Washington, D.C
Canadian wildfire smoke brings hazy skies to DC region Thursday
WASHINGTON – Smoke from Canadian wildfires drifted back into the Washington, D.C. region on Thursday, bringing hazy sunshine to parts of the area.
Canadian wildfire smoke brings hazy skies to DC region Thursday
Smoke from Canadian wildfires drifted back into the Washington, D.C. region Thursday covering parts of the area in a haze-filled sky.
FOX 5’s Tucker Barnes says the smoke may create a milky white haze, which is expected to improve slightly as the day progresses.
The smoke pushed into the region Wednesday afternoon and evening. It also covered parts of Pennsylvania and New York.
The National Weather Service says the raging wildfires in northern Canada are generating smoke plumes that are being pushed south on north and northwest winds. NWS says the smoke is more diffused and elevated in the higher levels of our area.
Canadian wildfire smoke brings hazy skies to DC region Thursday
We can expect the warmest day of the week on Thursday, with temperatures nearing 90 degrees and abundant sunshine. While this is a slight relief from the upper-90s and triple-digit temperatures seen earlier this summer, humidity is expected to rise on Friday and Saturday, leading to a higher chance of storms and rain over the weekend.
Thursday morning started pleasantly with temperatures around 69 degrees in the immediate D.C. area and cooler readings in the 50s in the mountains. Dry skies are expected.
Washington, D.C
DC Weather: Breezy conditions and some sunshine for Christmas Eve
WASHINGTON (7News) — The weather forecast for Christmas Eve promises mostly to partly sunny skies with breezy conditions.
Temperatures are expected to reach highs between 53 and 59 degrees, with winds from the west-northwest at 5 to 10 mph and gusts up to 25 mph.
As the day progresses, sunshine will return with passing clouds, and temperatures will settle in the upper 40s to low 50s. Midday winds are anticipated to ease.
SEE ALSO | NORAD’s 2025 Santa tracker is live: Where he’s at right now
As night falls, clouds will increase, and showers are likely by dawn on Christmas morning. Overnight lows will range from 34 to 40 degrees, with light winds.
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On Christmas Day, scattered morning showers are possible, and skies will remain mostly cloudy.
Washington, D.C
ECU football heads to Washington, D.C., for Military Bowl preparations
East Carolina’s football team is spending Christmas week in the nation’s capital as the Pirates prepare for their upcoming Military Bowl matchup against Pittsburgh.
The team departed Greenville around 11 a.m. Tuesday, loading onto five buses for the road trip to Washington, D.C. Head coach Blake Harrell rode on the lead bus as the Pirates left campus to continue bowl preparations.
While in the area, ECU is mixing business with some downtime. The team has scheduled practices but is also taking in professional hockey and football games during the trip.
The Pirates’ Christmas Eve schedule includes a practice in Springfield, Virginia, followed by community service and a team bowling event in Bethesda, Maryland.
ECU faces Pittsburgh in the Military Bowl on Saturday.
Panthers prepare for final home game
The Carolina Panthers, currently in first place, are preparing for their final home game of the regular season. Carolina will host the Seattle Seahawks, led by former Panthers quarterback Sam Darnold.
Panthers head coach Dave Canales spent 13 years with the Seahawks organization under longtime coach Pete Carroll and the team’s front office.
Carolina cornerback Jaycee Horn was named to the Pro Bowl and is expected to face a challenge against Darnold and Seattle’s offense.
Christmas Day NFL matchups
NFL fans will have three games to watch on Christmas Day, including a matchup featuring former Wallace-Rose Hill standout Javonte Williams and the Dallas Cowboys visiting the Washington Commanders.
UNC routs ECU in college basketball
In college basketball, North Carolina had little trouble defeating East Carolina at the Dean Dome, winning 99-51.
UNC’s Caleb Wilson scored 21 points and added 12 rebounds, while Henri Veesaar chipped in 13 points.
ECU’s Giovanni Emejuru led the Pirates with 21 points, but the team struggled offensively, shooting 1 of 20 from 3-point range and committing 17 turnovers.
Both teams will break for the week before returning to conference play. UNCW is scheduled to be the first regional team back in action.
Washington, D.C
The Trump administration is suing the District of Columbia over its gun laws – WTOP News
The Trump administration is suing the local government of Washington, D.C., over its gun laws, alleging that restrictions on certain semiautomatic weapons run afoul of Second Amendment rights
The Trump administration is suing the local government of Washington, D.C., over its gun laws, alleging that restrictions on certain semiautomatic weapons run afoul of Second Amendment rights.
The U.S. Department of Justice filed its lawsuit Monday in U.S. District Court in the District of Columbia, naming Washington’s Metropolitan Police Department and outgoing Chief of Police Pamela Smith as defendants and setting up another potentially seismic clash on how broadly the courts interpret individual gun possession rights.
“The United States of America brings this lawsuit to protect the rights that have been guaranteed for 234 years and which the Supreme Court has explicitly reaffirmed several times over the last two decades,” the Justice Department states.
It’s the second such lawsuit the administration has filed this month: The Justice Department also is suing the U.S. Virgin Islands, alleging the U.S. territory is obstructing and systematically denying American citizens the right to possess and carry guns.
It’s also the latest clash between the District of Columbia and the federal government, which launched an ongoing law enforcement intervention into the nation’s capital over the summer, which was meant to fight crime. The district’s attorney general is challenging the deployment of the National Guard to the city as part of the intervention in court.
In Washington, Metropolitan Police Department spokesman Sean Hickman said the agency does not comment on pending litigation.
The Justice Department asserts that the District is imposing unconstitutional bans on AR-15s and other semiautomatic weapons the administration says are legal to posses under the Supreme Court’s 2008 Heller precedent, which also originated from a dispute over weapons restrictions in the nation’s capital.
In that seminal case, the court ruled that private citizens have an individual right to own and operate weapons “in common use today,” regardless of whether they are part of what Second Amendment text refers to as a “well regulated militia.”
“There seems to us no doubt, on the basis of both text and history, that the Second Amendment conferred an individual right to keep and bear arms,” the majority reasoned. The justices added a caveat: “Of course, the right was not unlimited, just as the First Amendment’s right of free speech was not.”
The Justice Department argues that the District has gone too far in trying to limit weapons possession under that caveat. Administration lawyers emphasize the Heller reference to weapons “in common use today,” saying it applies to firearms that District of Columbia residents cannot now register. Those restrictions in turn subject residents to criminal penalties for unregistered firearms, the administration asserts.
“Specifically, the District denies law-abiding citizens the ability to register a wide variety of commonly used semi-automatic firearms, such as the Colt AR-15 series rifles, which is among the most popular of firearms in America, and a variety of other semi-automatic rifles and pistols that are in common use,” Justice Department lawyers write.
“D.C’s current semi-automatic firearms prohibition that bans many commonly used pistols, rifles or shotguns is based on little more than cosmetics, appearance, or the ability to attach accessories,” the suit continues, “and fails to take into account whether the prohibited weapon is ‘in common use today’ or that law-abiding citizens may use these weapons for lawful purposes protected by the Second Amendment.”
The Justice Department does not include any individual plaintiffs from Washington, D.C., alleging any violations of their constitutional rights. That’s different from the Heller case, which is named for Dick Heller, a Washingtonian who filed a civil lawsuit challenging the city’s handgun ban in 2003.
The administration argues in the suit that it has jurisdiction to challenge current District laws under the sweeping federal crime law of 1994.
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