tv KPIX 5 News CBS September 17, 2016 6:00pm-7:01pm PDT
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every penny. >> jasmine did nothing that was wrong. she didn't make any mistakes. she was a victim. these -- these police officers created the crime. reporter: now her attorneys will try to make oakland pay, $66 million. >> the claim is based on $3 million per perpetrator plus the aggregate total amount against the entity for covering up. >> reporter: the claim, a precursor to a lawsuit names the city, the police department, 11 officers, and former chief sean whent. jasmine's attorneys indicate there was obstruction of justice at the highest level within the police department accusing former chief whent of knowing about the sexual misconduct and covering it up. >> they have created a life- long deficit in this young lady. there's no amounts of money to restore her childhood. she will never recover. >> reporter: oakland has 45 days to respond. it's unlikely city leaders will pay out the claim given the large amount. >> i have tremendous compassion for the victim of this matter, her family.
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and so again, we respect that people have a right to use our justice system and seek redress of the wrongs. we will also do our duty to act in the interests of the city of oakland. >> reporter: mayor libby schaaf says she can't talk about pending litigation but says since the scandal, they have taken steps to try to restore public trust. >> we can answer the criminal charges that have been brought. we don't just not tolerate misconducted but also failure to report misconduct. attorney charles bonner says he will sue every agency that's taken advantage of jasmine and richmond is next. i'm da lin, kpix 5. jasmine's attorney is also defending the former prostitute's credibility. last week, the alameda county d.a. pointed out inconsistencies in jasmine's story suggesting she lied about having sex with officer brendan o'brien. it was o'brien's suicide last
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year that eventually led investigators to uncover this sex scandal. >> that the ex-stripsive evidence appears to establish that miss a never actually met officer brendan o'brien in person. >> the d.a. just got it wrong. jasmine actually had in person sexual contact with officer o'brien. we don't know how the district attorney got that completely wrong. >> the d.a. has already charged two former officers in the case. charges against five others could come as soon as monday. police are investigating a trio of deadly shootings around the east bay. in hayward, a 29-year-old man was shot and killed last night outside an apartment complex near 880 and west "a" street. later in richmond a 17-year-old was shot at the bella vista apartment complex in the hilltop neighborhood and he later died at the hospital. then early this morning another fatal shooting in bay point. all investigators will say is that at least one man died.
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so far, no arrests in any of those shootings. >> also in richmond, a toddler is recovering after being hit by a stray bullet fired from a block away. the little boy was in his mother's arms outside a food bank at second and mcdonald's yesterday. neighbors reported hearing gunfire. police say a man was shooting at another man. he was hit. a second bullet struck the toddler. >> both the victims the 16- month old victim along with the adult will survive their gunshot wounds and their injuries. >> the little boy is going to be okay. the wounded man is also recovering. the gunman got away. in redwood city the search is on for a missing child. 11-year-old david mendoza was last seen yesterday afternoon at kennedy middle school. he is considered at risk due to his age. if you see him, call police. the air quality is suffering with a "spare the air" alert in effect today and tomorrow. bad air quality in the east and
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south bay expected. surf is up at the shoreline. national weather service cautioning everyone to have a care at the beach. and it will also be warm as a big mound of high pressure builds over the west coast. that will push temperatures inland to near 100 degrees tomorrow. right now readings range from the 90s inland to just 60s at the beaches. we'll have the complete forecast in just a few minutes. a tackle at a baseball game ended up sending a at&t park security guard to the hospital. this video on twitter from last night's giants game. the guard was one of several people who rushed in to stop a fan who ran out on the field. he ended up breaking a leg in his attempt to take the fan down. he was helped off the field as the crowd booed the fan. it's been five years since giants fan bryan stow was beaten nearly to death by rival fans outside dodger stadium. he spent nine months in a coma and had permanent brain damage.
