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tv   ABC World News Tonight With David Muir  ABC  January 23, 2025 3:30pm-4:01pm PST

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>> thank you. >> and you can check out more of max's reporting in the san francisco standard's other stories, original stories on their website, sf standard, dot com and abc seven will continue to bring you more segments featuring the standard's city focused journalism every tuesday right here on abc seven news at 3 p.m. sometimes we move it to thursdays like today, but you can catch them weekly. thank you so much for joining us. world news tonight with david muir starts right now. and i'll see you back here for abc seven news at four. bye bye. tonight, breaking news. a judge blocking president trump's executive order on birthright citizenship. trump responds tonight.
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also what the president did today involving the assassinations of president john f. kennedy, rfk, and martin luther king. also tonight, seven officers shot responding to a call. and the wildfires tonight. first tonight, a federal judge dealing the first blow to president trump's immigration crackdown. the judge blocking president trump's order blocking birthright citizenship. tonight, the president responding. also, this move by the president involving jfk, rfk, and martin luther king. tonight, the alarming security breach at the u.s. capitol. abc news learning a man able to walk through the capitol inside. authorities say with a loaded gun, right during confirmation hearings. those seven police officers shot and wounded responding to a call. a navy veteran opening fire on them. what we're now learning about the gunman. the new images coming in right now. the massive hughes fire burning just north of los angeles. winds gusting up to 80 miles per hour, fuelling multiple new fires. and the scare involving bel air
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and the getty center. tonight, the dangerous cold from texas, all the way up to the northeast. so, when does it break? lee goldberg times this out tonight. the tense moments onboard that passenger jet taking off from boston. we now see the images tonight. the cockpit, the cabin filling with smoke. passengers saying they could not breathe. in court right now, the suspect in the idaho college murders, and what his attorneys have now asked the judge. the landmark settlement tonight involving oxycontin. what purdue pharma and the sackler family have agreed to pay. the oscar nominations tonight. timothee chalamet and first-time nominees ariana grande and demi moore. her first nomination at 62. and "inside out 2" nominated. reaction of it all. and america strong. what the buffalo bills fans are doing for the ravens tight end who dropped the ball. he says he is gutted. what bills fans have done
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tonight. even the ravens thanking them. good evening and it's great to have you with us here on a thursday night. we begin tonight with the federal judge blocking president trump's executive order that would end birthright citizenship, at least for now. president trump responding tonight. also, the president making news this evening, after his decision on the files involving the assassinations of president john k. kennedy, rfk, and martin luther king. first, the executive order blocked tonight. the judge today calling the president's order trying to end birth right citizenship, quote, blatantly unconstitutional. the justice department tonight responding, saying it willdy fend the president's order. tonight, pete hegseth, one step closer to confirmation now, even as two republican senators, lisa murkowski and susan collins say they will vote no. >> and president trump taking that action today to declassify the files related to three assassinations. president john f. kennedy,
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senator robert kennedy, and dr. martin luther king jr. what this now means. abc's chief white house correspondent mary bruce leading us off. >> this next order relates to the definition of birthright citizenship. >> reporter: tonight, a federal judge temporarily blocking president donald trump's executive order ending birthright citizenship. calling it blatantly unconstitutional. trump signing the order just hours after he was sworn in. >> birthright. that's a big one. >> reporter: birthright citizenship is protected by the 14th amendment. now 22 states and two cities filing suit to block trump's order from going into effect. today, seattle judge john coughenour. >> obviously, we'll appeal it. they put it before a certain judge in seattle, i guess, right? and there's no surprises with that judge. >> reporter: that judge, appointed by president ronald reagan. while over at the cop toll, stinging words from two republican senators for trump's
