Hummingbird migration map reveals new locations across US

Hummingbirdsare beginning toappear farther northas the fast‑winged birds continue their annual spring migration.

USA TODAY

Sightings have been reported across the Gulf Coast in recent weeks, and as far north as New Jersey, where a male ruby‑throated hummingbird was spotted March 31, according to Hummingbird Central'sinteractive migration map. Another hummingbird was seen near Charlotte, North Carolina, on March 22,AccuWeatherreported.

Forecasters sayhummingbirds will continue moving northas temperatures rise, becoming more common across central and eastern states by May.

It is unclear exactly what causeshummingbirds to migrateduring this period, but experts believe longer daylight hours, as well as the abundance of flowers, nectar and insects prompt the birds' northward journey according to Hummingbird Central.

The birding site notes that hummingbirds migrate alone, often following familiar paths, and can travel up to 500 miles at a time at speeds of 20 to 30 mph.

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Here's where hummingbirds have been spotted so far this year and how to attract them to your garden.

A ruby-throated hummingbird (Polistes rubiginosis) near a feeder in Anderson, S.C.

See hummingbird migration map

Hummingbird Central tracks hummingbirds across the country and has published aninteractive hummingbird migration mapfor 2026. The map is updated as of March 31.

A wood storks soars over the Corkscrew Swamp area on Dec. 4, 2024. A couple of wood storks on a sunny afternoon at Ballard Park in Melbourne, Florida A wood stork feeds in a waterway at Hibiscus Golf Club in Naples on Monday, Oct. 6, 2025. Wood storks, great egrets and other birds congregate in a drying marsh off of Corkscrew Road on Thursday, Nov. 20, 2025. Wood storks are seen feeding on fish stranded by rapidly dropping water levels at Paynes Prairie State Preserve near Gainesville, Florida, surrounded by marsh marigolds. Wood stork chicks are seen in the nest on a protected island in the Indian River Lagoon near Sewall's Point, Florida in April 2023, during a bird count by Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission biologists. A wood stork nestling squawks in its nest at the Wakodahatchee Wetlands in Delray Beach, Florida on April 9, 2021. The baby birds create quite a racket while nesting, compared to their normally silent parents. Two juvenile wood storks sport still yellow beaks at the Wakodahatchee Wetlands in Delray Beach, Florida in May 2025.. Wood storks at the Wakodahatchee Wetlands just west of Delray Beach in May 2023. Young wood storks at the Wakodahatchee Wetlands just west of Delray Beach in May 2023. A wood stork lands on a nest on Lake Somerset, in Lakeland, Florida on Feb. 22, 2013. A wood stork hangs out in a waterway at Bunche Beach in Lee County on Nov. 13, 2023. A wood stork forages at the Celery Fields, a stop on the Great Florida Birding Trail, in Sarasota, Florida on Nov. 15, 2012 on Thursday. A wood stork forages in shallow water in a rare Wisconsin sighting on Aug. 11, 2025 at Mud Lake State Wildlife Area near Watertown. A wood stork glides as the sun sets over Florida's Tomoka Basin near Ormond Beach.

Wood storks look distinctively prehistoric among wetland birds

How to invite hummingbirds to your yard

With impossibly fast wings, small bodies and long distances to travel, hummingbirds must eat every 10 to 15 minutes and visit 1,000 to 2,000 flowers per day, according to theNational Audubon Society.

If you want to boost your chances of seeing a hummingbird in your own backyard, the National Audubon Society says flowers, perches, insects and water are key. Here's what the organization suggests:

  • Flowers: Plant native, flowering plants in your yard. Red or orange tubular flowers attract hummingbirds, as do natives like honeysuckle, bee balm and hummingbird sage, which are rich with nectar.

  • Perches: Give them somewhere to rest, both open and somewhat sheltered.

  • Insects: Hummingbirds also get protein from small insects. Avoid pesticides in the yard, plant insect-pollinated plants in addition to hummingbird-pollinated plants and try hanging overripe fruit near a hummingbird feeder to attract fruit flies.

  • Bathtime: Hummingbirds like to bathe. Giving them fine, fresh water to do so could help attract them. Consider a misting device or a drop fountain.

  • Feeders: Hummingbird feeders also help give hummingbirds nectar, the necessary fuel for their long migrations.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Hummingbird migration map and where to spot them this spring

Hummingbird migration map reveals new locations across US

Hummingbirdsare beginning toappear farther northas the fast‑winged birds continue their annual spring migration. ...
Activist vessel collides with krill trawler in Antarctic confrontation

MIAMI (AP) — A ship operated by a group founded by anti-whaling activist Paul Watson collided with an industrial krill trawler in Antarctica in what the ship's Norwegian owner said was a "deliberate attack" that endangered its crew and could've caused a disaster in the same environmentally sensitive waters the activists claim they want to protect.

