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  • FAA scrambles to hire 8,900 air traffic controllers by 2028 as shortage reaches crisis levels

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    A nationwide air traffic controller shortage has put new attention on a growing training option the FAA now approves for certain colleges. 

    The recent federal government shutdown highlighted how thin staffing has become, especially as delays and reroutes stacked up across the country. 

    The FAA says it wants to hire at least 8,900 new controllers by 2028. According to FAA workforce data analyzed by USAFacts, about 3,000 controller positions were vacant nationwide as of late 2024 — though not every facility is equally understaffed.

    That shortage is driving interest in a newer FAA-approved college pathway designed to streamline controller training at a small group of universities — including Middle Georgia State. 

    KRISTI NOEM UNVEILS $1B TSA MODERNIZATION PLAN, AWARDS $10K BONUSES TO WORKERS WHO SERVED DURING SHUTDOWN

    Training ramps up in difficulty as students learn to manage more aircraft at once on radar. (Fox News)

    The Enhanced AT-CTI program allows students to train to the same standard as the FAA Academy, and if hired and meeting FAA requirements such as passing the Air Traffic Skills Assessment (ATSA), medical and security clearances, they can go directly to a facility instead of completing the full academy in Oklahoma City, which can involve long waitlists and multi-month courses.

    Graduates still undergo facility-specific training and must be certified on-the-job before becoming full controllers.

    Only about nine schools nationwide have been approved to offer the new Enhanced AT-CTI program as of 2025, according to Kemarie Jeffers, the department chair of aviation science and management at Middle Georgia State.

    Inside Middle Georgia State’s tower simulator, air traffic control student Brooke Graffagnino says the job’s intensity is what drew her in. “It kind of gets your chest beating, because with how much traffic there is, sometimes it is intense,” she said.

    HOUSE DEMOCRAT SIDES WITH TRUMP OFFICIALS ON AIR TRAFFIC CUTS AMID SHUTDOWN CHAOS

    Student speaks into a radio inside the airport’s control tower with a clear view of the runway.

    Students also train inside the on-campus control tower, gaining experience with real airport operations. (Fox News)

    She says students quickly find out whether they’re suited for the job. “You can kind of tell who does not [love it]. There have been quite a few, and they are no longer here. It takes a lot to get through it,” she said.

    Graffagnino says the importance of the work became clearer as she learned how controllers keep busy airspace organized. “Once you get in the airspace that is super crowded or approaching the larger airports like Atlanta, you need someone to help coordinate and keep everything separate and safe,” she said.

    Middle Georgia State was approved as an Enhanced AT-CTI school in mid-2024. Jeffers says the impact was immediate. 

    “Before our program had maybe about 17 to 20 students. Right now we have 54. So we have already, in that short amount of time, almost tripled in size the amount of students that we have,” he said.

    An instructor guides a student through a radar simulation showing aircraft movements.

    An instructor helps a student navigate radar-based air traffic training during an advanced simulation. (Fox News)

    To earn the enhanced designation, Jeffers said the school had to update its curriculum, overhaul parts of its simulator setup, and install new audio and video systems. 

    “We’ve upgraded a lot of our equipment… we had to install audio and video equipment upstairs in our tower sim,” he said. 

    Those upgrades allow the FAA to remotely review or spot-check training sessions and ensure they meet federal standards.

    FAA TO LIFT EMERGENCY FLIGHT RESTRICTIONS MONDAY MORNING AS AIR TRAFFIC STAFFING REBOUNDS

    The program’s biggest distinction is what happens after graduation. “Enhanced CTI eliminates your requirement of going to the academy. You will graduate here and you can go straight to work,” Jeffers said. “So it saves you time and effort — again, it gets you to work sooner and making money quicker.”

    The FAA requires enhanced programs to employ instructors with controller experience and maintain simulator equipment comparable to FAA standards.

    Graphic comparing the traditional and enhanced pathways for becoming an air traffic controller.

    A comparison of the traditional FAA route to becoming an air traffic controller and the newer Enhanced AT-CTI pathway. (Fox News)

    As students advance, the simulations become more complex, requiring trainees to manage more aircraft at once. 

    “As we get more comfortable and confident, we are able to allow more aircraft into the airspace at a time,” Graffagnino said.

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    Before finishing the program, every student must pass a final simulation that mirrors the FAA Academy’s evaluation process. 

    “Our instructors will then run a scenario and they will be graded… the exact same way in which they will be graded at the academy,” Jeffers said.

