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tv   The Late News  CBS  June 8, 2024 11:00pm-11:36pm PDT

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from cbs news bay area this is the evening edition. >> now at 11:00, demonstrators clashed at a rally over the recall of alameda county pamela price. da lin will have a literally blowly blow account. then a saturday at the lake turns violent. multiple people stabbed and at least one person shot at lake berryessa. and a symbol of solidarity overlooking san francisco every
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year for pride, but this year the pink triangle is taking on added significance. >> i think this transcends both sexuality and gender identity, this approach, i think the human value here is critical. good evening, i'm brian hackney mr. and i'm andrea nakano. a pamela price recall this morning turned violent and confrontational. a man claiming to be a price supporter got physical with the father of a murder victim who was there supporting the recall. da lin caught the whole thing on video. >> reporter: it was supposed to be a campaign kick-off for pamela price opponents. they're trying to convince voters to recall her. they were standing on that side inin front of the courthouse, the counterproteste r, price supporter, were standing on this side of the street, but things turned ugly very fast. a price opponent slapping a price supporter. people stepped in between the
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two to de-escalate the confrontation. moments before the confrontation the price supporter could be heard taunting parent who is lost their children by screaming raise your children. from raise your children. raise your children. >> reporter: the man who slapped him says he lost two family member, his son and a brother, to gun violence in recent years. >> i'm really upset right now. i just had a pamela price supporter tell me to raise my child. i wish i could. i wish he was here so i can raise him. >> reporter: the man who was slapped later got into a shouting match with another family that also lost loved ones. >> come on, come on. >> reporter: the confrontation reflected on the political division within alameda county, those for and against district attorney price. price opponents recently succeeded in putting the recall on the november ballot. many of these people lost loved ones to violence, like sofia, who declined to provide her last name. >> we miss and we love her. the pain will never go away, we
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just learn to live with it. >> reporter: a gunman shot and killed her 5-year-old daughter on the freeway while they were driving to a birthday party. sofia says price refuses to add special circumstance enhancements to the charges for the suspects. >> these criminals are going to get out and then hurt another child. >> reporter: homicide victim's families say price is making deal that would allow violent criminals to serve less prison time. >> ten years for somebody killing somebody's kid, that's ridiculous. >> the grief is from the heart, and we need to make decisions from -- more from the head. we need to think clearly about what's right, and we can't -- we can't allow victims to determine what the sentences are. we need to have the whole society come together, the whole community come together, and decide what they want. and we wanted more lenient sentences, which is why we elected pamela price. >> reporter: price won in 2022 with 53% of the vote. she ran
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on reforming the justice system and prosecuting corrupt cops. her supporters say she's doing what she promised to do. >> i know that pamela price is fair, and you have to be fair not only to the victim and their family but also to the person who's in the crime. i mean, you can't just, you know -- >> reporter: what do you mean by that? >> well, enhancements are to -- i mean, i'm not an attorney. i don't even know. but i know from being black in america that black people are put in jail much more than other people. >> reporter: while the two sides don't agree on politics, they agree they should respect one another. the handshake between some price opponents and supporters at the end. as for sofia, she says she wants a new d.a. who will hold criminals accountable. >> i encourage everybody to go out and vote. make sure you're
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registered. and recall price, because it's affecting a lot of cases out there. >> reporter: this is just the beginning. there'll be a lot more rallies from both sides leading up to the november 5th election. >> the man who was slapped ended up calling oakland police who did take a police report but have not said if they are pursuing any charges. one person dead, several others hurt after a shooting and stabbing at lake berryessa tonight. two of the people stabbed were airlifted to local hospitals. the shooting victim died. no arrests have been made and police are looking for at least one suspect. there's no word on what caused the fight or on the condition of the stabbing victims. golden gate fields is set to host its final horse race tomorrow after more than 80 years in the east bay. the company behind the track announced last year it would close. since then, 18 horses have died there, and animal rights activists have protested over the way they say race horses are treated. one of the
