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tv   The Ten O Clock News on KTVU FOX 2  FOX  April 11, 2024 10:00pm-11:00pm PDT

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is there a chance for love... i feel like we've grown a lot. ...as the farmers go on their final solo dates? this is, like, my dream date. could you see yourself with a man like me? ...and on the very last night on the farms... i don't want this to end. i love living here. ...the farmers must choose their final two ladies. - it weighs on my heart. - will you join me by the fire, please?
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port officials unanimously approve a controversial name change, sparking mixed reaction from the community. >> this area is really, really strong and i think this is our opportunity to get some new business. >> you should be pushing oakland for oakland. that makes no sense. >> bay area residents divided on the new name san francisco bay oakland international airport. good evening everyone. i'm mike mibach and i'm julie julie haener. >> the oakland port commission unanimously approved the change today. supporters and opponents showed up to vote to voice their opinions. ktvu is amber lee joins us now live from the airport. so, amber, what comes next? >> well, julie, the port
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commission says the name change will cause $150,000. now supporters say it will bring more people to use this airport and boost the economy. but opponents say it will cause confusion enthusiastically. >> i seven eyes. the motion carries. >> the oakland port commission voted unanimously to rename oakland international airport. the new name will be san francisco bay oakland international airport. the action came after dozens of supporters and opponents weighed in, replacing oakland with the san francisco bay further disrespects oakland. opponents say the name change is an attempt to distance the airport from oakland's image problem, stemming from crime and public safety issues. it's pro. >> oakland is definitely not any way denigrating the city that i'm so proud of that i've been living in for 40 years, the port's executive director says the name change will bring more people and businesses to oakland. >> it is corporate gentrification. move and it's a
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weak move because it doesn't address the root issue of public safety. >> city council member noel gallo says he's already talking to a group of canadian business people about flying into oakland. >> i strongly support trying to elevate the employment, the business attraction, the port commission first announced the proposal for the name change on march 29th. >> swift opposition has come from san francisco city leaders, business groups and stakeholders, including sfo. >> we believe that this new name will ultimately be misleading to customers, creating greater confusion, disservice and ill will. >> the port commission delayed a final vote on the name change to may 9th, saying it will consider more public input. >> i think that really the ball is in the court of the port of oakland. are they going to make good use of that time, or are they going to continue to ignore some of this other feedback that's coming to them? >> san francisco has threatened
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possible legal action. today, i reached out to san francisco city attorney david chu regarding the vote, he said in a statement, we are disappointed that oakland did not take the opportunity to work collaboratively with us to develop alternative names and to avoid litigation. we will have further updates in the coming days. the port's executive director tells me. regardless of possible legal action, the commission will move ahead with its plans to change the name julie amber when it comes to airport security codes like okay, would that stay the same? that will stay the same, and so will the logo. >> all right. we will continue to follow this developing story. amber lee live at oakland airport. amber thank you. a security company is hiring guards to work at the oakland coliseum. the announcement by allied universal comes as the oakland a's are preparing their temporary move to sacramento at the end of this season. it's not clear what events the new hires
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would be working, but dozens of a's game day employees have been told they will likely lose their jobs. they include security guards as well as concession stand workers, ushers and janitors. the a's have told those workers the team's new home at the minor league ballpark in sacramento will require fewer workers. >> new at ten sonoma county rescue teams have just suspended a search tonight for a swimmer who went missingn the russian river, sonoma county fire says the swimr walast seen around 440 this afternoon in the waters off steelhead beach, just north of forestville. there was a massive response into the evening hours from multiple agencies, including the sonoma county fire district and the sonoma county sheriff's office, officials say the swimmer was in the water with a group of friends when he or she went missing. water rescue teams launched boats and divers into the water. jet skis were also deployed as a reminder, sonoma county firefighters are urging people to be very cautious along the russian river during this time of year when it is cold and running, we caution people this
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time of year to really watch the water. >> the water is moving very fast. it's still at a high level if you're not an experienced swimmer. we urge you not to swim in the russian river at this time, battalion chief johnson says hypothermia is a very big concern. >> this search will resume in the morning. no word yet on the age of the missing swimmer. >> the contra costa district attorney's office has charged a man accused of sexually assaulting a woman this week in concord. authorities say 40 year old larry dean ridge junior pushed a woman to the ground and sexually assaulted her. it happened monday on a trail near the north concord bart station. the da's office says the victim was able to hit ridge, who then took her cell phone and wallet. a witness was able to help the victim call 911. concord police were able to arrest ridge shortly after that incident. he was arraigned in court today on forcible rape and assault charges. >> new at ten. health officials once again eyeing the spread of whooping cough here in the bay