    According to the FAA’s FY 2025 Air Traffic Controller Workforce Plan, the agency anticipates about 2,000 hires in FY 2025, 2,200 in FY 2026, and incremental increases through 2028, though retirements are expected to offset much of that growth.

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  • California farmers push back on Prop 50 as Democrats eye new House map

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    California voters are in the final days of a special election that could help determine control of the U.S. House of Representatives in 2026. The ballot measure, known as Proposition 50, would allow state lawmakers to temporarily redraw California’s congressional map — a move Democrats say could help them pick up additional seats in Congress.

    Jenny Holtermann, a fourth-generation farmer in California’s Central Valley, said that under the proposed map, she would remain in a Republican District, but worries about the changes could affect her community. 

    “It really is, it’s sad that they are really carving out those Republican areas of the district and moving them to really make the areas more Democrat, and that’s not what the Central Valley is,” Holtermann told Fox.

    REPUBLICANS FIGHT NEWSOM’S $88M REDISTRICTING ‘POWER GRAB’ AS PROP 50 BATTLE HEATS UP

    Early morning at an almond farm in California’s Central Valley.

    OBAMA ENDORSES NEWSOM CALIFORNIA REDISTRICTING PROP 50

    Beyond Central Valley farmers, the California Farm Bureau has also come out against Prop 50. Holtermann said she’s used to larger cities having more political influence in Sacramento but fears the measure would further silence rural voices.

    Jenny Holtermann is a 4th-generation California farmer. She's worried about how Prop 50 will affect rural representation in the state.

    Jenny Holtermann holds a fresh almond picked from her orchard. (Amalia Roy)

    “We are California, and as Californians we should not be caught up with what other states are doing to [gerry]mander their votes,” Holtermann said.

    NORTHERN CALIFORNIA VOTERS WEIGH IN ON PROP 50 REDISTRICTING FIGHT

    Lonny Johnson, vice chair of the Fresno County Democratic Party, said he doesn’t welcome the fight either, but argued that redistricting efforts in Republican-led states left California Democrats with few options.

    A flyer urging people to vote for Prop 50 sits on a table at the Fresno County Democratic Party office.

    A flyer urging people to vote for Prop 50 sits on a table at the Fresno County Democratic Party office. (Amalia Roy)

    “We can either fight this – which is what we’re doing – and the people of California seem very supportive if you look at recent polling, or we can do nothing. We can let them game the system, keep control of the House of Representatives, and there will be no check, no check, on the Trump Administration,” said Johnson.

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    Johnson added that unlike other states, the question of redistricting is up to California voters.

    “This was not an option that was afforded the voters of Texas, or the voters of North Carolina, or the voters of Missouri. The state legislatures just put it in,” Johnson told Fox.

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  • ‘It’s scary’: SNAP recipients brace for fallout as benefits vanish during shutdown

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    As the federal government drags into its second month, millions of low-income Americans – including thousands in Illinois – are now facing the cutoff of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits, bracing for what lies ahead as food pantry lines grow longer by the day. 

    For residents like Lisa Weaving of Springfield, the loss of food aid is more than a political standoff – it’s a looming crisis. 

    “It’s scary because I’m a cancer survivor. I’m in remission. My doctor has not released me to go back to work yet, so I’m on disability, and I really need the extra for food, because by the time I pay all the bills, there’s really nothing left,” Weaving said. 

    RETAIL GIANTS EXPAND PERKS FOR SNAP SHOPPERS, BUT WORKING FAMILIES LEFT BEHIND

    A volunteer reaches for food supplies at a pantry serving families who depend on SNAP benefits. (Olivianna Calmes)

    She said her apartment building houses veterans, seniors and others on disability. “The entire building right now is in an uproar because they don’t know where they’re going to get their food from. We have the bread line across the street, but that’s only one meal a day.” 

    Weaving said many neighbors are turning to multiple pantries. “We have a pantry that’s open on Wednesdays from 12:30 to 3, and it’s once a month. You can get about ten items per person. If you have kids, more. So it’s really a help for many, but their food doesn’t last an entire month. So you’re hopping from pantry to pantry.”

    map showing percentage of residents using snap benefits by state in 2024

    USDA data show that more than 41 million Americans use SNAP, with participation rates highest in New Mexico, Oregon and Louisiana. (USDA/Fox News) (Olivianna Calmes)

    At Washington Street Mission in Springfield, director Jarid Brown said demand in Central Illinois has surged sharply since benefits were frozen. “Yesterday I got a call from one of our churches who has a large food pantry, and they had twice the number of people there that night and actually cleaned everything out. If we double that number, it’s only going to last a few weeks. If we see triple that number come in, we’ll be cleaned out within a couple of weeks.”

