tv KPIX 5 News CBS July 10, 2016 6:00pm-7:01pm PDT
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minnesota and the deaths in louisiana just sparked his delusion to fast track his plan. >> police say the former army reservist laughed and taunted officers for hours following thursday's attack soon after the police chief made the decision to send in an explosive robot, ending the standoff, and killing johnson. our joe vazquez continues his reporting from dallas. within the last few minutes, another tense situation outside police headquarters. what's going on? >> second day in a row this has happened. suddenly we just saw a bunch of people start screaming and running past us this direction. we saw police officers with rifles start moving that way. it turns out there was a guy on a rooftop across the street. the police were very concerned. it didn't take them long to realize it was a man who was up there literally taking a selfie as it turned out. but it sent shock waves through this crowd. the police officers are still
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trying to breathe after two days ago, they were under fire directly from a sniper like that. a very difficult scene. this community trying to come to grips with all that has happened. a lot of people met today at a town hall to talk about it. >> reporter: at a dallas mega church called the potters house, they came together to pray, to shed a few tears, to talk about the trauma of the assassination of police officers. and others who died this week at the hands of the cops. >> the reason that i'm doing this is because i believe that every one of us was in some way injured. some way disturbed. >> i had to go to work thursday night in to friday and it's the first time i saw my wife cry when i left to go to work. my kids are like, dad, are you really going to work? i have to. this is my profession.
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i took an oath to serve and protect you all. >> reporter: alton sterling's death was captured on cell phone in louisiana. >> alton was my nephew. i called him my son because i raised him. it hurt me and it pained me. i was okay because i thought my child, my nephew didn't suffer. but when i saw it, he suffered. >> my daughter is an angel. she's definitely more stronger than i am. >> reporter: diamond reynolds called in and she was as calm as she was on the facebook live video, until she was asked what she would have done differently that day. >> if i could change anything from that night, it would never to take that route. because we would have never been in the wrong place at the wrong time. none of this would have happened. >> the pastor said he hoped today's event would be one of
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many ongoing national conversations about race relations. >> you don't have to be a racist to become complacent and comfortable in staying amongst people who dress like you, vote like you, and think like you. but if we're going to be one nation, we're going to have to cross the line. we're going to have to cross the line and come out of our comfort zone. >> words matter. i was only mad twice. i was mad at the shooter. because the pain. and i was mad when i heard a politician call the protesters cowards and hypocrites. now that's demonizing a group that a politician disagrees with. you don't demonize people. you say hey, i think you got it wrong here. okay? but god loves you. and i'm going to lift you up. >> we're back live here in dallas where that is the first
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of what people hope are many conversations. it does appear that it's back to normal, the crowds are gathering again. just a few seconds ago while we were in the taped piece, someone set off firecrackers about a half a block away. i got to tell you, that's probably the wrong thing to do right now as it is that tense here on the scene. >> absolutely. you get that sense of it. then beyond that is this amazing memorial behind you. i know you highlighted it yesterday. those are actual squad cars that are now covered in flowers and sentiments, correct? >> that's right. that right there is a police car. it is covered with balloons and flowers and cards and well wishes. you might see some of the ink smudged as we had a storm here yesterday. really it sort of reminds you of the ink smudge when people are crying and there have been a lot of tears here over the last few
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days. >> joe vazquez live in dallas. thank you. let's take you live out to san jose right now. an anti-police protest appears to be taking shape outside city hall. demonstrators chanting black lives matter. earlier they released balloons to remember the victims of police shootings. we're also hearing about a pro police rally set for san jose city hall sometime this hour. in the meantime in st. paul, minnesota, nearly two dozen officers were hurt overnight when protesters pelted them with bottles, rocks, even fireworks. demonstrators also blocked part of interstate 84 overnight to protest wednesday's fatal shooting of philando castile. police in riot gear walked in to the barrage to try to break up the crowd. these are some of the rocks police officers were pelted with. the st. paul police chief showed them off at a press conference today and demonstrated how much
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damage they can do. >> i want you to touch this badge and see the significant impact of a rock like this that gets thrown from a bridge and hits one of our officers with enough force to crack helmets and bend a piece of solid steel like this. >> 21 officers were hurt in the rioting but all are expected to recover. in spain today, president obama renewed his call for police and protesters to listen to each other. >> if we paint police in broad brush, without recognizing that the vast majority of police officers are doing a really good job, and are trying to protect people and do so fairly and without racial bias, if our rhetoric does not recognize that, then we're going to lose allies in the reform cause.
