tv ABC7 News 600PM ABC March 27, 2023 6:00pm-6:59pm PDT
6:00 pm
her own prosecutors. >> she has resigned in protest and far from the only one. in the past few months, she has been on the job and there have been many protests and resignations. >> first, we want to check on the weather with another system heading our way. >> that's right. live doppler 7. clouds gathering. a few sprinkles in the north showing up. as we widened this picture, a level two storm heading in our direction, moderate in intensity, deepening off the coast, and the potential for thunderstorms tomorrow and wednesday. let us go hour-by-hour and i will show you when the rain moves in. 11:00, across the north bay, spreading as the commute begins at 5:00 a.m. in the north bay with rain, the peninsula,
6:01 pm
coastline, south bay, east bay by 11:00 a.m. not only the rain and wind, but the potential for downed trees and minor flooding. this is a level two, so expect downpours, flooding on roadways, windy, potential power outages thunder and snow chance across the peaks. high roadway flooding, downed trees, outages, rock moderate. i will have a full look at the time line a moment. >> thanks. this comes as many are still recovering from the last event to knock out power to hundreds of thousands of people around the bay area. pg&e says the soil is still saturated and it will probably cause another threat in terms of bound trees and power lines. we have that story. >> it has been nearly two weeks
6:02 pm
since this part of debate area saw extended power outages. some people in places like the saratoga neighborhood were without powers for days. >> tuesday through thursday, the forecast was the power would not be on until 10:00 that night. >> though the rain added to challenges, pg&e said it was the high wind that cause the most promise. >> at one point because it was so windy, the wind exceeded 90 miles per hour, and crews had to stand down. >> they said the peninsula and south bay where the hardest hit areas. >> what we saw in santa clara county two weeks ago was historic. we had over 140,000 customers at and over 400 outage locations at one point. > they're expecting to be hit as hard again because many of the impacts are still lingering. >> the soil not getting a chance
6:03 pm
to dry and it is more likely we will see trees falling impacting infrastructure and disrupting service. >> they have removed more than 1000 trees and are positioning for later on when the storm sets in. they remind everyone to stay prepared. >> power lines can come down. stay away. call 911. they could be energized. if you're using a generator, make sure it is properly installed in a well ventilated area. charge your funds ahead of time. if you have medications and you need to evacuate, make sure you have an emergency plan ready. >> they say they have a plan and some art keeping a positive -- are keeping a positive outlook. >> we need the rain. i am not worried about it. >> we saw windows blown out during the last storm and crews were trying to prevent this from happening again. we saw crews cleaning and
6:04 pm
checking windows today. it is a good reminder to make sure there are no cracks in windows and to secure objects on balconies ahead of the storm. keep track of the rain anytime with the live doppler 7 radar, on demand on the bay area app, download it wherever you stream. now to that exclusive fighting exclusive, concerns about -- i team exclusive, concerns raised by prosecutors. >> we have been looking into the issues surrounding the new district attorney in alameda county. >> price is shaking things up with each passing gate and were seeing new information about plea deals that favor criminals with victims feeling like they have not received justice. the court records tell the story , april 20 9, 2018, sunday is 2:00 p.m., cesar garcia s
6:05 pm
miles per hour northbound in a red sedan like this one and makes an unsafe root lane change, side swiping a car, and several people suffered serious injuries in the crash including a pregnant woman who lost her eight-month-old fetus edits the result. garcia ditches the car and tries to report it stolen. a former alameda county district attorney nancy o'malley charged him with felony leaving the scene of an accident and felony reckless driving with serious injury, but this month, new da pamela price offered a deal. garcia pled no contest to vandalism and got released with time served just one year in county jail. >> pamela price and her administration are putting criminal suspects before victims. >> charlie weis and bomb resigned from the alameda county das office effective march 17 because "i no longer feel capable of a filling mike nicco and ethical duties as a prosecutor under this administration." >> victim still have rights and
6:06 pm
those are being ignored and flagrantly disregarded and it is really sad and hard to watch it he did not want to be part of that. >> the handling of that case gets worse. i have learned through multiple sources that the office did not inform the woman who lost the baby about the plea deal or reduced sentence until after it was done. the victim is devastated. sources inside the das office say it is state bulb at a victim be informed about a coming plea bargain and have a chance to speak at sentencing. neither of those happened. the deadly hit and run case was turned simply and to vandalism. >> white was that the appropriate charge? what a santa clara university professor specializing in criminal law and procedure and said, prices on staff pointed me to him as someone who would defend her policies. >> >> that is not a political entity pamela price kind of thing, but that is where it is yeah, why did you do that?
