Dolphins WR Tyreek Hill has seasonending knee surgery Field Level MediaSeptember 30, 2025 at 10:57 PM 3 Sep 29, 2025; Miami Gardens, Florida, USA; Miami Dolphins wide receiver Tyreek Hill (10) is tended to by medical staff after injuring his leg against the New York Jets during the second half at Ha...

- - Dolphins WR Tyreek Hill has season-ending knee surgery

Field Level MediaSeptember 30, 2025 at 10:57 PM

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Sep 29, 2025; Miami Gardens, Florida, USA; Miami Dolphins wide receiver Tyreek Hill (10) is tended to by medical staff after injuring his leg against the New York Jets during the second half at Hard Rock Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Rich Storry-Imagn Images (Rich Storry-Imagn Images)

Miami Dolphins wide receiver Tyreek Hill underwent a "major knee procedure" Tuesday to repair his torn ACL and other ligament damage, coach Mike McDaniel confirmed.

Hill will miss at least the rest of the 2025 season after dislocating his left knee and suffering the ligament tears during Monday's 27-21 victory over the New York Jets.

McDaniel told reporters that he had heard "good things" about any nerve damage to Hill's knee and said the eight-time Pro Bowler may not need more surgeries beyond Tuesday.

"It hasn't been deemed to be anything beyond this surgery and we're very hopeful for it to turn out well," McDaniel said. "But no, it hasn't been explained (that multiple surgeries are) an absolute necessity. It's just executing this procedure and seeing what happens from there."

Hill was injured when he caught a 10-yard pass from Tua Tagovailoa near the New York sideline with 13:21 left in the third quarter. His leg twisted awkwardly as he was going out of bounds, and Hill immediately grabbed for the knee.

While being carted off with an air cast on his leg, Hill forcefully clapped his hands several times, smiled and laughed in response to the crowd.

"He was probably in the best spirits of any player that I've ever -- it's just such a terrible experience when you go out and see guys when they have issues like that," McDaniel said immediately after the game. "But he immediately had wide eyes and was talking, 'I'm good. Just make sure the guys get this win.' He was focused on the team."

Those high spirits continued Tuesday, when Hill posted a video to social media showing him in a hospital bed before his surgery.

"Keep your boy in your prayers," Hill said. "You guys have been awesome, man. Fins Nation, just the whole entire NFL has been amazing, sending me lots of love, lots of prayers. I'm absolutely honored."

Hill, 31, had six receptions for 67 yards before exiting. He has 21 receptions for 265 yards and one touchdown in four games this season.

Hill is in his fourth season with the Dolphins after playing his first six campaigns with the Chiefs. Hill helped Kansas City win the Super Bowl after the 2019 season. He is a five-time first-team All-Pro who was selected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame's All-2010s Team as a punt returner.

--Field Level Media

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Dolphins WR Tyreek Hill has season-ending knee surgery

Dolphins WR Tyreek Hill has seasonending knee surgery Field Level MediaSeptember 30, 2025 at 10:57 PM 3 Sep 29, 2025; Miami Gard...

Ravens QB Lamar Jackson reportedly out Week 5 Field Level MediaSeptember 30, 2025 at 11:32 PM 2 Sep 28, 2025; Kansas City, Missouri, USA; Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson (8) throws a pass during the second quarter against the Kansas City Chiefs at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium.

- - Ravens QB Lamar Jackson reportedly out Week 5

Field Level MediaSeptember 30, 2025 at 11:32 PM

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Sep 28, 2025; Kansas City, Missouri, USA; Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson (8) throws a pass during the second quarter against the Kansas City Chiefs at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Denny Medley-Imagn Images (Denny Medley-Imagn Images)

Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson will not play in Week 5 and could be facing a longer absence because of a hamstring injury, the Baltimore Sun reported Tuesday.

Jackson left the Ravens' loss to the Kansas City Chiefs in the fourth quarter on Sunday. The Ravens (1-3) play the Houston Texans (1-3) this week with a roster besieged by injuries.

Head coach John Harbaugh would not confirm the status of Jackson, but bit back at suggestions Jackson could have finished the loss to the Chiefs.

"There was no way he was going to go back into the game," Harbaugh said. "The injury precluded it. The way I know Lamar, if he could've gone in the game, he would've been in the game. That's how he is."

Without Jackson against the Texans, the Ravens are expected to turn to Cooper Rush. The former Cowboys backup was signed in the offseason to bring an experienced hand if Jackson was unavailable.

