The FBI has issued a new warning to disable local admin accounts as ongoing data-stealing attacks continue. Here’s what you need to know.
Warning: spoilers are ahead for FBI: International's Season 4 winter premiere, called "The Kill Floor" and available streaming now with a Paramount+ subscription.
New episodes of all three FBI shows air on CBS Tuesday nights, starting with FBI at 8 p.m. ET, followed by FBI: International (which finally resolved Vo's fate in the winter premiere) at 9 p.m. ET, and closing out with Most Wanted at 10 p.m. ET. You can also revisit earlier episodes of the current seasons streaming on Paramount+.
All three shows return tonight, starting with “FBI” season 7 at 8/7c, “FBI: International” season 4 at 9/8c, and “FBI: Most Wanted” season 6 at 10/9c. Watch each midseason premiere tonight on CBS. Stream the new episodes via Fubo, Paramount+, DIRECTV Stream, and Hulu + Live TV.
International season 4 returned after its mid-season hiatus on January 28, 2025. The last time we saw the Special Agents, they were facing off against the deadly criminal Greg Csonka.
Donald Eugene Fields II was indicted in St. Louis for allegedly attempting to recruit and exploit a minor for commercial sex acts.
The video, set to “Bad to the Bone” by George Thorogood, drew condemnation. “Kash Patel, Donald Trump’s pick for FBI Director, shared an AI-generated video of himself chainsawing Members of Congress, political opponents, and media outlets. Dangerous and disqualified,” Judiciary Democrats tweeted Saturday.
Patel, like Trump, has taken a different view, saying the rioters have been mistreated by the criminal justice system. A former federal public defender and prosecutor, he has called them “political prisoners” and offered on at least one occasion to represent them for free.
Lady Lake Police Sgt. Michelle Bilbrey arrested Donald Eugene Fields II, a fugitive on the FBI's Ten Most Wanted list, during a routine traffic stop.
An FBI SWAT team smashed the front door of a suburban Atlanta home in 2017 as they attempted to serve a search warrant. They had the wrong home.
A Gloucester County man freed from prison in the wave of President Trump’s Jan. 6 pardons last week was serving a separate, longer term for possessing ammunition as a convicted felon, records show.