Idalia downgraded to tropical storm after hitting Georgia, Carolinas, Florida: Live updates

PERRY, Fla. − Downgraded to a tropical storm, what had been Hurricane Idalia powered across southeastern Georgia and the Carolinas on Wednesday evening after making landfall earlier along Florida's Big Bend as a Category 3 tropical cyclone and driving "catastrophic" storm surge and flooding for hundreds of miles.

As of 5 p.m., the storm's center was located 115 miles west-southwest of Charleston, South Carolina, heading northeast at 21 mph with sustained winds of 70 mph.

"Flash and river flooding is likely across Georgia and the eastern Carolinas through Thursday," the National Hurricane Center said in its afternoon update.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said at a late-afternoon briefing that some of the hardest-hit areas are laden with debris, severely damaged property, and reports of looting. He gave a stern warning to the looters.

"People have a right to defend their property," DeSantis said. "In this part of Florida, you've got a lot of advocates and proponents of the 2nd Amendment, and I've seen signs in different people's yards in the past after these disasters [that say] 'You loot, we shoot.' You never know what's behind that door."

He said he has told the state's emergency responders and law enforcement personnel to protect people's property.

"We are not going to tolerate any looting in the aftermath of a natural disaster. I mean, it's just ridiculous that you would try to do something like that on the heels of an almost category 4 hurricane hitting this community," the governor said.

"You go break into somebody's house, and you're trying to loot, these are people that are going to be able to defend themselves and their families. We are going to hold you accountable from a law enforcement perspective at a minimum, and it could even be worse than that, depending on what's behind that door."

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