Carrie Anne Fleming, ‘Supernatural’ actress, dies at 51 of cancer

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Carrie Anne Fleming, best known for her roles in “Supernatural” and “iZombie,” has died following a courageous battle with cancer. She was 51.

“She died peacefully with her loved ones by her side,” a representative for Fleming told Fox News Digital in a statement. “She is survived by her daughter. It was a great privilege to have known Carrie. She was a beautiful soul, inspiring, and above all, kind. She will be greatly missed.”

Fleming died in Canada, her rep confirmed.

HOLLYWOOD STARS WHO DIED IN 2026

Carrie Anne Fleming

Actress Carrie Fleming, here in 2014, has died after battling cancer. She was 51.  (Andrew Chin/Getty Images)

Earlier this month, Jim Beaver — who portrayed Fleming’s onscreen husband Bobby Singer on “Supernatural” — paid tribute to his late co-star on social media.

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“She was a powerhouse of vitality and goodwill and amazingly good nature, with a rapturous laugh and an utterly adorable personality that didn’t seem to have an off switch,” Beaver wrote on Facebook.

Beaver told Variety that Fleming died of breast cancer complications. 

Fleming was born on Aug. 16, 1974, in Nova Scotia, Canada.

Carrie Anne Fleming

One of Fleming’s most notable roles was Karen Singer in “Supernatural” for three episodes.  ( Andrew Chin/Getty Images)

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The actress landed her first onscreen role in the 1994 TV movie “Viper,” according to The Hollywood Reporter. She later received an uncredited appearance in the 1996 comedy “Happy Gilmore.” 

However, Fleming’s most notable onscreen appearances include her role as Candy in “iZombie” from 2015 to 2019, and her role as Karen Singer in “Supernatural” for three episodes. 

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Fleming also appeared in several British Columbia stage productions, including “Noises Off,” “Romeo and Juliet,” “Steel Magnolias” and “Fame,” according to Variety. 



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Tycoon2FA phishing platform returns after recent police disruption

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Tycoon2FA phishing platforms returns after recent police disruption

The Tycoon2FA phishing-as-a-service (PhaaS) platform that Europol and partners disrupted on March 4 has already returned to previously observed activity levels.

Microsoft led the technical disruption, which involved seizing 330 domains part of Tycoon2FA’s backbone infrastructure that included control panels and phishing pages used in attacks.

However, the disruption caused by the law enforcement was short-lived, as CrowdStrike noticed the cybercrime service return to normal operational volumes within days.

“Falcon Complete observed a short-term decrease in the volume of Tycoon2FA campaign activity following the takedown, with daily volumes on March 4 and March 5, 2026, reducing to 25% of pre-disruption levels,” reads CrowdStrike’s report.

“However, this volume subsequently returned to pre-disruption levels, with daily levels of cloud compromise active remediations returning to early 2026 levels.”

First documented by Sekoia roughly two years ago, Tycoon2FA appeared online as a PhaaS platform dedicated to targeting Microsoft 365 and Gmail accounts, featuring adversary-in-the-middle mechanisms that enable bypassing two-factor authentication (2FA) protections.

A month later, Trustwave reported that Tycoon2FA’s operators were actively improving the platform, adding new, advanced features, and enticing more cybercriminals to purchase access.

Tycoon2FA is a significant actor on the phishing scene, with Microsoft reporting that it generated 30 million phishing emails per month, accounting for 62% of all emails blocked by the tech giant.

According to CrowdStrike, Tycoon2FA is back in business using largely unchanged techniques, tactics, and procedures (TTPs), and supported a diverse set of illegal activities, like business email compromise (BEC), email thread hijacking, cloud account takeovers, and malicious SharePoint links.

After the disruption action, Tycoon2FA has been used in malicious email campaigns that relied on malicious URLs and shortener services, legitimate platforms such as presentation tools, where redirection mechanisms are abused, and also compromised domains.

AI-generated decoy web pages used in Tycoon2FA attacks
AI-generated decoy web pages used in Tycoon2FA attacks
Source: CrowdStrike

Interestingly, some of the old infrastructure remained active, indicating that the disruption was incomplete, while new phishing domains and IP addresses were registered quickly following the law enforcement operation.

Regarding the observed post-compromise activity, this includes the creation of inbox rules, hidden folders for fraud emails, and preparation for BEC operations.

