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Transcripts For KGO ABC World News Tonight With David Muir 20190404

fire on the family, killing a 10-year-old. the american woman, the tourist kidnapped. they're demanding a half million, and we're there tonight. new reporting this evening, investigators on robert mueller's team reportedly unhappy with the attorney general's summary, saying their findings involving the president were far more alarming. prince harry taking a stand tonight. he now wants a ban on one of the most popular video games here in the u.s. and around the world. and made in america is back tonight. we're taking another swing. our trip to the ballpark and one more thing we discovered made in america. good evening. and it'sreaking wsur late today in the case of thatmmot p boy who was last seen was just 6. this surveillance of him with hi overnight, we reported a young man coming forward, telling police he had just escaped, he ran across state lines, he said. the family of the boy suddenly filled with new hope after waiting for so many years. and then, just a short time ago, the fbi revealing it is not the boy. heartbreak again. and what would lead someone to do this? abc's whit johnson leading us off from cincinnati. >> reporter: tonight, heartbreak for the family of missing timmothy pitzen, after the fbi announced a dna test confirms the mysterious young man who showed up in kentucky is not who he claimed to be. >> it's devastating. >> yeah. >> it's like reliving that day all over again. and timmothy's father is devastated once again. >> reporter: instead, authorities say this is not a boy at all, but a 23-year-old man from ohio, brian michael rini. prison records there show a man there with the same name served time. and tonight, they want to know why they told this elaborate tale, giving a family false hope. >> oh, it's kind of back to ground zero for us. kind of reliving everything that did happen and renewing the loss one more time. >> reporter: since 2011, pitzen's family has served for the little boy who vanished with his mother when he was just 6 years old. >> it's just more devastated than anything else. where's tim at? if i knew where he was, i'd go get him. i'd do just about anything to get him back. >> reporter: his mother seen on surveillance taking him out of school and on trip to a zoo and water parks. days later, committing suicide, leaving a chilling note saying timmothy was safe but would never be found. >> he's with a 14-year-old juvenile, male, white, says he was kidnapped from somewhere. >> reporter: eight years later, this man in a hoodie showing up a northern kentucky neighbood. sharon hall snapping this picture. >> i could see the side of his face was scarred up, almost like he had been on concrete or something, like scars. >> reporter: like he had injuries or something? >> yeah, and his face was real rough. he was just frantic. >> reporter: he told a harrowing story about he has just escaped his kidnappers. >> he walked up to my car. and he went, "can you help me, i just want to get home." and he told me he's been kidnapped and he's been traded through all these people. >> reporter: but that lie is not discouraging timmothy pitzen's family. >> we know you are out there somewhere, tim. and we will never stop looking for you. praying for you and loving you. >> and whit johnson joins us live tonight from outside the fbi in cincinnati. whit, we can't imagine what this family is going through, this roller coaster of a 24 hours. they had new hope for some time, and where does this case go from here? >> reporter: well, david, a spokesperson with the aurora, illinois, police department, when asked if anything good can come from this case, he said it did create a renewed awareness a in the disappearance, but tonight, it is still unclear what charges could be in store for the man who made this whole thing up. david? >> whit johnson tonight, thank you. we are also following a hostage standoff still unfolding at this hour. two police officers shot and rushed to the hospital in a eyespo and then coming under fire. heavily armed s.w.a.t. teams moving in. the gunman holding at least one hostage. a 16-year-old boyma in the has . i-75 shut down tonight. abc's steve osunsami is on the scene for us. >> reporter: police say the barricaded gunman in this suburban atlanta neighborhood was promising to shoot cops, and has already wounded two. two henry county police officers were rushed to a hospital in downtown atlanta. one had to be airlifted. >> he's got two small children. >> reporter: the family of one of them spoke outside the hospital. >> this is the family's worst nightmare. >> reporter: this began with a frantic call from a woman reporting that someone inside the home may have been hurt or possibly killed. the officers were shot trying to enter the home. >> some type of domestic dispute. it was a trouble unknown and we just didn't get the information. the female caller was distraught. >> reporter: police say a 16-year-old boy, related to the gunman, was being held inside the home. a small army of local authorities set up next door and at one point, sent a robot into the house. families trying to get home, couldn't. neighbors inside their homes couldn't leave. four kids were reunited with their father -- >> were you scared, dad? >> yes, i was scared. >> reporter: after police helped them climb over a back then. >> let's get to steve osunsami. the officers themselves, they're expected to be okay? >> reporter: yes, david. one officer was shot in the hand, the other in the upper torso. and police say that his police vest may have saved his life. both officers are in stable condition tonight. david? >> steve osunsami. steve, thank you. we're going to turn next tonight to the horrifying description from inside the cockpit of that boeing max jet that crashed, the second one to go down. the ethiopians now saying tonight, quote, the crew performed all of the procedures provided by the manufacturer. and yet, they couldn't save the plane. and tonight, boeing now with a stunning acknowledgement. what they're now saying. and here's abc's david kerley. >> reporter: the first look tonight at the drama in the cockpit before the second deadly crash. a sensor malfunctions seconds after takeoff. sources tell abc news they believe it was a bird strike triggering that anti-stall system, mcas, nosing down the plane twice before the pilots shut off the system. the boeing procedure. but they can't manually nose up the plane, possibly because the jet's high speed is putting too much pressure on the stabilizer as alarms sound. >> pull up. >> reporter: then, counter to the boeing guidelines, the data shows the pilots turned the power back on. mcas misfiring again, sending them into a steeper dive and crash. shared blameccng to a former ntsb investigator. >> certainly, the design of the aircraft, the design of the system, the information provided to pilots, but also, the pilots themselves and how they reacted to the situation. >> reporter: and tonight, boeing's ceo acknowledging the link between the crashes. >> it's our responsibility to eliminate this risk. we own it and we know how to do it. >> all right, david kerley with us live. he's been on this story from the start. and david, we just heard boeing's ceo saying, "we own it." it must have really concerned them that the pilots at least at first did what they were supposed to do and it still didn't keep the jet in the air. >> reporter: puzzled why they turned the system back on. also, the speed. 