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controversial pentagon pick, former fox news host and veteran pete hegseth. lisa murkowski of alaska and susan collins of maine announcing they will vote against his confirmation, citing concerns about his management experience and the message he sends to women. murkowski writing, "i believe that character is the defining trait required of the secondary of defense, and must be prioritized without compromise." pointing to the allegations against hegseth of excessive drinking and sexual misconduct. tonight, sources tell abc news hegseth told another senator, democrat elizabeth warren, that he paid the woman who accused him of sexual assault in 2017 a $50,000 settlement. he has denied the assault allegations, claiming it was consensual. tonight, senator murkowski saying, "while the allegations of sexual assault and excessive drinking do nothing to quiet my concerns, the past behaviors mr. hegseth has admitted to, including infidelity on multiple occasions, demonstrate a lack of judgment that is unbecoming of someone who would lead our armed
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forces." senator collins citing another matter. hegseth's statement last year that women should not serve in combat roles. >> i'm straight up just saying we should not have women in combat roles. >> reporter: he said this at his cop fir make hearing. >> yes, women will have access to ground combat roles, given the standards remain high. >> reporter: collins tonight saying, "i am not convinced that his position on women serving in combat roles has changed." despite the push back, hegseth is expected to be confirmed when the senate votes tomorrow. >> are you worried about his confirmation? >> no, no surprises there. it's too bad, you know. it's the way -- the way it is. too bad. >> reporter: the president tonight also signing an executive order to declassify the files related to three assassinations that gripped the nation. the murder of president john f. kennedy in dallas, the fatal shooting of his brother, senator robert kennedy, in los angeles just a few years later, and the killing of dr. martin luther
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king at the lorraine hotel in memphis. trump declaring their families and the american people deserve transparency and truth. robert kennedy jr., trump's nominee for secretary of health and human services, has long called for the release of the government files into his father and his uncle's assassinations. >> everything will be revealed. okay? give that to rfk jr. >> yes, sir. >> reporter: the director of national intelligence will now have a few weeks to prepare a plan for the release of the records. the president today also speaking before the world economic forum in davos, trump saying he will demand that the federal reserve lower interest rates, raising quells about just how independent he wants them to be. he's also calling on saudi arabia to lower the cost of oil. of course, the saudi crown prince, the first foreign leader he spoke with back in office, and the dow today responding, jumping 400 points, david. >> david: it was a good day on the dow.
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mary, thank you. abc news learning tonight of what authorities are calling an alarming breach at the u.s. capitol. they say a man was able to walk around inside the capitol with a loaded gun, even as confirmation hearings were under way. pierre thomas tonight on what he's learned. >> reporter: capitol police tonight acknowledging a stunning security failure that occurred just a day after president trump was sworn in. the failure, department officials say, can never happen again. abc news first learning that a 27-year-old massachusetts man who authorities had been se searching for out of concerns he was having suicided a throughouts, allegedly made his way through security at the capitol and took a full tour, all while armed with a .9 millimeter handgun. >> we are in the middle of a highly dangerous threat environment. law enforcement across the country, including the cop tapi police, need to take every threat seriously. >> reporter: according to capitol police, the breach occurred sometime between 1:00 and 2:00 p.m. tuesday afternoon, amid confirmation hearings with
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senators, house members, and the public, all unaware that they were in a potentially dangerous situation. authorities say the man set off magnetometers at the capitol visitor center and was subjected to additional screening by a capitol police officer, who failed to find the firearm, which was discovered as the man left the library of congress following his tour. that officer has been suspended pending a full review of the incident, and we're told the capitol police officers will now undergo mandatory refresher training on security screenings. capitol police say there's no indication the man was there to harm members of congress. but law enforcement sources told me today they were shocked that someone apparently suicidal was walking through the capitol with a loaded gun. david? >> david: alarming indeed. pierre thomas tonight, thank you. we're going to turn next here to the seven police officers shot and wounded while responding to a call in san antonio. a navy veteran now accused of opening fire, shooting officers one by one as they arrived. here's abc's mireya villarreal.