Ultimately, CrowdStrike comments that, without arrests or physical seizures, it’s easy for cybercriminals to recover and replace the impacted infrastructure. As long as the demand from the phishing ecosystem is high, the motive for PhaaS platform operators remains unchanged.

Malware is getting smarter. The Red Report 2026 reveals how new threats use math to detect sandboxes and hide in plain sight.

Download our analysis of 1.1 million malicious samples to uncover the top 10 techniques and see if your security stack is blinded.



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Speaker Johnson pressures Schumer as DHS shutdown chaos hits major airports

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Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., is ratcheting up pressure on Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Democrats in the upper chamber as the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) shutdown creeps into a sixth week with no end in sight.

House GOP leaders are poised to hold votes Thursday on a pair of bills aimed at putting Democrats on the spot for the shutdown, Fox News Digital has learned.

Johnson is having the House vote for a third time on funding DHS through the end of the fiscal year on Sept. 30. The bill is based on a bipartisan deal struck earlier this year, but Democrats walked away from it en masse in protest of President Donald Trump’s strategy to crack down on illegal immigration.

The second measure is a nonbinding resolution led by Rep. Ryan Mackenzie, R-Pa., expressing support for all agencies under DHS’s purview.

DHS SHUTDOWN TIED FOR SECOND-LONGEST EVER AS DEMS AGAIN BLOCK FUNDING AMID AIRPORT CHAOS, TERRORISM CONCERNS

a split image of Speaker Mike Johnson and Leader Chuck Schumer

Speaker Mike Johnson is putting pressure on Senate Democrats with a pair of votes related to the DHS shutdown. (J. Scott Applewhite/AP Photo; Allison Robbert/AP Photo)

It comes as the DHS shutdown, now in its 38th day, is wreaking havoc for airline travelers across the country. Major airports in Houston, New Orleans, New York City, and other areas are seeing hours-long delays caused by Transportation Security Administration (TSA) staffing shortages, with scores of TSA agents calling out of work amid missed paychecks due to the shutdown.

TSA agents are poised to miss their paychecks this Friday, the second full pay period missed of the ongoing shutdown. 

The TSA is one of several agencies that operate under DHS, along with Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE), Customs and Border Patrol (CBP), the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), and the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), among others.

EXCLUSIVE: HOUSE REPUBLICANS TO HOLD HEARING ON DHS SHUTDOWN RISKS AMID TRAVEL SURGE

“Anyone waiting for hours just to miss their flights will not soon forget, and Republicans are going to continue reminding Americans that it’s the Democrats putting their safety at risk just to protect criminal illegal aliens,” a House GOP leadership aide told Fox News Digital on Monday.

“The problem for Democrats in their latest shutdown is they are hurting American citizens in an effort to protect criminal illegals and reopen our border, as evidenced by their own words and bills they are pushing to defund Customs and Border Patrol.”

people standing in bush airport security line

Travelers wait in long security lines at George Bush Intercontinental Airport in March 2026. (Lekan Oyekanmi/AP Photo)

Negotiations on funding DHS have ground to a halt with Republicans rejecting key demands from Democrats for ICE and CBP reforms — specifically requiring judicial warrants for immigration operations and banning agents from wearing face masks — as non-starters.

Trump also recently threw a wrench in the talks by demanding Republicans not accept any offer from Democrats until left-wing lawmakers agree to advance an unrelated election integrity measure called the SAVE America Act.

In the Senate, at least a handful of Democrats are needed to overcome a filibuster and advance any DHS funding legislation. 

The House, which operates on a simple majority, passed congressional negotiators’ initial DHS funding bill twice — and will likely do so a third time on Thursday.

The third iteration of the bill is being led by Rep. Juan Ciscomani, R-Ariz.

“This standoff has gone on long enough,” Ciscomani told Fox News Digital on Monday. “The men and women who keep our country safe here at home are a critical part of our national security—they need to get paid, now. These professionals should never be caught in the middle of political games, yet that’s exactly what has happened. It’s shameful.”

U.S. Capitol building

United States Capitol building is seen in Washington, D.C., United States on Dec. 2, 2024.  (Celal Gunes/Anadolu via Getty Images)

The nonbinding resolution honoring DHS is also likely to pass, but it’s unclear how much Democratic support it would get. 

“Instead of joining the bipartisan majority in supporting full funding for DHS, including commonsense reforms like body cameras and de-escalation training, Democratic leadership is afraid of the radical ‘Defund ICE’ movement and unwilling to compromise in order to protect the American people,” Mackenzie told Fox News Digital. “This situation is unacceptable, and it must end immediately.”