"If he's out there, it will be geared toward him," Harbaugh said of Rush. "We've got a good group around him. We have a lot of playmakers around him if he's playing. Same thing for Tyler Huntley if he's playing."

Already hurting at multiple key positions, the Ravens had other players leave Kansas City with ailments that could require multiple-game absences.

Linebacker Roquan Smith (hamstring), cornerbacks Marlon Humphrey (calf) and Nate Wiggins (elbow) and left tackle Ronnie Stanley (ankle) are all uncertain for Week 5. NFL Network reported Smith and Humphrey might miss 2-3 weeks.

The Ravens also lost two-time Pro Bowl defensive tackle Nnamdi Madubuike for the rest of the season due to a neck injury.

Madubuike was placed on injured reserve Saturday, about two weeks after reporting symptoms following Baltimore's Week 2 win over the Cleveland Browns.

Madubuike, 27, had two sacks in the first two games of the season and has amassed 203 tackles (42 for loss), 30 sacks and two forced fumbles in 78 career games (66 starts) for Baltimore since 2020.

--Field Level Media

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Ravens QB Lamar Jackson reportedly out Week 5

Ravens QB Lamar Jackson reportedly out Week 5 Field Level MediaSeptember 30, 2025 at 11:32 PM 2 Sep 28, 2025; Kansas City, Misso...

Imelda strengthens into a hurricane off the Bahamas Faris TanyosOctober 1, 2025 at 4:56 AM 22 Imelda strengthened into a hurricane early Tuesday and was forecast to head away from the Bahamas and southeastern U.S. and toward Bermuda, according to the Miamibased National Hurricane Center.

- - Imelda strengthens into a hurricane off the Bahamas

Faris TanyosOctober 1, 2025 at 4:56 AM

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Imelda strengthened into a hurricane early Tuesday and was forecast to head away from the Bahamas and southeastern U.S. and toward Bermuda, according to the Miami-based National Hurricane Center.

Imelda is the ninth named storm of the 2025 Atlantic hurricane season. It formed on Sunday in the western Atlantic.

Hurricane Imelda forecast maps

As of Tuesday night, Imelda's center was located 565 miles west-southwest of Bermuda, with maximum sustained winds of 85 mph, making it a Category 1 hurricane. It was moving east-northeast at 15 mph, the hurricane center said.

Map shows the forecast path of Hurricane Imelda. / Credit: CBS News

"On the forecast track, the center of the hurricane will approach Bermuda Wednesday afternoon," the hurricane center said, adding: "Some additional strengthening is forecast during the next day or so."

Anywhere from 2 to 4 inches of rain is expected across Bermuda from Wednesday into Thursday, which could lead to flash flooding, the NHC said. A dangerous storm surge is also expected to produce coastal flooding in Bermuda "in areas of onshore winds," the hurricane center said, adding that the surge "will be accompanied by large and damaging waves."

Swells generated by Imelda and Hurricane Humberto, farther out in the Atlantic, "are affecting the Bahamas and are currently spreading to much of the U.S. East Coast. These swells are likely to cause life-threatening surf and rip current conditions," forecasters said.

/ Credit: NOAA / National Hurricane Center

Warnings and watches for Imelda

A hurricane warning is in effect for Bermuda, meaning hurricane conditions are expected to occur there within 36 hours.

A tropical storm warning for the northwestern Bahamas was canceled Monday night.

Imelda follows Hurricane Humberto

Imelda comes on the heels of Hurricane Humberto, which rapidly intensified to a major hurricane over the Atlantic on Saturday but is not expected to reach land. Humberto reached as high as a Category 5 on Saturday before beginning to weaken. Tuesday morning, it was a Category 2 with sustained winds of about 100 mph.

Imelda (left) and Humberto as seen from a satellite off the Florida coast as of 5:30 a.m. on Sept. 30, 2025. / Credit: NOAA / National Hurricane Center

Forecasters said last week there was a small possibility the two systems could interact, creating what is known as a Fujiwhara effect, a rare phenomenon in which two different storms merge and become entangled around a newly formed, common center. However, they said it wasn't considered a likely outcome in this case.

Map shows the forecast paths for Imelda and Humberto over the Atlantic as of Tuesday, Sept. 30, 2025. / Credit: CBS News

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Imelda strengthens into a hurricane off the Bahamas

Imelda strengthens into a hurricane off the Bahamas Faris TanyosOctober 1, 2025 at 4:56 AM 22 Imelda strengthened into a hurrica...