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most vocal activists is samantha fay. her great great grandfather helped open the park when he was mayor of albany, but she spent the last five years working to have the gates closed for good. >> when i was a kid, no, i actually didn't know about all of the abuse that goes into keeping horses and raising horses here at golden gate field, and it was a serious moment of self-reflection when i actually realized they loved horses and i didn't love horse racing. >> the closure leaves 140 unused acres spanning albany and berkeley. berkeley's mayor says he wants a portion of it dedicated for open space and the rest would be a great site for housing, commercial space, or a hospital. >> for its part, the company that owns golden gate field says they're committed to the sport. they said we're proud to have been part of the legacy of golden gate fields, and we look forward to working with stakeholders to create a sustainable future for racing in california. but it won't be up here. they're shifting their focus to higher profile
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tracks in southern california like at santa anita, stranding people who tended horses at golden gate fields. >> the logistics of it all is just a little scary. it's just such a sudden -- six months is a pretty quick notice your life is going to change completely. >> i feel terrible for all the people, the workers on the back side, where are they going to go? >> the first race tomorrow is scheduled for noon. the giant pink triangle is back out at twin peaks as a symbol of hope and resilience. even after three decades overlooking the city, of organizers and volunteers tell our amanda hari it's taking on new meaning this year. >> we brand ourselves with the pink triangle out of camaraderie for those who were forced to wear the pink triangle during the holocaust. >> reporter: he puts in months of planning and hours of labor
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every year to make sure the pink triangle stands as a symbol people can never forget. >> just in the last 15 minutes i had four people ask me what it is. >> reporter: once intended as a badge of shame used to identify homosexuals in concentration camps during the holocaust, it has been reclaimed as a positive symbol by the lgbtq community. >> the rainbow flag is the anti dote to the pink triangle. >> reporter: carney says with more anti-lgbtq, trans, and drag bills popping up in legislatures every day, the effort he started 29 years ago continues to be necessary. but he never thought it would get this big. >> this started out as a renegade project. we snuck out and put it up in the dark at night so we wouldn't get arrested. >> it is stronger than hate. >> reporter: now it's fully embraced not only by the lgbtq community but the city as well, which hosts a commemoration
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ceremony on twin peaks each year. it's also grown in size and duration. at first, this triangle was only up for a weekend, now it's up for the majority of pride month. organizers say it took about 800 volunteers to lay down all of the tarps before they were able to nail them down. >> that's a huge crowd. it almost filled it all up. so the tarps were laid out rather quickly, within maybe 15 to 20 minutes. however, it took another 45 minutes to get them all in alignment. >> reporter: it then took hours for hundreds of volunteers from all walks of life to get it nailed down so it will stay in place through the end of the month. >> i think this transcends both sexuality and gender identity, in other words, the cause is humanistic in its approach. i think the human value here is critical.
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>> part of celebrating any pride is knowing where we've been, and this pink triangle is where we've been. >> reporter: even after nearly 30 years, carney says he's still blown away by the positive reception to the triangle. down on the peninsula today, san mateo celebrated its 12th annual pride parade. lot of folks came out to downto enjoy the fun, like barry renfroe, who came to a big decision. >> i decided that i'm going to tell every single person that i'm proud of you. i feel like that's a powerful statement coming from -- oh, my gosh -- i feel like that's a powerful statement coming from a father or grandfather figure to tell people i'm proud of you, and so far it's been very well received. >> barry said that he and his wife thought about doing this for years but this is the first time they actually did it. you can see all of our pride stories throughout the month on our website, kpix.com. well, after the break we'll
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get a look at today's juneteenth parade through downtown san francisco kicking off a month of celebrations. and later we'll get to see some local young people showing off their culinary skills. and we had a beautiful cooldown this weekend. temperatures were actually pretty much right about average where they should be for this time of year. that changes this week. that big pool of warm air is going to start migrating back our way, and i've got to show you when temperatures inland are going to approach 100 again. it's coming this week. details on that are next.
