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tv   ABC7 News 400PM  ABC  March 17, 2023 4:00pm-5:00pm PDT

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with a parent who was fed up and plans to transfer her daughter to another school, after claims of other safety concerns. >> he took out a kitchen knife and just stab someone in the back -- stabbed someone in the back. >> i was scared. . i was concerned for my friend. >> the kids are out of control. they are not getting the resources they need. they are not getting the support they need. it is bad right now. and nobody is paying attention to what actions happen at the school. reporter: i also spoke with the san francisco unified school district spokesperson who said all proper protocols were taken after the stabbing. she said there is no active threat to the school at this time. then i asked her what other measures were in place to keep kids here safe. >> francisco middle school and all middle schools have many wellness awards available for students. we know coming out of the pandemic, this has been a difficult time for students and schools are working to rebuild communities. reporter: back out here live, in
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a number of students are being let out for the day. sfpd confirms a juvenile suspect has en detained, and they appear to still be at the school. the investigation is ongoing. we will bring you more details as they become available. live tonight, the online, abc7 news. larry: california, making bold moves today in the prison system. >> san quentin was california's first present. today it will be california's model prison. for rehabilitation and restorative justice. kristen: governor newsom is announcing major changes at san quentin. we have team coverage today. cornell bernard will have the details on the governor's plan for san quentin. suzanne fawn will look at wha opponents are saying, and later, phil m. let's begin with a look at what's happening. >> we want to be the preeminent resort of justice for somebody in the world. that is the goal. reporter: governor
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an california's most notorious person is getting a new name and a new mission. >> we have to be in the homecoming business pyramid is not just about rehabilitation. it's about him coming. reporter: this prison built in 1852 and once home to california's death row will now be called san quentin rehabilitation center. we are less dangerous prisoners will get education, training, and rehabilitation under a new plan modeled after scandinavian concepts of prison life which focus on preparing people to return to society. >> we want to reduce costs and ultimately reduce incarceration by keeping our communities safe and we want to make sure people when they come out come out as fully engaged, committed members of our community and society and are contributing and not likely to reenter into the system. >> together we have created a place where second chances and true hope re: reality -- true hope re: reality. -- true hope are a reality.
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larry: critics say this plan is far-fetched and dangerous. suzanne fawn spoke with people outraged by the plan. reporter: from saint quentin prison to the rehabilitation center, he strongly opposes the plan. >> i think it is garbage, it is backward and dangerous to the people of california. reporter: his daughter was kidnapped and murdered by davis, currently at san quentin state prison. he says that does not work for violent offenders like davis. >> he was given a job that paid him $16 and $.50 an hour in 1993 as a machinist that was trained in a program and three months letter and my daughter was that. reporter: the president of crime victims united says the governor never reached out to crime victims advocates.
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she says rehabilitation works better with less serious offenders and low-level facilities like county jails. >> rehabilitation has to be thoughtful and vetted. we have seen what some of these criminal justice policies have done to california that are not thoughtful and vetted. we have more violent crime than we've ever had. theft is on the rise. and that's great that we are giving kitchens and nice couches when we have struggling families. i think his priorities are a little bit mixed up. reporter: critics say more resources should go to people victimized by crime. >> the idea that they can move this guy someplace safer or somehow rehabilitate this guy or the other 600, 700 top killers, baby killers, serial killers, and street killers on death row is absolutely ludicrous. larry: joining us for more on this issue is insider film a tear -- insider phil matier.
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reporter: is this going to be for everybody, including violent offenders? does not keep you from going into the program. the governor said today is going to be open to all prisoners and pretty much based on attitude, not necessarily what took you into prison. in other words, if you've got a good attitude and you show a strong work ethic or attempt to change your life, in some other institutions and maximum or medium lockup, you would be eligible for this. also remember this -- anybody in this facility is on their way out. so you already have to overcome those and be ready to be released anyway. kristen: what do other people in the criminal justice system and the prison system, correctional officers, etc. think about this? reporter: the correctional officers union is behind it. they are under a very stressful situation as well. and so, they work -- the work is tough for them so they are looking for anything that's one to help that as well. overcrowding is being reduced.
