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look like. there is one exemption. there would be pretty dangerous looking at a map trying to figure out where you're going while you're driving. courts have ruled that if you're looking at a map while driving on a phone, well, that's okay. and a statement late in the day from the mayor says that i was looking for an address using a navigation app which is legal. but it's nonetheless best to keep your eyes on the road. what would the oakland pd do if they caught her and pulled her over, well, the ticket's $67, and again, she wasn't caught by a policeman. >> we have developing news out of san francisco tonight. within the past few hours, we've gotten word the feds may be closing in on auto fugitive. vasquez joins us. >> reporter: i'm inside a bar in the haight, called the mad dog. this is where ryan chamber lane made his last appearance at 2:00. and i talked to some bartenders who work here and they were in fact told by the fbi that china chamberlain came here and took out cash from an atm. fbi agents asked employees people if they had seen chamberlain. nobody here at this bar saw him, and in fact other establishment owners told me that they were also shown these photos and and were told this bit about how he used this atm. so far, no arrests reported. i will tell you that ryan kelley chamberlain. he is one of the fbi's most wanted men. as of all weekend we've been reporting on this. he's described as armed and dangerous as feds investigated this knob hill apartment this weekend. a nationwide man hunt is underway. he put out a letter that seemed a lot like a suicide note but apparently healths still alive as of this afternoon. pete lee says that, this was a quote, "sighting." same clothes. lee goes on to say they take every lead seriously when there is a sighting he says, we will deploy agents and police officers that can, and apparently they did this afternoon, after that sighting, a credible sighting for the fbi at around 2:00. >> yeah, if you use the atm and there's a record of it and that's probably why the feds got there. joe vasquez in the haight. thanks, joe. >> we have learned that -- that part of the story we'll have coming up at 6:30. >> a beauty sticking out making for a frustrating commute home tonight. wait times are skyrocketing and people are left stranded crowding this platform at the montgomery station. the bart is packed and a contract dispute caused hundreds of workers calling in sick, standing two-thirds of their fleet. this live look at washington square park. buses that are few and far between. now it's been a miserable commute today. question now, are we in for another one tomorrow, phil? >> that is, the express buses are stopped locally, so if you are heading out on one of the muni trains, expect a long time. as for tomorrow, they sent out letters to muni workers saying that if you show up, or don't show up tomorrow, you better come with a doctor's excuse you're not going to get paid. but as for planning, if they get another sick out. here's what we found. >> at this point we're hoping for the best, planning for the worst. >> reporter: the problem is, aside from trying to line up backup drivers. all they can do is see how many drivers are going to call in sick tomorrow. privately, the officials are hoping that the message has been sent and that there'll not a repeat of a sick-out and forced a complete shut down of the historic cable car lines. the trouble is, they're not sure what the unions want. >> i've got to foia what exactly is in their minds. >> reporter: and the union is not talking. at least not officially. although the supporters are. >> first of all, the offer that the city has made is not exactly honestly because while they say they're going to give them believe and a half percent. so it's not a good offer. >> reporter: and if there's another sick out tomorrow. >> good it repeats itself depending on how many resources that we have we'll do something similar to what we did today. >> reporter: and what they did today was basically try to pull out as many buses as they could and put them on local lines and get them moving although it did mean that the cable cars are shut down. tomorrow? anyone's guess and as to whether this can happen again, i gotta tell you, the vote of its at 96%. and that can tell you how no and negative the drivers are right now, under liz? >> they're still, a 5% raise right now. even though what they contribute to their pension social security going on,. >> reporter: that's right and that's on par with what the other city workers are getting as well. and so the share in a jam, because if he wants to give muni more, they're going to say, hey what about us. so to last where we are in san francisco. >> and for the curators' sake, we'll hope for a better day tomorrow. >> if you're one of the lucky ones that didn't have to wade in today. what was the morning commute like? it wasn't pretty. >> i know, it's pretty hectic. >> about a whole hour now. >> we apologize for this inconvenience. >> rarely on a monday morning, does work seem so far away. >> i was hoping to get to work on time especially this is my first day i don't want to be late. >> you could try plan a. >> i try to get down to the n. >> you could try plan b. >> the other one here, also delayed. >> but no matter how many times you checked, getting there wasn't getting any closer. >> it's about 9:00 now, three of them came by, packed to the gills couldn't get in. >> if upper lucky enough to get on board. >> sar deans on board. >> some of them gave up and grabbed cabs. and others jumped in cars with total strangers. >> none you know each other? >> nope. >> most of them were left waiting leaving them plenty of time to think about the bigger picture. >> they were saying that they were going to fix muni for 21 years. >> a google employee told us the next shuttle was due at 9:45 and sure enough, it was right on time. >> the politics of the city, they need to fix muni. more and more people are moving here today they're talking about building more housing for people living here. and muni can't handle the people already living here, it seems. >> you can go outbound? >> i can go to the peach, i guess. it's nice and misty out there. >> you don't need me to tell you, it is not looking great. riders just standing around hoping to get one of the few buses that's actually running today. >> the coast guard is searching for auto missing sailor whose boat sank near the golden gate bridge. crews received a distress signal just after 4:00 this morning. where they're searching kirby cove on the west part of the bridge. the crews found parts of the boat on the rocks east of the bridge. rows her reare a has been hospitalized. she started feeling dizzy during a candidate forum yesterday now doctors think she had a virus that was a cause of an ear infection no word when she'll be back at work. >> voters will find something different on tomorrow's primary ballot. >> mail in ballots are already being counted at sacramento county elections office and orange ballots you'll notice something different you can vote for whichever party you want. unlike previous elections in california. when you had to choose a party's pollute. >> a lot of our voters are now considering themselves or registering as no party preference. they really don't want to choose a party and, in a primary election, that left -- that let you go group out. >> now a new california law allows anyone to vote on any candidate but only the two top vote getters will get the convenient election. >> in the fuel we could end up with people from two dangers or two republicans on the ballot so that's a big change. >> kim nulder says the top two primary system may hurt minor candidate party's chances to make it in november but it also allows people to vote strategically. if you're not worried about your favorite candidate making it into the top two. >> it it's. >> the law actually took effect in 2012 but you might not have noticed because you still have to pick a party in the presidential race. one of the ideas behind the top two primaries supposed to get better voter turn out at the primaries but research shows it's not working so far. >> it's only the second time that we've done this, so it may take some time before the word gets out. >> sam shane, kpix five. >> and campaigns are likely spending more money because of these two top two primary system trying to reach more voters across the aisle early on instead of waiting until after the primary. >> well with polyworkers could be very lonely after tomorrow's election. predictions say that it could be the lowest turn out in california history. california registrar says that few people are aware of the election and they are getting questions. the state's lowest turn out percentage ever was 28% in 2008. if you want more background on the races go to our website, sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com and keep checking back to get election results. >> mcdonalds in the hot seat why a customer says that the fast food joint serves a hazard at the fast food window. >> why a smartphone saved a guy's life. >> change today. strong arm shore made this. barely made the san francisco decline looking from oakland. we're going to be looking at more clouds, drizzle he will tomorrow. and the answer coming up in six minutes. right here. my parents were immigrants. and they taught me that with hard work, anything is possible. i earned a scholarship to mit. and worked across party lines to get things done. i'm alex padilla. i'll protect voting rights for everyone. and make it easier to start a business. so we create jobs and opportunity for all californians. what should we order? (announcer) alex padilla. secretary of state. [ male announcer ] choose it. scoop it. pour it. blend it. [ blender whirs ] no matter how you make it, you'll love our endless variety of beverages. baskin-robbins cappuccino blast®. customize yours today. were greeted by extra secury today in the wake of a hamm attack o >> students at a west oakland elementary school greeted by extra security today in the wake of a hammer attack on a student last week. police say the assault happened on friday at lafayette elementary school inside a restroom. hasmia miami has been arrested on suspicion of assault with a deadly weapon. the third grade victim is still at the hospital where she's being treated for serious injuries. the motive for the attack remains under investigation. >> a southern california woman is suing mickey d's over a cup of hot water. she claims that a drive through worker was negligent for not securing the lid. now you remember back in 1994, a new mexico juror awarded a woman nearly $3 million after she was burned by a hot cup of coffee at a mcdonalds restaurant. >> well, the abnew board of governors set to meet on vote on the sale of the la clippers but questions remain about a possible legal challenge by embattled team owner sterling. sterling lawyer talks about what's next. >> reporter: donald sterling's lawyer says he's taking his time deciding what to do next. under following his wife's announcement that she sold the clippers to steve balmer. on friday he filed a 1 billion- dollar law suit against the m.p.a. against the deal. >> we need time to re-evaluate whether that law suit has any lags or is worth pursuing. >> david freed man is a family law attorney who teaches community property and torts at glendale university, college of law. he says even winning a case against the league could cost donald sterling. >> what that means at the end of the day is that if he prevails against the nba then they don't have to pay, the family trust has to pay. so he would be paying himself, essentially. >> and so to say that she will use the trust funds to pay any judgment he might get against the nba, in my view at least raises serious questions about whether that indemnity is enforceable. >> clem bleacher says that he wants his name cleared after two reports came out that donald m. sterling is mentally incapacitated. he disputes them. >> she wanted to sell the team. she knew he wouldn't sign. so, she just outfoxed him by saying, "you're a nut case we're go to make it so that you don't have to sign and that's what she went ahead and did." >> we reached out to representatives for mr. sterling. and donald sterling's attorney says he is now re-evaluating whether he will sue his wife, the nba or both. in downtown los angeles, jeff winn, kpix five. >> one of the last major development opportunities in a booming san francisco neighborhood has been grabbed. the mission bay neighborhood just south of at&t park has been the center of a building boom over the last few years and kill roy reality swooped in, purchasing a 3-acre property for $95 million. the company plans on building four office buildings totaling 680,000 square foot of fresh space. >> tonight we introduce you to a bay area firefighter who is behind a life savings smartphone a app. john ramo is on the idea that is essentially crowdsourcing for medical emergencies. >> as a firefighter-paramedic, lucas hurries uses the latest technology to treat heart taxi in the east bay's is an ramone valley. but it may be with this technology that he may be saving lives around the world. >> this is the same as shouting in the room, is there a doctor in the house? this leverages technology. >> reporter: back in 2010 as a voluntarily tech geek. he helped develop a smartphone app that basically came known as pulse point when somebody calls 911 about cardiac arrest. an alert goes out to those who are within walking distance who knows cpr. >> we weren't sure when exactly it was going to be happening. >> it happened in clackamas, oregon. parking garage. saturday he got to meet the man whose life he saved with cpr. >> if you have this app or even have the ability to just help your neighbor just don't think about it. just do the right thing it's going to be such a big difference in people's lives. >> that's why the district gave away the app they developed to pulse point and they hope one day it will be standard issue on all smartphones. >> it will be so neat because the lives that could be saved if everybody had this on their phones. >> cpr is now limited to chest compressions only. anyone can learn it in seconds. the pulse points app shows you how and even sounds off the rhythms to follow. >> this is great. we are saving more and more lives. this is one of the lives that we've saved, and i know there's going to be more. >> reporter: in is an ramon can kpix five. >> pulse point says that nearly 5,000 people are day are downloading that free app. i couldn't well, today it seemed like the sun was trying to peek through. working hard. you think you can. you think you can. >> little bit but not quite. >> it didn't make it there. we hit our maximum sunshine 2:00-3:00, 4:00. a lot of parts in the country, you could do a forecast and the weather is exactly the same from one end area of the forecast to the other. it couldn't be even more the opposite here because we're socked with the clouds here in san francisco. but over clayton looking over to mount debris low. now there's some clouds in the sky albeit chilly in linens high lake port, 84, saratoga, but look what happened near the water. san pablo. ocean beach, 55 degrees. kind of a cool view from conquer. basically from conquer to highway from there. this is a time that lasted from seven this morning. eroding as the morning progresses but that cloud cover did make it all the way inland it is by a tiny area of low pressure. you can kind of pick it out here. look at the cloud cover low shore. and look right there. it spun up top and let it spin off of the coastline. that just fed in the onshore flow, fed in the marine air. so i see no reason to think why we're not going to start off tomorrow with cloudy, and fog, and drizzly. but that low pressure area moves out by wednesday, all we're doing is changing the wind direction. minimizing the onshore flow. the sunshine will come out and we will have warmer weather as a result but tomorrow another coolish day. free time clouds. vallejo morning low. sixty-one. san jose, 66. and fairfield you will hit 80 degrees tomorrow. warmer inland affecting in the 90s. yes, it's june. it's time for it. and at the coast, clouds kind of all day. yes, it's june it's time for it. this is summer right here. twenty to 30-degree temperature spread from half moon bay. >> tourists are always caught by surprise. >> that's when you want to own a sweatshirt. >> they sell jackets. >> you say a lot of those i love san francisco. i love the bay area. >> still ahead how some people say that digital billboards will destroy their million dollar views. >> and how apple will start keeping track of your sleeping habits. ,,,,,,,,,, gridlock. teacher layoffs. and a 60 billion dollar budget deficit. that's what john perez faced when he became speaker of the california assembly. so he partnered with governor brown to pass three balanced budgets, on time. for the first time in thirty years. today, the deficits are gone and we've invested an additional 2 billion dollars in education. now john perez is running for controller, to keep fighting for balanced budgets. beautiful views >> some people in albany are fighting plans to put a digital billboard along i-80, beautiful view that include the golden gate and the bay brilliance. news about the proposed lighted billboard turned him into an activist >> it's light. it's visual pollution and we don't want to look at it. >> a sierra club member also says that migrating birds basketball disturbed by the billboard's bright lights. the city council votes on the proposal next monday. >> mayor lee proposed one of the biggest budgets the city has ever seen. the $8.6 billion spending plan today. one of his top priorities, nearly a billion dollars to construct affordable housing in the city. and the budget also adds 800 government workers and 200 of those will be for muni. >> and through this budget i believe we're making smart, responsible and targeted investments to ensure san francisco's more affordable and better place to live for everyone. >> and the budget proposal adds an unprecedented $135 million for public schools as well as 300 people to beef up the police force. >> after years of budget cuts, now cal state universities are on a hiring sprees. they're now hiring 700 full- time staff members. the reason, so help people moving through. and so where's all that money coming from well mostly from a 10,025,000,000-dollar increase in state funding. >> coming up announcer next hour, the nationwide man hunt for a bay area fugitive considered armed and dangerous. tonight his facebook message about the murders at u.c. santa barbara. >> it's that time of year when apple unveils its latest features so what's new this time? >> and bargain hunters, the things that you should never buy in june. ,,,, intensifies for this bay ar fugitive. >> you're watching kpix five news. >> now at 6:30 he left behind a goodbye note on social media. tonight, the man hunt intensifies for this bay area funeral. brian web is live in san francisco tonight where the feds may be zeroing in on ryan chamberlain. >> ryan? under. >> reporter: and the fbi says they may have a credible sighting of ryan chamberlain today in san francisco's haight neighborhood. the plaid dog in the fog bar. chamberlain made used the atm machine and may have been drinking at another establishment nearby. that's all from this afternoon. we are also learning more about chamberlain through a kind of manifesto that he wrote filled with stories of betrayal, isolation, and depression. hours bring saturday's raid on this russian hill apartment where the fbi says they found illegal explosives, ryan chamberlain sent a facebook message to former colleague, mark mosier about the murders at u.c. santa barbara. >> ryan actually posted on my page about the roots of this type of violence in our society. >> reporter: the two guys go back 15 years in this city's political circles. mosier calls chamberlain smart, and fun. >> he has a quirky sense of humor and i always kind of enjoyed that. >> reporter: now mosier is worried that chamberlain is going to do something drastic based on this manifesto that reads like a suicide note he talks about lost jobs and ghost good way where he suggests that his dark international searches led to the fbi raid. his twitter account is active and out in the open. the latest posting from this morning reads: in them what they're reporting is true, no smashes, not armed and dangerous. no one ever in danger. i am so sorry, everyone. >> a lot of people read it with great sadness that, you know, we've all been there. >> all mark mosier can do is try to send a message to ryan and hope that he gets it before it's too late. >> if he's listening, reach out to an attorney, reach out to somebody in the media. reach tout to a friend and reach out to law enforcement and come back and just explain what's going on. >> reporter: okay, we have just received an update this second that the fbi's confirming that they have ryan chamberlain in custody. we believe that happened at chrisy field in the past few minutes where they apparently first spotted his car. this is all part of the man hunt that's been going on all weekend long looking for ryan chamberlain who lived in an apartment behind this door and allegedly had explosives sinusoid. we have a crew on the way and we will bring you any more updates as soon as we get them. but again, ken and liz, it sounds like the fbi is confirming that they finally have ryan chamberlain in custody somewhere around the chrisy field area. >> and brian, he has a lot of friends in the bay area, a lot of friends in san francisco who are really concerned about this welfare, you mentioned the manifesto read somewhat like a suicide note and they were afraid for his welfare. so this has got to be some relief for them. >> to find him alive, and even just a moment ago, a woman was worried that this manifesto, was kind of post-dated that might already be dead but it doesn't sound like it at this hour. >> we will check back with brian web. you can check out the entire goodbye manifesto on our website, kpix.com. >> meanwhile, muni is stuck for hours leaving with miserable commutes. it all boils down to a contract dispute. so hundreds of muni workers called in sick leaving two- thirds of muni buses grounded the morning commute was just as bad. >> i was out here about five minutes before 8:00. it's now 9:00 now. three of them came by packed to the gills. and i couldn't get in. >> now the morning commute didn't fully unwind until close to lunch time and now everyone's trying to get home. >> well coming soon to a apple store near you. new software updates to help you manage your home and your health. we report from the worldwide apple conferences. >> reporter: apple unveiled a new operating system, ios eight will make it easier to share and search. the biggest feature is health kit, a feature that allows people to track their diet, and vital signs. helping doctors keep tabs on the users' health. now we're trying to protect -- >> the new program's phone kit will give users control over their appliances, locks and lighting. charlotte says that security from hackers is a concern. >> for something like a home or a power grid that could be very serious if somebody could unlock your door with your phone. >> reporter: right now you've gotta to actually hit the home button in order to make it work. >> siri will also be able to identify songs and consumers will be able to share movies, and books. apple also revealed its latest operating system, the interface on mac desks was redesigned to match the look of ions and ipads and work with them. >> when you receive a phone call your mac gives you caller id and you can even accept the call and use your mac as a speaker phone. >> apple's new software updates will be available in the fall. david vegno, kpix. >> and apple claims that it has deep privacy securities in place to keep the users information safe. >> you could be wasting your money coming up in tonight's consumer watch, the worst thing to buy in june and just hundreds of acres of land will being turned over two bay area rancher to be devoured. ,, firsrefused all debates.rnly now honda's slinging mud, launching false attacks. isn't it time to put the old politics aside? the chronicle endorses ro khanna, saying he "offers an upgrade in congress for silicon valley." and the mercury news says, "ro khanna is ready for the congress of tomorrow... ...while honda is a politician of the past." for our future: ro khanna. khanna: i'm ro khanna and i approve this message. safeway understands you got to make every dollar count these days. that's why they have lots of ways for you to save. real big club card deals, the safeway app and gas rewards. this week, large, red seedless grapes are just $1.99 a pound. foster farms fresh whole chickens are only 99 cents a pound. and gatorade is just $3.99 an 8-pack. there's more savings to love... at safeway. the month of june means more daylight hours - and for so, more free time to shop. butn th >> well the month of june means more daylight hours and for some, more free time to shop. but on the consumer watch, julie watts warns of things that you shouldn't buy this month. >> the dealer list listed the worst things to buy in the month of june and pretty much anything apple tops the list. as you know, apple announced a slew of updates and upgrades today another its worldwide developer conference. and as soon as the things hit the shelves we're soon to see some price cuts. and barbecue grills they're discounted in july. tvs, and trips to disney world. news found that the most expensive time to travel to the kingdom is the last week of june. the cheapest? august. we have a consumer watch question tonight from a viewer who recently bought a car with cash. in an email rick anderson explains the dealer snifted we give them our social security numbers when i asked why since there's no credit check, they said homeland security. does homeland security really track car sales? well rick not exactly but laws aimed at money laundering to report cash transactions over $10,000 to the irs and speaking of cars as the number of driverless cars in development goes up, we could see insurance rates go down. developers say the driverless cars of the future could make accidents a thing of the past by eliminating all but but the number one cause of accidents, driver error. that will shift, it will shift more liability from the owner to the manufacturer. google has already said that if it's driverless car runs a stop sign, it would take responsibility for the tickets but the rules of the road are still being written. the d.m.v. still has until january to come up with the regulations governing the use and testing of driverless cars. >> i wonder what the insurance companies are doing right now. because this is a whole new set of guidelines. you ride at your own risk? how's that going to work? >> you still drive at your own risk but most of the liability, is for the manufacturer. >> that's a lot for the google to take on given that so many things are being hacked right now. so many people are hacking into companies. >> if people starts hacking cars and running them into each other i think car sales will dramatically decrease. >> all right. well, restoring peace between ranchers and environmentists, how a bay area woman is bridging the divide. >> no widespread rainfall throughout the bay area today although along the coast we did see widespread drizzle. will we see any rain chances for the first full week of june, that answer coming up. >> and coming up, the u.s. open might be in north carolina but today it went through san francisco. >> i can't explain how excited i am. >> what do the oakland raiders have in common with christmas hear tennis players rant at the french open, and how long can they hang on the led before it must be picked up? see it to believe it coming up. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, a prominent east bay environmental group has teamed up with a cattle rancher near mt. di >> it's been said politics make strange bed fellows. a cattle ramblinger -- angela with this new breed of rancher. >> reporter: these are real life happy california cows on a lush hillside in mount diablo's shadow and just as content. ranch erica race is a oakland rivers. this is in her blood. >> this is quite unique to what most folks have been raised as. >> reporter: conservation prime grazing land if curried canyon ranch. her landlord, save mount diablo, a group dedicated to preserving the land. >> some of it is strange. >> reporter: it's exactly where carissa wants to be. >> my day-to-day life is bridging the gap between what people would say environmental groups and ranchers but i think it's becoming common ground. >> reporter: instead of seeing ranching at odds with the habitat and nature. carissa sees these cows as naturally gardeners. allowing the plants to thrive and keep it healthy. >> we need healthy critters and healthy air, and healthy wildlife. >> we want to work with the grazer who was willing to put in the time and effort to understand the ranch alongside with us. >> sigh mountain diablo owns this property and at this point can do with it they choose but eventually the state park will probably take over this property and at that point what happens to carissa's ranch. >> generally, grazing is an incompatible use of state parks. so generally we don't graze. >> reporter: the state parks would need to grant special permission, a long process that's not even on the table right now. but never say never. these cattle looked leary at me at first but with time and mutual respect for our positions they let me stick around. maybe nature will be the overriding guide on this issue. >> it's not the rancher versus the environmentist, or the land owner against the manager. it's working together to accomplish common goals. >> and carissa plans to use her cattle to clear brush in advance of fire season. many people say grazing wouldn't have prevented or limited last year's morgan fire because the terrain was too steep. >> well, we're used to this june gloom. we know that any time june comes around, we're going to have fog, or cloudiness. >> mother nature's timing his past weekend was good, and next weekend it's just as well. had to show you this picture from san jose because it tells the entire weather story. we are sunny, inland because the picture's taken from san jose but look off the center of your television screen you see a thin stripe of cloud cover that is the invasion of the marine layer, it retreats during the day, and moving back in during the evening and guess what it's doing right now, it's in the process of moving back in. here come the clouds once again. san jose, 68 degrees, and santa rosa, 68. it is not warm out today. sixty-one in san francisco down from 56 degrees. mother nature's timing is pretty good because over the poos four days, the warmest were saturday and sunday. seventy-eight and 79 but we ended last week and this week with temperatures below normal and then the joke is, it's 70 degrees somewhere every day this time of year. that spot to remember will be marketedly inland with a high of 75 in sonoma. seventy-five in sonoma tomorrow. the rotten that we're not going to be 75 near the water. that's just continuing to feed in the onshore flow. it will be once again with us tomorrow even as it moves. heading to the sierra nevada. it will continue to drag in in a onshore onshore flow. >> high pressure then builds in on wednesday. limiting the onshore flow but not eliminating it so we'll have an pretty big onshore flow in the coast. which will likely be in the 90s. so tonight, drizzle, fog at the coast. tonight, cloud cover pushing all the way inland. you'll get the sunshine tomorrow afternoon but if you want the warm stuff you will want to wait until the later in the week. two to 4 degrees staying in the 60s. widespread 70s with afternoon sunshine for sunny veil and free time, and put a low alto and walnut creek, you're hit 80. chilly day in for an par for the course. high of 61. san rafael 72. your extended forecast we warm up on wednesday we hit the 90s inland starting friday and just plan on morning clouds with afternoon sunshine every day for the next week near the bay and that is your kpix forecast. >> all right paul thank you breaking news on the fbi search for that san francisco fugitive ryan kelley chamberlain has been caught at chrisy field it happened within the past 30 minutes. we've got word that police had cleared a parking lot near the saint francis yacht club after spotting casually's car. his car comes after agents tracked him to a bar in the haight where he used an atm. for explosive. again, breaking news, the fbi and san francisco police have arrested ryan chamberlain. more on this story ahead tonight another 11:00. we'll be right back. teacher layoffs. and a 60 billion dollar budget deficit. that's what john perez faced when he became speaker of the california assembly. so he partnered with governor brown to pass three balanced budgets, on time. for the first time in thirty years. today, the deficits are gone and we've invested an additional 2 billion dollars in education. now john perez is running for controller, to keep fighting for balanced budgets. thursday at pine na. today, olympic >> an all open golf tournament means that anyone can play if they qualify. the tournament took off a week from thursday. today, olympic club and lake her said held 36 holes of qualifiers. 110 tried, and only 38 made the cut. but maverick mcdealy is almost a lock to be the only local college golfer headed to the u.s. open. >> i owe a lot to my team, and my coaches, and also to my dad for hosting the 36 out there. >> my wife asked me do you want to go to pine hurries, and and they all said, i want to go. i can help out dad more than they can. he was hopping up and down. and it's going to be a family vacation to north carolina. so we're all going to go out and kind of make sure that he has some audience. >> dad's ready to party. so while one stanford golfer is alive for the u.s. open could the baseball team stay alive in the world reveals. marcus. that made it 3-0 hoosiers. kind of a live update, please? 3-2 as you see on your screen, indiana leading that game if the fifth inning. nfl news. jonathan goodwin is going home. the former 49er agreed to a deal with the new orleans saints. 35-year-old goodwin spent the past three years in san francisco, meanwhile the rangers were on the field today, another offseason work out. oakland has upgraded nearly every position this offseason except for tight end. and it sounds like tye allen might be a fan of the rolling stones. >> i don't know if you get everything that you want. and it's kind of when you sit on santa claus' lap. you ask for a bunch of stuff and you get about half of it. >> no satisfaction for fernando vernasco, who thought he won the point. he, blood, boiling, and left cheering off of the half. >> the goal provided that. i don't want to talk with you! i don't want to talk! every match! every match. >> it's too bad. that guy has a lot of talent but he just lets his blood boil way too often. rafael nadal. also won today. stephen sloan is out. >> and if your ski boat nearly blew up his weekend, here's what you missed. what a night for joanna this saturday. now this is not a replay. same inning. cole calhoun is out at the play. give that man a cuban. miami beat indiana for yet another trip to the nba finals. larry boroughs thought he had the key to victory. but somebody changed the lock. 20 feet if the air, it looked like a strike but the umpire called it a ball. you cannot be serious. and scott langley at the mother of golf tournament. check it out, cam. elizabeth, how many seconds is it going to be? >> oh... not -- >> any guess? >> oh, my gosh. i don't know. >> anybody have an guess? anybody in the audience? >> four minutes! >> okay. >> slow, just start... oh! he blows it! >> what was it? twenty-eight seconds? >> twenty-eight seconds. now officially, the rule by the pga is 28 seconds. >> well, it takes him 28 seconds to find the ball. >> ten seconds! and a lot more. >> he has his heart going. >> search kpix cbs and like us on facebook. ♪ ♪ thank you! thank you! dedicated bankers born to go the extra mile. you've been such a big help. it's what i like to do. so you can choose a bank where helping people comes first. heat shields are compromised. weare those thrusters burning? that's a negative. what's that alarm? fuel cell two is down. i'm going to have to guide her in manually. this is very exciting. but i'm at my stop. come again? i'm watching this on the train. it's so hard to leave. good luck with everything. with the u-verse tv app, the u-verse revolves around you the u-verse revolves around you right here. my parents were immigrants. and they taught me that with hard work, anything is possible. i earned a scholarship to mit. and worked across party lines to get things done. i'm alex padilla. i'll protect voting rights for everyone. and make it easier to start a business. so we create jobs and opportunity for all californians. what should we order? (announcer) alex padilla. secretary of state. announcer: it's time to play "family feud"! give it up for steve harvey! [captioning made possible by fremantle media] steve: how you folks doing? thank you very much. thanks for coming. all right. hey, welcome to "family feud," everybody. i'm your man steve harvey. we got a good one for you today. we got a family returning here for the third day with a total of $20,650, from woodstock, georgia, it's the hunt family. [cheering] and from decatur, georgia, it's the evans family. everybody's here trying to win their self a lot of cash and the possibility of driving out of here in a brand-new stylish ford fusion right there. let's play "feud."