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today he returns to the san jose rehab center where he spent some of the most difficult months of his life but maria medina shows us this time, he was there with a message of hope. >> reporter: bryan stow has come a long way. >> so many people are so amazed to be able to see you standing here and even talking to me. [ pause ] >> i'm very thankful. >> reporter: bryan now travels to schools to talk about anti- bullying so he is used to speaking in front of large crowds. but a scheduled talk today -- >> i didn't know if i was ready. >> reporter: -- was a little different. >> it seemed like too much at once. >> reporter: he was asked to speak at the santa clara valley medical rehabilitation center for a reunion with other patients. it a place where he spent several months. -- it's a place where he spent several months. >> he was barely up in a wheelchair at that time. he was not talking very much. >> reporter: bryan says he doesn't remember his time here as he recovered from the brutal beating. what he does know is that he is
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grateful. >> there's doctors, nurses, therapists, people i don't know helped me get this far. >> reporter: when it came time. >> my fellow survivors, remember, what you believe, you can achieve. >> reporter: -- like a pro he delivered his message. never give up. >> we just are so glad that he has come this far. we thanked the doctors and nurses, everybody that's helped him. >> it's been an amazing journal in that he is able to be here as a survivor. >> reporter: workers me at the santa clara valley rehabilitation center says bryan has been a mentor to other patients here. as far as his progress, he says he is now walking at home with the help of a cane. he hopes to get rid of his crushes altogether one day. in san jose, maria medina -- he hopes to get rid of his crutches altogether one day. maria medina, kpix 5. an east bay stand-down up to 500 veterans are brought to a tech village where they live for four days, they get three
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meals a day, healthcare and help founding housing. those and other services could be crucial to help get struggling veterans back on their feet. >> i watched the feelings an emotion, watching somebody that's homeless that doesn't communicate well the first day and by sunday, when it's time to go, they're back to normal and willing to communicate with you and you feel like you accomplished something. >> some 3,000 volunteers collaborate with air national guard members on active duty to put on this event every two years. today, people who had painful loss in the aids epidemic are marking 25 years since a memorial site was created in san francisco. it was made at a time when aids was at its peak and kpix 5's jackie ward is live at the aids memorial grove in golden gate park. >> reporter: it's just down this path where people call it an oasis. it's away from the city's hulls and bustle and it's meant for a
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place for people to grieve and remember. >> parks have a function to inspire and connect and i don't know that there's a more inspirational spot in the park or anywhere. >> reporter: it was 25 ago when this opened up as an aids memorial grove. back then it was a time of heartache. >> it was 1990 so people were dying rapidly. pages in the obituary. >> reporter: for jack porter hose' partner envisioned this oasis what is it was part of golden gate park. >> my official title is like the volunteer that didn't know when to go home. >> reporter: it's a place he visits to remember steven who died from aids in 1989. >> there was a group that got together and said we would love to build a sanctuary or grove or something in the city to remember all these that we keep losing. >> reporter: when steve died
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jack decided he would follow through with steven's plans and again donating a lot of the time to the grove and the existence. it's this partnership between volunteers like jack and the city's rec and park department that keeps this place special. >> we have a national memorial in golden gate park. and it's not just a concrete slab. you know, it's things that are alive. it's sunshine filtering through the redwoods. it's a meadow. it is a beautiful garden. it's all these things and it's special. >> reporter: and even though aids has killed too many people, their friends and family come here to make sure their spirits live on. 175,000 volunteer work hours have been put into this grove and every penny that's used for this grove has been privately funded. brian? >> thank you. still to come, passengers stranded for hours as a holdup in a amtrak train.
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with an arrest. witnesses say a man on a san diego-boun an eight-hour standoff on a southern california amtrak train ended early this morning with an arrest. witness say a man on a san diego bound train flashed a gun and barricaded himself inside. no passengers were hurt. they had to wait outside for hours as negotiators tried to get him off the train. >> i heard that there was a guy frantically walking up and down the aisles saying if i had a gun i would kill all these people. i don't know. there's different stories going on. >> i saw him back there and he was trying to open the door
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after they lock him in. and he wouldn't come out. >> tear gas convinced him to surrender. he is 46-year-old darius palmer from oxnard. it's unclear what he was trying to do. one witness said palmer was talk to himself and appeared to be on drugs. but he never threatened anyone. bart service is back to normal in san francisco at smoke on a trade sparked systemwide delays today. the smoke developed at about 8:30 a.m. at the 16th street station in san francisco's mission district this morning. the station was shut down for about half-hour while the smoke dissipated. trains passing through could only use one set of tracks. there were delays in all directions for several hours. delays will continue in san francisco for a different reason. there is no bart service between glen park and daly city this weekend. people traveling to sfo can expect delays up to an hour. crews are installing sound dampening equipment to the curved track way and other maintenance.