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gavin newsom is talking about closing prisons. he's trying not to put as many people in. that is an interesting dynamic we have here. a lot of people are calling for stronger laws. maybe enhancing things for guns and other violent natures, the governor is not making moves on that. neither is the state legislature. instead they are pushing ahead with rehabilitation and that is what we are -- we heard today. about getting tough on rehabilitation. larry: this comes four years after the governor issued a moratorium on executions in the state of california. would you describe this as a continuation of those moves? reporter: yes, i would. governor newsom is out to make a point and a change. he is against the death penalty. he is against enhanced sentences. he said we need to scale back the mass incarceration. remember the feds were in california, get people out of prisons, your health care system is not working and you are
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overcrowded. now they are continuing along that line. kristen: i imagine any measure of success would have to look at recidivism. but that is something that takes time to get that data back. reporter: and it takes time to accomplish. there's a lot of detail -- there's not a lot of detail on this plan. when asked about specifics, it got pretty hazy pretty quick. what you are right. recidivism right now -- but you are right. recidivism right now, 40% chance of recommitting on going back within three years. in norway where they have this sort of program, it is more like half of that. there's two things, there's going to be recidivism, people not going back to jail, but there is another important one, people that lets they are released if they recommit and in a horrendous nature, as we've seen people talking earlier in some of those stories, then that is a big political blow. it only takes one or two for the whole program to have questions raised about it. larry: that is an interesting point you bring up.
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how do you think something like that would impact gavin newsom's future political aspirations? because obviously people think at some point he's going to run for president. reporter: that's the chance he's going to be taking here. if he's running for president in two years, he is going to be ok because it's probably going to take them a year at least to get this thing up and going and probably a couple of years after that to see how it goes. but he's willing to take a shot at this. some people say it's windowdressing. some people say it is substantive change. we are going to see what happens because it's right here on our doorstep, san quentin. kristen: thank you. larry: a little background on san quentin, california's oldest present. construction began in 1852. prisoners worked on building it and slept on a nearby prison ship until it was complete in 1854. both male and female prisoners were incarcerated there until 1933. and how's the state's only gas chamber and death row since 1938. the last execution was 2006.
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we told you about the moratorium. newsom announced the moratorium in 2019. 2022, he began transferring inmates sentenced to death to other prisons. the death chamber at san quentin is being dismantled. it is a well-known present, housing a number of infamous prisoners, including charles manson, richard ramirez, scott peterson, etc., merle and dr. denny trail. kristen: elizabeth holmes,back in court today . the excitement before today's opening arguments. larry: and the rush to get power back on after thousands of customers have been in the dark for days. kristen: plus the st. patrick's day party got off to a very early start in the north bay. the celebration, coming up.
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kristen: back in a federal courthouse in san jose. the former ceo wants a judge to delay her prison sentence while her case is an appeal -- on appeal. larry: zach fuentes today and there was a dispute before arguments were underway. reporter: taking the same route she's made for several years now, elizabeth holmes made her way back to the courthouse in san jose, the same place where her trial took place, convicted in january of 2022 on four counts of defrauding investors for running her failed blood testing startup.
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sentenced to 11 years in prison in order to turn herself in, she is asking interest to delay her senses while she appeal the conviction. a woman tried to serve her papers while she walked in. she let them fall to the sidewalk. crors cil case. nobody spoke to cameras outside the court. inside, things got active before court even began. everyone waited for the judge to walk in, and a man walked through the gallery while we were sitting to approach homes with papers. it is unknown what the documents said or if that had a connection to the woman outside who tried to serve holmes. the man tried to escape and to go near her mother. agent held him back and took him out of the building. once court began, he was a chinese and the defense -- u.s. attorneys and the defense began arguing. this is in the judge says he will likely make the first week in april. the hearing turned to the requested delay for the a prison sentence as she appeals.