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Transcripts For KPIX KPIX 5 News At 6pm 20141022

started to replace the water main. >> we believe that as a result of the work somehow the bacteria got into the system. we caught it as part of our protocols for sampling. >> reporter: the san jose water company is providing free bottled water for any of the residents in the impacted area at fire station 19 located on sierra road. at this point, however, there is no estimate as to when all this is going to be fixed. first reports started on friday night so that's friday night, saturday night, sunday night, monday night, four nights going in a fifth night no end in sight but they are working on it. >> let's hope they fix it. thank you. only the state can give the "all clear" to lift that boil notice. the california department of water resources is monitoring the situation. a new feud between the san jose police union and the mayor. kpix 5 reporter len ramirez on the allegations that recruits are encouraged to drop out of training academy. >> reporter: she still has her san jose police recruit uniform but failed to make the force because an instructor thought she couldn't safely handle a gun. so that's an attorney and schoolteacher now and has jumped into the bitter battle between san jose and its police union accusing union president jim unland of discouraging recruits to join the force. >> he says, you know, the department is changed. measure b has made it a place that's not a good place to be for a lot of police officers. and he effectively told us through his message that it would be better for to us go to different departments and apply elsewhere. >> reporter: she appeared to have backed off from a newspaper opinion piece she wrote that said unland told the recruits to quit. >> i didn't. i never said that to recruits. um, it's just not part of my speech. >> reporter: unland was on a special police operation and not available on camera but the union's office manager who also meets with recruits says she never heard him say that. >> never, ever said anything about quitting at that time nor any other time have i ever heard him talk about it. >> reporter: ever since the passage of measure b which restricts pensions and benefits for officers, san jose has lost officers and recruits to other cities where the benefits are more attractive. >> they are very serious allegations and should be determined if they are true. >> reporter: it's been a sore spot for mayor chuck reed who is considering a formal investigation into what unland said. >> to discourage recruits from working for the city of san jose trying to get them to leave the city when we're trying to hire additional officers, those are troubling allegations. >> reporter: if reed moves forward with the investigation other recruits would testify about what they heard. len ramirez, kpix 5. >> all of this is playing out against the backdrop of a heated mayoral race in san jose. one candidate is backed by the mayor, the other by labor groups including the police union. and two new polls on that race. the first paid for by labor groups shows county supervisor dave cortese ahead of city councilman sam liccardo by 12 points. with the election now two weeks away, 22% of voters are still undecided. but a poll by the "mercury news" shows things differently. it has mayor chuck reed's pick sam liccardo leading dave cortese 40-37%. 23% are undecided. the push to keep oakland's professional sports teams in town got a huge financial shot in the arm. elizabeth cook has more. >> reporter: the city just confirmed a major investor is joining the team behind oakland's massive coliseum city project. a group called making oakland better held a rally at frank ogawa plaza to celebrate. the city has been trying for years to get a deal going on the multi-billion-dollar sports and entertainment megacomplex at the 120-acre comes site. today the city announced a san diego-based investor is in talks with the raiders about a new football stadium but there's work to be done. the project has huge funding shortfalls and massive infrastructure improvements before it can move forward. >> this is a very complex opportunity and to fulfill that opportunity will take some financial structuring and multiple sources of financing in addition to what we're bringing to the table. >> i remember one of the reporter says oh, your teams are gone there, you might as well just give it up but i think this is where we are today shows that after a lot of work that you never give up on oakland. you never count oakland out. >> the a's are also seeking a new ballpark. so far he hasn't spoken to them. the planning team's contract was set to expire. the city council voted to extend the contract another 90 days. >> a lot of fans would like to see them stay. >> oakland as well. >> great, thanks, liz. a legal victory for some san francisco property owners. we told you about the case of dan and maria levin. they sued last month when they were told the new formula for evicting a tenant under the ellis act meant having to pay more than $117,000. today a u.s. district court judge sided with the levins calling the cost unconstitutional. supervisor dave campos wrote the legislation that was struck down. >> i want the tenants in san francisco to know that we are not going to stop fighting because we know that this law can make the difference between someone being able to stay in the city or not if they are evicted. >> this is about whether government can make you pay a ransom for your property. >> the levins are grateful for the ruling and look forward to being able to use their property without having to pay a massive fine. >> after years of operating in san francisco, "airbnb" is finally allowed to. the board of supervisors voted 6-3 today in favor of a zoning change that essentially legalizes the short term rentals. "airbnb" has also started collecting san francisco's 14% hotel tax. it is expected to bring in millions of dollars a year for the city. the world series spotlight is shining on kansas city tonight. >> we're both wearing orange. the giants are facing the royals in game 1. but our ken bastida says sometimes it's not about baseball. it's actually about what? >> reporter: in kansas city? barbecue. yeah. doesn't take much imagination to figure that out. when you're in napa you're going to try the chardonnay. when you're in philly you try the cheesesteaks. when you're here in kansas city, you're going to try the barbecue. right? i can tell you firsthand, as a son of a butcher, this baby as close as ever get to heaven. >> see where the magic happens. >> reporter: there are at last county more than 90 barbecue joints in the greater kansas city area. experts will tell you this is one of the best. >> best barbecue in the world period. >> reporter: what do you know? >> i hear it's very good. >> kansas city style of barbecue is to cook our meat at a low temperature for a long period of time. >> reporter: welcome to oklahoma joe's. carrying on a tradition started way before the civil war. a tradition that carries on today. >> we have the ribs tradition from memphis. we have the brisket and sausage tradition from texas. and they all found a second home here. we didn't invent barbecue but we perfected it. >> reporter: doug says it's a time-honored process. the ribs are seasoned, massaged, and then placed in an oven and slow roasted over missouri white oak. the result? these are killer ribs. >> good texture. hm. lot of flavor. of that could be the best rib i have ever eaten, man. seriously good. >> amen. you're in kansas city. moo. [ laughter ] >> reporter: vegetarians everywhere are cringing right now. but you know, this stuff is amazing, veronica. i can tell you, hey, by the way, after the 1st inning, right? i went over and checked the scalpers. it's below face value to get into the world series right now. >> wow. >> reporter: $2,000 tickets, and below face value. but -- the barbecue here in kansas city, priceless. >> i just wanted to applaud you eating that -- that -- the ribs, they look amazing, and going back to you being the son of a butcher, somebody told me that your family's motto was, pleased to meet ya and meat to please ya. is that right? >> reporter: close enough. uncle bill who is probably watching tonight, yeah, that was his store. and then we're so proud of him and everything he achieved there. but yeah, we had our share of sawdust on our shoes. that's for sure. >> just on the shoes. >> yeah. >> yup. >> all right. thank you. got a little food on the line in the city-to-city wager. if the royals win, mayor lee sends to kansas city some slocumb ice cream sourdough and coffee. if the giants win casey mayor james will send us barbecue and jazz music. both mayors promise a visit to the winning city to perform community services, as well. >> blue bottle or something? >> dumplings from chinatown? >> we'll win. we have our orange on today. well, they were trying to build more earthquake safe buildings and ended up with something out of "back to the future." coming up a south bay startup's whoever board creation. >> you may soon have to pay to cross the golden gate on foot or bike. why the bridge district says it needs extra money even though it recently raced the toll. >> plenty of junk left on the slopes. the interesting find in this big sierra clean-up. >> more rain headed for the bay area that could affect your weekend plans, too. we'll have the details as we go outside as the sun sinks slowly into the west. the forecast is coming up. lopreventable medical errors,hey all lnow the third leadingse of cause of death. only heart disease and cancer take more lives. proposition 46 will save lives with drug and alcohol testing to make sure impaired doctors don't treat someone you love. safeguards against prescription drug abuse. and holds the medical industry accountable for mistakes. i'm barbara boxer. let's save lives. vote yes on 46. sa craig hunt die today hundreds of firefighters lined up and saluted a veteran cal fire pilot who paid the ultimate sacrifice. 62-year-old craig hunt died in the yosemite plane crash two weeks ago while fighting the "dog rock fire" fire. nearly 700 people said good-bye at the memorial service in san jose today. the 62-year-old pilot flew for cal fire for 13 years and taught chemistry at uc-santa cruz in the off season. earlier in his career hunt served as a navy pilot for nine years. he leaves behind a wife and a daughter. pedestrians may be forced to pay a price to take a walk on the bay area's golden gate bridge. it all boils down to a $33 million deficit for the bridge district. now, to make up that money, the district is considering charging a toll for pedestrians and cyclists to cross. mark kelly joins us. mark, they just raise the toll for drivers in the spring. now they need even more money? >> reporter: even more. $33million deficit over the next five years, allen. really incredible. the district administrators point to several big projects either in the works now or on the horizon for getting them in this position that they are in now. here are some of the projects. they include seismic retrofitting, the movable median, the suicide barriers and refurbishing old ferry docks to make them accessible for disabled and bikers. they are looking into installing this toll for bikers and walkers. the district says they have cut other costs including trimming staff lowering salaries and negotiating with the unions. but there is more cost cutting to do. >> our costs are as restrained as possible. and yet despite that, costs for everything we pay for go up every year. >> get more expensive. it's not just the costs going up. the toll for cars went up another dollar earlier this year. it will keep rising again over the next several years. of course, bikers and walkers, they say this toll is a horrible idea. the board is going to take up the proposal next friday to see if they will move forward with it. live at the golden gate bridge, mark kelly, kpix 5. >> now, if that pedestrian and bike toll happens it wouldn't be the first time for pedestrians. the bridge had a turnstile and a ten-cent admission until 1970. marin county is cracking down on lives for freeway jumping at the richmond bridge. the drivers get off 580 at the san quentin exit and hop back on just before the bridge. a ramp will be converted so drivers have to turn left so they can't cut back in before the bridge. skiers and borders can feel the change in the air. it won't be long before the snow falls in the sierra. sam shane it's the perfect time to clean up. >> reporter: it's hard to spot in winter the stuff that's fallen to its death from the chair lift left behind by partiers. or simply forgotten stuck in the snow. before the snow falls again at sierra tahoe the resort asks volunteers to pick up the junk. >> the sierra community is super loyal and into giving back and connect with the mountain. so they like to see it clean like we do. >> reporter: 300 people showed up sunday for keep sierra clean day. >> we are setting an example for our kids over here who are part of the cub scout group. >> reporter: they ride the chair lift up and hike down the dry slopes picking up anything they find out of the ordinary. >> a lot of beer bottles, zipper pulls, old ski passes, stuff like that. >> our son found a broken ipad. >> this is a drilling marker they use in the winter to mark places for grooming. >> reporter: volunteers got awards for strangest finds. >> whoa, what is this? >> reporter: and best haul weight to body ratio. >> nine pound. >> reporter: olympic snowboard slopestyle gold medalist jamie anderson helped the effort saying she wouldn't miss it. >> growing up down in meyers and sierra being my home resort and pretty much daycare growing up, i have always known how important it is to keep our environment clean. >> that was sam shane reporting. those volunteers collected 1700 pounds of stuff and one of the strangest finds on the slopes like you just heard was an electric toothbrush. >> what? [ laughter ] >> i don't know. >> no toothpaste? [ laughter ] >> and the weather system that brought us sprinkles left behind just a dusting of snow, allen, in the sierra. these are the pictures from heavenly mountain resort. season. the resort will need some h but he s hoping to be open about a month from now. toss to brian hackney in for paul deanno not enough for the upcoming season. heavenly hopes to open about a month from now. what do you think, brian? what do you think about all the snow? >> weather appetite? the. time will tell. [ laughter ] >> right. >> words of wisdom. >> really honest. >> the fact, noaa came out with the forecast between now and the end of the year so it's below average and that's not good. we can make up for it later. first, sunset coming at 6:24 tonight. so we are just about there. isn't that a beautiful shot? as we look toward the skyline of san francisco, very mild evening in store for the bay area. no fog at the shoreline. but plenty of waves at the coast as you can see. we still have a beach advisory posted with swells expected to be up to 12 to 14 feet through tonight. as a result, if you are heading out for an evening stroll at the coast, remember, sneaker waves always a problem when the swell is that high. and as we look live down in san jose, also beautiful sunset. livermore got up to 73 degrees today. oakland topped 72. concord 71. fremont 70. same for san jose. and in san francisco, we hit 67 degrees. here's what's happening. right now, the pacific northwest is getting pounded in a way that they are used to. it rains all the time up there. it's raining right now all being provided by this big wheelhouse. low pressure fetching a lot of moisture off the pacific. as a result that jet stream riding into oregon and washington state. what will happen is if the jet stream sinks south enough, then we pick up the rain, as well. it's not going to happen tomorrow. tomorrow mild weather and high pressure. so jet stays to the north bay stays dry. but on thursday and saturday, the jet comes down far enough so we get showers on those two days. saturday looks like it will be a rainmaker baywide. 3:00 in the afternoon on wednesday you see the high clouds up north. no rain tomorrow. but then by thursday, watch how the rain sinks into the north bay but least the south and east bay fairly dry. then we go into friday with link, showers up north. tomorrow looks okay. 72 at fremont. 74 livermore. 67 in san francisco. in the extended forecast, with unsettled weather ahead, we look forward nice day tomorrow, a few showers in the north bay on thursday. friday a break, saturday we could get wet baywide. >> oh. >> doesn't open the storm door, though, back to partly cloudy by the weekend. >> okay. >> take what we can get. >> thank you. one bay area city could soon make it easier for people who own pets to find places to rent. tough enough to find a place in the bay area let alone one that's pet-friendly. tonight the berkeley city council is going to vote into whether to look in a must accept pets policy for all landlords applying to rental properties with four or more units. >> i don't fundamentally believe that just because someone's housing status or their class that they should be prohibited to have pets. >> apartment owners and pet owners oppose the idea saying landlords should not be required to allow pets on their properties. it looks like a happy ending for an injured eagle that we have been telling you about. the golden eagle nicknamed morgan was released this morning. she was being cared for at the wildlife rehab center in morgan hill. the eagle may have been impaled on a metal post which damaged her air sack an organ critical for flight but after three weeks she was released in the same field where she was found. >> look at the wingspan. amazing. >> incredible. all right. still ahead, move over, mcfly! >> excited for this story. a south bay startup has created its own hover board. we are testing it out. stay tuned. ,,,,,,,, now, more and more americans are discovering that... shred after shred... dish after dish... day after delicious day... shredding galbani mozzarella yourself inspires meals, and moments, that are simply better. mmm, galbani (sfx: kiss). italy's favorite cheese brand. come to the skateboard ramp. marty mcfly had it nailed y ago... extreme sports just enter earned the space age. the hover board has come to the skateboard ramp and marty mcfly had it nailed years ago. >> he did. leave it to a bay area company to go back to the future to invent the next generation of skateboards that fly. mike sugerman couldn't resist giving it a try. >> who else? >> i know. [ laughter ] ♪[ music ] >> meet george jetson ♪ >> reporter: it's not the jetsons. nor is it marty mcfly. but it's not just hot air. >> there's no air flow at all. >> reporter: it's magnetic rejection instead that is attracting a lot of attention. i am floating on air! it's the hendo hover board. >> the hover board sort of chose us. >> reporter: a small typical silicon valley office, a startup called arc's packs with its white boards and requisite dog tippy greg henderson is making his invention which was never meant to zip borders along a halfpipe. it was to prevent buildings from collapsing in an earthquake. >> buildings not anchored to the ground and the ground is able to free lee shake the building, what you have is perfect base isolation. >> reporter: he is still working on that but darned if hover board weren't much more fun and marketable and could grab the public's imagination in a way ace isolation never could. even a first-timer can jump on it and air it out. or an experienced border like garrett can display his talents. there is a kickstarter campaign to buy a starter kick to get developers going in the hover field. application? sky's the limit even if it is only an inch off the ground. you think i'm ready for that? >> no. >> reporter: no. [ laughter ] >> reporter: maybe in a year, when the hendo hover board hits the market. they will hover about $10,000 each. in los gatos, i'm mike sugerman, kpix 5. >> i'm so glad they kept him off the halfpipe. >> and the helmet on his head. >> he needs a little more than that. he needs like, you know, the elbow pads, knee pads. [ laughter ] >> but we took out a life insurance policy on him just because it's mike. right? [ laughter ] >> the hover board goes on sale in october 2015. >> sky's the limit. >> not $99. >> no. all right. more to come in our next half- hour. a serious warning from california nurses saying, they are not prepared to deal with ebola if it breaks out here. now they are taking their case to the governor. >> and just as dangerous as driving drunk. how many americans admit to nodding off behind the wheel? ,,,,,,,, it's a fresh approach on education-- superintendent of public instruction tom torlakson's blueprint for great schools. torlakson's blueprint outlines how investing in our schools will reduce class sizes, bring back music and art, and provide a well-rounded education. and torlakson's plan calls for more parental involvement. spending decisions about our education dollars should be made by parents and teachers, not by politicians. tell tom torlakson to keep fighting for a plan that invests in our public schools. ebola. they want major changes to keep themselves. and potential patients safe. ome back, i'm al now at 6:30, california nurse sounding the alarm about ebola. they want major changes to keep themselves and patients safe. welcome back, i'm allen martin. >> i'm veronica de la cruz. kpix 5's ann notarangelo on the nurse's dire prognosis for california and what they want the governor to do about it. >> reporter: nurses unite with a warning, hospitals across california are not ready to treat an ebola patient. >> there's a whole plan that needs to be in place and it's not. >> reporter: they took their concerns to sacramento to get the governor's help and met in oakland to tell cal/osha. >> there's streaming going on at the kaisers but all standards, the training, there's not one uniform standard. >> reporter: the cdc issued much stricter guidelines for healthcare workers suggesting extra equipment and clothing and rigorous training. but these nurses want those guidelines to be mandatory in california. this woman says her hospital held only a few training sessions for nurses. >> a dressed this and was asked if more training would be available, i addressed it. they were hoping the other classes would train the nurses. that's inadequate. >> reporter: nurse after nurse expressed little faith that the hospitals are doing what's needed. >> nurses know the hospitals are not ready and we suspect it's profit-driven. and that's why -- on a daily basis i have trouble getting all the supplies i need. >> reporter: the california hospital association says it is surprised by the nurses' claims and says the health system prepares every day for infectious diseases like this. this has a potential to have personal implications and that's scary. >> but at the end of the day we are a mother, a wife, a family member, a community member. we want to make sure what's best for ourselves, family and community. >> that was ann notarangelo reporting there. an american journalist who has recovered from ebola will be released from an omaha hospital tomorrow. meanwhile the nurse who contracted ebola from a patient in dallas is improving, as well. 26-year-old nina pham has been upgraded from fair condition to good. pham is one of two nurses who became infected while treating thomas eric duncan earlier this month. homeland security is tightening restrictions on air travelers entering the u.s. from ebola affected countries. anyone coming from the three countries in west africa must travel through one of the five u.s. airports that's already screening for the disease. travelers originally headed to other airports will have to rebook. and hospitals are cross the country are taking extra precaution when it comes to killing germs. they are using so-called superbug robots to sanitize any areas that could potentially be exposed to the virus. the true d robot like this one at oweconnor hospital in san jose can sterilize a room with ultraviolet light. the hard charging editor of the "washington post" ben bradlee has died. he was 93. bradley led the post watergate coverage which eventually led to the resignation of course of president nixon. under his leadership the post printed the pentagon papers and went on to receive 19 pulitzer prizes. bradlee died at his washington home of natural causes. an american detained in north korea since april is on the way home tonight. jeffrey fowle was arrested for what was described as hostile acts, leaving a bible in a north korean bar. the state department says sweden obtained his release. but there is more work to be done. >> while this is a positive decision by the dprk we remain focused on the continued detention of two men and call on them to immediately release them and the u.s. government will continue to work actively on both of their cases. >> fowle has been examined by doctors in good health. he had been awaiting trial. the two other americans being held have already been convicted. yahoo posted stronger than expected earnings. it was one of the companies that triggered a rally on wall street. the market had its best day of the year. the dow closed up 215 points. nasdaq up more than 2%. >> it was the largest price fixing settlement in u.s. history. flat screen manufacturers agreed to pay more than $500 million for allegedly overcharging consumers. on the consumerwatch, julie watts says the checks are in the mail. >> reporter: you may have forgotten you filed a claim. we have covered it for three years. if you bought a flat screen between 1999 and 2006 you were probably overcharged and entitled to the piece of the pie. the checks are going out this week for those who filed. over 60,000 californians are slated to get over $350 million amount to $43.49 for each computer and double for each tv. the lawyer behind the class action lawsuit has been doing everything in his power to restore the reputation of class actions by ensuring as many consumers as possible got paid. joe at yosemite tow extended alioto extended the time to file three times. the retailer staples is investigating a potential data breach. hackers may have used malware to intercept bank information its customers were paying for products. their credit and debit card numbers have reportedly since been used to make fraudulent purchases. it's the same kind of attack that hit target and home depot and security experts warn, there are likely more to come. and scammers are taking advantage now of the ebola outbreak. they are sending out emails supposedly offering health tips to avoid getting sick. we have been getting them here at consumerwatch. this one appears to be from the world health organization. click on the link or attachment and you could download a virus. meanwhile, the ftc and the bbb have issued warnings about con artists trying to sell ebola protection and cures. the agency warns they are all hoaxes. there are no fda approved vaccines, medications or dietary supplements to prevent or treat ebola. you know, that email we got, one of the our volunteers downstairs isn't it up and said, hey, julie, you should report on this good information i'm sure. i wrote back, saying, yeah, it's a virus. >> exactly. it's hard to tell. >> don't click on anything. >> doesn't surprise me. thank you. no more driving while drowsy. that is the message from the national transportation safety board. cbs reporter craig boswell looks at just how dangerous it is to be nodding off at the wheel. >> reporter: in this video the driver of the truck runs a red light then crashes into another vehicle. he was reportedly asleep at the wheel. transportation safety officials say drowsy driving is just as bad as drunk driving. >> impaired driving probably covers alcohol and drugs, distraction,and drowsy fatigued driving. >> reporter: 41% of drivers report falling asleep behind the wheel at least once in their lifetime. that leads to 100,000 accidents a year up to 6,000 fatal. >> people are in a hurry and don't take the time to get some rest when they need it, i guess. >> reporter: many drivers say chewing gum or rolling down the window will help them stay awake. doctors say it's time to get off the road if you're yauning repeatedly, have heavy eyelids or forget the last few miles driven. >> one can just will one self to stay awake and make it home. >> reporter: a traffic safety researchers say drivers are asleep before they know it. >> a person has to be asleep for two minutes before they are more likely to realize they were even asleep. >> reporter: the ntsb says just two hours less than the recommended eight hours of sleep is enough to impair driving. craig boswell, cbs news, washington. >> we have all kind of felt it. >> scary stuff. we need more drive-through coffee shops. still ahead, more women getting into the automotive industry. how that's creating a different experience for the customer. >> plus, not what you want to see on your boat. teeth mark from a shark. how one woman got away. cause of death. only heart disease and cancer take more lives. proposition 46 will save lives with drug and alcohol testing to make sure impaired doctors don't treat someone you love. safeguards against prescription drug abuse. and holds the medical industry accountable for mistakes. i'm barbara boxer. let's save lives. vote yes on 46. first impressions are important. you've got to make every second count. banking designed for the way you live your life. so you can welcome your family home... for the first time. chase. so you can. in case you haven't noticed we're wearing giants orange today. >> and black. >> allen has some good news. >> the giants are leading. >> they are 4-0. 4th inning. right? base loade. less than 2% of auto mechanics and techs are women but now more women are get nothing it. it's creating opportunities for them and a different experience for customers as more women are getting into it. >> the fan back here, radiator. >> reporter: she is less than a month away from graduating from the automotive technician program at universal technical institute. >> the fact that i can be able to fix something that something else really can't figure out solve like a puzzle to me makes it fun. >> reporter: the newest class has 55 women in it a record for the school. >> we have a tremendous untapped population of women who don't see it as a career path. >> reporter: they want to recruit more women since auto techs are in demand. the starting wage is $43,000 a year. >> our employers love our female graduates. they bring something to them that their male population doesn't bring. >> i think a lot of people come in and are surprised like wow but they appreciate seeing it. >> reporter: ryan scott's company has hired a woman out of uti and wants to see more diversity. >> just been such a man-driven industry for so long a lot of people just expect to see men in it. so to see a female working on a car, i think it's a good thing. >> reporter: she believes she and other female tech also make other women more comfortable when they bring in their cars for repairs. >> feel like be able to gain trust that maybe they will actually be able to trust me over a male. i'm not putting them down. >> no. some of us men are trustworthy. still ahead, a close encounter with a great white shark. >> take a look at the teeth marks. how a woman managed to get away. >> and it is twilight time in the bay area. a beautiful shot around the bay area as the sunset is a few minutes past. but look at that as the sky is lit up and isn't that appropriate? about as orange as it can be in honor of the giants. forecast coming up in a minute. and i'm dennis o'donnell. long before there were the kansas city royals, they were the kansas city monarchs. guys like satchel paige, the negro league born right here in kansas city. coming up. ,, ,,,,,,,,,,,, - "dear scan, "i've been a scan member for almost two years and have been very satisfied with the plan." - "i would like to thank you and your organization from top to bottom." - "i recently called into scan regarding a claims problem." - "i had been going round and round with a problem with a prescription drug order." - "it is nice to know that one phone call to you, and you take care of it right away." - "your kindness and helpfulness has been appreciated "more than you will ever know. i could not have done it without your help." - i'll never be able to thank them enough. uh...and it's the truth. - "thank you so much. sincerely, donna markow." - "sincerely, shirley ramgren." - "sincerely, shirley ramgren." - that's what really sets scan apart from everybody else. scan cares. - i don't know a better way to say it than, the heart of scan. - scan, for your health and independence. for 1-point-8 mllion dollar. and comes with a lot of.. stuff..i guess you can call we'lll show you exactly whae mean... that story plus live coveraf the giants game from kansas city [ indiscernible ] going for $1.8 million and it comes with a lot of stuff. we'll show you that and more on bay area nightbeat at 10:00 on the cw. we'll see you then. hey, a woman in southern california had a close encounter with a great white shark. she lived to tell about it. she says a 6-foot shark attacked her outrigger canoe. this was off santa barbara on sunday. it knocked her into the water. she was able to get back into the boat unhurt. the harbor master says at this point, no plans to post a shark advisory. but you have been warned. >> santa barbara. >> be careful. >> great white. [ laughter ] >> stay out of the water. >> good reason to stay out of the water up whoer is that we have a high surf -- good reason to stay out of the water up here is that we have a high surf and heavy water but no teeth. that's going to abate tomorrow morning. around the bay area right now, commute looks smooth, numbers like nice. san bruno 67 degrees. oakland at 69. san francisco mild at 63. santa rosa 68 degrees. look at what's happening on thursday. a partial eclipse the sun coming our way in the afternoon. maximum eclipse at 3:15 in the afternoon. we'll have more details as thursday approaches. the conditions for that partly cloudy. you're not going to get away it probably in the north bay but south bay a better shot but never look directly at the sun under any circumstances. low pressure off the pacific northwest is going to stay far enough north so tomorrow we just get a gauze of high clouds oef the sun. so not a bad wednesday. but later in the week, those showers sink far enough south to produce a chance of some scattered light rain over the north bay. not much for the rest of the bay area until friday night and saturday. then more could be coming in. so sum it up partly cloudy tonight, variable clouds tomorrow. and then on thursday, we get more clouds but a chance of rain in the north bay. and then another shot coming in on saturday. in terms of the numbers, tomorrow close to average if not below. san jose at 74. oakland tomorrow 70. 67 in the city. and 73 degrees at concord. down the south bay it's nice 73 for santa clara, 74 san jose. and 72 in milpitas. hayward hit 67. out in the east bay numbers will be in the mid-70s. so again wednesday looks nice a few more clouds but mild readings. that includes petaluma 71 degrees. 73 in santa rosa. 72 at kentfield. 71 mill valley. in the city 67 degrees and oakland hit 70. and in the far north bay clearlake nice 72 degrees and more clouds for ukiah and 68. in the extended forecast, we look for some unsettled weather ahead with tomorrow numbers in the mid-70s inland and then chance of showers coming into the north bay on thursday. rest of the bay area should escape unscathed. and in the extended forecast, more widespread rain on saturday with again amounts not really great totals by any means, more in the north than in the south but looks like saturday everybody gets wet before we clear it up for sunday. dennis o'donnell is standing by live from the big game as we look toward the city and twilight. we'll be back in a minute. dennis o'donnell from kauffman stadium in kansas city. >> reporter: hello, allen. so far, so good if you are a giants fan. madison baumgarner taking the hill for san francisco against james shields. his nickname is big game james. well, he did not show up today. right now, san francisco leading 5-0 behind baumgarner. that game is in the 4th inning. football news, tom brady plays many things close to the vest. but he let his allegiance to the giants out of the box on facebook. he posted a photo wearing the old orange and black jacket with his dog at his feet. sharks wrapping up their five-game road trip in boston. it was tied at 3 in the third when gregory campbell directs the go-ahead goal. bruins win 5-3. sharks return to the tank thursday for the first time in almost two weeks. back to the task at hand. you know, kansas city played an awfully big role in the evolution of baseball in fact creating their own league. vine street, kansas city, rich in black history of a bygone era. but if you walk into the negro league's museum, you will walk back into one of the most significant periods of american history. >> what is going to get you is not only a perspective on the history of the negro league. this is the history of america. it's america at her worst and almost at her best. >> reporter: the museum holds argument facts of six decades of a league created because black players were not allowed to play with white players. there are theaters -- [ inaudible ] >> reporter: -- there is a baseball field with bronze statues representing the greatest negro league players including satchel paige. >> the clock is fastball at 105 miles per hour. >> reporter: on this field of dreams, satchel paige's catcher is josh gibson. >> the legend surrounding josh gibson who will many will call the black babe ruth but there are others who saw gibson play called ruth the white josh gibson still the only man to hit the ball out of yankee stadium. >> reporter: while gibson like many black baseball players were considered stars even in the eyes of white america, they were still refused service in restaurants and hotels. >> so yes, it was not uncommon for these men to play in a town fill up the ballpark but not be able to get a meal at the same time for the same fans or not have a place to stay. black businesses start to meet those needs. the grow leagues baseball brought them that clientele. >> reporter: jackie robinson broke the color barrier and opened the doors for negro league starts to become major league stars. but progress came with a price. >> jackie robinson breaking the color barrier was a beginning but it spelled the end of the negro league. we actually look at this from a standpoint that is bittersweet and the bitter comes in the fact that you can directly parallel the rise and fall of the negro league with the rise and fall of black economy and truthfully black economy never recovered from losing the negro league. >> reporter: the negro league may be gone but this shows social change, opportunity and passion for baseball. >> they had to love it to endure the things that they had to endure just to play baseball but they would never allow those hardships to kill their love of the game. so the story itself is not about the adversity but what they did to overcome the adversity. >> reporter: they certainly did over come a lot and you wonder what satchel paige would have done had he played in the major leagues and josh gibson in the major leagues. the location of that museum is at 12th and vine. and you recall the song kansas city, well, it is about that particular block and where the blacks hung out and right next to that museum is the american jazz museum. so that is the place to go if you are in kansas city. >> kind of like that better than the barbecue, actually. >> thanks, dennis. >> for news throughout the evening the latest is always on our website, kpix.com. also we're going to have more giants on the nightbeat at 10:00 on the cw. >> and 11:00 here on kpix 5. ,, ♪ at kaiser permanente, everything you need is under one roof. another way care and coverage together makes life easier. okay, a little easier. become a member of kaiser permanente. because together, we thrive. ♪ californians are discovering the real risks behind prop 46. it was written and paid for by the trial lawyers to make them millions... while, for the rest of us, health care costs go up. no wonder every major newspaper in the state opposes prop 46. they say 46 "overreached in a decidedly cynical way." it's a ploy "for trial lawyers to enrich themselves." and prop 46 has "too many potential drawbacks to be worth the risk." time to vote no on prop 46. to be worth the risk." thank you! thank you! dedicated bankers born to go the extra mile. you've been such a big help. it's what i like to do. so you can choose a bank where helping people comes first. chase. so you can. announcer: it's time to play "family feud." give it up for steve harvey! [captioning made possible by fremantle media] steve: oh, boy. ha ha! very good. thank y'all. thank you very much, everybody. i appreciate you. well, welcome to "family feud," everybody. i'm your man steve harvey. we got a good one for you today, folks. returning for their third day with the commanding total of $40,000 from tampa, florida, it's the hall family. uh-oh! by my hometown akron, ohio, it's the byrd family. everybody's here trying to win their self a lot of cash and the possibility of driving out of here in a brand-new head-turning ford fusion hybrid. i got some money. let's play the game. give me crystal! give me kim! ["family feud" theme plays] ladies, here we go. top 8 answers on the board. ha ha. fill in the blank. i'd have to be really thirsty to drink milk from a what? crystal. >> stream. steve: drink milk from the stream. just flows down from the mountains. kim? >> from a shoe. steve: from a shoe. pass or play? >> we're gonna play. steve: they're gonna play. they're gonna play. i'd have never gotten it. had nothing in me. chris, fill in the blank. i'd have to be really