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the main purpose of the repairs is to make its trains more reliable and safer. they say it reducing the noise is just a bonus. the work will continue into okay. the commute across the richmond/san rafael bridge could soon be a little smoother. the san francisco bay conservation and development commission just approved a four- year pilot project aimed at easing congestion along the span. the plans include a 10-foot- wide bike and pedestrian pathway to the upper deck and an additional eastbound lane on the lower deck. construction will begin this fall and should take about a year and a half. a popular palo alto sightseeing spot could soon be getting a much-needed makeover. the boardwalk at the baylands nature reserve has seen better days. new at 6:00, john ramos on the city's plan to rebuild it. >> reporter: the nature center sits on the bay land saltmarsh where the city of palo alto meets the bay. it is a place of quiet solitude
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amidst the bustle of silicon valley and many come here for a little spiritual reset. >> well, we have to because you have to have a [ indiscernible ] somewhere and this is a good spot. >> reporter: while the visitors center built in the 1960s has seen better days, it's what is out back that's really showing its age. this 850-foot boardwalk stretches over the marsh to the edge of the bay waters. it's been well loved but frankly, it's a mess. >> we had pilings rotting. we had a portion of the boardwalk that was sagging and listing to one side. >> reporter: two years ago, the city decided it was just too dangerous and shut it down. they were able to make some repairs to the boardwalk and re- open the first 200 feet but the rest stayed off limits to the public. >> it's one of the needed projects that we hear the most about. >> reporter: so at monday's meeting the city council will vote whether to approve $1.5 million to replace the
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boardwalk. you can guess how the vote will go since it's on the consent calendar, no debate. its to rebuild the boardwalk widening it by a foot to comply with disability rules. it won't be completed until 2020. there's a reason for that. >> it's out on the bay land we are limited to doing the nonnesting bird season with lasts from the beginning of september through the end of january. >> reporter: it's a lesson anyone who works near the bay must learn, don't plan on doing anything quickly and do your best to keep the neighbors happy. john ramos, kpix 5. >> they will vote on monday evening about rebuilding it and spruce up the nature center. ♪[ music ] beyonce is back in the bay area. her formation world tour takes over levi's stadium a little less than an hour from now.
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it will be her third show there this year including her halftime performance at super bowl 50. 45,000 fans are expected to attend tonight's two-hour concert and it's not too late to join them. tickets are still available. they are about $100. concert-goers are encouraged to take mass transit to avoid headaches. caltrain will have a special northbound train from the mountain view station about 75 minutes after the concert is over. well, they are going to have a beautiful night for that outing with balmy temperatures around the south bay and inland, along the shoreline not so much. we have the usual fog and low clouds that will keep things cool by the coast but inland we'll be near 100. ladies and gentlemen, the view from the transamerica pyramid and the numbers now around the bay area are showing things in the low 90s inland with livermore at 93, san francisco 62, san jose 82 and it continues warm in santa rosa at
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83. this is what's happening. high pressure is over the west coast. that high builds. temperatures climb. it's going to be near 100 tomorrow. warm weather is nice but the high is also trapping particulates near the surface. so unhealthful levels of pollution in the east bay and in the air in the south bay as well means a second day in a row tomorrow of "spare the air." beach hazard statement. rips occurrence are going to be a factor at the shoreline from the sonoma county coast all the way down to monterey. large breakers along the entire coast. so be careful. futurecast shows low clouds blossom along the peninsula coastline. but in general, not as many low clouds tomorrow as we had today under the influence of that high pressure. that means numbers will be coming up. the warmest day of the week miss goodrich is tomorrow. just to let you know you have to be at work. it doesn't really matter. temperatures warming to 100 inland. cooling tuesday afternoon. the raiders are playing the
