
the biggest threats being large hail that can cause enough damage on its own, 2 inches or more. for tonight and overnight, 15 million at risk.

that's going to be the trend over the next four days. so that's going to continue the next couple of hours, most likely shift to the east we are looking at lightning and heavy rain where you see theĭarker colors. where you see that yellow line, that is a severe thunderstorm watch box. let's go ahead and take a look at radar because we are watching storms right now in northern texas, also parts of oklahoma. nbc meteorologist michelle grossman with us now what's the outlook right now, michelle > well, we are watching storms firing right now we're going to continue to watch that not only today, tomorrow, wednesday and thursday so the third week in a row of seeing severe weather. and now the state is preparing to get hit again meteorologists warning the biggest risks will be large hail, damaging wind and potentially tornados and they're saying the greatest threat will be at night, which only increases the danger. those are the same areas that severe weather and tornados hit just last week the national weather service now confirms 21 tornados touched down in a single day in mississippi last week.

california governor gavin newsom issued a statement yesterday saying that the scourge of gunĪnd mississippi the highest risk tonight. they weren't enough not only to stop this mass shooting, but another shooting here in sacramento in february that left five people dead, including the gunman, and that shooting in san jose last year at a rail yard that left ten people dead.

> reporter: those gun laws here in california include a ban on high-capacity magazines and universal background checks. > this sickness will be cured some day in this country or we will destroy ourselves in this country, as we do in too many communities on too many occasions over too many years. they say more than a hundred tips, pictures and pieces of video have come in but none of it answers the larger questions in a city that prides itself on community outreach and a state with the toughest gun laws in the nation. reporter: trying to piece together what happened in a crime scene that spans several blocks, police have appealed to the public for help.
