SCOTUS Asks For More Security, Graham’s Sister Sworn In, Parasite Spreads Across US: AM Update 7/15

SCOTUS Asks For More Security, Graham’s Sister Sworn In, Parasite Spreads Across US: AM Update 7/15

A doctor says washing your produce with soap and water may NOT kill the Cyclospora parasite now spreading across 30+ states — boiling is the only sure method.

Jul 15, 2026 21:29 Difficulty: Beginner Played

TL;DR

Mark Halperin fills in for Megyn Kelly on this AM news update covering four major stories. Supreme Court justices Amy Coney Barrett and Elena Kagan made a rare Capitol Hill appearance requesting a 10% budget increase amid a 38% projected surge in threats, with Barrett recounting having to explain a bulletproof vest to her 12-year-old son. Darline Graham Nordone was sworn in as the first woman to represent South Carolina in the Senate. A Cyclospora parasite outbreak has sickened 4,000+ people across 30+ states, with Taco Bell under investigation. A heat dome is baking 108 million Americans. Key takeaway: wash your produce — but experts warn it may not be enough to kill the parasite.

#SCOTUS judicial security #Dobbs leak threats #Cyclospora food safety #heat dome extreme weather #Lindsey Graham death #Senate appointment #Taco Bell investigation #bulletproof vest SCOTUS #bipartisan confirmation #parasite outbreak lettuce #Amy Coney Barrett #Elena Kagan testimony #South Carolina Senate #federal judge threats #heat index safety #SCOTUS security #Elena Kagan #Supreme Court threats #Lindsey Graham #Darline Graham Nordone #Cyclospora outbreak #Taco Bell #heat dome #judicial threats #food safety #extreme heat #South Carolina #parasite

Mark Halperin fills in for Megyn Kelly on this AM Update covering four major stories: Supreme Court justices Barrett and Kagan testify on Capitol Hill requesting more security funding amid surging threats; Darline Graham Nordone is sworn in as the first woman to represent South Carolina in the Senate; a Cyclospora parasite outbreak sickens 4,000+ across 30+ states with Taco Bell under investigation; and a heat dome places 108 million Americans under heat alerts.

Chapter list
  • The episode opens with a Minnesota Department of Public Safety public service announcement delivered in a playful, sloth-themed voice encouraging drivers to slow down. The PSA uses offbeat humor — 'ever seen a six-sloth pile up?' — to make a genuine safety point about the benefits of driving at the speed limit. The announcement carries an earnest message: reduced speed saves lives, prevents accidents, and never results in speeding tickets. It's an odd but memorable cold open before Mark Halperin's news update begins.

  • Mark Halperin, host of 'Next Up with Mark Halperin,' opens by announcing he's filling in for Megyn Kelly and delivers a crisp four-story preview for the AM Update. Clips from the key voices — Justice Barrett on anonymous threatening deliveries, Senator Graham's sister being warned off salad bars, and the meteorological threat of the heat dome — are woven into the tease. The opening establishes the episode's urgent tone: this is a news day defined by escalating institutional threats, public health crisis, and extreme weather.

  • The first sponsor break positions Birch Gold Group as the answer to dollar devaluation since the US abandoned the gold standard in 1971. The ad invokes Alexander Hamilton's principle of sound, stable money and draws a direct line to the case for holding gold in a retirement portfolio today. Birch Gold, with an A+ Better Business Bureau rating, offers to convert existing IRAs or 401(k)s into tax-sheltered gold IRAs. The call-to-action is to text 'MK' to 989898 for a free, no-obligation information kit.

  • In an unusual display of bipartisan unity, liberal Justice Elena Kagan and conservative Justice Amy Coney Barrett appeared side by side before separate House and Senate panels to make an urgent case for a larger court budget. The court is requesting $228 million for the next fiscal year — a roughly 10% increase — including $14.6 million specifically for expanded justice protection teams. The scale of the threat is stark: nearly 400 federal judges faced threats last year, and 276 more have already been targeted in just the first half of this year alone, according to the US Marshals Service. The hearing drew into sharp focus the 2022 attempted assassination of Justice Brett Kavanaugh, when a California man named Nicholas Roski traveled across the country to Kavanaugh's Maryland neighborhood armed with a Glock, ammunition, a tactical knife, zip ties, pepper spray, and burglary tools. Roski called 911 and surrendered before carrying out the attack; he later pleaded guilty to attempted murder, telling prosecutors the leaked Dobbs draft had enraged him. The episode stands as the most visceral evidence of what the justices face — not abstract hate mail, but real, armed men at their front doors.