6:07 pm
>> this victim felt bad about this. i feel for her. she is thinking my baby was only worth a vandalism charge? >> yeah. right. right. >> i agree with you on that. i wanted to ask her about this case and more but she refuses to be >. >> my vision is to serve alameda county as a minister of justice. >> after her january, one of her first directives to attorneys and staff as they must address her as madame d.a. price. >> we will be prosecutors. we will use our power to change lives and not destroy them. she >> released his memo instructing prosecutors to stop using sentencing enhancements which bring higher prison terms. >> she is saying we will get somebody on armed robbery. that is what we are going to charge them with. we're going to charge them with
6:08 pm
enhancement, a going enhancement, gang enhancement, things like that, unless it is warranted, and it has to be extraordinary circumstances. >> that is impacting high-profile cases. prices throwing out special circumstances in a case with three new victims, including a nine-year-old from 1988. >> it means there is no additional punishment for the fact that he is a serial killer by definition. and that he committed those murders, at least motivated in one or more by sexual assault. >> the parents of a toddler killed by a stray bullet during a gun battle are concerned price will throw out gang enhancements in their case. >> and do it as a knee-jerk reaction without proper information is i think sad for the family and i think can result in injustice and can result in more people getting her more gun battles down the freeway, right? >> last thursday, a judge rejected the plea deal for a
6:09 pm
person accused of three murders and facing 75 years to life in prison if convicted. price offered 15 years on a single voluntary manslaughter charge. >> what that tells the community is three young black men were murdered and each of their lives is worth five years each. >> all this has prompted a push to recall price, including from victims rights groups. usage she should be recalled that she said she should be recalled? do you still believe that? i >> still believe what i believe in. i do not see any change. >> unofficial recall needs 92,000 signatures. she lost her son to a stray bullet during a 2010 gang shooting. no charges were filed, even though she knows the identity of the killer. >> it is a term at loss for me. i can imagine if you have somebody who is already in jail and they get a free pass when your loved one did not get a free pass. >> veteran prosecutors are not
6:10 pm
getting a free pass under pamela price. she made her intentions clear in this speech two months ago to an anti-police project rally posted to instagram. >> yes, it is a new day. most of them folks is gone. i'm working on the rest. ok. >> i find it hard to believe that every prosecutor in that office is no good. >> right. that is what it feels like she believes that we are criminals, racists, but she does not support who we are as humans in the career choices we have made and dedicated our lives to. >> we have confirmed that pamela price has placed seven attorneys on leave, fired one come at 10 resigned, four ret expense prosecutors gone out of an office with 135 attorneys. are you having an exit
6:11 pm
interview? >> no. if you had >> a chance to tell pamela price something, what would you tell her? >> i would employ her to see beyond herself and implore her to learn about what we do and why we do it, because if you're going to head an office where you have ethical and legal duties to uphold and you need to know what those are and you need to abide by them. >> charlie weis and bock has started working in the san francisco das office. i have placed a standing request for interview with d.a. price, i will talk with her anyplace, anytime. i have more leads to follow on upcoming plea deals. >> let's hope she takes you up on that. thank you. dan: let's move on. breaking news on the story we first brought you at 5:00 san jose police said a short time ago they made an arrest and a hit and run the killed woman as she walked her daughter and their dog sunday night. earlier today police said they