Government headed to a shutdown after lastditch vote fails in Senate MARY CLARE JALONICK, LISA MASCARO and STEPHEN GROVES September 30, 2025 at 5:01 AM 7.

- - Government headed to a shutdown after last-ditch vote fails in Senate

MARY CLARE JALONICK, LISA MASCARO and STEPHEN GROVES September 30, 2025 at 5:01 AM

7.4k

The Capitol is seen at dusk as Democrats and Republicans in Congress are angrily blaming each other and refusing to budge from their positions on funding the government, in Washington, Tuesday, Sept. 30, 2025. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

WASHINGTON (AP) — Senate Democrats have voted down a Republican bill to keep funding the government, putting it on a near certain path to a shutdown after midnight Wednesday for the first time in nearly seven years.

The Senate rejected the legislation as Democrats are making good on their threat to close the government if President Donald Trump and Republicans won't accede to their health care demands. The 55-45 vote on a bill to extend federal funding for seven weeks fell short of the 60 needed to end a filibuster and pass the legislation.

Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said Republicans are trying to "bully" Democrats by refusing to negotiate on an extension of expanded Affordable Care Act tax credits that expire at the end of the year.

"We hope they sit down with us and talk," Schumer said after the vote. "Otherwise, it's the Republicans will be driving us straight towards a shutdown tonight at midnight. The American people will blame them for bringing the federal government to a halt."

The failure of Congress to keep the government open means that hundreds of thousands of federal workers could be furloughed or laid off. After the vote, the White House's Office of Management and Budget issued a memo saying "affected agencies should now execute their plans for an orderly shutdown."

Threatening retribution to Democrats, Trump said Tuesday that a shutdown could include "cutting vast numbers of people out, cutting things that they like, cutting programs that they like."

Trump and his fellow Republicans said they won't entertain any changes to the legislation, arguing that it's a stripped-down, "clean" bill that should be noncontroversial. Senate Majority Leader John Thune said "we can reopen it tomorrow" if enough Democrats break party lines.

The last shutdown was in Trump's first term, from December 2018 to January 2019, when he demanded that Congress give him money for his U.S.-Mexico border wall. Trump retreated after 35 days — the longest shutdown ever — amid intensifying airport delays and missed paydays for federal workers.

Democrats take a stand against Trump, with exceptions

While partisan stalemates over government spending are a frequent occurrence in Washington, the current impasse comes as Democrats see a rare opportunity to use their leverage to achieve policy goals and as their base voters are spoiling for a fight with Trump. Republicans who hold a 53-47 majority in the Senate needed at least eight votes from Democrats after Republican Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky opposed the bill.

Democratic Sens. John Fetterman of Pennsylvania and Catherine Cortez Masto of Nevada and Independent Sen. Angus King of Maine voted with Republicans to keep the government open — giving Republicans hope that there might be five more who will eventually come around and help end a shutdown.

After the vote, King warned against "permanent damage" as Trump and his administration have threatened mass layoffs.

"Instead of fighting Trump we're actually empowering him, which is what finally drove my decision," King said.

Thune predicted Democratic support for the GOP bill will increase "when they realize that this is playing a losing hand."

Shutdown preparations begin

The stakes are huge for federal workers across the country as the White House told agencies last week that they should consider "a reduction in force" for many federal programs if the government shuts down. That means that workers who are not deemed essential could be fired instead of just furloughed.

Either way, most would not get paid. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimated in a letter to Iowa Sen. Joni Ernst on Tuesday that around 750,000 federal workers could be furloughed each day once a shutdown begins.

Federal agencies were already preparing. On the home page of the Department of Housing and Urban Development, a large pop up ad reads, "The Radical Left are going to shut down the government and inflict massive pain on the American people."

Democrats' health care asks

Democrats want to negotiate an extension of the health subsidies immediately as people are beginning to receive notices of premium increases for the next year. Millions of people who purchase health insurance through the Affordable Care Act could face higher costs as expanded subsidies first put in place during the COVID-19 pandemic expire.

Democrats have also demanded that Republicans reverse the Medicaid cuts that were enacted as a part of Trump's "big, beautiful bill" this summer and for the White House to promise it will not move to rescind spending passed by Congress.

"We are not going to support a partisan Republican spending bill that continues to gut the health care of everyday Americans," House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries said.

Thune pressed Democrats to vote for the funding bill and take up the debate on tax credits later. Some Republicans are open to extending the tax credits, but many are strongly opposed to it.

