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Hannity

just now beginning to push water towards the tampa bay area. water rises about 6 inches to a foot. just beginning in tampa bay, just checking that. but the outer bands of the storm are just offshore. so these are rotating into the mark myers, sarasota, especially tampa bay area here over the next few hours. this really begins over nine tonight and then into the morning hours. so the storm intensifies. 115-mile an hour storm wedn wednesday, a.m. time period. and that intensifies further up to may be 125 miles per hour. that is the official forecast. we can see more before it makes landfall. this are session -- section of the state with 15 feet above normal high tide in the water pushing miles in length. look at this. 85 miles, an hour while england and south georgia in the heading on off to the carolinas, where

Water , Tampa-bay-area , Foot , Bands , 6 , Storm , Storm-wedn , Sarasota , Mark-myers , Nine , 115 , Forecast

The Five

those hurricane conditions all the way up into georgia. so here is the latest. this is the midnight advisory, typically they only come out every three hours but when the center is easily tracked by doppler radar we can thank the adad the national weather service novembers tampa bay, we get these hourly updates. so its motion is off to the north at 17 miles per hour. look at the minimum central pressure, that has been dipping fast over the last several hours. after that well-formed inner core was able to form throughout the afternoon and first part of the evening. the max winds at 110, again, when that gets bumped up to 115 we're talking about a category 3. on its way to what the national hurricane center and what we believe the forecast models had been hinting at that. this is likely up to category 4 status before it makes land fall on florida's big bend. the last time that this happened it was in cedar key levy county,

Way , Hurricane-conditions , Latest , Southeastern-georgia , Center , Advisory , Three , Tampa-bay , North , Pressure , Updates , Motion

Jesse Watters Primetime

questions -- i've got questions about the placement of all of that to be honest. you didn't know if -- if you were under a rock, you didn't know this storm was approaching, you're out of town or you didn't want the payments on that cadillac. that's the only reason for that to be there at this point as this storm continues its path up toward the big bend and the nature coast. that's one of the spots -- we've got the live cameras there -- we've actually got weather instrumentation as well to get a closer look where people shouldn't be for safety reasons to show you what the storm looks like on approach. but we're still hours out from the worst of that, jane, arriving there in cedar key and it's already looking increasingly bad. >> jane: you see here, this is the air force hurricane hunters. they're flying through the plane right now. they just made a pass perhaps just off to the south. new advisory coming in now from the national hurricane center and we now have a major category 3 idalia. max wind speeds of 115 miles per hour. so it's been that critical information coming in from those air force, now 120, excuse me.

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FOX and Friends

efforts in maui later this afternoon as house republicans launch a probe into both the federal and state responses to the deadly wildfires in maui that killed 115 people. crews are ending their search for victims on land and will head to the ocean in hopes of finding possible remains. authorities say they don't know how many people are still missing three weeks later. new york city mayor eric adams is blaming governor kathy hochul after they both received letters from the biden administration ring apart their handling of the migrant crisis. >> i think the governor is wrong. she is the governor of the state of new york. new york city is in that state. every county in this state should be part of this. >> adams has repeatedly asked hochul to place migrants in other parts of the state but she says that is not her job. those are a couple of your headlines, guys beings back to you. >> brian: sanctuary city not a sanctuary state.

People , Crews , State , Ocean , Wildfires , Land , Responses , Probe , Search , Maui , Hopes , Victims

CNN This Morning

we will definitely get back to you as this continues to progress. now, where things stand right now, the hurricane is a category 3, 115 to 120 miles per hour winds. hurricane idalia has made landfall about 20 miles north of steinhatchee. you are seeing a picture of steinhatchee right now. look closely at that picture because what you see are roofs. those are not full houses. those houses are already mostly underwater. the biggest impacts of this storm, talking storm surges from 12 to 16 feet, wind and tornadoes in the outsider bounds of this storm. they are still to come, particularly in the areas where landfall was made as state, local and federal officials have been warning throughout the course of the last several hours. stay in your homes if you are in the big bend area. hunker down. just because landfall has happened or even if it seems like things eased up, the most significant impacts are still to come. we will be covering those

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CNN Newsroom Live

hawaiian electric company is denying that it is responsible for the fire that devastated an area there earlier this month. the company says falling power lines appear to have caused an early morning fire on august 8. but had been deenergized by the time a second afternoon fire started. >> the county of maui is suing the company. the afternoon fire ultimately grew into the inferno that killed at least 115 people and damaged or destroyed more than 2,000 structures. tragedy off the coast of greece after two boats carrying migrants capsized monday. many of them were rescued but four children and one woman died in separate incidents. >> greece is one of the european union main entry points for people fleeing africa and asia.

