Southeast
'A big relief': NC residents describe meeting with Trump after feeling 'ignored' post-hurricane
North Carolina residents Curtis A. Wright and Amber Wright, who were heavily impacted by Hurricane Helene, met with President Donald Trump during his visit to their state on Friday.
Curtis A. Wright argued in an appearance on “The Will Cain Show,” that he thinks that North Carolinians have “been ignored” in the wake of the hurricane and said that Trump’s visit was a “big relief.”
“It was a lot of relief. You know, people keep saying, how are you guys doing in Asheville? And, you know, we feel like he’s [sic] been forgotten. And I don’t think we’ve been forgotten. I think we’ve been ignored. So for him [Trump] to come and see us today, that was a big relief. We’d previously had JD Vance come out to our house with Samaritan’s Purse and some of the Grahams. And, you know, he told us that they were coming, and we were glad to see them.”
‘FEMA IS NOT GOOD’: TRUMP ANNOUNCES AGENCY OVERHAUL DURING VISIT TO NORTH CAROLINA
Trump visited western North Carolina on Friday to meet with residents still dealing with the aftermath of Hurricane Helene.
Amber Wright was asked to describe how they have been living in the wake of the hurricane and said that it has been a “true nightmare.”
“We just live day by day, one day at a time, trying to clean up, trying to see what our next steps are, if we’re going to be able to rebuild, if we’re not going to be able to rebuild. Waiting on, you know, insurance or whatever it may be. So it’s been a struggle. It really has,” she told host Will Cain.
North Carolina was struck by Hurricane Helene in late September and caused over 100 deaths in the state, as well as tens of millions in damage. The catastrophic flooding caused by the hurricane was described by FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell as “historic.”
FEMA has faced criticism for its relief efforts post-hurricane. During his visit Friday, Trump said, “FEMA has really let us down. Let the country down. And I don’t know if that’s Biden’s fault or whose fault it is, but we’re going to take over.”
Curtis and Amber Wright said that they had lost “everything they own” in the storm, including all of their farm equipment, and described what they would need in order to rebuild.
“What we’re needing right now is a fair evaluation from our insurance company in a timely manner to pay out,” Curtis Wright said. “Samaritan’s Purse has been a blessing to us,They are willing to fill all the gaps that FEMA and our insurance company has not. We actually have the ability to build on higher ground on another piece of property that connects to our current farm. And that’s what our hopes are, to get fair payout and just to tear down the home that we have because it’s beyond 50% repairable and then start over.”
While in North Carolina, Trump told reporters that he plans to sign an executive order “fundamentally reforming and overhauling FEMA, or maybe getting rid of FEMA,” Trump told reporters, saying, “I think, frankly, FEMA is not good.”
He also promised that his administration would step in to assist the clean-up efforts. “We’re going to fix it, and we’re going to fix it as fast as you can,” Trump said.
Only half of the debris recovery from Hurricane Helene is complete, according to the U.S. Army Corp of Engineers, and thousands of families remain in hotels.
Fox News’ Diana Stacy contributed to this report.
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Southeast
The Turning Point is here; Ole Miss TPUSA creates ‘fire hazard’ with member capacity
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On Oct. 29th, students, faculty and others traveled to visit the oak-lined paths, red-brick halls and campus Lyceum at the University of Mississippi to see Vice President JD Vance at a Turning Point USA event in honor of the organization’s co-founder, Charlie Kirk, alongside his widow, Erika Kirk.
Lesley Lachman, TPUSA chapter president at Ole Miss, remarked that the university is “the forefront of what Turning Point USA chapters look like across the country.
“This really is the point in history where people are motivated and want to get involved in politics, and Gen Z is fired up and ready to go,” Lachman added.
NEWLY LAUNCHED TPUSA CHAPTER CAUSES UPROAR AT MICHIGAN HIGH SCHOOL BEFORE FIRST MEETING
The University of Mississippi expects an immense turnout of attendees for the TPUSA event featuring JD Vance and Erika Kirk. (Fox News Digital )
“The chapter has grown so significantly that every time we hold the chapter meeting, we hit capacity, and it’s a fire hazard, which has been an interesting, wonderful problem to have,” the college junior said.
Citing a “complete surge in numbers” in the Ole Miss TPUSA chapter, which she said started at 200 people during the beginning of her presidency, the group has since grown to 1,500 students.
The law student said “people want to be involved, and they want to be conservative.”
MASSIVE CROWDS LINE UP IN THE RAIN AT OLE MISS FOR TURNING POINT USA EVENT WITH VP VANCE, ERIKA KIRK
Lesley Lachman, Ole Miss TPUSA chapter president, talks about the student organization’s unprecedented growth before JD Vance and Erika Kirk’s appearance on campus. (Fox News Digital )
“[Charlie Kirk’s] death has motivated people not only to get involved on social media, but also to get involved on campus,” she noted before mentioning the nonprofit’s newly minted CEO, Erika Kirk.
“Erika Kirk is a force. She’s a fighter. I think what she’s gone through is unbelievable,” Lachman shared.