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area. this time in san francisco, where more than a dozen cases have been reported since january, the latest at a high school in the city. ktvu zac sos live with us here in studio. after speaking with some medical experts. zach. >> yeah. and mike marin county, the other part of the bay area, to see cases of whooping cough over the last few months. so unclear right now if those cases are connected to the ones we're learning about in san francisco, patients, parents, rather at the san francisco school where these cases are centered, say they were recently alerted about all of this by school officials. >> scary disease. i don't want my girl get sick. >> parent ji young's initial reaction to the news that a small group of students at her daughter's school in san francisco had come down with pertussis, also known as whooping cough. >> people should not be panicking at all about this. >> doctor monica gandhi, an infectious disease expert at ucsf medical center. >> the main thing is to control the outbreak, meaning the way to control it is anyone who has these symptoms have to stay
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home, have to get the antibiotics. >> since january, the san francisco department of public health says there have been 13 cases in the city, most of them among high school students at sacred heart cathedral. prep. the symptom to be on the lookout for the telltale dry cough. >> the young children can have a very, you know, kind of musical aspect to the cough. the vaccine can protect you from really severe disease. >> doctor gandhi says the vast majority of people in the bay area have already been vaccinated. >> really say very few side effects. people do really well with these vaccines. >> parents feeling less anxious after reading more about the bacteria. >> i'm really not that concerned that much. school handled very well. >> we're pretty much vaccinated. so i mean, you know, what can you do? >> san francisco not the only area in the bay with cases since december, neighboring marin county has reported around 100 cases of whooping cough, most of them among students at tamalpais high in mill valley. >> i think the fact that the
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marin outbreak, there's been that many cases and it's still ongoing, i think maybe there may have been a link for the moment. >> doctor gandhi says the only age group people should be truly concerned about are newborns. they don't have the immunity when they're first born, and they can get really sick from pertussis. yeah. so certainly something to be mindful of. if you do have a newborn and there is someone else in your household who has tested positive for whooping cough or is displaying symptoms. in that case, doctor gandhi says the baby should be kept completely separate from them in another room, mike zac sos live tonight here in studio zach. >> thank you. us health officials are urging families to make sure children are vaccinated in the midst of ongoing measles outbreaks. the cdc report released today says there's been at least 113 cases of measles as of april 5th. that's nearly double the number of cases compared to last year. measles, which is highly contagious, had been considered once eliminated here in the us. >> oj simpson, one of the most
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polarizing figures in american culture, has died at the age of 76. simpson's family announced he passed away yesterday after a battle with cancer. simpson was born and raised in san francisco . before his fall from grace, he was a decorated football player in college and the nfl. ktvu jesse gary has more now on simpson's life in pro football, as well as his extended legal troubles. >> we, the jury in the above entitled action, find the defendant, orenthal james simpson, not guilty of people of a certain age will always ask where were you when the verdict in the trial of the 20th century was read? >> it's the defining piece in the three act story of the life of oj simpson. >> i think it's important for 2024 audiences to remember or be be reminded of just how important this trial was to the public. i mean, everyone tuned in for 11 months. >> the nation was glued to the fate of a former football star turned prime suspect in a double
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murder. o.j. became entwined at the center of a legal, cultural and racial tempest that simmered long before questions about racial bias in the case came to light. >> through cross-examination, there had been a significant amount of racial tension and racial unrest, particularly revolving around policing and the lapd. >> simpson would eventually set records and gained national and international stardom in the nfl , in television, and in major hollywood movies. but the specter at what many believe he did on bundy drive in brentwood in june 1994, color is how the country will forever see the man known as the juice. after his acquittal, simpson tried to embrace the spotlight. in the third act of his life, he went golfing and gabbing about the famous case and the supposed culprit, who never got caught. simpson even wrote a book about his theories, but he never returned to pretrial celebrity. instead the initials oj became synonymous with being a social
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pariah. >> audiences were much more divided on o.j. in that third act than they had been in the first act. and that's why he becomes, i think, such a divisive figure. toward the end of his life, simpson was convicted in 2007 of an armed robbery at a las vegas hotel. >> he said at the time that he was trying to take back sports memorabilia that belonged to him. nonetheless, he was convicted and spent nine years in jail. he was released in 2017 and spent the last years of his life in las vegas. his family says he died of prostate cancer at the age of 76. in the newsroom, jesse gary, ktvu, fox two news. >> and for more on simpson's infamous trial, we talked with ted rowlands today. he's a former ktvu reporter who covered that trial. he told us the case had a lasting impact on court coverage in the media. >> i think that the that the o.j. simpson case paved the way for so many cameras and so many different courtrooms around this country, and it's a good thing overall because it gives the system a test for lay people