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Transcripts For KPIX CBS 5 Eyewitness News At 11 20130206

take evasive action to avoid hitting a camel. drivers called 911 and kpix 5 reporter tells us the 911 folks called in some cowboys. >> then we got called to check it out. yes. this was an unusual road hazard.it was a camel that actually escaped twice today. this camel has a name. his name is rudy, and he's known here in this area. tonight it was touch and go trying to get him back in a trailer. tonight half a dozen east bay cowboys had the tricky task of corralling rudy into this trailer along bailey road. several ropes were attached to the camel and truck to help guide rude di into the trailer. we intentionally did not turn on our camera lights so we wouldn't spook him. >> this is quite a big assignment here. >> i' been a cowboy my whole life. all i've ever done is work with cows. on the ranch it's creative ingenuity. whatever you figure out is whatever is going to work especially here on bailey road. we need to get this thing in the trailer. >> this afternoon rudy was walking south on bailey road, cars reportedly swerving to miss him. this camel weighs more than a ton . >> woild wild. that one has it on his resume now. camel wrangler. >> that's right. who knew handful of them ready to go to get that camel back in the trailer. >> all right. rudy get back if your barn. thanks jowl yet. well governor brown is taking on the cowboys in texas who are trying to lure california companies away. here's his response to a new radio campaign out of the lone star state. >> should i liken it to standby. >> a lot of these are coming here. they don't go back. >> they have the one liners with by texas govern eric perry. he makes regular trips southwest as well trying to convince california companies to move. >> we all know the bay area real estate market is crazy right now. home prices are skyrocketing again, rent out of control but check out what found for sale today. kip. >> well, wen this is 856 maria lane in sunny vil and typically a house like this would go for about $800,000, but the asking price is well into the seven digits. now at first glance it would seem the bay area housing market has gone haywire. home sweet home. >> home sweet home. >> it's a nearly 1700 square foot home with four bedrooms. >> one and a half baths one of which was built during the rose field administration with wall heaters and a spacious kitchen with no dishwasher and original cabinets. asking price. >> we're asking 198. >> are you crazy. >> yeah. >> before you scoff consider this. the 80-year-old house sits on a third of aven acre so a developer could demolish it and build a half dozen town homes like these for 800k each. what's more this map shows the new audiotape l will be 1.3 miles away. it will draw 13,000 new employees to an already high demand cut-throat market. >> all those employees are going to have to have a place to live and that's why this area here is great in my feeling. >> the house appeared on a list compiled by blogger shen lou called scary shack over half a million like this one in albany for half a million dollars or this one for 585,000 or this one in downtown berkeley for $600,000. they all three things in common. run down buildings on big lots with intraet great locations. >> these days between the condition of the building and the price it's harder to tell which is scarier. >> and we -- we may very well see more situations like this, especially in cities that add workers but don't have the empty lots to build new houses. by the way this house actually did get a couple of offers. ken. >> all right. thank you for that. we learn today that the jeep that plowed into a car was stolen. the crash was caught on surveillance video. police say the jeep was taken moments before it slamd into the honda at 36 and foothill in oakland yesterday. the woman behind the wheel of that stolen jeep was killed. the honda driver was not seriously hurt. and tonight one bay area city has a very unusual message for drivers. speed up. again? speed up. well, kpix 5 reporter ann has learned why san ramon wants some people to drive faster. >> it's 30 miles an hour along the boulevard and in a few weeks, 35 on this stretch will be legal. >> i think people drive that fast, 5 miles to 10 miles over the speed limit anyway, and i don't see any accidents or anything so it doesn't concern me. >> but it doesn't sit well with everyone. >> do you prefer a slower sliment. >> i do. i do. just because slower means safer people safer kids. >> stand amount just completed its mandatory survey of many streets and many speed limits were just too slow. the average driver was already going faster than the posted limit and yet still driving safely. in the interest of alleviating congestion they decided to change the speed limit on portions of busy streets upping the limit by five to ten miles an hour. >> i think overall it's a good thing to do. maybe looking at the traffic patterns, the traffic lights. >> conducting the survey helps identify traffic issues but there's also a monetary incentive. the only way police officers can write speegd tickets that stick is for the city to have a valid speed survey wouchlt one it's easier for drivers to win challenges in court. >> well, police will start enforcing the new speed limits on february 22nd. coming up, a neighborhood landmark with a shady past. why cops say it's really part of a stalker's twist. >> pulling out. pulling on the clock. what happened when we confronted them. plus an unexpected side effect in diet soda and alcohol. it is not often we say this in the bay area that we are drier than a desert. so far this year exactly the says. we've had a half inch of rain. phoenix nearly triple that. when do we get rain fall? let you know the two days that are looking wet coming up announcer: cbs wednesday, a csi event. i'm looking for d.b. russell. announcer: a crime in vegas... taylor: where is she? how well do you know christine? i love this woman. announcer: ...ends in new york. ♪ i follow you down... ♪ i'll call my team. ♪ through the eye of the storm... ♪ taylor: you heard what he said. she's going to die. i'm coming with you. stokes: we got a body. (groans) where is she?! announcer: only cbs. this is so sick! i can't believe your mom let you take her car out. this is awesome! whoooo! you're crazy. go faster! go faster! go faster! go faster! no! stop...stop... (mom) i raised my son to be careful... hi, sweetie. hi, mom. (mom) but just to be safe... i got a subaru. (announcer) love. it's what makes a subaru a subaru. [ woman ] my boyfriend and i were going on vacation so i used my citi thankyou card to pick up some accessories. a new belt. some nylons. and what girl wouldn't need new shoes? and with all the points i've been earning i was able to get us a flight to our favorite climbing spot, even on a holiday weekend. ♪ ♪ things are definitely... looking up. [ male announcer ] with no blackout dates you can use your citi thankyou points to travel whenever you want. visit citi.com/thankyoucards to apply. murdered. . we are getting a look at the last-known image of a 13-year-old bay area girl who was found murdered. genelle conway allen last seen thursday afternoon near gran decircle in fairfield. she was found dead the next morning at allen witt park about three miles away. she had been strangled according to police. so far there's no word on a motive or any suspects. police tell us they'll have more to say about the case tomorrow. a brentwood family wants to know the you've seen this woman their daughter 21-year-old tori stephen soften. she was last seen friday in san francisco. her mother says tori's boyfriend dropped her off for a job interview in tenderloin. she told him she'd call him an hour later to pick her up, but no one has heard from her since. >> tori, if you see this, please call me. call mike. call the san francisco police, we will come and get you. we will come and get you anywhere you are. please, please call. >> this young woman is 5 foot 4 and 110 pounds with long brown hair hazel eyes, and tattoos on her forearms. it's an icon in one bay area neighborhood but turns out this elaborate labyrinth has a criminal past. it appeared in san francisco's burro heights neighborhood a few years ago. kpix 5 reporter found out cops say it's all part of a stalker's twisted plot. >> at first blush it looks like nothing more than a pile of rocks in a claering off heights boulevard but lake a look from on high. this is a carefully constructed labyrinth. >> it's very peaceful. you walk around it. it's really nice. >> one this community has come to cherish. >> i love it. >> labyrinth appeared mistierously some time in 2008. >> somebody anonymous made it. >> but now it appears that someone has a shady past. this is the handy work of aven alleged stalker who is on trial. >> there was a guy who was stalking a young girl, made the labyrinth for her and invited her to come through and walk through it. >> how bizarre. >> wow. this is really intense. that makes me feel less good about it. >> another guy that doesn't know when to, you know, let go. >> the san francisco district attorney's office says 34-year-old cesar lopez, a self-described artist, is now on trial, that he stalked the girl for ten years and blogged about her in this online forum. he also erected labyrinths, one in her image and finally this one, which led to his arrest. the stalking finally ended last year when lopez invited the girl to the labyrinth for a so-called clensingly ritual, instead police met him here. neighbors say the checkered back story only adds to the labyrinth's history. >> art comes from weird places sometimes. >> live in san francisco. you can't really be surprised. >> and it won't stop this from seeking out this bright spot with a dark past. >> does it do it for you. >> no. but it'll be there in the back of my head from now oun. >> in san francisco kpix 5. >> kind of a gruesome ending to a homecoming game at a los angeles high school. two students' fingers were cut off during a game of tug of war. witnesses say it happened all of a sudden when rope broke. >> all i see is his fingers cut off like it was like oh my god cut it in half, you know. >> the students had surgery to reattach their fingers. superintendents say school leaders are considering whether to ban any future tug of wars. they were supposed to be on a business trip. instead state workers were caught throwing your money down the gutter. bowling on the job. but the really intregs part is what they said when sam shane confronted them. >> in the middle of the day of thursday in december, our cameras caught these state workers bowling. 15 employees of the california department of parks and recreation on the clock laughing, eating and bowling. many of them arrived here in their official state vehicles to go bowling at west sacramento's capital bowl. it is the latest embarrassing episode in a state agency plagued with problems. in june it was revealed the parks department for years had been keeping a secret fund worth a whopping $54 million and they were hiding that money. they were threatening to close state parks. and just as they're trying to redeem the public thrust, we found their employees throwing gutter balls. and when they finishing bowling we followed some of the workers pack to their office in old sacramento where they actually te nighed what we clearly caught them doing. >> you weren't at the bowling allie. >> no. >> our cameras saw you at the bowling allie? have anything to say sir. >> i have no idea what you're talking about. >> do we know what we're looking at sgleer i think if you'd explain it, that would be great. >> these are pictures of people in your department bowling during the workday. >> waters say 15 employees ransack men toe for two days. he says their supervisor approved the building as a team-building exercise, which waters now says equals a mistake. >> what was going on there. >> well, this was an unfortunate and very isolated ins sdmrent they need a little bit of reality check. >> taxpayer advocate john says bowling party in the middle of a workday. . >> so i would think in the agency that the parks department would be a little bit more careful with their poll sitz and how they use their money. >> waters there will be no more bowling parties for workers in this agency while they're on the clock. >> i think we're all admitting this wasn't appropriate behavior. >> that was sam shane reporting. well all right. rudy the camel is out there looking for water and so are we. are we going to get any rain. >> that camel may be search ago little more if he finds a lake. little bit of rain. we had some, but the soaker that we need, i'm not seeing it. let's talk about tonight's clear skies, chilly night again. you've heard that one before. talk about tomorrow morning. concord 38, fremont 38, redwood city 40. san rafael 39 degrees. we always check the radar. there's not going to be any rain fall moving through. high deaf doppler radar is dry. top of year we were 36% above normal. now, we are 17% below normal. still much better than last year but that is dropping and dropping until some snow drops in this area will continue to drop. there is a little bit of relief in sight. we did have one boundary move today. western utah did not give us any rain fall. the next front will. tomorrow though on shore flow is still there. you'll have sunshine but you also will have chilly temperature sxhs little bit of brisk win coming out of the northwest. thursday next front moves through, does have a little moisture. not much. it needs zero. we could use some rain fall. we will get some on thursday. little bit of fog tomorrow morning at the coast and the city our north may valley up toward napa and sonoma. showers will arrive on thursday morning and we'll likely have some all the way through friday. highs tomorrow with on shore flow little keerl than they have recently. concord 58 should be 62 in san jose this time of year. fremont 58. san jose tomorrow 56. sunshine in pleasant hill try again. sonoma 58 and san francisco tomorrow 55 degrees. showers move in on thursday. it's something to talk about weather wise. we'll have about a quarter of an afrj of rain fall between thursday and friday then try out for the weekend. next week looks dry again. patterns have been stuck in the past couple months. the pattern we're stuck in right now, i don't see an end at least for the next two weeks. >> wow. >> little bit of rain but not much. >> do your rain dance tim. >> we've got to do something. >> all right. thanks paul. coming up why mixing diet soda and alcohol makes you plumper. there's this island -- and it's got super-cute kangaroos. barrow island has got rare kangaroos. ♪ ♪ chevron has been developing energy here for decades. we need to protect their environment. we have a strict quarantine system to protect the integrity of the environment. forty years on, it's still a class-a nature reserve. it's our job to look after them. ...it's my job to look after it. ♪ ♪ there is no mass-produced human. so we created the extraordinarily comfortable sleep number experience. a collection of innovations designed around a bed with dualair technology that allows you to adjust to the support your body needs. each of your bodies. our sleep professionals will help you find your sleep number setting. exclusively at a sleep number store. sleep number. comfort... individualized. at the ultimate sleep number event, queen mattresses start at just $599. and save 50% on our innovative limited edition bed. happens when you mix diet soda with alcohol. t soda can . well, cocktail lovers beware. >> yeah. turns out something strange happens when you mix diet soda with alcohol. drinks made be diet soda can actually make you drunker faster than cocktails made with regular soda. the added impairment they say it's equal to about an extra shot of booze. >> there's no sugar in it so it fwoes through the stomach a lot faster. the tie et mixer kind of soft spores the die jegs process of sending the alcohol into the bloodstream. >> it doesn't give your stomach anything to work off like regular soda does. >> so, in other words without the sugar the alcohol is metabolized a lot faster in your body. by the way this information comes from a study done by northern kentucky university which, of course, is jack and koch country. just don't go diet. >> well, dennis is back from new orleans, the country of everything wobderful and tasty and cay june. >> oh, man. i was overindulgence. >> really. >> trying to work it off. just going to take some time. >> by the way do you know what ravens said about the 49ers? rubbing face in it. we're next. state...not quite linsanity like last season with the knicks, but is averaging . jermy rin is on long list of warriors who video bribed out the leading golden state. the palo alto grabbed his averaging double digit. lyn visiting with yao ming prior to tip off as the rockets hosting the warriors. lyn finished with eight-point lead and kind of snowballed from there. houston put on a three-point shooting clinic. 14 threes in the first half alone tying an nba record. when it was all said and done they need 23 balls from beyond the arc. he had a game by 28. the final score 140 to 109 warriors winning streak is stopped. on the world cup wagon for gentleman mall meyers but the rest seen that way. they gave the match penalty and kicked him out of the fwun. bring out the exclusive kpix goal counter please. a total of six goals by the black hawks in first 12 minutes of the game then tied at three the end of one. jonathan watches puck right here. buries it. now lost two straight. the hawks win 5 to 3. time for the exclusive digest. close to a goal. michael and tommy however both with their first of the year tonight. well locker clean out day in santa clara for the super bowl runner ups and reflecting on a season that ended five yards shy of a sixth lombardi trophy. >> it wasn't our time. it wasn't our time. i mean, last year, look, we made some progressions on where we were and this year, we -- we twenty next step. >> how long tung this will last. >> for the rest of my life. >> now ravens held their super bowl parade. . >> two tickets for paradise mrz mrz mrz mrz. who's got it better than who? baltimore. >> that's wrong. why was 18 to double to beat the 49ers who can't seem to win anything lately. 60 grand for charity. puck to the face and the new york crowd still chanting crosby. crosby did return. the penguins beat the islander 12 to 2. only at seven points but at least this three looked good. that was the first half buzzer and number one i got a scary moment for gold med list lindsey vonn. she goes down. she tore her acl mcl and had a broken bone in her leg. will she be in the olympics next year? going to have to wait and see. we'll be right back. [ female announcer ] the best thing about this bar it's not a candy bar. 130 calories 7 grams of protein the new fiber one caramel nut protein bar. [ male announcer ] with over 50 delicious choices of green giant vegetables it's easy to eat like a giant... ♪ ♪ and feel like a green giant. ♪ ♪ ho ho ho ♪ green giant ♪ our next newscast is tomorrow morning at 4-30. . news cast tomorrow morning 4:30. we'll see you then. ( band playing "late show" theme ) >> from the heart of broadway broadcasting across the nation and around the world it's the "late show" with david letterman. tonight... plus paul shaffer and the cbs orchestra. i'm alan kalter. and now you asked for it david letterman! ( captioning sponsored by worldwide pants and cbs ( band playing "late show" theme ) ( cheers and applause ) (cheers and applause) >> dave: ho! hey! (musical flourish) thank you, thank you very much. hey, if you get a chance call my sister. (laughter) >> paul: let's say hello to her. >> dave: hey! you

