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Worst flooding in 20 years hits Hawaii; evacuations say 'LEAVE NOW'

Catastrophic flooding keeps hitting Hawaii astwo back-to-back storms pummeled the islandswith rain and damaging winds.

USA TODAY

Authorities say it's the worst flooding the state has seen in 20 years, as torrents of water wash out homes, damage roads and threaten to bust through a dam.

The threat of the dam failure in northern Oahu prompted an emergency evacuation of thousands on the morning of March 20. TheHawaii Emergency Management Agencylater clarified that the 120-year-old dam had not failed but "is at imminent risk of failure."

Evacuations were ordered for Haleʻiwa and Waialua, where an alert warned that all roads out are at risk of "imminent failure."

"LEAVE NOW," the alert said.

Gov. Josh Green said there have been no deaths or people unaccounted for during the flooding, but called it the worst the state has seen since the early 2000s. Some 200 people have been rescued from the flooding and about 10 presented at hospitals with hypothermia, he said.

"This is a major threat to our people and to our state," Green said at a news conference March 20.

The morning of March 21, the National Weather Service in Honolulu said two systems are continuing to drive rain (sometimes as heavy as 2 to 4 inches per hour), thunderstorms and an increased risk of flash flooding through the weekend. A flood watch was in place for the whole state through the afternoon of March 22.

The Wahiawā Dam near the Schofield Barracks on Oahu is at imminent threat of failure, the Hawaii Emergency Management Agency reported Friday, after heavy rain.

The dam is in Central Oahu near the Schofield Barracks, off the Kamehameha Highway. Assembly areas had been established for people required to evacuate or who were unable to get home. Oahu (Honolulu County) has 13 dams, according toUSA TODAY's dam-tracking database. Of those, seven have a "high" or "significant" hazard potential classification. The Wahiawa dam is private, built in 1906 and used primarily for irrigation. It's considered in poor condition, with a high hazard potential.

Water in the Kaukonahua Stream near Wailua just northwest of the reservoir rose more than 10.5 feet on March 20, several inches higher than it had reached on March 13, according to weather service data.

Up to 10 inches of additional rainfall was forecast for the island of Oahu from March 20 through the morning of March 23, the National Weather Service reported.

On March 20, the weather service reported that a foot of water was flowing over a road one mile east of Waialua, inundating several cars and homes. "Civilians had to be rescued and transported on a bulldozer," the bulletin stated.

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Kona storms – Hawaii's winter cyclones

A series of low pressure systems have struck Hawaii in March. They're a winter phenomenon, often called kona lows or kona storms, for the Hawaiian word "kona" for leeward. The winter storms typically impact the leeward side of the islands that are usually sheltered from tradewinds and intense rains, according to Steven Businger, a professor in the meteorology department at the University of Hawaii.

On average, one to two kona storms impact Hawaii during the November-to-March season, but it's very rare for two to form within the same month, let alone within a week, AccuWeather meteorologists said.

The first round of stormsimpacted the islands from March 10 to March 16, the outlet reported. It brought local rainfall totals of over 4 feet.

Worst flooding in 20 years

The flooding in Hawaii is the worst the state has seen since the 2004 Manoa Flood, Green said. A flood on Oct. 30, 2004, was one of several flash floods amid a storm that brought heavy rain. Rain peaked at a rate of 1.29 inches in a 15-minute span and 8.71 inches in 6 hours.

Manoa Stream overflowed in several areas. The worst flooding happened when a flood wave tore through a residential area and onto the University of Hawaii at Manoa campus. Floodwaters destroyed irreplaceable documents in the basement of Hamilton Library and caused damage to several laboratories with critical experiments, according to the National Weather Service.

No deaths or injuries were reported, but damage reached about $85 million at the time. About 120 homes were damaged, and a foot bridge over Manoa Stream was destroyed.

This footbridge over the Manoa Stream was destroyed during a flash flood event on Oct. 30, 2004. Flooding in Hawaii in March 2026 is the worst the state has seen in over 20 years since the 2004 flooding in Manoa, Gov. Josh Green said.

Damage from the March 2026 flooding could total $1 billion, Green said. That includes damage to numerous homes, roads, schools, airports and a hospital on Maui, he said.