94% of thrust. the plane going so fast. if you want to hand trim that plane, you got to go at a slower speed, david. >> all right, david kerley with us tonight. david, thank you. we also have new reporting here tonight on the american woman, the tourist, kidnapped by gunmen. they are demanding a half million in ransom. authorities in you began day tonight with a new warning, given what's happened to this american woman. abc's senior foreign correspondent ian pannell has just arrived in uganda for us. >> reporter: tonight, ugandan officials expanding the search zone as they frantically look for an american woman and her local driver, kidnapped while on a ewe began unanimous safari, similar to ones like these promoted by the tour company. a joint operation by police, armed forces and wildlife authorities now looking beyond the queen elizabeth national park where kimberly sue endicott, identified by neighbors as this woman, and jean-paul mirenge remezo were taken at gunpoint over two days ago. they were with an elderly canadian couple who were allowed to escape and warn authorities. an official in washington telling abc news, "it appears the abduction is motivated by money." but there are fears it could've been poachers or militia rebels from neighboring congo. the kidnappers demanding half a million dollars ransom. did they have a guard on this occasion? >> on this occasion they did not have a guide. they did not have one. >> reporter: tonight, the state department warning americans to avoid the part of the park where the pair were taken until this is resolved. >> and ian pannell reporting in from uganda for us, as this search for the american woman continues. i know that officials are closing parts of the border and they're telling tourists to travel with protection because of this incident? that's a change. >> reporter: yeah, this is a change. and, you know, ugandans are genuinely shocked by what's happened here. it's a mark of how normally safe this country is. there's not an actual requirement, normally, to take an armed guard. but obviously after this incident, that advice is now changing, they're telling people to take protection while still insisting this country is safe for tourists. david? >> all right, see yian, thank y back here at home tonight, there is a major new headline involving the mueller report. and in particular, members of robert mueller's team who are reportedly unhappy with how the report was summarized by the attorney general, telling associates that what they discovered was more alarming. abc's mary bruce on the hill for us. >> reporter: tonight, for the first time, members of robert mueller's team are reportedly sharing frustrations with how attorney general bill rr handling their record. according to "the washington post," an associate of the mueller team calls the report is "much more acute than barr s justice was "alarming and significant." barr has released a four-page letter, outlining his man conclusions, which is justice department says is not an attempt to summarize the report. but "the post" reports mueller's team is frustrated because they prepared their own summaries, to be shared "in their own words and not in the attorney general's summary of their work." one official briefed on the issue tells "the post" those summaries were written "in a way that minimum redactions, if any, would have been necessary, and the work would have spoken for itself." >> there's an easy answer to this -- release the mueller report as soon as possible. and let me just say -- the mueller report will be released. >> reporter: the justice department is pushing back, suggesting they couldn't release any of the summaries, because every page of mueller's confidential report was marked with a notation that it may contain confidential material. barr has promised to make public a redacted version soon. the president says he supports that. >> let it come out, let people see it. that's up to the attorney general. >> reporter: but today, he tweeted "there is nothing we can ever give to the democrats that will make them happy." republicans like trump's ally, senator lindsey graham, wants to see more. >> i want the report to come out publicly, just for, you know, to let the public see w they got for their money. >> reporter: later, he told us he's standing by the attorney general. no concern at all that barr's summary may not be an accurate reflection? >> zero. why would he do that? >> mary bruce on the hill tonight. and amid this new reporting that members of mueller's team are not happy, tonight, house democrats are demanding that the attorney general hand over those summaries, reportedly prepared by mueller's team end that some maintain were ready for the public, but weren't turned over? >> reporter: yes, and not only those summaries, david. in light of these new reports, democrats here on the hill are demanding to see all communications between the mueller team and the justice department about this report and its disclosure to congress. david? >> mary bruce. we'll see you tomni in ressmati an economic centrist from the telling the cohosts on "the view" today that he's running. and tonight, is facebook prepared for 2020 and ready to protect users from any meddling? face if book has already said one-third of the u.s. population saw posts from russian trolls during the 2016 election. george stephanopoulos asking facebook ceo mark zuckerberg if they're ready. >> we need to make sure that our systems stay ahead of the sophisticated bad actors who are just always going to try to game them. and that's just part of the dynamic that we're in and we need to invest more to stay ahead. >> looking ahead to 2020, are you ahead right now? >> i'm confident in where we are now. we've learned a lot since 2016, where obviously we were behind where we needed to be on defenses for nation states trying to interference. >> zucker berg with george on "gma," saying facebook now has better collaboration with law enforcement, election officials and the intelligence community. there is still much more ahead on "world news tonight" this thursday. road rage in america. the 10-year-old daughter killed. the father with his family in the car. authorities say they were followed home by another driver who then opened fire on the family. there's also news coming in tonight about the search for a missing teacher and mother here in the new york city area. the discovery tonight inside a storage facility. and news on the vaping scare involving young people in this country. several students sickened and taken to the hospital. why one teenager is now facing charges tonight. a lot more muznews ahead. to inspire confidence through style. ♪ i'm working to make connections of a different kind. ♪ i'm working for beauty that begins with nature. ♪ to treat every car like i treat mine. ♪ at adp we're designing a better way to work, so you can achieve what you're working for. ♪ yeah, i've had some prettyeer. prestigious jobs over the years. news producer, executive transport manager, and a beverage distribution supervisor. now i'm a director at a security software firm. wow, you've been at it a long time. thing is, i like working. what if my retirement plan is i don't want to retire? 