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that are that have the time to actually test it and watch it. >> simpson's acquittal in october 1995 was watched by an estimated 100 million people around theorld. >> now, before starring in the national football league, simpson was a big name back in the 1960s, right here in the bay area. simpson grew up playing sports at the potrero hill rec center in san francisco. a faded mural still commemorates his success. a trophy box also highlights his 1959 little league baseball team there. in the trophy case, he set football records during his high school days at galileo and at city college in the 60s. simpson was inducted into the bay area sports hall of fame in 1987. not long after playing for the san francisco 49ers, the organization says it has no intention of taking back this honor, despite his polarizing reputation. >> if he qualified for induction, if off later in life, he has some difficult times and later in life he does some difficult things, even bad
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things, that doesn't say he didn't achieve what the goal of the organization is to reflect. >> and before it was torn down, candlestick park used to have a plaque commemorating simpson's induction into the bay area sports hall of fame. >> coming up after the break, black maternal health week kicking off tonight. how a medical community in the south bay is working to raise awareness and close the gap for expecting mothers. >> a beautiful day today. pretty warm out there. change is coming. you've been hearing about it. it's going to be mainly some rain showers on saturday. we'll time it out for you when i see you back here. >> also coming up, bay area lawmakers expressing more concern over driverless vehicles. their message for federal traffic officials
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as black women face before and after giving birth. ktvu south bay reporter lamonica peters live now in san jose, where a kickoff event was held tonight, lamonica. >> julie santa clara valley health and county officials say they wanted to celebrate black motherhood, but they also wanted to bring attention to the alarming rate of black women who
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are dying in childbirth. >> 80% of pregnancy related deaths are preventable. we cannot accept the status quo as black maternal health week kicked off on thursday. >> santa clara valley health in santa clara county board of supervisors president susan ellenberg partnered to celebrate black motherhood and acknowledged the challenges black women today are facing. >> black women that are 3 to 4 times more likely to die during childbirth. black women in their 20s. with promise. with hope. standing before you already exhausted in 2020. >> ellenberg says california reported its highest maternal mortality rate in a decade between 2012 and 2019. she says at least 19 california hospitals stopped offering labor and delivery services. a panel of advocates talked about ways to address the crises. >> and so i think just the more we can cultivate, you know,
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diversity in the medical field, that's only going to help. i was there with my daughter when she was pregnant. >> so i went to the doctors with her. and just like we saw in the film with gemma, there were times when my daughter would go in and say she didn't feel good and just would be overlooked. >> reporter a short netflix film about a black woman writer who suffered a miscarriage and nearly died, was screened during the program. in 2022, the u.s. maternal death rate for black women was 69.9 per 1000, more than double that of white women. the panel also discussed the education and safety of black children after watching animated short film lil red is riding the wrong way in the hood. >> unfortunately, california is number one for human trafficking and a lot of the statistics are very grim for black, brown, and indigenous children. >> on friday, a virtual perinatal equity conference will
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be held by the public health department here in santa clara county. and if you'd like more information about how to register for that conference, just go to ktvu.com and click the link for this story. julie all right. >> lamonica peters reporting live tonight in san jose lamonica. thank you. the san francisco medical examiner says more than 60 people died of drug overdoses in the city last month. the latest numbers of deadly overdoses show 61 people died of overdoses in march. that is down slightly from the previous two months. health director doctor grant colfax says the majority of overdoses continue to be a result of fentanyl. >> fentanyl is much more deadly and insidious than any other street drug that we have faced before. we are in an unprecedented place that has challenged us to constantly evolve, pivot and refine our approach to the overdose crisis. >> doctor colfax says he would like to see federal regulations eased in order to expand the availability of methadone, which
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can be used to help treat substance abuse. >> california cracking down on the sale of illegal marijuana today, governor newsom announced the state's unified cannabis enforcement task force seized nearly 32,000 pounds of illegal marijuana between january 1st and march 31st. the drugs, worth approximately $53 million. they were seized in seven different counties, including alameda. >> new at ten tonight, a number of local lawmakers say they want more safety data on driverless cars. bay area members of congress, led by anna eshoo and kevin mullin, are asking the national highway traffic safety administration to improve reporting requirements on autonomous vehicles. they say av companies are not required to report many types of safety incidents, such as when they shut down on the road, obstruct emergency responders or cause traffic hazards. they're also not required to share the size of their fleet or miles traveled, making it impossible to compare safety records among companies checking in on the