One home on Kaihulo Drive in Mokuleia near Waialua was swept onto the beach in a flash flood on the morning of March 20.

"Remnants of the house appear to be split in half, and parts of the house appear to have collapsed," according to a storm report from the weather service.

A road in Makaha Valley on Oahu was closed in both directions March 20 after part of it collapsed, sending vehicles over the edge, another storm report said.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Catastrophic flooding in Hawaii as Oahu faces evacuations, dam fears

Worst flooding in 20 years hits Hawaii; evacuations say 'LEAVE NOW'

Catastrophic flooding keeps hitting Hawaii astwo back-to-back storms pummeled the islandswith rain and damaging winds. ...
Here's how much more money Caitlin Clark is set to make under the new WNBA CBA

The new WNBA collective bargaining agreement has arrivedand, once ratified, will see player salaries skyrocket across the board. That includes Caitlin Clark, whose popularity was definitely a factor in the revenue growth that made the deal possible.

Yahoo Sports

For perspective on how large an increase we're talking about, consider that the new WNBA minimum salary of $270,000 is larger than last year's $249,000 supermax for players. The league has also instituted a measure that will see some of its lowest-paid players see their incomes grow significantly if they see early success, like Clark.

The Indiana Fever star made $76,535 as a rookie in 2024 and $78,066 in 2025, figures dwarfed by her considerable endorsement income. PerSpotrac, she would have been due $85,973 for her third season in 2026 and still a year away from restricted free agency.

Now, she's set to make$530,000in 2026. That's viaESPN's Alexa Phillippou, who reported the number as an example of the new CBA provision called "EPIC" (Exceptional Performance on Initial Contract) that will fast-track high-performing players to max and supermax deals.

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Draft your Yahoo Fantasy Baseball team for the 2026 MLB Season

Because she has already made an All-WNBA team, Clark could see her salary grow to a projected max of$1.3 millionin 2027. After that, she could sign for a$1.7 millionsupermax in 2028.

How much Clark makes beyond that is dependent on the WNBA. The league's new salary cap will be based on league revenue, which the players pushed for in CBA negotiations. Under current projections, the top salary could be increased to $2.4 million by 2032.

COLLEGE PARK, GEORGIA - SEPTEMBER 18:  Caitlin Clark #22 of the Indiana Fever celebrates their 87-85 win in game three of the first round of WNBA Playoffs between the Indiana Fever and Atlanta Dream at Gateway Center Arena on September 18, 2025 in College Park, Georgia.  NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement.  (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

There are also a number of bonuses Clark will be eligible for down the line. Making All-WNBA first team again would net her $30,000 in 2026 and an MVP would get her $60,000. Those bonuses will also start scaling with league revenue growth in 2027.

All of that is a considerable raise for Clark. It's also likely far less than she would get if she were to hit the open market with no salary cap, but that's the sacrifice top players make when a max salary is instituted.

Like she did before this CBA, Clark will make up for it with endorsement money.Sportico estimatedher income in that realm to be $16 million in 2025. Despite her negligible salary, that still made her the sixth-highest paid female athlete overall.

Here's how much more money Caitlin Clark is set to make under the new WNBA CBA

The new WNBA collective bargaining agreement has arrivedand, once ratified, will see player salaries skyrocket across the...
March Madness conference records: How Big Ten, SEC, Big 12 and other fared in Round 1

In a college sports landscape where resume is so important, loyalties don't just lie with teams anymore. They lie with conferences as well, even if it's to push an agenda.

USA TODAY Sports

With that in mind, every conference wants to believe it is the creme de la creme. The SEC showed its depth for the second year in a row by sending 10 teams to theMen's NCAA Tournament, theBig Tenfielded nine, and the Big 12 sent eight. The ACC also sent eight teams, whereas the Big East sent just three.

MARCH MADNESS SCORES:See the big shots, moments, highlights in today's first round

Other multi-bid conferences include the West Coast Conference, the MAC, and the Atlantic 10.

Of course, beyond them are the auto-bid conference tournament winners, the single-bid conferences who annually send one team. How did these teams fare, and who is moving on to the second round? Here's a breakdown of the records across the board for all 31 college basketball conferences.