  • Justice Amy Coney Barrett, a mother of seven, brought the abstract danger of the court's security crisis into human scale. She described the night her security detail sent her home with a bulletproof vest during the most intense period of threats following the Dobbs leak — how she set it on her bedroom table, turned around, and found her 12-year-old son standing in the doorway asking what it was. 'I didn't expect that performing this service was gonna put me in the position of explaining to my children what a bulletproof vest was,' Barrett said. She also disclosed her home had recently been the target of a swatting attack — a hoax that sends armed police units rushing to a victim's address under false pretenses. Senator Susan Collins used the hearing to directly call out Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer, pointing to his 2020 speech outside the Supreme Court where he named Gorsuch and Kavanaugh by name and warned they would 'pay the price' — rhetoric Collins argued had no place coming from a senior public official and helped fuel the hostility the court now faces.

  • The hearing took an unexpected and touching turn when the late Senator Lindsey Graham, who died suddenly just days earlier, was remembered by the justices he had once evaluated. Justice Elena Kagan, no natural ally to the deep-red South Carolina Republican, recalled the moment in her 2010 confirmation when Graham interrupted a serious terrorism law debate to ask, simply, 'where were you on Christmas Day?' Kagan's response — 'like all Jews, I was probably at a Chinese restaurant' — drew laughs and became the most-cited moment of her hearing. Kagan said many people told her afterward that the Graham exchange was the moment her confirmation was sealed. She went further, crediting Graham not just for making her look funny but for voting to confirm her at all — a cross-party act she acknowledged was not expected from a senator representing a deep-red state. Graham was one of four Republicans who supported her nomination. Kagan closed by expressing the gratitude of the entire court and saying she could understand why so many people would deeply miss him.

  • With a brief oath of office, history was made — Darline Graham Nordone became the first woman ever to hold a Senate seat representing South Carolina, appointed by Republican Governor Henry McMaster to complete her late brother Lindsey Graham's term. McMaster revealed the story behind the appointment at the State House: he had called Darline in the early hours of Sunday morning and she agreed to serve through tears. 'I was humbled by your quickness to see the duty that you had to serve,' McMaster said. In her own remarks, Nordone paid tribute to her brother's relentless work ethic and genuine character — 'he worked nonstop to make our state, country, and world better' — before closing with a message directly addressed to Lindsey himself: 'I miss you more than I can even put into words, but I'm gonna do this. I got it.' The term expires in January, with a Republican primary special election scheduled for August 11.

  • The appointment of Darline Graham Nordone to her brother's Senate seat carried a depth of meaning that went far beyond political succession. Their mother died from cancer in 1976, and their father suffered a fatal heart attack just fifteen months later, leaving a 13-year-old Darline effectively orphaned while Lindsey was beginning law school. Rather than leaving her behind, Graham became her legal guardian, regularly traveling home to check on her while she stayed with relatives. He later formally adopted her so she could qualify for his military benefits — an act that speaks to the intimacy and responsibility of their bond. Darline told NPR in 2015: 'Lindsey wrapped his arms around me and promised me he would always be there for me and always take care of me.' She went on to earn a master's degree in rehabilitation counseling, worked as an optician, and served in several South Carolina state agencies. Now, she carries his Senate seat forward — the culmination of a life that Lindsey Graham made possible.

  • The second sponsor break pitches Lean, a weight-loss supplement developed by doctors at Brickhouse Nutrition, as an alternative for people who want real results without weekly injections. The ad describes Lean's studied ingredients as working to lower blood sugar, burn fat by converting it to energy, and suppress appetite. The product is positioned specifically for 'frustrated dieters' with 10 or more pounds to lose — not casual users. A 20% discount and free rush shipping are available at takelean.com using promo code MK.