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>> reporter: tonight, a navy veteran who opened fire on multiple police officers is dead. after a terrifying shootout at a san antonio apartment complex. one after the other, seven arriving officers struck by bullets late wednesday while responding to an attempted suicide call by a concerned family member. >> first officer arrived to that call, he wound up being shot. another officer who arrived after him or the same time as him was also shot. third officer arriving on the scene shot, as well. >> reporter: authorities say 46-year-old brandon pulos opened fire on police through an apartment window where he barricaded himself during an hours-long standoff. residents ducking for cover. >> i actually got on the floor and then i went in my bathtub. i went and sat in my bathtub, i'm like, yeah, this is probably the safest spot right now. >> reporter: those officers now recovering from nonlife threatening injuries. david, it's still unclear
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whether the suspect shot himself or whether he was killed by police, but we do know he was a ten-year veteran of the navy and he was arrested and released over the weekend. david? >> david: mireya, thank you. now, to the new fires burning in california tonight. red flag warnings up, wind gusts up to 80 miles an hour, fuelling multiple fires, in fact. and the scare along the 405 freeway, right near the getty center museum. matt gutman again on the scene tonight. >> reporter: tonight, southern california is again a powder keg. howling santa ana winds and bone dry conditions fueling fires big and small. >> you can see they're making retardant drops. >> reporter: smoke blasting firefighters working furl usely, stopping forward progress of the laguna fire, but not before a cal state campus was forced to evacuate. and overnight, the se pull have da fire breaking out near the getty center museum, burning 40 acres before fire fighters got a handle on it.
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managed to knock this down very, very quickly. it is not windy right now. meanwhile, just north of los angeles, firefighters still battling the now 15 square mile hughes fire. an all-out aerial assault through the night, precision drops saving the town of castaic. i mean, you can see the helicopter dropping. fire so close to the ground right behind you. i mean, it's barely 30 feet off the deck right now. >> we have some of the best pilots in the world out here in l.a., l.a. county, l.a. city. >> reporter: thankfully, no homes were lost, but for families forced to flee, nerves are frayed tonight. >> sad when we were leaving, especially seeing what happened with palisades and all that. >> reporter: david, southern california is such a tinderbox today that there have been ten new fires started today alone. and you can see firefighters still here at this fire, trying to spray down hot spots on the hillside over there. that's because those red flag
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warnings are said to persist into tomorrow morning, with winds gusting locally at up to 80 miles per hour. david? >> david: all right, matt gutman again tonight. thank you. let's get right to meteorologist lee goldberg from our new york station, wabc, tracking the dangerous winds right into the night. and then in the east, when the cold finally breaks. lee, take us through it. >> reporter: david, we'll begin with the fire forecast. we're not done with the critical fire danger just yet. the winds are relaxing a bit, but we still have some powerful, dangerous gusts and low humidity into tomorrow morning. the red flag warning will go until 10:00 in the morning. big pattern change for the weekend. onshore winds, higher humidity, even some mod rat rain and mountain snow. the only concern, isolated downpours, if they hit the burn scars, we have to be concerned about mudslides. turning to the cold. sound the retreat. the arctic air is definitely easing. we still have one more cold morning in the southeast. you see the cold weather alerts. sub-zero wind chills in 2 midwest. but temperatures take off over the weekend. 60s are back in house top. 50s in atlanta, and 40s here in
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the northeast will go a long way to cure that cabin fever. david? >> david: that will feel like summer around here. lee, thank you. we turn to the other news tonight, and the alarming images from onboard that passenger jet that took off from boston. smoke suddenly filling the cockpit and the cabin. the pilots declaring a may day. here's erielle reshef. >> reporter: tonight, that urgent midair may day, as smoke fills the cockpit and cabin of a plane. >> may day, may day, may day. >> reporter: this passenger video taken just minutes after takeoff from boston's logan international monday, showing reading lights shining through the thick haze. >> just remain seated. >> reporter: initially i thought, i was like, maybe it's just the altitude air difference. and then i was like -- i can't breathe. >> reporter: the pilots forced to turn the airbus a-350 around. in the air for nearly an hour.
