tv CBS4 News Repeat CBS November 19, 2016 12:37am-1:15am MST
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prison? >> developing tonight, judgment night for three men known as the masked robbers. they shot and nearly killed one man and tried to carjack a mother and daughter. only on cbs4, our karen morfitt talked with both women this evening. karen, this was certainly a day they had been waiting for. >> reporter: yeah jim, we just wrapped up that interview just a few minutes ago actually. exactly one year to the day, they say they could not be more thried men will be spending a long time behind bars and tonight for the first time, they are sharing their story about what happened and the moments after. memories of this massive man hunt last november are not easily forgotten. for robin and her mother rhonda, they will never fade. >> i don't think you ever will forgive it. >> reporter: the two were
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when two armed men tried to steal their vehicle. rhonda was shot trying to fight off the attack and her daughter was severely beaten as well. >> they didn't have any remorse. >> reporter: the men just moments earlier had stormed into a lakewood first bank wearing screen tight masks locking employees in a vault and getting away with $50,000 in cash. after then crashing their get away vehicle, the men stole a mini van, shot the owner multiple times and left him for dead in his a police chase ended in sheridan with all three flees on foot. >> i see one guy, out of the corner or my eyes i see a second guy approaching and got hit with that guy. >> reporter: one year later and three weeks of a tightly secured trial, a jury says they are all guilty. chief deputy da robert winier says it was a strong ruling that in the end will send a strong message. >> we are going to be asking for a sentence that making sure the community is safe and ensures that these guys will be
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harm other people. >> reporter: now, the suspects will likely be sentenced some time next month and with more than two dozen charges to each of them, they will be looking at lengthy prison sentences. we are live in denver tonight, karen morfitt, cbs4 news. >> thank you karen. also now, we are settling into another frigid night. with temperatures well below freezing. meteorologist lauren whitney is in the mobile weather lab for us tonight. lauren, anyone going to see places already in the single digits. limon is at 8 degrees. plenty of single digits in the high country. downtown, 30 degrees for us, but at dia, 20 degrees now. so behind that system that moved through yesterday and the cold front, we have significantly colder temperatures. obviously, it was a clear day today and pretty cold. only 32 degrees here in denver.
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afternoon, but tomorrow morning will be very, very cold with these very chilly temperatures. now, coming up early next week, we have the potential for another storm system to roll through and knock down our temperatures an bring the chance of more snow, for now, back to the studio where it is a little warmer. >> a little bit. thank you lauren. now an update on a murder investigation we have been following all day. 35-year-old zachariah was shot, late this afternoon, police arrested robert moore who is being investigated for first degree murder and drug possession. the two men who admitted to accidentally shooting a devastated wild fire in nederland will not go to prison. they were sentenced this morning. our stan bush checking in from boulder county. some people say this punishment is not harsh enough. >> reporter: jim, these men caused a fire that forced hundreds of families from their
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but, in the end, no prison time, apparently, because the fire was set accidentally. heavy air tankers and helicopters fought for days to contain the cold springs wild fire in july. eight homes were destroyed when two transients jimmy sugds and zach kukendal get their illegal camp get out of control. >> they have hurt a lot of people. >> reporter: nederland's fire chief is one of e across land he hopes to hand down to his children and theirs. >> that area is gone for my generation and his generation. it is never the same. it is eternally changed. >> reporter: the two were seen in this video while crews were still battling the flames and investigators were looking for suspects. they were arrested and taken to the boulder county jail where they will now stay for two years on work release and pay more than a million dollars in