  • A fast-growing Cyclospora parasite outbreak has become one of the largest foodborne illness events in recent memory, sickening more than 4,000 people across more than 30 states. Federal and state health officials, according to two sources familiar with the investigation cited by the Washington Post, are now examining whether Taco Bell restaurants played a role — though no direct link to the chain or any contaminated supplier has been established. The investigation sharpened after some Taco Bell restaurants around Detroit stopped serving lettuce, guacamole, pico de gallo, and a cilantro-onion mixture last week, posting vague signs citing a 'nationwide recall' while the company offered no public explanation. Michigan has emerged as the center of the outbreak with over 3,300 reported cases and 44 hospitalizations. The parasite — Cyclospora cayetanensis — spreads through produce contaminated with feces from infected individuals; it cannot jump from person to person because it must first mature outside the body. Symptoms take up to a week or longer to appear, making it exceptionally difficult for investigators to trace, as patients must recall what they ate days or even weeks before getting sick.

  • Infectious disease physician Dr. Richard Smith, speaking to NBC 7 San Diego, offered some of the most alarming practical guidance of the episode. 'All bets are off, even if you wash it with water and soap,' Smith said — a direct rebuttal to the assumption that careful produce-washing provides protection. The only reliable method to kill Cyclospora, he said, is boiling at high temperature. For those who frequent salad bars, his advice was simple: give them a rest for a week or two while investigators work to identify the source. Celebrity chef Andrew Gruel had separately pointed to Michigan's role as a major produce distribution hub and posted on X that 'bagged lettuce is the culprit,' advising consumers to cook their produce or avoid bagged lettuce mixes entirely. The practical takeaway for listeners: in this outbreak, caution demands more than a rinse under the tap.

  • The final major story of the episode is a coast-to-coast heat emergency, with a sprawling heat dome stretching from the West across the Northern Plains and into the Northeast, placing more than 108 million Americans under active heat alerts. The National Weather Service forecasted over 90 temperature records could be tied or broken in a single day, most involving unusually warm overnight temperatures that prevent bodies and buildings from recovering. All-time records have already fallen: Salt Lake City hit 109°F and Billings, Montana reached 111°F on Sunday. Fox 5 Washington meteorologist Tucker Barnes explained the science — high pressure suppresses storms, produces bright blue skies, and forces air to loft, compress, and descend back toward Earth, effectively capping the atmosphere and steering the jet stream away. The result: communities bake for days on end with no relief. ABC News chief medical correspondent Dr. Tara Narula added urgency for individuals, advising Americans to check the heat index rather than temperature alone, wear loose light clothing, avoid alcohol and caffeine, and hydrate consistently even without feeling thirsty. She also flagged a risk many overlook: short-muzzled dog breeds like pugs and boxers struggle to pant efficiently and are especially vulnerable in extreme heat.

  • Mark Halperin signs off from the AM Update, directing listeners to find more of his work at nextuphalperin.com and reminding them that the Megyn Kelly Show airs live on SiriusXM's Megyn Kelly Channel 111 at noon Eastern, as well as on YouTube and all podcast platforms. A final repeat of the Minnesota Department of Public Safety sloth-themed road safety PSA bookends the episode, reinforcing the same slow-down message from the cold open.

Cyclospora (Cyclospora cayetanensis)
A microscopic intestinal parasite spread through feces-contaminated food or water that causes prolonged diarrhea; it cannot spread person-to-person because it must mature outside the body first.
Cyclosporiasis
The intestinal infection caused by the Cyclospora parasite, characterized by stomach cramps, nausea, fatigue, and prolonged or explosive diarrhea.
Heat dome
A weather phenomenon where a high-pressure system traps hot air over a region, suppresses storms, compresses descending air, and steers the jet stream away, causing days-long extreme heat.
Heat index
A measure of how hot it actually feels when humidity is combined with the air temperature; a heat index above 103°F can be genuinely dangerous to human health.
Swatting
A harassment tactic where someone makes a false emergency report (e.g., a fake hostage situation) to send heavily armed police to a victim's address.
Dobbs leak
The May 2022 leak of a draft Supreme Court opinion in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization, which signaled the court planned to overturn Roe v. Wade, triggering widespread protests and threats.
Tax-sheltered IRA
An Individual Retirement Account structured to provide tax advantages (either tax-deferred or tax-free growth); Birch Gold's product converts a traditional IRA or 401(k) into one backed by physical gold.
House Appropriations Subcommittee
A congressional subcommittee responsible for reviewing and approving specific portions of the federal budget, in this case the budget for the federal judiciary.
US Marshals Service
The federal law enforcement agency responsible for protecting federal judges, managing fugitive operations, and other judicial security functions.
Pico de gallo
A fresh Mexican condiment made of chopped tomatoes, onion, cilantro, jalapeño, and lime — one of the items removed from Taco Bell menus in the Detroit area during the outbreak investigation.
Perfunctory
Carried out with minimal effort or care, as a routine duty; used here implicitly in contrast to Graham's genuine, non-perfunctory approach to confirmation hearings.
Legal guardian
A person legally appointed to care for and make decisions on behalf of a minor or incapacitated person; Lindsey Graham became his sister Darline's legal guardian after both parents died.
Special primary
A primary election held outside the regular election cycle specifically to fill a vacant elected office, in this case Lindsey Graham's Senate seat.

