Charlotte and the Rock Hill area could see less than an inch of snow from a second weekend wintry mix system Saturday night and early Sunday, according to the latest weather models from the National Weather Service in Greer, S.C.
National Weather Service
Charlotte and Rock Hill could still see less than an inch of snow from a second wintry mix system of the weekend late Saturday and early Sunday, according to the latest weather models from the National Weather Service in Greer, S.C.
The first system dumped 2 to 4 inches of snow overnight 3,500 feet and higher in the mountains, according to the NWS.
“Second storm late tonight brings a light mix of rain/snow east of the mountains,” NWS forecasters said on Facebook. “IF snow can develop, expect less than an inch along I-85.”
Snow could fall from northeast Georgia through the Rock Hill area into metro Charlotte, north Mecklenburg and north and northeast into Concord, Statesville and Salisbury, an NWS map released Saturday morning showed.
Charlotte forecast
A tenth of an inch of snow is possible in Charlotte after 10 p.m. Saturday into early Sunday, and less than a half inch later Sunday morning into the afternoon, the NWS Charlotte forecast showed.
The system should clear from the region by Sunday night, according to the NWS.
The high temperature in Charlotte is forecast to fall from 55 on Saturday to 41 on Sunday and remain in the low to high 40s through Wednesday. Thursday could see a high of 54 and Friday a high of 49, NWS forecasters said.
Monday through the work week should be sunny to mostly sunny
This is a developing story. Check back for updates.
Joe Marusak has been a reporter for The Charlotte Observer since 1989 covering the people, municipalities and major news events of the region, and was a news bureau editor for the paper. He currently reports on breaking news. Support my work with a digital subscription
Carolina Panthers wide receiver Jalen Coker looks to the sky as rain drops begin to fall at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, FL.on Saturday, January 3, 2026. The Panthers play the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the team’s final regular season game.
JEFF SINER
jsiner@charlotteobserver.com
Through the lens of our visual journalists, a moment in time is captured and becomes part of our history.
Each week the Charlotte Observer will present a selection of images that document communities.
This feature can be seen in Sunday’s newspaper and on our online Edition at eedition.charlotteobserver.com
Carolina Panthers wide receiver Jalen Coker looks to the sky as rain drops begin to fall at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, FL.on Saturday, January 3, 2026. The Panthers play the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the team’s final regular season game. JEFF SINER jsiner@charlotteobserver.com
Demonstrators march in uptown Charlotte Thursday, Jan. 8, 2026 to protest ICE after a woman in Minneapolis was shot Wednesday. TRACY KIMBALL tkimball@charlotteobserver.com
Charlotte Hornets guard Collin Sexton, right, fights to maintain control of the ball as Indiana Pacers guard Quenton Jackson, left, applies defensive pressure during action at Spectrum Center in Charlotte, NC on Thursday, January 8, 2026. JEFF SINER jsiner@charlotteobserver.com
Mallard Creek’s Michael Bengue (center) wins the loose ball during early 1st quarter action. Mallard Creek would host the Vikings from North Meck Tuesday January, 6, 2026. Jonathan Aguallo
A Wake Forest Fan celebrates Kordell Bartley’s touchdown. Wake Forest would play Mississippi State in the Duke’s Mayo Bowl at Bank of America Stadium on Friday, January 2, 2026. Jonathan Aguallo
Carolina Panthers quarterback Bryce Young, center, stands in the tunnel with his teammates prior to action against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, FL. on Saturday, January 3, 2026. The Buccaneers defeated the Panthers 16-14. JEFF SINER jsiner@charlotteobserver.com
The Carolina Panthers defense is unable to make the tackle on Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Baker Mayfield, right, as he rushes for yardage during action at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, FL. on Saturday, January 3, 2026. The Buccaneers defeated the Panthers 16-14. JEFF SINER jsiner@charlotteobserver.com
The Lady Maverick bench celebrates a North Meck turnover during late 2nd quarter action. Mallard Creek would host the North Meck Lady Vikings in a much anticipated conference game Tuesday January 6, 2026. Jonathan Aguallo
Toronto Raptors forward Brandon Ingram (3) drives to the basket against Charlotte Hornets guard Lamelo Ball (1) during the first half of an NBA basketball game, Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026, in Charlotte, N.C. Matt Kelley For the Observer
Wake Forest University head football coach Jake Dickert and his family is dumped with Duke’s Mayonnaise Friday, Jan. 2, 2025 after the Duke Mayo Bowl at Bank of America Stadium. Jonathan Aguallo tkimball@charlotteobserver.com
Carolina Panthers fans endure the rain as the team battles the Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, FL. on Saturday, January 3, 2026. The Buccaneers defeated the Panthers 16-14. JEFF SINER jsiner@charlotteobserver.com
Toronto Raptors forward Scottie Barnes (4) drives to the basket against Charlotte Hornets guard Liam McNeeley (33) during the first half of an NBA basketball game, Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026, in Charlotte, N.C. Matt Kelley For the Observer
Carolina Panthers safety Nick Scott jokes with a teammate during practice on Tuesday, January 6, 2026 in Charlotte, NC. The Panthers will host the Los Angeles Rams in first round action of the playoffs at Bank of America Stadium on Saturday, January 10, 2026. JEFF SINER jsiner@charlotteobserver.com
Protesters march in uptown Charlotte Thursday, Jan. 8, 2026 to protest ICE after an agent shot a woman in Minneapolis. TRACY KIMBALL tkimball@charlotteobserver.com
A new Panthers mural by Matt Moore, aka Puck McGruff, is finnished in time for tomorrow’s Wild Card playiff game between the Panthers and the Rams. The mural can be seen on Camden Road in South End. Melissa Melvin-Rodriguez mrodriguez@charlotteobserver.com
This story was originally published January 9, 2026 at 6:00 PM.