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attorneys say the sentence should be delayed because she's the mother of two small children. one of them a newborn. they say holmes has plenty of family support in the u.s. we spoke to him about those once. >> she says i want time to bond with the kids. i don't want to make them be punished for something i have done. there's really no harm in allowing this delay to occur. but the government is saying, we gave you that time, and time is up. reporter: federal prosecutors say she is a flight risk after booking a one-way ticket in january of 2022 to mexico following her conviction. attorneys spent time arguing whether the ticket purchase points to her being a flight risk. her defense attorney says she booked a one-way ticket ahead of the conviction hoping she would be acquitted and added she may have driven back home. u.s. attorneys argued otherwise. she remains out on bail while the judge makes his decision. it's expected to be given the first week of april. kristen: the family of a navy veteran who died while being restrained by antioch
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police is asking the court to change his death certificate. the family recorded video of the incident. the coroner determined angelo quinto died from excited delirium and drug intoxication. but an independent autopsy says he died from association, while he was being restrained -- asphyxiation, while he was being restrained. >> he should have been alive celebrating with us. but instead we are here trying to expose the truth. kristen: california's attorney general is investigating his death. the district attorney's decision not to file charges against the officers. abc seven news was told today that would consider changing its charging position if it receives relevant new information. larry: the international criminal court says it has issued an arrest warrant for russian president vladimir for war crimes, in connection with his alleged involvement in abductions of children from ukraine. this comes as china's president
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is preparing for a weekend visit to russia. an apparent show of support for putin. kristen: the weekend is here. we are starting out on a nice, sunny note. larry: it is so nice. we shoul and do the news with her. meteorologist: there's plenty of room here on the roof and it is so lovely out here. really comfortable right now. a mix of sunshine and high clouds. why not? the wind is not terribly strong. we are up just about everywhere. anywhere from 1-5 degrees. it is definitely a milder end to the workweek. if you are stepping out on the st. patrick's day -- this st. patrick's day, it is going to be nice. high clouds and sunshine before the sun sets. holding off later on as we head toward the 8 p.m., mostly cloudy. temperatures dropping into the mid-40's to low 50's.
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overall, looking nice. you can see all those high clouds streaming in from the south beach camera, you can see some blue sky mixing in, temperatures in the mid 60's from oakland to san francisco. we've already seen temperatures in the upper 60's to low 70's. oakland 64, 67 san jose and santa clara. it is filtered sunshine outside. upper 60's in santa rosa. fairfield, 71, 69 napa, 61 livermore. you can see the clouds are stacked up, but there is some to be found. sunny in the morning. mostly cloudy and mild for the afternoon. rain sunday morning. scattered showers later in the afternoon. wet and wendy toward -- windy towards next week. temperatures will be in the 30's and 40's tomorrow, some patchy fog around and higher clouds in the morning. tomorrow afternoon, you will notice how mild it is. 70 degrees from livermore
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to san jose to fremont. 69 santa rosa, 65 san raphael, francisco, 65 oakland. the clouds will thicken up as the day goes on. sunday you will notice in the morning you start to see some rain will begin, light to moderate intensity. towards 8 a.m., still light to moderate showers across the region and turning more spotty after the lunch hour. you will notice it winds down sunday night in terms of rainfall totals. this system, about a 10th of an inch to a half an inch for most of you. there will be a few locations picking up just 6/10 of an inch. atmospheric river will stay south of the bay area but we are going to get wet whether. monday the rainfall begins, the intensity picks up on tuesday with wind. we are expecting winds lasting anywhere from 25-40 mph. certainly more mountains no as you will notice in california -- mountain snow, as you will
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notice in california. the accuweather seven-day forecast, mild and clouding up tomorrow. you have the opportunity to get outside. sunday, a level one with rain turning to showers. a one for monday with a storm coming in. some showers continuing on wednesday. at this point, it's going to be cooler as well. we make the switch drastically from saturday to sunday in terms of temperatures. even into monday. kristen: thank you, sandia. harriet richardson made her final public comments today before she steps down. she and the state senators presented what they titled the bart hall of shame, calling them up for fraud, conduct of interest, and train constellations. bart drafted several contracts in 2012 and 2013 to produce 775 cars. . he said only 306 of those are currently operating. richardson explained her reason