Associated Press CORRECTS DATE TO TUESDAY, MARCH 31, NOT APRIL 1 - In this image from video provided by the Aker Qrill Company, an activist ship, operated by the Captain Paul Watson Foundation, collides with the Antarctic Sea, a vessel operated by Aker Qrill Company, in Antarctic waters, on Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (Aker Qrill Company via AP) In this photo provided by the Captain Paul Watson Foundation, the M/V Bandero, a Captain Paul Watson Foundation vessel, collides with the Antarctic Sea, a vessel operated by Aker Qrill Company, Tuesday, March 31, 2026, in Antarctica. (Soizic Roux/Captain Paul Watson Foundation via AP)

CORRECTION Antarctica Krill Ship Collision

A two-minute video provided to The Associated Press by the Aker QRILL Co. shows the moment Tuesday when the M/V Bandero, operated by the Captain Paul Watson Foundation, slowly steams toward the stern of the fishing vessel, hitting its port side at a slight angle.

The collision underscores thegrowing battlein the frigid waters of the Southern Ocean over the future of Antarctic krill, a shrimplike crustacean central to the diet of whales and critical buffer to global warming that's also in demand for use in health supplements, fishmeal and other products.

Aker said Wednesday that the Bandero came within centimeters of striking a diesel tank on its vessel, the Norwegian-flagged Antarctic Sea, and put at risk a habitat teeming with multiple whale species, seals and seabirds — all feeding on the Southern Ocean'sabundant but environmentally sensitive krill population.

The company said its multinational crew was shaken but unharmed and it would pursue all available legal action.

"Our crew were put at risk in some of the most remote waters on Earth, and only luck avoided potential environmental damage," Aker CEO Webjørn Barstad said in a statement.

The Captain Paul Watson Foundation did not respond to a request from the AP about Aker's accusations. But in its own news release, it characterized its actions as "aggressive nonviolence." It said the crew, led by French activist Lamya Essemlali, managed to disrupt all krill fishing during a five-hour "direct intervention" against two Aker-owned vessels. It also provided images showing the crew launching giant metal net shredding devices intended to disrupt fishing.

Watson himself was not on the ship, which departed Australia in February as part of what the Watson foundation called Operation Krill Wars.

"Throughout the encounter, the crew witnessed Antarctic wildlife in the surrounding waters, including penguins, seals, and even a whale, underscoring what was at stake as a small ship challenged a powerful industrial krill operation in a stark David-and-Goliath scenario," the foundation said in a statement.

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Watson founded the global Sea Shepherd conservation movement in the 1970s and for decades won a fearsome reputation for ramming vessels and other aggressive tactics in confrontations on the high seas that repeatedly landed him in jail. He was lastdetained in Greenland for five monthsin 2024 on a Japanese warrant that was later rejected by Denmark. Japan's coast guard sought his arrest over an encounter in 2010 in which he was accused of ordering a captain of his ship to throw explosives at what the Japanese labeled a whaling research ship.

While the Canadian-American citizen in the past has drawn support from Hollywood celebrities, his hard-line tactics have split the movement he started, with affiliates in France and Brazil rallying behind his newly created namesake foundation while Sea Shepherd Global and 20 national affiliates focus more on watchdog patrols on the high seas, policy action and supporting law enforcement in poorer countries where illegal fishing is rampant.

Fishing in Antarctica for krillsurged to a record last season, forcing an early closure of fishing activity for the first time.

Aker is the world's largest harvester of krill, responsible for over half the world's catch.

The remote fishery is managed by the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources, an international organization composed of 27 nations and the European Union.

Any investigation into the incident, including possible criminal prosecution, is likely to commence at the Mongolia-flagged Bandero's next port of call. Under international maritime law, an overtaking vessel has an obligation to stay clear of any nearby ship it's passing.

Bandero is named after the tequila company owned by John Paul DeJoria, an American billionaire who founded Paul Mitchell hair care products and has been a longtime supporter of Watson's endeavors.

This story has corrected the month that the Bandero left Australia to February, not March.

___ This story was supported by funding from the Walton Family Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content. ___ Contact AP's global investigative team atInvestigative@ap.orgorhttps://www.ap.org/tips/

Activist vessel collides with krill trawler in Antarctic confrontation

MIAMI (AP) — A ship operated by a group founded by anti-whaling activist Paul Watson collided with an industrial krill tr...
The US is waging AI-assisted war on Iran. Here's how.