The Power House just added a new spot for craft beer, wine, charcuterie boards, sandwiches and quick meals in downtown Rock Hill.
The Pour Market opened Thursday beside the Power House food hall, which includes Peaceful Palate. The Pour Market combines gastropub, market and social hub concepts. It has Italian sandwiches, artisan brats and grab-and-go meals.
Planned events at The Pour Market include live music, theme nights, tastings, fitness activities and local vendor gatherings. A catering menu and online orderings are coming soon. The Pour Market has indoor and patio seating.
The Pour Market has sandwiches, brats, grab-and-go meals and market fare along with craft beer and wine. The Pour Market
The Pour Market‘s University Center location is near several food, shopping and entertainment options including the Rock Hill Sports & Event Center. The Power House has free parking daily in a city garage.
The new concept replaces Middle James Brewing Co., which announced it was closing its Rock Hill location in September. Middle James spent two years at The Power House, and still has North Carolina locations in Pineville and Waxhaw.
Meals and appetizers at The Pour Market pair with craft beer and wine. The Pour Market
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John Marks graduated from Furman University in 2004 and joined the Herald in 2005. He covers community growth, municipalities, transportation and education mainly in York County and Lancaster County. The Fort Mill native earned dozens of South Carolina Press Association awards and multiple McClatchy President’s Awards for news coverage in Fort Mill and Lake Wylie. Support my work with a digital subscription
The baby squirrel races around her enclosure, jumping on her adoptive squirrel brother Cyrus, who is a wee bit older. If you open her enclosure, she will jump on you.
The young squirrels are among 45 at the Nutty By Nature Squirrel Rescue based in Rock Hill, S.C. Three women and a host of volunteers rehabilitate squirrels that have fallen from trees, become orphans or have been injured. Once they are old enough, the co-founders release them into the wild when they are roughly five months old. The rescue takes in squirrels mainly in York, Chester and Lancaster counties.
The rescue started after Rhiannon Story, Katherine Rigby and Juli Emmons each raised the squirrels that were either injured or newly born and without their mothers. They started the rescue in May even though they did not yet have any squirrels.
By fall, they almost had more than they could handle.
“It’s exploded,” Story said. “It’s raining squirrels.”
All of the women have worked with other animal rescue groups and wanted to volunteer but realized there weren’t enough squirrel rescues.
“We were getting babies left and right and there was only so much we could do,” Story said. “So we thought if we started a rescue and maybe we’d be able to get community support and we would be able to get volunteers to help.”
Katherine Rigby interacts with a squirrel in an enclosure at her Fort Mill home earlier this month. Rigby is a co-founder of Nutty By Nature Squirrel Rescue based in Rock Hill. TRACY KIMBALL tkimball@heraldonline.com
The stories of the squirrels in rescue
The women know the stories of how some of the squirrels made it to their doorsteps.
Titus, a baby squirrel, showed up at the hospital in Lancaster, and peered through the window as though he was looking for help, Rigby said.
The baby squirrel had possibly fallen out of its nest from one of the trees beside the Medical University of South Carolina. A Good Samaritan tried to find the mother squirrel in the wooded area beside the hospital, but could not find her.
Tree trimmers found a couple of baby squirrels after they chopped down a branch with the nest in it. A hawk or owl possibly took a baby squirrel’s mother after she went missing.
