold.
Other notable totals include Compton and Fourway, Virginia, both reporting 5.0 inches, while Tyro, Virginia, has recorded 4.5 inches.
These totals are expected to be eclipsed rapidly overnight as the storm “bombs out” and moves into the I-95 corridor, where snow rates of 1 to 3 inches per hour are forecast.
The FOX Forecast Center has released a critical power outage forecast as the historic bomb cyclone begins its rapid intensification off the East Coast.
With near-hurricane-force wind gusts and heavy, wet snow expected to lash the region through Monday, residents in the I-95 corridor should prepare for significant and potentially long-lasting service disruptions.
According to the latest data from FOX Weather, the threat levels are tiered as follows:
- Widespread outages: The highest risk areas include Long Island, Southeastern Massachusetts (including Cape Cod and the Islands), and the Jersey Shore. These coastal zones will face the most violent winds and the heaviest snow accumulation.
- Likely outages: Power failures are highly probable for major metropolitan areas including New York City, Boston, Hartford, and Philadelphia.
- Possible outages: Service interruptions may extend further inland to cities like Washington, D.C., Harrisburg, Scranton, Albany, and Portland.
The combination of the wet, heavy snow and snow rates of 1 to 3 inches per hour will place immense stress on the power grid.
Utility crews are on standby across the region, but travel bans and whiteout conditions may prevent them from reaching damaged lines until the storm subsides on Monday afternoon.
The transition has officially hit the coast, and Rehoboth Beach, Delaware is now seeing a steady, heavy coating of wet snow as the nor’easter kicks into high gear.
While the day started with light rain, the rapidly strengthening nor’easter is now pulling in colder air, turning precipitation into thick, heavy flakes that are quickly sticking to the boardwalk and streets.
Forecasters warn that this heavy, wet consistency poses a double threat: it makes the roads exceptionally slick and places immense weight on power lines and tree branches.
Residents should prepare for conditions to worsen dramatically tonight as snow rates could exceed 2 inches per hour, accompanied by wind gusts reaching up to 50 mph.
The FOX Forecast Center says conditions will deteriorate in Philadelphia over the next few hours as snow begins to add up.
Cameras show snow flying in the city and temperatures are now dropping, so the snow will begin to stick as we approach sunset.
The iconic Ocean City, New Jersey Boardwalk is now completely blanketed in snow as the nor’easter intensifies along the Jersey Shore.
This rapid accumulation comes as the FOX Forecast Center warns of snow rates exceeding 2 inches per hour and wind gusts up to 60 mph through Monday.
The massive bomb cyclone slamming the Northeast has effectively paralyzed air travel across the United States.
As of 3:15 p.m. ET today, FlightAware reports more than 12,400 U.S. flights have already been disrupted through Tuesday.
The scale of the cancellations is staggering, with 8,353 U.S. flights wiped off the boards so far and an additional 4,064 flights facing significant delays.
Major hubs including JFK, LaGuardia, Newark, and Boston Logan are seeing near-total shutdowns as blizzard conditions make safe takeoffs and landings impossible.
Travelers are strongly urged to check their flight status from home rather than heading to the airport, as many terminals are dealing with massive crowds and limited services.
As New York City prepares for its first historic blizzard in nearly a decade, DoorDash has announced the activation of its Severe Weather Protocol.
To ensure the safety of its workers and the community, DoorDash will temporarily suspend all operations across the five boroughs starting at 8:30 p.m. ET tonight.
We’re suspending operations early to keep Dashers safe and off the streets before the travel ban takes effect. We’re closely monitoring conditions and will resume as soon as it’s safe to do so.
The company is deliberately shutting down 30 minutes before the citywide travel ban begins to ensure all active deliveries are completed and Dashers are safely off the roads before the 9:00 p.m. ET street closures.
Operations are currently scheduled to remain suspended until at least 12:00 p.m. ET on Monday.
As the 2026 Nor’easter intensifies, Governor Kathy Hochul and the MTA have officially announced that all Long Island Rail Road (LIRR) service will be suspended system-wide starting at 1:00 AM on Monday, February 23.
While Metro-North is currently attempting to maintain hourly service, the severity of the blizzard conditions on Long Island—where snow totals are projected to hit 18–24 inches—has made it unsafe to continue rail operations.
The latest analysis from the FOX Forecast Center shows the nor’easter rapidly intensifying as it moves off the Mid-Atlantic coast.
Radar imagery highlights a critical zone of intense rising air stretching from Washington through Philadelphia and toward New Jersey.
This atmospheric “lift” is a primary signal that a rapid changeover from rain to heavy, accumulating snow is imminent for the I-95 corridor.
Meteorologists are currently monitoring a high-impact mesoscale band where snow rates are expected to explode. The most intense activity is currently focused within a triangular corridor encompassing Salisbury, Ocean City, Aberdeen, and Philadelphia.
Locations as far south as Exmore, Virginia and as far north as Philadelphia are seeing this transition now, which will lead to rapidly deteriorating visibility and slick roads.
As the center of the low-pressure system continues to strengthen, these heavy snow bands will march northward, setting the stage for the life-threatening blizzard conditions expected across New York City and New England tonight.
The Ocean State is officially under a State of Emergency.
With a major nor’easter bearing down on New England, Governor Dan McKee has issued an emergency declaration ahead of what is expected to be a significant blizzard event.
The National Weather Service has issued a Blizzard Warning for all of Rhode Island, effective from 4:00 p.m. today, Sunday, February 22, through tomorrow.
Some communities could get crushed by more than 2 feet of snow and here’s how it’ll happen. The FOX Forecast Center has identified specific “jackpot zones” where localized mesoscale banding will turn a major storm into a generational event.
While the entire I-95 corridor is in the crosshairs, the highest confidence for record-shattering totals is now concentrated along the coast.
- The Jersey Shore:
This region is currently the prime target for the storm’s highest totals, with forecasts now painting nearly 3 feet of snow. Intense snow bands are expected to set up here, dumping 2 to 4 inches of snow per hour during the storm’s peak Sunday night. - Long Island & Coastal New England: Central and eastern Long Island, along with the immediate Massachusetts coast, are also bracing for more than 24 inches as the storm bombs out over the Atlantic benchmark.
- Major metro hubs: New York City, Philadelphia, and Boston have all been upgraded to the 18–24 inch range as model confidence surges for a historic burial. If a mesoscale band parks itself over one of these cities, more than 2 feet of snow could bury millions.
The difference between a foot of snow and a jackpot 24-inch-plus total often comes down to mesoscale banding.
These narrow ribbons of extreme snow are notoriously difficult to predict; they can stall over a single county, leading to local maxima that far exceed surrounding areas.
However, with Blizzard Warnings now covering nearly 35 million people, the margin for error is shrinking: even the low end of this forecast qualifies as a major, life-threatening event.
As the blizzard begins to impact the region with heavy snow, Metro-North Railroad has announced significant service adjustments for tomorrow.
On Monday, the railroad will operate on an hourly service schedule across its main lines. Additionally, all branch lines will operate on a weekend schedule to accommodate the challenging conditions and lower ridership expected during the blizzard.
While these changes are slated for Monday, Metro-North warns that service may also be impacted today as the snow intensifies.
Commuters are strongly encouraged to check the MTA website or the TrainTime app before heading to the station and to allow for significant extra travel time due to the hazardous weather.
Despite the intensifying blizzard conditions across the city, the Staten Island Ferry will continue to operate, albeit on a modified schedule to ensure the safety of all passengers and crew.
Starting at midnight tonight, the ferry will switch from its standard weekend frequency to an hourly schedule.
Service is expected to ramp up slightly in the morning, with half-hour service currently planned to resume at 6:00 a.m. Monday.
Travelers are reminded that a citywide travel ban remains in effect until noon tomorrow, and New York City Emergency Management has issued a Hazardous Travel Advisory for the duration of the storm.
Please allow significant extra travel time and exercise extreme caution when navigating terminals and boarding vessels.
Meteorologists have detected lightning strikes off the Delmarva coast this afternoon, a powerful signal that the developing nor’easter is undergoing rapid intensification.
This lightning is a “signature” of extreme atmospheric instability and strong upward motion, often indicating that the storm is bombing out and preparing to unleash intense mesoscale snow bands.
Visible satellite imagery today has captured a rare and striking meteorological phenomenon: atmospheric gravity waves rippling away from the center of our intensifying nor’easter.
Often compared to the ripples created by throwing a stone into a pond, these waves form when stable air is violently displaced—in this case, by the explosive intensification of the storm’s core.
The FOX Forecast Center is closely monitoring these “ripples in the sky,” as they are a clear physical signature of a storm undergoing rapid bombogenesis.
While gravity waves are often invisible to the naked eye, they become visible on satellite when moisture condenses into thin, parallel cloud bands at the wave’s crests.