Chapter 4 · 02:31

SCOTUS Security Crisis: Justices Testify Before Congress

In an unusual display of bipartisan unity, liberal Justice Elena Kagan and conservative Justice Amy Coney Barrett appeared side by side before separate House and Senate panels to make an urgent case for a larger court budget. The court is requesting $228 million for the next fiscal year — a roughly 10% increase — including $14.6 million specifically for expanded justice protection teams. The scale of the threat is stark: nearly 400 federal judges faced threats last year, and 276 more have already been targeted in just the first half of this year alone, according to the US Marshals Service. The hearing drew into sharp focus the 2022 attempted assassination of Justice Brett Kavanaugh, when a California man named Nicholas Roski traveled across the country to Kavanaugh's Maryland neighborhood armed with a Glock, ammunition, a tactical knife, zip ties, pepper spray, and burglary tools. Roski called 911 and surrendered before carrying out the attack; he later pleaded guilty to attempted murder, telling prosecutors the leaked Dobbs draft had enraged him. The episode stands as the most visceral evidence of what the justices face — not abstract hate mail, but real, armed men at their front doors.

Claims made here

The Supreme Court is requesting $228 million for the next fiscal year, including $14.6 million for expanded justice protection.

Mark Halperin no source cited

Nearly 400 federal judges faced threats last year, and another 276 were targeted in the first half of this year.

Mark Halperin US Marshals Service

Nicholas Roski pleaded guilty to attempted murder of Justice Kavanaugh, admitting he was angered by the leaked draft Dobbs opinion.

Mark Halperin no source cited

Government
Data point 38%

SCOTUS Asks For More Security, Graham’s Sister Sworn In, Pa… · Jul 15, 2026 Government

The Supreme Court expects a 38% surge in threats this year, following a 25% rise last year. Nearly 400 federal judges faced threats in the past year, and the court is now requesting $228 million — including $14.6 million for expanded justice protection — to keep up with an escalating danger.

Government
Attempted Assassination of Kavanaugh: How Close It Really Got

SCOTUS Asks For More Security, Graham’s Sister Sworn In, Pa… · Jul 15, 2026 Government

A California man drove across the country to Justice Brett Kavanaugh's Maryland neighborhood armed with a Glock, ammunition, a tactical knife, zip ties, pepper spray, and burglary tools — intending to assassinate him. He called 911 and surrendered himself, later pleading guilty to attempted murder after saying the leaked Dobbs draft had enraged him.

Chapter 5 · 05:05

Barrett's Bulletproof Vest and the Personal Cost of the Bench

Justice Amy Coney Barrett, a mother of seven, brought the abstract danger of the court's security crisis into human scale. She described the night her security detail sent her home with a bulletproof vest during the most intense period of threats following the Dobbs leak — how she set it on her bedroom table, turned around, and found her 12-year-old son standing in the doorway asking what it was. 'I didn't expect that performing this service was gonna put me in the position of explaining to my children what a bulletproof vest was,' Barrett said. She also disclosed her home had recently been the target of a swatting attack — a hoax that sends armed police units rushing to a victim's address under false pretenses. Senator Susan Collins used the hearing to directly call out Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer, pointing to his 2020 speech outside the Supreme Court where he named Gorsuch and Kavanaugh by name and warned they would 'pay the price' — rhetoric Collins argued had no place coming from a senior public official and helped fuel the hostility the court now faces.

Claims made here

Threats against Congress are up 50% this year according to the Capitol Police chief's testimony.