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>> the president has been speaking daily about the attacks. during his 4-day trip to europe. he's heading back home after cutting his visit short by a day. he'll travel to dallas on tuesday to speak at an interfaith memorial service for the fallen officers. in the wake of the nationwide protest, hundreds gathered in san francisco's tenderloin neighborhood today to heal. kpix 5 maria medina was there as neighbors, friends, and strangers came together. >> reporter: in the middle of the day, the middle of the street, the tenderloin transformed in to a place where the community gathered sunday. to laugh, eat, and play. >> it was so much tragedy we've been experiencing. >> reporter: janice is the co-founder of well known glide memorial church. the church partnered up with san francisco block party sunday street to extend the party to the street in front of glide. >> i think it's so important for
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people to come together as a community. that the only way we can really resolve these problems is that we understand that we're all human beings and we all bleed. we all cry. >> it's wonderful to make space to cultivate community. >> reporter: deon johnson iii is an associate pastor for glide. he says happiness is refreshing as tension is at an all time high in the nation. >> we're at our best when we come together and when we celebrate our diversity. >> reporter: church members say events like sunday streets is a step in the direction of healing. >> i think it's important to see the unity, to see all colors coming together, being unified, healing one another. >> it's once a month on a saturday. they move all over san francisco. next month they'll be in the mission. in san francisco, maria medina, kpix 5. >> in about an hour the city of
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antioch will host a prayer vigil for the fallen officers and their families. the mayor saying, i grieve for the nation. america is in crisis. the vigil starts at 7:00 on lone tree way. stay with cbssf.com for continuing coverage of the tragedy in dallas. we'll go back live to joe vazquez a little bit later in the newscast. a strange kidnapping for ransom case out of vallejo. police have arrested four people for that crime. as of this hour they've not found the victim. mark kelly has that story. >> reporter: the 57-year-old victim was last seen alive at this grocery store. that was 11 days ago. people here in vallejo are concerned she won't be found alive. >> that's not typical around here. something like that to happen. >> reporter: the first sign she was in harm's way came the first of the month when her son, living in san francisco, got a text from an unknown number. it read, your mother is being
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held for ransom and if authorities contacted she'd be killed. the ransom was less than $100,000. >> there was no additional communication after the text. >> reporter: vallejo pd arrested four people in connection with elvira's abduction. but still no sign of elvira. >> none of the suspects are divulging her location. we're hoping someone will come forward that will be able to help us locate her. >> reporter: making this case even more challenging to crack, there's no sign of a forced entry at elvira's apartment. but officers did find her dog dead. >> i'm very sad about it. it's very difficult for the people who live here in vallejo that there was a kidnapping
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here. >> reporter: detectives said at least one of the suspects and the victim are acquaintances. mark kelly, kpix 5. >> all four suspects are being held at the solano county jail. still to come, the party is over for one rowdy san jose apartment complex. >> plus, you know what they say about life giving you lemons. soon you'll be able to pick them yourself off the streets of one san francisco neighborhood. >> a bit of a warming trend as we look live from oakland toward the bay area. but today: a historic napa church damaged quake.. is >> later, it's taken nearly two years and $2 million, but today a historic napa church damaged in the 2014 earthquake finally back in service. ,,,,,,,,
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new at 6:00, fed up neighbors in san jose are celebrating a legal victory after suing the absentee landlord of a problem property next door. it sounds confusing. kpix 5 devin fehely will have the details on the party that rang up quite a price tag. >> reporter: the judge ruled landlord william robertson was responsible for the, quote, routine party, that's been a longstanding complaint of homeowners near the apartment complex. >> there was drug dealing going on, a chop shop. it was not a place where you would want to raise your children. >> reporter: susan price-jang spearheaded the efforts to hold robinson and other absentee landlords according for the living conditions in the apartments they live in and rent. after years of e-mails and phone calls that went unreturned, she convinced her neighbors to pursue a unique legal strategy, suing robertson in small claims court for damaging the property values and quality of life. >> the problems are caused by