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Democrats have tried to push legislation to fund DHS except for agencies related to Trump’s immigration crackdown, efforts that have been shunned by the GOP.

Both Schumer and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., have argued that ICE’s controversial operations in Minneapolis and other blue cities are reason enough to block any proposal that funds further immigration operations.



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Kelly Reilly and Cole Hauser star in ‘Yellowstone’ spinoff set in Texas

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Beth Dutton and Rip Wheeler are returning to the small screen for the “Yellowstone” spinoff, “Dutton Ranch.”

Kelly Reilly and Cole Hauser will be reprising their roles in the new series focused on their romantic relationship. Paramount+ released a teaser trailer as well as first images of Hauser and Reilly in the new series.

According to a press release, Beth and Rip leave Montana behind for life in Texas. In some of the stills, Hauser and Reilly are seen riding horses and dancing. However, it doesn’t seem like it will be smooth sailing for Rip and Beth.

Rip and Beth Dutton

Cole Hauser and Kelly Reilly are reprising their roles in “Dutton Ranch.” (Emerson Miller/Paramount+)

“As Beth and Rip fight to build a future together — far from the ghosts of Yellowstone — they collide with brutal new realities and a ruthless rival ranch that will stop at nothing to protect its empire,” a press release states. “In South Texas, blood runs deeper, forgiveness is fleeting, and the cost of survival might just be your soul.”

MICHELLE PFEIFFER AND KURT RUSSELL REVEALED IN FIRST IMAGES FROM ‘YELLOWSTONE’ SPINOFF ‘THE MADISON’

Alongside Hauser and Reilly, “Dutton Ranch” stars Juan Pablo Raba, Jai Courtney, J.R. Villarreal, Marc Menchaca, Natalie Alyn Lind, and Ed Harris.

Fans cannot wait for the “Yellowstone” sequel to release.

Kelly Reilly Cole Hauser

Kelly Reilly as Beth Dutton and Cole Hauser as Rip Wheeler in “Dutton Ranch.” (Lo Smith/Paramount+)

“Excuse me ???!!!!! This is what we’ve been waiting for!!!! So exciting!!!” one user commented on the “Dutton Ranch” official Instagram page. Another added, “WELCOME TO TEXAS BABY.”

A third user commented, “Never been so excited for a series to launch.” Another user wrote, “This show is about to break ALL the records.”

Beth Dutton, Rip Wheeler

Cole Hauser as Rip Wheeler and Kelly Reilly as Beth Dutton in “Dutton Ranch,” episode 2, season 1. (Emerson Miller/Paramount+.)

Annette Bening will be joining the cast as Beulah Jackson, “the powerful, cunning and charming head of a major ranch in Texas.” Finn Little will also be returning in his role as Carter, the young boy Beth and Rip took under their wing.

The show will premiere globally on Paramount+ on May 15.

Kelly Reilly, Ed Harris

Kelly Reilly as Beth Dutton and Ed Harris as Everett McKinney in “Dutton Ranch.” (Emerson Miller/Paramount+)

Beth Dutton

Kelly Reilly as Beth Dutton in “Dutton Ranch.” (Emerson Miller/Paramount+)

‘LANDMAN’ STAR ANDY GARCIA SAYS ‘MAVERICK’ TAYLOR SHERIDAN HAS REFRESHING APPROACH TO HOLLYWOOD

Other first-look shots show Harris reading a bible in church and Courtney sitting on chair, smoking a cigarette indoors. Reilly was seen standing in the middle of the road at night time in one of the images and Benning was seen deplaning a private jet in another shot.

Cole Hauser riding a horse

Cole Hauser as Rip Wheeler in “Dutton Ranch.” (Lauren Smith/Paramount+)

It appears that Reilly’s Beth will become friendly with Harris’s character as one still shows them sitting at the bar together.

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In April 2024, Hauser told Country Living that he knew Sheridan had a few things up his sleeve for Beth and Rip’s love story.

Ed Harris

Ed Harris reading a bible in church in “Dutton Ranch.” (Emerson Miller/Paramount+)

J.R. Villarreal as Azul, Kelly Reilly as Beth Dutton, and Cole Hauser as Rip Wheeler

L-R: J.R. Villarreal as Azul, Kelly Reilly as Beth Dutton, and Cole Hauser as Rip Wheeler in “Dutton Ranch.” (Emerson Miller/Paramount+.)