Elena Kagan Capitol Police chief's congressional testimony

Government
Collins Calls Out Schumer for Inflaming SCOTUS Threats

SCOTUS Asks For More Security, Graham’s Sister Sworn In, Pa… · Jul 15, 2026 Government

Senator Susan Collins publicly called out Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer for a 2020 speech where he singled out Gorsuch and Kavanaugh by name outside the Supreme Court, warning they would 'pay the price.' Collins argued rhetoric from elected officials on both sides is directly dangerous — not just irresponsible.

Chapter 6 · 07:00

Kagan's Tribute to Lindsey Graham: The Chinese Restaurant Moment

The hearing took an unexpected and touching turn when the late Senator Lindsey Graham, who died suddenly just days earlier, was remembered by the justices he had once evaluated. Justice Elena Kagan, no natural ally to the deep-red South Carolina Republican, recalled the moment in her 2010 confirmation when Graham interrupted a serious terrorism law debate to ask, simply, 'where were you on Christmas Day?' Kagan's response — 'like all Jews, I was probably at a Chinese restaurant' — drew laughs and became the most-cited moment of her hearing. Kagan said many people told her afterward that the Graham exchange was the moment her confirmation was sealed. She went further, crediting Graham not just for making her look funny but for voting to confirm her at all — a cross-party act she acknowledged was not expected from a senator representing a deep-red state. Graham was one of four Republicans who supported her nomination. Kagan closed by expressing the gratitude of the entire court and saying she could understand why so many people would deeply miss him.

Claims made here

The Supreme Court police expect a 38% annual increase in threats in 2025, following a 25% increase the prior year.

Elena Kagan no source cited

Government
Kagan's Christmas Day Joke That Sealed Her Confirmation

SCOTUS Asks For More Security, Graham’s Sister Sworn In, Pa… · Jul 15, 2026 Government

During her 2010 confirmation hearing, Lindsey Graham interrupted a serious terrorism law debate to ask Elena Kagan where she was on Christmas Day. Her answer — 'like all Jews, I was probably at a Chinese restaurant' — became the most memorable moment of the hearings, and Kagan says many told her it sealed her confirmation.

Chapter 7 · 09:50

Darline Graham Nordone Sworn In as First Female South Carolina Senator

With a brief oath of office, history was made — Darline Graham Nordone became the first woman ever to hold a Senate seat representing South Carolina, appointed by Republican Governor Henry McMaster to complete her late brother Lindsey Graham's term. McMaster revealed the story behind the appointment at the State House: he had called Darline in the early hours of Sunday morning and she agreed to serve through tears. 'I was humbled by your quickness to see the duty that you had to serve,' McMaster said. In her own remarks, Nordone paid tribute to her brother's relentless work ethic and genuine character — 'he worked nonstop to make our state, country, and world better' — before closing with a message directly addressed to Lindsey himself: 'I miss you more than I can even put into words, but I'm gonna do this. I got it.' The term expires in January, with a Republican primary special election scheduled for August 11.

Claims made here

Lindsey Graham became his sister Darline's legal guardian while in law school after both parents died within 15 months; he later formally adopted her.

Mark Halperin no source cited

Society & Culture
Lindsey Graham Raised His Sister: The Untold Family Story

SCOTUS Asks For More Security, Graham’s Sister Sworn In, Pa… · Jul 15, 2026 Society & Culture

When their mother died in 1976 and their father followed just 15 months later, a young Lindsey Graham stepped up as his 13-year-old sister Darline's legal guardian while he was still in law school. He later formally adopted her so she could receive his military benefits — a bond that ultimately led her to the US Senate.

Chapter 8 · 13:15

The Graham Family Story: How Lindsey Became Darline's Guardian

The appointment of Darline Graham Nordone to her brother's Senate seat carried a depth of meaning that went far beyond political succession. Their mother died from cancer in 1976, and their father suffered a fatal heart attack just fifteen months later, leaving a 13-year-old Darline effectively orphaned while Lindsey was beginning law school. Rather than leaving her behind, Graham became her legal guardian, regularly traveling home to check on her while she stayed with relatives. He later formally adopted her so she could qualify for his military benefits — an act that speaks to the intimacy and responsibility of their bond. Darline told NPR in 2015: 'Lindsey wrapped his arms around me and promised me he would always be there for me and always take care of me.' She went on to earn a master's degree in rehabilitation counseling, worked as an optician, and served in several South Carolina state agencies. Now, she carries his Senate seat forward — the culmination of a life that Lindsey Graham made possible.