Their presence today signals extreme turbulence in the upper atmosphere and serves as a precursor to the intense snowfall rates and hurricane-force wind gusts expected to lash the coast tonight.
FOX Forecast Center meteorologists say we’ve reached a critical turning point in the storm’s development.
As the low-pressure system (marked with a red “L”) moves off the coast, it is beginning to tap into powerful atmospheric dynamics.
The orange-dashed region highlighted by the FOX Forecast Center identifies an area of intense rising air stretching from Washington through Philadelphia and toward New York City.
This rapid upward motion is a “signature” signal for meteorologists, indicating that the atmosphere is priming itself for an immediate and rapid changeover to heavy snow.
While some coastal areas are currently seeing rain or a mix, this intense lift will soon cause temperatures to crash, turning the precipitation entirely to snow.
Once this transition occurs, residents in the I-95 corridor should prepare for snow rates of 1 to 3 inches per hour, which will lead to near-zero visibility and life-threatening blizzard conditions by this evening.
While much of the region is still waiting for the first real flakes to stick, the signature of this monster nor’easter is already being spotted along the coast.
Huge, silver-dollar-sized snowflakes have been reported falling along the Ocean City, New Jersey Boardwalk, signaling a rapid transition as cold air begins to wrap into the strengthening bomb cyclone.
Though the ground is still relatively warm from recent mild temperatures, these massive flakes are a precursor to the intense snow rates expected tonight.
As of 1:00 p.m. ET, LaGuardia Airport is the only official reporting site in the region to record measurable snow, clocking in at 0.3 inches while other major hubs like Central Park and JFK report only a trace.
Meteorologists at NWS Upton say they expect these accumulations to ramp up rapidly after sunset as surfaces cool, setting the stage for the storm’s most dangerous impacts tonight.
FOX Weather is providing LIVE, around-the-clock coverage of Blizzard ’26. With more than a dozen crews deploying into the storm, this is the place for the most comprehensive storm coverage.
Our team of meteorologists and correspondents will be Weathering It Together with you, reporting on the latest LIVE developments as the storm unfolds.
- Stream FOX Weather LIVE 24/7 on your favorite device
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The threat level for the Northeast has jumped significantly as Blizzard Warnings were just expanded across Connecticut and Massachusetts.
As of this afternoon, more than 38 million Americans now find themselves under a Blizzard Warning, stretching from the Mid-Atlantic all the way through New England. 4 whole states: New Jersey, Connecticut, Rhode Island, and Delaware are now under the extreme warning.
Forecasters warn that this massive expansion reflects increasing confidence in the storm’s “bombogenesis,” which will trigger whiteout conditions and near-hurricane-force wind gusts through Monday.
In these areas, residents are being urged to prepare for snow rates of up to 3 inches per hour, which could result in more than 2 feet of total accumulation in the hardest-hit coastal areas.
As a massive nor’easter rapidly develops into a bomb cyclone off the East Coast, the governors of New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Rhode Island, and Massachusetts have all declared states of emergency.
These declarations come as meteorologists warn of a “signature storm” that could rank among the top ten snow events in the region’s history, with more than 38 million people now under blizzard warnings.
The state of emergency status allows these states to mobilize National Guard units, activate emergency operations centers, and implement strict travel bans to keep motorists off life-threatening roads.
Mayor Cherelle Parker has declared a Disaster Emergency for Philadelphia, effective immediately, as the city braces for a major winter storm predicted to dump between 18 and 24 inches of snow.
The declaration, made in coordination with Governor Josh Shapiro, grants the city enhanced powers to mobilize all available resources—including over 1,000 workers and 800 pieces of equipment—to protect residents and clear critical routes.
In addition to the Disaster Emergency, a formal Snow Emergency and parking ban will go into effect at 4:00 PM today. Residents must move their vehicles from the city’s 110 miles of designated Snow Emergency routes to avoid being ticketed and towed.
With the heaviest snow expected overnight and into Monday morning, all Philadelphia public schools will operate on a fully virtual schedule tomorrow to keep students and staff off the dangerous roads.
The FOX Forecast Center is warning New Yorkers that while the snow may currently seem manageable, the most dangerous part of the storm comes overnight.
Intense atmospheric lift just north of the storm’s center is expected to trigger incredible snow rates across the New York Metro area overnight.
Forecasters say snow rates of over 1 inch per hour are a certainty, with the storm likely hitting its peak intensity between 2:00 a.m. and 6:00 a.m.
During this early morning window, snow rates could reach a staggering 3 inches per hour, creating a wall of snow that will quickly bury city streets.
The FOX Forecast Center notes that by the time people wake up on Monday morning, there may already be a full foot of snow on the ground. With visibility dropping to near zero and winds gusting over 50 mph, travel will be impossible during this peak period.
Visible satellite imagery captured minutes ago shows the nor’easter rapidly organizing and off the East Coast as it prepares to slam the Northeast with historic snow.
The FOX Forecast Center is tracking the storm’s explosive development in real-time as all the atmospheric ingredients align for a life-threatening blizzard tonight.
NJ Transit says it is suspending service ahead of the storm to prioritize safety as New Jersey braces for the blizzard.
To ensure the safety of both customers and employees, the agency is urging residents to travel only if absolutely necessary. Those who must travel should expect slippery conditions at all stations and build extra time into their schedules to account for potential delays.
NJ Transit has announced the following major service changes beginning tonight:
- Buses:
All NJ Transit bus service will be suspended effective 6:00 p.m.
- Light Rail: All light rail lines (Newark, Hudson-Bergen, and River LINE) will also be suspended starting at 6:00 p.m.
- Access Link: Service will be suspended at 6:00 p.m.
- Rail service: The Princeton Dinky is currently suspended due to engineer availability issues related to the ongoing Portal Bridge project; substitute bus service is being provided. Other rail lines are currently operating but may face additional suspensions as the storm intensifies.
Conditions are changing rapidly, and additional service adjustments or total suspensions are possible on Monday. Commuters are encouraged to continuously monitor njtransit.com or use the NJ Transit mobile app for real-time “My Transit” alerts.
It may look like a typical, quiet winter afternoon right now with snow barely beginning to stick, but meteorologists warn that this is the “calm before the storm”.
Conditions are expected to deteriorate rapidly with terrifying speed as the bomb cyclone intensifies off the coast this evening.
What starts as light rain or flurries will rapidly transform into a life-threatening blizzard tonight, with snow rates reaching 2 to 3 inches per hour and wind gusts screaming up to 70 mph.
By the time the sun goes down, visibility will drop to near zero, creating a total whiteout that makes travel not just difficult, but impossible.
Northeast state leaders say if you are not already at your final destination, you are running out of time to get there safely.
Tonight isn’t just about shoveling; it’s about survival as the combination of heavy, wet snow and hurricane-force gusts threatens to snap trees and trigger widespread power outages while the mercury plunges.
Governor Ned Lamont has officially declared a state of emergency for Connecticut as a major nor’easter bears down on the state with blizzard conditions.
As part of this emergency declaration, all commercial vehicles—including tractor-trailers, tankers, and RVs—are prohibited from traveling on limited-access highways statewide starting at 5:00 p.m. today.
The Governor is strongly urging all residents to finish essential errands early and stay off the roads for the duration of the storm to allow plow crews to work safely.
The number of U.S. flight disruptions has officially crossed the 10,000 mark as a historic bomb cyclone brings major travel hubs to a standstill.
Data from FlightAware confirms that as of midday, the U.S. aviation system has logged over 7,640 cancellations and more than 2,780 delays through Tuesday.
Major carriers—including JetBlue, Delta, and American Airlines—have preemptively scrubbed thousands of flights through Tuesday to prevent crews and aircraft from being trapped in the storm’s path.
The most severe impacts are concentrated at Northeast gateways like JFK, Newark, and Boston Logan, where blizzard conditions will make runway operations impossible.
Most airlines have issued extensive travel waivers, and travelers are strongly urged to confirm their flight status online rather than heading to the airport.
The U.S. House of Representatives has officially postponed critical votes to end the current partial government shutdown from Monday to Tuesday.
As a historic bomb cyclone slams the Northeast, travel conditions across the D.C. area will become increasingly hazardous, leading leadership to adjust the legislative schedule for the safety of members and staff.
This delay comes as the shutdown, which began on February 14, enters its ninth day.
The Department of Homeland Security remains the primary agency affected by the impasse as lawmakers continue to debate controversial reforms to immigration enforcement.
In a rare and historic move, New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani has officially declared a State of Emergency and instituted a citywide travel ban as the blizzard begins to paralyze the region.
The Mayor announced that all city streets, highways, and bridges will be closed to non-emergency traffic starting at 9:00 p.m. tonight and remaining in effect until 12:00 p.m. Monday.
This blanket restriction applies to all vehicles, including cars, trucks, scooters, and e-bikes, with narrow exemptions granted only for essential emergency movements and critical service workers.