Hundreds ofIranian civilian deathsin the war have put the U.S. military's new AI systems in the spotlight and raised concerns from lawmakers over whether these systems are making deadly mistakes.

USA TODAY

Experts and former officials say the military's artificial intelligence systems are central to"Operation Epic Fury,"which is seeing AI deployed on the battlefield to a new degree.

"For somebody who spent years talking about how we're moving too slow, I'm now concerned about how fast we're moving," said Jack Shanahan, a retired lieutenant general who led efforts to develop and integrate AI into the military.

"At some point it may become increasingly difficult to define what an advanced AI system must not do, as opposed to humans defining what they want it to do."

<p style=The Pentagon is moving to deploy thousands of soldiers from the Army's 82nd Airborne Division to the Middle East, The New York Times, Wall Street Journal and Reuters reported. The reported deployment from the army division known for its elite paratroopers bolsters a force that already consists of thousands of Marines, sailors and an amphibious assault ship

See photos of other moments in U.S. history the 82nd Airborne Division has been deployed.

American soldiers watch as men of the 504th Parachute Infantry of the 82nd Airborne Division descend on Tempelhof Airport, Berlin, Sept. 6, 1945. The jump from a height of only 750 ft was in honour of Marshall Zhukov of the Soviet Union who captured Berlin and at the end of the WW II became commander-in-chief of the Russian zone of Germany.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> American general James M Gavin (1907 - 1990) of the 82nd Airborne Division on a battlefield where US troops of the 508th Infantry Regiment clashed with German forces, Belgium, circa 1944. Gavin later served as the US Ambassador to France from 1961 to 1962. German civilians from the town of Ludwigslust are forced by soldiers from the 8th Infantry Division and the 82nd Airborne Division United States Ninth Army to exhume and transport the bodies of the victims of Nazi Germany's effort to exterminate the Jewish population, political and social dissidents, homosexuals, gysies and prisoners of war amongst many others at the Wobbelin concentration camp, a subcamp of the Neuengamme concentration camp near the city of Ludwigslust for reburial on 6th May 1945 near Ludwigslust, Germany. Baghdad, IRAQ: A US soldier from Bravo Company 5-20 Infantry Regiment barks an order as his squad engages in a sustained gunfight with unidentified gunmen after their combat outpost came under attack, at the Adamiyah neighborhood of northern Baghdad during day five of Operation Arrowhead Strike VI, 10 February 2007. The regiment combined with the 82nd Airborne division U.S. soldiers from Charlie Company, 3rd Bat., 505th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 82nd Airborne Division, carry out Corporal Brian R. Kresic who injured his ankle during Operation Mountain Sweep in Afghanistan. Exact dates or location not made available by the army. The shadow of a U.S. Army soldier from the 82nd Airborne Division, A U.S. Army soldier with the 82nd Airborne First Infantry Division patrols along a road November 8, 2003 in Fallujah, Iraq. Two soldiers were killed and one injured when their Bradley fighting vehicle struck an improvised explosive device (IED). U.S. Army soldiers from the 82nd Airborne 1st Battalion 505th Regiment secure a an Iraqi detainee during an October 31, 2003 cordon and search operation through three houses in the town of Fallujah, Iraq. The raid yielded hidden rifles, rocket propelled grenade launchers and remote bomb detonation equipment in the houses and resulted in the detention of three individuals for questioning, including one believed to be a former Iraqi special forces soldier and explosives detonation expert. A paratrooper in 1st Brigade of the 505th Parachute Infantry Regiment of the 82nd Airborne Division stands guard December 30, 2003 at the entrance to the base near Fallujah, Iraq. A paratrooper from the 82nd Airborne Division's 1st Battalion, 325th Infantry Regiment looks through helmet-mounted night vision goggles during a night patrol on June 25, 2007 in the Hurriyah neighborhood of Baghdad, Iraq. The 82nd Airborne conducts night patrols almost every night in the Shia neighborhood in west Baghdad to enforce a 10 pm curfew. Staff Sgt. Jeremiyah Britton of Hart, Michigan, of the 82nd Airborne Division's 1st Battalion, 325th Infantry Regiment tries to restore order during handouts of humanitarian relief June 26, 2007 in the Hurriyah neighborhood of Baghdad, Iraq. The 82nd Airborne tried to keep the distribution of boxes of food staples and blankets orderly, but surging crowds soon turned chaotic, with many forced to leave without receiving any aid. U.S. Army medic Sgt. Tad Myers from Jersey Shore, PA walks past a group of Iraqi civilians on September 11, 2007 in the Hurriyah neighbourhood of Baghdad, Iraq. Troops from Alpha Company 1-325 Infantry of the 82nd Airborne were searching for an illegal weapons cache in the area. 1-325th were some of the first troops to arrive in late January as part of the American troop Helicopter Crew Chief SPC John Slay of Moultrie, GA from C Company Dustoff 3rd Battalion of the 82nd Combat Aviation Brigade 82nd Airborne Division watches out the window of a MEDEVAC helicopter after picking up an unjured Marine December 16, 2009 near Delhi, Afghanistan. The MEDIVAC unit is tasked with evacuating wounded coalition forces and local nationals throughout Helmand Province. Flight medic Sgt. Aaron Burrows (L) of Amarillo, TX with C Company Dustoff 3rd Battalion of the 82nd Combat Aviation Brigade 82nd Airborne Division directs a U.S. Marine (C) and a soldier with the Afghan National Army to a MEDEVAC helicopter December 20, 2009 near Delhi, Afghanistan. The MEDEVAC unit evacuates sick and wounded coalition forces and local nationals in Helmand Province. US paratroopers of the 82nd Airborne division, 1st battalion 325 airborne infantry arrive to install a new US Army base with food and water outside of Port au Prince on January 18, 2010, six days after an earthquake majoring 7.0 only open-ended Richter scale hit the Haitian capital. US paratroopers of the 82nd Airborne division, 1st battalion 325 airborne infantry arrive to secure and install a US base with food and water outside of Port au Prince on January 18, 2010, six days after an earthquake majoring 7.0 only open-ended Richter scale hit the Haitian capital. Engineers of Bravo Company, 2nd Battalion, 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment of the US Army's 82nd Airborne set explosives inside a suspected terrorists' cache during a cave clearing operation 01 February, 2003 about 29 miles north of Spinboldak, about 24 miles from the Pakistani border, Afghanistan. Operation Mongoose started January 27 after US and coalition forces came under attack by terrorists and soldiers continue cave clearing missions in the area.