6:12 pm
found the vehicle thanks to a tip and by using automated license plate reader cameras. it happened just before 7:00 on blossom road near the avenue. one person died and her dog was killed as well. one person suffered minor injuries. this may be just the beginning of a ransomware attack gripping oakland's computer system putting employee data at risk, hackers posting there is more to come, our reporter spoke with oakland's police officers association without this and they are threatening to take legal action against the city? >> that's right. they said the mayor and city officials have stonewalled each of their attempts to get any update on this ransomware attack. a data leak our sources tell us is impacting thousands of employees and residents. >> the city has ignored
6:13 pm
stonewalled its own employees. it is pathetic. >> he is the president of the oakland police officers association. six weeks after their network was hacked, he got in email. >> it said i am sorry. we have lost all your information, but you get a year of credit monitoring. >> the city provided a number to help those impacted. was he called. >> your information has been compromised. that is it. >> he said that is the most information he got from the city. they sent two letters. march 6 and march 20 both attempts to get any update on the scope of the attack and the number of people impacted and how the city is working to prevent it from happening again. have you heard any response? >> no. no. multiple times. nothing. >> city administrator? >> nothing. >> did you get a response to the
6:14 pm
email? >> nothing. i would like to say you have our been our main conduit of information to city employees. >> even for us, getting answers has not been easy. we had to show up at a press conference discussing housing to get any update on ransomware. even then we got cut off. >> housing questions, i do have a ransomware question. can i still ask? >> no. that is three. thank you. i have been vocal in regards to the different outlets i have shown up to and given an update. >> we have not seen that or anything. >> he says police officers have had credit cards opened in their name while other employees are saying they cannot file police reports properly because the systems are so bound. >> this is something we have inherited. >> not responding to letters from your own employees is not an inherited problem.
6:15 pm
it is your own. >> we've reached out to the mayor again today for an interview to discuss these concerns and have yet to hear back. we did hear back from a city spokesperson who said they have received the letter and are looking forward to meeting with them, adding they are working to balance their commitment to transparency with the need to protect the integrity of this investigation. more to come. dan: ok. thanks. >> scientists can't explain why colon cancer is rising among young adults. coming up, a cautionary tale from a woman when she was diagnosed at 37 years old. >> how about you get it together and come up with a plan to fix this? dan: more employee data is the end ransomware attack. now one group is going on the offensive. we will follow that story
6:18 pm
ama: march is national colon cancer awareness month. dan: the recommendation is to begin screening at 45, but in some cases it can and should be done earlier. ama: we have more on why this type of cancer is now being diagnosed and younger people. >> colon cancer is the deadliest type of cancer among men 20 to 49 and women are not far behind in that age group. we know that screening and getting a colonoscopy is essential in that message was drilled into older adults and it has worked, right?