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for stepping down early. >> bart has to change the culture from the top down and set tone at the top that we don't want waste an fraud. -- and fraud. of the inspector general identifies it, we are going to cooperate with him in weeding that out. kristen: she resigned months before her four-year term was supposed to and. larry: you have probably heard about increasing catalytic converter thefts. a carfax report came out with the top 10 cars at risk. the toyota prius was number one followed by the tacoma and the camry. the ford f series truck was number six followed by the econoline and explorer. el cerrito residents can now get free catalytic converter edging kits. they were purchased as an effort to prevent future thefts. kristen: inside open ai, the company behind the
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chat but that everyone is talking about. larry: and a different kind of technology could stop shoplifting. the question is, is everyday pressures can feel overwhelming it's okay to feel stressed, anxious, worried, or frustrated. it's normal. with calhope's free and secure mental health resources, it's easy to get the help you and your loved ones need when you need it the most. call our warm line at (833) 317-4673 or live chat at calhope.org today.
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larry: an abc news exclusive taking us into artificial intelligence. kristen: the ceo of open ai is giving you insight. rebecca jarvis sat down with
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him. reporter: i spoke to the open ai ceo inside their san francisco headquarters on the day that they released their latest version, gpt4, which can write essays and speeches, offer logical reasoning, analyze pictures, and even take tests outperforming most humans, scoring in the 90th percentile on the bar exam and 700 and the sat math portion. what changes because of ai? >> part of the exciting thing here is we get continually surprised by the creative power of all of society. reporter: that would surprise, it's both exhilarating as well as terrifying, i'm sure. >> i think people should be happy that we are a little bit scared of this. reporter: you are a little bit scared. >> a little bit. reporter: if i said i were not, you should either not trust me or be very unhappy in this job. reporter: the chief technology officer showed us how it can help with your taxes.
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we input information for a typical family of three. so, your copying tax law -- you're copying tax law. and within seconds, the standard deduction. which was correct. it even identified a picture of a dog and was able to recognize the dog was probably hungry. watch as we take a photo of what is inside this refrigerator. the technology analyzes was there. >> i see that you have some bread, some mozzarella cheese, tomatoes, mayonnaise. you can make a simple grilled cheese sandwich with these ingredients. you can make a strawberry toast by spreading the raspberry on the bread and topping it with sliced strawberries. perfect. reporter: providing a recipe. what is this also a recipe for something else? >> on the one hand, there's all this potential for good. on the other hand, there is a huge number of unknowns that could turn out very badly for society. reporter: how confident are you
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that what you've built won't lead to those outcomes? >> well, we will adapt it. reporter: as negative things occur? >> for sure. the current systems are still weak, relatively -- relative to what we expect to create. putting the system out now, learning as much as much as we can is how we avoid the more dangerous scenarios. reporter: is there a kill switch? >> any engineer can just say, we are going to disable this for now. reporter: the model itself, can it take the place of that human? could it become more powerful than that human? >> that waits until someone gives it an input. this is a tool that is very much needed with control. kristen: like every tool that is ever revolutionized, it can propel us forward and it can also hurt us, right? it depends on whose hands it is in and the parameters we give it. larry: skynet activated. [laughter] one thing is interesting. i saw a guy on twitter
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who basically asked it to start a business for him with instructions and a logo. he is up and running now. it took like an hour. kristen: these are my skills, these are my funds. larry: yeah. he created a business out of nothing. interesting. kristen: coming up -- there is something on the horizon again. another big storm on the way. for thousands in the sotheby, the power is still out. larry: more fallout from the collapse of silicon valley bank and what could still lie ahead.