    FEDERAL WORKERS BRACE FOR MISSED PAYCHECK AS SHUTDOWN ENTERS 5TH WEEK

    “If you’re living in poverty, if you are in that lowest income, it’s hard enough to climb out of poverty as it is. But now you add in rising food prices and you add in rising utility prices. It makes it nearly impossible for anyone to get out of that hole,” Brown added. 

    close-up of snap supplemental nutrition assistance program sign

    The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, provides federal food aid to more than 40 million Americans each month. (Fox News) (Olivianna Calmes)

    “This is the first time it’s actually going to hit hard,” Weaving said. “And to think there are 42 million, they’re saying, that are going to be hungry in a place like Springfield. We do worry that the crime rate might go up because of this.”

    SENATE GOP DIVIDED AS MILLIONS RISK LOSING FOOD AID IN SHUTDOWN STANDOFF

    “There are able bodies that may be abusing the system, but there are so many that need this,” Weaving said.

    Brown said the greatest impact of the shutdown has been the pause in benefits. “The greatest impact that we’ve had with the budget shutdown is going to be the SNAP benefits being frozen off,” he said. “My hope is that for a minute we can set politics aside and think about what it’s going to take to reopen government and then address the issues that we’re separated on later. But holding individuals who need food assistance hostage for 1 or 2 issues, we’re holding service personnel hostage for over 1 or 2 issues, that’s not acceptable.”

    shelves filled with cereal boxes and pantry staples at washington street mission in springfield

    Stocked shelves at Washington Street Mission’s food pantry in Springfield, Illinois, where staff say food pantries in the area are struggling to keep pace with rising demand. (Fox News) (Olivianna Calmes)

    Brown said that if people want to help, they should start locally – donating food or money directly to community organizations already serving those in need.  

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    Illinois has joined other states in suing the federal government to compel the continuation of SNAP payments during the shutdown, arguing that state programs can’t fill the gap on their own. 

    Olivianna Calmes is a multimedia reporter for Fox News, covering national and Midwest stories.

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  • Police agencies turn to virtual reality to improve split-second decision-making

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    Police departments across the country are turning to virtual reality training to help officers make split-second decisions in difficult, and sometimes dangerous, situations.

    The goal is to help officers respond quickly and safely to any call, according to tech company Axon, and more than 1,500 police agencies across the United States and Canada are now using Axon’s virtual reality training program to make that happen.

    Recruits at the Aurora Police Department in Colorado are among those training with the technology. 

    “You get to be actually in the scene, move around, just feel for everything,” recruit Jose Vazquez Duran said.

    AMAZON DEFENDS AMBITIOUS AI STRATEGY THAT COULD PREVENT 600,000 FUTURE HIRES THROUGH INNOVATION

    Police departments across the U.S. and Canada are increasingly adopting virtual reality training programs to better prepare officers for real-life, high-pressure situations. (Kennedy Hayes/FOX News)

    Fellow recruit Tyler Frick described it as “Almost like… a 3D Movie. Except this is exactly what we are going to be doing when we graduate the academy.”

    Aurora PD uses Axon’s virtual reality program to prepare recruits for scenarios including de-escalation, Taser use and other high-stress interactions.

    “It’s filmed with live actors who are re-enacting scenarios. And we have a lot of content there focused on a wide range of topics, from mental health to people who are experiencing drug overdose or encountering domestic violence,” said Thi Luu, vice president and general manager of Axon Virtual Reality.

    EX-POLICE CHIEF WARNS CHICAGO COPS WILL GET HURT BECAUSE MAYOR JOHNSON WON’T HELP ICE

    virtual reality police training on tablet

    In Aurora, Colorado, police recruits are training with VR to prepare for real-life scenarios, including de-escalation, Taser use and other high-stress interactions. (Kennedy Hayes/FOX News)

    The Aurora Police Department has used Axon’s virtual reality training program for three years. Officials say the technology keeps getting more advanced and easier to use, which helps free up other resources.

    “Really helps on manpower for my staff, the training staff, when we can have, you know, 10 or 15 recruits all doing the exact same scenario at the same time. That means we are getting the most out of our training hours and having well-trained, well-rounded officers is really important,” said Aurora police Sgt. Faith Goodrich.

    Axon said the artificial intelligence in its newest training program can adjust how virtual suspects act – making them friendly, aggressive or anything in between. They can answer questions, talk back or even refuse to cooperate, just like in real life.

    Every session is different, depending on how officers handle the situation.