The co-founders know everything squirrel-related.
They know squirrels need calcium in their diets and that they can be trained to use a litter box. They also know nuts are only to be used as treats, instead of staples in their diets.
“The first thing everybody always wants to do is feed them nuts,” Rigby said. “And nuts to squirrels is like a Snickers to a human, so nuts are like candy bars to them.”
Their diet consists of rodent food high in calcium and a host of fresh vegetables like zucchini, kale, romaine lettuce and others. They also like to nibble on deer antlers that contain calcium and because it helps keep their teeth filed.
Rigby said she follows people on TikTok who raise squirrels and talk about their care. She also follows reputable squirrel websites to learn how to care for them.
Two squirrels play in an enclosure at the Nutty By Nature Squirrel Rescue. TRACY KIMBALL tkimball@heraldonline.com
Learning how to be a squirrel
Rigby has even started a “squirrel school” where she helps them practice jumping.
“You need them to be really strong jumpers, so that they can jump tree to tree,” she said.
When the squirrels reach about four months old, they will go outside to the pre-release enclosure where they become acclimated to the smells and sounds of the outdoors.
Part of squirrel school is to observe wild squirrels in their habitats.
“They are very smart,” Rigby said. “I know it sounds crazy, but they do watch other squirrels and they learn.”
Once they have been in the pre-release cage for a few weeks, they are released into the wild at 16-20 weeks old. The co-founders and volunteers will release them into their backyards and other properties.
“We are the only ones that truly interact with them once they get bigger,” Story said. “Because you want them to go outside and actually wild-up and not come to people.”
Rhiannon Story holds a days-old squirrel at the Nutty By Nature Squirrel Rescue in early October TRACY KIMBALL tkimball@heraldonline.com
That doesn’t stop them from visiting their former caregivers, who give them nutty treats.
Not all of the squirrels can be rehabilitated.
One such squirrel has Type 2 diabetes. The co-founders realized something was wrong when the squirrel allowed people to pet him and was rapidly gaining weight.
“His name is Chubs for a reason,” Story said. “He’s a thick, healthy boy.”
The women try to find the squirrels’ mothers before taking them in, Story said.
They will put the babies in a box and attach it to a tree and play squirrel sounds on their phones. Many times, the mother will come get them.
The co-founders said they feel like they are doing something important.
“The first time they climb those trees, it’s an indescribable feeling,” said Story, who has been called The Crazy Squirrel Lady. “You can see the job on their faces and that right there lets me know that I did something that was great, even if you know it matters only to one squirrel, it still matters.”
To donate or volunteer, visit nuttybynaturerescue.com.
Katherine Rigby interacts with a squirrel in an enclosure at her Fort Mill home earlier this month. Rigby is a co-founder of Nutty By Nature Squirrel Rescue based in Rock Hill. TRACY KIMBALL tkimball@heraldonline.com
Katherine Rigby interacts with a squirrel in an enclosure at her Fort Mill home earlier this month. Rigby is a co-founder of Nutty By Nature Squirrel Rescue based in Rock Hill. TRACY KIMBALL tkimball@heraldonline.com
Katherine Rigby interacts with a squirrel in an enclosure at her Fort Mill home earlier this month. Rigby is a co-founder of Nutty By Nature Squirrel Rescue based in Rock Hill. TRACY KIMBALL tkimball@heraldonline.com
Two squirrels play in an enclosure at the Nutty By Nature Squirrel Rescue. TRACY KIMBALL tkimball@heraldonline.com
Katherine Rigby interacts with a squirrel in an enclosure at her Fort Mill home earlier this month. Rigby is a co-founder of Nutty By Nature Squirrel Rescue based in Rock Hill. TRACY KIMBALL tkimball@heraldonline.com
This story was originally published October 31, 2025 at 8:56 AM.
Visiting Judge Keith Kelly sentenced Dylan Lineberger, 33, to time served with a permanent restraining order after Lineberger pleaded guilty to misdemeanor first-degree harassment in York County criminal court. Kelly suspended the maximum three-year prison sentence, and gave Lineberger 355 days credit for wearing a GPS monitor for almost a year after Rock Hill police arrested him in late October 2024.
Lineberger worked for the CMPD for nine years before his arrest. He was placed on administrative leave when he was arrested, then left the department in April, according to his lawyer, Chris Lusk, and CMPD records obtained by The Herald under a Freedom of Information Act request.
The Herald is not naming the victim because of previous court statements, in which she remains fearful for her safety. She was in court Thursday but did not speak.