Claims made here

More than 4,000 people across more than 30 states have been sickened in the Cyclospora outbreak.

Mark Halperin Washington Post

Health & Fitness
Data point 4,000+

SCOTUS Asks For More Security, Graham’s Sister Sworn In, Pa… · Jul 15, 2026 Health & Fitness

Federal and state officials are investigating whether Taco Bell restaurants played a role in a Cyclospora parasite outbreak that has sickened more than 4,000 people across 30+ states. Some Detroit-area Taco Bell locations stopped serving lettuce and guacamole last week with signs citing a 'nationwide recall' — but no direct link has been established.

Chapter 10 · 15:09

Cyclospora Parasite Outbreak: Taco Bell Under Investigation

A fast-growing Cyclospora parasite outbreak has become one of the largest foodborne illness events in recent memory, sickening more than 4,000 people across more than 30 states. Federal and state health officials, according to two sources familiar with the investigation cited by the Washington Post, are now examining whether Taco Bell restaurants played a role — though no direct link to the chain or any contaminated supplier has been established. The investigation sharpened after some Taco Bell restaurants around Detroit stopped serving lettuce, guacamole, pico de gallo, and a cilantro-onion mixture last week, posting vague signs citing a 'nationwide recall' while the company offered no public explanation. Michigan has emerged as the center of the outbreak with over 3,300 reported cases and 44 hospitalizations. The parasite — Cyclospora cayetanensis — spreads through produce contaminated with feces from infected individuals; it cannot jump from person to person because it must first mature outside the body. Symptoms take up to a week or longer to appear, making it exceptionally difficult for investigators to trace, as patients must recall what they ate days or even weeks before getting sick.

Claims made here

Cyclospora must mature outside the body before becoming infectious and therefore generally does not spread directly from person to person.

Mark Halperin CDC

Cyclospora symptoms typically begin about one week after exposure and can include explosive diarrhea that may persist for weeks or recur.

Mark Halperin CDC

Michigan reported more than 3,300 cases and 44 hospitalizations in the Cyclospora outbreak.

Mark Halperin no source cited

Health & Fitness
Cyclospora: What It Is and Why It's So Hard to Track

SCOTUS Asks For More Security, Graham’s Sister Sworn In, Pa… · Jul 15, 2026 Health & Fitness

Cyclospora is an intestinal parasite spread through feces-contaminated food or water. It cannot spread person-to-person because it must mature outside the body first. Symptoms take up to two weeks to appear, forcing patients to recall meals they ate long ago — making outbreak tracing a nightmare.

Chapter 11 · 17:38

How to Stay Safe: Boil Your Produce and Skip the Salad Bar

Infectious disease physician Dr. Richard Smith, speaking to NBC 7 San Diego, offered some of the most alarming practical guidance of the episode. 'All bets are off, even if you wash it with water and soap,' Smith said — a direct rebuttal to the assumption that careful produce-washing provides protection. The only reliable method to kill Cyclospora, he said, is boiling at high temperature. For those who frequent salad bars, his advice was simple: give them a rest for a week or two while investigators work to identify the source. Celebrity chef Andrew Gruel had separately pointed to Michigan's role as a major produce distribution hub and posted on X that 'bagged lettuce is the culprit,' advising consumers to cook their produce or avoid bagged lettuce mixes entirely. The practical takeaway for listeners: in this outbreak, caution demands more than a rinse under the tap.

Claims made here

Washing produce with soap and water may not be sufficient to kill Cyclospora; boiling is needed to reliably eliminate it.