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your tenants and their friends. you are going to be held responsible. and the judge agreed. >> reporter: robertson claimed he wasn't aware of the problems, and even if he was, had no control over them. the judge sided with neighbors in a precedent setting decision, ordering him to pay each plaintiff $1100. >> bad landlords have an impact on neighborhoods. >> reporter: devin fehely, kpix 5. >> we tried to contact the landlord and the property management company for comment today but we haven't heard back. a new hotel proposal in san jose would create one of the tallest buildings in town. if approved, the 24-story hotel would go up near 101 and 880, not far from the airport. right now the area is mostly home to low rise office buildings. new data on san francisco housing shows why lower earning workers often struggle to buy and keep a home, even when they go for the cheapest properties. the lowest earning third of workers can expect to spend
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nearly 70% of their income on mortgage payments in the city. that's according to real estate data firm zillow. by comparison, median income buyers can expect to spend about 40%. the highest earners will spend about 30% of their income on home payments. lemon trees will soon be planted in a san francisco neighborhood with a rough reputation. the tenderloin. it's part of a push to cultivate locally grown produce. so far 4,000 have been planted. now a group called just one tree plans to put in many more. they're also partnering with demonstration gardens in the tenderloin. >> there are a lot of hidden gardens here. the tenderloin national forest, the people's garden, the
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demonstration garden. lots of rooftop gardens. we want to bring the gardening down to the street level and improve the quality of life for all the people of the tenderloin. >> 50 trees will go in ahead of the rainy season. anyone interested in being a lemon tree steward can visit the gardens on golden gate avenue. weather looks pretty good. a little windy at this hour. about a quarter after 6:00 right now. the ocean beach looks good. big change from the past couple of days. not much in the way of low cloudiness out there. numbers are weird. in san francisco, 68 degrees for the past two hours. it's actually warmed up. at 6:00, 70 degrees. gusts to about 20 in concord. so a little breezy. sunny finish to this sunday. and low pressure is now kicking in to the east and as it does, it will spread showers in the pacific northwest but for us, it's broken up the marine layer.
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turbulence, wind and everything will mix out the marine layer. we've got sun. going to allow a high pressure bridge to build over the area. it stays windy and brisk right through tomorrow. brisk near the shoreline. windy by the coast. inland not so bad and certainly warmer. temperatures in the 80s today. futurecast shows in the wee small hours of the morning, 3:00 in the morning tomorrow morning we'll have clear skies. for the rest of the day we'll have mostly sunny conditions. except right at the shoreline. you can see a little bit of fog sticking like salt water taffy to the peninsula which we trusted will not do literally. only a few low clouds tonight. not much. sunny and breezy monday and tuesday. the winds will be with us but so will the sun. then we warm it up as the high ridge builds in. tonight the numbers go down in to the low to mid 50s. so this is par for the course what we've seen lately. sun up tomorrow morning at 3 minutes before 6 a.m. and numbers tomorrow look fairly
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typical for the central valley. redding, 96 in the north and fresno down in the south, 95 degrees. yosemite at 77. lake tahoe at 74. this looks close to average as well. san francisco, 66, and concord, 87. both within a notch of average. and san jose, 82 degrees. oakland 73 tomorrow. a lot of sun tomorrow in the south bay. very nice for monday. readings will be from the upper 70s to the low 80s. 84 at mountain view. 82 for san jose. over in the east bay, numbers will be near 90 degrees for antioch. we'll be cooler in the 680 corridor. 87 for livermore. 87 at walnut creek. temperatures in the upper 70s and low 80s except right by the shoreline, sausalito, 70. and stinson beach, what a great dog beach. 66 degrees at stinson. 62 for bodega bay. up around ukiah and clear lake and lakeport, mid 80s. looking ahead, things warm up. wednesday, thursday, friday, low 90s. as we head in to the weekend we'll cool it down a little bit
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with some fog and some low clouds and temperatures collapse all the way down in to the mid 80s. hope the giants aren't collapsing. they're playing the diamondbacks. we've got the expert over there. >> bumgarner is pitching a gem. he's rocking and dealing. we also got stuff out of the south bay. 72 holes. just not enough in this golf major just south of san jose. how come you can't do that? engines roared as hundreds of ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
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engines roared as hundreds of low riders cruised down mission street in san francisco today. wheels were up as classics and new low rides bounced down the road in the king of the streets low rider parade. about an hour ago, some of the cars competed in a bounce contest at fort mason. >> that's how i get to work.