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>> building a better bay area. moving forward. finding solutions. this is abc7 news. kristen: another beautiful day today. but that is about to change unless your definition of beauty
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is different from larry's. larry: i like warm and sunny. sorry. sandy patel is up on the roof. it doesn't look super sunny, but it looks pleasant. meteorologist: it is absolutely pleasant up here. if you like sunshine and warm weather like larry, we really have it right now. it's just so nice. it will continue for the first half of your weekend, with high clouds that you are looking at on live doppler 7. the system over the pacific is going to bring us wet weather. you will notice high clouds failed to bring the sunshine. no rain on the radar yet -- filtering the sunshine. no rain on the radar yet. 50's and 60's, still those clouds around. tomorrow, some fog around, temperatures start out comfortable in the 40's primarily. by the afternoon, 60's and 70's again. here comes the rain sunday. it is going to be primarily a morning event, then scattered or spotty showers for the afternoon hours. a winter storm watch already
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posted for the sierra sunday morning through wednesday morning, about 5500 feet. heavy snow is possible and it is going to be slowly -- snow levels will be lowering. expect gusty winds with heavier snow heading into next week. larry: thank you. pg&e cruise, taking advantage of this dry weather, as they work to repair several powerlines, many of them caused by downed trees. take a look at the outage map. they are still clearly -- there is still clearly a lot of work to do. most of the outages are along the 101 and 280 corridors in san mateo and santa clara counties. kristen: the south bay has been the hardest hit nearly 4500 customers are still impacted. larry: dustin dorsey was there as crews continue their work to try to restore electricity. reporter: five crews, 20 plus pg&e workers, multiple trucks and two 200 foot cranes. a massive response in cupertino as thousands have been without power for days. >> we have dozens of cre
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contractors, support across the state. it is all hands on deck to get power restored. the hardest hit area is territory. reporter: power, out since tuesday. these neighbors have not been able to go home. >> we just came by to make a decision to stay another day. in the hot because we can't depend on the power being on until late today. reporter: they are staying in sunnyvale because all nearby hotels are sold out. >> the hotel is full. and it's full of refugeesfrom power . from various communities. reporter: the culprit? a common suspect that created a much less common amount of damage. the powerful winds pushed down a tree in one of these backyards pulling these lines down with it. that created a domino effect. seven pg&e poles were snapped. this was tuesday. days later, signs of damage
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remained. the replacements were prepped on the ground by workers before being lifted high into the air, carried over homes before being placed back onto the ground. >> dear working 16 hours -- they are working 16 hours and get eight hours to rest. we have had storm after storm this year, this is the 13th a major storm have experienced. some crews have been working in eureka. reporter: they intend to stay as long as it takes to bring back power to the neighborhood. while it has been inconvenient for them, they say the community is grateful. >> god bless the folks for doing the best they can and in a very awkward and frustrating situation for everybody. reporter: dustin dorsey, abc7 news. larry: workers are racing to remove tons of dirt from a hill threatening to destroy several homes in santa rosa. at least two homes have been red tagged on corporate drive. that's where mud from a hillside
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has destroyed fencing and could push against homes. bulldozers are trying to move the mud before the oncoming storm arrives and creates even more danger. kristen: yes somebody national park will reopen tomorrow after storms caused significant damage and cost the iconic park to close for three whole weeks. monza, yosemite valley will reopen 24 hours a day. -- monday, yosemite valley will reopen 24 hours a day. keep track of the changing conditions and access the same live doppler 7 available on demand on the abc7 bay area app wherever you stream. we'll be right back. larry: actually, we will continue with new developments in the ongoing banking collapse. filing for bankruptcy protection. kristen: this comes one week after regulators took over the bank. reno has the latest. reporter: as the banking panic rapidly deepens, president biden
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is now stepping in with an urgent call, saying congress must act to impose tougher penalties for senior bank executives whose mismanagement contributed to their institutions' failing. lenders raced to save first republic bank, now on the verge of collapse. >> what are you doing with people investing with you? you make it sound like you have everything covered. but at the same time it feels like they are just playing with our cash. reporter: silicon valley bank failed a week ago. its parent company now filing for chapter 11 bankruptcy. >> the bankruptcy helps the parent company find new owners for other business lines but are not under federal control, which include things like investment banks and management firm. reporter: the securities and exchange commission now conducting independent investigations into the failure. the fbi's early focus is on silicon valley bank's leadership and whether there is evidence of possible insider trading. on broadway, many productions,
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reportedly scrambling after the closure of signature bank, a medium-sized bank used by as many as half of all broadway shows. >> now thankfully the government has come to the rescue and said they will make the depositors whole, some are saying there's a bit of a delay in accessing the money but they will be able to get it. reporter: janet yellen this week reassured the senate committee the bank systems in the u.s. are sound and resilient. saying taxpayer money is not being spent to ensure deposits in the now failed silicon valley and signature banks. larry: coming up -- an effort to stop shoplifters stirring up a lot of controversy.