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Transcripts For KPIX CBS 5 Eyewitness News At 11 20130206

the one theory, investigators are . this is kpix 5 news. murder in wine country three bodies found inside a home. the one theory investigators are ruling out tonight. good evening. i'm ken. >> and i'm elizabeth cook. we begin with that breaking news. the sheriff just released new details about the three men found dead on ross station road in forestville near iron horse vineyards. the killer is still on the loose. joe. >> liz you know, the sheriff's department they're still on the scene. there's the crime scene investigators right there. they are not elaborating much, but they do say this is not guilty a murder suicide and they're highly confident they're going to catch the killer. >> there did not appear to be a struggle and they died of gunshot wounds. >> the sheriff's department spokesman said the three men were shot to death inside a bedroom in one of the houses on the back part of the property. a couple discovered their bodies around 3:15 this afternoon. the boyfriend is the brother of one of the victims. he came by to check on his brother because he hadn't heard from him in several hours. the sheriff's department won't elaborate on who did this and why but the spokesman says they are confident they will catch the murder. >> this is not a random crime so i don't believe that there's any danger to any of the citizens of sonoma county or anywhere else. >> when you say this is not a random crime what do you mean by that? how do you know that. >> i'm not going to get into the detail ts of our ngs at this time. it's too early. >> the sheriff spokesman said none of the suspects actually lived here but that one of them has family member associated with the property. the spokesman says a neighbor reported hearing gunshots but won't say whether anyone heard any arguing or any other noises before the shooting. >> triple had hads are unusual. >> do you know when the last time is there's been one in sonoma county. >> you know, i would be guessing somewhere back in the early 80s. >> lieutenant o'leary says they are doing interviews right now, and they expect it will lead to some developments rather quickly. reporting live in sonoma county joe vasquez cbs 5. we don't usually talk about traffic problems on your 11:00 news but you got to take a look at this. tonight bay area drivers had to take evasive action to avoid hitting a camel. drivers called 911 and kpix 5 reporter tells us the 911 folks called in some cowboys. >> then we got called to check it out. yes. this was an unusual road hazard.it was a camel that actually escaped twice today. this camel has a name. his name is rudy, and he's known here in this area. tonight it was touch and go trying to get him back in a trailer. tonight half a dozen east bay cowboys had the tricky task of corralling rudy into this trailer along bailey road. several ropes were attached to the camel and truck to help guide rude di into the trailer. we intentionally did not turn on our camera lights so we wouldn't spook him. >> this is quite a big assignment here. >> i' been a cowboy my whole life. all i've ever done is work with cows. on the ranch it's creative ingenuity. whatever you figure out is whatever is going to work especially here on bailey road. we need to get this thing in the trailer. >> this afternoon rudy was walking south on bailey road, cars reportedly swerving to miss him. this camel weighs more than a ton . >> woild wild. that one has it on his resume now. camel wrangler. >> that's right. who knew handful of them ready to go to get that camel back in the trailer. >> all right. rudy get back if your barn. thanks jowl yet. well governor brown is taking on the cowboys in texas who are trying to lure california companies away. here's his response to a new radio campaign out of the lone star state. >> should i liken it to standby. >> a lot of these are coming here. they don't go back. >> they have the one liners with by texas govern eric perry. he makes regular trips southwest as well trying to convince california companies to move. >> we all know the bay area real estate market is crazy right now. home prices are skyrocketing again, rent out of control but check out what found for sale today. kip. >> well, wen this is 856 maria lane in sunny vil and typically a house like this would go for about $800,000, but the asking price is well into the seven digits. now at first glance it would seem the bay area housing market has gone haywire. home sweet home. >> home sweet home. >> it's a nearly 1700 square foot home with four bedrooms. >> one and a half baths one of which was built during the rose field administration with wall heaters and a spacious kitchen with no dishwasher and original cabinets. asking price. >> we're asking 198. >> are you crazy. >> yeah. >> before you scoff consider this. the 80-year-old house sits on a third of aven acre so a developer could demolish it and build a half dozen town homes like these for 800k each. what's more this map shows the new audiotape l will be 1.3 miles away. it will draw 13,000 new employees to an already high demand cut-throat market. >> all those employees are going to have to have a place to live and that's why this area here is great in my feeling. >> the house appeared on a list compiled by blogger shen lou called scary shack over half a million like this one in albany for half a million dollars or this one for 585,000 or this one in downtown berkeley for $600,000. they all three things in common. run down buildings on big lots with intraet great locations. >> these days between the condition of the building and the price it's harder to tell which is scarier. >> and we -- we may very well see more situations like this, especially in cities that add workers but don't have the empty lots to build new houses. by the way this house actually did get a couple of offers. ken. >> all right. thank you for that. we learn today that the jeep that plowed into a car was stolen. the crash was caught on surveillance video. police say the jeep was taken moments before it slamd into the honda at 36 and foothill in oakland yesterday. the woman behind the wheel of that stolen jeep was killed. the honda driver was not seriously hurt. and tonight one bay area city has a very unusual message for drivers. speed up. again? speed up. well, kpix 5 reporter ann has learned why san ramon wants some people to drive faster. >> it's 30 miles an hour along the boulevard and in a few weeks, 35 on this stretch will be legal. >> i think people drive that fast, 5 miles to 10 miles over the speed limit anyway, and i don't see any accidents or anything so it doesn't concern me. >> but it doesn't sit well with everyone. >> do you prefer a slower sliment. >> i do. i do. just because slower means safer people safer kids. >> stand amount just completed its mandatory survey of many streets and many speed limits were just too slow. the average driver was already going faster than the posted limit and yet still driving safely. in the interest of alleviating congestion they decided to change the speed limit on portions of busy streets upping the limit by five to ten miles an hour. >> i think overall it's a good thing to do. maybe looking at the traffic patterns, the traffic lights. >> conducting the survey helps identify traffic issues but there's also a monetary incentive. the only way police officers can write speegd tickets that stick is for the city to have a valid speed survey wouchlt one it's easier for drivers to win challenges in court. >> well, police will start enforcing the new speed limits on february 22nd. coming up, a neighborhood landmark with a shady past. why cops say it's really part of a stalker's twist. >> pulling out. pulling on the clock. what happened when we confronted them. plus an unexpected side effect in diet soda and alcohol. it is not often we say this in the bay area that we are drier than a desert. so far this year exactly the says. we've had a half i'm looking for d.b. russell. announcer: a crime in vegas... where's christine? ...ends in new york. ♪ i follow you down... ♪ i love this woman. i'm coming with you. ♪ through the eye of the storm... ♪ where is she?! announcer: the two-night csi event-- cbs wednesday. with this flu season being the most severe in years it's important to follow cdc guidelines to help protect your family. wash your hands often. and clean your surfaces using a disinfectant to prevent the spread of cold and flu viruses. you can trust lysol because lysol disinfectant spray is approved to kill twice as many germs than any other disinfectant spray. and with lysol no-touch hand soap you have 10 times more protection with each wash. helping protect your family with lysol... that's our mission for health. murdered. . we are getting a look at the last-known image of a 13-year-old bay area girl who was found murdered. genelle conway allen last seen thursday afternoon near gran decircle in fairfield. she was found dead the next morning at allen witt park about three miles away. she had been strangled according to police. so far there's no word on a motive or any suspects. police tell us they'll have more to say about the case tomorrow. a brentwood family wants to know the you've seen this woman their daughter 21-year-old tori stephen soften. she was last seen friday in san francisco. her mother says tori's boyfriend dropped her off for a job interview in tenderloin. she told him she'd call him an hour later to pick her up, but no one has heard from her since. >> tori, if you see this, please call me. call mike. call the san francisco police, we will come and get you. we will come and get you anywhere you are. please, please call. >> this young woman is 5 foot 4 and 110 pounds with long brown hair hazel eyes, and tattoos on her forearms. it's an icon in one bay area neighborhood but turns out this elaborate labyrinth has a criminal past. it appeared in san francisco's burro heights neighborhood a few years ago. kpix 5 reporter found out cops say it's all part of a stalker's twisted plot. >> at first blush it looks like nothing more than a pile of rocks in a claering off heights boulevard but lake a look from on high. this is a carefully constructed labyrinth. >> it's very peaceful. you walk around it. it's really nice. >> one this community has come to cherish. >> i love it. >> labyrinth appeared mistierously some time in 2008. >> somebody anonymous made it. >> but now it appears that someone has a shady past. this is the handy work of aven alleged stalker who is on trial. >> there was a guy who was stalking a young girl, made the labyrinth for her and invited her to come through and walk through it. >> how bizarre. >> wow. this is really intense. that makes me feel less good about it. >> another guy that doesn't know when to, you know, let go. >> the san francisco district attorney's office says 34-year-old cesar lopez, a self-described artist, is now on trial, that he stalked the girl for ten years and blogged about her in this online forum. he also erected labyrinths, one in her image and finally this one, which led to his arrest. the stalking finally ended last year when lopez invited the girl to the labyrinth for a so-called clensingly ritual, instead police met him here. neighbors say the checkered back story only adds to the labyrinth's history. >> art comes from weird places sometimes. >> live in san francisco. you can't really be surprised. >> and it won't stop this from seeking out this bright spot with a dark past. >> does it do it for you. >> no. but it'll be there in the back of my head from now oun. >> in san francisco kpix 5. >> kind of a gruesome ending to a homecoming game at a los angeles high school. two students' fingers were cut off during a game of tug of war. witnesses say it happened all of a sudden when rope broke. >> all i see is his fingers cut off like it was like oh my god cut it in half, you know. >> the students had surgery to reattach their fingers. superintendents say school leaders are considering whether to ban any future tug of wars. they were supposed to be on a business trip. instead state workers were caught throwing your money down the gutter. bowling on the job. but the really intregs part is what they said when sam shane confronted them. >> in the middle of the day of thursday in december, our cameras caught these state workers bowling. 15 employees of the california department of parks and recreation on the clock laughing, eating and bowling. many of them arrived here in their official state vehicles to go bowling at west sacramento's capital bowl. it is the latest embarrassing episode in a state agency plagued with problems. in june it was revealed the parks department for years had been keeping a secret fund worth a whopping $54 million and they were hiding that money. they were threatening to close state parks. and just as they're trying to redeem the public thrust, we found their employees throwing gutter balls. and when they finishing bowling we followed some of the workers pack to their office in old sacramento where they actually te nighed what we clearly caught them doing. >> you weren't at the bowling allie. >> no. >> our cameras saw you at the bowling allie? have anything to say sir. >> i have no idea what you're talking about. >> do we know what we're looking at sgleer i think if you'd explain it, that would be great. >> these are pictures of people in your department bowling during the workday. >> waters say 15 employees ransack men toe for two days. he says their supervisor approved the building as a team-building exercise, which waters now says equals a mistake. >> what was going on there. >> well, this was an unfortunate and very isolated ins sdmrent they need a little bit of reality check. >> taxpayer advocate john says bowling party in the middle of a workday. . >> so i would think in the agency that the parks department would be a little bit more careful with their poll sitz and how they use their money. >> waters there will be no more bowling parties for workers in this agency while they're on the clock. >> i think we're all admitting this wasn't appropriate behavior. >> that was sam shane reporting. well, all right. rudy the camel is out there looking for water and so are we. are we going to get any rain. >> that camel may be search ago little more if he finds a lake. little bit of rain. we had some, but the soaker that we need, i'm not seeing it. let's talk about tonight's clear skies, chilly night again. you've heard that one before. talk about tomorrow morning. concord 38, fremont 38, redwood city 40. san rafael 39 degrees. we always check the radar. there's not going to be any rain fall moving through. high deaf doppler radar is dry. top of year we were 36% above normal. now, we are 17% below normal. still much better than last year but that is dropping and dropping until some snow drops in this area will continue to drop. there is a little bit of relief in sight. we did have one boundary move today. western utah did not give us any rain fall. the next front will. tomorrow though on shore flow is still there. you'll have sunshine but you also will have chilly temperature sxhs little bit of brisk win coming out of the northwest. thursday next front moves through, does have a little moisture. not much. it needs zero. we could use some rain fall. we will get some on thursday. little bit of fog tomorrow morning at the coast and the city our north may valley up toward napa and sonoma. showers will arrive on thursday morning and we'll likely have some all the way through friday. highs tomorrow with on shore flow little keerl than they have recently. concord 58 should be 62 in san jose this time of year. fremont 58. san jose tomorrow 56. sunshine in pleasant hill try again. sonoma 58 and san francisco tomorrow 55 degrees. showers move in on thursday. it's something to talk about weather wise. we'll have about a quarter of an afrj of rain fall between thursday and friday then try out for the weekend. next week looks dry again. patterns have been stuck in the past couple months. the pattern we're stuck in right now, i don't see an end at least for the next two weeks. >> wow. >> little bit of rain but not much. >> do your rain dance tim. >> we've got to do something. >> all right. thanks with this flu season being the most severe in years it's important to follow cdc guidelines to help protect your family. wash your hands often. and clean your surfaces using a disinfectant to prevent the spread of cold and flu viruses. you can trust lysol because lysol disinfecting wipes kill 99.9% of cold and flu viruses. and with lysol no-touch hand soap you have 10 times more protection with each wash. helping protect your family with lysol... that's our mission for health. happens when you mix diet soda with alcohol. t soda can . well, cocktail lovers beware. >> yeah. turns out something strange happens when you mix diet soda with alcohol. drinks made be diet soda can actually make you drunker faster than cocktails made with regular soda. the added impairment they say it's equal to about an extra shot of booze. >> there's no sugar in it so it fwoes through the stomach a lot faster. the tie et mixer kind of soft spores the die jegs process of sending the alcohol into the bloodstream. >> it doesn't give your stomach anything to work off like regular soda does. >> so, in other words without the sugar the alcohol is metabolized a lot faster in your body. by the way this information comes from a study done by northern kentucky university which, of course, is jack and koch country. just don't go diet. >> well, dennis is back from new orleans, the country of everything wobderful and tasty and cay june. >> oh, man. i was overindulgence. >> really. >> trying to work it off. just going to take some time. >> by the way do you know what ravens said about the 49ers? people with sore throats have something new to say. ahh ! mmm ! ahh ! finally, there's cepacol sensations. serious sore throat medicine seriously great taste. plus the medicine lasts long after the lozenge is gone. ahh ! mmm ! cepacol sensations. state...not quite linsanity like last season with the knicks, but is averaging . jermy rin is on long list of warriors who video bribed out the leading golden state. the palo alto grabbed his averaging double digit. lyn visiting with yao ming prior to tip off as the rockets hosting the warriors. lyn finished with eight-point lead and kind of snowballed from there. houston put on a three-point shooting clinic. 14 threes in the first half alone tying an nba record. when it was all said and done they need 23 balls from beyond the arc. he had a game by 28. the final score 140 to 109 warriors winning streak is stopped. on the world cup wagon for gentleman mall meyers but the rest seen that way. they gave the match penalty and kicked him out of the fwun. bring out the exclusive kpix goal counter please. a total of six goals by the black hawks in first 12 minutes of the game then tied at three the end of one. jonathan watches puck right here. buries it. now lost two straight. the hawks win 5 to 3. time for the exclusive digest. close to a goal. michael and tommy however both with their first of the year tonight. well locker clean out day in santa clara for the super bowl runner ups and reflecting on a season that ended five yards shy of a sixth lombardi trophy. >> it wasn't our time. it wasn't our time. i mean, last year, look, we made some progressions on where we were and this year, we -- we twenty next step. >> how long tung this will last. >> for the rest of my life. >> now ravens held their super bowl parade. . >> two tickets for paradise mrz mrz mrz mrz. who's got it better than who? baltimore. >> that's wrong. why was 18 to double to beat the 49ers who can't seem to win anything lately. 60 grand for charity. puck to the face and the new york crowd still chanting crosby. crosby did return. the penguins beat the islander 12 to 2. only at seven points but at least this three looked good. that was the first half buzzer and number one i got a scary moment for gold med list lindsey vonn. she goes down. she tore her acl mcl and had a broken bone in her leg. will she be in the

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Transcripts For KPIX KPIX 5 News At 11pm 20130207