6:19 pm
the number of cases and deaths is down. the message from these people is, do not wait. >> at 31 weeks pregnant on my husband's birthday. >> not only pregnant, but 37 years old when she was told by doctors that she had stage four colon cancer. >> i was cared for. my baby was cared for. i started chemo the next week. i did three rounds to start treatment while i was pregnant. all i could think about was i want to be there for that baby. thank goodness i responded very well to treatment. the tumors shrunk with the chemo. i delivered my baby by c-section about three weeks early. >> her son levi is a healthy boy. after surgery and more chemo, there is no sign of cancer. she still has two get a scan every three months, but some
6:20 pm
cool cancers are more aggressive. case in point, mariana, who was pregnant and very young. >> she was diagnosed at 37. she would not have been eligible for a colonoscopy. >> she remembers her sister being in great pain. >> they made the decision to deliver the baby, clear the sepsis, removed the portion of her: affected by cancer. >> despite that, she died one year after being diagnosed. there are a number of risk factors for colon cancer. >> we are exposed to a diet higher in sugar and processed foods. >> a sedentary place but i'll -- lifestyle and obesity are also factors, but none of those applied to the two women. >> she ate well and took care of herself. >> amanda is a marathon runner. she advises everyone to talk about their symptoms. >> they can't be afraid to talk
6:21 pm
about their bowel movements. they can't let their doctors diminish the symptoms. >> blood in the stool. never ring of the stool. unexplained deficiency. >> one dr. with center treated both amanda and mariana. another of her patients is a patient with no symptoms but a routine blood test found elevated liver enzymes. i was told i had stage four colon cancer which had metastasized to my liver, and i had 45 tumors on my left side and 12 tumors on my right side and that i would likely die in three months to six months. >> that was in 2016 at the time the recommended age for colonoscopy was 50. she was only 47. >> i had an eight-year-old, you know. i did not have permission to go. >> she asked us to record her
6:22 pm
chemo session because she wants everyone to know the possible implications of not getting tested. >> total time here is eight hours to 11 hours. i am on chemo for three days every other week. >> the chemo takes a huge toll. >> low energy, vaguely nauseous, and i feel like my insides are burning. i feel hot. >> she says she is alive because of an infusion pump implanted in her abdomen which delivers the chemo directly to her liver. >> it is practically the only hospital on the west coast that does this, and implanted pump, and they feel it with me -- fill it with medicine. you think a colonoscopy is unpleasant and it takes time, i mean it is nothing compared to being on chemo the rest of your life. i think that people do not realize that it is not just a test, it is being able to be with your family.
6:23 pm
>> now, i want to mention the patient who died at 38 left behind three children. recoendecopy is5 old but if you have a family history of colon cancer you can get screened earlier. it is important. dan: vitally important. thank you. ama: ok. now to the weather. we are tracking another storm. dan: yeah, soon. sandhya: yeah, we are hours away from that storm. live doppler 7. area of low pressure spinning off the coastline intensifying. right now the activity is northern california. as we get you closer, snow over the higher terrain and rain showers at the lower elevations. locally, clouds increasing. a few sprinkles showing up, but most of this is not hitting the
6:24 pm
ground in the northern part of our viewing area, just so you know, and i hope you had a chance to enjoy the sunshine as temperatures range from the low 50's to upper 60's in places like gilroy. we made a nice rebound this afternoon. seeing blue skies from santa cruz. beautiful. low 50's. palo alto is 58. san jose. santa clara. 60. half moon bay 50°. clouds increasing towards the tower. mid 50's from santa rosa to nevada. fairfield 61. did you feel that she'll? cold this morning -- that chill? cold this morning. record low temperatures. 33. new record for oakland. half moon bay. san francisco. sfo. napa. tying records here 32 napa three b in previous years.