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unresolved symptoms? heart failure and seemingly unrelated symptoms like carpal tunnel syndrome... ...shortness of breath... ...irregular heartbeat... ...and lower back pain could mean something more serious called attr-cm a rare, underdiagnosed disease
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that worsens over time, so it's important to recognize the signs. sound like you? call your cardiologist and ask about attr-cm. kristen: are you ready for the four at 4:00? it's been three years since the bay area went into lockdown, due to the coronavirus. the shelter-in-place order was issued a few days later. the initial order was expected to last only a few weeks. we all know how that went. weeks turned into months, turned into years. millions work from home, took online classes, and had therefore delivered. a lot has gone back to normal. but a lot of things are stuck. thoughts, larry? larry: i can't believe it's three years. i'm hoping that we are over the final hurdles and we can get back
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to whatever normal is. you just don't know. but if you would've told me before all this occurred that ther wo something that shuts down the whole world, i couldn't even imagine what that would've been. kristen: karina, thoughts? karina: i remember thinking, tomorrow i'm not going to be able to go to a restaurant. the thought of a -- of not being able to go to a restaurant or a movie, i remember thinking this is so crazy. then we all kind of get -- then we all kind of had to get used to this new normal by doing some interviews. that was a bit challenging for a while. getting adjusted to the normal that became our normal for a couple of years. i remember that was a really weird transition time. larry: who misses the giant zoom calls with family members?
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kristen: that's actually kind of nice. karina: i had a fun time doing that. larry: it was good for a couple weeks. [laughter] sorry, family. kristen: i will say the one thing that's changed for me because of the pandemic -- if i really want to do something, i'm just going to do it. just do it now. because you never know if life is going to change and then you won't be able to. larry: well said. so many have been impacted by this. free food is stirring up issues in los angeles. dozens of deliveries have been showing up in homes that did not order the foods. some as many as 30 unwanted deliveries. some say they are just eating the food. one man says he's eaten so many men chicken sandwiches, it's enough to haunted his dreams. [laughter] uber says it is looking into this. like swatting with food. it could be ingenious. let's just say i order food
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for kristin and she knows. when itrrivesshi don'evw, larrys only a problem if the pizza shows up and you have to pay? but if the person had to prepay, you are like, what's the problem? meteorologist: yeah. i think whoever's doing this, either as a computer glitch, or a nice gesture on the part of a good samaritan, saying, here, let me feed the neighborhood. larry: the guy got 30 sandwiches. i don't think that is a good samaritan [laughter] karina: i won't complain if somebody wants to send free food to my house. [laughter] meteorologist: but there are so many different theories as to why this is happening. it might be a marketing ploy. some people interviewed about this think it is bored rich kids sending people free food. hey, rich kids, our address here at kgo is --
