tv KPIX 5 Noon News CBS July 10, 2017 12:00pm-12:30pm PDT
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live from the cbs bay area studios, this is kpix 5 news. >> now at noon, a new push to find a killer. efforts to find the person who shot a man while he was playing pokemon go in a san francisco park. i'm michelle griego >> >> and i'm kenny choi. the man's family are working to motivate the person responsible
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to come forward. >> reporter: it's been almost a year since the killing of a college student here at aquatic park. today a push to make sure that the case doesn't go cold. >> it's important to have closure. to find the person that shot my baby boy in the back. >> a 20-year-old college student us with playing the game pokemon go with a friend. he was shot and killed. no robbery, no confrontation, no apparent motive. one of the few clues, this sketch of a suspect seen running from the scene. >> we've interviewed countless folks and we haven't found someone with a motive. >> reporter: today a $110,000 reward is on the table for the information leading to the killer's arrest. 50,000 from the riley family. 50 from the city of san francisco, and 10 from the u.s.
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park police. >> reporter: we do know that money motivates people. the person who did this crime must be called to justice. >> reporter: police have identified two types of vehicles that may have been associated with the crime. a black audi and a 2013 white four door sonata. his family says the past year has been hell. >> we don't know how to go on without him. we try our best every day. and it just -- there's no sense in it. >> and anyone with information is asked to call the u.s. marks police. and you have if population to remain anonymous. new at noon, an arson investigation is starting following last week's massive fire at a on project
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in oakland. federal atf investigators have set up their trailers and a tent as they look for the clues. kpix 5's katie neilsen shows us a building where the windows are falling out. >> reporter: the simple explanation is it's been too dangerous for arson investigators to get inside and start their investigation. also the building behind me, 180 grand, has been evacuated. late yesterday afternoon. huge glass panels started falling off the office building. it was damaged by the heat and fire causing the glass to shatter on the street below. that's why it's still evacuated. the rest of the kiss placed residents were able to get back in their homes yesterday afternoon. the businesses that could have been damaged by heat or water were checked out. they took a first look inside
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their homes. >> i -- [ indiscernible ] >> i'm lucky that my apartment not burn. >> reporter: the concern now is still the office building at 180 grand where glass is continuing to fall off the sides of the buildings. no word yet on when the evacuation orders will be lifted for building. katie neilsen, kpix 5. a traffic alert in livermore. pg&e says a third party dug into a gas line. pg&e says no one is expected to lose service. san francisco police are looking for someone who shot and killed someone in the mission district. police briefly shut down the
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intersection as they searched for clues. a male victim died at the scene. meantime. check out this bizarre site. officers had their hands full with the homicide investigation when someone threw a sink at a police patrol car. the sink shattered the back window. the two incidents are unrelated. a judge will focus on oakland police in connection with a sex scandal. a hearing will be held at 2:30. a recent report points to how badly the department handled the investigation. the judge can hold public officials in contempt or fine them and put the whole department into receivership. >> california firefighters are battling two wildfires. danielle nottingham reports from santa barbara county. >> reporter: smoke rose from the mountains in santa barbara county as firefighters continue to battle a massive fire which
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broke out saturday afternoon. the flames quickly spread over the weekend, forcing hundreds of people to evacuate nearby campgrounds. including 80 children who were trapped in a camp barracks saturday. >> i pray that if i didn't die, then i would go to church. and then right when i prayed the firefighters came. >> reporter: firefighters are keeping their eye on this campsite. you can see the smoke and hot spots among the downed trees. at the other end of santa barbara county, firefighters are battling another fire which charred at least 24,000 acres. many fled to a red cross shelter for the safety. >> it's overwhelming. sometimes you cry. >> reporter: andrew north of sacramento -- firefighters have made progress in the sierra nevada.
