New Jersey
Tropical Storm Debby remnants to blast N.J. with tornado threat, 50 mph wind gusts today
The dangerous remnants of Tropical Storm Debby could spin up tornados in New Jersey on Friday along with wind gusts up to 50 mph and intense thunderstorms that could cause flash flooding, according to the latest forecast.
The National Weather Service has issued a tornado watch for 17 counties through 2 p.m. Friday. There’s a 5% to 9% probability for tornadoes for about half the state, which the weather service notes “is quite high for this area.”
Just Bergen, Hudson, Monmouth and Ocean counties are excluded from the tornado watch, but the weather service said in its early Friday forecast that the watch area may need to be expanded and the timing of the watch extended as Debby progresses north through Pennsylvania.
- ALSO: Here’s why N.J. faces a tornado threat during the storms from Debby’s remnants
“Tornadoes are the main threat,” the National Weather Service said. “Isolated damaging wind gusts in the morning with a more widespread risk afternoon and evening.”
The main threat from the remnants of Tropical Storm Debby will be potential tornadoes and winds that gust up to 50 mph in New Jersey on Friday, the National Weather Service said. A tornado watch has been issued for 17 counties. Flash flooding from intense thunderstorms is also possible.AccuWeather.com and National Weather Service
While the heaviest rain from Debby will miss New Jersey, thunderstorms with intense downpours could still hit already rain-soaked parts of the state, forecasters say. Another 1 to 2 inches of rain is possible for most of the state, with 2 to 4 inches in the forecast for northwestern counties.
- Live N.J. power outage tracker: Gusty winds from Debby remnants put thousands in dark
The National Weather Service issued a flood watch through 1 a.m. Saturday for 11 counties — Camden, Gloucester, Hunterdon, Mercer, Middlesex, Morris, northwestern Burlington, Salem, Somerset, Sussex and Warren.
The main threat from the remnants of Tropical Storm Debby will be potential tornadoes and winds that gust up to 50 mph in New Jersey on Friday, the National Weather Service said. A tornado watch has been issued for 17 counties. Flash flooding from intense thunderstorms is also possible.AccuWeather.com and National Weather Service
A wind advisory has also been issued for nearly the entire state through Friday evening.
The forecast calls for “a period of strong south or southeast winds on Friday, with wind gusts of 35-50 mph expected across the entire area,” the weather service said. “This may led to downed trees and power outages.”
NJ Advance Media’s power outage tracker showed 5,000 homes and businesses already in the dark as of 8 a.m. Friday.
The main threat from the remnants of Tropical Storm Debby will be potential tornadoes and winds that gust up to 50 mph in New Jersey on Friday, the National Weather Service said. A tornado watch has been issued for 17 counties. Flash flooding from intense thunderstorms is also possible.AccuWeather.com and National Weather Service
AccuWeather.com’s forecast predicts wind gust of 40 to 60 mph across a wide area expected to feel the effects of Debby, which is now a post-tropical cyclone. The private weather forecasting company noted that the wind and tornado threat, and not heavy rain, remain the main concern for New Jersey.
“Places such as Philadelphia, New York City and Trenton, New Jersey, may have actually received more rain Tuesday night than they will from Debby into Friday night,” AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist John Feerick said.
The main threat from the remnants of Tropical Storm Debby will be potential tornadoes and winds that gust up to 50 mph in New Jersey on Friday, the National Weather Service said. A tornado watch has been issued for 17 counties. Flash flooding from intense thunderstorms is also possible.AccuWeather.com and National Weather Service
Some localized river flooding may linger into Saturday, but skies begin to clear for what should be a much needed stretch of pleasant weather.
Highs on Saturday and Sunday are expected to be in the low-to-mid 80s with low humidity. The nice weather with slightly below average temperatures continues through next week, the weather service said.
Thank you for relying on us to provide the local weather news you can trust. Please consider supporting NJ.com with a subscription.
New Jersey
NJ man finally faces quadruple murder trial, accused of killing brother’s family in Colts Neck fire horror
⚖️ Paul Caneiro is finally on trial, years after a brutal quadruple homicide and house fire stunned Monmouth County.
⚖️ Prosecutors say Caneiro murdered his brother, sister-in-law, and their two children in Colts Neck, then set multiple fires to cover it up.
⚖️ Years of delays: Attorney changes, legal motions, COVID disruptions, and appeals pushed one of NJ’s most notorious murder cases to this moment.
A New Jersey man accused of killing his brother and his family before setting their Monmouth County house on fire is finally facing trial.