Dr. Richard Smith no source cited

Chapter 12 · 18:18

Heat Dome Baking 108 Million Americans: Records Fall Across the West

The final major story of the episode is a coast-to-coast heat emergency, with a sprawling heat dome stretching from the West across the Northern Plains and into the Northeast, placing more than 108 million Americans under active heat alerts. The National Weather Service forecasted over 90 temperature records could be tied or broken in a single day, most involving unusually warm overnight temperatures that prevent bodies and buildings from recovering. All-time records have already fallen: Salt Lake City hit 109°F and Billings, Montana reached 111°F on Sunday. Fox 5 Washington meteorologist Tucker Barnes explained the science — high pressure suppresses storms, produces bright blue skies, and forces air to loft, compress, and descend back toward Earth, effectively capping the atmosphere and steering the jet stream away. The result: communities bake for days on end with no relief. ABC News chief medical correspondent Dr. Tara Narula added urgency for individuals, advising Americans to check the heat index rather than temperature alone, wear loose light clothing, avoid alcohol and caffeine, and hydrate consistently even without feeling thirsty. She also flagged a risk many overlook: short-muzzled dog breeds like pugs and boxers struggle to pant efficiently and are especially vulnerable in extreme heat.

Claims made here

More than 108 million people were under active heat alerts as a heat dome stretched from the West Coast to the Northeast.

Mark Halperin no source cited

The National Weather Service forecasted more than 90 temperature records could be tied or broken in a single day, mostly involving overnight lows.

Mark Halperin National Weather Service

Salt Lake City reached 109°F and Billings, Montana hit 111°F on Sunday, shattering all-time records.

Mark Halperin no source cited

A heat index greater than 103°F can be dangerous, as it reflects combined temperature and humidity rather than air temperature alone.

Dr. Tara Narula no source cited

News
Data point 108M

SCOTUS Asks For More Security, Graham’s Sister Sworn In, Pa… · Jul 15, 2026 News

More than 108 million Americans are under heat alerts as a massive heat dome stretches coast to coast. The mechanism: high pressure traps hot air, caps the atmosphere, and steers the jet stream away — locking communities into dangerous temperatures for days at a time. Salt Lake City hit 109°F and Billings, Montana reached 111°F.

Health & Fitness
Extreme Heat Safety Tips: What Doctors Say You Must Do

SCOTUS Asks For More Security, Graham’s Sister Sworn In, Pa… · Jul 15, 2026 Health & Fitness

With 108 million Americans under heat alerts, doctors say check the heat index (not just temperature), wear light loose clothing, avoid alcohol and caffeine, and hydrate even when you don't feel thirsty. Don't forget your pets — short-muzzled breeds like pugs and boxers are especially vulnerable because they can't pant efficiently.

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6 / 15 cited (40%)

Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.

The Supreme Court police expect a 38% annual increase in threats in 2025, following a 25% increase the prior year.

Elena Kagan no source cited

Threats against Congress are up 50% this year according to the Capitol Police chief's testimony.

Elena Kagan Capitol Police chief's congressional testimony

Nearly 400 federal judges faced threats last year, and another 276 were targeted in the first half of this year.

Mark Halperin US Marshals Service

The Supreme Court is requesting $228 million for the next fiscal year, including $14.6 million for expanded justice protection.

Mark Halperin no source cited

Nicholas Roski pleaded guilty to attempted murder of Justice Kavanaugh, admitting he was angered by the leaked draft Dobbs opinion.

Mark Halperin no source cited

More than 4,000 people across more than 30 states have been sickened in the Cyclospora outbreak.

Mark Halperin Washington Post

Michigan reported more than 3,300 cases and 44 hospitalizations in the Cyclospora outbreak.

Mark Halperin no source cited

Cyclospora must mature outside the body before becoming infectious and therefore generally does not spread directly from person to person.

Mark Halperin CDC

Cyclospora symptoms typically begin about one week after exposure and can include explosive diarrhea that may persist for weeks or recur.

Mark Halperin CDC

Washing produce with soap and water may not be sufficient to kill Cyclospora; boiling is needed to reliably eliminate it.

Dr. Richard Smith no source cited

More than 108 million people were under active heat alerts as a heat dome stretched from the West Coast to the Northeast.

Mark Halperin no source cited

The National Weather Service forecasted more than 90 temperature records could be tied or broken in a single day, mostly involving overnight lows.

Mark Halperin National Weather Service

Salt Lake City reached 109°F and Billings, Montana hit 111°F on Sunday, shattering all-time records.

Mark Halperin no source cited

Lindsey Graham became his sister Darline's legal guardian while in law school after both parents died within 15 months; he later formally adopted her.

Mark Halperin no source cited

A heat index greater than 103°F can be dangerous, as it reflects combined temperature and humidity rather than air temperature alone.

Dr. Tara Narula no source cited

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