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low ride. yeah. >> looking good. >> going in style. this golf thing, we were talking about it during the break. you're going to get to it in a few seconds. >> awful way to lose a golf major. just terrible. what a time to be in the south bay though. u.s. gymnastics trials in san jose right now. a little further south, strange end to the u.s. women's open. lydia ko had the lead. she could not stay out of the hazard. took a double bogey 7. could not recover. to 16. brittany lang for the lead. for the lead. go. go. she negotiated it at 17, had a short par to maintain the lead, and missed that one. dropped her in to a tie with anna norquist. big hitting sun young park. needed this to go at 18 for a chance to tie atop the leader
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board, and she got wet. soul crushing shot. so we go to a playoff between brittany lang and norquist. out of the box toward the hole. later here on super slo-mo it was discovered she grounded her club in the sand. a devastating two-stroke penalty. lang played the 18th. tapped in for par. and her first major championship. boy, give credit to norquist. what a way to lose. came back from 6 down to force the playoff. >> obviously disappointing. blowing 35, 40. i had a 5 iron. i didn't do it on purpose. what can i say? apparently had a really good shot there. good shot in on 18. playing really good today. it's just hard to lose that way but that's the game of golf. >> that's how it goes. baseball, giants working the last game of the season. first half, hosting the diamondbacks. story coming up on the late
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show. facial hair all around, folks. this is support of pitcher dallas keuchel. i love the beard. the as got seven shutout innings. six strikeouts out of them. a called strike 3 there. game was scoreless till the 6th. a broken bat base hit number. it scored matt mcbride. as went ahead 1-0. held on to that lead in the 9th. they sent ryan matsen on the hill and he couldn't close it out. evan gattis found some real estate. a two-out rbi double. score carlos gomes. it went extras. grounder to 3rd. and the throw here pulled yonder alonso off the bag. everybody safe. astros scored and won it. danny valencia awarded a throwing error and the as had four errors in the game. astros win 2-1. 38-51. 13 games below .500.
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he did it in 2013. why not three years later? britain's andy murray, wimbledon king. first set, near court. tried to be the aggressor. but this shot by the scotsman, what do you do with that? murray took the first step. second set decider in a tiebreaker. murray, he just didn't make any mistakes. only 12 unforced errors the entire match. third set. match point. here's how murray took them out. murray won a second wimbledon title. his third career major. he's the wimbledon king. >> the prime minister of the country is here. i think playing in a wimbledon
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final is tough but certainly wouldn't like to be prime minister, it's an impossible job. soccer, portugal in red. france, euro cup, 2016 final in paris. cristiano rinaldo didn't see much action. injured his knee in the first half. this mob wouldn't leave him alone. rinaldo carried off the field in tears but his team picked him up. scoreless in extras. an error, scoring the game winner. portugal won 1-0 for their first major international tournament title. there you go. a little soccer, a little bit of everything. still ahead in our next half hour, we'll go back out live to joe vazquez in dallas where police are revealing disturbing new details about what the gunman said to them as he carried out his deadly ambush. >> the feds are also hot on the
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suspects are refusing to talk about elvira's whereabouts. party is over for one rowdy apartment complex in san jose. that's what a judge just ruled. neighbors sued a landlord who allegedly allowed years of partying, drug dealing, and debauchery. he'll have to play each of the plaintiffs $1100 for damaging property values and quality of life. >> hundreds gathered at a mega church in dallas today to remember the five officers who were killed in an ambush there this week. the aunt of anten sterling was there and the girlfriend of philando castile phoned in to show her support. authorities reveal thursday's attack could have been a lot worse. the gunman had been apparently training for some time and had material for explosives in his home. joe vazquez is live in dallas where the feds continue to work with the local police.