Paul Caneiro was dealt a string of criminal charges, including four counts of first-degree murder, for the family massacre at a sprawling Colts Neck home more than seven years ago.
Keith Caneiro’s body was discovered on the front lawn by a landscaper two days before Thanksgiving in 2018. The bodies of Caneiro’s 45-year-old wife, Jennifer, and two children, 11-year-old Jesse and 8-year-old Sophia, were recovered from the wreckage.
Paul Caneiro was also accused of setting his own Ocean Township home on fire while his own family was inside.
The trial has been held up for years as Paul Caneiro’s rotating defense attorneys have filed repeated motions. He has maintained his innocence.
Here is a round-up of the harrowing deaths and what we know so far about the case.
Caneiro quadruple murder trial gets underway in 2026
Gruesome discovery of the Caneiro family, killed in Colts Neck
Keith Caneiro, 50, was shot four times in the head and once in the torso, before his lifeless body was recovered from his front lawn in Colts Neck.
His wife was shot in the head and stabbed in the torso, her body found near the stairs to their basement.
Their 11-year-old son was found in the kitchen, stabbed in the torso and arm, according to a 2019 lawsuit filed by Vlassis Karidis, Jennifer Caneiro’s father.
According to the lawsuit, based on a medical examiner’s findings, the youngest victim, Sophia, was the last to die and was still alive while the house was engulfed in flames, leading to lung damage and smoke inhalation that factored into her death.
She was found on the stairs leading to the second floor with stab wounds. The autopsy suggests that she suffered before she died based on an increase in white blood cells.
“Sophia survived her parents albeit with multiple stab wounds for an unimaginable period of time but demonstrably long enough to experience breathing difficulty and onset of high-degree stress,” the lawsuit says.
Karidis’ suit has been stayed for several years, pending the outcome of this criminal trial.
Read More: Lawsuit says girl, 8, suffered most in Colts Neck family homicide
Caneiro quadruple murder trial gets underway in 2026 – FILE photo of accused quadruple killer Paul Caneiro Monmouth County Prosecutors Office
Caneiro brothers as business partners, before being accused of fraud
Keith Caneiro started an IT consulting firm in 1989 and brought in his older brother with a 10% ownership interest, according to the 2019 lawsuit filed by Karidis, which also says the brothers took over a pest control company in 2011.
Attributing statements and messages shared with attorneys, the lawsuit said Keith and Jennifer Caneiro had accused Paul Caneiro of stealing tens of thousands of dollars from them and the businesses that the brothers held.
The night before he was killed, Keith Caneiro forwarded a company email stating that Paul Caneiro would no longer be paid his $225,000 salary, citing money missing from the business accounts, according to the lawsuit. The litigation is on hold pending this criminal trial.
In separate emails and messages cited by the lawsuit, Keith had said he was working to sell his companies and pursue a new position in order to be done dealing with his older brother.
About eight months before her brutal death, Jennifer Caneiro told her sister that her brother-in-law, that Caneiro had stolen thousands intended for her children’s trust and education funds, some of which he deposited into his own children’s education funds or used to pay down student loans.
The lawsuit also said that the Caneiros had voiced concerns to other family and friends about Paul Caneiro charging “excessive and improper personal expenses” to credit cards held by the businesses that he worked at with his brother.
Prosecutors say Paul Caneiro set two fires to cover up murders
The Colts Neck fire was reported around 1:30 p.m on Nov. 20, 2018, on Willow Brook Road. Investigators have said they believe Caneiro first killed his relatives and set the fire in Colts Neck before returning to his home about 5 a.m.
Prosecutors said the fire at Caneiro’s own house was both a “ruse” and an effort to destroy evidence that he had taken from the Colts Neck scene.
CBS New York shared helicopter footage of the Colts Neck fire as it was still being put out in 2018, as posted to YouTube.
The once-million-dollar property was cleared of the burned-out wreck by a demolition crew in 2020, Asbury Park Press reported.
Caneiro quadruple murder trial gets underway in 2026 – Paul Caneiro in court in 2018 CBS New York via Youtube
Why the Caneiro quadruple murder trial took more than seven years
Paul Caneiro started with a public defender before using several prominent defense attorneys in the following years. In February 2025, Monika Mastellone took over as defense attorney.
In December 2018, the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office had already said that a trial might not get underway until 2020. That was before the COVID-19 pandemic wreaked havoc on all court proceedings.
The state Supreme Court agreed in September to hear prosecutors’ appeal on one of Superior Court Judge Marc Lemieux’s rulings on evidence in the case, pushing jury selection to this month.