>> reporter: in 1984, police were investigating the most high-profile missing child case in a generation. it turns out a neighbor of kevin collins had a sordid past. wayne jackson had a record that involved child molestation. he also had a black dog, just like the man kevin was last seen talking to. >> this case is a case that haunts the san francisco police department. >> reporter: now, 29 years later, police chief greg suhr is revealing for the first time that jackson is a person of interest in the case. but why wasn't he arrested back then? >> he was detained. he was interviewed. he allowed a consent search of the same house we just did a search warrant on. a photo spread was shown to the two witnesses that described the suspect. they weren't able to pick him out of the photo spread. >> they knew enough about his past. they dropped the ball on this guy. >> reporter: mark glass, an advocate for missing children, says the pd should have taken their person of interest more seriously. >> this is a guy who kidnapped and raped a small child on fisherman's wharf and then didn't appear for his court date. then when he finally was apprehended, he only spent six months in jail and then three months' probation. they knew enough about this guy. >> reporter: wayne jackson died in the sunset district five years ago. police now say he went by many aliases, which made it difficult for investigators to know the full extent of his criminal past. police are asking if anyone knew mr. jackson to come forward and talk to investigators, and also i should mention, i spoke with kevin's sister briefly on the phone tonight. she says the entire family is overwhelmed with the news that police could have had their man all those years ago. reporting live, joe vazquez, kpix 5. we're about to see something we haven't had in more than a week. kpix 5 meteorologist paul deanno is in the weather center. paul? >> high-def doppler radar, we are looking at rain moving in. we look up to the north and see the leading edges of rainfall several hours away, but it is on its way to the bay area. but it's not going to bring us widespread soaking rainfall. we're just talking scattered showers because most of the moisture will stay north. we will see some showers. we'll talk about how much rain is coming to the bay area, coming up in a few minutes. the fbi is now involved in the murder investigation of that teenage girl in fairfield. the body of 13-year-old jen was found friday. releasing the cause of death at this time. it is not appropriate. the time and place will come later on, but at this point it would be hurtful to our investigation." fairfield police want anyone who may have seen something to call them. that triple murder we told you about last night? turns out, it was a drug deal gone bad. the 3 men were shot in a cabin near forestville in sonoma county: they were 26- year-old raleigh butler of petaluma... 46- year-old richard lewin of new york... and 42- year-old todd klarkowski of colorado. investigators say they were in a bedroom with a lots of pot. "what i hear, i guess there were 100 pounds, it was a 200 thousand dollar deal and some fool just took their life." the killer or killers are still on the loose. governor brown ordered state workers to stop taking what he called "unncessary trips" at taxpayer expense. but c-b-s reporter sam shane found out: people the governor himself appointed are still racking up the frequent flier miles... and, yep, you're paying for it. on a recent th people the governor himself appointed are still backing up the frequent flyer miles. and yep, you're paying for it. >> reporter: across the street from the capitol, our camera caught robin umberg leaving work early. again. she was flying to her southern california home in orange county for the weekend, on your dime. >> everybody knows something is wrong. it's common knowledge. >> reporter: we've concealed the identity of this inside source, who says umberg does this almost every month. she charges the trip to california taxpayers. but 90% of the trips violate governor jerry brown's mandate. umberg is just one of five top administrators of the california department of veteran's affairs who are members of what we call the cal vet travel club. >> are you aware of how much you've been spending on travel? >> yes. >> how much? >> the actual dollar figure i don't have. >> reporter: he is one of five executives who spent $82,000 in travel by 18 months, the biggest spender by far is top guy, peter gravitt, who spent nearly $32,000 on travel since may of 2011. >> is the director available to talk to us about this? >> no. >> reporter: we were told he's traveling. records show that 75% of trips have been to attend an event that were near his home. 45 of the trips are non-mission critical. >> the governor has said you can travel if it's to audit, revenue collect, to do business. >> well, we are doing business. >> but you're not. >> this is business. >> we've looked at the records. come on. he's going down there for a fund-raiser over a weekend. his house is down there. why should the taxpayer pay for that? >> he goes down there to meet with those individuals, many of them who are corporate leaders, who have agreed and worked with us on trying to identify and hire veterans. >> reporter: it's not just secretary gravitt. 16 of the 17 trips robin umberg took were for an event 12 miles from her home. another undersecretary took 39 trips. 26of them were non-mission critical. >> how do they get away with taking so many questionable trips paid for by taxpayers? >> reporter: these five members approve each other's travel. >> where is the oversight? >> we have our internal accounting office that looks at travel, that looks at what is done. any outside agency, the department of finance and others, can come in and look at what they want to look at. >> do you think maybe they need to? >> i don't believe they do. >> our reporter notified the governor's office about his investigation, but the governor said he hadn't heard about it. and here's what happened when a producer asked him what he planned to do about the frequent flyers. >> will you talk to us? okay. thank you very much. >> as for cal vet, the deputy secretary says top brass have no intention of cutting back on that travel. coming up, the part of the bay area that's about to lose because of a battery problem. why soon it will be hard to know if you're getting real salmon or the kind grown in a lab. right up behind with a hatchet, smash, smash, smash! >> how a colorado hitchhiker saved the day when a driver went crazy. and there's a celebration tonight. i'm at the seven-mile house. coming up, how they're celebrating this 160th anniversary. so if you have a flat tire dead battery need a tow or lock your keys in the car, geico's emergency roadside assistance is there 24/7. oh dear, i got a flat tire. hmmm. uh... yeah, can you find a take where it's a bit more dramatic on that last line, yeah? yeah i got it right here. someone help me!!! i have a flat tire!!! well it's good... good for me. what do you think? geico. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. what's that? when i take a picture of this check, it goes straight to the bank. oh. oh look the lion is out! no mommy no! don't worry honey, it only works on checks. deposit checks from your smartphone with chase quickdeposit. just snap a picture, hit send and done. take a step forward and chase what matters. all san jose flights thru the end of march. you might the japanese airline that flies into san jose has cancelled all san jose flights through the end of march. you might say, i don't fly to tokyo, so what do i care? well, it's costing the south bay a lot of money. the cancelled flights cost the santa clara valley an average of $214,000 a day in lost business. or about $9 million between now and the end of march. all nipone uses the boeing 787 and the plane is still grounded because of battery problems. would you eat fish made in the lab? the fda is about to approve the sale of genetically engineered salmon. kpix 5 reporter julie watts explains, soon you may not be able to tell if you're getting the real fish or the man-made kind. >> reporter: salmon is a popular and healthy choice. but would you eat salmon created in a lab? >> i don't think that's right for them to do that. >> reporter: introducing genetically modified salmon, created using genes from other fish. >> this wouldn't happen in a natural system. this is crossing different species. >> reporter: and this is the end result. these fish are all the same age and had the same parents. but take a look at the fish on top. it's genetically modified and much larger. the company that created the salmon claims they grow twice as fast. each has genes from the two salmon. the fda is expected to approve the fish, saying it's as safe to eat as other salmon, prompting public concern. >> it probably would not be labeled so people would have no idea at the store. >> if it's gmo, i have a right to know! >> reporter: the fda does not require labeling for genetically modified crops, so it's possible labeling won't be required for the new salmon either. >> it sounds frankly pretty scary. >> reporter: dr. holman studies public perception of bioengineered food. >> our research shows that if a product has that label, consumers are less likely to buy it. >> reporter: the fda says it recognizes the concerns customers have and encourages voluntary labeling. julie watts, kpix 5. and the scariest predators in the ocean are getting some very special protection. great white sharks are now considered an endangered species. the state department of fish and game will spend the next year deciding whether to keep them on that list. there are 339 adult great white sharks between marin county and mexico. a hitchhiker with a hatchet has become an internet sensation. >> and he's the good guy in this story. allen martin on how the surfer dude from fresno saved a couple of innocent bystanders when a driver went berserk. >> he was driving down this way. he was like, you know what? i've come to realize i'm jesus christ and i can do anything i [ bleep ] want to. and he [ bleep ] pinned him in between that shrub. >> reporter: homeless hitchhiker kai was in the back seat of this vehicle when this all went down. >> the guy went crazy. he gets in his car and tries to move the car. and we weren't going to let him doing it. >> if he started driving that car around again, there would have been a hell of a lot of bodies in here. >> he just kept saying he was jesus christ. he used the n word, meaning the black people. he said we need to get them off of the earth. >> reporter: the pg&e worker was rushed to the hospital and underwent surgery for non-life- threatening injuries. he wasn't the only person the driver attacked. >> he put me in a bear hug and started beating the crap out of me. >> these two women are trying to help him. a guy that big can snap a woman like a pencil stick. so i went up behind him with a hatchet. smash, smash, smash! >> reporter: and that's what tanya said saved her life. and kai, the homeless hitchhiker, didn't care that the suspect was more than six feet tall. >> that woman was in damage. he just finished what looked like at the time killing somebody. if i hadn't have done that, he would have killed more people. >> reporter: allen martin, kpix 5. >> so i'm hearing that people on the internet have raised $500 to get kai a surfboard. we're all set. >> he's got a hatchet, so -- >> doesn't every good surfer need one? >> obviously. here's what we have weather- wise. tonight, cloud cover moving in. temperatures on the increase, although still chilly. you will wake up to 45 and a few showers around in oakland. we'll take you to chinatown. some video there. get ready for the chinese new year, year of the snake, beginning this sunday, february 10. nothing yet on the radar, but there is rain several hours to the north. we will have rain come tomorrow morning in the north bay. we need it. average rainfall since christmas is 5 inches. we're at 10% of that. we've had less than a half inch of rainfall since christmas. but here comes an front. we're now seeing some of that rainfall up off the northern california coastline. it's not going to be that soaking rainfall that will really put a dent in our rainfall deficit, because the front is keeping most of its energy to the north. that said, scattered showers tomorrow, and for the first half of friday. after that, we get locked into position once again. dry weather but also chilly weather. this likely will hang out for another week or so. so after two days with scattered showers, we're likely look at another seven to ten mainly dry days the. as for how much rainfall, really not that much. about an eighth of an inch of rainfall for most of us. perhaps about a quarter of an inch out toward pacifica. showers here tomorrow morning will be with us through about lunchtime. lows near freezing in our inland communities on saturday and sunday. mid 50's with those showers tomorrow. redwood city, 56. 55 for walnut creek. scattered showers. san ramon, 55. sunshine for the weekend. chilly, upper 50's and we will likely stay dry next week. two days of showers and then a whole truckload full of dry days. >> we need more of those showers. >> we're gonna need more days than what we got on that forecast. >> all right. coming up, we're going to take you to the only place in the bay area where you've been able to get a beer since the california gold rush. 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[ male announcer ] with no blackout dates you can use your citi thankyou points to travel whenever you want. visit citi.com/thankyoucards to apply. on tonight in brisbane, not too far from the cow palace. well, there is quite a celebration going on tonight in the town of brisbane. >> it's at a bar called the seven mile house. it's a place where your great, great, great grandfather could have gone for a beer. >> yeah. about a seven mile walk from his house. juliette goodrich and her photographer parked their truck where 160 years ago horses were tied up. julie, is that karaoke i'm hearing in the background? >> reporter: i think it is. some budding rock stars. it's the 160th anniversary. good clean fun. yes, they are inside singing. it is one of the oldest bars in the bay area and the only mile house left standing in its original location. seven mile house opened its doors in 1853. this live music and karaoke sports bar and grill was once a pony express route and stagecoach stop. it's exactly seven miles to the ferry building in san francisco. >> at almost every mile from the ferry building to san jose, there was a mile house. those mile houses were rest stops for horses. >> reporter: it spanned the decades, from brothel, biker, trucker hangout, to sports/gambling den, and now it's a 49er favorite hangout. >> this place is a legacy, you know what i'm saying? and i love it here. we'll keep coming here. >> reporter: photos of the original seven mile house owners are displayed on the wall. the new owners, a filipino family. tonight's celebration entry is nachos, burgers and wings. >> we continue our support of this establishment. it will never die! >> reporter: some say the seven mile house is haunted. they're saying no. it's just rich with a lot of history inside. tonight, it's filled with, yes, a lot of budding rock stars. actually, they got silent inside, ken, because they could see the television here. they're watching the story as we speak. they're mesmerized. >> everybody in the seven mile house, we get off in an hour, okay? >> reporter: sounds good. >> all right. ha ha. we'll be right back. dinner's ready. [ female announcer ] hamburger helper stroganoff. beefy. creamy. stroganoffy. helpers. forty dishes, all delicious. [ woman ] ring. ring. progresso. i just finished a bowl of your light chicken pot pie soup and it was so rich and creamy... is it really 100 calories? let me put you on webcan... lean roasted chicken... and a creamy broth mmm i can still see you. [ male announcer ] progresso. you gotta taste this soup. there is no mass-produced human. so we created the extraordinarily comfortable sleep number experience. a collection of innovations designed around a bed with dualair technology that allows you to adjust to the support your body needs. each of your bodies. our sleep professionals will help you find your sleep number setting. exclusively at a sleep number store. sleep number. comfort... individualized. at the ultimate sleep number event, queen mattresses start at just $599. and save 50% on our innovative limited edition bed. q city..so they touched down 100 miles away in tulsa and fi rolled in at 4 a heavy fog kept the warriors' plane from landing in oklahoma city. so they touched down in tulsa and finally rolled in at 4 a.m. this is after mark jackson's bunch gave up 140 last night in houston. first quarter, kevin martin, steal. stephen curry's pass. that's an easy russell westbrook finger roll. kevin durant on the fast break. thunder up by 20. third quarter, nobody looking at westbrook, who gets the easiest dunk of his life. the thunder win 119-98. at least they can go get some sleep now. stanford chopped down their second opponent. second half, chasson randle gives us the cardinals a three- point lead. but mark lyons, 15 of his 20 in the second half. today was national letter of intent day, when high school football players commit to colleges. here is our in-depth look at stanford's recruiting class. >> a former cal golfer james is preparing for round one. new to the tour. hahn made himself familiar after his gangnam style dance on the green. >> i walked off the green. and i was possessed. and that's what came out. >> i have in my hand the top five. you are supposed to go easy on the goalie in warm-up. lars didn't get that memo. the montreal goalie, not a good spot. no. 4, most three-year-olds can't do this, but how about a younger girl? next stop, wnba. no. 3, bismarck, north dakota, hockey. alex scoops up the puck with the back of his stick. bismarck century high wins it. juan carlos garcia bicycle kicks the pass. honduras shocked the u.s., 2-1. no. 1, 20,000 bucks to the st. jude's hospital on that. >> only julie watts has it hotter than hewey lewis right now. getting some action. >> at the seven mile house. >> yeah. very impressive. >> good move. we'll be right back. save up to $500 on beautyrest and posturepedic. get a sealy queen set for just $399. even get 3 years interest-free financing on tempur-pedic. keep more presidents in your wallet. sleep train's presidents' day sale is on now. tomorrow letterman is next. >> all right. and our next newscast, tomorrow morning at 4:30. seven mile house is celebrating. i think we'll go down and rescue julie. >> julie can handle herself. good night! ( band playing "late show" theme ) >> from the heart of broadway broadcasting across the nation and around the world it's the "late show" with david letterman. alan kalter, and now entrepreneur, david letterman! captioning sponsored by worldwide pants and cbs >> dave: thank you very much ladies and gentlemen. you know what? i want to tell you something exciting. think about this. maybe you saw it, maybe you didn't, but you summer heard about it-- 49 years ago today, right here on this stage the beatles appeared on american

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Transcripts For KPIX KPIX 5 News At 11pm 20130207

[ female announcer ] the best thing about this bar it's not a candy bar. 130 calories 7 grams of protein the new fiber one caramel nut protein bar. [ male announcer ] pillsbury grands biscuits. delicious. but say i press a few out flat... add some beef sloppy joe sauce... and cheese fold it all up and boom! i just made an unbeatable unsloppy joe pillsbury grands biscuits. let the making begin. f0 this is kpix 5 news. one second he was handcuffed in the back seat. the next thing police knew, their suspect was driving away. good evening. i'm ken bastida. >> and i'm elizabeth cook. kpix 5 reporter kiet do shows us how the guy gave the cops the flip. >> reporter: yeah. when big guys get arrested with just one set of handcuffs, it can put a lot of pressure on their shoulders. so what police officers do is they double cuff the suspects. now, ironically, san jose police were trying to help this guy when he took advantage of them. anthony sanchez is a husky guy. about 275 pounds, he had violated his parole on a drug conviction. so san jose police came to his apartments to arrest him. officers double-cuffed sanchez like this, because he couldn't get his arms close enough together. the undercover officers then put the 32-year-old in the back of an unmarked police minivan, but then dropped papers on the ground. >> literally took a couple of seconds where the officer bent over to pick up the paperwork. and the suspect was able to jump into the driver's seat, put the car in gear and flee the scene. >> reporter: a tenant had just left and the apartment gate stayed open just long enough. officers swarmed the area. about two hours later, they found him. sanchez was about a mile away. he took off. all the police equipment was still on the front seat. there were never any weapons inside. >> hopefully he'll still have the handcuffs on him when we find him. >> reporter: it was common for officers to leave keys in the ignition if they're going to be in the vehicle. sergeant jason dwyer is keeping things in perspective. >> when everybody goes home at the end of the daip and all our equipment is accounted for, it can't be that bad of a day. >> reporter: and in the grand scheme of things, a parole violation is not that big a deal, but now he's in a lot more trouble, facing additional charges of escape and vehicle theft. live in san jose, kiet do, kpix 5 news. this next one is a case that has haunted san francisco police for nearly 30 years. what happened top kevin collins? kpix 5 reporter joe vazquez tells us that this man may have taken the secret to his grave. >> reporter: in 1984, police were investigating the most high-profile missing child case in a generation. it turns out a neighbor of kevin collins had a sordid past. wayne jackson had a record that involved child molestation. he also had a black dog, just like the man kevin was last seen talking to. >> this case is a case that haunts the san francisco police department. >> reporter: now, 29 years later, police chief greg suhr is revealing for the first time that jackson is a person of interest in the case. but why wasn't he arrested back then? >> he was detained. he was interviewed. he allowed a consent search of the same house we just did a search warrant on. a photo spread was shown to the two witnesses that described the suspect. they weren't able to pick him out of the photo spread. >> they knew enough about his past. they dropped the ball on this guy. >> reporter: mark glass, an advocate for missing children, says the pd should have taken their person of interest more seriously. >> this is a guy who kidnapped and raped a small child on fisherman's wharf and then didn't appear for his court date. then when he finally was apprehended, he only spent six months in jail and then three months' probation. they knew enough about this guy. >> reporter: wayne jackson died in the sunset district five years ago. police now say he went by many aliases, which made it difficult for investigators to know the full extent of his criminal past. police are asking if anyone knew mr. jackson to come forward and talk to investigators, and also i should mention, i spoke with kevin's sister briefly on the phone tonight. she says the entire family is overwhelmed with the news that police could have had their man all those years ago. reporting live joe vazquez, kpix 5. we're about to see something we haven't had in more than a week. kpix 5 meteorologist paul deanno is in the weather center. paul? >> high-def doppler radar, we are looking at rain moving in. we look up to the north and see the leading edges of rainfall several hours away, but it is on its way to the bay area. but it's not going to bring us widespread soaking rainfall. we're just talking scattered showers because most of the moisture will stay north. we will see some showers. we'll talk about how much rain is coming to the bay area, coming up in a few minutes. the fbi is now involved in the murder investigation of that teenage girl in fairfield. the body of 13-year-old jen was found friday. releasing the cause of death at this time. it is not appropriate. the time and place will come later on, but at this point it would be hurtful to our investigation." fairfield police want anyone who may have seen something to call them. that triple murder we told you about last night? turns out, it was a drug deal gone bad. the 3 men were shot in a cabin near forestville in sonoma county: they were 26- year-old raleigh butler of petaluma... 46- year-old richard lewin of new york... and 42- year-old todd klarkowski of colorado. investigators say they were in a bedroom with a lots of pot. "what i hear, i guess there were 100 pounds, it was a 200 thousand dollar deal and some fool just took their life." the killer or killers are still on the loose. governor brown ordered state workers to stop taking what he called "unncessary trips" at taxpayer expense. but c-b-s reporter sam shane found out: people the governor himself appointed are still racking up the frequent flier miles... and, yep, you're paying for it. on a recent th people the governor himself appointed are still backing up the frequent flyer miles. and yep, you're paying for it. >> reporter: across the street from the capitol, our camera caught robin umberg leaving work early. again. she was flying to her southern california home in orange county for the weekend, on your dime. >> everybody knows something is wrong. it's common knowledge. >> reporter: we've concealed the identity of this inside source, who says umberg does this almost every month. she charges the trip to california taxpayers. but 90% of the trips violate governor jerry brown's mandate. umberg is just one of five top administrators of the california department of veteran's affairs who are members of what we call the cal vet travel club. >> are you aware of how much you've been spending on travel? >> yes. >> how much? >> the actual dollar figure i don't have. >> reporter: he is one of five executives who spent $82,000 in travel by 18 months, the biggest spender by far is top guy, peter gravitt, who spent nearly $32,000 on travel since may of 2011. >> is the director available to talk to us about this? >> no. >> reporter: we were told he's traveling. records show that 75% of trips have been to attend an event that were near his home. 45 of the trips are non-mission critical. >> the governor has said you can travel if it's to audit, revenue collect, to do business. >> well, we are doing business. >> but you're not. >> this is business. >> we've looked at the records. come on. he's going down there for a fund-raiser over a weekend. his house is down there. why should the taxpayer pay for that? >> he goes down there to meet with those individuals, many of them who are corporate leaders, who have agreed and worked with us on trying to identify and hire veterans. >> reporter: it's not just secretary gravitt. 16 of the 17 trips robin umberg took were for an event 12 miles from her home. another undersecretary took 39 trips. 26of them were non-mission critical. >> how do they get away with taking so many questionable trips paid for by taxpayers? >> reporter: these five members approve each other's travel. >> where is the oversight? >> we have our internal accounting office that looks at travel, that looks at what is done. any outside agency, the department of finance and others, can come in and look at what they want to look at. >> do you think maybe they need to? >> i don't believe they do. >> our reporter notified the governor's office about his investigation, but the governor said he hadn't heard about it. and here's what happened when a producer asked him what he planned to do about the frequent flyers. >> will you talk to us? okay. thank you very much. >> as for cal vet, the deputy secretary says top brass have no intention of cutting back on that travel. coming up, the part of the bay area that's about to lose because of a battery problem. why soon it will be hard to know if you're getting real salmon or the kind grown in a lab. right up behind with a hatchet, smash, smash, smash! >> how a colorado hitchhiker saved the day when a driver went crazy. and there's a celebration tonight. i'm at the seven-mile house. while your carpets may appear clean. it's scary how much dirt your vacuum can leave behind. add resolve deep clean powder before you vacuum to expel the dirt within your carpets. resolve's deep clean powder is moist. absorbing and lifting three times more dirt than vacuuming alone. leaving you with a carpet that's truly fresh and clean. don't just vacuum clean. resolve clean. hey, it's me progressive insurance. you know, from our 4,000 television commercials. yep, there i am with flo. hoo-hoo! watch it! 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[splash!] running out of aerosols can be frustrating. so try the air wick freshmatic. it automatically fills the air with rich fragrance. just one freshmatic refill lasts as long as 55 aerosol cans. something in the air wick. the arteries of your dishwasher are constantly clogging up with grease and lime scale. use finish dishwasher cleaner every month to keep your machine in sparkling health. for shining results, finish dishwasher cleaner. all san jose flights thru the end of march. you might the japanese airline that flies into san jose has cancelled all san jose flights through the end of march. you might say, i don't fly to tokyo, so what do i care? well, it's costing the south bay a lot of money. the cancelled flights cost the santa clara valley an average of $214,000 a day in lost business. or about $9 million between now and the end of march. all nipone uses the boeing 787 and the plane is still grounded because of battery problems. would you eat fish made in the lab? the fda is about to approve the sale of genetically engineered salmon. kpix 5 reporter julie watts explains, soon you may not be able to tell if you're getting the real fish or the man-made kind. >> reporter: salmon is a popular and healthy choice. but would you eat salmon created in a lab? >> i don't think that's right for them to do that. >> reporter: introducing genetically modified salmon, created using genes from other fish. >> this wouldn't happen in a natural system. this is crossing different species. >> reporter: and this is the end result. these fish are all the same age and had the same parents. but take a look at the fish on top. it's genetically modified and much larger. the company that created the salmon claims they grow twice as fast. each has genes from the two salmon. the fda is expected to approve the fish, saying it's as safe to eat as other salmon, prompting public concern. >> it probably would not be labeled so people would have no idea at the store. >> if it's gmo, i have a right to know! >> reporter: the fda does not require labeling for genetically modified crops, so it's possible labeling won't be required for the new salmon either. >> it sounds frankly pretty scary. >> reporter: dr. holman studies public perception of bioengineered food. >> our research shows that if a product has that label, consumers are less likely to buy it. >> reporter: the fda says it recognizes the concerns customers have and encourages voluntary labeling. julie watts, kpix 5. and the scariest predators in the ocean are getting some very special protection. great white sharks are now considered an endangered species. the state department of fish and game will spend the next year deciding whether to keep them on that list. there are 339 adult great white sharks between marin county and mexico. a hitchhiker with a hatchet has become an internet sensation. >> and he's the good guy in this story. allen martin on how the surfer dude from fresno saved a couple of innocent bystanders when a driver went berserk. >> he was driving down this way. he was like, you know what? i've come to realize i'm jesus christ and i can do anything i [ bleep ] want to. and he [ bleep ] pinned him in between that shrub. >> reporter: homeless hitchhiker kai was in the back seat of this vehicle when this all went down. >> the guy went crazy. he gets in his car and tries to move the car. and we weren't going to let him doing it. >> if he started driving that car around again, there would have been a hell of a lot of bodies in here. >> he just kept saying he was jesus christ. he used the n word, meaning the black people. he said we need to get them off of the earth. >> reporter: the pg&e worker was rushed to the hospital and underwent surgery for non-life- threatening injuries. he wasn't the only person the driver attacked. >> he put me in a bear hug and started beating the crap out of me. >> these two women are trying to help him. a guy that big can snap a woman like a pencil stick. so i went up behind him with a hatchet. smash, smash, smash! >> reporter: and that's what tanya said saved her life. and kai, the homeless hitchhiker, didn't care that the suspect was more than six feet tall. >> that woman was in damage. he just finished what looked like at the time killing somebody. if i hadn't have done that, he would have killed more people. >> reporter: allen martin, kpix 5. >> so i'm hearing that people on the internet have raised $500 to get kai a surfboard. we're all set. >> he's got a hatchet, so -- >> doesn't every good surfer need one? >> obviously. here's what we have weather- wise. tonight, cloud cover moving in. temperatures on the increase, although still chilly. you will wake up to 45 and a few showers around in oakland. we'll take you to chinatown. some video there. get ready for the chinese new year, year of the snake, beginning this sunday, february 10. nothing yet on the radar, but there is rain several hours to the north. we will have rain come tomorrow morning in the north bay. we need it. average rainfall since christmas is 5 inches. we're at 10% of that. we've had less than a half inch of rainfall since christmas. but here comes an front. we're now seeing some of that rainfall up off the northern california coastline. it's not going to be that soaking rainfall that will really put a dent in our rainfall deficit, because the front is keeping most of its energy to the north. that said, scattered showers tomorrow, and for the first half of friday. after that, we get locked into position once again. dry weather but also chilly weather. this likely will hang out for another week or so. so after two days with scattered showers, we're likely look at another seven to ten mainly dry days the. as for how much rainfall, really not that much. about an eighth of an inch of rainfall for most of us. perhaps about a quarter of an inch out toward pacifica. showers here tomorrow morning will be with us through about lunchtime. lows near freezing in our inland communities on saturday and sunday. mid 50's with those showers tomorrow. redwood city, 56. 55 for walnut creek. scattered showers. san ramon, 55. sunshine for the weekend. chilly, upper 50's and we will likely stay dry next week. two days of showers and then a whole truckload full of dry days. >> we need more of those showers. >> we're gonna need more days than what we got on that forecast. >> all right. coming up, we're going to take you to the only place in the bay area where on tonight in brisbane, not too far from the cow palace. well, there is quite a celebration going on tonight in the town of brisbane. >> it's at a bar called the seven mile house. it's a place where your great, great, great grandfather could have gone for a beer. >> yeah. about a seven mile walk from his house. juliette goodrich and her photographer parked their truck where 160 years ago horses were tied up. julie, is that karaoke i'm hearing in the background? >> reporter: i think it is. some budding rock stars. it's the 160th anniversary. good clean fun. yes, they are inside singing. it is one of the oldest bars in the bay area and the only mile house left standing in its original location. seven mile house opened its doors in 1853. this live music and karaoke sports bar and grill was once a pony express route and stagecoach stop. it's exactly seven miles to the ferry building in san francisco. >> at almost every mile from the ferry building to san jose, there was a mile house. those mile houses were rest stops for horses. >> reporter: it spanned the decades, from brothel, biker, trucker hangout, to sports/gambling den, and now it's a 49er favorite hangout. >> this place is a legacy, you know what i'm saying? and i love it here. we'll keep coming here. >> reporter: photos of the original seven mile house owners are displayed on the wall. the new owners, a filipino family. tonight's celebration entry is nachos, burgers and wings. >> we continue our support of this establishment. it will never die! >> reporter: some say the seven mile house is haunted. they're saying no. it's just rich with a lot of history inside. tonight, it's filled with, yes, a lot of budding rock stars. actually, they got silent inside, ken, because they could see the television here. they're watching the story as we speak. they're mesmerized. >> everybody in the seven mile house, we get off in an hour, okay? >> reporter: sounds good. >> all aq don't wait for presidents' day to save on a new mattress. sleep train's presidents' day sale is on now. save up to $500 on beautyrest and posturepedic. get a sealy queen set for just $399. even get 3 years interest-free financing on tempur-pedic. plus, free delivery, set-up, and removal of your old set. keep more presidents in your wallet. sleep train's presidents' day sale is on now. superior service best selection lowest price guaranteed. ♪ sleep train ♪ ♪ your ticket to a better night's sleep ♪ running out of aerosols can get pretty frustrating. try the air wick freshmatic. it automatically fills the air with its captivating scent. just one freshmatic refill lasts as long as 55 aerosol cans. and with so many rich, indulgent fragrances to choose from, you can get lost in celebration. something in the air wick. city..so they touched down 100 miles away in tulsa and fi rolled in at a heavy fog kept the warriors' plane from landing in oklahoma city. so they touched down in tulsa and finally rolled in at 4 a.m. this is after mark jackson's bunch gave up 140 last night in houston. first quarter, kevin martin, steal. stephen curry's pass. that's an easy russell westbrook finger roll. kevin durant on the fast break. thunder up by 20. third quarter, nobody looking at westbrook, who gets the easiest dunk of his life. the thunder win 119-98. at least they can go get some sleep now. stanford chopped down their second opponent. second half, chasson randle gives us the cardinals a three- point lead. but mark lyons, 15 of his 20 in the second half. today was national letter of intent day, when high school football players commit to colleges. here is our in-depth look at stanford's recruiting class. >> a former cal golfer james is preparing for round one. new to the tour. hahn made himself familiar after his gangnam style dance on the green. >> i walked off the green. and i was possessed. and that's what came out. >> i have in my hand the top five. you are supposed to go easy on the goalie in warm-up. lars didn't get that memo. the montreal goalie, not a good spot. no. 4, most three-year-olds can't do this, but how about a younger girl? next stop, wnba. no. 3, bismarck, north dakota, hockey. alex scoops up the puck with the back of his stick. bismarck century high wins it. juan carlos garcia bicycle kicks the pass. honduras shocked the u.s., 2-1. no. 1, 20,000 bucks to the st. jude's hospital on that. >> only julie watts has it hotter than hewey lewis right now. getting some action. >> at the seven mile house.