See the army division known for its elite paratroopers throughout history

ThePentagon is movingtodeploy thousands of soldiersfrom the Army's 82nd Airborne Division to the Middle East,The New York Times,Wall Street JournalandReutersreported. The reported deployment from the army divisionknown for its elite paratroopersbolsters a force that already consists of thousands ofMarines, sailors and an amphibious assault ship.See photos of other moments in U.S. history the 82nd Airborne Division has been deployed.American soldiers watch as men of the 504th Parachute Infantry of the 82nd Airborne Division descend on Tempelhof Airport, Berlin, Sept. 6, 1945. The jump from a height of only 750 ft was in honour of Marshall Zhukov of the Soviet Union who captured Berlin and at the end of the WW II became commander-in-chief of the Russian zone of Germany.

At a closed door House Armed Services Committee briefing on March 25, Pentagon officials told lawmakers AI was used in data management, but not final target selection, according to a person with knowledge of the briefing.

U.S. soldiers are "leveraging a variety of advanced AI tools," Adm. Brad Cooper, the commander of U.S. Central Command, said in a March 11video updateon the war. "Humans will always make final decisions on what to shoot and what not to shoot and when to shoot but advanced AI tools can turn processes that used to take hours, and sometimes even days, into seconds."

The military has hit tens of thousands of targets in the monthlong Iran war, including more than 1,000 in the first 24 hours after the war launched on Feb. 28. One of the sitesbombed that day was an Iranian school, leading to at least 175 deaths, most of them children.

Experts and former officials say the military's artificial intelligence systems are central to 'Operation Epic Fury.'

In the early days of the war, the U.S. military fired more long-range, expensive missiles to hit Iran from far away, but has sinceshiftedto using more short-range, gravity bombs that can be dropped from aircraft, now that Iran's air defenses are degraded, according to Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Dan Caine and other officials.

The first targets struck likely came from longstanding Pentagon plans for an Iran attack, said Emelia Probasco, a senior fellow at Georgetown University's Center for Security and Emerging Technology who studies military uses of AI.

More:Who attacked a girls' school in Iran, and will there be accountability?

But as the war drags on, AI could play an increasing role, Probasco said, including in "prioritization" of targets – telling soldiers where to hit first.

"We are now entering the phase where those targets have been attacked and now you could potentially start to see an even greater impact of AI," she said. "You're looking for time critical targets, targets that move, targets that we didn't know about before."