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falcons as mr. glenn will rhapsodize about in a minute. we'll broadcast that game in the afternoon on channel 5. grand prix of sonoma 88 degrees tomorrow. lafayette art and wine fest 90 degrees. it will be nice in lafayette. norcal boat -- i'm sorry, the norcal dragon boat festival more than 100 competitors out there in lake merritt tomorrow. 74 degrees. 77 for beautiful mill valley. 77 degrees. happening all weekend. overnight lows tonight will be in the mid-50s. vern, did you go to the mill valley art fest? >> i walked through. >> well, that's all you had to do. travel weather, i'm sure it was very nice. 99 degrees in redding tomorrow. 99 in sacramento. 100 in fresno. the forecast tomorrow is going to be hot inland. temperatures near 100 degrees at concord. not quite as bad in the south bay. not quite as good if you like the warm weather. 85 degrees in the south bay for the most part mid-80s. mid-90s and near 100 at brentwood, walnut creek,
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pleasant hill and concord over 100 degrees. and in the north bay we are going to be looking at low 90s in the warmest spots with a slight cooling around mill valley. temperatures around cloverdale and clearlake mid-90s. tomorrow near 100 inland. monday a little cooler and then tuesday, wednesday and thursday, the numbers collapse back down to the mid-80s inland but in the meantime, sunshine and plenty of it! that's what's coming up in weather. as for what's coming up in your health, juliette? >> still to come, would you consider wearing your health tracker under your skin? the bay area researchers whose new project reads like something out of a science fiction novel! >> got an update on stanford usc football and we'll set the table for cal and texas and enjoying some dazzling highlights like this heisman contender carrying the rock. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
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rowers race to the beat of chinese dragon boats were out on lake merritt in oakland today. people onshore watched teams of rowers race to the beat of chinese drums. more than 100 teams included one from the philippines. this is a first for lake merritt and a source of pride for the mayor. >> it is the first time it's been to oakland. and we, um, have a little joke that just like so many things in san francisco, it's moving to oakland. >> hm. admission to two-day festival, there are food booths, and other festivals. 5,000 people turned out this morning as san francisco's fort mason for the walk to end alzheimer's. it was led by sports director dennis o'donnell who lost his father to alzheimer's. he has been walking for a cure
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for 16 years now. >> 1.3 million is the biggest goal we have ever had here in san francisco. and what is the total raised by the san francisco walk over the years? >> oh, wow we must be, oh, 10 million? >> wow. that's great. dennis had lots of support from the staff including kenny choi anchor in the mornings here at channel 5, elizabeth cook, michelle griego, i also think she does the morning, ken bastida and veronica de la cruz. >> yes. they had their little ones with them in tow. very cool. really nice. >> yeah. >> good to see. >> all right. what you got going, vern? >> i got a lot. a lot of moving parts here. a lot of the local marquee games are ongoing or tonight number 7 stanford at the goal line right now at sc up 10-3 already in the 2nd quarter. and 11th ranked texas who last week knocked off notre dame they are in berkeley tonight to play cal, a touchdown favorite. the offense puts up 45 points a game.
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solid credentials in bear>> it's a great opponent to play. um, beating texas at the home territory. opener would be great for a program great for the fans, and kind of catapult our season i feel like, um, they're a great team. we respect them. but we're going into the game confident and we should win. all right. we'll get out of here with quarterback lamar jackson number 10 of louisville. he put on a show against second ranked florida state. scored from the 18-yard line here. he rushed for 146 yards, four touchdowns. threw for one, two. he is a heisman candidate. and this one coming up, this is out of the shotgun. this one even more incredible. this one in the 4th quarter almost unfair what he did to the seminoles defense. louisville crushed florida state, 63-20. florida state the number 2