    Technology helps train police

    Police recruits interact with virtual reality to sharpen their skills. (Kennedy Hayes/ FOX News)

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    A study from PwC found that virtual reality can speed up officer training and boost confidence in applying new skills compared with classroom-trained counterparts. 

    According to the study, VR learners showed a four times faster training rate and a 275% boost in confidence when applying learned skills compared to their classroom-trained counterparts.

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  • National program helps seniors spot scams as losses surge

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    Scams targeting older Americans are surging, and federal officials are warning that the tactics are becoming harder to detect.

    The Federal Trade Commission says scammers are posing as IRS agents, police officers, or other officials – often over the phone or online – to steal thousands of dollars at a time.

    The FTC says scams involving losses over $10,000 have quadrupled in recent years. The FBI reports that older adults filed the most scam complaints last year, with average losses climbing to $83,000 – up 43% from the year before.

    SCAMMERS NOW IMPERSONATE COWORKERS, STEAL EMAIL THREADS IN CONVINCING PHISHING ATTACKS

    In response, AARP has launched Senior Planet, a national program offering free fraud-awareness classes to Americans age 60 and older. The program teaches participants how to identify red flags, spot fake communications, and avoid sharing sensitive information under pressure.

    Classes are available in several other states, including Texas, Maryland, and New York. (Kennedy Hayes/ FOX News)

    AGING BRAINS COULD ‘BECOME’ YOUNGER WHEN KEY PROTEIN IS DECREASED

    Rick Planos, an instructor for Senior Planet in Illinois, says his involvement is personal. His mother lost more than $2,500 in gift cards to a scammer who convinced her that her grandson had been arrested.

    “My mom was distraught,” Planos said. “First, she was distraught that one of her grandchildren was arrested – and then it turned out that wasn’t true. And then she was distraught that she got scammed.”

    7 STEPS TO ‘SUPER-AGING’ ARE KEY TO LIVING A LONGER, MORE FULFILLING LIFE, EXPERTS SAY

    Now, Planos leads scam prevention classes in his community.

    “I spend a lot of time teaching for AARP. I took what happened to us and put it into some kind of positive energy to protect other people,” Planos said. 

    Federal officials are warning that the tactics are becoming harder to detect

    The program teaches participants how to identify red flags, spot fake communications, and avoid sharing sensitive information under pressure. (Kennedy Hayes/FOX News)

    In Denver, Senior Planet hosts regular in-person classes, but the program is also available online and in several other states, including Texas, Maryland and New York.

    CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR HEALTH NEWSLETTER

    “It’s important to talk about where the risks and dangers are,” said Aaron Santis, program lead for Senior Planet Colorado. “But we’re also using technology as a tool to enrich people’s lives.”

    Carolyn Gibson, a recent student, said she joined to learn more about new technology such as artificial intelligence – and how to protect herself from scams.

    “I came over here to find out who is this AI, what is this AI. The people here, they’ve been very helpful,” Gibson said. 

    Senior Planet classes

    The FTC reminds consumers that government agencies will never call to demand money. (Kennedy Hayes/Fox News)

    Instructors encourage participants to slow down, verify, and never feel rushed into sharing information – especially if contacted by someone claiming to be from a government agency. According to the website, Senior Planet helps seniors learn new skills, save money, get in shape, and make new friends.

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    The FTC reminds consumers that government agencies will never call to demand money. If you receive a suspicious call, hang up, visit the agency’s official website, and report the scam directly.

    Senior Planet helps seniors learn new skills, save money, get in shape, and make new friends, according to their website

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  • Northern California voters weigh in on Prop 50 redistricting fight

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    Voting began this week for a statewide special election that would drastically alter California’s congressional map. Proposition 50, or Prop 50, could add as many as five Democratic-held seats in Congress in time for the 2026 midterms.

    The measure asks California voters to temporarily allow the legislature to decide the state’s district maps through 2030, after which the power would return to the independent California Citizens Redistricting Commission. If Prop 50 wins, it could leave as a few as four Republican-held seats across the state after 2026.

    Recent polling shows Prop 50 will likely pass. Gov. Gavin Newsom and California Democrats say Prop 50 is a necessary countermeasure to Republican-led redistricting efforts in Texas.

    ABBOTT SIGNS TEXAS REDISTRICTING MAP INTO LAW, SECURING MAJOR GOP VICTORY AHEAD OF 2026 MIDTERMS

    The entrance to California State University, Chico. (Amalia Roy)

    However, UC Davis Professor Jim Adams warned a win for the Democrats in the short term could have negative long-term consequences.