20 soldiers with AI match the work of 2,000

For nearly a decade, the military has been integrating an AI tool known as the Maven Smart System into its computer systems. The system, often shortened to "Maven," fuses the military's many, disparate channels of data, intelligence, satellite imagery and asset movements into a single software platform. Military leaders say the system can make decisions in the heat of battle faster and more effective.

The system has already drastically increased the number of targets that a given number of operators can hit. According to Probasco's 2024studyof Army exercises using the system, roughly 20 people using it could match the work of more than 2,000 soldiers in Iraq war-era targeting cells then considered the most efficient in U.S. military history.

And its development in the two years since her study has been "dramatic," she added.

In ademoof the Maven Smart System at a March 12 conference, Cameron Stanley, the Pentagon's chief digital and artificial intelligence officer, showed the ease with which a user could turn a structure into a ball of flame with a "left click, right click, left click."

On the screen behind Cameron, a cursor hovered over an overhead image of lined up cars, showing numbers representing their measurements, locational coordinates and other data. With a few clicks, the "detection" of an object could be moved into a "targeting workflow," Cameron said.

The system offered a choice of "which metrics AI should prioritize," including "time to target," "distance," or "munitions." A sleek graphic appeared to show on a map the circular blast radius that the strike would create, and the arc that the weapons would travel. After a couple clicks on a blue "approve" bar and green "task executed" bar, the dark cloud of an explosion filled the screen.

"When we started this, it literally took hours to do what you just saw there," Cameron said.

Iran school strike raises AI questions

In spite of officials' claims that AI improves the military's accuracy, the civilian death toll in Iran has raised concerns over whether it has contributed to faulty targeting.

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Lawmakers have asked whether AI played a role in the school strike.Investigationsby the New York Times and other outlets found that the United States was likely behind the strike, which used a U.S.-made Tomahawk missile. The school may have been on an outdated list of targets that the military failed to recheck, according to thosereports. The Pentagon has said its own investigation into the strike is ongoing.

Smoke rises following an explosion during a protest marking the annual al-Quds Day (Jerusalem Day) on the last Friday of the holy month of Ramadan, in Tehran, Iran, on March 13.

More than a hundred lawmakers in theHouseandSenatesigned letters sent to Pentagon chiefPete Hegsethin mid-March asking whether the Maven Smart System was involved in the strike on the school, and for more details on how the military is checking the work of AI.

Shanahan said he saw "no indications" that AI was involved in the strike, "but we need to acknowledge that while future AI will be capable of finding more targets than ever before, humans must remain responsible and accountable for the decisions to hit those targets."

In past military exercises, AI has demonstrated far lower accuracy than humans. In the Army exercises that Probasco studied, the Maven Smart System couldcorrectly identifya tank around 60% of the time, as compared to a human soldier's 84% accuracy, and that number dropped to just 30% in snowy weather. An AI targeting system tested by the Air Force in 2021hitjust 25% accuracy when it was tested on imperfect conditions.

The Pentagon in 2023 issued adirectivethat soldiers and commanders using AI systems must be able to "exercise appropriate levels of human judgment over the use of force."

"Our military operates in full compliance with all U.S. laws and established policies, such as ensuring a human is always in the loop for critical operational decisions," the Pentagon said in a statement to USA TODAY.

"The responsibility for the lawful use of any AI tool rests with the human operator and the chain of command, not within the software itself."

Pentagon goes after company behind its AI chatbot

The Trump administration as a whole hasmovedto remove regulations around AI in the name of innovation and cutting bureaucracy, and the Pentagon has followed suit. In a Jan. 9memolaying out the military's AI strategy, Hegseth directed the Pentagon to work towards "unleashing experimentation" with AI models and "aggressively identifying and eliminating bureaucratic barriers to deeper integration" of AI.

"We must accept that the risks of not moving fast enough outweigh the risks of imperfect alignment," the memo read.

Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth directed the Pentagon to work towards 'unleashing experimentation' with AI models and 'aggressively identifying and eliminating bureaucratic barriers to deeper integration' of AI.

In recent months, that approach has put the Pentagon at odds with Anthropic, the Silicon Valley company behind Claude, the only AI chatbot that is currently configured to operate on the Maven Smart System.

Anthropicsought out an agreementfrom the Pentagon that its technology would not be used for mass surveillance, or to hit targets without human signoff. The Pentagon refused to accept those terms, saying Claude must be available to the military for "all lawful uses," as its officials publiclyblastedthe company on social media. The Pentagon moved todeclarethe company a "supply chain risk" – a designationmeant to restrictcompanies vulnerable to sabotage or subversion by U.S. adversaries – but wasblockedfrom the move by a federal judge's ruling on March 26.