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people in the nation. as i speak, stanford has just scored again. another mccaffrey touchdown. so fantastic up 17-3 on sc. it doesn't feel like it's going to be fight on trojans by the close of business today. >> all right. >> we shall see. thank you. coming up, the uc-berkeley, are they working on a tiny new sensor that could revolutionize healthcare from the inside out? >> only on "5," sharon chin shows us the fitbit of the future. >> reporter: michelle says it's a sensor which could one day be planted in your body to wirelessly record information about your nervous system in real time. >> from the outside you send in an ultra sonic wave. that reflects back from the implant and when it does so, there's information encoded in the reflection that tells you how the neuron or muscle or -- or -- or, you know, the general nerve is firing. >> reporter: the professor developed the neurosensor with researchers at uc-berkeley's electrical engineering and
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computer science department. the device doesn't need batteries. the ultrasound wave hits the square crystal producing electrical power for the circuit which then takes in the information. michelle says the sensor could track and even treat a variety of medical conditions. it could record irregular heartbeats and offer patients more control over the prosthetic limbs. >> like, for example, incontinence or bladder control, these are motor disfunctions and if you can block or stimulate the nerve properly you can address them therapeutically. >> reporter: this person says the sense core give new hope for 3 million americans with a neurological condition. >> be able to provide the stimulation to perhaps stop issues before they fully they are full-fledged. >> reporter: nischelle says the tyner sensor to be available for human testing in a few years. in berkeley, sharon chin, kpix 5. >> and researchers say it could be another decade before they
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seek fda approval for the device. and still ahead, in the next half-hour, a bomb goes off along the route of a charity road race. the out of state scare that has some bay area police stepping up patrols tonight. >> plus, the video is enough to make any parent's heart stop. how school buses are getting smarter to catch drivers who refuse to slow down. >> and you could call it the deal of a lifetime. how a simple groupon offer from a bay area business ended up saving four lives. ,,,, - i was diagnosed with parkinson's actually
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in early 2013. it took awhile to sink in. we had to think a little more seriously about saving money for the future and for the kids. - the income of airbnb really helped to mitigate the stress. - but we have that flexibility of knowing that if you know things get worse, we have this to help keep us afloat. - so that's very, very important for us.
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craig boswell on the launching of the latest verbal grenade in the war for the white house. reporter: donald trump addressed the remembrance project in houston saturday. the group advocates for tougher immigration laws. >> politicians ignore your cries for help. but i never will. >> reporter: trump pledged to the families of americans killed by illegal immigrants that he would shine a national spotlight on the issue. >> not one more american life should be given up in the name of open borders. >> reporter: on friday, the republican presidential nominee appeared to threaten hillary clinton while criticizing her position on gun control. he says clinton's secret service team should disarm. >> take their guns away, she doesn't want guns. take them. let's see what happens to her. >> reporter: clinton's campaign said in a statement today, inciting people to violence, it is an unacceptable quality in anyone seeking the job of commander-in-chief.
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the latest cbs news, washington post poll shows 67% of voters believe trump is a risky choice. bernie sanders held several campaign events for clinton on college campuses in ohio today. >> and you have got to do everything that you can to make sure that secretary clinton and ted strickland win this state. >> reporter: the cbs news poll also shows clinton and trump are in a statistical tie when third party candidates are included in the vote. craig boswell, cbs news, new york. a former defense secretary who served under presidents for both parties says that when it comes to national security, donald trump is beyond repair. bob gates tore into clinton and trump in a "wall street journal" op. ed. today. gates ran the pentagon under president george w. bush and barack obama. he criticized clinton for foreign perception of reliability and trust. but trump he says is in a league of his own.