“But I know that there’s some stuff on the horizon when it comes to Taylor’s ideas for Kelly Reilly and myself, and some of the other cast. I’m excited to see where he goes creatively with that. But right now, it’s just: Let’s finish strong; let’s do the best we can,” Hauser said at the time.

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In an interview with Radio Times in March 2024, Reilly advised “Yellowstone” fans not to pay attention to everything they read ahead of the finale and also made a subtle hint that Beth Dutton’s story was not over.

“I just care about finishing [the main show] with as much care and as much passion and as much love as I can muster to put into it,” she told the outlet. “That’s what I care about. I’m sort of prepping for that now [and] that’s my tunnel vision thing that I care about most. And what goes on beyond that? There are discussions, you know. Don’t believe everything you read. It’s just nonsense. But we’re gonna, you know, let’s wait and see. I don’t have an answer right now. But we’ll see.”

Jai Courtney

Jai Courtney as Rob-Will in “Dutton Ranch.” (Emerson Miller/Paramount+)

Annette Bening

Annette Bening as Beulah Jackson in “Dutton Ranch.” (Emerson Miller/Paramount+)

In August, Fox News Digital confirmed that Hauser and Reilly would star in a “Yellowstone” spin-off. Aside from “Yellowstone,” Taylor Sheridan already has “1883” and “1923” as prequels to the main show. “The Madison,” starring Michelle Pfeiffer and Kurt Russell, released earlier this month.

“Dutton Ranch” will premiere globally on Paramount+ on May 15, at 8pm ET/PT, with two episodes, and then weekly throughout the series’ nine-episode first season.

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Private sector wants Feds’ help to tackle China’s Typhoons • The Register

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RSA 2026 Back in the day (circa 2023) when cybercrime group Scattered Spider and its help-desk voice-phishing calls were a relatively new threat, the feds considered pulling the government’s top cyber-threat hunters and their private-sector counterparts into one room to share information, in real time, about this loosely knit extortion ring that was terrorizing enterprises.

“Scattered Spider was evolving so quickly, and there were private-sector partners who had such exquisite information and intelligence,” EY managing director Dave Scott said on an RSAC panel Monday morning. At the time, Scott led the FBI’s Cyber Operations Branch.

While the private-sector intelligence analysts were moving fast, “here we were, with the government, and waiting for legal process and then waiting for the approvals and everything else to share that information,” Scott remembered. “And I know it frustrated a lot of our industry partners. You know, we even proposed, back during Scattered Spider, to actually pull private sector, public sector together into one room and stand up a coordination cell where they’re sharing in real time.”

Proposed is the key word. This real-time collab did not happen. Fast forward a few years, and phone calls are the second most common method used by cybercriminals to gain initial access to their victims’ IT estate – as well as the top tactic used when breaking into cloud environments.

Scott made these comments during a panel discussion titled Inside the Hunt for China’s Typhoons: Disrupt, Deter, and Defend. It was originally billed as a “behind-the-scenes” look at the FBI, NSA, and private industry’s joint operations to disrupt the operations of Beijing’s Typhoon gangs and their attempts to target US critical infrastructure.

Then the federal government speakers all cancelled, and the panel became a four-person, all-private-sector discussion with an actual empty chair on the stage.

Attorney David Lashway, who co-chairs Sidley Austin’s global privacy and cybersecurity practice, said the empty chair should not be symbolically occupied/left-empty by the US government. “The administration has been very clear about its response to Volt and the other Typhoons and Chinese national aggression in cyberspace,” he said.

Still, the FBI and NSA weren’t on the stage as the panelists all touted the importance of public-private partnerships.

“So many of these challenges are blended,” said Wendi Whitmore, chief security intelligence officer at Palo Alto Networks.

Most of the Volt Typhoon sightings on utility owners and operators’ networks, and the Salt Typhoon intrusions into telecommunications networks happened on private-sector infrastructure. “All of us have a certain level of visibility into those environments,” Whitmore said.

“When we look at public-private partnerships, we have a role to play, to share information, to then make sure that decision-makers within the government can take decisive actions,” she added. “When you look at Volt and Salt Typhoon, it really required the victims stepping forward and sharing intelligence. It required the law firms and the incident response firms who were working those cases to share that information so that the decision-makers within the government can take separate actions.”

While Scott said he has “yet to see a perfect solution for the information sharing,” it becomes even more important in the era of AI. “As quickly as AI is progressing, it just becomes more and more critical for that information sharing to be real time,” he said.