    “I think that even if Prop 50 does help the Democrats win a handful of additional seats in California, by winning the battle in California, the Democrats may make themselves lose the war nationally,” Adams told Fox.

    Adams, a Democrat, said he agrees with Prop 50 supporters that he wants to see something done to curb Republican redistricting efforts in other parts of the country.

    TRUMP-BACKED MAP VICTORY IN MISSOURI COULD TRIGGER REDISTRICTING BATTLES IN THESE STATES

    “There is certainly a visceral satisfaction for the Democrats in feeling that Proposition 50 helps them to fight back. I don’t question the Democrats need to fight back. The question is, are they fighting smart with Proposition 50,” he added.

    Prop 50 has the potential to spark political backlash, not only within California Republicans or independents in 2026, but on a national scale during the presidential election in 2028.

    If Prop 50 passes, California’s northern districts risk going from mostly red to completely blue after the midterms.

    Chico, California, downtown area

    The downtown area of Chico, California. (Amalia Roy)

    Chico, California, sits in Republican-held District 1, which is represented by Rep. Doug LaMalfa. It’s one of the districts targeted in Prop 50. The proposed map would likely flip the district by pulling in voters from closer to the more Democrat-leaning Bay Area. 

    In 2024, President Donald Trump won Butte County by about 3,000 votes over then-Vice President Kamala Harris. On the streets of downtown Chico, that political split showed when asking voters their feelings on Prop 50.

    VOTING UNDERWAY IN 2025 ELECTION THAT MAY DETERMINE IF REPUBLICANS HOLD HOUSE IN 2026 MIDTERMS

    Don Tarman and Martin Bettencourt both said they support the proposition, adding that it’s a reaction to Trump’s presidency.

    “We agree with Gavin Newsom that Trump is trying to sway the election for the House. He picked up supposedly five votes in Texas. We’ll see how the vote comes out when we get to the election. But yeah, we’re not Trump fans. I think Gavin Newsom is trying to fight back a little bit,” Tarman said.

    Bettencourt said he doesn’t typically support redistricting, but this is “a different time.”

    “I don’t like redistricting. I think it’s mean to the voters. I think they take away power from them, because they move it around and adjust it,” he said. “I think we’re in kind of a different time, so we’re reacting off the top of the ticket, which is the president, and we have to do what we have to do to compensate for that until we get someone better in a position of power.”

    Ballot box outside library

    A ballot box sitting outside the Butte County Library, Chico branch. (Amalia Roy)

    Jim Henderson and Eleanor Engelbrecht are among those who don’t agree with the proposition – both of them saying that redistricting in California is not an ideal response to the efforts in Texas.

    “When say they do it in Iowa, then do we have to have Oregon do the same thing and the next thing you know everything is being gerrymandered? It’s unfortunate the governor of Texas didn’t recognize that this wasn’t an appropriate way of dealing with the elections, but he made his decision, and I don’t think we should feel compelled to say, well, if you’re gonna do it, we’re gonna do it also,” Henderson said.

    Engelbrecht said the country is going through enough change and things need to just “settle.”

    “Right now, we’re going through a lot of change already, and I don’t think this is the time we need to be, I don’t know, dusting and cleaning really. I think that we really need to let things settle. I think where our country is at right now, there’s a lot of divide already, and I think really this comes down to defending fair elections,” she said.

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    If Prop 50 passes, there will likely be a legal battle. California Republicans are already filing lawsuits against the measure.

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  • Arizona sheriff’s office utilizing new AI program to assist with writing case reports

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    As artificial intelligence becomes more mainstream, the Pima County Sheriff’s Department is looking at how it can use the emerging technology.

    At the beginning of the year, deputies began a trial of Axon’s Draft One, which is a program that writes incident reports using AI. A body camera records the interactions, then the program uses the audio plus any additional information from the deputy to create a first draft. Deputies then review everything before submitting the final report.

    “They’re able to verify the completeness, the accuracy and all of that,” Capt. Derek Ogden said, “But the initial first draft, they can’t submit as their case report.”

    Demonstrating the program, Deputy Dylan Lane showed how Draft One can write a case report that would have taken him 30 minutes to complete in five minutes.

    CHATGPT MAY ALERT POLICE ON SUICIDAL TEENS

    A Pima County deputy opens Draft One to begin writing his case report. After it’s finished, he will check it for accuracy before submitting it. (Amalia Roy)

    “Most of that time is just the quick changes, making sure that all the information is still accurate and then just adding in those little details,” Lane said.

    Ogden said Draft One saves crucial time during shifts when deputies are handling multiple incidents back-to-back. He said the program is one of several ways the department is exploring AI tools.