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he called trump, quote, stubbornly uninformed about the world and how to lead our unour country and government and unseated to lead our men and women in uniform. trump said of gates, look at the results under his guidance, a total disaster! u.s. air strike in syria went wrong killing dozens of syrian soldiers instead of isis fighters. it happened at an army base in eastern syria that was surrounded by isis, syria and russia saying the american air raid killed 62 syrian soldiers and enabled the militants to advance. the obama administration says it regrets an unintentional loss of life and central command halted the air strike immediately after hearing from russian officials it was a mistake. an oceanfront area of new jersey was on lock down after a pipe bomb went off near a charity road race. the explosion happened just before thousands of runners
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were scheduled to pass by reporter: the explosion blew a hole in this plastic trash can just as runners in the semper five charity race were due to pass around 9:30 this morning. >> i yelled to my neighbor and said what was that? >> reporter: but heavy turnout for the race benefiting marines and sailors slowed registration and delayed the start. no runners were on the course and no one was hurt. >> that was actually a very good thing because had it not been delayed, we would have been running by the -- where the explosive device was. >> reporter: a law enforcement official says three small pipes were tethered together all with explosives but only one went off. new jersey congressman tom mcarthur was briefed on the investigation. >> it was clearly intended to go off at a certain hour and so there was definitely intent to hurt people. >> we know it was on a timer? >> we don't want to get into details only because i don't want to get ahead of the fbi
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and compromise what they're doing. >> reporter: residents were escorted home at 6 p.m. brook silva-braga for cbs news, seaside park, new jersey. >> in the wake. new jersey explosion, san francisco police are beefing up their own patrols just in case. the department said in a statement, sfpd has increased uniformed high visibility presence throughout the city and are working with allied law enforcement agencies and are encouraging the public to report any suspicious activities. one person is dead and five wounded by a man that philadelphia authorities say was, quote, hell bent on hurting people. among the wounded, two police officers one of whom was ambushed while sitting in her cruiser. a note found at the scene of the shooting spree express the hatred for the police. the gunman was shot and killed by police. >> we have to keep them in our prayers, the civilians that are seriously hurt and still in various degrees of being treated. and i think that all in all it was a terrible scary night but our officers turned out okay and hopefully the civilians
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will also turn out okay. >> well, of the three civilians wounded, a woman shot seven times died. the suspect was identified as nicholas glenn. police say they had had many run-ins with him before. they believe though that he acted alone. still to come, keeping kids safe even after they leave class. why more and more cities are adding cameras to their school buses and why california is not on board yet. >> and is soccer getting too popular for its own good? why the game is sending more and more kids to the hospital. ,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
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installing cameras.. on the school buses. but they're not watching the students. they're keeping an eye -- oe road. julie watts on some of the heart-stop y've caug more cities are installing cameras on school buses but not watching the students. they are keeping an eye on the roads. julie watts on some of the heart stopping moments they have caught so far. >> reporter: on the right side of your screen, a school bus is stopped. on the left, a pickup truck keeps driving plowing into an austin 7th grader. >> walking and see this truck coming and expect him to stop
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but he doesn't and everything just goes into a blur. >> reporter: miles was bruised but otherwise fine. his mother amy saw the video that night on tv. >> it's just your heart drops into your feet. and you just can barely breathe when you are watching that. >> reporter: the very next day, another truck hit a high school junior getting off a bus in the same city. amazingly, he was also fine. by one estimate, american drivers illegally pass school buses with stop signs out more than 13 million times last year. on average, more than 8 kids a year are killed by drivers who ignore those school bus stop signs. >> right down the road where everything happened. >> reporter: the daughter was one of them killed after getting off her florida school bus in 2010. they are pushing state lawmakers to allow school bus cameras and citations to keep children safe. >> it's not an accident because it's preventable. and it's not a tragedy because we know it's going to happen again. >> reporter: at least 15 states now allow cameras to be mounted on the outside of school buses
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to record drivers he will legally passing. california isn't one of them, to record drivers illegally passing. legislation introduced to do that. it stalled in april after the assembly transportation committee questioned data from california bus drivers who say they observed over 21,000 drivers illegally passing buses. they noted a smaller number of citations from chp and, quote, only 3 involved injuries. >> that's probably a 50 to 100 right there. >> reporter: unlike california, austin did install cameras last year. when the bus sign comes out, five cameras start recording. in four month, they have sent out 6600 citations. at $300 a pop, they hope the cameras and citations will soon train drivers that the school bus stop signs really do mean "stop." >> that's's somebody's baby. it's my responsibility as a driver to make sure that every one of those kids gets home
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safely. >> reporter: julie watts, kpix 5. >> well, the citations issued last year in austin alone generated nearly $2 million in fines. the money was split between the school district and the camera company. well, as if that isn't a big enough hazard for kids here's one more, soccer. a new report says injuries are skyrocketing. the numbers are the worst among children aged 7 to 17. researchers found about 300 children are treated every day in the emergency room. and they also looked at 25 year's worth of data and found sprain, strains and fractures were the most common injuries but the rate of concussions is also increasing significantly. still to come, he raided a cash register but couldn't steal a dime. the critical oversight that left this california crook empty-handed. >> and the pressure is on. temperatures coming up around the bay area as we look live out towards the bay. we have the all-important sunday forecast coming up. >> i'm coming back and i'm bringing physicality too!