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(announcer) you can quit. for free help, call 1-800-quit-now. we turn next tonight to the urgent manhunt in a deadly road rage shooting. a husband and wife with their daughters in the car were followed home by another driver who then opened fire on the family. abc's adrienne bankert is in phoenix. >> reporter: tonight, a 10-year-old girl is dead, shot while riding along in the family car. phoenix police now on the lookout for this white truck. surveillance video shows the truck tailgating a family of four back to their house. >> they pulled into their resident, the truck stopped, driver opened the window and opened fire. >> reporter: 10-year-old summerbell brown died at the hospital. her father was wounded. police suspect road rage is to blame. >> this is really hard for me, i lost my baby. >> reporter: officials are looking for a man between 30 and 40 years old and that white four-door ford f-150 with damage to the left rear side. >> we are furious. there's nothing that's going to bring our daughter back. and there is nothing that we want more than justice. >> reporter: david, police say this is the seventh road rage incident so far this year, the fifth in just the last two weeks. david? >> adree yaen bankert tonight, thank you. when we come back here, the most expensive divorce ever. what jeff bezos' wife has settled for. also, newsg in for a missing teacher and mother here in new york city. the discovery tonight. and prince harry and the new controversy. he wants to ban one of the most popular video games in the u.s. and the world. the index is next. i was thinking... could there be another around the corner? or could it turn out differently? i wanted to help protect myself. my doctor recommended eliquis. eliquis is proven to treat and help prevent another dvt or pe blood clot... almost 98 percent of patients on eliquis didn't experience another. ...and eliquis has significantly less major bleeding than the standard treatment. eliquis is fda approved and has both. don't stop eliquis unless your doctor tells you to. eliquis can cause serious and in rare cases fatal bleeding. don't take eliquis if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. if you had a spinal inje ca if you have tingling, numbness, oor muscle weakness.. while taking eliquis, you may bruise more easily... and it may take longer than usual for bleeding to stop. seek immediate medical care for sudden signs of bleeding, like unusual bruising. eliquis may increase your bleeding risk if you take certain medicines. tell your doctor about all planned medical or dental procedures. what's around the corner could be surprising. ask your doctor about eliquis. but allstate actually helps you drive safely... with drivewise. it lets you know when you go too fast... ...and brake too hard. with feedback to help you drive safer. giving you the power to actually lower your cost. unfortunately, it can't do anything about that. now that you know the truth... are you in good hands? 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(announcer) for free help, call 1-800-quit now. when cravings hit, hit back. choose glucerna, with slow release carbs to help manage blood sugar, and start making everyday progress. glucerna. moving? that's harder now because of psoriatic arthritis. but you're still moved by moments like this. don't let psoriatic arthritis take them away. taltz reduces joint pain and stiffness and helps stop the progression of joint damage. for people with moderate to severe psoriasis, 90% saw significant improvement. taltz even gives you a chance at completely clear skin. don't use if you're allergic to taltz. before starting, you should be checked for tuberculosis. taltz may increase risk of infections and lower your ability to fight them. tell yousymptoms, or received a vaccine or plan to. inflammatory bowel disease can happen with taltz, including worsening of symptoms. serious allergic reactions can occur. for all the things that move you. ask your doctor about taltz. we humans are strange creatures. other species avoid pain and stru we actually... seek it out. other species do difficult things because they have to. we do difficult things. because we like to. we think it's... fun. introducing the all-new 2019 ford ranger built for the strangest of all creatures. finally tonight here, baseball season is back and so is made in america. we're still recovering from that batting practice. and we've also discovered something new on the field. with the earliest opening day ever this year, we're not only watching the players, we're watching the bats. dove tail bats from shirley mills, maine. hey, paul. you'll remember paul lancisi. i need some tips, is what i need. >> we can do that. >> reporter: he showed us his bats, birch ash and rock maple trees. >> reporter: beautiful bats. this is entirely made in america. >> made in maine with maine wood, with mai labor. it's been awhile. probably since little league. a few tips. >> first thick you're going to do with an ash bat, you have to hit the edge grain. you can't hit the face grain. or you're going to break the bat. >> reporter: all right. >> and then as you're swinging, you're coming in to the ball. concentrate on hitting the ball. >> reporter: thanks, paul, for clapping. but tonight, we're clapping, because they told us today, eight new hires at that bat factory in shirley mills. and from maine to this tiny town in texas tonight. nocona, off highway 82. 50 workers making 150 baseball gloves 0 day. robert "big bob" storey there on the right founded the nokona leather goods. their first glove in 1934. and rob storey is his great grandson. >> my dad worked here 62 years. i'm at 39 myself, hoping to get to 40, so, truly a fourth generation family. >> reporter: first comes the leather. >> from texas, oklahoma, kansas, pattern. cting the stamping the logo. "american made," nocona, texas. and carla yeargin and her son, josh, inspecting before shipping. what's it like working with mom? >> it's interesting. family here all the timeis fam> different? >> the quality, the attention to detail. >> reporter: those gloves now used by the pirates, the twins, the royals, the tigers. and that bat maker tonight? come on, when you're watching, are you really looking for your bat? >> every time. >> reporter: american workers tonight watching baseball, with three words in mind. >> made in america! >> we love made in america, and we'll be looking for those bats and gloves, too. i'm david muir. i hope to see you right back here tomorrow. good night. the vmi in this video was that seriously injured, fortunately. >> he shared his thoughts about why he pulled the carjacking suspect out of the car. david louie is in san jose where all of this unfolded. >> reporter: what a story. 72-year-old hector estrada thought this was a safe street. then he was approached by a 14-year-old who tried on carjack his vehicle at gunpoint. he resisted and ended up getting punched multiple times as he tried to take back his nissan sentra. hector estrada, a long time little league coach, was unloading sodas from the back of his car when a teenager confronted him demanding his keys. >> i said no way. he showed me his gun. i said i don't care if you have a gun. i'm not going to give you my keys. he reached and grabbed them. >> home video from a kral he installed a week ago shows what happened next. >> he jumped in the car. i tried pull him back. he punched me and broke my glasses. and that's how i got all these cuts right here. and then i couldn't, i couldn't see him anymore. i said you're on camera. i pointed up there. and he said i don't care. and then he says, i've got a gun. and i said i don't care. so i grabbed him out of the car. >> he says he's not sure why he was so brave but he said he would do it again. the carjacker was arrested by san jose police a short distance away after ran a