This annual cybersecurity conference isn’t the only – or the most important – place where public-private partnerships are built and information sharing happens. Much of this happens behind closed doors and very likely on Signal threads. But still, when one of the world’s more significant infosec events has no US government speakers, it isn’t a good look. ®



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15 small Amazon buys that make life easier, starting at $4

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These under-$25 Amazon finds are thoughtful, practical picks you’ll wish you bought sooner. From a portable tire inflator to a mini fan and bug traps, they tackle everyday annoyances with ease. Even better, some are already discounted ahead of Amazon’s Big Spring Sale, running March 25 through 31.

READ MORE: Amazon’s Big Spring Sale hasn’t started yet — but these early deals are live right now

Tech

These clever finds solve everyday problems like lost keys, limited outlets and dirty earbuds.

Original price: $12.96

This charging station comes with built-in protection. (Amazon)

Upgrade any outlet with this wall charger, featuring five outlets and four USB ports. Keep your devices powered without the cord clutter — and grab it before the deal disappears. 

Keep track of valuables with this tile. (Amazon)

Stop losing your keys or wallet with the Life360 tile. The Bluetooth tracker works with Apple and Android devices, letting you ring your Tile or track it through the free app. With this deal live now, it’s a smart time to try it for yourself.

Original price: $6.45

This compact cleaning kit helps keep your AirPods in top shape. (Amazon)

Get the gunk out of your AirPods with this compact kit designed to reach tight spaces inside earbuds and charging cases. It’s a simple, low-cost way to improve sound and hygiene, and works on phones, tablets and other devices.

READ MORE: Early Amazon Big Spring Sale deals: Fox News reader favorites under $25

Home

Organize cords and manage pests at home with these small upgrades.

Manage cord chaos with this box. (Amazon)

Keep messy cables out of sight with this cord management box designed to hide power strips and wires. It’s made from durable plastic and blends in easily with existing decor. A rear cable slot helps maintain the neat setup.

These Zevo traps use UV light to attract insects. (Amazon)

Manage pests with these insect traps. UV light attracts bugs and traps them in a disposable adhesive cartridge. Each set includes a plug-in device and one cartridge.

Original price: $9.99

Roll this drying rack up for storage.  (Amazon)

This roll-up drying rack is a smart solution for small kitchens. Lay it over the sink to air-dry dishes and roll it up for storage after. It even doubles as a heat-resistant trivet.

Auto 

Keep your vehicle in prime condition with these gadgets. 

Original price: $39.99

Pack this mini tire inflator in your car for emergencies. (Amazon)

Keep this portable tire inflator in your car for quick fixes on the road. It’s compact, easy to use with preset settings and a digital display, and powerful enough for car tires. Snag it while it’s 48% off.

Original price: $12.99

Keep your car clean and neat with a trash can. (Amazon)

Minimize clutter in your car with this tiny trash can. It attaches to a seat headrest and secures with snaps to hold trash bags in place. It’s even insulated, so you could use it as a cooler in a pinch.

Original price: $8.99

Get hard to reach places cleaned with this gel. (Amazon)

This reusable cleaning gel pulls crumbs and debris from hard-to-reach spots like a center console and dashboard. You can also use it on electronics to pick up dust and dirt.

Kitchen

These kitchen tools speed up prep work and keep things tidy and safe.

Original price: $15.99

No more garlic smell on your hands. (Amazon)

Skip the sticky hands and lingering garlic smell with this easy-to-use garlic peeler and chopper. The rocking design makes mincing simple, while the silicone tube handles peeling in seconds.

These locks attach with adhesive.  (Amazon)

Useful for more than just child-proofing, these refrigerator locks keep doors securely shut. Adjustable straps fit corners from 3 to 8 inches and attach with a strong adhesive.

Let baking powder neutralize odors in your trash can. (Amazon)

Can’t shake that trash can smell? Try these Arm & Hammer baking soda pouches that absorb odors for up to 30 days. Just drop one in and let it do the work.

Outdoor

Stock up on outdoor essentials ahead of warmer weather.

Original price: $9.99

This little handheld fan is easy to carry. (Amazon)

Beat the heat on the go with this compact handheld fan. With three speeds and a rechargeable battery, it’s a tiny workhorse that fits easily into a handbag or backpack — perfect for travel, commuting or quick relief from the sun.