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[laughter] kristen: high prices may not be the only thing you have to worry about on your next shopping trip. someone may be watching you. we have a look at what's happening. reporter: a supermarket's use of facial recognition, raising privacy concerns. the sign posted outside a fairway store in new york city reads "customers' biometric data may be collected." >> using a scan of our eye or face or fingerprint. reporter: saying in a statement that technology is helping the store reduced retail crime. shoplifting has surged across the country. the number of shoplifting complaints in new york surged to more than 63,000 last year. 45% more than the year before. dozens of retailers are reportedly using facial recognition to catch repeat offenders and more entertainment venues are using this will that ticket gates including firstenergy stadium in cleveland, city field in new york, and the rose bowl in
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pasadena. >> it is difficult to find a pin in a haystack in a large venue or event. i think he will continue to see the technology distributed. reporter: the owner of madison square garden has been under fire for using facial recognition to identify and remove people. those removed include lawyers involved in litigation against msg. >> our law enforcement, there are huge positives. on the negative side, the concerning side, we've got a real challenge around how the data is utilized. especially if put in the wrong hands. larry: hmm. what do you think? kristen: i mean -- i think i'm maybe on one end of this. but i'm not that worried about it. larry: big brother watching you? kristen: not that worried. larry: i've been trying to get people to pay attention to this for a long time. i want to close up. ladies? karina: we are used to it
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at this point. we open a bar phones -- open up our phones, clear at the airport. i think it is the way of the future whether we like it or not. meteorologist: i'm not too concerned. i'm with both kristin and karina. we are already utilizing some of this. is just going to happen more and more. larry: as long as it doesn't turn into mission impossible, where they can make a false eye that can get into your stuff. kristen: chatgpt. [laughter] larry: i told you big brother is watching you. [laughter] a new study found having a dog is associated with a greater chance of having a sleep disorder or overall trouble sleeping. but they are so cute. while people who have cats have a higher chance of experiencing leg jerks in the night? i don't know. [laughter] i just read, ok? it appears in the journal
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human animal interactions. i know this for a fact, my daughter's to cats -- two c jump on her head when they want to wake her up like a 4:00 a.m. when they want to play. that's why she dropped them off at our house for three months. [laughter] kristen: oh, no. larry: she is sleeping better now. kristen: you are not? larry: i'm not. meow meow. kristen: do you experience this? karina: i don't have pets or kids so i get plenty of sleep. [laughter] larry: wow. meteorologist: but i think -- i just think that there are pros and cons. pets keep you active. they get you out for a walk every day. it's just a little con. >> we have a bunny and the bunny does not do anything to keep us up. my kids are grown, so i don't have to worry about them keeping me up. i do sleep like a rock. i'm not concerned. but i feel for larry, with the daughter dropping off
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the cats. that means you are not getting much sleep. l[laughter] larry: but they are adorable. we love them. [laughter] that is it for the four at 4:00.