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in nederland call fair. >> i saw three escaped campfires last year. we had another one this year that we caught. and, these guys are a symptom of the problem, as much as i want to be really mad at them, i'm mad at them, but, other people do the same thing and just, we got lucky enough to catch the fires. >> reporter: nederland's fire chief says this area has become a destination for homeless camping. that wild fire was the battle, but, illegal camping is the war he bush, cbs4 news. with also have new development ins the disappearance of a toddler from wyoming. police were searching a landfill in northern colorado. the boyfriend of the boy's mother has pleaded guilty to charges. 13 month old silas died after falling off a changing table. today, 23-year-old logan rogers pleaded guilty in laramie to
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get up to 20 years. developing tonight, people who lived around rocky flats had almost twice as many forms of rare cancers than anywhere in the united states. well, those are the findings of a new community health survey. they made plutonium triggers into the 1980s . jeff, government officials are not concne >> reporter: this is one of the more recent state studies done by the colorado department of health and public environment. they looked at cancer rates in the 80s and the early 90s . a top official says today the science is done. there is no risk for people around rocky flats. a few thousand people disagree. >> the preliminary data is concerning. >> reporter: almost 2,000 people responded to the rocky flats downwinders health survey
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of cancer were reported. >> 48.8% of the cancers were seen are rare cancers. and, that, to me, is worth further investigation. >> reporter: the study hasn't started to look at other health issues like birth defects. >> we absolutely must have new studies and ... and we can't do that without some level of government involvement. >> reporter: the plant closed in 1989. and the cleanup was quickly completed. many are now asking how public health issues have been bed. >> how much more validated data do you need to compile that cdphe and doe will listen? >> we know people have offered to do more testing and independent testing and that has not been ... no one has taken anyone up on that. >> i get e-mails from people whose children are sick. this is not just a problem of people in their 40s or 50s or 60s . this is an ongoing health legacy that is affecting our
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professors from colorado state, cu, and boulder and metro state looking through this data. but because they are teaching at the same time, it could be months if not a little more than a year before more conclusive findings may be released. live in superior, jeff todd, cbs4 news. and happening tomorrow, this goes-r satellite will finally launch into space hauling breakthrough technology to help meteorologists better predict our weather. the satellite was built at lockheed martin right there jefferson county. cbs4 meteorologist dave aguilera working late tonight down in cape canaveral, florida. dave, at least it is warm. what do we have, 17 hours or so until liftoff? >> reporter: less than 24 hours jim. so, the countdown clock is already beginning on what will be new technology about ready to blast off that will be revolutionizing the way we forecast weather.
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ready to last off as nasa is set to launch the goes-r satellite. the first of four geo stationary satellites built by lockheed martin in colorado. they will relace the current array of satellites that have not been updated in over two decades. it will deliver high resolution images better and five times faster than what we have now. >> i think we will see a big up tick in the hack ray rare cancers si forecasts. >> reporter: goes-r has a state of the art lightning mapper giverring forecasters a dramatically improved idea where severe storms may erupt. greatly speeding up severe weather warnings for dangerous wind, rain, hail, and even tornado outbreaks. >> potentially get folks more time and notice to take cover and go to safety. >> reporter: there are so many colorado connections.