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at its peak, it threatened 5000 buildings. >> it was coming down. it was wild. we he had to get the hell out. >> reporter: slightly cooler temperatures and diminishing winds are helping the efforts. danielle nottingham, cbs news, santa barbara county, california. today the trump administration is pushing back on allegations of collusion with the russians. this after donald trump jr. changed his story about a meeting. >> reporter: donald trump jr. admits he met with a russian attorney who claimed to have damaging information on hillary clinton. >> he was told there would be information helpful to the campaign. there was no russian information. >> reporter: the lawyer offered information on individuals
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connected to russia who she said were funding the democratic national committee and supporting mrs. clinton. she had no meaningful information and changed the subject to adoption. robert mueller is looking into whether the trump campaign colluded with russia. >> there was no collusion. but the fact that they were willing to do the meeting suggests to me that a willingness to collude. and that's what bob mueller is going to have to dig into. >> reporter: the white house insists that the president did not know about the meeting. president trump met with russian president vladimir putin friday. the two discussed creating a cyber hacking unit to prevent future election meddling. >> i'm sure vladimir putin could be of assistance in that. >> the president has tweeted
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there was a discussion but that doesn't mean he thinks it can happen. the kremlin has no ties to the lawyer connected to the meetings. >> britain's highest court will meet on thursday to decide the fate of an 11-month-old baby boy with a rare genetic condition. the family has been fighting for months to tame him to the u.s -- take him to the u.s. for treatment. >> reporter: the battle is being decided here at london's high court. judges will decide whether he can receive experimental treatment or if life support should be turned off. >> reporter: for several months, his parents have been arguing that new drugs would give him a 10% chance to live. >> no known major side effects. nothing to lose. and he deserves a chance. >> reporter: charlie's rare
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mite toe con deal disease has left him blind and death, unable to move his limbs. doctors initially said the experimental treatment would only prolong his suffering. and now researchers outside of britain said the new treatment might help. >> reporter: on sunday, charlie's parents delivered a petition to the hospital with 350,000 signatures. >> let's get charlie the treatment he needs. >> if he's still fighting, we're still fighting. >> reporter: american doctors in new york have offered to treat charlie. and the internet has raised $1.7 million to help. for cbs news, london. >> pope francis and president trump have voiced their support. charlie's condition is so rare that he's thought to be one of
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16 children in the world to suffer from it. a camp worker wakes up to find a bear biting his head and trying to drag him away. plus a potential solution to avoid all the log-ins and passwords, technology that could read everything from the way we walk to the way we swipe. >> and the pass record is -- cooler. hi, everybody. just a little bit cooler in the inland areas. today out of the triple-digits into the 90s. and look at the beautiful bank of clouds. the newscast continues right after this.
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says he was asleep when he felt hot breath... and heard crunching noises scra colorado camp leader survived a terrifying bear attack. the 19-year-old named dylan was asleep when he heard crunching noises. a bear was trying to drag him away. >> it bit the back of my head. when it was dragging me it was the slowest part. >> he was able to put his survival skills to use. he punched the bear and poked it in the eye before it ran off. and today park officials euthanized the bear they believe is responsible for the attack. >> check out this new video of a storm that hit over the weekend. time lapse of a super cell at sunset. along with lightning, making for pretty incredible pictures.