With forecast models predicting up to 24 inches of snow and wind gusts reaching 60 mph, officials are taking these extreme steps to prevent motorists from becoming stranded and to allow the city’s fleet of 2,600 sanitation workers to clear life-saving routes without obstruction.
Suffolk County Executive Ed Romaine has issued a 24-hour travel ban as Long Island prepares for potentially historic snow totals.
The mandatory ban takes effect at 9:00 p.m. tonight and will remain in place until 9:00 p.m. Monday.
While most residents are required to stay off the roads, the ban does not apply to essential workers and plow operators.
Executive Romaine stated this decisive action is necessary to ensure visibility for road crews and to protect lives as the storm transitions quickly from rain to heavy snow bands and damaging winds.
The New Jersey Department of Transportation (NJDOT) has issued mandatory commercial vehicle travel restrictions on several major interstate highways, effective at 3:00 p.m. today.
The restrictions, coordinated with neighboring states, apply to all tractor-trailers, empty straight CDL-weighted trucks, passenger vehicles pulling trailers, recreational vehicles, and motorcycles in both directions until further notice.
Mayor Zohran Mamdani and Schools Chancellor Kamar Samuels have officially announced that all New York City public school buildings will be closed on Monday, including remote learning, due to the blizzard.
Mayor Michelle Wu has declared a snow emergency for the City of Boston as a major nor’easter, expected to bring historic snow and blizzard conditions, begins to hammer the region.
During a recent press conference, the Mayor warned that the city is facing dangerous travel conditions through Monday, characterized by heavy snow and powerful winds. To prioritize public safety, all Boston Public Schools and central offices will be closed on Monday.
Mayor Wu emphasized that city teams are already pre-treating roads, but the intensity of the storm makes staying off the roads essential. Residents are encouraged to stay inside, check on vulnerable neighbors, and visit boston.gov/snow-parking for a full list of restricted streets and available garage space.
Nearly 10,000 flights have been disrupted as a massive blizzard bears down on the Northeast, paralyzing travel from Philadelphia to Boston.
According to FlightAware, at least 7,200 U.S. flights have been canceled, with 2,200 more delayed as the bomb cyclone creates life-threatening conditions.
Major hubs—including JFK, Newark, and Boston Logan—have become ghost towns as airlines proactively scrubbed schedules to keep planes and crews out of the storm’s path.
With snow rates of up to 3 inches per hour and 60 mph wind gusts expected to continue through Monday, travelers are being urged to check their status before leaving home.
Most major carriers have already issued travel waivers, allowing passengers to rebook without penalty as the aviation network prepares for a ripple effect of delays that could last well into the week.
The Broadway League has issued a critical weather update on behalf of its members, announcing the cancellation of shows for Sunday night.
Broadway matinee performances scheduled for 3 p.m. or earlier today will proceed as originally planned.
However, due to anticipated travel impacts and evening travel bans already announced for surrounding areas, Broadway theatre owners and producers have reached a consensus to cancel all evening performances with curtain times at 6 p.m. or later tonight.
For all other shows, theatergoers should contact their original point of purchase directly with any questions regarding exchange or refund policies.
Notably, as of 10:30 a.m., the production of Operation Mincemeat has not yet canceled its evening performance.
Governor Josh Shapiro announced that state teams are working around the clock to prepare for the intensifying storm as blizzard warnings expand into Southeastern and Northeastern Pennsylvania.
With heavy snow expected to continue through Monday, the Governor urged residents to stay off the roads, prioritize safety, and follow local officials for real-time updates.
Governor Kathy Hochul has deployed a specialized all-terrain rescue vehicle to Long Island to bolster the state’s blizzard response efforts.
This powerhouse of a vehicle can transport more than 20 people and is set to assist local emergency crews with vital search and rescue operations during the height of the storm.
Governor Ned Lamont has scheduled an emergency press briefing for 3 p.m. today as Connecticut prepares for a historic blizzard that could dump up to two feet of snow across the state.
The Governor is expected to provide critical updates on the state’s emergency response and safety protocols as wind gusts exceeding 50 mph begin to sweep through the region.
Westchester County, New York has announced a mandatory road ban as the bomb cyclone prepares to deliver its heaviest blow tonight.
Following guidance from the New York State Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Services, the ban will take effect at 9:00 p.m. tonight, and remain in place until 10:00 a.m. Monday.
During this window, all roads are closed to everyone except essential emergency travel, including police, fire, and ambulance services.
Officials are implementing this drastic measure because travel conditions are expected to be treacherous to impossible due to the combination of heavy snow and high winds.
By staying off the roads, residents ensure that emergency crews and plows can operate safely and effectively during the peak of the storm.
Meteorologists at the National Weather Service in Boston are raising the alarm for a potentially historic and destructive period for communities southeast of the Boston-Providence corridor.
As the bomb cyclone intensifies, the primary threat in these areas is the dangerous combination of heavy, wet snow and ferocious northeast wind gusts reaching 60 to 70 mph.
This specific region is at high risk for widespread power outages and significant tree damage as the weight of the water-logged snow puts immense strain on infrastructure already battered by near-hurricane-force gusts.
Forecasters warn that the most life-threatening conditions will occur from 4:00 a.m. to noon on Monday, making any travel during the morning commute nearly impossible and highly discouraged.
Even the animals are hunkering down for this one.
The Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) has announced that all five of its New York City parks—the Bronx Zoo, Central Park Zoo, Prospect Park Zoo, Queens Zoo, and the New York Aquarium—will be closing early at 2:00 p.m. today.
Due to the forecasted heavy snow and blizzard conditions, the parks will also remain completely closed on Monday.
While the gates will be locked to the public, WCS says essential animal care and operations staff will stay on-site to ensure all residents are safe, warm, and fed during the bomb cyclone.
This proactive closure aligns with Mayor Mamdani’s urge for New Yorkers to stay home and off the roads as the storm intensifies this afternoon.
If you were planning a snowy stroll through the penguin exhibit, you’ll have to wait until the jackpot snow bands pass and crews can safely clear the pathways.
You’ve seen the insane snow totals and the bone-rattling winds, but let’s chat about one of winter’s most dramatic (and surprisingly common) phenomena in a bomb cyclone: thundersnow!
If you hear a rumble of thunder during this blizzard, you’re not imagining things—and it’s a sure sign you’re right in the heart of the storm’s nastiest snow bands.
Simply put, thundersnow is exactly what it sounds like: thunder and lightning happening during a snowstorm. But it’s not your typical summer thunderstorm. Instead of warm, humid air creating big, booming updrafts, thundersnow occurs when there’s an unusually steep temperature drop with height in the atmosphere, creating instability.
Imagine warm, moist air trying to rise very quickly through much colder air above it—it’s like a mini-supercell, but with snow. This creates the charge separation needed for lightning and the subsequent thunder. Because snow dampens sound, thundersnow often sounds more like a muffled rumble than a sharp crack.
The most intense thundersnow events are often found in the “deformation zone” or the wrap-around precipitation shield of a rapidly intensifying low-pressure system—which is exactly what we have with this bomb cyclone.
- Coastal New Jersey & Long Island:
These areas, already in the jackpot zone for 24+ inches of snow, are prime candidates. The storm will be at its most powerful and rapidly deepening directly offshore, creating the perfect conditions for instability within those heavy snow bands.
- Southern New England (especially near the coast): As the storm tracks up the coast, the sharp temperature gradients and strong lift will make thundersnow a real possibility for places like Boston and coastal Massachusetts.
- Heavy mesoscale bands: Anytime you have those narrow, incredibly intense snow bands dumping 2-4 inches per hour, keep an ear out. These are the sweet spots for localized thundersnow.
So, if you’re hunkered down tonight and you hear a distant rumble, don’t be alarmed (unless it’s the sound of your roof groaning under the snow). It just means you’re experiencing one of winter’s coolest, and most intense, meteorological marvels.
Mayor Zohran Mamdani joined FOX Weather on Sunday morning to issue a stark warning to New Yorkers, emphasizing that “staying home means you are staying safe” as the historic bomb cyclone intensifies.
With blizzard conditions threatening the city with up to 20 inches of snow and life-threatening whiteouts, the Mayor told FOX Weather meteorologist Nick Kosir that all residents should hunker down and avoid the roads entirely until the storm passes on Monday.
Mayor Zohran Mamdani tells FOX Weather that a final decision on whether New York City Public Schools will pivot to remote learning on Monday will be made by noon today.
While traditional snow days are a thing of the past due to state instructional requirements, families are being urged to monitor official channels for the definitive call on in-person versus virtual classes.
New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani recently joined FOX Weather meteorologist Nick Kosir to discuss the city’s mobilization efforts as a historic blizzard brings up to 24 inches of snow to the five boroughs.
During the interview, Mayor Mamdani emphasized that while travel will become extremely hazardous, there is currently no plan to shut down the public transit system as the MTA works around the clock to keep subways and buses moving.