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weather around here. >> we had some fog this morning. you saw it at the coast. it was very dense. it hung out for a while and dropped temperatures coast and a little bit bayside, and then temperatures inland went up. so today was warmer inland, cooler at the coast and about the same in the middle. there's the fog. it cleared off this afternoon as the low pressure to the north kind of released. that high pressure. this was earlier when the fog was still doing its thing. fog should be gone tonight. we'll see maybe a little bit in the morning. and then a lot of clouds moving in tomorrow is going to be noticeable because it will be much cooler than today. as much as 1015 degrees cooler in some places than it was today. so that instead of in the low 80s, we'll be in the mid 60s, upper 60s, maybe some low 70s, but it's going to be noticeably cooler. no rain expected, just more clouds. and then on saturday we get that opportunity for showers that move in here. saturday looks like it's wettest overnight like friday night. tomorrow night into early saturday morning. and then somewhere between 9 and 2:00 in the afternoon. there's some breaks, right. so it's going to not be a complete
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washout, but it will be an umbrella day on saturday. sunday looks a heck of a lot better. we'll have all the details coming up. >> all right. see you soon, bill. thank you. harvard is among the universities once again mandating test scores as a requirement for admission. the ivy league announced that the applicants must submit test scores, including the sat or act. the change impacts students applying to harvard for admission in the fall of 2025. harvard and other universities made the test optional back in 2020, when covid made access to standardized testing limited. other universities making the change do include california institute of technology, yale, and brown. >> still to come tonight, kicking off cam fest coming up at 1030. the launch party in san francisco highlighting asian american media. but first, a hate crime charge filed against a man who police say vandalized a san francisco mosque. >> multiple times. >> also ahead, rising concerns tonight over a rare mosquito spotted in santa clara county. later tonight, the warning from health officials
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who uses a wheelchair, was hurt when she was hit by a car. it happened just before seven tonight in the area of leavenworth and turk streets in the tenderloin. video from the citizen app shows paramedics loading the victim into an ambulance, as the fire department says it doesn't know the extent of the woman's injuries. san francisco police will be investigating what led up to the crash. >> the san francisco district attorney has announced a hate crime charge against the suspect accused of vandalizing a mosque. surveillance video from last week shows a man smashing the windows of a mosque on sutter with a skateboard. he also reportedly made several islamophobic threats. now, police say they received a call last night that the same man was back at the mosque. the responding officers identified him as the suspect from the surveillance video. 35 year old robert gray. he now faces a number of charges, including felony vandalism with a special
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allegation of a hate crime. >> the city of oakland says its new police chief will be sworn in in mid-may. it is the closest we have gotten to a timeline for when floyd mitchell will take over to lead the police department. this comes after mayor shengtao introduced him as the new chief last month. oakland has not had a permanent police chief since tao fired lauren armstrong in february of 2023. >> the california justice department has reached an agreement with the vallejo police department on how to move forward with reforming that police department. the doj first opened up an investigation into vallejo pd in june of 2020, just days after an officer shot and killed sean monterrosa. well, now, as part of a settlement agreement, the city of vallejo and its police force will take new actions led by an independent evaluator and overseen by the doj to address a pattern of, quote, unconstitutional conduct. some of those reforms do include addressing unreasonable force by holding officers and supervisors accountable, conducting an audit
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whenever an officer points a gun at a member of the public, promoting and strengthening partnerships within the community, and ensuring that all stops, searches and seizures by officers are compliant with the law. >> tonight, a launch party for san francisco's cam fest, which you can expect from this year's film festival, plus 90% down, is no money. >> it's a little money. so it's very complication now for it, for me, for everybody. >> challenging times for san francisco's street vendors. the new changes that many say will hurt their bottom line. >> and the red hot warriors keep climbing up those standings. jason appelbaum will tell you where they are in that nba playing position tonight in sports. also coming up, plans to build an overnight train between los angeles and san francisco, moving forward. today's new developments on the high tech
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season with a launch party tonight in san francisco. the nonprofit's film, music and food festival highlights asian american voices. ktvu jana katsuyama joins us now live from san francisco to explain what's new this year. jana >> julie. the website and the ticket sales are open now. the gala will be held here at the asian art museum once again, but the opening night screening will be held at a different venue. there was plenty of cheering as the center for asian american media held its 2024 cam fest launch party thursday night at victory hall in san francisco. people gathered to celebrate and raise a glass to the 42nd year of cam fest, which has served as a showcase and support system