Original price: $15.98

Stay protected on sunny days with this Sun Bum roll-on applicator. (Amazon)

Avoid streaky sunburns with this roll-on sunscreen applicator that spreads SPF without the mess. Easy to use and kid-friendly, grab it while it’s on sale for 20% off. 

For more deals, visit www.foxnews.com/deals

Original price: $2.50

Stay prepared for anything with this first aid kit. (Amazon)

Heading outside more? This first aid kit packs essential wound care items into a compact case, making it easy to handle cuts, scrapes and more. Pack one in the car or tuck it into a gym bag.

If you’re an Amazon Prime member, you can get these items to your door ASAP. You can join or start a 30-day free trial to start your shopping today.



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Virginia Dem Rep. Beyer admits redistricting aims to stop Trump, not voters

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A top Virginia Democrat appeared to admit that state Democratic lawmakers’ effort to redraw the commonwealth’s congressional map is more about stopping President Donald Trump and his agenda than about ensuring fairness for voters in the Old Dominion.

A referendum drafted by Richmond’s Democratic majority and set to go before voters in April would allow the assembly to redraw Virginia’s congressional map in a way that Richmond Democrats signaled would draw out four of five Republican congressmen and draw the populations of most new districts from dense, left-wing Fairfax County.

In comments to NBC News, Rep. Donald Beyer, an Alexandria-Fairfax Democrat, appeared to admit redistricting’s true purpose while commenting on early voting figures that appeared to lean in the GOP’s favor.

Beyer said the redistricting effort is “not a done deal by any means” and that Democrats need to “effectively make the case that even though this seems unfair in Virginia, it’s totally fair for America, for those of us who believe that taking back the House is the most significant thing we can do to stop Donald Trump.”

NEW DEM STAR’S QUICK HARD-LEFT TURN AFTER ‘MODERATE’ CAMPAIGN WON HER COVETED RESPONSE TO TRUMP: LAWMAKER

Rep. Donald Beyer Jr. standing at a protest in Washington

Rep. Donald Beyer Jr., D-Va., attends a protest in Washington. (Tom Williams/Getty Images)

“Don said the quiet part out loud,” Virginia House Minority Leader Terry Kilgore, R-Gate City, told Fox News Digital on Monday.

“This is manifestly unfair for the Commonwealth of Virginia. We’re a 51-49 state, not a 90-10 state. If they’re willing to silence nearly half the Commonwealth’s voters in the name of ‘fairness,’ what else are they willing to do?” Kilgore said. His legislative seat in the far southwest would sit in the sole Republican-favored congressional district under the new map.

“Last November, Democrats sold Virginians a fake ‘affordability’ agenda that is false, a total hoax, and a con job,” Senate Minority Leader Ryan McDougle, R-Hanover, said.

“Now they are back at it, trying to shove another partisan power grab down our throats, this time wrapped in the phony label of ‘fairness,’” he told Fox News Digital.

Fox News Digital reached out to Beyer for further comment and to Gov. Abigail Spanberger for her take on his admission.

5 VIRGINIA CONGRESSMEN: DEMOCRATS ARE REJECTING VOTERS TO GERRYMANDER OUR STATE

Rep. Don Beyer speaking at a campaign event in Arlington, Virginia

Representative Don Beyer, a Democrat from Virginia, speaks during a campaign event for Terry McAuliffe, Democratic gubernatorial candidate for Virginia, in Arlington, Virginia, U.S., on Friday, July 23, 2021. McAuliffe is bringing President Biden to the vote-rich suburbs as he works to keep a national focus in the race and tie his Republican opponent to former President Trump. Photographer: Oliver Contreras/Sipa/Bloomberg via Getty Images

The text of the amendment facing voters next month asks whether the Constitution of Virginia should be amended to allow the General Assembly to temporarily adopt new congressional districts to restore fairness in the upcoming elections.

The tagline “restore fairness” has become a clarion call for critics who claim exactly what Beyer appeared to admit: that the definition of “fairness” used is questionable at best.

“Representative Beyer said the quiet part out loud. This isn’t about fairness, transparency, or representing Virginians,” Rep. Ben Cline, R-Va., said. His Shenandoah Valley district stands to be chopped into several Fairfax-connected pieces under the new map.

“It’s about political power and Democrats’ determination to rig the map to ‘take back the House.’ When Democrats admit they’re willing to defend an unfair process in Virginia for the sake of national political power, it exposes exactly what’s driving this effort, and it has nothing to do with the people they’re supposed to represent,” Cline told Fox News Digital.