    Police report written by AI

    Draft One writes a case report using the recording from an Axon body camera. (Amalia Roy)

    “Recently, we saw a detective from our criminal investigative division use AI to identify a deceased unidentified person,” Ogden said. “We’re also looking for ways to increase the productivity and efficiency of our patrol deputies and some of our corrections officers.”

    Law enforcement agencies across the country are evaluating how artificial intelligence could help their departments, especially when dealing with resource shortages.

    SCHOOLS TURN TO AI GUN DETECTION FOR SAFETY

    “A lot of policing agencies are budget constrained. It is very attractive to them to have a tool that could allow them to do more with less,” said Max Isaacs from The Policing Project, which is a non-profit within NYU School of Law that studies public safety and police accountability. 

    Isaacs said while AI offers opportunities to save resources, there’s not much data on how much help these programs truly provide.

    Body camera on officer

    A Pima County deputy wears an Axon body camera in a simulation of an emergency call. (Amalia Roy)

    “You have a lot of examples of crimes being solved or efficiencies being realized,” Isaacs said, “But in terms of large-scale studies that rigorously show us the amount of benefit, we don’t have those yet.”

    TRUMP SIGNS EXECUTIVE ORDER TO HARNESS AI IN FIGHT AGAINST CHILDHOOD CANCERS

     Isaacs also raised the issue of accuracy. 

    “AI is not perfect. It can rely on data that is flawed. The system itself could be flawed. When you have errors in AI systems, that can lead to some pretty serious consequences. It can lead to false arrests. It could lead to investigators going down a dead end and wasting time and resources,” Isaacs said.

    Addressing those concerns, Ogden agreed that information can be flawed. He said it’s why human eyes must review every report written with Draft One.

    After a successful trial with 20 deputies, Ogden said the next step is to expand Draft One to corrections officers.

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  • American trucking industry urges lawmakers to act as online cargo theft surges

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    As the holiday season kicks off, freight trucking experts say cargo theft will once again surge as more products hit the road.

    The July Q2 report from CargoNet, a national information-sharing system that tracks cargo theft, shows a 13% increase in cargo theft compared to the same time in 2024.

    Old-fashioned cargo theft is still happening, and one San Antonio-based freight business has some experience with it. 

    “Before 2020 it was more just straight thefts,” said Adam Blanchard, co-founder of Double Diamond Transport and Tanager Logistics. “They would come in, cut the seals and take cargo out of it.”

    NINTENDO SWITCH 2 STOLEN IN $1.4M CARGO HEIST

    While this freight truck is stopped, the driver is unaware criminals are stealing the load in his truck. (Verisk CargoNet)

    Online cargo theft has skyrocketed since the pandemic, rising 1,500% over the past four years, according to Trucking.org.

    Keith Lewis, CargoNet’s Vice President of Operations, said he noticed the jump in online theft just after 2020, “and the bad guys realized they could work from anywhere in the world and control freight.”

    These fraudsters are now digging deep into all facets of the trucking industry.

    “They stole my identity as a freight broker in order to get cargo from other companies and tender it to legitimate motor carriers and I started having legitimate trucking companies reaching out to me asking for payment for freight that wasn’t mine,” Blanchard said.

    Blanchard traced the fraudsters back to Eastern Europe and found they stole a load of energy drinks. His business partner got the fake logistics company on the phone, but they were never hit with legal action. 

    The heist by the fraudsters hurt Blanchard’s reputation, and due to the rise in theft claims, his business insurance rates doubled this year.

    CARGO THEFT HITS RECORD HIGH IN 2024

    Online cargo thefts on the rise

    Adam Blanchard, a freight business owner, said many stolen goods are sent to fake warehouses. (FOX News)

    American Trucking Associations (ATA) CEO Chris Spear told FOX, “This is much more tech-driven by transnational organizations operating out of Eastern Europe, Russia. They’re actually going into the bill of laden, they’re looking for the expensive type of freight.”

    But what happens once a truckload of product is stolen by a fraudster across the world?

    “They’ll steal that freight, put it in containers as best we can tell, a lot of it is going to the LA area, and transport it to other countries,” Blanchard said.

    CargoNet’s Lewis said sometimes freight companies do not know a load of goods is stolen until weeks, months or even a year later. 

    “The problem is, is we don’t have mandatory reporting, so a lot of these go unreported,” he said. 

    So far this year, California, Texas, and Illinois rank in the top three for cargo theft, representing 53% of all cargo theft nationwide. The top items targeted are food and beverages, and household goods.