The nation’s aviation network is grinding to a standstill as a generational bomb cyclone slams into the Northeast, with more than 8,000 flights disrupted across the country.
As of Sunday morning, FlightAware reports the total number of scrapped trips includes 6,800+ full cancellations and hundreds of delays through Tuesday.
Major hubs like New York (JFK and LaGuardia), Newark, Philadelphia, and Boston are bearing the brunt of the impact, with carriers like JetBlue canceling 40% of their Sunday schedule to avoid stranding aircraft and crews in the storm’s jackpot zones.
The disruptions aren’t limited to domestic travel; international giants have taken the rare step of canceling all Monday flights to and from New York and Newark.
With blizzard conditions bringing near-zero visibility and 70 mph wind gusts, airports will struggle to maintain safe runway operations.
If you are one of the thousands affected, most major airlines—including Delta, American, United, and Southwest—have waived change and cancellation fees, allowing you to rebook your travel through the middle of next week without penalty.
If you’re looking out your window right now at puddles and grey skies, it might be hard to believe that a historic, two-foot snow event is just hours away.
For many in the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast, Sunday morning has brought a deceptive period of light rain or a slushy mix, fueled by daytime temperatures hovering just above freezing.
But don’t let the wet pavement fool you—this is the calm before the bomb cyclone truly explodes.
FOX Weather meteorologists warn that as the storm bombs out and rapidly intensifies offshore later today, it will begin to drag a wall of arctic air into the region, flipping that rain to heavy snow from north to south.
For major cities like New York City, Philadelphia, and coastal New Jersey, the rain is expected to transition to all snow through the afternoon and early evening.
By nightfall, the transition will be complete for nearly the entire I-95 corridor. This is when the storm’s most dangerous phase begins, with snow rates potentially hitting 1 to 3 inches per hour.
This initial period of rain is actually a major concern for the jackpot zones. The moisture is soaking the ground and any early accumulation, making the eventual snowpack incredibly heavy and wet.
When the 60–70 mph wind gusts arrive later tonight, that water-logged snow will act like a lead weight on tree limbs and power lines, significantly increasing the risk of widespread, prolonged outages.
The bomb cyclone isn’t just a snow-maker; it’s a high-octane wind machine.
As the storm’s central pressure plummets today, the FOX Forecast Center is warning of damaging wind gusts that will create life-threatening whiteout conditions and likely trigger widespread power outages across the Northeast.
While the snow totals are grabbing the headlines, the wind is what will make this storm truly dangerous for anyone caught outdoors.
Peak wind gust forecast through Monday:
- Montauk: 60–70 mph (gusts to 75 mph possible)
- New York City: 50–60 mph
- Boston: 50–60 mph
- Hartford: 50–60 mph
- Philadelphia: 30–40 mph
- Washington: 40–50 mph
The most extreme winds are expected along the immediate coast, where gusts could top 70 mph as the “L” (low pressure) center tracks just offshore.
When these ferocious winds hit the expected 2-foot snow totals, visibility will drop to near zero in seconds.
Residents are urged to secure loose outdoor items and prepare for the possibility of being without power for several days as the combination of heavy, wet snow and tropical-storm-force gusts puts immense strain on the grid.
While Philadelphia, New York City, and Boston brace for a historic two-foot burial, Washington, D.C., and Baltimore appear to be dodging the bomb cyclone’s lethal punch.
The National Weather Service (NWS) Baltimore/Washington has notably opted against issuing Blizzard Warnings for the immediate metro areas, instead keeping Winter Storm Warnings and Advisories in place.
The primary reason for the miss is the storm’s projected track, which is expected to bomb out just a bit too far east to pull the heaviest snow bands directly over the District.
Additionally, marginal surface temperatures in the mid-30s during the day on Sunday will cause much of the initial precipitation to fall as rain or a slushy mix, effectively “wasting” several hours of potential accumulation.
Despite missing the jackpot totals, the region isn’t entirely off the hook. Baltimore is still expecting a respectable 5 to 8 inches of snow, with some areas north and east of the city potentially seeing up to 12 inches as the storm intensifies late Sunday night.
Meanwhile, D.C. residents should plan for a more modest 3 to 5 inches (maybe even less), mostly accumulating on the grass as temperatures struggle to hit the freezing mark before the steadiest moisture pulls away.
While D.C. won’t be shoveling two feet of snow tomorrow morning, the combination of gusty 35 mph winds and rapidly dropping temperatures this evening will still make for a treacherous Monday morning commute.
Amtrak has initiated massive service adjustments across its busiest corridor as the nor’easter brings life-threatening conditions to the Northeast.
In consultation with meteorologists and local officials, the carrier says it is proactively canceling trains on Sunday and Monday to protect passengers and equipment from 60 mph wind gusts and localized snow totals of up to two feet.
While Amtrak has not released a final tally of individual train numbers, the modifications are widespread, impacting the Northeast Regional, Acela, and various Keystone Service routes.
The rail agency emphasized that these “proactive measures” are designed to limit exposure to hazardous conditions and support state-issued travel bans currently in effect across New York and New Jersey.
Impacted customers are being notified directly via email or text; however, all travelers are urged to check their train status on the Amtrak mobile app before heading to the station.
Philadelphia is officially in the crosshairs of a historic nor’easter as the National Weather Service has issued a Blizzard Warning for the city, the first of its kind in 10 years.
Not since the record-shattering “Snowzilla” of January 2016 has the city faced a winter alert of this magnitude, which signals a dangerous combination of heavy snow and sustained wind gusts of 50 to 60 mph, creating life-threatening whiteout conditions.
Mayor Cherelle Parker has already declared a snow emergency, warning residents that near-blizzard conditions will make travel extremely difficult to impossible through Monday.
The storm is expected to “bomb out” off the coast, potentially dumping 18 to 24 inches of snow on the city.
While the day begins with a slushy mix, a sharp drop in temperature this evening will flip the precipitation to all snow, leading to intense rates of 1 to 2 inches per hour overnight.
With visibility expected to drop below a quarter-mile and power outages a high probability, officials are urging all Philadelphians to be home by sunset and stay off the roads to allow crews to manage this generational event.
There is no “off-season” for the fearless crews of the 53rd Weather Reconnaissance Squadron. Known as the Hurricane Hunters, these Air Force Reserve and NOAA pilots have swapped tropical heat for arctic air, flying their specialized WC-130J Super Hercules and Gulfstream IV aircraft directly into the developing nor’easter to gather critical, real-time data.
By dropping GPS instruments called dropsondes from altitudes as high as 45,000 feet, they are sampling the atmosphere’s temperature, pressure, humidity, and wind speed in regions where satellites and ground stations simply can’t reach.
This mission is the secret weapon for forecasters trying to nail down the impossible track of this historic blizzard. The high-resolution data retrieved by the planes is fed directly into the American (GFS) and European (ECMWF) weather models, helping to resolve the “model mayhem” that saw snow predictions jump from a few inches to over two feet in mere hours.
By capturing the exact moisture levels and wind fields offshore, these flights are providing the linchpin data needed to issue more accurate Blizzard Warnings and potentially save lives across the Northeast.
Boston is currently under a Blizzard Warning as it prepares for a historic bomb cyclone that could dump between 18 and 24 inches of snow across the metro area.
With the storm intensifying later tonight, the city is bracing for life-threatening travel conditions, 60 mph wind gusts, and significant coastal flooding.
Mayor Wu has declared a snow emergency and implemented a parking ban to assist road crews, while officials urge residents to hunker down and prepare for potential widespread power outages caused by the heavy snowfall and extreme winds.
There is a spooky numerical trend that has New York City meteorologists scratching their heads: nearly every all-time record-breaking blizzard in the city has occurred in a year ending in the number 6.
This 10-year interval has turned the mid-winter months of 1996, 2006, and 2016 into legendary milestones for weather enthusiasts and a nightmare for city transit.
As we find ourselves in 2026, the pattern seems to be holding firm as yet another historic bomb cyclone takes aim at the I-95 corridor.
To understand the scale of what is currently brewing, we have to look back at the big three storms that defined the last three decades:
- January 1996 (The Blizzard of ’96):
This massive nor’easter paralyzed the Eastern Seaboard for nearly a week. Central Park recorded 20.2 inches of snow, while other boroughs saw up to 30 inches. The storm was so intense it forced the New York Stock Exchange to close early and left thousands across the region without electricity or heat for days. - February 2006: Just 10 years later, a minor affair turned into a record-shattering event. It dumped 26.9 inches on Central Park in a single 16-hour period—the highest total recorded since 1869 at that time. Snow fell at staggering rates of 3 to 4 inches per hour, causing subway delays and cutting bus service in half.