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Transcripts For KGO ABC World News Tonight With David Muir 20190405

10-year-old. the american woman, the tourist kidnapped. they're demanding a half million, and we're there tonight. new reporting this evening, investigators on robert mueller's team reportedly unhappy with the attorney general's summary, saying their findings involving the president were far more alarming. prince harry taking a stand tonight. he now wants a ban on one of the most popular video games here in the u.s. and around the world. and made in america is back tonight. we're taking another swing. our trip to the ballpark and one more thing we discovered made in america. good evening. and it's great to have you with us here on a thursday night. and we begin tonight with that heartbreaking new turn late today in the case of that missing 6-year-old boy that riveted much of the nation. timmothy pitzen is the illinois boy who was last seen when he was just 6. this surveillance of him with his mother among the last images of him. overnight, we reported a young man coming forward, telling police he had just escaped, he ran across state lines, he said. the family of the boy suddenly filled with new hope after waiting for so many years. and then, just a short time ago, the fbi revealing it is not the boy. heartbreak again. and what would lead someone to do this? abc's whit johnson leading us off from cincinnati. >> reporter: tonight, heartbreak for the family of missing timmothy pitzen, after the fbi announced a dna test confirms the mysterious young man who showed up in kentucky is not who he claimed to be. >> it's devastating. >> yeah. >> it's like reliving that day all over again. and timmothy's father is devastated once again. >> reporter: instead, authorities say, this is not a boy at all, but a 23-year-old man from ohio, brian michael rini. prison records there show a man there with the same name served time for burglary and vandalism. and tonight, they want to know why he told this elaborate tale, giving a family false hope. >> oh, it's kind of back to ground zero for us. kind of reliving everything that did happen and renewing the loss one more time. >> reporter: since 2011, pitzen's family has searched for the little boy who vanished with his mother when he was just 6 years old. >> it's just more devastated than anything else. where's tim at? if i knew where he was, i'd go get him. i'd do just about anything to get him back. >> reporter: his mother seen on surveillance, taking him out of school and on a trip to a zoo and water parks. days later, committing suicide, leaving a chilling note, saying timmothy was safe, but would never be found. >> he's with a 14-year-old juvenile, male, white, says he was kidnapped from somewhere. >> reporter: eight years later, this young man in a hoodie showing up in a northern kentucky neighborhood. sharon hall snapping this picture. >> i could see the side of his face was scarred up, almost like he had been on concrete or something, like scars. >> reporter: like he had some injuries or something? >> yes, yes, and his face was real rough and he was just frantic. >> reporter: he told a harrowing story about how he had just escaped his kidnappers. >> he walked up to my car and he went, "can you help me? i just want to get home." and he told me he's been kidnapped and he's been traded through all these people. >> reporter: but that lie is not discouraging timmothy pitzen's family. >> we know that you are out there somewhere, tim. and we will never stop looking for you. praying for you and loving you. >> and whit johnson joins us live now from outside the fbi in cincinnati. whit, we can't imagine what this family is going through, this roller coaster of a 24 hours. they had new hope for some time, and where does this case go from here? >> reporter: well, david, a spokesperson with the aurora, illinois, police department, when asked if anything good can come from this case, he said it did create a renewed awareness in the timmothy pitzen disappearance, but tonight, it's still unclear what charges could be in store for the man who made this whole thing up. david? >> whit johnson leading us off tonight. whit, thank you. we are also following a hostage standoff still unfolding at this hour. two police officers shot and rushed to the hospital in a suburban atlanta neighborhood. they were responding to a call and then coming under fire. heavily-armed s.w.a.t. teams moving in. the gunman holding at least one hostage, a 16-year-old boy. it's unclear at this hour if the woman in the house has survived. the area on lockdown, part of i-75 shut down tonight. abc's steve osunsami is on the scene for us. >> reporter: police say the barricaded gunman in this suburban atlanta neighborhood was promising to shoot cops, and has already wounded two. two henry county police officers were rushed to a hospital in downtown atlanta. one had to be airlifted. >> he's got two small children. >> reporter: the family of one of them spoke outside the hospital. >> this is the family's worst nightmare. >> reporter: this began with a frantic call from a woman reporting that someone inside the home may have been hurt or possibly killed. the officers were shot trying to enter the home. >> some type of domestic dispute. it was a trouble unknown and we just didn't get the information. the female caller was distraught. >> reporter: police say a 16-year-old boy, related to the gunman, is being held hostage inside the home. a small army of local authorities set up next door and at one point, sent a robot into the house. families trying to get home couldn't. neighbors inside their homes couldn't leave. four kids were reunited with their father -- >> were you scared, dad? >> yes, i was scared. >> reporter: -- after police helped them climb over a back fence. >> so, let's get to steve osunsami, who has been on the scene for us all day long. and steve, the officers themselves, they're expected to be okay? >> reporter: yes, david. one officer was shot in the hand, the other in the upper torso. and police say that his police vest may have saved his life. both officers are in stable condition tonight. david? >> steve osunsami. steve, thank you. we're going to turn next tonight to the horrifying description from inside the cockpit of that boeing max jet that crashed, the second one to go down. the ethiopians now saying tonight, quote, the crew performed all of the procedures provided by the manufacturer. and yet, they couldn't save the plane. and tonight, boeing now with a stunning acknowledgement. what they're now saying. and here's abc's david kerley. >> reporter: the first look tonight at the drama in the cockpit before the second deadly crash. a sensor malfunctions seconds after takeoff. sources telling abc news they believe it was a bird strike triggering that anti-stall system, mcas, nosing down the plane twice before the pilots shut off the system. the boeing procedure. but they can't manually nose up the plane, possibly because of the jet's high speed. it's putting too much pressure on the stabilizer as alarms sound. >> pull up! >> reporter: then, counter to the boeing guidelines, the data shows the pilots turned the power back on. mcas misfiring again, sending them into a steeper dive and crash. shared blame according to a former ntsb investigator. >> certainly, the design of the aircraft, the design of the system, the information provided to pilots, but also, the pilots themselves and how they reacted to the situation. >> reporter: and tonight, boeing's ceo acknowledging the link between crashes. >> it's our responsibility to eliminate this risk. we own it and we know how to do it. >> all right, david kerley with us live. he's been on this story from the start. and david, we just heard boeing's ceo saying there, "we own it." it must have really concerned them when they heard that these ethiopian pilots, at least at first, did what they were supposed to do and it still didn't keep the jet in the air. >> reporter: and puzzled, david, why they deviated from the guidelines and turned that system back on, as well as the speed. 