Area , Power-lines , Afternoon-fire , Company , Hawaiian-electric-company , Inferno , County , Maui , Deenergized , 8 , August-8 , People

Andrea Mitchell Reports

electric company says the fire on the morning of august 8th appears to have been caused by power lines that fell in high winds but is faulting maui county for most of the devastation saying the power lines in west maui had been deenergized for six hours when the second blaze started. the fire is the deadliest in the u.s. in a century killing at least 115 people with hundreds still missing. a blaze destroyed 2,000 buildings. joining me is the governor of hawaii, josh green. what is your reaction to the statement from hawaiian electric company? >> thank you for having me. right now we're investigating on the second day after the crisis so that was on the 10th of august, i asked my attorney general, ordered her, in fact, to a comprehensive review and subsequent investigation into everything revolving around the fire. we'll get to the bottom of it. right now, yes, the county and hico, the energy company, are sparring about who is responsible. what is most important to me is we care for the survivors and we

Fire , Power-lines , Most , Maui-county , Hawaiian-electric-company , Devastation , Deenergized , West-maui , August-8th , 8 , Six , People

Jose Diaz-Balart Reports

folks are working to get all the preps done. this business has put up caution tape, and the doors are open in the front and back. i think that is hopefully so when the 115-mile-per-hour winds come through, they will be able to go through the structure and may cause less damage, and some of the structural damage we might see in some of these situations, and that's the concern for a lot of these businesses up along the waterfront. a lot of them have boarded up their windows to prevent that. some are trying to move everything out of their shops and putting it into a moving truck to save what they can here. folks here in cedar key have until 4:00 p.m. to evacuate, and they are under a mandatory evacuation, and they are racing against the clock to get the preps done and get out before we see the impacts of the storm.

Winds , Folks , Business , Doors , Front , Caution-tape , 115 , 115-mile-per-hour , Some , Damage , Situations , Structure

Andrea Mitchell Reports

get some kind of recovery monies for the families that lost everything. the facts will come out, we'll be totally transparent and hold everyone accountable. >> there has been so much confusion about the number of missing people tragically. do you have an updated number of how many people you're still trying to find? >> i do. the number dropped originally from 1200 to 800. that's because everyone, we cast a wide net, everyone who spoke up they're worried they lost someone or couldn't locate someone sent us a lot of reports. there were a lot of duplicates. that number under 300 now. the number of missing reports is more like a third of that, missing people to the county. so about monday we expect to have a new number from the fbi. it is tragic, andrea. 115 fatalities. we're beginning to rebuild. i'm grateful to the president, grateful to the bipartisan committee that came yesterday to maui and we're grateful to all of america for caring about us. >> there is a tension between the effort to take care of the

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Chris Jansing Reports

energy. his message is he'll fight this and he's not going anywhere. >> thank you for that. hawaiian electric is now acknowledging its powerlines starting the fire on maui that killed at least 115 people and destroyed more than 2,000 structures but they're putting the ultimate blame on maui county firefighters who, they argue, claimed that the blaze was contained and left scene. only for the flames to reignite later that afternoon. this shifting blame is at the center of the fast growing number of legal battles. "the wall street journal" reports lawyers are seizing on the opportunity, descending on maui in groves, to secure clients and file claims. joining me now, danny. i want to start with the big picture, if i can. the journal reports that lawyers will likely have to prove that hawaiian electric was in some way negligent in addressing fire risks in the major lawsuit that's out there.

People , Hawaiian-electric , Energy , Anywhere , Powerlines , Fire , Message , Maui , 115 , 2000 , Blame , Shifting-blame