- January 2016 (Snowzilla):
Keeping the “sixes” streak alive, the storm became the most significant storm in NYC history. It dropped an all-time record 27.5 inches of snow in Central Park. The storm prompted a total travel ban for all NYC and Long Island roads, proving that even with modern preparation, a 10-year monster storm can still bring the “city that never sleeps” to a complete standstill.
With Blizzard Warnings once again hoisted for the five boroughs this weekend, it appears the “10-year curse” is right on schedule. Whether it’s a quirk of atmospheric cycles or just meteorological coincidence, the Northeast is once again bracing for a generational event that could join the ranks of ’96, ’06, and ’16 in the record books.
History is unfolding in the Garden State as the National Weather Service (NWS) has placed the entire state of New Jersey under a Blizzard Warning.
According to NWS Mount Holly, this marks the first time in exactly 30 years—stretching back to the legendary Blizzard of 1996—that such a widespread, top-tier winter alert has covered all 21 counties simultaneously.
While coastal regions have seen more recent warnings, this universal declaration underscores the extreme nature of the bomb cyclone currently bearing down on the region.
The NWS transition from Winter Storm Warnings to a blanket Blizzard Warning follows a surge in confidence that sustained winds or frequent gusts of 60 mph will combine with snow rates of 2 to 3 inches per hour to create life-threatening conditions.
During the 1996 event, the state was similarly paralyzed by over two feet of snow and record-shattering drifts that shut down the New Jersey Turnpike for the first time in its history.
With current forecasts predicting up to 24 inches for some jackpot zones, Governor Sherrill has echoed the gravity of the moment, urging all residents to treat this as a potentially historic threat to life and property.
FOX Weather is providing LIVE, around-the-clock coverage of Blizzard ’26. With more than a dozen crews deploying into the storm, this is the place for the most comprehensive storm coverage. Our team of meteorologists and correspondents will be Weathering It Together with you, reporting on the latest LIVE developments as the storm unfolds.
Leading up to this weekend’s historic blizzard, even the world’s most sophisticated computer models found themselves in a state of model mayhem as they struggled to pin down the storm’s volatile track.
Just days before the first flakes fell, major global systems like the European (ECMWF) and the American (GFS) were locked in a stark disagreement that left meteorologists baffled.
While the GFS was sounding the alarm for a record-shattering “biggest storm of all time” with potential three-foot totals, the European model—historically considered the most accurate global predictor—was calling for a much weaker system that would largely head out to sea.
The primary challenge for these digital guides was capturing the rare and explosive phasing of two separate energy systems from the Great Lakes and the Southeast and the final track of the storm’s center.
Most reliable models initially failed to realize these systems would merge at full speed, creating an atmospheric energy blast that redefined the storm’s magnitude in mere hours.
Additionally, because models are only as good as the data they receive, small miscalculations in the initial temperature and moisture levels can lead to wildly different answers.
This high-stakes uncertainty meant that even a minor shift of 50-100 miles in the projected track was the difference between a “nothing” event and a crippled I-95 corridor.
If you went to bed on Friday thinking this was just a nuisance storm and woke up to a 24-inch nightmare, you aren’t alone—and neither are the computers.
This wasn’t just a forecast miss; it was a masterclass in atmospheric chaos.
Here is the breakdown of how the Blizzard of ’26 went from a disorganized mess to a generational monster in under 48 hours.
The perfect (or worst) track:
Earlier in the week, most weather models took the storm’s center far away from the U.S. coast. That lead to initial predictions of a light-snow event for the I-95. When the storm’s individual pieces got closer and computers were able to accurately model it’s eventual path, snow amounts took a serious turn. Now, the center of the storm is projected to track directly over or just southeast of the 40°N/70°W benchmark. This specific set of coordinates is considered the sweet spot for classic New England nor’easters, as it allows the storm to pull in maximum moisture from the Atlantic while keeping the I-95 corridor on the cold, snow-heavy side of the system.
Bombogenesis:
With the right ingredients in play, storm will undergo bombogenesis—the “bomb” in bomb cyclone. To be a bomb, a storm’s central pressure must drop 24 millibars in 24 hours. This one won’t just meet the criteria; it will demolish it, dropping pressure like a rock. As the pressure plummets, the storm begins to spin more violently, pulling in massive amounts of moisture from the warm Gulf Stream and slamming it into a wall of arctic air.
The “mesoscale” headache: The real reason your local total might have jumped from 6 inches to 24 is a phenomenon called mesoscale banding. These are narrow, high-intensity ribbons of snow—often just 10 to 20 miles wide—that can dump 3 to 4 inches of snow per hour while a town just a few miles away sees significantly less. Models struggle to pinpoint exactly where these bands will set up until the storm is literally on top of us.
Factor in a high snow-to-water ratio (where cold air turns a little moisture into a lot of fluffy snow), and you have the perfect recipe for a forecast that “busts” toward the extreme.
The blizzard has brought the nation’s aviation network to its knees, with 7,300 U.S. flights already disrupted as of Sunday morning.
Mass cancellations are piling up across the Northeast, with over 6,630 flights scrapped through Tuesday as airports in New York, Boston, and Philadelphia prepare for a total whiteout.
Airlines have effectively surrendered to the blizzard’s 70 mph gusts, grounding fleets to prevent planes and crews from being stranded in the jackpot zones of the I-95 corridor.
Major carriers including American, Delta, United, Southwest, and JetBlue have proactively issued travel waivers for the Northeast ahead of the storm.
These alerts cover a broad range of airports from D.C. to Boston, allowing passengers scheduled to fly on Sunday, February 22, and Monday, February 23, to rebook their flights without paying change fees or fare differences.
If you have travel plans through the middle of the week, the message is clear: check your app, stay home, and prepare for a long road to recovery once the snow finally stops.
Governors Kathy Hochul (NY) and Mikie Sherrill (NJ) have officially declared States of Emergency as the Northeast braces for the full fury of a historic bomb cyclone.
In New York, the National Guard has been activated to stand watch over 22 counties while a strict commercial travel ban takes hold of I-84 and all southern routes starting at 4:00 p.m. ET.
Governor Hochul is urging residents to hunker down before the storm’s 60 mph gusts turn the landscape into a blinding whiteout that could make even a short trip life-threatening.
Across the Hudson, Governor Sherrill has placed all 21 New Jersey counties under high alert, warning that the Garden State is in the crosshairs of a generational event.
With coastal communities staring down the barrel of a potential two-foot snow burial, the state is prepping for the inevitable snap of power lines and falling trees as 60 mph winds lash the region through Monday morning.
Both leaders are emphasizing a single, urgent message: finish your preparations now and stay off the roads to give emergency crews the space they need to battle this monster storm.
The FOX Forecast Center has significantly increased its snow predictions as a powerful “bomb cyclone” prepares to blast the East Coast.
Widespread accumulations of 12 to 24 inches are now expected along the I-95 corridor from Philadelphia to Boston through Monday.
Forecast confidence is surging for a historic event, with models now painting more than two feet of snow for parts of the Jersey Shore and Long Island.
FOX Forecast Center snow totals through Monday
- Jersey Shore: 2 feet+
- Boston: 18–24″
- New York City: 18–24″
- Philadelphia: 18–24″
- Baltimore: 5-8″
- Washington: 3-5″
The heaviest snow is set to arrive Sunday night into Monday morning, with intense mesoscale bands potentially dumping 2 to 4 inches of snow per hour in localized “jackpot” zones.
Combined with wind gusts between 50 and 70 mph, these totals will lead to total whiteout conditions and life-threatening travel.
Residents are urged to complete all preparations immediately, as the weight of this heavy snow combined with extreme winds is likely to trigger widespread power outages throughout the region.
The Northeast is bracing for a historic atmospheric assault this morning as nearly 30 million Americans find themselves under rare Blizzard Warnings.
From the mid-Atlantic coast up through New England, the National Weather Service is warning of a “potentially life-threatening” event as a rapidly intensifying bomb cyclone prepares to dump 12 to 24 inches of snow along the I-95 corridor.
In New York City, this marks the first Blizzard Warning issued in nine years, underscoring the severity of a system that could bring snow rates of 2 to 3 inches per hour and wind gusts up to 60 mph.
As the storm “bombs out” over the Atlantic tonight, visibility is expected to drop to near zero, making travel dangerous, if not impossible through Monday afternoon.
Governors in New York and New Jersey have already declared States of Emergency, with major transit hubs like Philadelphia and Boston preparing for total whiteout conditions and widespread power outages.
With the heaviest snow set to arrive Sunday night, officials are urging the millions in the storm’s path to finish all preparations immediately and stay off the roads to allow emergency crews room to work.
Don’t miss out: you can go back and see LIVE updates from Saturday’s coverage of this historic blizzard.
Click here to see the minute-by-minute updates from FOX Weather.
Team Canada star, who blew wide-open net chance, makes telling comment about loss
As expected, Team Canada was not happy standing on the ice receiving their silver medals in Milan after Jack Hughes’ overtime game-winner to give Team USA gold.
