What we know about the arson at Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro’s residence
Authorities in Pennsylvania have arrested the man they say intentionally set fire to the governor’s residence early Sunday morning while Gov. Josh Shapiro and his family were asleep inside.
Prosecutors have charged Cody Balmer, 38, with attempted murder, terrorism, aggravated arson and other crimes. He turned himself in to police later on Sunday.
Authorities have not disclosed a motive for the attack, but investigators say Balmer told them he had been “harboring hatred” toward Shapiro and would have beaten the governor with a hammer if he’d encountered him during the break-in at the Harrisburg residence.
Pennsylvania State Police said Monday that Balmer had been hospitalized and was receiving treatment for “a medical event not connected to this incident or his arrest.”
At a press conference Sunday evening, a shaken Shapiro thanked law enforcement officers for their work and well-wishers for their messages of support, as he forcefully denounced acts of political violence.

“This type of violence is not ok! This kind of violence is becoming far too common in our society,” Shapiro said. “And I don’t give a damn if it’s coming from one particular side or the other, directed at one particular party or another or one particular person or another, it is not ok. And it has to stop. We have to be better than this.”
Here’s what we know so far about the arson attack.
Police detail how the arson unfolded
Investigators say Balmer accessed the governor’s residence grounds by climbing a perimeter fence on the south side of the property.
According to a probable cause affidavit written by the Pennsylvania State Police, Balmer was then seen on surveillance video approaching the piano room on the south side of the residence.
He broke a window in the piano room and threw an incendiary device inside, authorities say, before breaking an adjacent window, climbing through it into the residence and throwing a second incendiary device into the dining room. Police say both rooms suffered “significant fire damage.”
Balmer was then spotted on surveillance video kicking open a dining room exit door, climbing over the same fence he used to enter the property and running away.

Pennsylvania State Police Lt. Col. George Bivens said Balmer was inside the residence for less than a minute and that the entire incident played out over “a period of several minutes” and was a “very quick event.”
Troopers had been alerted to a perimeter breach at the residence and were investigating it while Balmer allegedly committed the arson, Bivens said. “He actively evaded troopers who were here to secure the residence even while they were searching for him on the property,” he said. “While they were searching is when he attacked the residence, broke in and set the fires.”
What Balmer told investigators
During the investigation, a woman police said was Balmer’s “ex-paramour” called authorities and said Balmer had confessed to her to setting the fires at Shapiro’s residence and wanted her to tell the police he did it.
A short time later, Balmer approached an officer outside the Pennsylvania State Police headquarters in Harrisburg and admitted he was responsible for the arson, police say.
In a subsequent interview, investigators say Balmer told them he hated Shapiro and was aware that Shapiro and others might be in the house at the time of the attack. When police asked Balmer what he would have done if he’d encountered Shapiro, “he advised he would have beaten him with his hammer,” officers said.
Balmer allegedly told police that he walked for about an hour to the governor’s residence — roughly three miles from the address listed for him in the affidavit — and that he created the homemade Molotov cocktails used in the attack by pouring gasoline from a lawnmower into empty Heineken beer bottles. Investigators found two broken Heineken bottles containing gasoline at the crime scene.
A search of Balmer’s residence turned up a Snap-on jacket, a black bag and a small sledgehammer that police say were identical to those used by the perpetrator seen in the surveillance footage of the attack.
In a reversal, the Trump administration restores funding for women’s health study
The unexpected elimination of funding for the decades-long research project focused on women's health shocked scientists. They were heartened by the quick restoration of support.
Alabama executes a man who said he was guilty of rape and murder and deserved to die
James Osgood was pronounced dead Thursday evening following a three-drug injection at a south Alabama prison. A jury in 2014 convicted Osgood of capital murder in the death of Tracy Lynn Brown in Chilton County.
A developing political scandal in Florida has Gov. Ron DeSantis on the defensive
A developing political scandal in Florida has put Gov. Ron DeSantis on the defensive. Republican lawmakers are investigating how $10 million in state money was diverted for use in a campaign.
Artists wanted for Trump’s National Garden of American Heroes
The National Endowment for the Humanities says the project will "honor the statesmen, visionaries, and innovators who shaped the nation." It's a lot of statues.
More than 50 House Democrats demand answers after whistleblower report on DOGE
Members of the Congressional Labor Caucus wrote the letter after NPR reported that a whistleblower says DOGE may have removed sensitive labor data and compromised the security of computer systems.
Home sales just posted their biggest monthly fall since 2022
More inventory hitting the market was expected to drive sales. Instead, existing home sales suggest a continued slump in the housing market, with mortgage rates hurting affordability.