In rare, pointed back-and-forth with Schumer on the Senate floor Tuesday morning, Thune said Republicans "are happy to fix the ACA issue" and have offered to negotiate with Democrats — if they will vote to keep the government open until Nov. 21.

A critical, and unusual, vote for Democrats

Democrats are in an uncomfortable position for a party that has long denounced shutdowns as pointless and destructive, and it's unclear how or when a shutdown will end. But party activists and lawmakers have argued that Democrats need to do something to stand up to Trump.

"The level of appeasement that Trump demands never ends," said Sen. Peter Welch, D-Vt. "We've seen that with universities, with law firms, with prosecutors. So is there a point where you just have to stand up to him? I think there is."

Some groups called for Schumer's resignation in March after he and nine other Democrats voted to break a filibuster and allow a Republican-led funding bill to advance to a final vote.

Schumer said then that he voted to keep the government open because a shutdown would have made things worse as Trump's administration was slashing government jobs. He says things have now changed, including the passage this summer of the massive GOP tax cut bill that reduced Medicaid.

Trump's role in negotiations

A bipartisan meeting at the White House on Monday was Trump's first with all four leaders in Congress since retaking the White House for his second term. Schumer said the group "had candid, frank discussions" about health care.

But Trump did not appear to be ready for serious talks. Hours later, he posted a fake video of Schumer and House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries taken from footage of their real press conference outside of the White House after the meeting. In the altered video, a voiceover that sounds like Schumer's voice makes fun of Democrats and Jeffries stands beside him with a cartoon sombrero and mustache. Mexican music plays in the background.

At a news conference on the Capitol steps Tuesday morning, Jeffries said it was a "racist and fake AI video."

Schumer said that less than a day before a shutdown, Trump was trolling on the internet "like a 10-year-old."

"It's only the president who can do this," Schumer said. "We know he runs the show here."

___

writers Seung Min Kim, Kevin Freking, Matthew Brown, Darlene Superville and Joey Cappelletti in Washington contributed to this report.

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Government headed to a shutdown after last-ditch vote fails in Senate

Government headed to a shutdown after lastditch vote fails in Senate MARY CLARE JALONICK, LISA MASCARO and STEPHEN GROVES Septem...

Records appear to reveal past arrest of man accused in Michigan church shooting September 30, 2025 at 11:13 PM 9 Debris is seen on the vehicle used by the man who allegedly rammed his vehicle into The Church of Jesus Christ of Latterday Saints in Grand Blanc Township, Mich.

- - Records appear to reveal past arrest of man accused in Michigan church shooting

September 30, 2025 at 11:13 PM

9

Debris is seen on the vehicle used by the man who allegedly rammed his vehicle into The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Grand Blanc Township, Mich. on Sunday Morning, before opening fire and setting the building ablaze, Tuesday, Sept. 30, 2025. (Ryan Sun/AP)

Newly released records from Utah's Summit County Sheriff's Office appear to suggest the man accused of attacking a church in Michigan over the weekend had been arrested in Utah in 2010.

According to an incident report and mugshot obtained by Scripps News, Thomas Jacob Sanford was arrested for driving under the influence after leaving a bar on March 12, 2010.

A man with the same name and date of birth crashed his truck into a Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Grand Blanc Township, Michigan, on Sunday. Police say he then shot several people, set the building on fire, before being killed in a shootout with officers.

The Utah incident report from 2010 described Sanford as driving in a vehicle that was "bouncing back and forth (side to side) in his lane."

RELATED STORY | Police say no victims remain unaccounted for after shooting, fire at Michigan church

During the traffic stop, the officer conducted field sobriety tests on Sanford. He described Sanford as having eyes that were "fairly blood shot and glossy." The officer also noted that Sanford appeared to have a balance problem.

"Based on the driving pattern I observed, time of night (bar closing time frame), Sanford's field sobriety test observations and his breath sample, I placed Sanford under arrest for suspicion of driving under the influence," the officer wrote.

According to the report, a breath test at the jail returned a .181 result.

Sanford "admitted to have (sic) been drinking beer...and said that he had two, but they were 'stronger' beers. He also said he had beers at his house before going out," the officer wrote.

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Records appear to reveal past arrest of man accused in Michigan church shooting

Records appear to reveal past arrest of man accused in Michigan church shooting September 30, 2025 at 11:13 PM 9 Debris is seen ...

 

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