Last month, the state Supreme Court ruled that prosecutors can use a digital video recorder as evidence in Caneiro’s trial, despite it being taken without a warrant issued, NJ.com reported.
Seven years ago, CBS New York shared video of Caneiro’s first court appearance.
25 True Crime Locations: What Do They Look Like Today?
Below, find out where 25 of the most infamous crimes in history took place — and what the locations are used for today. (If they’ve been left standing.)
Report a correction 👈 | 👉 Contact our newsroom
All 31 convicted killers pardoned by Gov. Murphy
Since December 2024, Gov. Phil Murphy has granted clemency to 283 individuals convicted of various crimes. Of those, 31 have been pardoned and released early from state prison after they were convicted of murder and aggravated manslaughter. After their release, each killer is subject to five years of parole supervision.
Gallery Credit: Rick Rickman
New Jersey
Hischier | POST-RAW 1.4.26 | New Jersey Devils
NewJerseyDevils.com is the official web site of the New Jersey Devils, a member team of the National Hockey League (“NHL”). NHL, the NHL Shield, the word mark and image of the Stanley Cup and NHL Conference logos are registered trademarks of the National Hockey League. All NHL logos and marks and NHL team logos and marks as well as all other proprietary materials depicted herein are the property of the NHL and the respective NHL teams and may not be reproduced without the prior written consent of NHL Enterprises, L.P. Copyright © 1999-2025 New Jersey Devils and the National Hockey League. All Rights Reserved.
New Jersey
New Jersey didn’t wait for trends — this is what 2026 feels like here
Every year comes with its own personality, but New Jersey doesn’t wait around to see what the rest of the country decides is “in.” We move fast here. We adapt. We complain loudly — and then we make it part of our routine. Somewhere between a jughandle turn and a diner refill, 2026 developed a very Jersey personality. You may not have noticed it happening, but you’re already living it.
Here are 10 things that feel unmistakably so 2026, Garden State edition.
The way New Jersey talks now (and what it really means)
Calling every inconvenience “a situation.”
Traffic? Situation. School drop-off? Situation. The coffee machine acting up? Full-blown situation.
Quietly flexing about not pumping gas.
We don’t brag. We just casually mention it… often.
Errands, routines and the New Jersey sense of time
Planning an entire weekend around one errand.
Costco, Home Depot, or MVC — choose wisely and clear your schedule.
Checking Dan Zarrow’s forecast on the NJ101.5 app religiously.
Because if you’re going to trust the weather, it might as well be someone who knows New Jersey.
Having a “favorite small town” you don’t live in.
You’ve “been a few times.” You “get the vibe.”
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Roads, tolls and the daily traffic psychology of NJ
Treating tolls like a personal betrayal.
Every increase feels targeted, and we all do the same mental math at the booth anyway.
Explaining traffic circles and roundabouts like a survival skill.
Somehow we all know exactly what to do — except when we don’t.
Money stress, comfort food and Garden State coping mechanisms
Treating diners as emotional support buildings.
Coffee refills fix things. It’s science.
Complaining about taxes while never actually leaving.
Because deep down, we know better.
Comparing energy bills like it’s a competitive sport.
Nobody likes the numbers, but everyone wants to know if theirs is worse.
The truth is, 2026 in New Jersey isn’t about trends you see online. It’s about habits, shortcuts, shared frustrations, and small victories we all pretend are normal. And if you read this nodding along, congratulations — you’re not behind the times. You’re just right on schedule… in New Jersey.
Best New Jersey Diners For Breakfast and Lunch
Thank you to our New Jersey listeners for these recommendations.
Gallery Credit: Bill Spadea
-
World1 week agoHamas builds new terror regime in Gaza, recruiting teens amid problematic election
-
Business1 week agoGoogle is at last letting users swap out embarrassing Gmail addresses without losing their data
-
Indianapolis, IN1 week agoIndianapolis Colts playoffs: Updated elimination scenario, AFC standings, playoff picture for Week 17
-
Southeast1 week agoTwo attorneys vanish during Florida fishing trip as ‘heartbroken’ wife pleads for help finding them
-
News1 week agoRoads could remain slick, icy Saturday morning in Philadelphia area, tracking another storm on the way
-
Politics1 week agoMost shocking examples of Chinese espionage uncovered by the US this year: ‘Just the tip of the iceberg’
-
News1 week agoMarijuana rescheduling would bring some immediate changes, but others will take time
-
World1 week agoPodcast: The 2025 EU-US relationship explained simply