94% thrust. the manual says if you want to hand-trim the plane, you have to be going at a slower speed. david? >> all right, david kerley with us tonight. david, thank you. we also have new reporting here tonight on the american woman, the tourist, kidnapped by gunmen. they're now demanding a half million in ransom. authorities in uganda tonight with a new warning, given what's happened to this american woman. abc's senior foreign correspondent ian pannell has just arrived in uganda for us. >> reporter: tonight, ugandan officials expanding the search zone as they frantically look for an american woman and her local driver, kidnapped while on a ugandan safari, similar to these promoted by the tour company. a joint operation by police, armed forces and wildlife authorities now looking beyond the queen elizabeth national park, where kimberly sue endicott, identified by neighbors as this woman, and jean-paul mirenge remezo were taken at gunpoint over two days ago. they were with an elderly canadian couple who were allowed to escape and warn authorities. an official in washington telling abc news, "it appears the abduction is motivated by money." but there are fears it could've been poachers or even militia rebels from neighboring congo. the kidnappers demanding half a million dollars ransom. did they have a guard on this occasion? >> on this occasion, they did >> reporter: tonight, the state department warning americans to avoid the parts of the park where the pair were taken until this is resolved. >> and ian pannell reporting in tonight from uganda for us. as this search for this american woman continues, i know, ian, that officials are now closing parts of the border and they're telling tourists to travel with protection because of this incident? that's a change. >> reporter: yeah, this is a change. and, you know, ugandans are genuinely shocked by what's happened here. it's a mark of how normally safe this country is. there's not an actual requirement, normally, to take an armed guard. but obviously after this incident, that advice is now changing, they're telling people to take protection while still insisting this country is safe for tourists. david? >> all right, ian pannell and our team in uganda for us. thank you, ian. and back here at home tonight, there is a major new headline involving the mueller report, and in particular, members of robert mueller's team who are reportedly unhappy with how the report was summarized by the attorney general, telling associates that what they discovered was more alarming. abc's mary bruce on the hill for us. >> reporter: tonight, for the first time, members of robert mueller's team are reportedly sharing frustration with how attorney general bill barr is handling their report. according to "the washington post," an associate of the mueller team calls the report is "much more acute than barr suggested." sources telling "the post" the evidence on obstruction of justice was "alarming and significant." barr has released a four-page letter outlining his main conclusions, which the justice department insists is not an attempt to summarize the report. but "the post" reports mueller team is frustrated, because they prepared their own summaries, to be shared "in their own words and not in the attorney general's summary of their work." one official briefed on the issue tells "the post" those summaries were written "in a way haveeeney, and e rk wld have ok itself." >> there's an easy answer to -- lethmur po and let me just say -- the mueller report will be released. >> reporter: the justice department is pushing back, suggesting they couldn't release any of the mueller team's summaries, because every page of mueller's confidential report was marked with a notation that it may contain confidential material. barr has promised to make public a redacted version soon. the president says he supports that. >> let it come out, let people see it. that's up to the attorney general. >> reporter: but today, he tweeted, "there is nothing we can ever give to the democrats that will make them happy." republicans like trump's ally, senator lindsey graham, wants to see more. publicly, just for, you know, to le for their money. >> reporhe attonall that barr's summary may not be an accurate reflection? >> zero. he's not stupid. why would he do that? >> mary bruce on the hill tonight. and mary, amid this new reporting that members of mueller's team are not happy, tonight, house democrats are and inning that the attorney general hand over those summaries, reportedly prepared by mueller's team, that some maintain were ready for the public but weren't turned over? >> reporter: yes, and not only those summaries, david. in light of these new reports, democrats here on the hill are demanding to see all communications between the mueller team and the justice department about this report and its disclosure to congress. david? >> mary bruce. we'll see you tomorrow night. in the meantime, in the race for 2020, ohio congressman tim ryan, economic centrist from the heartland, telling the cohosts on "the view" today that he's running. and will fight for the working class democrats who voted for president trump but who haven't, in his words, seen the results. and tonight, is facebook prepared for 2020 and reprotect? facebook has already said one-third of the u.s. population saw posts from russian trolls during the 2016 election. george stephanopoulos asking facebook ceo mark zuckerberg if they're ready. >> we need to make sure that our systems stay ahead of the sophisticated bad actors who are just always going to try to game them. and that's just part of the dynamic that we're in and we need to always keep on investing in more to stay ahead of that. >> looking ahead to 2020, are you ahead right now? >> i'm confident in where we are now. we've learned a lot since 2016, where obviously we were behind where we needed to be on defenses for nation states trying to interfere. >> zuckerberg with george on "gma," saying facebook now has better collaboration with law enforcement, election officials and the intelligence community. there is still much more ahead on "world news tonight" this thursday. road rage in america. the 10-year-old daughter killed. the father with his family in the car. authorities say they were followed home by another driver who then opened fire on the family. there's also news coming in tonight about the search for a missing teacher and mother here in the new york city area. the discovery tonight inside a storage facility. and news on the vaping scare involving young people in this country. several students sickened and taken to the hospital. why one teenager is now facing charges tonight. a lot more news ahead. a lot more news ahead. lot more muznews ahead. to inspire confidence through style. ♪ i'm working to make connections of a different kind. ♪ i'm working for beauty that begins with nature. ♪ to treat every car like i treat mine. ♪ at adp we're designing a better way to work, so you can achieve what you're working for. ♪ yeah, i've had some prettyeer. prestigious jobs over the years. news producer, executive transport manager, and a beverage distribution supervisor. now i'm a director at a security software firm. wow, you've been at it a long time. thing is, i like working. what if my retirement plan is i don't want to retire? 