Canadian star Nathan MacKinnon made an interesting comment after the game that sparked debate on social media.
“You be the judge of who was the better team today,” the Team Canada assistant captain and Colorado Avalanche star said, via the Canadian Press.
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MacKinnon seemingly implied that Canada was the better team despite the result. Sure, they outshot the U.S., 42-28, and they were certainly in control of the puck more throughout the three periods in Milan.
It even took some heroics from Team USA goaltender Connor Hellebuyck to keep the game tied at one goal apiece, including a miraculous stick save on Devon Toews point-blank chance in the second period.
TEAM USA MEN’S HOCKEY WINS GOLD MEDAL IN OVERTIME AGAINST CANADA AT WINTER OLYMPICS
But there were also a few miscues from Canada, and MacKinnon had a major one with 10:50 left in the third period. Hellebuyck was completely beat when the puck was swung over to MacKinnon, who had a wide-open net to work with. All he had to do was put it between the pipes and Canada would’ve taken a 2-1 lead.
Instead, his shot hit the short side of the net, and Team USA caught a break as one of the best goalscorers in the world was denied by his own error. It’s one of those moments where MacKinnon may be thinking, “What if?” considering how the game ended.
With both sides stuck in a draw after three periods, the Olympic overtime rules are that of the NHL regular season – 3-on-3 sudden death hockey. For Team USA, this format benefitted them considering what was happening in the second and third periods, with Canada handling them on both ends of the ice.
But MacKinnon once again made a grave mistake in overtime, as it didn’t seem he was anticipating defenseman Zach Weresnki flying into him in the offensive zone after Hughes pushed the puck up into Canada’s zone.
MacKinnon could’ve charged harder on the puck, but Werenski came away with it instead and slung it over for Hughes, who buried it past Jordan Binnington for the golden goal.
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So, while stats and other metrics may say Team Canada was the better team on the ice, it only matters in key moments. And, of course, the scoreboard at the final whistle.
As Team USA celebrates their first Olympic gold medal since the 1980 miracle-on-ice in Lake Placid, Team Canada can only head back to their respective cities thinking about what went wrong in the end.
Former FBI agent offers new theory about Nancy Guthrie’s disappearance
A former FBI agent believes that investigators should explore a new possible angle in the mysterious disappearance of Nancy Guthrie.
Jonny Grusing worked in the FBI’s Denver Division for 25 years, investigating violent crimes, missing persons, serial killers and more. He is also the author of “The Devil I Knew: Unmasking a Serial Killer,” about the true crime case of Scott Kimball.
Grusing made it clear that he is only operating off of information that has been made public in the case, and that he’s positing a new theory in case it might jog the memory of a member of the public who could help solve the case.
“The first thing he does is with his glove, and with his glove, it doesn’t look like he’s trying to take [the camera] off,” said Grusing of the suspect’s behavior on Guthrie’s stoop. “It looks like he’s trying to cover it with his right hand.And then he looks down, he looks around, and he gets the branches, and he puts the branches up in front of it.”
“Is there a chance, since we don’t have audio, that he is either knocking on the door loudly or that he has pressed the ring doorbell, [that] he’s trying to get Nancy to answer the door, and he’s shielding himself from being seen as a masked person, so she will, in her confusion, open the door?” Grusing asked rhetorically.
FBI REVEALS NEW SUSPECT DETAILS, INCLUDING BACKPACK, IN NANCY GUTHRIE DISAPPEARANCE; DOUBLES REWARD TO $100K
Grusing said that if that’s the case, the suspect likely wasn’t there to rob the home. Since Guthrie lives in a sprawling residential area, Grusing also believes it unlikely that the suspect was a robber who accidentally showed up at the wrong address.
Rather, he said, the suspect might have been there because he had a personal grievance against Guthrie, and might have lured her out of the home onto her porch.
The possibility makes even more sense, Grusing said, when considering that blood was found spattered on Guthrie’s front porch and down the driveway, and authorities have not released any information about whether there was blood found inside the home.
NANCY GUTHRIE CASE: FBI PREPARES FOR ‘PARALLEL REALITIES’ WHILE AWAITING DNA RESULTS
The suspect also wore a gun in what is believed to be a cheap Walmart holster, and wore it on the front of his body, which Grusing described as not “tactically sound.” Grusing also believes that the gunman would have had trouble firing that gun with the gloves he was wearing, and that the gun may have just been a prop to instill fear in Guthrie.
“So, if the gun’s a prop, if he’s shielding himself from being seen, if he’s actually ringing the doorbell or knocking on the door, getting her to come, he wants to confront her about something in my opinion,” said Grusing.
Grusing has always believed that in whatever interaction Guthrie had with the suspect, something went wrong, causing him to remove her from the house. Perhaps, he said, Guthrie identified him, causing a panic. He also says the kidnap-for-ransom theory doesn’t add up, given that alleged kidnappers never reached out to the Guthrie family directly.
POSSIBLE TATTOO SEEN IN NANCY GUTHRIE VIDEO MAY HELP ID SUBJECT, FORMER PROFILER SAYS
Grusing wouldn’t speculate on what kind of grievance someone might have had with Guthrie, or why they might have had it.
But he wants the public to consider the possibility, just in case they remember someone saying they were wronged by a person fitting Guthrie’s description.
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“It’s hard to be an expert in human behavior because it’s so unique to that person,” said Grusing, despite his quarter-century of experience.
“You know, I’m just trying to use the experiences of different cases and trying to apply any sort of logic to this in the hopes that someone from the public who has thought it might be someone they know whether it’s his family or whether now it’s a coworker or friend or associate or whatever, to put that one puzzle piece together that says, ‘Yes, and now I think it could be him.'”
WATCH: AOC defends Taiwan stumble in late-night rant as fiancé snores in background
An emotional Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., attempted to blame critics – and even President Donald Trump’s own off-the-cuff agility – for the backlash she received for her response to a question at the recent Munich Security Conference on American defense of Taiwan in the event of a Chinese invasion.
“If you think I don’t understand foreign policy, because of out of hours of discourse about international affairs, I pause to think about one of the most sensitive geopolitical issues that currently exist on earth, I’m afraid the issue is not my understanding, but perhaps the problem is you’ve gotten adjusted to a president that never thinks before he speaks,” a raspy-voiced Ocasio-Cortez said on a late-night Instagram Live video circulating on social media.
The leftist congresswoman’s Munich stumbling on Friday, Feb. 13, started the critical firestorm and has conservatives questioning her fitness for a potential 2028 Democrat presidential primary campaign.
“Um, you know, I think that this is such a, you know, I think that this is a um — this is, of course, a, um, very long-standing, um, policy of the United States,” she said with pause when asked about America defending Taiwan in the event of a Chinese invasion to enforce its One China Policy over the island-nation.
AOC HIT WITH SOCIAL MEDIA BACKLASH AFTER APPEARING TO STRUGGLE WITH QUESTION ABOUT US DEFENDING TAIWAN
“And I think what we are hoping for is that we want to make sure that we never get to that point, and we want to make sure that we are moving in all of our economic, research and our global positions to avoid any such confrontation and for that question to even arise.”
Vice President JD Vance, a potential 2028 presidential campaign opponent in a prospective general election matchup, weighed in multiple times this week to Ocasio-Cortez’s remarks.
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“I think it’s a person who doesn’t know what she actually thinks, and I’ve seen this way too much in Washington with politicians: Where they’re given lines and, when you ask them to go outside the lines they were given, they completely fall apart,” Vance told Fox News’ “The Story With Martha MacCallum” in an in-studio interview earlier this week.
“That was embarrassing,” he continued. “If I had given that answer I would say, ‘You know what? Maybe you ought to go read a book about China and Taiwan before I go out on the world stage again.’ I hope that Congresswoman Cortez has the same humility. I’m skeptical.”
Iran prepares to ‘unleash’ Hezbollah if regime faces existential threat
Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) has tightened control over Hezbollah in the Middle East amid looming prospects of potential U.S. strikes, according to reports.
According to the Jerusalem Post, the tactical shift comes as Hezbollah and Iran prepare for military confrontation in the region, with analysts warning that if Washington specifically strikes the regime, Hezbollah is ready to be “activated.”
“If the regime in Tehran feels threatened, the likelihood of unleashing Hezbollah against Israel and U.S. regional assets increases substantially,” Ross Harrison, a senior fellow at the Middle East Institute, told Fox News Digital.
“Hezbollah would not be activated right away, unless the attack immediately targets the leadership of the Islamic Republic. But as part of a graduated response, Hezbollah will likely be seen as an asset,” he said.
“If it faces an existential risk, then Iran may throw caution to the wind and try to deploy Hezbollah to the maximum,” Harrison explained.