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Transcripts For KPIX KPIX 5 News At 6pm 20130207

>> this case is a case that haunts the san rancisco police department and the city and has pretty much throughout the entire careers of everybody that's standing here. >> reporter: a fresh look at the crime by the cold case unit let to the searched of his old haight district home last week where jackson and his roommate lived just blocks away from where 10-year-old kevin collins disappeared on the way home from basketball practice in 1984. jackson was a suspect in part because three years earlier, he had spent six months in jail for lewd acts on a 7-year-old at fisherman's wharf. what's more -- >> he had a dog similar to the one suspect was seen to have. >> reporter: still at the time police came up short. >> he was detained, interviewed, he allowed a consent search of the same house we just did a search warrant on and a photo spread was shown to the two witnesses that described the suspect with a large black dog and they weren't able to pick him out of the photo spread. >> reporter: what police didn't know is that jackson was also wanted in canada under another name. >> for a 1973 incident where he allegedly kidnapped and sexually assaulted two juveniles. he was released and fled canada. he was never apprehended in part because of the multiple identities he used. >> reporter: those names include raymond william stewart, kelly lee dawson, wayne jackson, kelly sean stewart and others. revelations about his past led to the digging up of the garage floor of his old home in the haight last week. there police found remains. but they turned out to be animal bones. >> the investigation continues. >> reporter: as part of the investigation, they are asking anybody who recognizes him or names that ring a bell, to get in touch with the homicide department here because they're not giving up on this case. by the way, they spoke with kevin's mother yesterday and told her they were going to be releasing this information just to keep her abreast of the latest developments in the case that as the chief said has haunted both this department and the city for decades. >> phil, thank you. fairfield police also held a news conference this afternoon to talk about the investigation into a murdered teenager. the latest on that case a little later in this newscast. there's been a wave of drownings and rescues along the northern california coast in recent months. a lot of those involve dog owners trying to save their pets. kpix 5 reporter don ford shows us how state and federal officials are looking to prevent another drowning. >> reporter: instead of saving someone, this rescued jet ski is deliberately dropping a coast guard swimmer into the mavericks waves. this is a multi-agency drill and the trained swimmer will be picked up by this coast guard helicopter. some serious surf training in serious conditions. petty officer pam bowman says beach accidents this year are alarming. >> we have had seven deaths and five of them have been related to people out on the beach with their dogs. >> reporter: folks diving into the surf trying to save their dogs washed into the water by so-called sneaker waves. women accident is especially tragic. >> a 16-year-old boy saw his dog go into the surf. he went into the water after the dog. his parents were concerned about his ability to get back out of the water and sadly, the only one of that who made it back out of the water was the dog. >> reporter: california state parks lifeguard jeff watkins says don't underestimate your dog. >> what people need to know about dogs is they are great swimmers and they are always going to make it back to shore. the most important thing you can do is keep your eye on your dog and cheer it on. don't go in after the animals. >> reporter: susan walks on the beach with the dogeveryone. >> think about it often. you can turn your eye on the wave. >> reporter: would you go after your dog in the surf? >> no. >> reporter: dave heck man grew up near the beach and knows how to be safe. now he brings his two sons. >> it's kind of strange how that happens how these waves just come out of nowhere. >> reporter: bottom line, experts say in these cold pacific waters, unless you are already wearing a wet suit, your dog is a much better swimmer in the surf than you. in half moon bay, don ford, kpix 5. checking bay area headlines, no one was hurt when this three-story house in the berkeley hills went up in flames. the fire on keith avenue started around noon ungulfing the second and third floors. no word on how it started. it's unclear what sparked a deadly house fire in san leandro. firefighters pulled a man out of the burning home on in tune drive just before 5:00 this morning -- on neptune drive just before 5:00 this morning. he died at the scene. home depot is building its workforce. and looking for 80,000 seasonal workers to fill openings across the country. kpix 5 consumerwatch reporter julie watts explains how bay area job hunters can cash in. reporter: from garden to paint to home improvement, home depot is hiring in a big way. the company announced it's increased its annual seasonal hiring by 14% to 80,000 employees nationwide. 1500 of them right here in the bay area. something home depot hiring manager jessica miller says is much-needed. >> people are starting to do more land escaping, starting to build more outside and around their house, so we definitely need more associated to accommodate the greater customer numbers. >> reporter: good for the economy and the job market. >> i would be surprised if they get the word out, they don't get five, ten applicants for each job. >> reporter: this labor expert says 1500 jobs from one employer is extremely rare. in home depot's case, it's due to the housing rebounded as homeowners are spending more on home improvement. but he warns the real estate boom doesn't necessarily translate to a rebounded in construction. >> so construction employment is on the upside. it's still far below what it was five years ago. but it is slowly increasing. >> reporter: in the meantime, many seasonal hires are finding a permanent home at the depot. >> here you go. probably about 30% of our current associates started out as seasonal workers. >> reporter: associates like randy who was one of last year's seasonal hires. in a very competitive job market, randy says the ease of home depot's seasonal hiring process came as a welcome relief. >> once i got to home depot and applied for it, it was pretty easy. it was instantaneous. >> reporter: and you're still here? >> and i'm still here. >> reporter: nationwide, home depot says half of its full- time employees actually began as seasonal workers. for more information on openings, head to cbssf.com/consumerwatch. there's also a special application tool designed specifically for military veterans. and remember, if you have a consumer problem, give us a call, 1-888-5-helps-u. julie watts, kpix 5. some high-tech companies in the bay area might be expanding. but the new employees may not be able to drive to the jobs. why cars could be forbidden from the road to the workplace. [ [ bleep ] ] ran up with a hatchet, smash, smash, smash! >> how a hitchhiker saved a pg&e worker from a deranged driver who claimed to be jesus christ. >> weather time and another dry day throughout the bay area despite it was chilly and a cold front moved through. we'll talk about the prospects for rain. we actually have some in the forecast. and find out if we'll be using that drought word anytime soon, gosh! your forecast coming up. in san francisco. 5-passengers and 2-cable car al muni blames a bolt in the tracks for this morning's cable car accident in san francisco. five passengers and two cable car operators went to the hospital after the cable car suddenly stopped at powell and washington. one of the passengers fell out of the cable car. others on board were shaken up. >> did you bump your head? >> yes. >> oh. >> we were just coming down the hill and the train abruptly stopped. they never moved after that. it was a little scary with the kids but looks like everyone's okay. >> investigators are trying to figure out where the bolt came from and how it got on the track in the first place. cable car service is back to normal tonight. google may soon have to launch a major search of its own for new ways to get its employees to work. they are looking to expand in mountain view. while new workers would be welcome, kpix reporter len ramirez tells us the city isn't so interested in their cars. len? >> reporter: that's right. the feeling is that in this north bayshore area traffic is at the breaking point now. so what the city council is leaning towards doing -- they haven't voted on this yet, but leaning towards drawing a line on the sand saying no new car trips into the area even though companies like google plan to expand here. but they are challenging those companies to come up with other ways to get employees to their jobs. in the area around the google campus you can find many modes of transportation, foot, bikes, vans, buses, airplanes, and the car which is still king, and the source of the area's dreaded traffic jams. >> have you ever seen traffic around 5:00 here? >> reporter: he commutes in with his engineer buddies from hayward. >> it gets pretty congested. i would love not to drive. >> we have a goal of no net new cars into the north bayshore area. >> reporter: margaret is part of a mountain view city council majority that wants to send a message to google and other tech firms wishing to expand in north bayshore to think outside the car. >> it's fine for them to come in but we want them to use alternate transportation. >> reporter: it may be soon part of the city's master plan development for the area. by 2030 another 3.4 million square feet of office space will be built here which could add another 14,000 daily commuters but the city wants the number of daily car trips to stay where it is now. the challenge is on for google and others to sprout ideas for driveless people movers and personal rapid transit, ideas now being given serious consideration for getting people to their jobs. >> really want to partner with our private corporations to find alternatives and find ways to, you know, allow the growth but to be able to do it in an environmentally-friendly sensitive manner. >> walk out my front door, hop on a muni bus, take that to bart. >> reporter: mark would welcome new transportation technologies but is proving it can be done now. he uses six modes of transportation to get from his home in san francisco to his job at microsoft in mountain view. do you feel good about not using a car? >> uhm, i feel happier than i do when i'm reading license plates and butcher stickers, so yeah. >> reporter: a google spokesman was not available for comment but they did say in a statement, they do want to work with the city of mountain view in solving these issues and they are concerned about the environment, as well. allen, there is a feeling around mountain view that this problem may not be that hard to solve. they have done a lot of research and found that a great percentage of workers into this area lives within a five-mile radius so they can maybe get on a bike, get on foot, maybe get into another shuttle bus or something like that so it may not be as hard to solve as you might first thing. >> the closer you live to work, makes sense. >> reporter: that's right. >> thanks, len. i got some traffic trouble for you here. the camel caught running amok on a concord road seems to be just fine. vets checked out rudy today just to be sure. the one ton animal actually escaped twice yesterday from his fenced had yard on bailey road. and apparently we're fresh out of camel jockeys so police brought in cowboys to round him up. >> amazing. well, a homeless hatchet wielding hitchhiker is being called a hero for saving the life of a pg&e worker. the hitchhiker says the man giving him a ride in fresno suddenly went berserk. he claimed he was jesus christ, made racist comments, and then smashed into the back of a utility truck injuring the pg&e worker who is african-american. the driver then went on the attack, beating up a woman who then tried to help the pg&e worker. then it was the hitchhiker to the rescue. >> these two women are trying to help him. she runs up and grabs one of them. a guy that big could snap a woman's neck like a pencil stick. so i ran up behind with hatchet, smash, smash, smash. >> whoa. >> neither was seriously hurt. the suspect is in custody and the hitchhiker is an internet sensation. you can see his entire recap of what happened on our website, cbssf.com. just click on the story. >> i read hitchhikers guide to the galaxy. i didn't read that chapter. >> you didn't read that chapter called smash? >> guy will have his own reality show soon. >> it's been so dry around here we have camels in concord, think they're home now! [ laughter ] it's not that dry. but it has been very dry outside. another dry day today testing out those beautiful bay lights on the western span of the bay bridge. livermore you hit 61. oakland 61. concord hit 58. no camel sightings on the roads. redwood city hit 60 today. highs in san jose and fremont were 58. san francisco you topped out at 56 degrees today. i show you this every day. kind of part of my job. but it's been this common theme of a radar with nothing on it but two sweeping little icons there. well, that's what we have tonight. by this time tomorrow, there will be scattered showers out there. and here's why. we have a front moving in from the north but if you think about it, all the juicy air is to our south. all the cold air is to our north. but cold air can't hold as much moisture. it's kind of a rule of nature. so we have all this stuff coming down from the north. yes works we get a little bit of -- yes, we get a little bit of rainfall. we don't want flooding but we could use rain. we're not going to get it because this system is coming from the north with no tap of tropical moisture whatsoever. so what you get, scattered showers. you get them tomorrow, friday, as that front moves through. front is gone, now high pressure builds in again and as it moves west to east, it starts off to our west, clockwise flow. you will have sunshine on saturday and sunday. rainfall totals really very unimpressive. our latest computer models say even less than .2" of rainfall in san francisco. many of you getting less than .10". so some but not much. san francisco tomorrow with that he scattered showers 54. san jose 55. redwood city 56. napa 53 degrees. showers will be around on thursday and friday. then we get sunny again. that's not bad for the weekend. upper 50s. cold mornings especially in our inland valleys lows near freezing and next week we stay dry with sunshine and highs in the low 60s. as you know, it's been an entirely dry january. now rain a little bit of rain finally on its way to the bay area. kpix 5's roberta gonzales in crystal springs reservoir with the mobile weather lab. >> reporter: we are in san mateo county. i have to look at our weather map. oh, yes, i knew it felt colder and it certainly is. it's dropped down to 47 degrees now. the wind is at one-mile-per- hour but i have to tell you it's been fluctuating out of the northwest up to 12. relative humidity is at 77%. come on own here. we are just outside of crystal springs reservoir. obviously since the sun went down at 5:39, you can't see much. but by the time the sun comes back up tomorrow morning at 7:09, you will be able to see that the waters are now beginning to recede from the shoreline. yup. that reservoir is lowering. that's because back in december we had copious rain throughout the bay area. one storm after another with near record amounts of rainfall and wind. that translated to snow in the greater lake tahoe area. you remember back here in christmastime we had back to back blizzards both producing nearly two feet of snow in tahoe? yeah, that translates into water for us during the summer months. but instead, we dried up very rapidly in the month of january typically we should see 11 days of rainfall but instead, only five and then here comes february and so far not even a drop in the weather bucket. so i wanted to go ahead and compare, san francisco which is typically wetter than san diego which has a dry climate, and the desert city of tucson and check that out, we have only nearly a half inch of rain since the very first day of 2013. so should we start throwing around that d word? right here in san mateo county, 90% of normal as far as rainfall is concerned. so with only six more weeks of winter left, it does certainly bear watching. reporting outside crystal springs reservoir for mobile weather, roberta gonzales, kpix 5. just four days in the lunar new year. how the history of a snake could foreshadow your future. >> and the countdown to the new bay bridge is on. kpix 5 is proud to be the official television for the opening ceremonies in september. we'll continue to kind posted on planning for the big day. the upcoming lunar new year ushers in one of the less-favorable signs in the chinese zodiac. so, kpix-5 a lin tells us: exit the dragon? enter the snake. >> the upcoming lunar new year ushers in one of the less favorable signs. chinese zodiac. -- signs of the chinese zodiac. so kpix 5 reporter da lin reports people are preparing. >> reporter: the year of the snake slithers into sight. >> definitely red and gold. honey and happiness. >> reporter: many are transforming home and businesses with lucky items and plants to welcome the new year, which starts on sunday. >> it's good to have a good starting so the whole year will be good. >> reporter: folks hoping for a good start to 2013 packed stores today to stock up on decorations. >> planning on having a big dinner for the family so that's why we're buying decorations to decorate the whole house for chinese new year. >> reporter: a florist says tangerine plants are selling fast. >> most people think about blooming plants for the new year so it brings in a sense of new growth, the more fruit you have the more prosperity. >> reporter: since the snake represents traits like cleverness and agility, a fortune teller predicts people who adapt to the changing economy will do better financially this year. so people have to use this snake spirit to go back to work as well as making changes to their careers and to their family. >> reporter: here are some famous snakes. oprah, presidents john f. kennedy and martin luther king, jr. were all born in the year of the snake. in the coming year you will see a lot of events in the bay area celebrating the lunar new year the biggest one perhaps the parade in san francisco on the 23rd, tens of thousands of people expected to celebrate that parade. from my family to yours, [ non- english language ] , i'm da lin, kpix 5. coming up in our next half hour, the investigation into the murder of a teenager in fairfield. five days after her body is found, how police say this case really hits home and the initial clue we now know is not true. >> the postal service plans to stop delivering mail on saturdays. why that's actually good news for netflix. what happened when we confronted them. 15:52:56 "this is a tragic time. i'm the parent of >> state workers busted bowling on the clock. what happened when we confronted them. taylor: where is she? how well do you know christine? i love this woman. announcer: ...ends in new york. ♪ i follow you down... ♪ i'll call my team. ♪ through the eye of the storm... ♪ taylor: you heard what he said. she's going to die. i'm coming with you. stokes: we got a body. 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[ mom ] don't stress. we can figure this out. ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] get the speed to make a great first impression. call today to get u-verse high speed internet for as little as $14.95 a month for 12 months with a one-year price guarantee. this is delicious. ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] save the day in an instant. at&t. ♪ ♪ what's that? when i take a picture of this check, it goes straight to the bank. oh. oh look the lion is out! no mommy no! don't worry honey, it only works on checks. deposit checks from your smartphone with chase quickdeposit. just snap a picture, hit send and done. take a step forward and chase what matters. this is a tragic time. i'm the parent of a daughter and this is -- this is the worst nightmare that that family is living through. >> now at 6:30, police get personal when talking about the murder of a fairfield teenager. they know she was murdered. the autopsy proved it. but they don't know who did it or why. the body of 13-year-old genelle allen was found early friday morning at a park in fairfield. kpix 5 reporter ken bastida on the search fourth killer. >> reporter: people come to allan witt park leaving mementos in memory of 13-year- old genelle allen, whose body was found here at the park early friday morning. fairfield police held a news conference today. they released several more photos of the 13-year-old. they say the department of justice and the fbi have now joined the investigation. fairfield police chief walter tibbett says no suspect information or cause of death information will be released at this time. >> the police department is not releasing the cause of genelle's death at this time. it is not appropriate. the time and place will come later on but at this point it would be hurtful to our investigation and devastating to the family for additional details to go out. so we're asking that that not be released. the time and place will come later. >> reporter: meanwhile, the family has released a statement, quote, this has been a devastating tragedy for our family and community. we need to thank everyone for the outpouring of support at the memorial site. and we are grateful, very grateful, for your love and support. >> reporter: and police have set up a tip line now. area code (707)428-7345 and are asking the public for help with this. any information to please contact the fairfield police department. in fairfield, ken bastida, kpix 5. new tonight, police in pittsburg are looking for these three people in connection with last month's murder at a gas station. they are all considered armed and dangerous. the victim was shot in the head at a union 76 gas station on railroad avenue last tuesday. no word on a motive. police say the suspects are known to frequent oakland and san francisco. state workers who were supposed to be on a business trip were caught throwing your money down the gutter, bowling on the job. but the really interesting part is what they said when cbs reporter sam shane confronted them. >> reporter: in the middle of the day a thursday in december, our cameras caught these state workers bowling. 15 employees of the california department of parks and recreation on the clock laughing, eating, and bowling. many of them arrived here in their official state vehicles to go bowling at west sacramento's capital bowl. it is the latest embarrassing episode in a state agency plagued with problems. in june it was revealed the parks department for years had been keeping a secret slush fund worth a whopping $54 million as they were hiding that money, they were threatening to close state to parks. and just as they are trying to regain the public trust, we found their employees throwing gutter balls. and when they finished bowling, we followed some of the workers back to their office in old sacramento where they actually denied what we clearly caught them doing. you weren't at the bowling alley? >> no. >> reporter: our camera saw you at the bowling alley. do you have anything to say sir? can you tell me anything about that party you had at the capitol bol just now? >> i have no idea what you're talking about. >> do you know what we're looking at here? >> if you could explain it, it would be great. >> reporter: well, these are pictures of people in your department bowling during the workday. >> reporter: waters says the 15 employees were in sacramento for two days of meetings. she says their supervisor approved the bowling as a team building exercise which waters now says was a mistake. what was going on there? >> well, this was an unfortunate and very isolated incident. >> they need a little bit of a reality check. >> reporter: taxpayer advocate says this bowling party in the middle of a workday shows that the attitude in the state's parks department has not changed. >> so i would think of any agency the state parks department would be a little bit more careful with their policies and how they use their money. >> reporter: waters vows there will be no more bowling parties for workers in this agency while they're on the clock. >> i think we're all admitting that this was inappropriate behavior. >> that was sam shane reporting. a decision to allow gays into the boy scouts has been put off for the next few months. the boy scouts of america's leadership says the organization will take action on the resolution at its national meeting in may. the announcement comes as both sides of the issue lobby fiercely for keeping or doing away with the policy. starting soon, you probably won't get first class mail on saturday. the u.s. postal service plans to cut service to save money. kpix 5 reporter mike sugerman explains why the post office's financial problem is actually good news for reporter: rain, sleet, sno no problem. but the postal service will stop saturday delivery this summer. when was the last time you got a letter that you wanted? >> several years ago. it's been a long time since i have actually gotten a letter. >> reporter: one of the reasons the postal service lost $16 billion, with a b, last year. this move could save $2 billion a year. >> they can't compete with computers and e-mails and u.p.s., fedex now. they just can't. >> reporter: that's exactly what the postmaster general said. >> our move to five-day mail delivery also reflects the changing market demand and we are simply not in a financial position where we can continue to maintain six-day delivery. >> reporter: packages? they will still come. post offices? they will stay open. but bills? flyers? birthday cards? starting in august, with congressional approval, they will have to wait until monday. and that will affect who? >> i'm disappointed. i'm one of the few people who sends out mail. >> reporter: if there were more people like andrea carrington of crockett, the postal service would be rolling i doing. -- rolling in dough. >> send out over 300 birthday cards a year and i have about 15 people i correspond with regularly by mail. >> there's just nothing like it. it's very personal. people express their feelings and it's just a nice memory you can keep it. >> reporter: you know who really likes it? netflix! it's one of the post office's biggest customers. stock went up 10 points today. no saturday mail? it figures more people will stream movies. that saves them money. mike sugerman, kpix 5. we all know the bay area real estate market's crazy but this home? doesn't have a dishwasher. 80 years old. why a real estate agent says it's a bargain at $2 million. plus, the token being eliminated from monopoly and the new figure that is taking its place. you score little victories every day. now you can do it with dinner. introducing land o'lakes® sauté express®. the all-in-one sauté starter with butter, olive oil, herbs and spices... so dinner really sizzles. it's one step, no prep. and so good, they'll ask for more. and that little victory is a pretty big deal. land o'lakes® sauté express®. find it in the dairy aisle. com boom. a new report from the silicon valley index shows nearly half of all job growth in silicon valley is past that of the dot- com boom. a new report from the silicon valley index shows nearly half of all jobs created in the bay area were in santa clara and san mateo counties. one expert calls that a cause for euphoria. and the growth is not just tech jobs. the report says construction is one of the fastest growing industries in the region. a shack in the south bay is for sale. asking price, nearly $2 million. the 80-year-old house on maria lane in sunnyvale a little more than a mile from the new apple campus. the home is nearly 1700 square feet, four bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths, wall heaters and a spacious kitchen with no dishwasher, and original cabinets. but it's all about the location. the new apple campus will draw in 13,000 new employees to an already high demand housing market. >> all of us employees are going to have to have -- all of those employees are going to have to have a place to live and that's why this area here is going, in my feeling, to boom. >> real estate agent sells us the house already has a couple of offers. >> what if it were on park place? monopoly speaking of which getting a new token costing out a classic. facebook voters decided to eliminate the iron. its going to be replaced by a cat. the iron, wheelbarrow and shoe were neck and neck for elimination in the final hours of voting. the cat beat out the robot, diamond ring, helicopter and the guitar. versions of the monopoly with the in your token will come out later this year. california's biggest student fundraiser to find cancer is right here in the bay area. >> it's a unifying sense, a great feeling on campus to have everyone bond together. >> meet the 17-year-old leader behind it. >> coming up in weather, things are going to get more active. find out when the radar behind me is going to be showing some rainfall and find out when freezing temperatures will likely return to the bay area. it's all coming up next. >> okay, folks. who is the most disliked athlete in the world? i'm dennis o'donnell. and this cal alum, if he could play golf like he could dance, watch out this weekend in pebble beach. we'll show you coming up. this is speeding. this is in a rush. this is fast food. this is accelerating. and this is happening too fast. this is the express lane. getting a ticket. and this is the fast track. this is the fastest in-home wi-fi for all rooms, all devices, all the time. this is xfinity internet. call or click to get started today. xfinity. the future of awesome. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ [ engine revs ] [ female announcer ] small... [ engine revs ] wicked... ♪ ♪ and now... ♪ ♪ topless. ♪ ♪ the fiat 500 abarth cabrio. ♪ ♪ right now, 5 million seniors the number of alzheimer's cases in the u.s. is expected it triple in the next few decades. right now, five million seniors suffer from the memory robbing disease. a study says that number will reach 13.8 million in 2050. that would be the equivalent of everyone in the state of illinois having the disease. >> the baby boom generation is entering into retirement years. and as they age, we know the numbers of those with alzheimer's will increase dramatically. >> right now caring for those with alzheimer's costs $200 billion a year through medicare and medicaid programs. experts say that number will rise to a trillion dollars by 2050. let's be real. not every teenager is willing to give up free time for charity. but as kpix 5's kate kelly reports, this week's jefferson award winner found some inspiration in the stories of cancer survivors. reporter: like most high school seniors, 17-year-old zach martinucci juggles a full schedule. honors classes, college applications and tennis team practice leaves little free time. yet his bulletin board tells a different story. for four years, zach has made time to participate in relay for life a 24-hour fundraiser put on entirely by the students at burlingame high school. >> we raise money for the american cancer society and that goes to fund our research, education advocacy and patient service. >> reporter: he got involved his freshman year as a team captain. by sophomore he was running the event. >> it's a unifying sense, a great feeling on campus to have everyone bond together to fight cancer. >> reporter: today, the burlingame high school relay for life is the largest student- run event of its kind in the state. in the last four years, they have raised nearly a quarter of a million dollars for the american cancer society. >> zach stands out because he is not doing it for himself. he is not doing it for a resume'. he's passionate about what he wants to do. he wants to truly make a change in this world. >> reporter: steve mills is director of student activities at burlingame high. >> ever since he stepped foot on this campus he's made a huge impact. >> reporter: his work with the american cancer society isn't limited to just his school. he is the lead high school volunteer for the state training other students to put on relays at over 60 campuses across california. >> now, let this sound represent one death. [ sound ] >> reporter: at campus meetings, he and his fellow volunteers demonstrate why their work is so important. >> listen to the death -- listen to the death caused each day by tobacco. [ sound ] >> reporter: zach says he is motivated by the stories from cancer survivors. as graduating student body president he is ready to pass the baton to fellow students confident in the knowledge you don't have to be an adult to make a difference. >> i just want to congratulate you and present you with a pin that we made. [ applause ] with >> reporter: so for his work with the american cancer society as well as his local leadership, this week's jefferson award in the bay area goes to zach martinucci, kate kelly, kpix 5. >> to participate in burlingame high school's relay for life, go to cbssf.com, click "connect," then jefferson awards to find our story on zach. >> great to see teenagers making a difference. our weather could be changing. ran starts tomorrow. >> you wouldn't think so outside. sunny all day but there's a fast-moving front that will give us a chance of showers for many of you towards santa rosa, yountville, tomorrow. san jose clear skies. san francisco only 51 degrees. kind of chilly today. it's average for early february but there's a little chill in the air. we have clear skies over the city, as well. livermore you're at 51. san jose 51. concord 52. santa rosa 53. radar is clear now. i think by about midnight tonight we'll see showers a few hours to our north and west and by the time lawrence has the forecast for you tomorrow morning, it will be raining in the north bay hills. we could use it. the average rainfall between christmas and now is about 5" even in san francisco. we're at 1/10 of that or 10% less than one half of one inch. we could use more. you and i both know that we are very dry in the summertime. we add up the rain in the winter to get us through the dry summers. fremont 40. san francisco 48 overnight. there's a problem with this front though. some fronts have the ability to tap into some tropical moisture, the stuff to our south. some fronts just kind of scoot by and give us rain and it's not a big deal. we're looking at the latter type of front of the it's going to move through. we will get some rainfall but without that tropical connection that deep tropical moisture, we are just going to get some scattered showers and that's it. some of you don't mind that but we could use a little more rainfall that we are going to see on thursday and friday. that said, here's the front moving through hanging out on friday, as well. two days with scattered showers through about lunchtime on friday. that moves out, high pressure again the dry weather moves in. but as it moves in from the west we'll get a northerly flow and over the weekend i'm talking saturday morning, sunday morning, even monday morning, lows inland, walnut creek, livermore, napa, santa rosa, you likely will drop down to about freezing. there will be some frost out there starting saturday morning. rainfall totals, wait for it -- not that much. hayward .1" ." san jose less. there is not a juicy front moving through. showers get here though tomorrow morning. we'll have on and off rainfall through lunch. time on friday then clear out for the weekend and clear skies will lead to near freezing temperatures over the weekend. and also monday morning. highs tomorrow mid 50s. concord 54. san jose 55. good evening in los altos your high tomorrow 56 with scattered showers. union city 54. san ramon, vallejo, mid-50s and the mid-50s from richmond south to oakland and west to san rafael. extended forecast the rain moves out lunchtime friday. chilly mid- to upper 50s and dry monday, tuesday and wednesday of next week. dennis has sports coming up next. ooh kfc. hey, you're supposed to wait for everybody. you know what, while we're waiting why don't we play a game of hide and seek? right now? yeah go hide. go on buddy. one, two... [ son ] come and find me! three! [ son ] are you even looking for me? i am looking! [ male announcer ] bite-sized chicken's grown up. kfc bites. freshly hand-breaded big bites of premium breast meat seasoned in the colonel's original recipe. try 10 bites with an 8 piece meal for $19.99. [ son ] dad? [ male announcer ] today tastes so good. season... the team announced they will tarp off the third deck known as "mount davis" ng the capacity to f the raiders won't have as much trouble selling out home games next season. they announced they will tarp off the third deck known as mount davis and reducing the capacity to 53,000. the pros will tee off tomorrow morning in the opening round of the at&t pro-am at pebble beach. today it was all about the celebs. here's vern glenn. >> reporter: singer huey lewis, the longest tenured celebrity who stole the show in a chipoff to win it. >> that shot there, i bet pros would make one or two out of ten. >> reporter: when was the last time you made a shot like that? >> well, let's see. i chipped in yesterday actually. but not for $20,000. [ laughter ] >> reporter: lewis will be playing the monterey peninsula club tomorrow as with most of the "a" listers and bill belichick, who said four words to me dennis when i approached him for an interview, no, i'm good, thanks. at pebble beach, vern glenn, kpix 5. >> oh, we've all been there. aaron rodgers isn't the only former cal star at pebble beach. james hahn is also in the field. kim coyle has more on the rookie with all the right moves. >> it wasn't and he perfect any and said i'm going to be a good golfer, it wasn't epiphany. >> reporter: he made the cut and earned a top five finish at the human that challenge but it was what hahn did without a club in his hand that turned him from obscure rookie to internet sensation. >> everyone's grown up and says when they are kids they are saying what would i do if i was on hole 16? >> this happened earlier today, jake. james hahn and i know, you know, a lot of stuff at 16 this week. i think that the [ indiscernible ] -- takes the cake. >> i made birdie, walked off the green. and was possessed. >> reporter: as you can see, hahn is very comfortable in front of the camera and could have another career in his future. >> i play golf for a living. but i don't want to talk golf 24/7. >> hi, this is james hahn reporting from cbs channel 5. we're here with stephanie hahn today and just wanted to ask you about your husband. he started off the year pretty good on the pga tour. can you tell us a little bit about that? >> uhm, definitely an entertainer as everybody saw from last weekend. >> do you have a nickname for him out there? can you tell us about that? >> i hear it's asian brad pitt but i don't know how he got it. he is obviously good-looking but not sure where it came from. >> reporter: the only question left to ask, what does hahn have up his sleeve this weekend at pebble beach? >> i think now since the bar has been set so high that maybe the winning putt on 18, you know, might be a little something but you will have to watch the golf channel to find out. >> asian brad pitt. the people have spoken. if you are an athlete don't lie to your fans. lance armstrong tops the list of forbes magazine of the most disliked athletes followed by the notre dame linebacker who shot up the list after the fake girlfriend saga, tiger woods, jay cutler and metta world peace round out the top five. check out baby titus. the toddler's trick shot receiving a million views in three days on youtube. looking at these shots, if i'm the harlem globetrotters i want this kid on my team right now. >> yeah. >> better shooter than metta world peace, too. [ laughter ] >> likeable. [ laughter ] captions by: caption colorado comments@captioncolorado.com ack ight at 11. and...done. did you just turn your ringer off so no one would interrupt us? oh no, i... just used my geico app to get a tow truck. it's gonna be 30 minutes. oh, so that means that we won't be stuck up here, for hours, with nothing to do. oh i get it, you wanna pass the time, huh. (holds up phone) fruit ninja!!! emergency roadside assistance. just a click away with the geico mobile app. save up to $500 on beautyrest and posturepedic. get a sealy queen set for just $399. even get 3 years interest-free financing on tempur-pedic. keep more presidents in your wallet. sleep train's presidents' day sale is on now. mom, i invited justin over for lunch. good. no, not good. he's a vegetarian and he's going to be here in 20 minutes! [ mom ] don't stress. we can figure this out. ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] get the speed to make a great first impression. call today to get u-verse high speed internet for as little as $14.95 a month for 12 months with a one-year price guarantee. this is delicious. ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] save the day in an instant. at&t. ♪ ♪ joey fatone: this is joey fatone. it's time to play "family feud." give it up for steve harvey! steve: welcome to the show folks. thank you for coming. how's everybody doing? how you folks doing? thank y'all very much. thank you for coming. thank y'all. hey. welcome to "family feud," everybody. i'm your man steve harvey, and like always, we got a good one for you today. returning for the second day from columbia, south carolina, home of the big d.m. it's the bennett family, and from louisville, kentucky--that's home of the derby--it's the schuering family. let's go. give me b.j., give me mary. let's go. guys, here we go. we've got the top 6 answers on the board. name something you do to your bottom. b.j.? >> sit. steve: sit. mary? >> exercise. steve: pass or play? >> we're gonna play. steve: they're gonna play. >> all right. steve: miss isabella, how you doing today? >> i'm doing great! steve: wonderful, wonderful. all right. name something you do to your bottom. >> exercise it. steve: you exercise it. >> yes.