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(danny) after a long day of hard work... ...you have to do more work? (vo) automatically sort your expenses and save over 40 hours a month. (danny) every day you're nearly fried to a crisp, professionally! (vo) you earned it, we're here to make sure you get it. quickbooks. backing you. let's see, aleve is than tylenol extra strength. and last longer with fewer pills. so why am i still thinking about this? i'll take aleve. aleve. proven better on pain. he'd die of lung cancer. (susan n) leonard was afraid he never thought it would be copd. you always think you have more time than you do. and you really don't. (announcer) you can quit. for free help, call 1-800-quit-now. we turn next tonight to the urgent manhunt in a deadly road rage shooting in phoenix. police say a husband and wife with their daughters in the car were followed home by another driver, who then opened fire on the family. abc's adrienne bankert is in phoenix. >> reporter: tonight, a 10-year-old girl is dead, shot while riding along in the family car. phoenix police now on the lookout for this white truck. surveillance video shows the driver of that truck tailgating a family of four back to their home. >> they pulled into the driveway of their residence. the truck stopped, driver rolled down the window and opened fire on that family as they sat in their car. >> reporter: 10-year-old summerbell brown died at the hospital. her father was wounded. police suspect road rage is to blame. >> this is really hard for me, i lost my baby. >> reporter: officials are looking for a man between 30 and 40 years old and that white four-door ford f-150 with damage to the left rear side. >> we are furious. there's nothing that's going to bring our daughter back. and there is nothing that we want more than justice. >> reporter: david, phoenix police say this is the seventh road rage incident so far this year, the fifth in just the last two weeks. david? >> adrienne bankert tonight, thank you. when we come back here, the most expensive divorce ever. what jeff bezos' wife has settled for. also, news coming in about the search for a missing teacher and mother here in new york city. the discovery tonight. and prince harry and the new controversy. he wants to ban one of the most popular video games in the u.s. and the world. and the world. the index is next. and the world. the index is next. or could it turn out differently? edhelp protect myself. my doctor recommended eliquis. eliquis is proven to treat and help prevent another dvt or pe blood clot... almost 98 percent of patients on eliquis didn't experience another. ...and eliquis has significantly less major bleeding than the standard treatment. eliquis is fda approved and has both. don't stop eliquis unless your doctor tells you to. eliquis can cause serious and in rare cases fatal bleeding. don't take eliquis if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. if you had a spinal injection while on eliquis call your doctor right away if you have tingling, numbness, or muscle weakness. while taking eliquis, you may bruise more easily... and it may take longer than usual for bleeding to stop. seek immediate medical care for sudden signs of bleeding, like unusual bruising. eliquis may increase your bleeding risk if you take certain medicines. tell your doctor about all planned medical or dental procedures. what's around the corner could be surprising. ask your doctor about eliquis. but allstate actually helps you drive safely... with drivewise. it lets you know when you go too fast... ...and brake too hard. with feedback to help you drive safer. giving you the power to actually lower your cost. unfortunately, it can't do anything about that. now that you know the truth... are you in good hands? but prevagen helps your brain with an ingredient originally discovered... in jellyfish. in clinical trials, prevagen has been shown to improve short-term memory. prevagen. healthier brain. better life. you wouldn't accept an incomplete job from any one else. why accept it from your allergy pills? flonase sensimist relieves all your worst symptoms, including nasal congestion, which most pills don't. and all from a gentle mist you can barely feel. flonase sensimist. you can barely feel. val, vern... i'm off to college and i'm not gonna be around... i'm worried about my parents' retirement. oh, don't worry. voya helps them to and through retirement... ...dealing with today's expenses... ...like college... ...while helping plan, invest and protect for the future. so they'll be okay... without me? um... and when we knock out this wall imagine the closet space? yes! oh hey, son. yeah, i think they'll be fine. voya. helping you to and through retirement. ito take care of anyct messy situations.. and put irritation in its place. and if i can get comfortable keeping this tookus safe and protected... you can get comfortable doing the same with yours. preparation h. get comfortable with it. to the index of other news tonight, and to the grim discovery here in new york city. police believe they may have found the body of jeanine cammarata, a teacher and mother reported missing five days ago. authorities tonight say they found a badly burned body inside a storage facility. police say her estranged husband is a, quote, primary suspect. the world's most expensive divorce is making news tonight. jeff and mackenzie bezos have reached a record $137 billion settlement. the amazon ceo will keep 75% of their stock in the company. she'll keep the other quarter, about $36 billion worth of stock. she's now the fourth richest woman in the world. several high school students were hospitalized in connecticut amid a vaping scare. police say at least five teens were sickened after sharing a vape pen at school. authorities believe a 15-year-old girl filled it with thc liquid. she's now facing drug charges. and prince harry issuing a warning tonight about children and social media, calling it more addictive and dangerous than drugs or alcohol. he also wants to ban the popular video game "fortnite," saying it's designed to addict young players. he wants children to spend more time outside. when