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for asian american film and media makers. >> i'm having a platform to display our art and like the art that my team and i made is, it's really a dream come true. most of us really want to make an impact, especially within our own communities. so it's really nice to find a community that is very supportive. >> new this year it's a change to the opening night venue, which will be held may 9th at the palace of fine arts theater instead of the castro theater, which is under renovation. the opening film, called admissions granted, tackles affirmative action, an issue that has divided asian americans. >> those kinds of questions are vitally important that we talk about, talk them through, understand what is our relationship with other communities in america? >> executive director steven gong says many of the films this year tackled difficult issues with the pandemic, with with violence against our community. >> i think we're still trying to work our way through that. >> also, new is an industry hub
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space for networking and panels. we wanted to congregate and have everyone under one roof, just as a way to nurture and cultivate. like more of these connections between our filmmakers and media makers. staff hope that cam fest can spark dialog during these divisive times and seismic shifts in the film industry. >> it's really dangerous if we stop talking to one another inside our own families and inside of our communities, it's totally changing, right? >> with all of these platforms, with dwindling, dwindling movie theaters. and so for us, like this is a really important space . >> cam fest runs from may 9th through may 19th. and julie, they say they have plans, some 35 different screenings and events, both here in san francisco as well as in oakland. yeah, it looked like a fun kickoff party tonight and a good turnout. >> jana. thank you. first fridays returning to oakland after a three month hiatus, organizers say the event will
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take place this friday night on telegraph avenue in uptown oakland. first fridays was scheduled to return last friday, but was canceled due to the rainy weather. the last time first fridays took place was back in december, organizers say they put the event on pause for the first three months of the year because of financial difficulties. the monthly block party has been a gathering place for various artists, performers and small businesses in oakland for several years. >> new at ten, a san francisco community group held a town hall tonight focused on upzoning projects in the sunset. the coalition called neighborhoods united. as sev said, it is against tall developments in the area. the group says it's worried about unwanted luxury, high rises and small business displacement. new state laws now allow developers, though, to build multi storey homes without input from city and community leaders. the group says it's working to qualify a new housing proposition for california's november ballot that would authorize city and county laws to override state zoning statutes.
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>> we want to make sure that local laws, can with the jurisdictions approval, they can institute the law that the state has passed where they can opt out of it. it's pro prospective and retroactive. >> some city leaders have supported upzoning projects in the past, hoping to address the need for more housing. >> another change is coming for street vendors in san francisco. that's right. >> the city decided it is going to close the indoor market that they were placed in after the vendors were initially banned from selling out on the street. ktvu tom vacar has the story. >> on thursday midmorning, it was sunny, warm, quiet and pleasant on mission and 24th, as well as mission in 16th as police units stood by to make sure the ban on illegal vendors held every vendor, including the licensed ones, were evicted, including jaime luna. >> the police says the furthest that third rung take out.
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>> even with a permit. yeah >> no. no choice. >> one woman who sells water and snacks on the corner says it's killed her little stand to 90% down. >> it's no money. it's a little money. so it's very complication now for it. for me, for everybody. >> it's a far cry from the days when chaotic, out of control dealers sold goods, many of them pilfered at a 100% discount from beleaguered brick and mortar stores. when the ban came to these locations, the city set up temporarily lasting a free place for licensed vendors. one lady who lives here in the neighborhood told me off camera that after 6 p.m. up until midnight, the illegal booths return and the selling goes on unabated. >> i pay tax, i pay for permits, but i can do nothing in the street. but the people don't have any paper selling every day
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. >> but la will close on the 21st of april since the few licensed vendors that use it get little or no foot traffic, no money, no sale, nothing. >> one day you can believe $20. sometimes nothing for eight hours. >> so the city will put them back very close to where they were outside. >> we're going to move them over to 24th street, which is the other site that is open air. right? it's in the parking lot. there will now be up to 20 vendors there. >> unlicensed vendors are not invited. >> we have our teams out there and have to keep monitoring that. >> so somewhere between 6 and 8 every night after the enforcement teams leave, the unlicensed market returns tom vacar, ktvu, fox two news. >> new at ten tonight. an overnight train connecting san francisco to los angeles is one step closer to becoming a reality. transit startup dream star lines announced today it