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was less like "mission impossible..." and more like "mission impossibly stupid." e a brazen heist at a southern california ymca was like mission impossiblely stupid. security cameras at the indio center caught the thief kicking through the ceiling and then drops to the floor, breaks into a cash register, takes the
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money, and runs! but he might have trouble spending his ill-gotten gains. it was a toy cash register filled with play money. >> as you can see, the receiving tiles have been replaced here -- the ceiling tiles have been replaced here at the ymca and also there's money back in the cash register. they should probably clear out this drawer so they don't get hit again. >> the surveillance cameras got a look at the bandit and police are looking for him. >> he would be tough on monopoly! [ laughter ] clear around the bay area toth tonight but fog and low clouds return and there's lots to cover both at the shoreline and inland where numbers will approach 100 degrees tomorrow. hot on the way for the bay area. still cool at the beach but warm inland with northerly winds keeping things hot in excess of $100 degrees. we see the sun sink slowly into the west as we look toward the bay, the numbers still warm in
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concord. 92 degrees as we approach 7:00 on this fine saturday night. santa rosa 83. high pressure in command of the west coast. so the high builds, temperatures climb to the low 100s tomorrow inland the warmest day of the week. tomorrow a "spare the air" day tomorrow with bad air quality in the east and south bays. to the shoreline there's a rip current hazard large northwesterly, as well. big breakers at the coast. careful heading there. futurecast shows what we have. clear skies until the wee small hours of the morning. and then we'll get sunshine for much of the rest of the day. not much in the way of low clouds. so not bad except the beach hazard advisory that's posted. here's what we're expecting. patchy clouds, 100 tomorrow, cooler tuesday afternoon. overnight lows tonight fairly mild saturday night in the bay area. sun-up tomorrow at 6:45a tomorrow, we are well above average. san francisco hits 77.
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concord 15 degrees warmer than it usually is this time of the year at 101. oakland 82. south bay 97 at morgan hill and beautiful los gatos 94 degrees. in the east bay the numbers will be as warm as 100 degrees at brentwood also over 100 at concord. pleasant hill, walnut creek, triple digits tomorrow. north bay looks nice and warm as well with 89 degrees for santa rosa. 81 in sausalito and right at the beach the numbers in the upper 60s. clearlake lakeport and ukiah mid-90s will do it. extended forecast tomorrow warmest day. monday back off a little bit but then tuesday the numbers fall like a set of car keys. we'll be back into the mid-80s by tuesday, wednesday and thursday. in the next weekend, we'll have the return of the fog and low clouds but in the meantime, sunshine and warm temperatures. and speaking of red-hot, ladies and gentlemen, vern glenn! >> and i am back with more moving pictures of the rough
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stuff. here we go. let's go inside hemingway stadium. number one alabama at ole miss? >> university of mississippi, ole miss, whoo! they were bringing it! watch this play! oh, man! john youngblood off the hit bringing it back. rebels have beaten alabama the last few years. 24-32nd quarter. wow, bama rolled back to tie it at 27. harris took the handoff and he is rumbling! stumbling! all the way to the end zone. alabama came back to win it, final of 48-43. hey, mr. tom brady, mr. sir high school, mr. patriot, michigan alum, game against colorado in white and on the punt return, it's peppers got to love special teams. broke nine tackles on the run. 204 all purpose yards for peppers. this kid, whoa, amazing! michigan big blue they win 45- 28.
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more of the marching bands. must be lincoln, nebraska. huskers scoring against oregon. a divine ozobo. nice cut back inside to extend a 3rd quarter lead. nebraska beat the ducks final of 35-32. nfl. 49ers two touchdown underdog at carolina. the raiders a near touchdown favorite to beat the falcons on kpix 5 on sunday. how do you like that raider nation as derek carr airborne in his will to win in the big easy last week the newest captain comeback with a touchdown passes here to seth roberts and a two-point lob to crabtree beat the saints 35-34. carr said he channeled one of his favorite clutch nba ballers
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in the wind. >> you try to slow all that down. you know, that's really just my mindset. really, you know, in my head, i'm a big kobe fan so that mamba mentality. you have to do it. i've studied him watched him forever and that's always been my mindset when i get into those situations. now they always don't always work out but that's just where my mind's at. >> anybody hungry? i am. that was good. a's and rangers, a's up 4-0 in the fifth. semien back away, gone! a three-run job right now the a's up 7-0 in the fifth. giants and cardinals are tied at one in the third. and we'll leave you with this. simon pagenot won the pole for the indy grand prix of sonoma tomorrow. he is the points leader. if he finishes in the top five he wins the whole championship. the troubles continue for samsung.