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Transcripts For FOXNEWSW The Ingraham Angle 20180622

that position, as i know personally. it was his humor, i think, that a lot of us, as we smile tonight remembering him, or thinking about tonight. >> all kinds of folks, for the last year, in the end, hillary's not going to run. i said 100%, she would run, unless she is struck by lightning. there is no lightning. i think there is some people who get in, and they are not going to get out unless they are beaten. speaking as an amateur psychiatrist. so what if you look like a lucky luciano? it doesn't matter to us at all. >> that is trump for me. [laughter] >> i think he was calling me. [laughter] >> he was definitely calling you. >> mars polander. >> what is the difference between a democrat and a socialist? >> a democrat is a socialist -- with a filter. >> are we going to fight like they did? >> no, no. >> i said here a week ago that it will snow in hell before the obama doj indicts hillary. i'm willing to entertain a belief in climate change before that. >> let me write that down. i'm tweet that part out. just that part. >> laura: let's bring in our distinguished panel to discuss his life and career. on the phone with us, "special report" anchor, bret baier. in the studio, fox news senior political analyst brit hume, associate editor and columnist at real clear politics, a.b. stoddard, and fox news contributor charlie hurt, opinion editor for "the washington times." boy, all of us have so many memories of charles. before we go to the panel here, bret, you sat in the seat so many nights, as did brit hume, with charles to your right, and it was always a rollicking ride. in commercial breaks, where all the fun usually happens, and in the online special show, where charles was even funnier that he was on the panel. some reflections tonight? >> yeah, you know, it is a bittersweet moment because i like looking back at those moments, and the fun and humor. i just talked to daniel, who was at his dad's side, along with his wife, robyn, and they've been heartened by some of these memories and some of the stories, and looking at their dad and his prime, charles could light up a room. he could crack a joke. he was my first baseman there on the panel for almost ten years. before that, alongside brit hume. he could cut through the noise of the day, and then crack us up in the commercial breaks like nobody else could. so he just had a gift. his writing was unlike -- i don't think you are going to see another columnist that had his penetrating kind of wisdom and thoughts and we are going to try to use that as we go on, because he's commented on every issue on the day. and we'll bring him into the conversation as we go forward. >> laura: brit hume. >> we've known this was coming for some weeks now. it barely lessens the sadness of this moment. but what that means is, charles had a chance, in the last few weeks of his life, to hear how we all felt about him. the kind of tribute you just heard from bret, what the rest of us have been saying all day, it wasn't that he was just so brilliant, although he was, he was also so very kind and funny, and we loved him. all of us around here loved him. those of us who might be considered big shots loved him, everybody is love him, as well. i hope you knew that, i suspect he did, and i'm glad he did for that. >> laura: everyone from the makeup artists, the guys behind the camera who do such good work, and women behind the scenes, everyone knew him. he didn't want to be treated differently, though, than anyone else. you pointed that out. >> you are talking about the breaks, back in the day, "special report, charles was on, he would come in earlier because of the wheelchair, it took him earlier to get into position, which meant that there were two commercial breaks before the time, that i got to spend with charles. every now and then, he would say, a kind word to me about my work. i always felt like the earth and everything that was and it had just been conferred upon me when i got a compliment from charles krauthammer. that's how much i respected him. we all did. how much i loved him. >> laura: a.b., there was a moment on "the daily show" that i had not seen until just before this show tonight. i would like your reaction and thoughts. let's watch. >> 30 years. do you ever look back on some of these writings and think, what was i thinking? >> it's worse than that. [laughter] >> good. >> the worst part of writing the book was going all the way back and reading the million words i've written, couldn't believe i had written some of that stuff. >> what has the growth process been like? >> the growth process, well, i was once a liberal. [laughter] >> so the early writings showed hope. >> and then came change. [laughter] >> laura: i mean, a.b., you sat next to him on so many evenings. >> just brilliant. i wrote about him last week and i said that the only debate that i ever won in nine years was on the super committee, which was a debt cutting committee, which fell flat on its face, he wrote with great hope about how it all might work out. it was really going to be a great opportunity. when i busted him about it, when it folded, he said that was one of the times where i wasn't cynical enough. he was never wrong. his prediction didn't come true. usually because he hasn't been cynical enough. but for someone who was so cynical, he was also always full of hope and joy. and he really delighted in the little things, and that was an incredible combination, so stoic, so strong, because of his battle, and what he had to surmount in the wake of it. but then, just as someone who really delighted in the warmth and exchange of people. he loved people. we had a night right here at the table, i'll never forget, early on when i didn't know him well, and i was seated in between him and steve and bret are making some college over drinking jokes, and charles said, that commercial always says to me, schaefer. the only beer to have when you are having more than one. then he paused perfectly timed, more than one what? and then of course, it was right back to the panel, and we were back on camera, and i was practically under the table. his comedic timing was unbelievable. also, sometimes, just had the delight of a small kid. it was really something to behold. >> laura: psychiatrist, harvard medical school, pulitzer prize, more awards than we can list here. but charles, when he wrote about a political movement or event, he wrote about it in a way that he cut through where so many others were mired in minutia. president reagan, i loved this part, of course this was after reagan's death. he wrote, "optimism is the perfect way to trivialize everything that reagan was or did. optimism, every other person on the number 6 bus is an optimist. what distinguished reagan was what he did and said. reagan was optimistic about america by the cynicism and general retreat of the post-vietnam era because he believed unfashionably that america was both great and good." i love that. like an old uncle, reagan is so optimistic, but it was optimistic about the goodness of america. i love the fact that he pointed that out. he was always cutting against the conventional wisdom. >> that in and of itself is the optimistic view of america. of course, i have the pleasure of knowing charles far less than anybody sitting at this table, but i remember being a younger boy, growing up in a small town, and we got "the washington post," and i remember my father would rip out his columns and send them to me, give them to me, and that had a profound impact on my interest in newspapers, and obviously politics. he was obviously brilliant, funny, all of these things. that the title of his book, "things that matter," was the most perfect title of a book for him, because what he did better than anything else was to cut through all the noise and put everything into perspective, with the things that were important, and the things that mattered. >> that book was a collection. collections don't sell. >> laura: it was on the best seller list for a year and a half. >> that sold like hot cakes for years. i think people are still buying it. i got a copy of it. >> i was on the train coming from new york yesterday, there was a guy sitting there reading that book. >> i want to mention bret's special, people have to take that hour and sit down, it is absolutely breathtaking. >> laura: tomorrow night, 9:00 p.m. on fox news, i can't wait to watch it. i've seen bits and pieces, but i haven't seen the whole thing. bret, the night after night after night, election night, primary night, krauthammer was tough on the trump campaign but also very fair. he and i got into some legendary battles on the panel in the run-up to the election, with george will, his best friend, and it was a spirited debate, was always so much fun, though. he was such a great sparring partner on the issue of rising populism versus the old bush globalism, interventionism. he loved the philosophical back and forth that i think makes "special report" such an important show to have featured him. i know brit hume was the first one to really put him on the show, and that made the difference on that panel. he really -- i know you've missed him since, we've all missed him here at fox. >> yeah. he really was a powerhouse. he loved getting into the politics. he loved engaging with you and tucker and others on the issues of the day politicalwise. >> i did the bit with the casino and i tried to get panelists to put chips and bets on potential candidates. we had 17 in the beginning of this process, republicans. so he did not put any money on trump and eventually, he was begrudgingly putting five and ten, and he would always put a five chip on one women in song, and he just had a great time with it. he was somebody who i think touched people in a way that, even if you didn't agree with him, you kind of nodded your head and said, all right, i get that. >> laura: brit, trump, we think about what is happening with the big immigration debate, separating the families, i just want to know what krauthammer would be saying. >> me, too. i would love to know that. >> laura: what would he say about the nazi concentration camp issue? >> he was offended by trump. he was not his candidate. not in any way. >> laura: let's be honest, he thought, as does george will, trump is a horrible vulgarian. he did believe that. let's be honest. >> he thought he was ignorant and ben dacious. >> and the rest of it. >> exactly. >> laura: no love lost. >> once trump was nominated and became president, i think charles, like some of the rest of us, was deeply offended by the coverage of him. he was very fair to trump during the course of his presidency, for as long as charles was able to witness it, a year before we lost him to this terrible illness. >> laura: he had a column in 2011, a.b., called "alone in the universe," one of the columns, you see the title, you got to read it. i went back and read it today. talking about how many galaxies, constellations, life on other planets and so forth. he said at the end, "we grow justly weary of our politics but we must or member this. politics, in all its grubby, grasping, corrupt, contemptible manifestations, is sovereign in human affairs. everything ultimately rests upon it, fairly or not, politics is the driver of history." i think i would debate him on that because i don't know if politics is that important to most people's lives. but it was important to him and he thought the debates that we were having, of course that was 2011, during the obama administration, all the big questions about how we handle terror and other countries, foreign affairs, were very important. but he always had a very interesting clinical take, psychiatrist take on the afterlife, whether there was an afterlife. i just wonder, like, i just want to have a conversation about this. when i read this, i was like, this is why i loved being on with krauthammer. >> we all do. that was what was so wonderful about his columns, they would go off on all these other huge -- >> laura: being a father. >> the perspective was so broad. the thing about how much he loved politics and believed it was an important debate, and the discourse was so important, even though it's eroded and degraded so rapidly, he really believed that everyone should be persuadable, at least around the edges. he didn't like people who weren't willing to just be persuaded a bit here and there. and so he tried to bring that to his argument. most of the time it works on people. they would say, even if i didn't agree at the end, i really saw how well he made the point. so he engaged them. and that was an art of persuasion in itself. >> laura: charlie, you worked in a lot of columns in your day, on being a columnist, he wrote, "longevity for a columnist is a simple proposition, once you start, you don't stop. you do it until you die or can no longer put a sentence together. it has always been my intention to die at my desk, although my most cherished ambition is to outlive the estate tax." well, he almost did. we've doubled the estate exemption, so he did pretty well on that. again, humor in the face of difficulty, and i don't know. that was just another. >> i think he would agree with you in terms of politics is not what everything is about. he is right, politics is about power, who can govern, in that respect, it is the most important thing because it is how we determine what rights we have. at the end of the day, he wanted to go to a baseball game. he would have loved to have been at the nats game tonight. >> they did a tribute to him tonight. >> he would have been embarrassed by that. but he would have loved to have been there. i don't know anybody who squeezed more out of life than dr. krauthammer. >> laura: guys, thank you so much tonight. bret, brit, a.b., and charles, of course. thank you all so much. we will miss you, charles, greatly. a reminder again to watch bret baier's special tomorrow at 9:00 p.m. eastern time entitled "charles krauthammer: his words." as life goes on in washington, president trump schools democrats on the hard facts on immigration reform, what's going to happen there? you got to hear how clearly he explains what is at stake in this fight for our nation's future. that is next. what is >> laura: oh, what a shock, the media on a mission to blame trump for the ongoing crisis of the border but the facts just keep getting in the way. here's a prime example of how they are framing the story. >> he was once again blaming democrats for this crisis at the border when of course it is his because administration's policy that resulted in separation of the families from their children. >> laura: but inconvenient truths keep popping up. this headline. "yes, obama separated families at the border, too." this has been going on for decades. children and adults making this really dangerous journey from central america up through mexico and ending up on our doorstep. at the white house today, president trump explained during the cabinet meeting why the left has shown little concern for their safety until now. >> we have come up with a lot of solutions but we have democrats i don't want to approve anything because that's probably, they think, bad for the election that's coming up. unfortunately, there are a lot of people suffering, and that is unfortunate. loopholes in our immigration laws all supported by extremist open border democrats. that is what they are. they are extremist, open border democrats. if you look at nancy pelosi, you look at chuck schumer, you will see tapes where they wanted to have borders. they needed borders for security, just a short while ago. a number of years ago. i see chuck schumer, "we must have borders." hillary clinton, "we must have borders." if people penetrate our borders, we want to get them out of the country. now all of a sudden, big open border people. it's a whole big con job. democrats also refuse to fund the personnel, bed space, resources we need to house the minors. now they want us to take care of the minors, that is fine. they don't want to give us the money to take care of them, because the worse everything looks, they think the better they will do with respect to the blue wave. >> laura: democrats claim that they're only concerned for their offer of the children, housed in those shelters, though, as the trump administration is pointing out, how the facilities are a safe haven compared to the long and perilous journey made at the mercy of human traffickers, smugglers, and yes, coyotes. >> they've created and let it happen, a massive child smuggling industry. it's exactly what it's become. traffickers. you think about this, human traffickers are making a fortune. it's a disgrace. these loopholes force the release of alien families and minors into the country when they illegally cross the border. since 2014 alone, nearly 200,000 unaccompanied alien minors have been released into the united states as a result of democrat-backed loopholes. including catch and release, which is one of the worst. one of the reasons i am being tough as they do nothing for us at the border. they encourage people, frankly, to walk through mexico and go into the united states. because they are drug traffickers, they are human traffickers, they are coyotes. i mean, we are getting some real beauties. >> laura: years of government neglect and failure to enforce our immigration laws created this crisis. trump is trying to fix it. but you wouldn't know that from the coverage. so it's up to the president to point out what we have been saying for years. lousy laws, leftist judges, open borders mentality have created obstacles that make border enforcement difficult, if not impossible, especially when children and families, or adults with children they claim are related come across the border. >> we have to house these minors and we have to house them safely, and frankly, we have to house them and we should be taking good care of them, and then we should return them back home. that's what we have to do. democrat and court ordered loopholes prevent family detention and lead to family separation, no matter how you cut it. i signed a very good executive order yesterday, but that's only limited, no matter how you cut it. it leads to separation ultimately. i am directing hhs, dhs, and doj to work together to keep illegal immigrant families together during the immigration process, and to reunite these previously separated groups. but the only real solution is for congress to close the catch and release loopholes that have fueled the child smuggling industry. mexico, by the way, is doing nothing for us. nothing. they have the strongest immigration laws, they can do whatever they want, they can keep people out of mexico. they have a 2,000-mile journey up mexico. they walk through mexico like it's walking through central park. it's ridiculous. mexico does nothing for us. >> laura: it's the democrats' choice. they can work with the president to fix the system or keep playing politics. it might help if the media stopped there nonstop war on trump. that's wishful thinking. "the washington post" today reported that the trump administration will stop prosecuting parents who cross the border illegally with children. huh. one problem. the story wasn't accurate. "the post" neglected to reach out to the department of justice and now, the story has been corrected. if the media were as interested in getting all sides of the story as they are in just getting trump, maybe we can make some real progress and people can actually know things called facts. here to separate fact from fiction on the border issue is the president of the board or patrol unions tucson office, art del cueto, as well as chairman of the american conservative union, matt schlapp, and ambassador suzan johnson cook, a former advisor to president bill clinton and barack obama. it is great to have all of you on. we have a lot to get through here. there is so much misperception and misrepresentation about what has been happening at the border. art, the other night, you gave us a fact that i can't stop thinking about. you said it on the show. about what happens with these children when they are -- they are under 18, and they are sent up through this journey from guatemala or honduras or salvador, and they come up through mexico, and you said, as a border patrol agent, agents find certain items on the girls, especially the girls. i want you to repeat this story because i think a lot of people who didn't hear it need to hear it. >> what we often times, we find them with birth control pills, and they are told that they use these pills because they may get raped along the journey. i'm going to go a little bit off of any talking points and explain that you were dead on with everything you said. it is sickening that certain members of the media have chosen to attack our president. it is sickening that certain members of the media have chosen to attack border patrol agents, and describe us as nazis. that is disgusting that you would even think that. i don't know where that even comes from. we have minors that we have detained without their parents. we have detained just recently a minor out here in the tucson sector, their uncle threw him over the fence with nothing but a letter, a little handwritten note in his pocket that said, "help me find my mom," and the mom's name on that piece of paper. agents that i know that i have worked with, myself included, go to the field numerous times with our own food that we buy, toys, clothes, everything else, so we can assist to these people we arrest of the border. to compare us to nazis is a whole new low. that is the most disgusting thing. these people are idiots for that comparison or they need to go back to school and actually learn history. they probably fell asleep during history class is what i think. >> laura: susan, nancy pelosi, chuck schumer, even barack obama, were really, i think, pretty clear back in 2014 that these kids were going to have to go home. president obama said they were going to have to go home, literally, hillary clinton said they were going to have to go home, the unaccompanied minors, and the family units crossing the border. and this is what nancy pelosi said when she visited one of the family detention centers in 2014 where obama was keeping the family units. let's watch. >> what we just saw was so stunning. if you believe, as we do, that every child, every person has a spark of divinity in them, and is therefore worthy of respect, what we saw in those rooms was a dazzling, sparkling array of god's children. the balance is to move these kids, these young people, these families, as quickly as possible into another setting. we are here to think the border patrol into doing the best they can under the circumstances. >> laura: a very different attitude back in 2014. same detention centers. a judge -- one of them, two of -- a judge shut one of them, to of them down, the family detention centers, even though they were the best they could deal with, as someone who spent a lot of time in central america, a lot nicer than where a lot of these people sadly come from. why the change? >> now it's 2018. you look at a president who started his whole campaign and presidency talking about building a wall, citing a whole group of people as rapists, racists, coming from a country. there are lot of misperceptions. not everyone is in an unaccompanied minor. what we have seen recently are minors accompanied by their parents. right in new york yesterday, 229 children are without their parents, before the executive order was signed. you shake your head, no, matt -- >> laura: 2,400 have been apprehended since the zero-tolerance policy went into effect. of them, it's 2,000 who were separated from their parents, and in some cases, the people saying they were the parents were not the parents. children had a credible fear of the adults bringing them into the country. so there's a lot of stuff going on there. but the lion's share of the people that hhs is dealing with our, like art said, they are abandoned by people. 2,000 and 10,000, 2,000, you were right, were separated for a variety of reasons. but 10,000 are unaccompanied. >> 229 still haven't been united from the parents. but you know, i think the move is idiotic, and it's ignorant because when i was talking about republicans -- >> laura: is it nazi germany? >> we are talking about humanity. i went all over the world -- >> laura: she thought it was not nazi germany back in 2014. >> you'll have to ask nancy pelosi that. >> laura: they all said that. >> the last time i checked the nazis, did not bring basketball 500 of kids to be back with their parents. by the way, all president trump was doing was following the law, very important for people to understand. he was following the law that president obama had to follow, that the courts created, when i hear michael steele, calling these concentration camps for kids, i think it is time for the rnc to repudiate that kind of talk. as a law enforcement, the president following the law. we can have political disagreements but this is well over the line. >> the images, you can't deny the images of children being torn -- >> laura: i want art -- art deals with the images every day. but the images of children being traffic and cartel members who are pumping our country with fentanyl and heroin, they are being enriched because of this human trafficking, and the coyote smuggling, all have to pay off to the cartels. do they not, art? >> you are talking about kids that are being smuggled in the trunks of vehicles. such great parents, that they are giving their child to a criminal organization so they can put them in a trunk of a vehicle and cross through the desert or cross through very dangerous areas. they are such good parents that they are being thrown over fences without any adult supervision whatsoever, so they can be exposed to the elements. the reality is, the pictures you are seeing from a lot of these media outlets are from the last administration, not from president trump's administration. you can spin it anyway you want but the reality is, i'm out there, all the time. i work that border, and i'm telling you right now, things are being done correctly, and there's a lot of people out there in the media that are twisting things around and villainizing something that isn't there. their hatred toward one president is so amazing that you are blinded to the truth of what is happening right now. >> laura: guys, stay right here. we have breaking news at the border. plus, the media finds an outrageous new way to criticize the first lady. you have to see it to believe it. first lady. >> laura: okay, some quick breaking news. matt schlapp stolen from us but the ap just reported that about 500 children have been reunited with their families after being separated from their family since may. we'll have more throughout the hour as it comes to us. that breaking news first. and mission accomplished for the mainstream media, which has managed to dent the first lady's popularity. they ran weeks of stories with cool speculation why melania trump had disappeared from public view, living in another house, in new york, back in eastern europe. never mind the fact that she just had a fairly significant surgery. a new cnn poll shows her favorability rating is down to 51% from 57% last month. i don't know if i believe that. now that she's back in the public, the media, well, they found a new reason to pounce. today the first lady visited a texas shelter housing illegal immigrant children. good for her. but all the media could do was talk about her jacket. they went into a frenzy to search for the hidden meaning of the words emblazoned on the back of her jacket, which read, "i really don't care, do you." the first lady spokeswoman said, "it's a jacket, there was no hidden message. after today's important visit to texas, i hope the media isn't going to choose to focus on her wardrobe." of course, that was wishful thinking. let's discuss why the first lady just keeps getting the mean girl treatment from the media. the chief of staff for the first lady laura bush, anita mcbride, and rachel campos duffy is a fox news contributor. all right, rachel, the president did tweet out that it was a comment about fake news. in other words, melania doesn't care about the fake news, do you? more importantly, it was a jacket from zara and it was $39. >> you remember when michelle obama went to a homeless feeding event or center and wore $500 sneakers. look, it is an odd choice to wear that. to be -- it's a head-scratcher. >> laura: who is their staffer? i don't want them to get mad at me. i'm not a fashion plate myself. sorry, i love the fox news -- but i'm more of a jeans and t-shirt type of person. but melania is so spectacular, she's so beautiful. that was an odd -- if it's a message, then say, "i'm goofing on you, media." >> we may find out that that is what it is. it's a head-scratcher. i'm a political stylist, i would not have worn that jacket. >> laura: no logos. >> that said, all the amazing outfits that she's worn, they never write about at all, if you don't watch conservative press, you don't hear all of that, she makes one misstep, i am curious to see why she wore to. >> laura: a staffer should say, no. who knows, she probably just threw it on, just grabbing whatever is in the closet. >> i don't think melania just grabs anything. [laughter] >> laura: okay, so it was a message. is it genius, anita? >> i think that actually was the most valuable comment apropos, as a political staff, you understand the objects around things like that, and yes, i don't want to say anything negative about the staff, either, i know how tough their job is every single day, all the little nuances that you are trying to take care of. >> laura: you don't want to probably wear the stiletto manolo blahniks -- >> i did love that, though. she looked fabulous. but then she took off her heels and wore them to get onto air force one. she put on her sneakers. but again, it is just a constant, constant attack on her, it never ends. let's face it, they think she is complicit in her husband -- >> laura: same thing with ivanka. they were trashing ivanka. they were going after her. nonstop trashing her. the "time" magazine cover of president trump -- by the way, we found out, god bless the child, was not one of the children separated from their parents. they are using children as props on magazine covers as well. "the root" has a headline, "dear melania trump, please stop trying to be the moral compass for the white house. you are trash, too." >> outrageous. >> again, that is a message not just to melania, that is a message to all conservative women. they say that we're complicit, traitors because we choose to think for ourselves, and that is -- and they want -- it's a warning to anyone who dares to see the amazing, fabulous economic news and don't forget, this week, what happened in duluth was sort of overshadowed by this event. this is the heart of union democrat working-class -- these have been for generations democrats, and he goes in there, saying, those democrats are losing working-class americans, and this is all an attempt to cover up all of that. >> laura: i have to say on the separating the children from the families, obviously, 500 reunited tonight, but the polling on this, as i suspected, people are not blaming president trump on this. they are blaming bad policies, and sadly, irresponsible parents, sending children, bringing children on these harrowing journeys. so the public is not where the elites are on the border issue. everyone has compassion but they are not blaming president trump. >> i hope that they read what mrs. trump's statement was today after she returned to the white house. i thought it was a really beautiful statement, her visit down there really moved her, and what she said, these children are in this position, not through their own fault, but the fault of adults. and that is why i wish the congressional picnic had happened tonight because she could have been our modern day dolley madison, going around all these members of congress. >> this is really up to you to fix this. it is one of the few bipartisan events. i understand why they did that. >> laura: it would get trashed if they had it. >> no way they could have survived the media onslaught. your guest from the border patrol, almost 50% of border patrol are hispanic. what he said about those children, as this information starts to get out, thank you for getting that information out, the detention centers are far safer than the journey that the little children just came on. i will say this, people aren't stupid. i spoke to an african-american who said, gosh, the conditions at the detention center are better than some of the projects that i grew up in. people are looking at the sentencing, let's not blame the border patrol. they are doing the best they can, the children were brought here under horrible, irresponsible circumstances. >> laura: and mrs. trump, i saw the first lady trump, this is how someone deals with children. my kids are always totally out of control. and she -- just the way she deals with them, gets down low with them -- you can tell someone by the way they treat children. for all of you trashing melania trump, nice try. not working. you are digging yourself into a deeper hole. >> you know what, laura, she is floating above all of it. >> laura: she is remarkable that way. >> she's winning over people's hearts very quietly in her own style and she refuses to do it their way. she's doing it her own way. >> laura: isn't that what we want in women? she's not going to be like michelle obama. she's not going to be -- but if anyone said anything about the obama daughters like they said about barron trump and that horrible comment about barron trump, they would be doing nonstop coverage of it. >> absolutely. >> laura: great panel, thank you so much to both of you. up next, exclusive new details, what congress may do to doj and the fbi brass if they don't turn over those key documents pronto. stay there. the fbi brass if thy don't turn over those key ♪ >> lau >> laura: fox news has learned new details about an ultimatum congressional investigators delivered to the fbi director and the deputy attorney general. fox's catherine herridge reporting and a trio of house chairmen gave the doj and fbi three days to turn over a key last friday. -- three days to turn over key documents last friday. two sources tell fox at committee chairs trey gowdy, bob goodlatte, and devin nunes demanded records about intelligence activities and the fbi's alleged use of informants before it opened that russia collusion probe in july 2016. well, now that that deadline has passed, house speaker paul ryan says that he has not ruled out citing deputy attorney general rod rosenstein for contempt of congress. let's discuss these developments with former whitewater deputy independent counsel sol wisenberg. former deputy assistant attorney general robert driscoll. great to see both of you. robert, how serious is this, contempt of congress? the deputy attorney general? i mean, eric holder was held in contempt of congress over the fast and furious stuff, and nothing really happened here. how serious is it? >> i think it's pretty serious, your own party threatening to hold you in contempt. i really do think the doj wants to avoid that at all costs, but i think that just the dispute here that doesn't look good for anyone right now. i think there is a lack of trust on both sides. after the ig report, i suspect when that comes out, people in the agency feel a little bit more free to talk about it because it's out there, some of their process they are working under are now gone, and i suspect that some people will probably be told what they should expect. when people on the hill don't see it, they are squawking about it. we'll see how it gets resolved. >> laura: sol, speaking of which, the democrats are calling this all kind of deficient, and we have paul ryan apparently last friday, as catherine told us, not ruling out contempt of congress. people thought that ryan would back away from that but he hasn't. we are looking at a potential serious showdown tomorrow. >> if you saw congressman gowdy over the weekend, he indicated, and i don't think i had ever seen him so mad, and he gets mad a lot, he indicated that contempt really wasn't enough. he said, we'll use the full panoply of the constitutional powers, and look what happened with holder. who knows what they'll do. it's not clear to me whether or not there has been partial compliance so far. i guess we'll see. as to your other point about the procedural default of the subpoena that the democrats are claiming is there, do you really expect rod rosenstein to say, i would love to give this over but the democrats say you've broken the rules. i don't see that happening. he's either going to give the stuff over or he's not. if he doesn't give it over, he is not going to rely on an internal rules violation that the democrats have brought up. >> laura: bob, do you think anyone at the doj, you know, tipped off the democrats here on this? a little curious. >> no, i think that's just the democrats looking to weaken the subpoena. i totally agree. there is no way a republican doj is going to rely on a technical deficiency. >> laura: jeff sessions was on a radio show today, and talked about peter strzok. let's watch. >> is strzok still on the payroll of the fbi? >> mr. strzok, as i understand, has lost his security clearance. >> laura: yay! was get out the sam shane. lost his security clearance, was marched out of the building. not clear whether he just lost his security clearance, like, today, or whether that happened when he left the building. how much jeopardy is he in? could he be in any jeopardy other than losing his job at this point, sol? we are thinking that documents might have been altered, that's another issue. we are looking at the 302 documents, not directly related to strzok himself. what else could happen here? >> i haven't heard that they are related to strzok. we have this very piecemeal news on that, that supposedly, according to congressman meadows, there was improper, potentially improper alteration of a 302, which, as you know, is what the fbi calls the reports of interviews with people who they question. but we have no idea what is meant by that. i read one account that andrew mccabe demanded that something be changed, but that is all total speculation at this point. you know, there are some ways in which 302s can be changed that are perfectly proper, and other ways that aren't. as far as strzok is concerned, he has certain due process rights as an employee. i don't think he is in any criminal trouble but i think he is a short timer for sure. >> laura: guys, thank you so much. fantastic panel. the latest unhinged lunacy from the left next. ♪ >> laura: rece >> laura: we say this a lot but the left hit a new low. a small mom-and-pop cafe in duluth, minnesota, suffered a huge backlash all because it hosted a segment of "fox and friends" this morning. let's find out exactly what happened from matt berthiaume, the restaurant's general manager, and son of the owner. matt, believe it or not, i've been to duluth, and i have even been to your cafe. [laughs] i love minnesota. yeah, no joke. i have good friends who live not too far from you on one of the major lakes. i'm pretty sure i was in your cafe a couple of years ago. this was outrageous. you just decided to open up your doors to "fox & friends," and then you were hated upon. tell us what happened. >> yeah, when my mom decided that she would let "fox & friends" come in and do the interviews here this morning, thought it was a great idea for this restaurant to expand to reach people on a new level. i don't think she really understood the ramifications of the possibilities of what could happen. within probably 10 to 15 minutes into our facebook post, we had about 100 comments or so, and a lot were pretty negative, certain kind of grudge match. >> laura: [laughs] nasty. no, it was beyond nasty. >> yeah, it was beyond nasty. they were pinning us in a corner and making decisions for us without even talking to us. >> laura: matt, i got to read some of these. first of all, everyone has been to minnesota, everyone thinks of minnesota nice, okay? you guys are all supposed to be nice. but the leftists, they want to try to rip you to shreds because you had doocy on set. it was ridiculous. gail said "sadly, i can't support the decision and will never return. i know nobody cares and you can call me snowflake and libtard and whatever you want, i just feel they made the choice, this is their choice, i support it, i'm sure all you haters can fill the place." in other words, if you patronize the establishment -- by the way, love the taco omelette at uncle louie's cafe -- if you patronize the establishment, you are a hater, is that what they are saying? >> pretty much. there was one thing about being a place for white supremacists. >> laura: what? >> to come and eat, now we have declared that for us. yeah, so it was pretty difficult to hear that, broke my mom's heart because we love the people of the city, for someone that has come here before, my mom has probably known the order and order and seen it a million times, to have them say those things about us broke her heart. >> laura: your mother's not political. she's a small business owner. we always hear liberals, oh, they love mom and pop, shop local. no, it is boycott local or be mean to local. they don't really mean shop local. shop local liberal store owners. let me tell you, uncle louie's cafe in duluth, minnesota, everyone should go, patronize it, great food, great people. thank you so much, matt. we'll be right back. so much, .. so much, >> weird to sit at the desk, so many times sat here with charles and the whole gang, we continue to mourn his loss, pray for his family and leave you with one thought. whenever you are faced with an explanation of what is going on in washington the choice between incompetence and conspiracy, always choose incompetence. that is it for tonight. we will miss you. shannon bream for the fox news at night team picks things appear. shannon: house leaders say there will not be a vote on the compromise immigration bill. reports from capitol hill, lawmakers were wildly confused about what is in the bill and what is not. you will hear from members of both sides of the aisle. a looming deadline tomorrow for the justice department, house republicans demanding answers regarding the fbi's alleged spy in the 2016 trump campaign, new details tonight about a rare meeting between the key players. later remembering our friend charles kraut

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