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the solar mapper was built at cu and the rocket itself was built by united launch alliance, all in colorado. >> this is the culmination of for myself, personally, over 12 years of work, so, for me, it is kind of an emotional moment. >> reporter: so, a couple of things gang, the launch is scheduled tomorrow at 5:42 east coast time in the afternoon. we will bring it to you here. and also, there will be about six monthsover testing of the satellite to make sure type of thing. so, it may be at the end of spring, early summer, but, before we can start to use this high definition data. i'm dave aguilera in cape canaveral. tonight, an update on the thousands of united passengers stranded for hours at dia. >> it was a nightmare. >> how the airline got away with keeping people stuck on the tarmac for hours. >> plus, donald trump picks his
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news for legal marijuana. and a teenager live streams himself firing shots at his neighbor's home. [ sound of gunfire ] [ laughter ] >> and our system is long gone, but, we are watching this one behind it as it is moving toward california right now. when this could arrive in our direction and could it bring more rain and snow. >> csu looks to close cu stadium with a bowl clinching win. it is a big weekend of college
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from the airport. lauren? >> reporter: yesterday, united blamed the problem on deicing issues with a contractor but an aviation attorney that i spoke with says passengers may have some recourse here. united passenger kemmy keene waits for hours at denver international airport hoping to take off for tucson before eventually spending the night in a hotel. >> instead of leaving at 7:00, it was g then 9:00, then at 10:00, it disappeared. >> reporter: he was booked on one of dozens of flights that was canceled or delayed due to deicing issues. hundreds of passengers tweeted their frustrations including howard dean. longest deicing of his career. flights delayed four to five hours. >> i think people could understand they have a little
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themselves out. >> reporter: aviation attorney joseph lerusoo said they should file written formall complaints with the airlines. >> detailing what happened the night before. times, how long they were on the tarmac, the general atmosphere. >> reporter: under the federal passenger bill of rights, fliers may be eligible for travel vouchers and other compensation. and airlines that leave passengers on tarmacs more than three hours can face fines of up to nearly $30,000 per passenger. now, he also says airlines may be willing to negotiate with a customer, but he says don't necessarily expect a response right away. under that bill of rights, the airline actually has 60 days to respond to a written complaint. we are live tonight at dia, lauren whitney, cbs4 news. lauren dispirito. after six years of legal wrangling and claims he would never settle, donald trump has
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university. the president-elect has agreed to pay $25 million to resolve three lawsuits over his former school for real estate investors. the students paid up to $35,000 for the classes. but after the school closed in 2010, they sued saying it simply did not deliver the results promised. more than 6,000 former students will get some restitution. and trump also announced he will be nominating alabama senator jeff sessions for attorney general. he is a hard ne immigration and has a controversial history. back in 1986, he was nominated to be a federal judge, but, didn't go through after several allegations he had made racist comments. sessions also very anti- marijuana. firearmly against legalization on the state level. once saying good people don't smoke marijuana. a teenager in akron, ohio was arrested after firing shots
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[ sound of gunfire ] [ laughter ] >> you can see the 15-year-old boy fires a rifle through an open window. then, he fires a handgun. the bullets struck the neighbor's home. >> if you are just siting in your home watching television and you hear something like that, that would freak you out. i'm not used to hearing that. >> neighbor says the teenager lives with his grandmother, but was home alone at the time, he was arrested on the other hand weapons charges. police are trying to figure out where he new video showing foam, lot of it flooding the streets of san jose. a fire alarm malfunctioned inside a new airplane hang ar. a sea of it spilled into surrounding streets. now, all they can do is wait for it to dissipate. >> that's a lot of foam. we have another chance of snow in our forecast. >> let's get the latest from ed greene. >> but we have the weekend to
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open. they have studies snow guns going. you can see the snow guns going here in keystone. they are open too. breckenridge opens tomorrow. clear skies around the state. that is from border to border. so, sunshine, tomorrow, and, sunday. here is our storm system with some snow and some showers and thunderstorms along that cold front. all pushing into the east so we catch a nice break with high pressure building in for the weekend. you see clouds and snow and rain. th sitting out there. that is coming our way next. let's go to lauren whitney in the colorado weather center and it appears number two is on the way. >> it is. we have a chance of moisture early next week. so for the weekend, high pressure is going to dominate for us. it will bring us some warmer temperatures. we are not getting back to the 80s we had earlier this week, but we will get back to the 50s and the 60s and we will stay on the dry side. it could get windy on higher elevations. and we have this system that is making its way toward the coast.
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up into the pacific northwest tomorrow. and again, like ed said, we have clear skies but a chance of snow in the mountain areas and some of that could head in our direction monday into tuesday. some of our mountain areas out west after of right now could get a decent shot of some snow. tonight with the clear skies behind that system, we are looking at some very chilly temperatures. actually, may get a little cooler than 16 here in denver, 21 boulderment teens out on the eastern plains. as you head toward the high country, it will be a cold night 13 in craig. 23 grand junction. 19 in eagle tonight. bundle up and snuggle uptight. if you are getting ready for bed now. and make sure the pets are inside. it is chilly out there. >> it sure s. it was chilly all day long. 32 degrees at dia for the official high. we have not been that cold since march 18 of this year. 36 downtown. 14 and 18 is where we started out. 15 and 23 the norms.