Five of Virginia’s 11 congressional districts would originate in Arlington or Fairfax counties and encompass meticulously drawn swaths of the state’s conservative interior, including one district ridiculed for resembling a lobster or scorpion, as it begins at the Potomac River and winds southwest through Democratic suburbs before splitting into two halves. One half includes rural Greene, Rockingham, and Augusta counties closer to West Virginia, while the other stretches down the Zachary Taylor Highway into Goochland and Powhatan counties west of Richmond.

In turn, a likely Democrat-majority district would form, narrowly connecting the independent cities of Harrisonburg, Staunton, and Waynesboro within Rockingham and Augusta counties and linking them via conservative areas like Nelson County with Lynchburg and Roanoke far to the south.

Beyer’s current district would likely become the new 8th and stretch down the west bank of the Potomac River through current Rep. Rob Wittman’s, R-Va., rural 1st District in the Northern Neck, collecting nearly a dozen small red counties in the state’s oyster country anchored by the deep-blue city.

The only Republican deemed safe under the map would be Rep. Morgan Griffith, R-Va., in the far southwest, which would become an overwhelmingly Republican seat.

Rep. Jennifer Kiggans’ evenly split Eastern Shore and Hampton Roads district would draw in just enough urban and suburban population to potentially turn blue.

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Since early voting began this month, yard signs emblazoned with “VOTE NO” have begun popping up in several red counties threatened by the new map, including Culpeper, Shenandoah, Highland, Orange, and Page, home to Luray Caverns.

“VOTE YES” signs were, in turn, observed in rural Clarke and suburban Prince William counties over the weekend.



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Mazda discloses security breach exposing employee and partner data

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Mazda discloses security breach exposing employee and partner data

Mazda Motor Corporation (Mazda) announced that information belonging to its employees and business partners had been exposed in a security incident detected last December.

Mazda is one of Japan’s largest automotive manufacturers, with an annual production of 1.2 million vehicles and revenue of nearly $24 billion.

The company said the attackers exploited a vulnerability in a system related to warehouse management for parts procured from Thailand. The system did not contain any customer data. Also, the breach is limited to 692 records.

“Mazda Motor Corporation has identified traces of unauthorized external access to a management system used for warehouse operations related to parts procured from Thailand,” reads Mazda’s announcement.

“Following this discovery, the Company promptly reported the matter to the Personal Information Protection Commission – an external bureau of the Japanese Cabinet Office – and implemented appropriate security measures and conducted an investigation in cooperation with an external specialist organization.”

The investigation revealed that the potentially exposed information includes the following data types:

  • User IDs
  • Full names
  • Email addresses
  • Company names
  • Business partner IDs

Although Mazda says it has detected no misuse of that information, the company recommends that impacted individuals remain vigilant because the risk of phishing attacks and scams targeting them is significant.

Apart from notifying the authorities, Mazda also implemented additional security measures on its IT systems, including reducing internet exposure, applying security patches, increasing monitoring for suspicious activity, and introducing stricter access policies.

At the time of writing, no ransomware group has publicly claimed the attack on the Japanese company.

BleepingComputer has contacted Mazda to learn more about the incident, and we will update this post with an official response as soon as it reaches us.

Although a data breach was never officially confirmed by Mazda, the Clop ransomware group in November 2025 posted Mazda.com and MazdaUSA.com on its data leaks site, claiming it compromised both the Japanese automaker and its U.S. subsidiary.

Malware is getting smarter. The Red Report 2026 reveals how new threats use math to detect sandboxes and hide in plain sight.

Download our analysis of 1.1 million malicious samples to uncover the top 10 techniques and see if your security stack is blinded.



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‘The View’ hosts clash over ICE agents replacing TSA amid shutdown

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“The View” co-host Sara Haines said on Monday she is not against the idea of ICE agents filling in as the government shutdown impacts TSA.

President Donald Trump announced Sunday that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents would be deployed to airports across the country to help ease travel chaos brought on by the ongoing Department of Homeland Security (DHS) shutdown.

Tens of thousands of TSA agents have been forced to work without pay for weeks as the shutdown draws on with no end in sight. It’s led to hours-long delays at airports across the country, with images of massive security lines dominating the news.

“I don’t actually hate the idea of this right now,” Haines said of ICE agents filling in to help airports. “ICE has gotten billions of dollars, they have almost doubled their budget. We’re talking about TSA workers who aren’t getting paid and the ones that are making it there are having to pay for gas prices and riding buses.”