Power 4 Men's NCAA Tournament records

The SEC is leading the way among the Power 4, with only Georgia and Missouri suffering losses in the opening round. First Four team Texas was able to defeat former Big 12 conference-mate BYU and AJ Dybantsa, while Tennessee unseated regular season undefeated darlings Miami (Ohio).

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In the Big Ten, Wisconsin suffered an upset at the hands of High Point, whereas Ohio State lost to TCU to open the tournament. The rest of the conference was able to advance. The Big 12 lost BYU and UCF, while the rest of the conference advanced despite scares to Kansas and TCU. The ACC struggled, with Duke being forced to play all 40 against Siena and North Carolina suffering a devastating loss at the hands of VCU.

Other multi-bid conference records in March Madness

One and only one conference stands undefeated after two days of March Madness: The dreaded Atlantic 10.

Indeed, Josh Schertz's Saint Louis squadcompletely dismantled Georgiain the first round, while VCU pulled off the aforementionedcomeback against North Carolina. The West Coast Conference lost Saint Mary's and Santa Clara in Round 1, while Gonzaga continues to dance, and the MAC dropped Miami and Akron.

While the Big East saw UConn and St. John's move on, Villanova lost to Utah State, capping off the Wildcats' season.

Atlantic 10

Other conferences March Madness records

Beyond the eight conferences to send multiple teams, there were 23 other conferences represented. Of those, the only single-bid conferences to advance to the second round were the Big South's High Point, which stunned No. 5 Wisconsin, and the Mountain West's Utah State, which took down Villanova as a No. 9 seed. That puts them at 2-21 as far as single-bids go.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:March Madness records by conference: How Big Ten, SEC, others fared

March Madness conference records: How Big Ten, SEC, Big 12 and other fared in Round 1

In a college sports landscape where resume is so important, loyalties don't just lie with teams anymore. They lie ...
Tennessee plans rare execution of a woman. She's fighting back.

Christa Gail Pikewas just 18 years old when she committed a crime that dominated headlines for years: She tortured and murdered her romantic rival in Tennessee and later showed off a piece of the 19-year-old woman's skull to schoolmates.

USA TODAY

The killing in the woods of Knoxville demonstrated a brutality and callousness rarely seen in a woman, let alone one so young. Now 30 years later, Pike is back to making headlines as the state of Tennessee prepares to execute her.

Pike, who just turned 50 on March 10, is set to be executed by lethal injection about six months from now on Sept. 30 for the murder of 19-year-old Colleen Slemmer. On Jan. 12, 1995, Pike and two others lured Slemmer into the woods and carried out a ritualistic murder that lasted about an hour.

If the execution moves forward, Pike will be the first woman put to death in Tennesseein more than 200 yearsand only the19th woman executedin modern U.S. history.

She's now fighting back and suing the state to stop her execution.

Christa Gail Pike looks around as someone enters the courtroom where a hearing for a new trial for her was being held on Jan. 12, 2001.

Pike's attorneysfiled a lawsuitin a Tennessee court in January challenging the state's lethal execution method, arguing that it violates her religious beliefs and constitutional rights, and could cause her excessive pain. In response to Pike's arguments, the state says in a court filing on Thursday, March 19, that she hasn't presented any evidence that the lethal injection presents an unconstitutional risk to her and that death row inmates have never been guaranteed a pain-free execution.

During Pike's time behind bars, she has taken responsibility for the murder and has "changed drastically," she wrote in a 2023letter she wrote to The Tennessean− part of the USA TODAY Network.

"It sickens me now to think that someone as loving and compassionate as myself had the ability to commit such a crime," she wrote.

USA TODAY is looking at Pike's arguments for a reprieve from execution, what the state has to say about them and how the victim's mother feels.

What was Christa Gail Pike convicted of?

Christa Gail Pike and Colleen Slemmer were both students at the Knoxville Job Corps, a career-training program, when Pike began dating a 17-year-old boy in the program. She later came to fear that Slemmer was trying to steal him, prosecutors told jurors at trial.

Pike, her friend and the boyfriend, lured Slemmer away from the Job Corps center and into the woods before the attack, largely carried out by Pike over an hour-long period on Jan. 12, 1995, according to court records.

Pike later bragged about killing Slemmer, telling another student at the center that she had cut the teenager's throat six times with a box cutter, cut her back with a meat cleaver, carved a pentagram into her chest, and continued the violence even though Slemmer "begged" her to stop, according to court records.