6:25 pm
the wind is not strong but that will be changing with the storm moving in overnight and tomorrow morning with heavy rain and gusty wind and the possibility of damage and a brief break thursday and friday. alan our exclusive impacts -- on our exclusive impact scale, level two, flooding, not just roadways, but small streams and creeks. the potential for downed trees and outages and a chance of thunderstorms along with snow on the higher peaks. we have a wind advisory that starts at 8:00 p.m. for solano county. the north bay, hills, coastline, 11:00 p.m. tonight. the rest of the yellow, 45 to 55 miles per hour. hour-by-hour. 5:00 tomorrow morning wind increasing over 30 miles per hour by 11:00 a.m. we are talking 55 mile-per-hour winds at half moon bay 43 san francisco/oakland this is why we are concerned that the ground is saturated in the wind will take countries this is a concern
6:26 pm
going into the early afternoon before the winds dial back. rain picks up at 11:00 p.m. tonight and moves into the north bay by five collecting them still in the north bay primarily with the heaviest but scattered showers elsewhere and 11:00 a.m., downpours and also seeing the rain mind shifting to the east bay ad southbay at 3:00 is the front goes through and scattered showers behind that system. still downpours wednesday morning/afternoon snow over the higher peaks, and this trend continues into the nighttime the rainfall totals .75 inches to 2 inches or more. 30/40's. windy. give yourself extra time tomorrow afternoon. 40/50's. cooler day. two tomorrow. one wednesday. the possibility of thunder tomorrow wednesday. dry thursday/friday. we have a weaker system this weekend. dan: thanks. ama:
6:29 pm
6:30 pm
6:31 pm
6:32 pm
6:33 pm
♪ building a better bay area, moving forward, finding solutions, this is abc7 news. >> these shootings and these mass shootings will continue to happen until our lawmakers step up and passed gun safety legislation. dan: anger. anguish. another deadly mass shooting at a school. new information as we hear more about the shooting. ama: the latest massacre on a u.s. school campus killed three children and three adults. the shooter shot and killed by police. we have images just in from nashville police that what they say is the shooter's car and entry point to the school. you can see the door with the window shattered. we have the latest on the investigation. >> be advised, stay out of the
6:34 pm
general area of burton hills drive road, confirmed active shooter. >> at least three young children and three staff members shot and killed at the covenant school in nashville, tennessee monday morning. police now identifying the six victims as evelyn dieckhaus, hallie scruggs, and william kinney, all nine years old. and cynthia peak, mike hill, and katherine koonce, all staffers in their 60's. the shooter has been identified as audrey elizabeth hale. they say she entered the school through outside entrance and carried two rifles and a handgun. >> we went in as soon as was safe to provide lifesaving efforts for those impacted by this incident. >> officials cite the first 911 call at the christian school for roughly 200 preschool through sixth graders came at 10:13 a.m. local time. >> multiple victims.
6:35 pm
>> 14 minutes later, seven people including the shooter was dead after metro national police say they shot and killed her. >> when the officers got to the second level, they saw a shooter , a female who was firing. the officers engaged her. she was fatally shot by responding police officers. >> students were seen holding hands, leaving their school and surrounded by law enforcement, to meet their parents and guardians. >> my son and i survived a mass shooting over the summer. i am an tennessee on vacation. >> president biden addressing it today. pres. biden: we have to do more to stop gun violence ripping our communities apart, ripping the very soul of this nation apart, and do more to protect schools that they are not turned into prisons. >> the fbi is involved in the investigation and said an officer had a wound from cut glass, but know other injuries.
6:36 pm
-- no other injuries. ama: silicon valley bank has a new owner. first citizens bank has purchased the assets, loans, and deposits. first citizens is based in raleigh, north carolina. 17 branches of svb bank will operate as silicon valley bank, a division of first citizens bank. the collapse of the bank, followed by signature bank, roiled markets and triggered a collapse and confidence among investors and depositors. dan: trains are stopped between livermore and another station following a collision with a dump truck. scott seven was over the scene on ultimate palace road in bracken road. you can see the dump truck on its side. no injuries were reported. we are working on how long it will be affected. ama: in the south bay, planned parenthood has announced a new way to test for sexually transmitted infections faster
6:37 pm
than before. our reporter explains how it aims to save lives and bridge the widening health equity gap for san jose and beyond. >> at the nation's largest planned parenthood affiliate, the debut of its first of kind technology available only here in san jose, changing the way sexually-transmitted diseases are tested. >> bringing this gold standar test to our patients means we can reduce them. >> to address the epidemic in california, they partnered with the medical technology company to install this new machine. it completely automates all steps protesting from start to finish, a step towards ending the epidemic. >> molecular testing will advances work so we can make sure patients get the appropriate diagnosis and
6:38 pm
treatments on don't suffer adverse health outcomes. >> now the process to do that has never been easier. samples are loaded into the machine, 1700 at a time, faster and a higher volume, delivering 1000 results, testing for three specific sti's to reduce false positives. >> the automation can enable high-volume testing. the design contest for three sexually-transmitted infections, enabling more testing to happen within the community. >> a community considered to beat some of the most underserved in the city. 65% of patients that below the federal poverty level while many are not insured are underinsured. they are helping to close the health equity gap. >> it plays a role in expanding access to vital health care for our most vulnerable community in many cases, our low income
6:39 pm
community, communities of color traditionally underserved. >> and hopefully save lives in the process. ama: fans make good on promise to fight back against the world's biggest ticket marketplace after the taylor swift concert fiasco. >> ed started off in the liver room where i would not let him dunk on the who. dan: a big march madness moment for one native. hear how it started from the family of a college basketball standout who has a very bright
6:40 pm
that checks all the boxes. it's all here with the comcast business complete connectivity solution. peace of mind with cyberthreat security. the power of the largest, fastest reliable network. plus, save up to 75% a year with comcast business mobile. the complete connectivity solution. from the company powered by the next generation 10g network. get started for just $49 a month. and ask about an $800 prepaid card. comcast business. powering possibilities™.