"The military will not allow a vendor to insert itself into the chain of command by restricting the lawful use of a critical capability," the Pentagon said in a statement. "It is the military's sole responsibility to ensure our warfighters have the tools they need to win in a crisis, without interference from corporate policies."

Anthropic has said in statements that it does not believe the Pentagon has yet used Claude in a way that broke its conditions. But the disputereportedly aroseafter Anthropic learned that the military used Claude in its operation to capture Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro. "Anthropic currently does not have confidence," the company maintained in court documents, "that Claude would function reliably or safely if used to support lethal autonomous warfare."

AI built for military purposes "already has a lot of accuracy issues," but language learning models like Claude "are actually even more inaccurate," said Heidy Khlaaf, chief AI scientist at the AI Now Institute.

"They're not very good at solving for tasks outside of what they've been trained on, and that's ok if you're using it in a non critical environment, like writing an email, but that's very different when you're dealing with novel scenarios like a fog of war."

More:FBI Director Kash Patel's emails stolen by Iran-linked hackers

The dispute with Claude is not the first time that the increasing business partnerships between Silicon Valley and the Pentagon to create high tech weapons and military tools have come under criticism from the companies building them. Google was originally contracted to work on the Maven Smart System in its early developmental stages, but dropped the contract in 2018 in response to aprotest movementfrom its workers. Google and Amazon workers have also in recent yearsprotestedthe companies' AI contract with the Israeli military and Google'sworkwith immigration and border enforcement.

"If any tech company caves to the Pentagon's demands," Hegseth "will have the power to build and deploy A.I.-powered drones that kill people without the approval of any human," a group of organizations representing Amazon, Google, and Microsoft workers wrote in astatementon the Anthropic dispute.

Shanahan said human control of AI for military uses is a "nonnegotiable starting point," but it could eventually be confined to the design and development of systems that increasingly operate on their own.

"You're going to be operating under the assumption that at some point an autonomous weapon is released, and no human will have the ability to bring it back."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:How the US is waging AI-assisted war on Iran

The US is waging AI-assisted war on Iran. Here's how.

Hundreds ofIranian civilian deathsin the war have put the U.S. military's new AI systems in the spotlight and raised ...
Easter Holiday Weekend Weather Forecast: Wet East, Chilly Midwest, Nice West

Easter week is here, and this weekend's forecast has a pronounced split in the nation's weather as a storm system tracks across the eastern half of the country.

The Weather Channel Cody Froggatt/PA Images via Getty Images

Let's break down the forecast each day this weekend to help you plan your holiday activities.

Saturday

-Where the weather looks great: In the West from the Rockies to the West Coast, it will be sunny in most areas with temperatures near or above average, and not nearly as hot asthe recent record heat wave.

-Where you'll need a jacket: Unfortunately, rain and thunderstorms are expected Saturday from the Great Lakes to eastern Texas and the lower Mississippi Valley. Some thunderstorms could be strong or severe with heavy rainfall, as well. In parts of the upper Midwest, snow is expected in the areas shown in blue or purple in the map below. And strong, chilly winds are expected in much of the Plains and upper Mississippi Valley behind a cold front.

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-Where it might be okay: We can't rule out a threat of some showers in parts of the East. But in most areas, they don't seem likely enough to postpone any Easter egg hunts, but it will turn wetter on Sunday. And while it will be breezy, it will also be much warmer than average in most of the East, with 70s and 80s as far north as parts of the mid-Atlantic.

(192-hours: Further beef up your forecast with our detailed, hour-by-hour breakdown for the next 8 days – only available on ourPremium Pro experience.)

Easter Sunday

-Fabulous holiday weather:Again, the West is the big winner on Sunday, with plenty of sunshine and temperatures generally warmer than average for the first Sunday in April, without the recent blistering heat.

-Rain jacket will be needed: Unfortunately, rain, perhaps with a clap of thunder, is likely in the East as a cold front slices through. It will also be quite windy with the front. Any sunrise Easter services planned outdoors in the Southeast may have to be moved indoors.

-A winter jacket needed: Sunday will be chilly and windy in the Midwest, with highs only in the 40s in the Great Lakes. Some snow showers may linger in parts of the western Great Lake snowbelts from northeast Minnesota into northern Wisconsin, Upper Michigan and western and northern Lower Michigan. Leave extra time to get to your Easter destination if traveling in these areas.

(FORECAST MAPS:Rain/Snow|Highs/Lows|Travel Planner)

Jonathan Erdman is a senior meteorologist at weather.com and has been covering national and international weather since 1996. Extreme and bizarre weather are his favorite topics. Reach out to him onBluesky,X (formerly Twitter)andFacebook.