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signed an agreement with union pacific railroad. dream star is now allowed to operate its trains on union pacific's tracks , linking san francisco to southern california. the company says its high tech cars will have private rooms, in-room showers and internet access. if all goes to plan, dream star hopes to start service as early as summer 2025. >> coming up tonight at 11, a south bay bar makes a post on instagram asking for help after its safe is stolen right from the business. the damage that thieves caused tonight at 11. >> and rain back in the forecast . not for tomorrow, but soon. it'll be here for part of the weekend. we'll have the details and break out when you might see the sun. >> but first, a new regulation that could close a loophole when it comes to buying guns. president biden's proposal after the break
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freed is now appealing his conviction on fraud and conspiracy charges. a new york judge sentenced him to 25 years in federal prison last month. prosecutors accused the co-founder of ftx of defrauding investors and customers of more than $11 billion before the cryptocurrency exchange collapsed. attorneys for the 32 year old will have to prove errors were made during the trial, a process that could take years. >> the biden administration is taking steps to close the so-called gun show loophole for background checks on gun sales. the new rule will require unlicensed gun dealers to perform background checks when selling guns. federal officials estimate there are about 23,000 unlicensed sellers who are selling firearms online at gun shows and through other portals. president biden says this will keep guns out of the hands of domestic abusers and felons, but there is mixed reaction on
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capitol hill. >> it will show parents, kids and teachers and americans everywhere impacted by gun violence that congress is listening. >> shame on the atf, shame on the biden administration. shame on the administrators of the bipartisan safer communities act for playing political games. >> the rule will likely be challenged by pro-second amendment groups. >> new fears for the families of some of the hostages still being held by hamas, according to the new york times, hamas might not have 40 hostages to exchange in this week's proposed cease fire deal. president biden continues to call for a cease fire. he wants more humanitarian aid to be let into gaza, as officials warn a famine has started in the north. israel says it is working on infrastructure that would allow more food into the region. >> we are constructing the northern crossing, a new land crossing from israel into northern gaza to enable more aid
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to flow directly to civilians in the areas that have been challenging for the trucks to access. >> another concern in the middle east, israel, facing retaliation from iran after iran blamed israel for an airstrike that killed some of their top military leaders in syria. >> coming up, several bay area cities hit with fines from the epa. the violations for sewer overflow also a warning over a rare mosquito and the south bay tonight. >> why health officials are sounding the alarm. >> and more warm weather today. but that's about to change as we look ahead to t
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( ♪ ) mugs. ♪ bmo ♪ $300,000 in sewage violation penalties. these fines were announced by the us environmental protection agency. the epa says they all failed to prevent sanitary sewer overflow from reaching san francisco bay. the city of oakland owes the most about $278,000 for 67 overflow violations. alameda owes just $200 for failing to prevent one overflow. piedmont, albany and berkeley were also fined. >> santa clara county officials are sounding the alarm tonight about a rare mosquito, which can transmit diseases to people. >> now, these mosquitoes do exist in other parts of california, but their discovery in an urban residential area is
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causing greater concern. ktvu is mark sayer reports. >> in the east san jose foothills, workers from the santa clara county vector control district are deploying additional traps in the area where the mosquitoes were first discovered. the traps are being deployed in bushes and other damp and cool areas where the mosquitoes are likely to reproduce. seen under a microscope. this is what the aedes aegypti mosquitoes look like. >> this is the mosquito trap that caught our first adult female vector control ecologist taylor kelly is on the team that made the discovery. it is a very beautiful mosquito as far as mosquitoes go, but it's not one that you want to see in this area. >> the ada aegypti were first detected by regular surveillance, but now the vector control district has set up special traps like this one. it uses a special scent. it's a human scent, much like dirty socks. to attract this specific type of mosquito. >> it is a very concerning thing because the ada aegypti can transmit diseases like zika, chikungunya and yellow fever and
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dengue. >> vector control officials say they have no idea where these mosquitoes came from, nor how they ended up in a residential area far from major highways and commercial areas. resident russ johnson says workers actually came to his house last week to let him know of the discovery, and asked him to eliminate any sources of standing water in his yard. >> well, i'm a little more concerned about this one because apparently it's out during the midday, right? and not just dusk. dawn and dusk. so that's got me more concerned for now. >> vector control says this is an all hands on deck situation that requires the quick cooperation of residents. we're asking the public to do their part and do a community effort to ensure that this mosquito does not get established. >> go around your home, inspect your home, look at any container or, you know, dog bowls, anything that can hold any amount of water. >> so far, only limited, very targeted spraying has occurred, but wider efforts could take place if more of the ada aegypti mosquitoes are discovered.