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receive a $7,500 ev lease bonus or 4.99% apr on a new volvo electric vehicle. larry: a lot of people wearing green today, they saint patrick started got started today early. kristen: they hosted the annual parade. lena howland takes a look
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at the history. reporter: led by a single bagpiper and a sea of green -- >> this is the shortest parade in america -- longest shortest parade in america. reporter: all before the sun came up. what was once a drunken stumble out of a bar, later turned into a citywide st. patrick's day tradition. now going on 27 years. >> it started with some folks rolling out of one of the bars in the morning, cruising around the plaza. now it's been adopted as one of our most treasured community traditions. reporter: the parade grand marshall says it is traditions like these that make up the fabric of healdsburg. >> it is so much fun. in the small town -- and a small town of usa. >> they celebrate everything. they go all out for everything. but st. paddy's day is the one everybody says, you can't miss this. i was like, ok, i'll get up early. reporter: an irish tradition complete. he wore speedo's
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freezing conditions just for the occasion. >> everyone putting on their green where, just having some good community fun. [laughter] >> i never saw the guy with irish underwear. >> i would give it a 10. reporter: all with the goal of waking the entire town up. including those staying at a hotel overlooking the downtown plaza. >> it is absolutely wonderful. it is a good vibe. reporter: lena howlande, abc7 news. larry: how many speedo's are appropriate when you have an atmospheric river? [laughter] kristen: that person might've been a little gold. larry: that is why you doubled up. [laughter] meteorologist: i know all about it. the national weather service is saying an atmospheric river going south of the peoria next week monday through wednesday, they are saying we don't have an atmospheric river. go figure. we do have high clouds right now
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heading into tomorrow afternoon. another mild day. low 60's to low 70's. clouds thickened up throughout the day after patchy fog. next week, here comes a ring. -- comes the rain. about a half an inch to just over an inch. the mountains will pick up more. wet for your sons and windy -- for your sunday and windy as we start a new season. larry: enjoy tomorrow. [laughter] another superhero is returning to the big screen. ♪ >> this is very personal. kristen: it is personal. the family ties in the
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(box thuds) (water boils) (packet tears) (tea bag clanks) (water pours) - listening to people that drink bigelow tea is so important to my family, because making that perfect cup, it's the reason we do what we do hi, guys! - hi! - hey! - so what are you guys drinking? - constant comment. - when i'm drinking bigelow tea, it's just a moment for me. it's just me time. - that's what a cup of tea is. - it is. - a moment for you, someone you love.
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- aw! (customer sighs) - it tastes really great. - yes! it was always bigelow tea - wow! that's what my family hopes for. cheers. - cheers. (bright upbeat music)
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kristen: coming up tonight at 8 p.m., shark tank followed by 2020 at 9 p.m., then don't miss abc 7 news at 11 p.m. larry: let's go back to karina nova. kristen: she's here with entertainment news for us. karina: this is exciting. movie flies back into the box office this weekend. george pennock has a look at shazam. reporter: zachary levi puts on the red suit again to star in the sequel to shazam: fury of the gods. how does one s
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>> oh. my. [laughter] reporter: the daughters of atlas show up looking for something stolen from them long ago. and that means more action, more monsters,, more adventure. the key word here, more. ♪ [laughter] >> i just threw a truck at a dragon. i love my life. reporter: the kids were young for the first one, some of the content will feel a little older and mature, and we want to freak people out a little bit. there should be mistakes involved. reporter: and some comedy. >> i'm not super old like you. but have experiences you don't have. because i've seen all the fast and furious movies, lady. reporter: you will see the city of philadelphia take quite a beating. >> we try to save the city. we just did it very poorly. a greek goddess came from another dimension and started to justly waste to the city.
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i apologize. we could not stop them fast enough. it will all get fixed. don't worry. >> you are very menacing. i just want you to know that. reporter: he says he is in the best place he's ever been in this life -- in his life. he talked about healing from years of anxiety and depression in his 2022 book "radical love." now he lives within men's gratitude. >> i get to wonderful -- to talk to wonderful people like you and to wonderful movies that will be all over the world. pinch me! reporter: it is rated pg-13, and theaters now. abc7 news. kristen: thanks, george. there you have it. something to do this weekend. abc7 news is streaming get the you want, wherever you are.
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abc 7 is a 5:00 is next. stay right here. [captioning performed by the national captioning institute, which is responsible for its caption content and accuracy. visit ncicap.org]
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ask your doctor about every-other-month cabenuva. with every-other-month cabenuva, i'm good to go. >> building a better bay area, moving forward, finding solutions. this is abc 7 news. >> if san quentin can do it, it can be done anywhere else. once a mine is stretched, it never goes back to its original form. this is about stretching people's mind about what we are capable of doing and reducing recidivism in this state. >> transforming san quentin from a state prison to a rehabilitation center. ama: governor newsom his plan to change san quentin including its new name and new mission. our reporter's life now outside the prison with details. >> this prison once notorious killers like a charles manson is getting a complete
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overhaul when it comes to prison

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