Easter Holiday Weekend Weather Forecast: Wet East, Chilly Midwest, Nice West

Easter week is here, and this weekend's forecast has a pronounced split in the nation's weather as a storm system...
Trump isn't immune from civil claims his Jan. 6 rally speech incited riot, judge says

WASHINGTON (AP) —President Donald Trumpis not immune fromcivil claimsthat he incited a mob of his supporters to attack the Capitol on Jan, 6, 2021, a federal judgehas ruledin one of the last unresolved legal cases stemming from the riot.

Associated Press

U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta ruled Tuesday that Trump's remarks at his "Stop the Steal" rally, held on the Ellipse near the White House shortly before the siege began, "plausibly" were inciting words that are not protected by the First Amendment right to free speech.

The Republican president is not shielded from liability for much of his Jan. 6 conduct, including that speech and many of his social media posts that day, according to the judge. But Mehta said Trump cannot be held liable for his official acts that day, including his Rose Garden remarks during the riot and his interactions with Justice Department officials.

"President Trump has not shown that the Speech reasonably can be understood as falling within the outer perimeter of his Presidential duties," Mehta wrote. "The content of the Ellipse Speech confirms that it is not covered by official-acts immunity."

Not the first court ruling on presidential immunity

The decision is not the court's first ruling that Trump can be held liability for the violence at the Capitol and it is unlikely to be the last given the near-certainty of an appeal. But the 79-page ruling sets the stage for a possible civil trial in the same courthouse where Trump was charged with crimes for his Jan. 6 conduct, before his 2024 electionended the prosecution.

Mehta previously refused to dismiss the claims against Trump in a February 2022 ruling that Trump was not entitled to presidential immunity from the claims brought by Democratic members of Congress and law enforcement officers who guarded the Capitol on Jan. 6. In that decision, Mehta also concluded that Trump's words during his rally speech plausibly amounted to incitement and were not protected by the First Amendment.

The case returned to Mehta after an appeals court ruling upheld his 2022 decision. He said Tuesday's ruling on immunity falls under a more "rigorous" legal standard at this later stage in the litigation.

Mehta, who was nominated by Democratic President Barack Obama, said his latest decision is not a "final pronouncement on immunity for any particular act."

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"President Trump remains free to reassert official-acts immunity as a defense at trial. But the burden will remain his and will be subject to a higher standard of proof," the judge wrote.

Official capacity vs. office-seeker

Trump spoke to a crowd of his supporters at the rally before the mob's attack disrupted the joint session of Congress for certifying Democrat Joe Biden's 2020 electoral victory over Trump. Trump closed out his speech by saying, "We fight. We fight like hell and if you don't fight like hell, you're not going to have a country anymore."

Trump's lawyers arguedthat Trump's conduct on Jan. 6 meets the threshold for presidential immunity.

The plaintiffscontended that Trump cannot prove he was acting entirely in his official capacity rather than as an office-seeking private individual. They also said the Supreme Court has held that office-seeking conduct falls outside the scope of presidential immunity.

Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., who at that time led the House Homeland Security Committee, sued Trump, Trump's personal attorney Rudolph Giuliani and members of the Proud Boys and Oath Keepers extremist groups over the Jan. 6 riot. Other Democratic members of Congress later joined the litigation, which was consolidated with the officers' claims.

'Victory for the rule of law'

The civil claims survived Trump's sweeping act of clemency on the first day of his second term, when he pardoned, commuted prison sentences and ordered the dismissal of all 1,500-plus criminal cases stemming from the Capitol siege. More than 100 police officers were injured while defending the Capitol from rioters.

The plaintiffs' legal team includes attorneys from the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law. Damon Hewitt, the group's president and executive director, praised the ruling as a "monumental victory for the rule of law, affirming that no one, including the president of the United States, is above it."

"The court rightly recognizes that President Trump's actions leading to the January 6 insurrection fell outside the scope of presidential duties," Hewitt said in a statement. "This ruling is an important step toward accountability for the violent attack on the Capitol and our democracy."

Trump isn't immune from civil claims his Jan. 6 rally speech incited riot, judge says

WASHINGTON (AP) —President Donald Trumpis not immune fromcivil claimsthat he incited a mob of his supporters to attack th...
Serbian journalists protest reported attacks, pressure on media

BELGRADE, Serbia (AP) — Dozens of journalists blocked traffic on Wednesday outside the office of Serbia's populistPresident Aleksandar Vucicto protest what they say are mounting attacks and pressure on themedia in the Balkan country.