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>> you may be able to hear the loud roar of motors behind me. that's because there are about 100 motorcycle riders or more who have decided to come by police headquarters. let me tell you what officials have revealed about the gunman and the attack he'd been planning. they say he'd been planning this attack for some time, that he even practiced at detonating devices. he had intended to use bombs but the events of the week fast tracked his plan. who exactly is this gunman, micah johnson? the answer we've learned is complicated. a soldier who served his country. a radical who claimed to hate white people. a family man who lovingly took care his autistic brother. a mad man who joked while slaughtering police officers with sniper fire. >> we negotiated with him for about two hours. and he just basically lied to
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us, playing games, laughing at us, singing, asking how many did he get, and that he wanted to kill some more and that there were bombs there. there was no progress on the negotiation. >> reporter: after the army sent micah johnson home from the war in afghanistan and kicked him out of the service for sexual harassment, he made a mixed impression. depending who you asked, he was friendly, he was reclusive. while he loved collecting weapons, some who knew him insist he was not a violent man. investigators say they have evidence he'd been planning an attack on the cops for quite some time. >> we believed the deaths in minnesota and louisiana just sparked his delusion to fast trach his plan. >> reporter: links on his facebook page include one for the african american defense league which explicitly encourages violence against police officers. quote, we're calling on the gangs across the nation, attack
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everything in blue. >> you heard the police chief use the word delusion. he also said the suspect was babbling the whole time they were talking to him, when he wasn't singing or laughing and that at one point wrote some gibberish in blood on the wall. now we have to include the issue of mental illness as something was going on in this man's head that pushed him toward the attack. >> we've got to you live, every time we go to you live, it seems as if something else has ramped up. there were firecrackers, reports of a fire on the roof, and we understand there has been a security scare in the last few
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minutes. >> just before the motorcycles came running by, a guy was there, it looked a little creepy, police sent officers over there to confront him, ask him what was going on. at some point he pulled out a weapon that he had and showed it to the officers. they then looked over the weapon and then they gave it back to him and he went on his merry way. this is texas. right to carry state. presumably he had the right paperwork because he went pretty quickly without being cuffed, without much of a search, a little bit of a search. yes, it is very active for some reason tonight. and clearly this community is dealing with what can only be described as ptsd at this point. it's really not comfortable to have all these incidents happen. >> i know it's a right to carry state. it hardly seems the time or the place. but we'll see what happens later tonight.
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we'll check back with you later at 10:00. joe vazquez live in dallas. on the campaign trail now where the democrats are taking a major step toward party unity. hillary clinton and bernie sanders will campaign together this week for the first time. the pair will attend a rally at a new hampshire high school on tuesday where sanders is expected to endorse his former rival. on the republican side, donald trump is doing his best to unite his party ahead of next week's gop convention. he met last week with more than 200 house republicans including speaker paul ryan. >> we had a very good exchange on lots of ideas and lots of policy issues. i thought it was a very good meeting. it's very clear he's working on putting together a strong general election campaign. >> the presumptive nominee still has work to do to bring his party together. some gop leaders are still pushing to introduce new rules to try to block trump's nomination. golfer dustin johnson says he'll skip the upcoming summer olympics in rio next month over
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concerns about the zika virus. that makes the 32-year-old u.s. open champion the first american to withdraw from the games over zika. johnson said he and his fianci plan to have more children in the near future and he feels it would be irresponsible to put himself and his family at risk. the mosquito-borne virus can be sexually transmitted and can lead to birth defects in babies. a father and his 9-year-old daughter are lucky to be alive after their small plane crash landedane florida lake. the event -- the violent crash was caught on video. >> reporter: new video of friday's plane crash showing the single engine piper landing in a lake. onboard, the 49-year-old pilot and his 9-year-old daughter. both somehow survived. >> did this really just happen? >> reporter: the video was taken by two fishermen who immediately called 911 and rushed to help. >> we got them out of the water.