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june 19th is the day in 1865 when the last bastian of slavery, texas, freed a quarter million people, and today san francisco city leaders and cultural organizations floating down market street for a juneteenth parade. niko was happy to be out on market street riding the trolley, but his favorite thing about the parade was just seeing the community -- seeing the black community out in numbers. >> san francisco's been pushing out black folks for the last 30, 40, 50 year, you know what i mean? and you don't see a lot of us anymore. so it's good to see us all out and celebrating. you know what i mean? kind of reclaiming our city. >> juneteenth has been celebrated far long time, but
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it hasn't been federally recognized until the black lives matter movement of 2020. we're going to shift our focus to weather, and as you said, we're going to have some warm days coming up. >> by about tuesday. tuesday and wednesday. but we still have the second half of the weekend, and it's going to be just as nice as the first half was. >> great. >> we were freezing our kiester, frankly. in land it was nice. >> it was, it was. tomorrow there'll be more sunshine in the city. in fact, look at the time lapse from sunset, caught the last little bit of the marine layer that was screaming onshore, and there won't be a lot of that. you look at that and go, i know how this goes. it starts about then at sunset, and then overnight with cover of darkness it fills in the bay. only it won't do that in a super big way tomorrow. let's track that. if we use
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the high resolution futurecast which has gotten so good at depicting the extent of the marine layer over the next 48 hours, what we see is a shield of high clouds. it'll obscure what little marine layer there will be. if we get our clear view down, we can now see there isn't any marine layer by then. there will be some in the morning. it might work over the east bay shore into san pablo bay, but it's not going to stick around as long as it did today. and it's going to be slightly warmer as a result. we might see a little bit of the marine layer build in along the coast there as we get into sunday night. on monday morning it will fill back in. but that's monday. that's what it looks like out there now. you can kind of see that. there's that -- it's low stratus clouds hanging out over the city. just broading out there. this is exactly what you did today. now we've covered both
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days. that's your weekend. let's look ahead. how does this change on tuesday, and it's always dramatic to take the same map and just transition it ahead. and you can watch the color codes change and the numbers really went up. look at antioch, right near 100 by the time we get to tuesday. concord, you're going to be well into the 90s. 96 in concord. 91 for san jose. 92 in santa rosa, and the city will go to 72. so that's always a notably nice, relatively nice warm day if you like that kind of thing. you won't have much marine layer then either. you can see the warmth migrating our way. we looked at this a moment ago. this is that wonderful visual which kind of helps us track how the intensity of the warmth typically builds in from the desert southwest this time of year when the center of high pressure sets up. and that's what's coming. it won't last all week. look what happens. san francisco and oakland never really show these warm-ups in a dramatic way. sure, oakland goes to 78 and then down to 67. it's inland microclimates where you see the big, dramatic
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swings, like this one. from 92 in the north bay on tuesday down to 78 on thursday. san jose, your numbers go along the bottom there. you kind of do the same thing. and when we finish the microclimate, that top line is the inland east bay. 96 tuesday, 78 thursday. and then you'll be back up to near 90 by is saturday. andrea, over to you. >> thank, darren. coming up in sports, a former giant has a career day as he faced the a's at the coliseum. and there's not much this current giant can't do. his defense in the outfield has lifted his team, but we'll show you what he did today as the giants
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the giants enter the weekend coming off back-to-back wins and had a chance to clinch the series today in texas
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against the rangers. regardless of the stakes, the giants always want to play their best when they face their former manager. and there he is, boch in blue. still heartbroken. let's move on to the first inning of this game against the rangers. heliot ramos sends a line drive to the center field wall. austin slater comes in from first score. and that's an rbi double for ramos. the giants take an early 1-0 lead. in the third inning, game tied at 1-1. ramos on the plate again, and he takes a curveball. this one deep to left. that's his sixth home run of the year. ramos drove in all three runs for the giants as they take a 3-1 lead. fast forward all the way to the bottom of the ninth. camilo doval gets into a minor jam. winning run at the plate for the rangers, but he gets the fly out to end the game. the giants have already won the series and will be looking for the sweep tomorrow. it's pride day at the coliseum as the a's hosted the
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blue jays. oakland trailed just 1-0 after four innings but things began to unravel in the fifth with two outs, a liner down the right field line. seth brown having some trouble fielding it, but that gave the runner from second enough time to score. the blue jays ended up scoring five runs in the fifth, and that was enough run support for former giant kevin gausman. he strikes out ten batters over nine innings and gets the complete game shutout. that's first nine-inning complete game shutout of his career. the blue jays win #-0, and the a's still have a chance to claim the series on sunday. to golf, it's the third round of the pga memorial tournament over in dublin, ohio. and it's a cool moment on the par five seventh hole. an uphill pitch shot and holes out for an eagle. but then his playing partner, shane lowery, on the very next shot from the green side bunker makes the shot for birdie. good day for both of those players, but they're still behind world
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number one scottie scheffler. he makes this birdie on number 12 look easy, and scheffler is ten under for the tournament and has a four-stroke lead entering the final round. well, coming up, we'll look ahead to tomorrow's big race in sonoma as nascar pays its annual visit to the bay area. and it wasn't just a big day for the nwsl bay fc, it was fr ♪ hey, come on, come on ♪ ♪ do what you want ♪
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get into an audi and go your own way. find your way to exceptional offers during the summer of audi sales event at you local audi dealer. well, a big night in the world of women's soccer in the u.s. and the bay area's team was front seat and center. bay fc got the special opportunity to face the chicago red stars at historic wrigley field in the windy city. a league record crowd of over 35,000 in attendance for this match, but bay fc wasn't caught up in the lights. they came to play. 25th minute, 1-nil bay area fc early. 9th minute, the defender didn't clear this in time, and bay fc wins 2-nil to pick up their fourth victory of the season. in hockey game one of the stanley cup final, florida panther hosting the edmonton
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oilers. second period, the panthers already up 1-0. the oilers had more shots on goal but they didn't make it count like the panthers. evan rodriguez there fiengdz the back of the net to put the panthers up 2-0. florida goes on to take game one 3-0. it's the eve of nascar's annual stop in the bay area up in sonoma. it begins tomorrow at 12:30 and a familiar face will be leading the pack. three-time world series champion sergio romo will be behind the wheel of the pace car for this sunday's race in sonoma. martin truix jr. is the defending champ. four wins in wine country. our vern glenn chatted with him this week, and apparently truix hasn't fully reached vip status quite yet. >> reporter: in the old day, drivers used to be helicoptered in from the napa valley airport. alluded the traffic.