“I think her motherly instincts really do give her the capability to be a wonderful leader, and I could see her growing this organization even bigger, especially with this big boom happening.”
TURNING POINT USA CHAPTER DENIED OFFICIAL STATUS BY LOYOLA UNIVERSITY NEW ORLEANS STUDENT GOVERNMENT
The University of Mississippi expects a big turnout for the TPUSA event featuring JD Vance and Erika Kirk. (Fox News Digital)
There have been various reports from chapter presidents at different schools describing the same uptick in student involvement for the organization after Kirk’s Sept. 10 death.
Despite growing support for the nonprofit across the nation, reports of hatred and acts of violence from TPUSA student members continue.
“I think the work we’ve done on campus is really beautiful, but, really, the bigger message of this is the turning point, and the work is going to continue,” Lachman said.
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Southeast
Major blue county in hot seat after violent illegal alien arrested 10 times finally nabbed by ICE
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FIRST ON FOX: Fairfax County officials are in the hot seat after the Trump Department of Homeland Security says the county’s sanctuary policies allowed an illegal alien to walk free despite having been arrested ten times and having 19 criminal charges, including for malicious shooting and unlawful wounding.
The top Fairfax County official is disputing DHS’ characterization of it as a sanctuary county. However, Salvadoran national Jorge Armando Melendez-Gonzalez, 27, was arrested 10 times and has been charged with 19 different crimes in just over seven years, between March 19, 2018, and July 18, 2025, according to DHS.
He was finally arrested by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Oct. 24 after DHS said officials at the Fairfax County Adult Detention Center declined to honor an immigration detainer it lodged against him on July 18.
The July detainer was not the first time Fairfax County ignored an ICE request to hold Melendez-Gonzalez. ICE also lodged a detainer against him in 2023. According to DHS, “Fairfax County officials refused to honor the immigration detainer and released this dangerous criminal alien back into the community.”
ICE NABS 3-TIME DEPORTED ILLEGAL ALIEN CHARGED WITH ASSAULTING A POLICE OFFICER: ‘GOOD RIDDANCE’
Jorge Armando Melendez-Gonzalez, 27, was arrested 10 times and has been charged with 19 different crimes in just over seven years. (Fox News; Fairfax County Police Department)
The agency said Melendez-Gonzalez entered the U.S. illegally in June 2015. An immigration judge ordered his removal from the country just over a year later in October 2016.
Despite this, Melendez-Gonzalez stayed in the country for just over ten years, racking up a long list of offenses in Virginia. He has arrests for three counts of malicious shooting, unlawful wounding, use of a firearm in commission of a felony, assault and battery, assault on a family member, grand larceny, trespassing, possessing a false government identification, public intoxication, disturbing the peace and making a false statement to a law enforcement officer.
He has two felony convictions for unlawful wounding stemming from a 2023 shooting, which carry sentences of three years in confinement. However, his sentence was reduced to a year.
According to a statement from the Fairfax County Police Department, detectives arrested Melendez-Gonzalez in August 2023 in a shooting that injured three men outside a business in Falls Church, Virginia.
Fox News Digital reached out to Fairfax County Commonwealth Attorney Steve Descano, a Democrat, for the reason for Melendez-Gonzalez’s sentence being suspended. A spokesperson for the commonwealth’s attorney’s office declined to comment, referring Fox News Digital to the Fairfax County Sheriff’s Office, which, the spokesperson said, “is responsible for handling ICE detainers.”
SOCIAL MEDIA ERUPTS AFTER ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT SCREAMS DURING VIRAL DC ARREST: ‘WHAT I VOTED FOR’
The Fairfax County, Virginia, Adult Detention Center allegedly ignored an ICE detainer to hold Melendez-Gonzalez. (Fairfax County)
Allyson Conroy, a spokesperson for the sheriff’s office, which runs the Fairfax County Adult Detention Center, told Fox News Digital, “We did not have a judicial warrant on file from ICE for Jorge Armando Melendez-Gonzalez for either date, Aug. 28, 2023, nor for July 18 of this year.”
Conroy said “the sheriff’s office could not maintain custody over Mr. Melendez-Gonzalez.”
Regarding the suspension of Melendez-Gonalez’s sentence, Conroy said that decision “is in the discretion of the judge or the assigned commonwealth’s attorney. You should contact those individuals for further information.”
Fox News Digital also reached out to representatives for Fairfax County regarding the Fairfax County Circuit Court’s decision but did not immediately receive a response.
Fairfax County Chairman Jeffrey McKay, also a Democrat, responded to Fox News Digital’s request for comment, saying, “Fairfax County, through the Board of Supervisors, does not control or make decisions regarding ICE detainers or judicial sentencing; those responsibilities fall to the sheriff and the courts, respectively.”
He said Fairfax County “does not consider itself a sanctuary jurisdiction and continues to follow all applicable federal and state laws.”