Pike said she had "thrown a large piece of asphalt at the victim's head," believed to be a fatal blow, and kept a skull fragment, later showing it off to fellow students, court records say.

Pike was convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to death. Pike's boyfriend, Tadaryl Shipp, was convicted of first-degree murder, sentenced to life in prison and recently was denied parole. Pike's friend, Shadolla Peterson − who prosecutors say kept watch during the attack − testified against Pike and was sentenced to probation.

Colleen Slemmer is pictured

Who is Christa Gail Pike?

Christa Gail Pike, 50, is the only woman on Tennessee's death row and has been living there for 30 years following her sentencing in April 1996. Pike and her mother, Carissa Hansen, sobbed uncontrollably in the courtroom during the sentencing, according to archived news reports.

Pike's trial attorneys had tried to mitigate her crimes by describing Pike as a cast-off child from a dysfunctional family who bounced between her divorced parents' houses depending on who was sick of her at the time, according to an archived news report in the Knoxville News-Sentinel, part of the USA TODAY Network.

Hansen told jurors that she was a bad mother who smoked pot with her daughter and even allowed Pike to have a live-in boyfriend at the age of 14. "I should be the one in her seat. I should be punished for her crime," Hansen said, according to the News-Sentinel.

Christa Gail Pike is pictured at a hearing on July 30, 2007, at the age of 31. Her attorneys were working to get her off of death row at the time.

A University of Tennessee police officer countered the sympathetic testimony, telling jurors that Pike returned to the scene of the crime after Slemmer's body had been found and "seemed amused."

"She was giggling," he testified, the newspaper said.

Pike's current attorneys arguethat had she been tried today, Pike never should have been sentenced to death because of her young age and mental illness at the time of the murder, and her disturbing history of being sexually abused as a child, starting before she could even talk. They believe she deserves life in prison without the possibility of parole.

On Pike's website, created by supporters who are arguing for her clemency, Pike says that she doesn't want to use her childhood trauma as an excuse for Slemmer's murder.

"There is no excuse for what I did ... I take full responsibility for my actions, and regret everything that happened that night," she says. "I only want my situation to be looked at now through the eyes of logic instead of anger and answered the question of if I deserve to die for a crime committed by three people."

Christa Gail Pike sues Tennessee officials over execution

In a lawsuit filed against the state in January, Pike's attorneys argue that Tennessee's lethal injection method is likely to cause her unnecessary pain and added terror and suffering, a violation of the U.S. Constitution's protections against cruel and unusual punishment.

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One of Pike's medical conditions,thrombocytosis, can lead to unusual bleeding and "death by drowning in one's own blood," they argue, citing a report by an anesthesiology expert. Additionally, Pike cannot request to be executed by the state's only other approved method − electrocution − because doing so would violate her Buddhist beliefs, which prevent her from "participating in any process leading to her own death," her attorneys argue.

They also say that the state could botch Pike's lethal injection, citing concerns over the state's new execution protocol.

Tennessee began using the new protocol in 2025, three years after the statehalted all executionsover a "technical oversight" in the lethal injection ofdeath row inmate Oscar Franklin Smith. The new lethal injection protocol usesthe single drug pentobarbital, as opposed to three drugs under the previous method.

Christa Gail Pike is pictured.

Pike's attorneys cite a number of "botched" executions using only pentobarbital,including that of Byron Blackin Tennessee for the murder of his ex-girlfriend and her two daughters in 1988.

Reporters who witnessed the execution,including one from the Tennessean, reported that Black appeared to be in pain and distress during the lethal injection, which is required to be free from cruel and unusual punishment under the U.S. Constitution.

"It's hurting so bad," Black told his spiritual adviser at one point during the execution, the Tennessean reported.

Pike's attorneys slammed the state's new lethal injection protocol as being "plagued with the same issues that have marked botched executions for decades: secrecy, intentional omission, inattention to detail, and untrained and unlicensed prison personnel attempting to fill medical role."

What does the state say about Pike's lawsuit

Regarding Pike's arguments about cruel and unusual punishment, established case law says that "the Eighth Amendment does not guarantee a prisoner a painless death" and that "some risk of pain is inherent in any method of execution − no matter how humane," according to the state's response to Pike's lawsuit filed on Thursday, March, 19.