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reporting in san jose mark sayer, ktvu, fox two news. >> governor newsom is requesting a federal emergency after the cancellation of california's ocean salmon season. that decision was made yesterday by the pacific fishery management council due to the continued low numbers of the chinook salmon population, the governor says the emergency request will help bring financial support to the affected fishing communities. in a news conference in san francisco today, the salmon industry blamed what they call irresponsible water policies by state water managers. >> we're fighting for these fish. we're making hard sacrifices for the next generation of fish, and we're making the hard decisions about the harvest. now we need the california water managers to make some sacrifices on their end. they need to make some hard decisions about saving these fish as well. >> the governor's office says it has allocated $800 million over the last three years to restore habitat and increased water flows and remove dams that were preventing fish from returning
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to their native rivers. >> dramatic video of the sonoma county sheriff's office pulling someone from a car that went down a ravine. we'll hope to have that video for you in just a minute. but first, we'll go over to chief meteorologist bill martin and a look at that forecast. bill. >> rain coming our way as we go into saturday. a beneficial rain shouldn't be a ton of rain quarter inch, half inch kind of a thing. and it's going to be mainly overnight friday into saturday, early morning. and then somewhere around nine to noon on saturday. it's sun comes out a little bit. the then the thunderstorms, the potential for thunderstorms will be in the afternoon. we'll look at that in the model. temperatures warmed on up until wednesday. they actually cooled a little today even though they were warmer inland. and then they really trend down tomorrow. temperatures tomorrow will be down into the mostly in the 60s, mid and upper 60s. so cloud cover. yeah check. not as sunny tomorrow, not as warm, but pleasant. and then saturday is kind of just one of those days.
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you know, it's going to be not enough. it's going to be enough showers that's going to slow you down. it's not going to be enough to shut you down. i'll show you what that means in the latest model. but temperatures tomorrow are going to cool a good 10 to 15 degrees. so that'll, that'll that'll be noticeable right off the bat. and then here comes that system. and well you might notice here is here's this kind of a frontal prefrontal band. and then here is the system itself. this whole low is going to drop down the coast. it's not going this way. if it was going this way we'd be wet in the next six hours. but it's going to work its way down the coast tomorrow and actually go out towards the west a little bit, which will get it off our coast and not and should not bring any showers tomorrow. and then in the model you'll see it come back onshore on friday, on saturday, friday night into saturday morning. so nice. overnight lows. here's the model i'll stop it down a bunch. so here's tomorrow morning. here's the low way back here. the parent low is here. and then you see it kind of going here. here we are at 6:00 tomorrow night. so nice day tomorrow. partly
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cloudy, mostly cloudy. you, you, you know, whatever you're thinking and then as we get into late friday night into saturday morning and then 8 a.m. saturday morning and look at the back edge, there's a big kind of a clear slot through about 1:00. and then some secondary showers come in in the evening and then should be out of here by sunday. there might be a scattered shower on sunday, but for the most part should be out of here. so lower temperatures tomorrow. more clouds tomorrow. not as nice a day tomorrow. i mean last couple days. last three days have been insanely great, but i think sunday, if you're if you're if you're trying to hone in on the weekend, sunday is obviously your day. saturday is not going to be a complete loss. but sunday is going to be your day. i'll see you back here at 11. >> sounds good bill. thank you. all right. here's that video of the sonoma county sheriff's office. now pulling someone from that vehicle that went down a steep ravine again on mount tamalpais. so this rescue happened around 6:00 last night, right near panoramic highway. that's on the west side of tam. due to the tall trees on the
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mountain, the rescue team had to be lowered 200ft down. as you can see here, they did manage to reach the victim and bring her up to the chopper. no word tonight on her condition. >> an exhibit on the great immigration migration is opening this saturday at the berkeley art museum and pacific film archive. it's called a moment in every direction legacies of the great migration. it examines the generational and cultural impacts of the migration, which started in the early 1900s. more than 6 million black americans moved out of their south to other out of the south to other parts of the country. they left to escape the oppression of jim crow laws and to pursue better economic and educational opportunities. we heard from anthony graham bamford, senior curator, about how the exhibition came to be. >> all of the artists made brand new pieces that often began with really personal histories, thinking about their relationship to the great migration, their family's relationship to the great migration, and the ways that they and their families have moved have stayed, and various