IRAN SIGNALS NUCLEAR PROGRESS IN GENEVA AS TRUMP CALLS FOR FULL DISMANTLEMENT
President Donald Trump previously gave Iran a deadline of 10 to 15 days to respond to a deal, raising questions about what steps Washington could take if Tehran fails to comply.
A new round of talks is now scheduled for Thursday in Geneva and expected to focus on Iran’s nuclear program, including uranium enrichment levels and sanctions relief.
“The decision-making circle in the White House is very small regarding Iran, with the president keeping a close hand on it all,” Harrison explained.
He added that any decision to directly target the Iranian regime would likely rest within Trump’s inner circle of advisers.
“Normally there is input from the National Security Council and the wider intelligence community,” Harrison said. “Since the decision-making process in the White House is opaque, it is hard to know how much of this is getting through.”
WITKOFF WARNS IRAN IS ‘A WEEK AWAY’ FROM ‘BOMB-MAKING MATERIAL’ AS TRUMP WEIGHS ACTION
“If the U.S. is engaging with the Saudis and Emiratis, they are getting warnings about the possibility of this war spreading to the broader region, which would be deleterious to the U.S. and its allies,” he added.
Harrirson also warned that there was “potential for attacks to spread across the region, to Israel through direct Iranian ballistic attacks and via Hezbollah, and to the Gulf Arab states through Iran directly and possibly via the Houthis from Yemen.”
Regional media reports also suggest Iran’s ties with Hezbollah are strengthening. Sources told Al Arabiya and Al Hadath that IRGC officers have been rebuilding Hezbollah’s military infrastructure and managing strategic war plans.
The coordination follows changes within Hezbollah’s leadership, Harrison explained.
“Since the killing by Israel of Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah last year, ties and operational coordination have to some degree been reestablished,” he said.
“The IRGC has supported Hezbollah in Lebanon for decades,” he said, adding that efforts to reestablish ties appear to be occurring “particularly in light of the destruction of Iran’s nuclear sites last June.”
IRAN DRAWS MISSILE RED LINE AS ANALYSTS WARN TEHRAN IS STALLING US TALKS
“Iran is trying to resurrect lost assets, such as its missile program and its connections to Hezbollah,” Harrison said.
“Hezbollah has been seen for decades by Iran as a deterrence asset against an Israeli or American attack. Since Hezbollah has its own interests, connected to but separate from Iran, whether its leadership will go all the way for Tehran is unknown,” he concluded.
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The developments surrounding Hezbollah and the IRGC came as Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has appointed close ally Ali Larijani as the country’s de facto leader, according to reports.
Fox News Digital has reached out to the White House for comment.
Olympic controversy grows as Chinese American stars are pitted against each other
Just minutes after Alysa Liu won a historic Olympic figure skating gold for the U.S., her story as the child of a Chinese American immigrant who fled communism spread like wildfire across social media.
Almost immediately, that discourse evolved, in many circles, into comparisons to another Chinese American superstar who has dominated headlines in Milan Cortina — American-born Team China skier Eileen Gu.
“Alysa Liu > Eileen Gu,” Barstool Sports founder Dave Portnoy wrote in a post on X. “The triumph of America over China!”
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Other pundits were quick to point out the contrast between Liu’s story, a tale of American loyalty among an immigrant’s child, and Gu, who chose to compete for Team China when she was 15 years old despite living her life in California.
“Eileen Gu is unlucky that Alysa Liu’s patriotism stands in stark contrast to Gu’s betrayal of her country,” American lawyer and political analyst Gordon Chang told Fox News Digital.
Just how different and how similar are the two Olympic superstars?
Liu and Gu were each born to single parents who left China. They both grew up in the Bay Area
Liu’s father, Arthur Liu, was there in Tiananmen Square in the spring and summer of 1989.
The Tiananmen Square protests, also known as the Tiananmen Square Massacre, proved to be a life-changing moment for Arthur and a history-changing moment for everyone else. Hundreds of Chinese students and residents in the capital city of Beijing were killed by the country’s military for protesting the communist government.
Arthur was later summoned to report to the Office of Chinese Communist Party Youth League to address his presence that day.
“I refused to provide them any more names of students who had participated in the organization of the demonstrations. … I was going to take full responsibility for everything that had happened since at one time I was elected the president of the Guangzhou Autonomous Student Union of Universities,” Arthur Liu told USA Today.
“Going to prison for me was a matter of time.”
He had to sneak onto a boat to Hong Kong, risking up to three years in prison or a labor camp. The boat took an extended detour to avoid military detection. He later fled to California from there.
“His persistence, and he’s brave too,” Alysa told Fox News Digital of her father during a roundtable interview at the USOPC media summit in October. “We all knew about it. He had some stories for us, but we also found out from our other relatives. They would tell us as well.”
In the 1980s, Gu’s mother, Yan Gu, was a student at Peking University studying chemistry and biochemistry, according to The New York Times. She came to the United States to earn a master’s degree, eventually earning it from Stanford.
At age 40, Yan gave birth to Eileen, and raised her as a single parent, according to Olympics.com. Not much is known about Gu’s father. Eileen has not publicly commented on him and declined to answer questions about him with The New York Times.
And Liu doesn’t even know her own mother. She and Arthur’s four other children were conceived using an anonymous egg donor and a gestational surrogate.
As a lawyer, Arthur Liu raised Alysa and her siblings in Oakland. Yan raised Eileen Gu across the bay in San Francisco.
Alysa began skating at age 5 when her father brought her to the Oakland Ice Center. She later trained under Laura Lipetsky, a former figure skater who had trained under figure skating Hall of Fame coach Frank Carroll.
Gu excelled as a student and as an athlete throughout her adolescence. She scored 1580 out of 1600 on her SAT exams. Every summer, she went back to China for a few weeks to get extra math practice, according to The Guardian.
Gu competed in her first Freestyle Ski World Cup in January 2019. At that time, she was representing the U.S.
But it was the last time Gu would represent the U.S.
China embarked on a mission to recruit overseas athletes with Chinese lineage, especially in America
It was called the Chinese naturalization project.
The project accelerated around 2018–2022, aimed at recruiting foreign-born athletes, primarily with Chinese heritage, to boost competitiveness, notably for the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics and soccer, according to The China Project.
Gu and Liu were top recruiting targets.
Gu traded in her red, white and blue for red and gold. Just months after competing in her first Freestyle Ski World Cup for the U.S. in January 2019, she competed for China for the first time in June of that year after requesting a change of nation with the International Ski Federation.
In an announcement on Instagram, she said she made the decision “to help inspire millions of young people” in China and “to unite people, promote common understanding, create communication, and forge friendships between nations.”
Seven years after the decision, Gu is the highest-paid Winter Olympic athlete in the world, making an estimated $23 million in 2025 alone due to partnerships with Chinese companies, including the Bank of China and western companies.
The Wall Street Journal reported last week that Gu and Zhu Yi, a fellow American-born figure skater who now competes for China, were paid a combined $6.6 million by the Beijing Municipal Sports Bureau in 2025 for “striving for excellent results in qualifying for the 2026 Milan Winter Olympics.”
Overall, the two were reportedly paid nearly $14 million over the past three years.
The Lius remained loyal to Team USA.
Arthur was reportedly “not open to persuasion” to having Alysa compete for China, according to The Economist.
Both athletes competed at the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics, Gu representing China and Liu representing the U.S.
Gu won two gold medals and one silver in freeskiing and went home to California as a new global household name for her success.
Liu finished in sixth place in women’s singles figure skating, then went into a temporary early retirement.
Gu has refused to answer questions about the Chinese government’s actions; Liu has been directly targeted by Chinese government actions
Gu has become a target for global criticism this Olympics for her decision to represent China while remaining silent on the country’s alleged human rights abuses.
In an interview with Time Magazine, Gu was asked her thoughts on China’s alleged persecution of Uyghurs and other Turkic Muslim minorities in Xinjiang.
“I haven’t done the research. I don’t think it’s my business. I’m not going to make big claims on my social media,” Gu answered.
“I’m just more of a skeptic when it comes to data in general. … So it’s not like I can read an article and be like, ‘Oh, well, this must be the truth.’ I need to have a ton of evidence. I need to maybe go to the place, maybe talk to 10 primary source people who are in a location and have experienced life there.
“Then I need to go see images. I need to listen to recordings. I need to think about how history affects it. Then I need to read books on how politics affects it. This is a lifelong search. It’s irresponsible to ask me to be the mouthpiece for any agenda.”
Liu and her family, on the other hand, found themselves in the crosshairs of China’s government ahead of the 2022 Beijing Games amid her father’s past and her own refusal to compete for China.
Before her appearance in the 2022 Beijing games, she and her father were the alleged targets of a spying operation by the Chinese government.
US OLYMPIC GOLD MEDALIST ALYSA LIU WAS ONCE TARGETED BY CHINESE SPIES
Liu called the experience “a little bit freaky and exciting.”