The state also defended its lethal injection protocol, citing "the overwhelming history affirming the use of lethal injection generally and pentobarbital specifically."

Besides, Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti said that Pike "carried around a piece of Colleen Slemmer's shattered skull in her pocket and showed it to her friends as a trophy after luring Colleen into the woods to torture and murder her."

"Pike has offered nothing but speculation that the well-established, constitutional lethal injection method poses any unique risk in her case," he said in a statement to USA TODAY. "We wish Pike's commitment to the sanctity of life had arrived in time to save Colleen Slemmer."

UT forensic anthropologist Dr. Murray Marks testifies about the wounds to Colleen A. Slemmer's skull during Christa Gail Pike's murder trial in Knox County Criminal Court on March 25, 1996.

Slemmer's mother, May Martinez, has been vehement in her support of the death penalty for Pike. She has fought for decades to obtain the last remaining piece of her daughter's skull so that it can be buried with the rest of the teen's remains; investigators have been holding it as evidence in the case.

"My heart breaks every single day because I keep reliving it and reliving it, and I can't no more, and I want this to happen before I die,"Martinez told WBIR-TVin 2021.

"There's not a day goes by that I don't think about Colleen or how she died and how rough it was," Martinez continued. "I just want Christa down so I can end it, relieve my daughter, so she finally can be resting."

May Martinez, Colleen Slemmer's mother, is pictured.

How many women have been executed in the U.S.?

Just 18 women have been executed in the United States since 1976, compared to 1,623 men, according to the Death Penalty Information Center. That means women represent just 1% of all modern U.S. executions.

Pike is not only the only woman on Tennessee's death row, but she's among just 48 female death row inmates in the nation. That's compared to a male population just under 2,100 − roughly 2%.

The last execution of a woman in the United States was that ofAmber McClaughlin in 2023. McClaughlin, who was the first transgender person executed in the nation, was convicted as a man of raping and fatally stabbing 45-year-old Beverly Guenther on Nov. 20, 2003. Guenther was McLaughlin's ex-girlfriend.

How many women has Tennessee executed?

Citing the Death Penalty Information Center, Pike's attorneys say thatonly three womenhave ever been executed in Tennessee.

They list the hangings of three Black women in 1807, 1808 and 1819, though they didn't identify their crimes. Only one of the women's names is known: that of Molly Holcomb in 1807. Two of them are listed as slavesby deathpenaltyusa.org, which names the crimes as murder, though many slaves were unjustly killed themselves over false accusations or for no reason at all.

Pike is both the last person in Tennessee sent to death row for a crime they committed when they were 18 and is the last woman sentenced to death in the state,reported the Tennessean.

Contributing: Evan Mealins and Kelly Puente, The Tennessean

Amanda Lee Myers is a senior crime reporter who covers breaking news, cold cases and executions for USA TODAY. Follow her on X at @amandaleeusat.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Tennessee plans rare execution of a woman. She's fighting back.

Tennessee plans rare execution of a woman. She's fighting back.

Christa Gail Pikewas just 18 years old when she committed a crime that dominated headlines for years: She tortured and mu...
Iranian and Romanian charged after trying to enter UK's nuclear submarine base

LONDON (AP) — An Iranian man and a Romanian woman have been charged after trying to enter the naval base in Scotland that is home to Britain's nuclear-armed submarines, police said Saturday,

Associated Press

Police Scotland said the 34-year-old man and 31-year-old woman will appear at Dumbarton Sheriff Court on Monday.

As is customary in Scotland, police did not release the suspects' names or the charges they face before their court hearing.

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The pair were detained on Thursday after attempting to enter HM Naval Base Clyde, about 40 miles (64 kilometers) northwest of Glasgow.

The base, also known as Faslane, is home to the core of the U.K.'s submarine fleet, including the vessels that carry nuclear weapons.

Britain has been a nuclear power since the 1950s. Since the 1990s, its nuclear deterrent has consisted of four Royal Navy submarines armed with Trident missiles.

Iranian and Romanian charged after trying to enter UK's nuclear submarine base

LONDON (AP) — An Iranian man and a Romanian woman have been charged after trying to enter the naval base in Scotland that...

 

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