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relationships to space and place, and how that informs their lives. >> you can get advanced tickets now on the bampfa site. the exhibit will run this saturday the 13th through september 22nd. >> sharks homegrown goalie devin cooley a brick wall in the net tonight. jason appelbaum has that story coming up next in sports. >> then on the 11:00 news, former heavyweight champion mike tyson gets a setback to his efforts of entering the cannabis industry
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they streak towards next week's play-in tournament with the eighth seed still in play tonight in portland without the services of klay thompson and
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draymond green, both resting up another big game tomorrow night. first quarter brandon pisemsky watch this feed to jonathan kuminga. and yeah he knows how to finish. very pretty assist by the rookie kuminga finished with 19 points. warriors led by three at the half. but the blazers actually led by six in the fourth until the warriors went on a 16 to 1 run. stephen curry just five of 16 on threes, but that one was big steph skipping his way to a team high 22 points. kevon looney he made the biggest impact tonight. the steal off the inbound steph finds pisemsky and the lefty finishes with the layup and the foul. pisemsky nine points. looney nine points 11 rebounds four blocks. warriors beat the blazers 100 to 92. so with two games left in the regular season, the warriors they move ahead of the lakers into ninth place, and they can go as high as eighth if they win both the remaining games, and the kings lose one of their final two games. it is, for many, the
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greatest golf tournament in the world. round one of the masters from beautiful augusta, georgia, where, like pebble beach, the course is part of the show. five time defending champion tiger woods still drawn big galleries, and he opens his 26th masters with a birdie on the very first hole. tiger minus one through 13, before his round was suspended due to darkness. shot of the day tyrrell hatton's approach on the par four fifth hole and watch as it just spins right back into the cup. hatton tied for sixth at three under his round, also suspended with four holes left. your leader. it's this man bryson dechambeau. here he is on 17. long birdie putt dechambeau finished at seven under par and he has a one stroke lead heading into tomorrow's second round. the a's they could only muster up four hits and one run today against the rangers, but that was enough
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because jp sears was nearly unhittable. more on him in a moment. but first, seth brown in the second inning provided all the scoring in this game, and he did it with one swing of the bat. takes john gray deep to right just inside the foul pole. solo home run. and it's one nothing. a's back to sears who strikes out corey seager to end the six. sears had a no hitter into the seventh. he and three relievers combined on a one hit shutout. a's win for the fourth time in the last five games. one nothing los gatos native devin cooley picked up his first career win last saturday. he was outstanding tonight versus seattle. the crack in second period william eklund perfect setup for kyle burrows, who risked it past joey daccord for the goal two one san jose. but the night belonged to cooley, who made save after save, turning away the kraken with a variety of stops. 49 and all. and yeah, his dad loved every
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minute of it. cooley picks up his first road win 3 to 1. your final, the stanford women's basketball team is hoping that kate pay will pick up right where tara vanderveer left off. pay currently negotiating a contract with the university to become just the fifth head coach in program history and she is stanford through and through. pay was born at stanford hospital, attended menlo high and was a guard on stanford's 1992 championship team, the last 17 years she's been an assistant coach under vanderveer for all right. tom brady retired a year ago. we know that. any chance he might want to make a comeback? >> i'm not opposed to it. if they would, i don't know if they're going to let me if i become an owner in the nfl team. but i don't know if, i don't know. i'm always going to be in good shape. i'll always be able to throw the ball. so to come in for a little bit, like mj coming back, i don't know if they let me, but i wouldn't be opposed to
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it. >> it's not a no. it's not a no for the 46. >> you never know. you're right. i could see it. he's he's in like the best shape of his life. true. >> yeah i love that. he still wants to do it. he's got it in his blood. definitely. he says he's faster than he is now. >> that now that he was as a rookie. >> michigan. >> he always says, though he was slow when he was coming out of college. >> really slow. >> yeah, but i love it a good attitude. jason. thank you. okay. all right. next at 11. >> if you're not an experienced swimmer, we urge you not to swim in the russian river at this time. >> tonight, a warning from firefighters after a swimmer goes missing in the russian river. the 11:00 news on ktvu. fox two starts now. the russian river in sonoma county. this time of year. it is cold. it is dangerous and moving fast. good evening everyone. >> i'm mike mibach and i'm julie julie haener. tonight, a swimmer went underwater and disappeared. the search called off for now, butet to resume in the mornin it ppened in the waters off steelhead beach, just northf forestville. the area is a popular swimming spot in the north bay. when the weather gets w

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