Prosecutor: Harassment by text, surveillance, vandalism
Lineberger and his former girlfriend broke up in September 2024 when she told him she wanted no further contact, prosecutor Alex Harper said in court Thursday. The harassment started in North Carolina, then moved to Rock Hill, where the woman lived when Lineberger sent unwanted text messages, made phone calls, and sent the victim gifts, Harper said.
In October 2024, Lineberger vandalized her vehicle. Then on Oct. 24, Lineberger texted his ex-girlfriend’s current boyfriend saying, “If he ever saw the victim and him together, that he would kill him and make the victim watch,” Harper said in court.
Lineberger had access to his police-issued gun and more than 30 weapons at the time, Harper said.
The next day, Lineberger called the victim several times using an app to block the number and followed her in a rented car to a Rock Hill Food Lion, Harper said. Police arrested Lineberger in Lincoln County, N.C. before he was extradited to South Carolina.
Ex-cop admits crime but says nothing else in court
Lineberger was in court Thursday but did not say anything except to plead guilty.
Lineberger was released on $10,000 bail with the GPS monitor soon after Rock Hill police arrested him. He had no prior criminal record and now works a maintenance job, Lusk said in court.
Time served would be “an appropriate resolution,” Lusk told Kelly.
Victim’s civil lawsuit against Lineberger still pending
A civil lawsuit filed by the woman, which alleges Lineberger stalked her, remains pending, according to Lusk and York County court documents.
The criminal case and civil suit are separate.
The woman’s lawsuit claims the surveillance and stalking and Lineberger tried to hack her email, court records show. She also has a North Carolina restraining order against Lineberger, according to the lawsuit.
The lawsuit that describes Lineberger’s actions as “dangerous” claims Lineberger falsified emergencies to try and reach her. She is seeking punitive and compensatory damages for intentional emotional distress and other claims.
Related Stories from Charlotte Observer
Andrew Dys covers breaking news and public safety for The Herald, where he has been a reporter and columnist since 2000. He has won 51 South Carolina Press Association awards for his coverage of crime, race, justice, and people. He is author of the book “Slice of Dys” and his work is in the U.S. Library of Congress.
A Rock Hill, South Carolina man is charged after a shooting on May 21, 2024, police said.
Rock Hill SC
Two people have died and two others were hurt after a shooting at a neighborhood block party in Rock Hill Saturday night, police said.
Police responded after 10 p.m. to the shooting in the 900 block of Southland Drive, Rock Hill Police Department Lt. Michael Chavis said Sunday morning.
No arrests have been made, Chavis said.
A woman, 44, and a man, 21, died at the scene, police said in a statement. The identities of the two people killed have not been released by the York County Coroner.
Police found a 25-year-old woman shot in the arm, officials said. A fourth victim, a 24-year-old man, suffered a graze gunshot wound, according to police.
No other information about how the shooting happened or what led to the gunfire has been released.
The residential area is in the southern part of the city near where Mount Holly Road and Saluda Road intersect.
Andrew Dys covers breaking news and public safety for The Herald, where he has been a reporter and columnist since 2000. He has won 51 South Carolina Press Association awards for his coverage of crime, race, justice, and people. He is author of the book “Slice of Dys” and his work is in the U.S. Library of Congress.
Rise & Shine Doughnut Cafe carries mini doughnuts for $1 each.
Alex Cason
CharlotteFive
A beloved local bakery will be saying goodbye to Rock Hill soon, less than three years after opening.
Rise & Shine Doughnut Cafe, known for its doughnuts, mini cinni rolls and other sweet treats, announced that it will be closing next week.
Rise & Shine Doughnut Cafe is at 1807 Cherry Road, Suite 103, in Rock Hill. Alex Cason CharlotteFive
“When we moved south to be closer to family, we didn’t know then that the doors of Rise and Shine would be our home for the last few years. We have met and cherished so many moments with each of you,” owners John and Debbie Scalia said in the announcement.
“While it is never easy to close a chapter of life, we are certain that the time is right. We are excited for our next adventure with more traveling, more time together, more moments with family and cherishing it all.”
Varieties at Rise & Shine Doughnut Cafe include glazed, filled and cake doughnuts, along with apple fritters. Alex Cason CharlotteFive
After owning a doughnut shop in Massachusetts for a decade, the Scalias brought a taste of their old bakery to the Carolinas when they opened Rise & Shine in 2021, CharlotteFive previously reported.
Rise & Shine Doughnut Cafe’s filled doughnuts include Apple and Spice, and Bavarian Cream. Alex Cason CharlotteFive
“We’re very proud to have such loyal customers that love us so much. It warms my heart,” Scalias previously told CharlotteFive.