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i got the girl. he got the dad. the girl had super bad trauma on her head and the dad had pretty bad back pain. >> she was 9 years old. when we pulled her out, she was crying uncontrollably. >> reporter: the plane took off from orlando executive airport. it's unknown where they were headed when they crashed in to lake down, 10 miles west of orlando around 6:10 p.m. shortly before impact, the pilot radioed that he was having engine problems and reassures his daughter that everything will be okay. >> large lake beneath me and, my gosh. it's going to be okay. >> the pilot and his daughter are recovering in the hospital. no word on their conditions. the faa is looking in to the cause of the crash. still to come, proof that true faith can't be shaken. at least not for long. the historic church that's finally back in service nearly two years after the big napa quake. >> and san francisco wants to start giving away free college
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rocked the napa area.. leaving many downtow it's been nearly two years since the 6.0 earthquake rocked the napa area. one of the structures heavily damaged in the august 2014 quake, the city's historic first presbyterian church. took 22 months and about $2 million to repair the 19th century structure. but kpix 5's john ramos shows us today the beloved church is finally back in service. >> reporter: the light shining in to this morning's service at the first presbyterian church in napa was a change from the dark day in 2014 when the earthquake sent its stained glass windows crashing to the ground. >> it was so sad to see the broken stained glass windows laying out in the street. >> reporter: the building was
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constructed in 1874 and there were fears that behind the cracked and broken plaster could be structural damage that would doom the little church. >> it's a historical structure, one we value in and pride. to see it damaged during the earthquake was scary. could it come back? could they fix it? >> reporter: that answer came today as the congregation joyfully celebrated the reopening of their sanctuary. they spent two years and $2 million meeting in the church gymnasium as the building was being repaired and fortified. today as churchgoers discuss lessons learned from the quake, the only visible reminder was the tilted weather vane, showing that sometimes adversity is a blessing in disguise. >> our church is in a stronger
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place today because of the earthquake. >> earthquakes are considered an act of god. and like the building itself, the people here were tested. but through it all their faith remained unshaken. >> the pastor says the day they straighten the weather vane will be declared shake sunday and every member of the congregation will be treated to a milkshake. time for a look at some of the areas happening around the bay area. >> a blue ribbon panel releases its final report on transparency and accountability within the san francisco police department. district attorney george gascon assembled the panel of judges after a series of racist text messages from officers came to light. it's been focusing on several areas including stops and searches, use of force, among other preliminary findings, the panel has already found that officers stopped a lot more
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people of color than whites. >> the san francisco police department is insufficiently independent. in addition to the blurred lines between the two, many believe the influence inside and outside the department have been and remain an impediment to open dialogue. >> the police union has rejected allegations that the department has a problem with racial bias in the ranks. a plan to make city college free for san francisco students could move ahead this week. on tuesday the board of supervisors will vote on whether to put a new property tax on the november ballot. the revenue would be used to cover tuition, books, and other student expenses. it would cost about $13 million a year. the tax would apply to property sales of $5 million or more like
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large office buildings. transportation experts from around the state will meet to try to find more money. electric and hybrid cars have been cutting in to the gas tax revenue for years. now they're testing out a replacement with a per-mile tax. >> they can't find the money in the general funds? come on. >> they treat me like an atm machine in this state. >> mileage can be tracked in several different ways, including buying miles in bulk. tracking your odometer readings or paying through your smart phone. it's about to get a little easier to get over the altamont pass. friday cal trans will open a new 10-mile truck climbing lane, moving the trucks over to the side and it should speed up the drive for everybody else. we'll see. we've a little extra time. if you're taking b.a.r.t. to the oakland airport, one of the connecter shuttle tracks will be closed for maintenance starting on tuesday. the work is expected to take two
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to three days. during that time the shuttles will be single tracking. so cars will be running every 18 minutes instead of the usual five or six. still to come, they're called ghost guns for a reason. the nation's untraceable firearms that are being made in northern california warehouses. how a lot of them ended up in the hands of one man with security clearances at a major bay area airport. >> changes in the forecast finally as the sun sinks slowly in the west. we'll show you what's happening this week that hasn't happened in a while. >> a lost go pro camera surfaces to tell the story of its time at sea complete with a creepy crab selfie. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
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we're with you san francisco, and you bring out the best in us. care. zuckerberg san francisco general hospital and trauma center. "go pro" camera. and guess what? a fisherman made quite a catch off the english channel last week. he pulled up a long lost go pro camera and guess what? the video card was still good. he just posted the footage to youtube hoping to find the owner. the last shot shows a diver hopping away from a woman off the dock but the camera apparently got away from him and sunk slowly to the bottom. you can hear people splashing around, looking for it as the tide rolled it around. but the divers never found it. but look who did. in a scene straight out of a horror movie, this giant crab wandered up to take a look, hung around, took some selfies before losing interest and eventually scuttling off. >> [ laughter ]
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he set himself right in the middle of the camera. he knew right where the lens was. meanwhile, above the surface of the ocean, we're looking at clear skies around the area and destined to remain that way. low clouds offshore will form after midnight. not much close to land and later in the day on monday you can see some moving back in around south san francisco but then being pushed back out to sea. so in general we'll have a sunnier day tomorrow and as we look at ocean beach right now, not a stitch of cloudiness in sight. 83 in concord. san francisco just sweltering at 70 degrees. santa rosa, 83. here's how it looks. we've got low pressure moving inland over the pacific northwest. that means they're going to get some showers in washington state tonight and over the cascade range. down here just means wind and temperatures finally beginning to warm as high pressure replaces that low. windy and brisk through tomorrow especially along the shoreline.