6:41 pm
♪ alex! mateo, hey how's business? great. you know that loan has really worked wonders. that's what u.s. bank is for. and you're growing in california? -yup, socal, norcal... -monterey? -all day. -a branch in ventura? that's for sure-ah. atms in fresno? fres-yes. encinitas? yes, indeed-us. anaheim? big time. more guacamole? i'm on a roll-ay. how about you? i'm just visiting. u.s. bank. ranked #1 in customer satisfaction with retail banking in california by j.d. power.
6:42 pm
dan: taylor swift fans are getting their day in court after the botched release of her concert tickets was suing ticketmaster over tickets for the tour. about 300 people claimed the company engaged in fraud, price-fixing, and antitrust violations. ticketmaster apologize for the problems, saying it suffered a staggering number of bot attacks. ama: one player helped to team to the final four yesterday.
6:43 pm
we talked today with his family. >> cheers, pride, and joy this native and saint agnes is alone sealed san diego state's first ever ticket to the ncaa final four. >> oh my gosh. watching the game yesterday i have never been so nervous. >> it was a wild end to the game. in the final seconds, the free throw gave the aztecs the win. back home, his mom and dad today still overwhelmed, fighting back tears of joy. >> it is too many emotions. her to explain right now. it -- hard to explain right now. it is overwhelming. >> the moment after you saw him after the game what was that like? >> oh my god. i kissed his face a thousand times. i said you did it. you are here. >> his parents say he fell in love with basketball as a child. >> he was a small kid shooting
6:44 pm
threes. who is this kid? >> he played at st. nick nations, then san francisco -- saint agnes shifts. his family attributes this win to his strong work ethic. the early mornings and late nights practicing basketball at this >> center in marin city. >> coming up here, it's a lot of you are not this, not bap, not big enough, so anytime he is faced with the challenge and hear someone he say he can't do the challenge he is always determined to go out and prove that person wrong. >> to some, he may be seen as an underdog, but his family and friends that they do not stop believing in him and gathered for a watch party where he got his start, many in that group are planning a trip to houston this week to be there in person at the final four game, a big moment for him and his hometown of marin city. >> yeah, this is great, great for the community, great for the
6:45 pm
6:48 pm
dan: a rare beetle discovered near the home of a former governor. it is named after former governor jerry brown and his wife who opened the 2500 acre ranch to researchers. berkeley news reports that dna analysis shows it has not been observed by scientists in five decades and is a new species. ama: tough day for the oakland zoo, mourning the death of its elephant, lisa, who was humanely euthanized yesterday after chronic health issues. the zoo will be closed tomorrow because of rain. this has been quite common for the zoo this year, including a full shutdown in january. dan: that is too bad.