Rise & Shine’s last day in business will be Sunday, April 28, and you can preorder some of its biscuits and pastries until then.
“We hope to spend these last couple of weeks bringing you joy through our doughnuts and other treats, it has been our pleasure serving this community,” the Scalias wrote on Instagram.
Chyna Blackmon is a service journalism reporter for The Charlotte Observer. A native of the Carolinas, she grew up in Columbia, SC, and graduated from Queens University of Charlotte. She’s also worked in local television news in Charlotte, NC, and Richmond, VA. Support my work with a digital subscription
The family of former NFL player Phillip Adams, who killed six people outside Rock Hill before killing himself in 2021, added the NFL to a wrongful death suit over his alleged brain injuries from football, court documents show.
The lawsuit that added the NFL and NFL Properties Inc. as defendants was re-filed this week in Orangeburg County civil court, where Adams played college football at S.C. State University. S.C. State is also a defendant in the lawsuit originally filed in 2023, but denied wrongdoing in legal documents.
Phillip Adams was from York County and lived with his parents at the time of the killings. The lawsuit was filed by Adams’ father on behalf of Adams’ minor son, court documents show.
The lawsuit claims the NFL failed to exercise care for Adams. The NFL “knew or should have known that it was engaging in activity detrimental to the safety of Phillip Matthew Adams when Defendants knew or should have known such conduct would result in harm,” the lawsuit states.
Efforts to immediately reach an NFL spokesperson were unsuccessful Friday afternoon.
Adams, who was 32 at the time of his death, played for the San Francisco 49ers, New England Patriots, Seattle Seahawks, Oakland Raiders, New York Jets and Atlanta Falcons.
The lawsuit claims Adams suffered head trauma while playing in the NFL from 2010 through 2015.
The Herald has also reached out to the lawyers for Adams’ family but has not received a response.
What happened in 2021 mass shooting?
York County Sheriff Kevin Tolson said in April 2021 Adams shot and killed Dr. Robert Lesslie, his wife Barbara Lesslie and two of their grandchildren, Adah, 9, and Noah, 5. Two HVAC workers at the Lesslie home that day — James Lewis and Robert Shook of North Carolina — also died after being shot.
Adams lived with his parents nearby at the time. Adams killed himself that night at his family home, the sheriff said.
A doctor in Boston said after examining Adams’ brain that the former football player suffered from Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy, or CTE. It’s a brain condition caused by repetitive head trauma, and sometimes found in former football players.
Dr. Ann McKee, a neuropathologist at the Boston University CTE Center, said in a December 2021 news conference in Rock Hill that Adams had “stage 2 CT.” McKee said Adams’ “frontal lobe pathology” was “abnormally severe.”
In the news conference, McKee said Adam’s brain showed extensive damage when it was examined after his death — the only time such a determination is possible.
“His 20 years of football gave rise to his CTE,” McKee said in 2021.
Check back for updates on this story.
Charlotte Observer reporter Alex Zietlow contributed reporting.
Related stories from Charlotte Observer
Andrew Dys covers breaking news and public safety for The Herald, where he has been a reporter and columnist since 2000. He has won 51 South Carolina Press Association awards for his coverage of crime, race, justice, and people. He is author of the book “Slice of Dys” and his work is in the U.S. Library of Congress.
ROCK HILL, S.C. — A South Carolina man accused of killing a sheriff’s deputy in June has died in hospice care.
Duane Heard died Friday in Rock Hill, new outlets reported, citing the Spartanburg County coroner.
Heard was charged with murder in the death of 25-year-old Spartanburg County Deputy Austin Derek Aldridge, who was among deputies responding to a domestic disturbance call on June 21 west of Spartanburg.
When Aldridge knocked on Heard’s door after a woman reported that Heard assaulted her, Heard came out and shot Aldridge in the head, authorities have said. They described it as an ambush.
Officials said Heard then stole Aldridge’s gun, keys and electric stun gun and fled. Aldridge tried to evade a traffic stop by pretending to surrender, then wrecked his vehicle, running into the woods while repeatedly exchanging gunfire with deputies, authorities said. The Spartanburg County Coroner’s Office said Heard was shot twice before his capture.
Prosecutors had said they would seek the death penalty against Heard. He had been receiving treatment for his injuries until he was discharged and booked into the York County jail on Oct. 20.
The coroner said while in custody, Heard’s health deteriorated and he was taken into hospice care.
Aldridge had been a deputy for three years. His widow, Jessica Link Aldridge, was pregnant when Aldridge died and scheduled to deliver in February 2023.