    The ATA says cargo theft is a $19 million-a-day hit to the trucking industry.

    DEMOCRAT CRITICIZES TRUMP IN DIVERTING RESOURCES FROM FIGHTING ORGANIZED RETAIL THEFT

    CargoNet shows top places affected by cargo theft

    California, Texas and Illinois are the top three states for cargo theft in the U.S., according to CargoNet. (FOX News)

    The freight trucking industry is urging lawmakers to pass the Combating Organized Retail Crime Act (CORCA). The ATA said the bill “would provide law enforcement and industry with a unified framework to fight back. Not only would it create a long-overdue task force to pursue these criminal rings, but it would also establish a badly needed national cargo theft database.”

    Blanchard testified to Congress in February, along with other industry leaders. 

    “Here is the crux of the issue. There is no law enforcement agency that is focused on this,” Blanchard said. “Until we get legislation passed on the federal level that establishes a federal law enforcement coalition that begins to investigate these crimes, and begins to actually conduct arrests and prosecutions, this [is] only going to continue to get worse.” 

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    Blanchard said theft will affect every part of the business, which means he may have to increase prices – ultimately leading to higher prices for shoppers.

    “When they’re seeing products not arriving on the shelves, there’s a shortage of that,” Spear said. “The cost goes up. There’s a reflection in what you, I and what everyone pays for the things we want and need.” 

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  • North Carolina family still recovering a year after Hurricane Helene destroyed home

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    Nearly one year ago, Hurricane Helene downgraded to a tropical storm and surged right through Western North Carolina, destroying over 74,000 homes and causing around $60 billion in damages, according to the governor’s office.

    Some families are still trying to figure out how to move forward a year after the storm. 

    “My entire 20th year of life has been recovering from a storm,” Amiyah Keele said while reflecting on the past 12 months with her mother, Jessica.

    The Keeles currently live in a camper on a property in Burnsville, North Carolina, after Helene sent about four feet of water through their home on Sept. 27, 2024. Their camper is right next to a house with other family members.

    RESIDENTS DETAIL ‘HORRIFIC’ STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA AFTER HURRICANE HELENE

    The Keele family lived in the home pictured above when Helene hit, sending about four feet of water through the dwelling. (Chelsea Torres)

    The Keeles first spoke with FOX back in November, while they were stocking up on fuel for their generators. 

    “The water was too high and too fast, like we – just made it out,” Amiyah said. The Keele family waded through the raging river until they were safe with their neighbors, staying for nearly a week.

    In the aftermath of the storm, the majority of the region had no cell service, electricity or running water.

    “About a week of just — just nothing, like we didn’t know if anybody else we knew were(sic) okay,” Amiyah said. 

    NORTH CAROLINA MAN SHARES STORY OF SURVIVAL AFTER HELENE

    After about a week, volunteers and donations began pouring into the region from all over the country.

    One group set up a distribution and supply site just a couple miles down the road from the Keeles. The only way they could get there was by walking, but the family went nearly every day to help volunteer. 

    French Broad River overflowed during Helene

    Video taken days after Helene when the water had not receded.  (Fox News)

    “[About] five days later and luckily, we were blessed with wonderful tents,” Jessica told FOX. For nearly a month, the family stayed in tents as recovery began around them.

    HURRICANE HELENE AS IT HAPPENED: SCARS FROM HURRICANE HELENE REMAIN IN WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA

    Volunteers and nonprofit organizations also donated a new car and generators to the Keeles. 

    Amiyah said a heater is a “godsend” when “you’re trying to sleep in a tent.” Not too long after, the family was blessed with a camper by a nonprofit.

    “It didn’t have power or water, but it was better than a tent,” Jessica said. 

    The Keeles are still living in the donated camper. Since then, they’ve received a couple of donated sheds, which hold some of their belongings. Damaged appliances and furniture still sit outside their flooded home.

    “Samaritan’s Purse is great. They came and mucked out the house and had a snowball fight with my son,” Jessica said.

    Meanwhile, a simple reminder to keep on going through the trauma and obstacles is a wooden sign hanging in the donated camper that said “so this is not Home Sweet Home…ADJUST!”

    'Not Home Sweet Home...Adjust!"

    The Keeles have had the sign pictured above for years and believe the words reign true now more than ever.  (Chelsea Torres)

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    Jessica said the sign survived the flood.

    She told FOX, “We’re actually doing great compared to some people,” and Amiyah chimed in, “And we’re still struggling.”