TRUMP DEMANDS ‘SAVE AMERICA ACT’ BE TIED TO DHS FUNDING AMID AIRPORT CHAOS

Sara Haines hosts "the View"

Sara Haines is one of the longtime co-hosts of “The View.” (Jenny Anderson/ABC via Getty Images)

“And so if you want to fill in bodies here,” she continued, “because their success rate at finding criminals has been 5%. These are 100% guaranteed travelers coming through there, so I just feel like putting more people on the job, I don’t see that as a bad thing.”

“You mean, you want to feel safe when you take your kids to the airport?” guest host Abby Huntsman quipped. “It’s crazy we’re spending billions of dollars on a war right now, what’s going on in Iran, and we can’t even feel safe in our airports, and Congress is still getting paid!”

Co-host Sunny Hostin, however, argued that she is not comfortable having ICE agents working in airports, arguing they not only have less training, but undergo completely different kinds of training that differentiate from TSA agents. 

“I don’t feel comfortable at all having ICE agents there, because ICE agents, instead of getting 72 days of training, they only get 42 days of training, and they are not trained the way TSA agents — let’s remember TSA agents require four to six months of training, including two to three weeks at a TSA academy,” she said. 

HOUSE GOP TARGETING VULNERABLE DEMS OVER DHS SHUTDOWN, TSA CHAOS

ICE-agents-garage

The co-hosts of “The View” debated the idea of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents shoring up airport security as the government shutdown hinders many TSA agents. (Christopher Dilts/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

She argued further that such training “includes x-ray simulation, passenger screening, bag inspection, emergency protocols, and then they have to get recertified every couple of months. An ICE agent with 42 days of experience wearing a mask and no body camera has no business in our airports. I’m sorry.”

Haines disagreed, however, arguing that ICE agents will not only be better behaved in airports than in immigration raids, but have also made major concessions regarding Democrats’ concerns.

“Sunny, I disagree. First of all, I will say they are more dangerous undertrained on the streets than they are in the airports I would say, but also, I definitely see the politics on both sides, but Democrats need to realize that perfect — don’t let the perfect be the enemy of the good,” she said.

She then followed by arguing, “They have compromised. They’re doing expansion of body cameras. Markwayne Mullin agreed during his hearing to do the warrants when they’re searching unless it’s an emergency.”

Ultimately, Haines argued, TSA workers need to get paid. 

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Sunny Hostin appears at event

Sunny Hostin argued that ICE agents’ training is incomparable to that of TSA agents. (Gary Gershoff/Getty Images)

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Fox News’ Elizabeth Elkind contributed to this report.



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US Ambassador Sergio Gor Announces Visit Of Top Defense Official Elbridge Colby To India Amid West Asia Crisis

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Amidst the war raging in West Asia, India and America have increased their strategic activity. In this sequence, US War Policy Deputy Secretary Elbridge Colby will visit India on Tuesday. The purpose of his visit is to discuss regional instability, energy security and its adverse effects on maritime trade routes.



Along with this, the objective of the visit will be to advance the goals set in the joint statement issued by President Donald Trump and Prime Minister Narendra Modi in February 2025 and to implement the framework of the US-India major defense partnership. US Ambassador to India Sergio Gore confirmed the visit on social media platforms and said that we look forward to welcoming him.

What is the reason for Colby’s seizures?
Colby is considered one of the key figures in the formulation of US defense policy in Trump’s second term. This is his first visit to India. Just before this, senior US military officials, including Indo-Pacific Commander Admiral Samuel Paparo and US Space Command chief General Stephen Whiting, had visited India.

The timing of the visit is particularly significant as it coincides with the ongoing conflict in West Asia. The regional war has “disrupted supply chains of key products such as crude oil, gas and fertilizers” for India and other Asian countries.

Efforts to improve India-America relations
In this backdrop, this diplomatic initiative comes at a time when New Delhi and Washington have intensified efforts to improve bilateral relations after the recent tense period. These differences were previously fueled by trade disputes, the India-Pakistan conflict in May and India’s purchase of Russian energy.

There is also a possibility of renegotiation of the framework of the trade agreement in February during this visit. It is noteworthy that the US Supreme Court had declared Trump’s tariffs illegal. Due to this, there is a need to finalize the trade agreement. Additionally, the visit builds on the security foundation established in October, when Defense Minister Rajnath Singh and US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth signed a “10-year defense framework” aimed at strengthening security cooperation within the Indo-Pacific region.

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