6:49 pm
rd.yilt' wth.a:mong sa. get ady.lives c. that will be changing quickly. we have a warning. snow. two to four snow levels lowering to 2500 tomorrow morning. this is a level two tomorrow. flooding. downed trees. outages. snow over our peaks. we are seeing sprinkles in the northern viewing area, but this is not the main system. the storm is off the coast and producing rain and snow in northern california, so less time it out towards 11:00 p.m., moving into the north bay, 5:00, downpours across the region through 11:00, and we continue with the showers for the
6:50 pm
afternoon hours with temperatures coming down in the 40's and 50's. the forecast from a two tomorrow to a one wednesday. snow over the peak spirit short break over the weekend, a lighter system so not as strong. dan: thanks. ama: we are back with baseball, larry. larry: it is here. the babe ruth series. unusual trysts -- twist in this one. one player who played for both teams.
6:51 pm
6:53 pm
>> now, abc 7's boards. larry: get ready for a pitch clock, changes in the size of the bases, changes begin as the giants host the a's and the series. giants beat oakland yesterday 9-5. it marks the return of a fan favorite for one night only. chris alvarez is live with more on the matchup and the player who will take the mound for the final time. chris: one not only, the forever giant, sergio romo did pitch for the a's. it will be emotional. sergio spent the bulk of his career with the giants.
6:54 pm
15 years in the big leagues. world series. he was an all-star. that final strikeout in 2012 in detroit, his hallmark play. tonight, he will pitch one last time before he retires as a giant. >> the feelings i have are just extremely blessed to me you know. i got an opportunity to not only play professional baseball but to play professional baseball at the highest level for 15 seasons. i am blown away by it all, the reception, the love i have been getting. it is just, wow. >> he has brought a lot of life to our camp. it is great to have sergio around. it'll be nice to see what he can do with the ball in his hands tonight. >> he has given his life to
6:55 pm
baseball, to the giants organization. i'm sure bruce would say the same thing. you love to see an organization take the time, and with sergio, bringing him back here and giving him one last hurrah. ch last time he takes the mound. i know there is no crying in baseball, but i will allow tonight for him. larry: it will be fun. credit to the giants for honoring the heroes of the past. whenever his elbow heels, he will be the starting quarterback for the 49ers. that was the plan, the message from john lynch in arizona today. he is still recovering from surgery, so it is unclear when he will be ready. this past season, purdy
6:56 pm
after taking over for jimmy garoppolo. >> he has earned the right. the is probably the leader in the clubhouse. i will let kyle make those decisions, but brock purdy is probably the guy and will probably take the first snap. larry: if you are looking for affordable family fun, check out the indoor football league of the panthers. the panthers play at sap center, the shark tank. last night, it went to the final seconds against the arizona rattlers. my daughter is on the panthers dancing to it she may or may not be on the 20 yard line. i am just saying. look at the quarterback weaving through the defense on diving for the touchdown as the panthers held on. 47-46. here is his next great move, throwing a souvenir to the fan, who makes the catch. she got the football. she got everything.
6:57 pm
it was so much fun last night as the panthers won 47-46. i have to say it as special senior baby girl out there. i was more nervous than she was. i have been doing this since i was five years old, dad. ama: she can handle it. larry: she is outstanding. dan: thanks. ama: that is it for us now. dan: we appreciate your time.
6:59 pm
♪♪ from the alex trebek stage at sony pictures studios, this is "jeopardy!" [applause] here are today's contestants-- an engineer from kansas city, missouri... an associate dean from williston park, new york... and our returning champion, an editor from chicago, illinois... whose 1-day cash winnings total... [applause] and now, here is the host of "jeopardy!"-- ken jennings! [cheers and applause] thanks, everyone. thank you, johnny gilbert. welcome to "jeopardy!" our new champion, tamara ghattas, took us on a roller coaster of emotions on friday's show, starting out the first round in negative territory
90 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
KGO (ABC) Television Archive Television Archive News Search ServiceUploaded by TV Archive on