“You know what I mean? It’s so … unbelievable. You know what I mean like, that’s crazy,” Liu previously told Fox News Digital at a roundtable interview at the USOPC Media Summit in October.
“Like, imagine finding that out at such a young age, I mean, like In a weird way, I was like, ‘Am I like in some prank show?’ Like, is this world real. Like, I must be some movie character. But, I mean, it was like it made sense to me, you know, from like everything my dad did back in his activist days.”
One of the five men charged with spying on Chinese dissidents living in the U.S., Matthew Ziburis, allegedly contacted Arthur in November 2021, impersonating a USOPC official and asking for his and Liu’s passport numbers, The Associated Press reported at the time.
Ziburis allegedly traveled to California’s Bay Area, where the Liu family lived, to surveil them and try to coax private information from the family that he could then supply to the Chinese government.
Her father told The Associated Press at the time, “They are probably just trying to intimidate us, to … in a way threaten us not to say anything, to cause trouble to them and say anything political or related to human rights violations in China. … I had concerns about her safety. The U.S. government did a good job protecting her.”
The U.S. Department of Justice and FBI came to Liu’s aid.
She first spoke with the FBI agent who would protect her family at length at a Japanese restaurant.
“I went, like, to eat dinner with her a couple times. I mostly talk, because, like, I’m also, like, really interested in what she does, like guys like, that’s so cool to me. Like, I don’t know, just like meeting with an FBI agent like that’s crazy work,” she said.
“You know, and I mean, like, not many people can do that. So I, you know, I have so many questions and, like, I’ve met with. Like, a psychologist there, not for me like because, I was like, so curious about, like, what she does.”
Liu added the FBI made her feel “safe” throughout the situation.
The spy operation didn’t scare Liu off from competing in Beijing. But she had heightened security assurances from the U.S. State Department and USOPC, and at least two people escorted her at all times when she was there.
She went into retirement shortly after the Beijing Games ended.
“She became really unhappy,” Arthur Liu told USA Today about why she retired. “She avoided the ice rink at all costs. She’s traumatized. She was just traumatized. She was suffering from PTSD, and she wouldn’t go near the ice rink.”
But Liu made her return to the sport just two years later in 2024. By March 2025, she was already making history for Team USA, becoming the first American the World Figure Skating Championships in 19 years.
Her comeback included a storybook ending with Thursday’s gold medal performance.
Liu hasn’t ruled out adapting her life and experience in an international spying incident into a movie.
Still, she has some preferences if her story makes it onto the big screen.
“They gotta make me look like a super cool hero or something. And just, I can’t just be the kid that got spied on and did nothing about it,” she said. “But, honestly, I would just have the main focus be like my dad’s story because, like, his story is so cool and, like, also just like everything that only happened because of what he did, so, like, I feel like we got to start with the roots.”
All eyes turn to Gu, who has faced a storm of global controversy in Italy as social media rages with politically charged comparisons to Liu
With Liu earning gold on Thursday, Gu is now the last athlete between the two chasing a gold medal. Liu’s win on Thursday has ensured Gu will ski with the backdrop of viral, and often unflattering, comparisons to Liu by American patriots on social media.
Chang told Fox News Digital that Gu “should count her lucky stars she was born an American. A generous America allowed her to compete for China at the Beijing Olympics four years ago and then let her back into the country. If the reverse were true, and she had been born in China, the Chinese regime would not have been so indulgent.”
Gu will compete in the women’s freestyle skiing halfpipe final on Sunday after only winning silver in her first two events. The event was postponed from after severe snow made the original scheduled time on Saturday unsafe.
Gu had to overcome a near-disastrous crash during her first run of the qualifying round on Thursday to get to this final, and last chance to win Gold in Milan Cortina.
It will be the climax of a games defined by immense global criticism for Gu.
She brought backlash upon herself early in the games when she responded to a question about President Donald Trump criticizing U.S. Olympian Hunter Hess for being critical of the state of America.
“I’m sorry that the headline that is eclipsing the Olympics has to be something so unrelated to the spirit of the Games. It really runs contrary to everything the Olympics should be,” Gu told reporters Monday.
“The whole point of sport is to bring people together. … One of the very few common languages, that of the human body, that of the human spirit, the competitive spirit, the capacity to break not only records, but especially in our sport, literally the human limit. How wonderful is that?”
Gu also claimed she had been “caught in the crossfire” herself.
“As someone who has got caught in the crossfire before, I feel sorry for the athletes,” Gu said. “I hope that they can ski to their very best.”
Vice President JD Vance weighed in on the controversy surrounding Gu in an interview Tuesday on Fox News’ “The Story with Martha MacCallum.”
“I certainly think that someone who grew up in the United States of America who benefited from our education system, from the freedoms and liberties that makes this country a great place, I would hope they want to compete with the United States of America,” Vance said.
When asked if she feels “like a bit of a punching bag for a certain strand of American politics at the moment,” she said she does.
“I do,” she said. “So many athletes compete for a different country. … People only have a problem with me doing it because they kind of lump China into this monolithic entity, and they just hate China. So, it’s not really about what they think it’s about.
“And, also, because I win. Like, if I wasn’t doing well, I think that they probably wouldn’t care as much, and that’s OK for me. People are entitled to their opinions.”
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Gu has claimed she was “physically assaulted” for the decision.
“The police were called. I’ve had death threats. I’ve had my dorm robbed,” Gu told The Athletic.
“I’ve gone through some things as a 22-year-old that I really think no one should ever have to endure, ever.”
Kate Middleton dazzles in stunning Gucci dress at star-studded 2026 BAFTAs
Kate Middleton made a radiant return to the red carpet as she and Prince William joined Hollywood stars including Kate Hudson and Emma Stone at the 2026 British Academy Film Awards (BAFTAs).
The BAFTAs, Britain’s annual celebration of the year’s best films, were held on February 22, 2026 at London’s Royal Festival Hall and hosted by actor Alan Cumming.
The Prince and Princess of Wales made a surprise appearance at the event, marking the first time that they had attended the awards together since 2023.
Middleton dazzled in a floor-length, flowing blush pink Gucci gown that featured sheer layers in pale and rose tones and a dark red velvet belt. The princess, who is famous for recycling her fashion, had previously donned the gown when she attended the 100 Women in Finance’s gala dinner in 2019.
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She accessorized with royal jewelry, including the diamond Greville Chandelier Earrings, which were previously owned by Queen Elizabeth II, as well as the Queen Mary Choker Bracelet. Middleton wore her hair in soft side-parted curls, completing her red carpet look.
William, who serves as the President of BAFTA, subtly coordinated his ensemble with Middleton’s gown, opting for a dark red velvet evening jacket along with a white button-down shirt, a black bowtie, black trousers, and black dress shoes.
Hudson, who was nominated for a best leading actress BAFTA, turned heads in a striking red off-the-shoulder corset gown, paired with diamond statement necklace and fan-shaped diamond earrings. The “Song Sung Blue” star wore her hair in a sleek updo, completing her Old Hollywood-inspired look.
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Stone, who also received a best leading actress nod, dared to bare in a floor-length black halter dress with a dramatic keyhole cutout that extended almost to her navel and also featured a long train. The “Bugonia” star wore understated diamond jewelry that included stud earrings and a bracelet and sported strappy black heels.
Kerry Washington stunned in a custom navy blue Prada gown that featured a daring side-baring silhouette with sequin straps and a flowing pleated tulle skirt. The “Scandal” actress completed the look with diamond-encrusted navy blue medallion-style earrings and a navy blue manicure.
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Monica Bellucci wowed in a sophisticated off-the-shoulder black gown by Stella McCartney, which she accessorized with a diamond and sapphire Cartier High Jewelry necklace.
Gillian Anderson stood out in an elegant purple and brown patterned chiffon gown by Roksanda, that featured a high neckline and a purple tied belt along with diamond drop earrings.
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Teyana Taylor commanded attention in a custom plum-colored trench coat inspired Burberry gown that featured a dramatic rose-like collar and belted waist. Taylor, who was nominated in the best supporting actress category for her performance in “One Battle After Another,” completed her look with Tiffany & Co. jewelry.
Jessie Buckley, who received a best leading actress nomination for her performance in “Hamnet, walked the red carpet in a striking blue velvet Chanel gown with jeweled broaches on the shoulders and a scooped back. The actress accessorized with Chanel jewelry including diamond and sapphire earrings and a multi-gem ring.
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Rose Byrne made her BAFTAs debut in a light yellow backless chiffon halter gown by Miu Mui that was embroidered with silver crystals and featured a cinched waist. Byrne, who wore dramatic diamond drop earrings, was nominated in the leading actress category for her performance in “If I Had Legs I’d Kick You.”
Sadie Sink stunned in a mint green backless, sideless Prada gown held by a delicate ribbon around the waist. The “Stranger Things” star completed her elegant look with Bulgari jewelry.