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how do you get in now? >> we drive. i don't know. i have never been around in the helicopter days, so maybe those old-timers were making a lot more money than we are, i'm not sure. but i've left there before in a helicopter, but i've never went there in one. so yeah, we'll see. >> so tomorrow's going to be one of those days that if you're not going to the race, you might want to avoid that area near the racetrack. >> i will to that, thanks, andrea.. coming up next, some local teens ge
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welcome back. the ymca in san francisco's chinatown hosted a feast on friday night where teens from the culinary academy showed off their skills to friends and family and loureen ayyoub has the story. >> reporter: once a safe haven for chinese immigrants facing discrimination, the chinatown ymca here in san francisco is
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now a vibrant hub providing cultural classes like cooking, which is welcoming youth of all backgrounds. each day she enters a grand entrance at the ymca in san francisco's chinatown where he teaches culinary classes to teens. he gives back by serving kids in the community. >> kids can come here and not worry so much about money or kind of what high school you go to. they all come from anywhere in the city to this one spot, the ymca, and they have a great time. >> reporter: and that's the kind of safe haven reverend chan hoped for back in 1911 when the chinatown ymca was established. from services for new immigrants to access to quality recreational experiences, this cultural hub has been serving members of all backgrounds for over a century. he says teaching teens about
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specialty asian dishes as an homage to the neighborhood they're planted in means so much to him because of some of the cultural misunderstandings he dealt with as a teen of thai ancestry. he recalls some of those dishes his mom packed for him at school. >> they become like little brown pieces of beef jerky, dried essentially. i remember like i dropped it one time on the floor and another kid was saying it looks like turd or poop. i was super sad or disappointed. but thinking about it now, i'm more sad i dropped the food rather than him saying anything. my mom makes amazing food, so i never feel ashamed about that anymore. >> reporter: now nothing could crack his confidence. and it's the kind of empowerment he loves to provide to his students at the y. from understanding kitchen etiquette to learning new recipes, students like margaret say all the new knowledge is inspiring. >> the thing i enjoy the most about this program is just, like, the trial and error, but then in the end seeing how we,
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like, how we manage to, like, just top all those, like, failures, and like, come out with, like, something successful is really, like, happy. >> reporter: and learning to properly sear duck is not the only perk of the culinary program. the experience allows teens to expand their community and learn more about their own interests. >> i want them to know that, like, the y and me and all other adults will do our best to push them to pursue whatever they love. whether it be cooking or things they can take from cooking, like being organized and clean and ready. i want them to take those things and push it into what they love doing, find what they want to do. >> reporter: a discovery of their passions with mentorship right by their side. >> and the learn more about some of their programs at the chinatown ymca, you can visit this link on your screen, ymcsf.org and search for
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chinatown teen programs. >> well, it's going to be cooler before that big hot warm-up happens. >> it will be. and there is a hot warm-up coming by the time we get to tuesday we'll be back into the upper 90s by then. but tomorrow will be a lovely day. it's going to be just like today. temperatures right on the mark for average for this time of year. >> i do 't i have active psoriatic arthritis. but with skyrizi to treat my skin and joints, count me in. along with clearer skin, skyrizi helps me move with less joint pain, stiffness, swelling, and fatigue. and is just 4 doses a year, after 2 starter doses. serious allergic reactions and an increased risk of infections or a lower ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms, had a vaccine, or plan to.
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