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a florida man is now suing the smartphone maker after he says his galaxy note 7 exploded in his pocket. it appears to be the first lawsuit in the u.s. over the batteries defect linked to fires. samsung announced weeks ago it was recalling 2.5 million of those smartphones and this week, the feds issued a formal recall. u.s. safety regulators first warned owners not to use them on airplanes and then told people not to turn them on at all. samsung will begin issuing the first replacement phones next week. still to come, talk about the deal of a lifetime. >> she said i know i don't have to and i'm not asking you. i'm telling you that i want to do this. >> a bay area business owner brought in a lot more than she bargained for with a simple groupon offer. how a new client ends up saving her husband's life. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
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but she got a lot more than that. kpix 5's cate c : a bay area business owner put in a groupon order to get new clients. cate caugiran shows us one new customer saved her husband's life. >> reporter: when jean mccoy offered a groupon to bring in new customers to her business, she had no idea the deal she offered would turn into a deal of a lifetime for her family. >> not in my wildest dreams. >> reporter: last year, jean's husband was suffering from kidney failure for the second time. in 2009, jean donated her own kidney but it failed. the couple was close to losing hope. >> my husband is at home going through a process again. there's, you know, shadow down the road of no light to know when he is going to get a kidney. >> reporter: through the shadows came janet jennings.
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she bought jean's groupon to get facials and in their session jean shared his story in passing. after janet's third appointment with jean. >> came home and told me one of her clients was interested in going through the process to donate a kidney. >> she says i know i don't have to and i'm not asking you. i'm telling you, that i want to do this. >> when i heard that, i said what?! i said, who is this person? how long have you known them? >> reporter: janet knew jean for about a month but had never even met the husband. >> to have janet come forward and say that i'm willing to do this, there was light. >> reporter: janet got tested and was not a match for him but there was one more option. kidney exchange. the program matches incompatible donors to other patients in need. >> even if you're not compatible with that person we have a computer database that's able to put in all the information of the potential donor. >> reporter: janet registered with california pacific medical
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center's kidney exchange and started a chain reaction that allowed four people to get new kidneys. including geary. >> we actually in california we have a pretty big shortage of organ donors so that we have a huge waiting list here, a sixth of the national wait list lives in california. >> reporter: and thanks to janet, he and three others can be taken off the list. so jean's initial efforts to get new business turned into a new life for geary and three other families. >> for her to actually present this gift to my husband and have never met him and she just met me, that meant a lot. >> reporter: in san francisco, cate caugiran, kpix 5. >> amazing the things that people are willing to do. >> absolutely. >> yeah. >> it all began with groupon. that's bizarre but a happy ending we hope. thanks for watching. see you back here at 11:00. >> for news throughout the evening t he latest is always on our website, cbssf.com. for now as we look at the fog and low clouds, good night. captions by: caption colorado
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don't need much more than that. it's all about simplicity. (yells): skylar! where's my banjo? i asked you, like, 20 minutes ago. (clears throat, wolf howling) all right, do me a favor. give those beans a twirl on the way out, would ya? get out of here. cbs has asked me to host their new fall preview, which is why i'm out here, clearing my head for my new show, kevin can wait, on cbs mondays. i like to go camping in the woods by myself. gives a man time to think. and right now, i'm thinking about joel mchale, which would be weird if he didn't have a new show on cbs this fall. let's take a look. (strums chord) mark. the show is called the great indoors, so that's a play on "the great outdoors," but it's indoors. do you see what's happening there, guys? my name is matthew perry, and i'm playing jack gordon. you wish you were that guy! here. there's a shelter up the street. christopher mintz-plasse: joel mchale plays jack, who does a lot of research
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