we come back tonight, made in america is back, and here's a hint. we're taking another swing. one more thing we discovered made in america. ed my life. but i'm a surv. after myrt attack, my doctor prescribed brilinta. it's for people who have been hospitalized for a heart attack. brilinta is taken with a low-dose aspirin. no more than 100 milligrams as it affects how well brilinta works. brilinta helps keep platelets from sticking together and forming a clot. in a clinical study, brilinta worked better than plavix. brilinta reduced the chance of having another heart attack or dying from one. don't stop taking brilinta without talking to your doctor, since stopping it too soon increases your risk of clots in your stent, heart attack, stroke, and even death. brilinta may cause bruising or bleeding more easily, or serious, sometimes fatal bleeding. don't take brilinta if you have bleeding, like stomach ulcers, a history of bleeding in the brain, or severe liver problems. slow heart rhythm has been reported. tell your doctor about bleeding, new or unexpected shortness of breath, any planned surgery, and all medicines you take. if you recently had a heart attack, ask your doctor if brilinta is right for you. my heart is worth brilinta. if you can't afford your medication, astrazeneca may be able to help. i heard there guwere fleas out here.r? and t-t-t-t-t-icks! and mosquitoooooooooooes! listen up, scaredy cats. we all have k9 advantix ii to protect us. it kills and repels fleas, ticks and mosquitoes, too. be head of the household, had to because i became a dependent. my tip is, every time i wanted to smoke a cigarette i would think of my children. (announcer) for free help, call 1-800-quit now. when cravings hit, hit back. choose glucerna, with slow release carbs to help manage blood sugar, and start making everyday progress. glucerna. moving? that's harder now because of psoriatic arthritis. but you're still moved by moments like this. don't let psoriatic arthritis take them away. taltz reduces joint pain and stiffness and helps stop the progression of joint damage. for people with moderate to severe psoriasis, 90% saw significant improvement. taltz even gives you a chance at completely clear skin. don't use if you're allergic to taltz. before starting, you should be checked for tuberculosis. taltz may increase risk of infections and lower your ability to fight them. tell your doctor if you have an infection, symptoms, or received a vaccine or plan to. inflammatory bowel disease can happen with taltz, including worsening of symptoms. serious allergic reactions can occur. for all the things that move you. ask your doctor about taltz. we humans are strange creatures. other species avoid pain and struggle. we actually... seek it out. other species do difficult things because they have to. we do difficult things. because we like to. we think it's... fun. introducing the all-new 2019 ford ranger built for the strangest of all creatures. finally tonight here, baseball season is back and so is made in america. we're still recovering from that batting practice. and we've also discovered something new on the field. with the earliest opening day ever this year, we're not only watching the players, we're watching the bats. dove tail bats from shirley mills, maine. hey, paul. you'll remember paul lancisi. i need some tips, is what i need. >> we can do that. >> reporter: he showed us his bats made from birch, ash and rock maple trees. beautiful bats. this is entirely made in america. >> made in maine with maine wood, with maine labor. >> reporter: he tried out for the major leagues. i barely made little league. it's been awhile. probably since little league. a few tips. >> well, first thing you're going to do, with an ash bat, you have to hit the edge grain. you can't hit the face grain. or you're going to break the bat. >> reporter: all right. >> and then as you're swinging, you're coming in to the ball. concentrate on hitting the ball. >> reporter: thanks, paul, for clapping. but tonight, we're clapping, because they told us today, eight new hires at that bat factory in shirley mills. and from maine to this tiny town in texas tonight. nocona, off highway 82. 50 workers making 150 baseball gloves a day. robert "big bob" storey there on the right, nocona leather goods. their first glove in 1934. rob storey is his great-grandson.dad woed yearsge leather. >> from texas, oklahoma, kansas, nebraska. >> reporter: cutting the pattern. stamping the logo. "american made," nocona, texas. and carla yeargin and her son, josh, inspecting before shipping. what's it like working with mom? >> it's interesting. you see family here all the time. i mean, that's just what this company is about, is family. >> reporter: what makes them different? >> the quality, the attention to detail. >> reporter: those gloves now used by the pirates, the twins, the royals, the tigers. and that bat maker tonight? come on, when you're watching, are you really looking for your bat? >> every time. every at-bat. >> reporter: american workers tonight watching baseball, with three words in mind. >> made in america! >> we love made in america, and we'll be looking for those bats and gloves, too. i'm david muir. i hope to see you right back here tomorrow. good night. good night. live where you live, this is abc7 news. >> carjacked in his own driveway. this san jose man fought back, and now he's getting justice. good evening. i'm ama daetz. >> and i'm dan ashley. now some of this video is hard to watch, but knowing what's happened since then makes it a little easier to see. >> yeah, this is the crime in progress. yesterday morning a 72-year-old man struggled with an armed carjacker who punched him and then took off. >> the victim was carjacked outside his house on coldwater drive. the suspect only got about two miles away before he crashed at story road and mcginnis avenue. >> he took off rung. but now that suspect is under arrest. >> abc7 news reporter david louie is live from san jose. that car owner has a really compelling story about why he fought for his property. >> dan and ama, that is very true. hector estrada is 72 years old and is dealing with a pulmonary condition which he suspects may shorten his life. he says that's probably why he was so bold in disregarding a gun pointed at him and going after the youthful carjacker who police later identified as being only 14 years old. 72-year-old hector estrada, a retired plumber and long time little league coach was unloading sodas from the back of his car when a teenager confronted hip, demanding the keys. >> i said no way. i'm not going to give you. he showed me his gun and stuff like that. i said i don't care if you have a gun. i'm not going give you my keys. so he reach and grabbed them. >> home security video shows what happened next. >> he jumped in the car and i reached in and tried to pull him back. but he punched me and broke my glasses. and that's how i got all these cuts right here. and then i couldn't -- i started bleeding, so i couldn't see anymore. i just went around the car. i said you're on camera, and i pointed up there at the camera, and he says i don't care. and then he says i got a gun. and i said i don't care.