Associated Press Serbian journalists block the traffic outside the offices of Serbia's President Aleksandar Vucic in Belgrade, Serbia, Wednesday, April 1, 2026, in protest of mounting attacks and pressure on the media. (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic) Serbian journalists block the traffic outside the offices of Serbia's President Aleksandar Vucic in Belgrade, Serbia, Wednesday, April 1, 2026, in protest of mounting attacks and pressure on the media. (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic) Serbian journalists block the traffic outside the offices of Serbia's President Aleksandar Vucic in Belgrade, Serbia, Wednesday, April 1, 2026, in protest of mounting attacks and pressure on the media. (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic) Serbian journalists block the traffic outside the offices of Serbia's President Aleksandar Vucic in Belgrade, Serbia, Wednesday, April 1, 2026, in protest of mounting attacks and pressure on the media. (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic)

Serbia Tensions Media

The gathering in Belgrade was organized after journalists reporting on local elections inSerbiaon Sunday faced attacks during violent incidents that were reported in at least three out of 10 towns where the balloting was held.

"We want to show solidarity with colleagues who were attacked on that day (Sunday) ... but also to stress the ever harder and more dangerous position of journalists in the field," Serbia's Independent Journalists' Association said in a statement.

The group added that "attacks on journalists are not isolated incidents, they are a systematic blow to the public's right to know."

International observerssaid they witnessed violence and irregularities on Sunday.

The vote was seen as a test for Vucic following more than a year of youth-ledstreet proteststhat have shaken his tight grip on power. His right-wing populist Serbian Progressive Party won in all 10 municipalities.

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Around 20 journalists were attacked on Sunday while more than 100 attacks have been recorded this year, the Serbian media association said.

Authorities have promised to investigate but hardly any of the assailants have been held responsible.

Serbia is formally a candidate nation for EU membership, but Vucic has been accused of clamping down on democracy, including media freedoms, while nourishing ties with Russia and China.

Tensions also soared Tuesday whenpolice raidedthe headquarters of the University of Belgrade, saying they were investigating a student's death. The university said authorities were abusing the case to exert pressure following the student-led protests that first started in November 2024 after atrain station tragedyin the country's north.

Thousands gathered later Tuesday outside the rectorate building in downtown Belgrade to protest the police action. Scuffles briefly erupted when police pushed protesters away from the building.

The youth-led movement formed after a railway stationcanopy collapse in Novi Sadthat killed 16. It has posed the biggest challenge to Vucic's leadership in more than a decade.

Serbian journalists protest reported attacks, pressure on media

BELGRADE, Serbia (AP) — Dozens of journalists blocked traffic on Wednesday outside the office of Serbia's populistPre...
King Charles to visit US to address Congress, meet President Trump

King Charles III will visit the United States this month to address American lawmakers,United States House Speaker Mike Johnsonannounced on Wednesday, April 1.

USA TODAY

The trip will mark the first state visit by a British ruler since ‌2007, when Charles' mother ​Queen Elizabeth made ​what was the ​fourth such U.S. trip ‌of her reign.

In a statement post on X, Johnson said the king had been invited to address U.S. Congress ‌on April 28 during his ‌visit to Washington D.C.

In a separatestatement releasedone day earler, Buckingham Palace announced Queen Camilla will accompany the king, and said the "long-planned" trip came on the advice of the British government and, "at the invitation of The President of the United States."

"Our two nations share one of the most consequential partnerships in history, and together we will mark the historic milestone of America's 250th year of independence,"Johnson wrote in a post on X.

"I look forward to spending time with the King, whom I greatly respect,"President Donald Trumpwrote ina post on Truth Socialafter the announcement. "It will be TERRIFIC!"

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When is King Charles visiting the United States?

The royals' itinerary includes celebrating "the historic connections and the modern bilateral relationship between the United Kingdom and the United States," the palace wrote in a news release.

Trump said the monarchs' trip is planned April 27-30.

President Donald Trump bids farewell to King Charles III at Windsor Castle on Sept. 18, 2025, in Windsor, England.

The king is expected to speak to lawmakers on April 28, and attend a banquet dinner ​at ‌the White House later that day.

The king will then continue to the island of Bermuda to undertake his first royal visit as monarch to a British overseas territory.

This is a developing story.

Natalie Neysa Alund is a senior reporter for USA TODAY. Reach her at nalund@usatoday.com and follow her on X @nataliealund.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:King Charles and Queen Camilla to visit US, meet Trump

King Charles to visit US to address Congress, meet President Trump

King Charles III will visit the United States this month to address American lawmakers,United States House Speaker Mike J...

 

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