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>> we will need to dump fuel for return into boston airport. >> reporter: dumping fuel to lighten the plane, landing safely back in boston. the airline saying none of the 302 people onboard were hurt. david, the flight says its engineers are inspecting that plane. so far, the airline has not said what may have caused the smoke. the faa says that it is looking into a possible mechanical issue. david? >> david: erielle, thank you. tonight, a new settlement in a years-long opioid lawsuit. the sackler family and their company purdue pharma agreeing to pay $7.4 billion to settle lawsuits involving oxycontin. that's a billion dollars more than an earlier deal. they gave up their demand of immunity from future lawsuits. 15 states, local governments, and individuals joined in this lawsuit, claiming the family and their company fueled addiction and overdose deaths. a judge still has to sign off. when we come back here tonight, in court right now, the suspect in the idaho college
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murders. what his attorneys have now asked the judge. also tonight, the oscar nominations revealed, from timo timothee chalamet to ariana grande. we have the news. and what buffalo bills fans have done for the ravens tight end who dropped the ball. even the ravens thanking them tonight. i was losing interest in the things i love. then i found a chance to let in the lyte.” discover caplyta. unlike some medicines that only treat bipolar i, caplyta is proven to deliver significant symptom relief from both bipolar i & ii depression. and in clinical trials, movement disorders and weight gain were not common. caplyta can cause serious side effects. call your doctor about sudden mood changes, behaviors, or suicidal thoughts right away. anti-depressants may increase these risks in young adults. elderly dementia patients have increased risk of death or stroke. caplyta is not approved for dementia-related psychosis. report fever, confusion, or stiff muscles, which may be life threatening, or uncontrolled muscle movements which may be permanent.
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finally tonight here, the oscar nominations are in. tonight, the oscar nominations are in. ♪ for the times they are achanging ♪ >> reporter: the 97th academy awards. ten movies nominated for best picture. ♪ emilia perez leading with 13 nominations. ♪ including best picture and best actress for carla sophia gascon. ♪ and zoe saldana for best supporting actress, facing off against ariana grande for "wicked." ♪ you're gonna be popular ♪ >> david: "wicked" earning ten nominations in all, including best picture.
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♪ defying gravity ♪ >> david: along a best actress nominee for cynthia erivo. and demi moore for best actress in "the substance." >> take care of yourself. >> david: the movie about the search for youth and a better you, but at what cost? >> i'm fine. everything's fine. >> david: in the best actor category, adrian brody. >> they do not want us here. ♪ once upon a time ♪ >> david: timothee chalamet nomina nominated. he in the leading role for two movies up for best picture this year. the second one, "dune part two." ? knife can shatter. >> david: and this summer's blocbuster "inside out 2" from our parent company disney nominated for best animated feature.
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>> can you hear me? i got to press the button. >> david: becoming the highest grossing animated film of all time. >> i'm just such a huge fan of yours. >> david: the academy awards, march 2nd, right here on abc. ♪ an incredible year for the movies. going to be a big night. and you can watch the oscars right here on abc, march 2nd. i i'm david muir. from all of us here, good night. news starts right now. >> two years ago today, you know, it changed the lives of a lot of us. it changed the history of half moon bay. it changed the way we see farm workers. >> it was two years ago today. a deadly mass shooting changed half moon bay forever.
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>> after months of persistent vehicle encampment in the area, they're now getting a break. >> to even enter any program. they're reduced to one trash bag, one suitcase. >> a deadline today to get rvs off the streets in the south bay. >> and how san francisco became ground zero for the country's birthright citizenship laws. good afternoon. thanks for joining us. i'm larry beil. >> and i'm kristen z. today marks two years since the deadly half moon bay mass shooting that killed seven people and injured one. it happened when a former employee targeted coworkers on two farms. he's pleaded not guilty. the trial is set to begin in april. >> that shooting has shined a light on the challenges facing farm workers, from low wages to housing to health care. and now a permanent memorial for the victims is being planned. but the question is what should it look like and who is going to pay for it? abc seven news reporter luz pena in half moon bay today. >> it's been two years, and even though farm workers are back on the fields, the hole left behind after seven of them were