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Prosecutors lay out case against RRHS staffer accused of abuse

A local criminal trial began this week for Ana Castro, a former Rio Rico High School employee accused of committing child abuse against a student with special needs.

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Trial set for former RRHS employee accused of physical abuse

Trial set for former RRHS employee accused of physical abuse
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GMV Spearheads Pioneering Cybersecurity Ventures Under INCIBE's Flagship Initiative

Madrid, Spain (SPX) Mar 12, 2024 - In a significant stride towards advancing cybersecurity and digital sovereignty, GMV has garnered support from the Spanish National Cybersecurity Institute (INCIBE) to kickstart the Luis Valle R and

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At one Nebraska high school, the entire freshman class is just Bailley

At Loup County High School, Bailley Leibert is the sole member of the class of 2027, a lonely freshman class of one in the tiny Sandhills school district.

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At one Nebraska high school, the entire freshman class is just Bailley

At one Nebraska high school, the entire freshman class is just Bailley
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At one Nebraska high school, the entire freshman class is just Bailley

At one Nebraska high school, the entire freshman class is just Bailley
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At one tiny Nebraska high school, there's only one freshman

At Loup County High School in Taylor, Nebraska, Bailley Leibert is the sole member of the class of 2027. The Sandhills district has just 89 kids — one of the

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