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inland not so bad. we'll look for things to be warming up by the time we get toward midweek. we'll be in the low to mid 90s by wednesday, thursday, and friday. overnight lows in the mid 50s. sun up 3 minutes before 6 a.m. heading out of the bay area, 90s in the central valley. sunshine all over the place. maybe a few low clouds. tomorrow we're up close to average with 66 in the city. in the south bay, the numbers will be near 80 degrees. a little bit warmer at mountain view and morgan hill. east bay, mid 80s will do it for the most part. warmer at antioch. plenty of sunshine including the north bay tomorrow. wake up to sunshine and 78. 81 for san rafael. 76 for mill valley. way up north, 86 for lake port. 89 at clear lake. 87 for ukiah. extended forecast, we're going to be looking at temperatures to continue to climb until we're in the low 90s by thursday and friday. that's inland. we'll cool it down a little bit as we head in to next weekend but looks like a fairly sunny week ahead. so that is good news.
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that are imp preef as the debate over gun control heats up, there are a lot of guns out there impossible to chase. >> they're called ghost guns. home made weapons. many have been traced to one shop in northern california and they've wound up in the hands of criminals. >> reporter: juan gutierrez cannot legally own a firearm. a convicted felon, he cannot pass a background check to buy one. but he made himself guns including this rifle, using this drill press and carved slogans in to his guns. including it is the duty of the patriot to protect his country
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from its government. and then posted photos of himself training with the south bay platoon of the california state militia. his jacket was covered with the same slogan he had tattooed on his arm. the defiant reply of ancient greeks ordered to drop their weapons, come and get them. he worried someone who knew he was a felon and heard him bragging about his guns alerted federal agents. this atf agent works undercover so he agreed to protect his identity. >> because of his extremist views, the concerned citizen was worried about the safety of the public. >> reporter: the atf agent who investigated gutierrez says juan was trying to get other militia members to join him. >> we can't say for sure he was planning a big attack, however, as a law enforcement agency, we could not take that chance. >> reporter: atf agents arrested gutierrez where he works, here, behind the security perimeter at san jose airport on the tarmac where gutierrez is
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employed by the company that refuels jets and other vehicles. they searched his home and found rifles, a pistol, tools to make more guns, and a thousand rounds of ammunition. >> so he's a felon in possession of a firearm and he's still employed at the airport in a security area. >> that is correct. >> reporter: san jose airport told us they revoked juan's security badge after he was arrested but a month later the tsa made them get it back while he awaited trial. he's continued to work inside the security perimeter. gutierrez was sentenced after he agreed to enter a guilty plea to federal charges of felon in possession of ammunition. the airport telling us it's gutierrez's responsibility to tell them when he's evicted -- when he's convicted. a security print of his fingerprints is done every two years and it would reveal any criminal convictions. >> gutierrez was sentenced to
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three months probation, six months home confinement except to go to work. the judge told him, quote, i'm taking a little bit of a chance on you. last friday san jose airport said they had revoked his security badge. >> but for all of that time while we're kicking our shoes off in security lines, he's working behind the security line. >> absolutely. >> that's an incredible story. >> that will wrap it up now. thanks for watching. >> for news throughout the evening, stay tuned to cbs.com. 60 minutes is next. ,,,,
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captioning funded by cbs and ford. we go further, so you can. >> steve kroft: that's the apartment? >> that corner on the third floor. >> kroft: the apartment belonged to boston mobster and longtime fugitive "whitey" bulger, then the most wanted man in america. bulger eluded the fbi for 14 years by hiding in plain site in santa monica, california. tonight, you'll hear from the agents who finally caught him, with some help from an alley cat and his girlfriend's breast implants. >> we just rushed him. >> kroft: you mean guns out? "fbi, don't move!" >> i asked him to identify himself and that didn't go over well. he asked me to "f"-ing identify myself. and i asked him, i said, "are you whitey bulger?" he said, "yes." >> bill whitaker: six years ago, when arizona needed drugs to execute an inmate named jeffrey landrigan, it purchased them
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