nightmare is unfolding in buffalo, new york , after days of blistering cold weather in nearly fifty two inches of snow ,dozens are now dead. thousands are without power. new york s governor referred to driving conditions as a war zone. police, national guard are going door to door, plowing their way through the snow to perform welfare checks. and the death toll in western new york is expected to rise. meanwhile, thousands of flights have been canceled or delayed, especially on southwest airlines. which is stranded americans and their luggage all over the country in what is being described as a colossal failure at every level. here now with a full report. fox wethers, katie, burne, katy . some southwest fliers never made it home for the holidays. many of them are still stranded tonight. and for those who gave up on flying altogether, they decided to drive home instead. now they re showing up to airports like this, looking for their luggage and being told they won t be seein
governor greg abbott. by his own count, abbott has sent some 11,000 migrants to new york so far. mayor eric adams went him against him this week, giving gop stunts that the city shelters that capacity, which means many of these migrants can find themselves alone. today s rivals also coming just days after florida governor ron desantis took credit for orchestrating two flights, mostly venezuelan migrants from texas, to martha s vineyard. men, women, children arriving without any warning, and under false pretenses. migrants say they were told they were going to boston. they were promised jobs and homes. and npr reports they were approached by a woman named perla, who said they would get their papers expedited, if they got on their plane. none of that was true. there is one of those migrants, explaining the ordeal to nbc news. [speaking non-english] [speaking non-english] [speaking non-english] the most uncertain 24 hours we ve ever had, no way to listen to how one-way hel
republican texas governor greg abbott. a surprise to the volunteers who raced to receive those people. some are families, men, women, and most that can t speak english, to defend themselves. as officials scramble to get them food and shelter. in new york, the mayor says his sanctuary city is nearing a breaking point with more than 11,000 asylum seekers dropped off there since may. we re covering each city and all of the angles here and the impacts of this escalating battle. we begin there on martha s vineyard. cnn s miguel marquez. we know you arrived there a short time ago. what do you know about the migrants there and how they are doing right now? they are doing well, given everything they are been through. everyone i have spoken to, i have spoken to about a dozen of them so far. they are all in san antonio, texas, yesterday morning. and then, they arrived here. we know a little about them. there s about seven families among the 50 on the 2 planes. there s four children b
children at risk. seizing rainbow colored fentanyl pills. kids as young as 13 years old dying every day in their house. it not enough safe water coming through the pipes for people to use. flooding exacerbated longstanding problems in water treatment plants. nasa will try to launch the artemis moon rocket after scrubbing monday s blast off. nasa plans to return astronauts to the moon by the middle of the decade. there ain t nobody we turned this cornfield into a party steve: live from new york city, this is fox & friends on this, the final day of aug august 2022. right now 70 degrees, going for a daytime high 84. will there was a shower. when we walked in the building we felt the allergy stuff. i looked it up, ainsley. ainsley: ragweed? steve: ragweed is moderate very high dust and dander. ainsley: i don t know what i m allergic to but something. i need some of your sir tech or whatever you take. steve: allegra. brian: every seven years your body rot
cases related to trump and trump s rivals. and he maintained his innocence for 23 years, and now prosecutors say he deserves a new trial after the popular serial podcast raised doubts about dna evidence in the case. welcome to the lead. i m jake tapper. it could be the first in 30 years, a freight rail strike looming closer could begin as soon as friday morning. about 60,000 workers are set to walk off the job if unions and management fail to come to an agreement in the next day and a half. the consequences from this could be, frankly, economically devastating. gas prices which have been drastically falling from their summer peak could once again skyrocket if trains carrying fuel stop moving. harvested crops could be prevented from reaching food factories, stopping staples from reaching grocery stores. amtrak is already canceling almost all of its long-distance passenger trains starting tomorrow as most of their routes run on freight tracks, disrupting travel across the