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35 superior. now, everybody below normal. 27 and 17 full ten degrees cooler out at the airport right now. south 10 for the winds. 84% humidity. so the humidity is still up there. the barometer is high but on the way down. nice shot from pete. these are post snowstorm pretty shots in parker with the blue sky. look at this at telluride. as we saw in steamboat, they got 13 inches of new snow. they are opening take a look at this from the top of berthoud pass. as we take a look at the lows tonight. single digits and teens east, single digits and teens for the mountains. and tomorrow, we start to moderate these temperatures. we are looking at mostly 50s , 40s , 60s out west. temperatures in the 40s and 50s in the mountains. we will see clear skies. chilly, 19 and 14 for the
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skies. and more seasonal weather. we will be in the low to mid 50s as we take a look at sunday, 10 degrees warmer. monday, here come it is system lauren was talking about. overnight, it could be rain mixed with snow. 49 on tuesday, so, not as cold as this system. 53 on wednesday. and then, here we go at thanksgiving day. pretty nice with 57 degrees and sunny skies. 55 on friday. and, the weekend, pretty much more of the same. >> you know, turkeys typically
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>> nuggets finally got their first home win wednesday. slow start for the nuggets. they scored just 19 in the first quarter. then, they exploded for 38 in the second quarter. the nuggets have five-and-a- half. then, jamir nelson. first basket of the game is a big one. the game needed overtime. they have trouble closing out games. down one. nuggets down one. and jamir ne of bounds. and the corner. nuggets lose another tough one. 113-1111 the final. for cu it is pretty simple. beat washington state tomorrow and utah next week and the buffs will play for the pack 12 title. if they lose either game, their chances of playing in the conference title game are pretty slim. but who would have thought this late in november the butches would be in control of their own post season destiny. pretty exciting stuff in boulder.
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that? to be able to play in a big game. especially at home in front of our fans who have been incredible this year. >> we already 8-2. getting over the hump. we are playing for something in november. the november games matter. it is really important. it is really exciting. >> the end of an era tomorrow night in fort collins. final game at hughes stadium. if the rams want to extend their season into bowl season, they need one more win. they have a tough home >> it is nondodge the issue type of football game. there is no dodging in these games. you have to man up, put your big boy pants on for every one of these. here is another opportunity this week against a team that is going to say here we come. coming up, du hockey playing as the number one team in the nation. then, let the teddy bears fly
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>> we haven't gotten the credibility we dereceiver. i know we are special and i know we will show up sunday to win and next saturday and win. and, we will make a name for ourselves in the tournament. >> du soccer has won four straight summit titles. they will confidence they can get some ncaa wins. du hockey, the new number one team in the nation. the first teddy bear toss. they are donated for the care for colorado du trailed 1-0 to miami after the first, but troy terry finally finds the back of the net to make it 1-1. the game officially ended as a tie. but du won a shoot-out for an extra point in the conference standings. how will you spend your broncos bye week? 44% said they would say think their family. 38% said they would go see what it is like outside again.
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>> if you have a news tip or story idea, we want to hear from you. call our tip line at 303-863 tips. that is (303)863-8477 or send us an e-mail through cbsdenver.com. >> i don't know what happens to you on friday nights. but. >> take a beloved cbs4 logo. we call that the cbs eye. it is suspiciously like the eye of an animal. what animal do you think it is? [ laughter ] yes. it is a little pine squirrel. >> of course. >> see, it has a little cbs eye. >> i have to stretch for that one. [ laughter ] >> big storm night slowed down a little bit.
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