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  • 20 years later: Survivors recall the storm that changed the gulf coast

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    NEW ORLEANS — It’s been 20 years since Hurricane Katrina slammed the Gulf Coast as a Category 3 storm. The disaster is remembered not just for its winds, but for the crushing surge of water that devastated rural Louisiana parishes and tore through the heart of New Orleans. 

    A woman searches through storm debris in Buras, LA, following Hurricane Katrina’s landfall on Aug. 29, 2005. The storm left widespread destruction across the Mississippi-Louisiana border. (Sarah Alegre)

    Katrina weakened before making landfall on Aug. 29, 2005, but still struck the Louisiana-Mississippi border as a Category 3 storm. The storm surge flooded homes, took more than a thousand lives and turned reality into a nightmare along the Gulf Coast.

    Memories from Louisiana

    In Plaquemines Parish, seven-year-old Corrine English lost nearly everything when the small fishing town of Buras was swallowed by floodwaters.

    HURRICANE KATRINA SURVIVORS SHARE STORIES OF PERSEVERANCE 

    “Part of me feels like it was just yesterday because of the feeling of thinking about everything being taken away from us,” English said. “It just feels really raw.”

    English said she remembers the moment watching her mother’s reaction to the news as Katrina’s eye centered over Buras, Louisiana. 

    “I think that’s when I realized something was really wrong,” she said, recalling her mother’s emotion. “This isn’t going to be something where we can just pack our suitcases back up and go back home.”

    Sixty miles north, in the Superdome in New Orleans, Corbett Reddoch, a Louisiana National Guard member from Buras, expected to ride out the storm in a drill-like scenario.

    “You’d come in, the storm would pass, and then everybody would leave,” Reddoch recalled.

    But when the levees failed, thousands of people were trapped inside as supplies dwindled and conditions deteriorated quickly.

    SALVATION ARMY REVEALS HOW KATRINA CHANGED DISASTER RELIEF OPERATIONS 

    “It was basically a three-day fist fight…people didn’t know how to act,” Reddoch said.

    For families in Buras, survival looked different. Entire neighborhoods disappeared underwater, leaving residents cut off and isolated.

    “Not only were they going through this as parents who had watched on TV their entire world washed away,” English said, “they had to figure out how to make it normal for two 7-year-olds and a 10-year-old.”

    Today, the only piece of English’s childhood that remains is a Build-A-Bear she carried through the storm, a small reminder of survival and resilience.

    “Sometimes it feels like yesterday,” English said. “Other times it feels like it was 100 years ago, because my life has changed so…much. And it’s hard not to wonder what my life would have been like if that didn’t happen.”

    Reflections from Mississippi

    Gulfport, Miss. Home destroyed by floods.

    A fallen tree rests on a damaged home in Gulfport, Miss., in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, Aug. 2005. The storm’s winds and surge destroyed thousands of homes across the region
    (Sarah Alegre)

    In Mississippi, where Katrina’s storm surge leveled much of the Gulf Coast, communities are also reflecting on what has changed and what hasn’t.

    “Everybody had a loss,” said Leonard Papania, former police chief of Gulfport. “In moments like these, you don’t build character, you demonstrate it,” he said.

    Today, Gulfport is marked by blue skies, palm trees and a new look. But two decades ago, the scene was unrecognizable. Papania, then a young lieutenant, recalls walking through streets he could no longer recognize.

    mississippi home destroyed by hurricane katrina

    A collapsed home is seen in Gulfport, Miss., after Hurricane Katrina struck the Gulf Coast. Entire neighborhoods were leveled by the storm surge.
    (Sarah Alegre)

    KATRINA: LESSONS FROM THE MONSTER STORM I’LL NEVER FORGET 

    “It was just heart-stopping, the area I grew up in, I’ve lived here all my life,” Papania said. “You didn’t even know where you were.”

    The husband and father of four also lost his home.

    Rupert Lacy, who helped coordinate law enforcement and emergency management during the storm, remembers it vividly.

    “For Katrina, I had that vision that this is what I’m going to see…I just didn’t realize it was going to be on steroids,” Lacy said.

    It wasn’t the first monster storm he had seen. As a child in 1969, he lived through Hurricane Camille, whose surge flattened entire communities.

    “You’ve got to understand the force of water,” Lacy said. “Buildings that survived Camille did not survive Katrina.”

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    Today, emergency officials say lessons from Katrina continue to guide their response.

    “We do plan for the potential failures of our systems,” said Matt, an emergency leader in Gulfport. “We do have paper backups, we have alternate forms of communication.”

    Still, for Papania, the memories remain close.

    “I always say I wouldn’t trade the experience I had in Katrina, but I absolutely don’t want to do it again,” he said.

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