ILLEGAL MIGRANT WITH HISTORY OF CHILD ABUSE, DOMESTIC VIOLENCE ALLEGEDLY TRIED TO RAM ICE AGENTS IN COLORADO
Steve Descano, commonwealth’s attorney-elect in Fairfax County, Virginia, speaks at an event at the Center for American Progress about Virginia’s newly elected progressive prosecutors Dec. 17, 2019. (Getty Images)
DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin, however, placed the blame squarely on the county’s sanctuary policies.
“These sanctuary policies make Virginians less safe,” McLaughlin told Fox News Digital.
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“Fairfax County refused to honor two ICE arrest detainers and chose to release this criminal back onto Virginia’s streets. Virginia sanctuary politicians protected this criminal illegal alien and allowed him to terrorize American citizens,” she added.
“Thanks to the brave men and women of ICE law enforcement, this serial violent criminal with 10 previous arrests is now off of Virginia’s streets.”
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Southeast
Erika Kirk delivers raw, faith-filled tribute to late husband at Ole Miss: ‘I slept on his side of the bed’
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Erika Kirk walked onto the stage at the University of Mississippi (Ole Miss) Wednesday night to a packed house for her first Turning Point USA campus appearance since the murder of her husband, Charlie Kirk.
“It’s hard not to cry after watching,” she said of the video tribute that played before she took the microphone. “I haven’t seen that… that video since that day happened.”
“Being on campus right now for me is a spiritual reclaiming of territory,” she said. “There is a lot of symbolism in today. It’s Wednesday, seven weeks. And the more that I am coming to grips with the permanency of this nightmare, the more that I am starting to realize and witness that the enemy, he doesn’t want you.”
“He wants your territory. He wants your influence. And I could just hear Charlie in my heart. I could just hear him say, ‘Go reclaim that territory, babe. Go — the battles that God’s love conquers.’ And that’s why I’m here today,” she added.
TURNING POINT USA ELECTS ERIKA KIRK AS NEW CEO, CHAIR OF THE BOARD FOLLOWING CHARLIE KIRK’S ASSASSINATION
Erika Kirk speaks during a “This Is the Turning Point” campus tour event at the University of Mississippi, in Oxford, Miss., Wednesday. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)
Erika thanked the students who filled the arena, many wearing “Freedom” T-shirts like the one she wore at the podium. “You have no idea how helpful it is to have all of you in my life, because you help me feel even more deeply connected to my husband,” she told them.
She recalled how Charlie made a point at every Turning Point USA event to stop and talk with student leaders. “He would ask you what your name is, what you’re studying, what issues are going on on campus,” she said. “He wanted you to know he was investing in you: into your chapter, into your school. That was a pulse point for him.”
“Earn your voice,” she urged. “You are the courageous generation. That’s what you are. All of you, Gen Z, you are the courageous generation. Make him proud.”
WHO IS ERIKA KIRK?: WHAT TO KNOW ABOUT THE LATE CHARLIE KIRK’S WIDOW FROM THEIR LOVE STORY TO HIS LEGACY
Erika Kirk, Charlie Kirk’s widow, speaks during a Turning Point USA event where Vice President JD Vance also spoke at the University of Mississippi, in Oxford, Miss., Wednesday. (Jonathan Ernst/Pool/AFP via Getty Images)
“I lost my friend. I lost my best friend,” she said. “If you’re nervous about standing up for the truth, the murder of my husband puts into perspective all those fears. My husband never went with the flow. He believed the harder path was always the right one, because comfort doesn’t change the world.”
She shared for the first time with the audience present that for weeks after Charlie’s murder she avoided their bedroom at home.
“It took me a while to even just make it back into our bedroom,” she said. “I used to sprint from the opening door into the bathroom and sprint out. I was not ready to walk into our bedroom yet, and when I was finally able to sleep in our bed for the first time, I slept on his side of the bed.”
ERIKA KIRK SAYS LATE HUSBAND’S DEATH SPARKED ‘REVIVAL’ AT ARIZONA MEMORIAL
Attendees listen as Vice President JD Vance speaks during a “This Is the Turning Point” campus tour event at Ole Miss, in Oxford, Miss., Wednesday. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)
From that spot, she said, she finally saw what Charlie saw every morning, the framed words on the wall: “They will be known by the boldness of their faith.”
“He saw that every single morning he woke up,” Erika said. “I didn’t, because I was on the other side, facing the window. But from his side, that’s what he saw first.”
On his desk, she added, were three questions Charlie had written out and asked himself each day: “What is something I can do for someone today? What is something I can do to add value to the world today? How can I honor God today?”
“Those were his action points for courage,” Erika said. “Ask yourself those questions every day, and I promise you, you will get courage. What death amplifies even more is that you only get one life. So live like it matters.”
“Love your family fearlessly. Love your spouse fearlessly. Love this country,” she said. “Defend her and serve our God. And don’t think that it’s someone else’s role to do it. You do it. You do it.” The audience broke into applause.
“This moment can either be your breaking point or your wake-up call,” she said. “Essentially, your turning point.”
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She then introduced Vice President JD Vance, a friend of her late husband, calling him someone who “understands the fight that we’re up against and can articulate that in a way that transcends race and background.”
“There will never be another Charlie,” she said, “but I know he’d be proud to see us here tonight.”
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