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shoppers are on the marks and they are set to shop amazon's massive sales for prime day. it kicks off at 6:00 tonight. and the sale will lost 30 hours. shoppers can expect hundreds of thousands of deals available in 13 countries, including the u.s. if you're not an amazon member, get a free 30 day trial. >> and you'll need a password. >> the average computer user has 27 passwords. brook silva-braga shows us how researchers are looking at a solution based on biometrics. >> just the walking is enough to tell. >> that's right. >> reporter: he asked a student to walk across campus at rutgers and hand his phone to another student. >> that difference in how they walk is enough. >> it's enough to identify who
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the person is walking. >> reporter: to the phone's accelerometer. >> you have two different people with different signatures. >> they are trying to make our devices more secure. >> if i try to use the phone, the camera is looking at me. >> with a process called active authentication that constantly, passively monitors the user. the phone was also trained incredibly to recognize the unique way its owner scrolls down the screen. >> and now let's say if you want to try using his phone -- >> if i swipe it's going to be able to tell. >> someone else is scrolling, yes. and now you swipe. >> after two swipes. >> why isn't this active authentication active yet? it could drain the batteries or
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fail to work in certain settings. for example, the camera can't see you in the dark. and some of the methods like tracking our pattern of life could turn off jewsers. >> to a lot of people this is going to look creepy. >> that's right. it's creepy but very powerful. >> i think it's inevitable. >> he helped invent facial recognition. and tech companies can't be trusted to self-regulate the use of biometrics. >> what guarantees me that someone is not using my data to do surveillance on me? >> questions like that will need to be answered soon. biometric data could start replacing passwords in the next few years. you know what password i
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kick thinking of, pee wee's playhouse. >> do you remember that? i don't think so. it's a whole different generation. >> let's look outside right now. i'm glad i don't remember that. we can see all the way to the east bay. what a view this is. you can see this skyline. we have the temperatures on the rise. it's 85 degrees in livermore. 80 in san jose. and low 80s in santa rosa. checking in. do you want 70s? go to vallejo? do you want 90s, paul smith is restauranting at 91 degrees. and the winds are picking up in san francisco. it's an on shore bush the west wind at 17. and in fairfield a 13-mile-per- hour winds. and that that wind -- the inversion layer with all the
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haze. we warm back up at the end of the workweek. high pressure not going anywhere. planted over the four corners. and the low has been enhancing the marine layer. and check out the temperatures. we were at 107 on friday. and concord back to clayton --down to 91. and cooler tuesday and you can teal the difference. 96 at the state capital. and 60s in monterey, very seasonal. the sun goes down at 8:33. and by tomorrow morning we'll have dipped overnight into the 50s. today's highs, 50s, 60s, 70s, and 90s. >> this is how the week ahead looks, that dip in the temperatures away from the bay. otherwise, a steady base. clouds lingering all the way
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the grill. salt and pepper, olive oil. it's a beautiful thing. let's talk about -- beautiful colors all the way around. nice and green and right here. that beautiful dark purple color. and squeeze it. it's going to feel nice and fresh. when you bring them home, store them in the refrigerator right away. and crisp them. put any leaf lettuce in water for a little while. rinse off the excess water. restaurants use that many times. it keeps them fresh and crisp. remember to eat fresh and stay healthy. are these beautiful? look at that. a california teenager is celebrating two lottery wins in the same week. >> okay, this is beautiful. they both came from scratch tickets.
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19-year-old rosa -- won the prize of $550,000. a few days later. she bought a second scratcher. and that one was worth $100,000. she mans to use that on a new car. >> she's got to buy a megamillions ticket. >> e-mail your nominations for summer camps to coolcamps@kpix.com. we may feature it on the show. we'll be right back.
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public's water in novato. now, the district has to drain the *entire tank... as they search for *who did this. that story and more at five. vandals breach a chain link fence and now the entire tank has to be drained. we'll have that story and more coming up at act. that's it for news news at noon. the bold and the beautiful is here and it's next. >> ah, nice to have you back, kenny. >> good to be back. >> we missed you. [ laughter ] >> have a great day, everyone.
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♪ >> laceration looks good. that shoulder will be sore for a while, but you shouldn't need any p.t. unless you experience more stiffness. >> brooke: what about the concussion? >> headache still gone? >> r.j.: yeah. >> brooke: honey, i know you want to get out of here, but please tell the doctor the truth. >> r.j.: mom, i don't have a headache, okay? >> it was a mild concussion. your son is a very lucky young man. >> r.j.: dad always did say i had a hard head. >> i'll check in on you later. your son will be fine. >> brooke: coco, can i talk to r.j. a moment alone, please? >> coco: sure. um, i'll -- i'll be outside. >> r.j.: okay.
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