tv KPIX 5 Noon News CBS October 14, 2019 12:00pm-12:28pm PDT
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this is kpix5 news. a young woman playing videogames with her young nephew killed by police in texas. we have some late-breaking developments. i'm kenny choi. >> i'm michelle griego. police say an off w ser who shot a black woman in her home resigned just before before he was set to be fired. he was placed on administrative leave after shooting her in the home over the weekend. bodycam footage shows him early aiming his flashlight and gun at her windows and firing the weapon. the police chief announced his resignation and that his force is taking the incident seriously. >> most of the officers i encountered er the n'w weoperat
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th understand the gravity of the situation. the officer in question joined the force last year. the chief said he violated the department's use of force policies. the family of the victims is demanding he be arrested. a here is more from where a former trump official just testified. >> reporter: kenny, this on the fast track with several officials subpoenas including the former russia expert behind closed doors. >> fiona hill arrived on capitol hill for closed-door testimony monday. >> the crime here is that the american people don't get to see what is going on in these sections. >> reporter: she is expected to
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tell lawmakers that the personal attorney rudy giuliani and the ambassador to the european union ran their own policies in the ukraine outside the usual channels. they it stems from last week's arrest. they are charged with funneling. he pushed ukraine to investigate biden and his son, hunter who was on the board of the gas company. >> no one asserted i did anything wrong except the lying president. >> he said his family members will not work for foreign corporations if he is picked. >> the whistleblower's whose report leading to this official impeachment inquiry may not be coming to capital him. >> it may not be necessary to
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take steps that night reveal the whistleblower's identity to do that. we'll make sure we protect that whistleblower. >> his identity is exactly what the president wants. >> why arprotecting a person that tells you things that weren't true? >> president trump tweeted we must determine the whistleblower's identity to see why this was done to the u.s.a. now the eu ambassador is iflater this week. >> what else do we know about hill's background specifically in foreign policy? >> reporter: well, she is a well-respected foreign policy expert. she really is someone who has been with the bragging institution, at one point directing the senator for several years on advice with europe and the united states. she worked with harvard university and has written books so she has that expertise that is well-respected in this
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arena and soway can expect some of that to come out out of this treme and we may also get some of her testimony publicly in a written form as we received with some of the others who have testified so we'll keep you posted on that, as well. >> >> thank you. as turkish troops pour into northern syria, president trump is de fending his nctionon turk for the invasion but even some of trump's allies in congress say that is not enough. >> i think it is not necessarily going to prevent turkey from doing what they are doing. this has been turkey's dream for a long time and the president basically gave the green light to do it. >> in response to his critics this morning, the president tweeted the same people who got us into the middle east mess want to stay there. >> for the first time san francisco is recognizing today
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the second monday in october as indigenous people's day. hundreds met in a sacred sunrise gathering. jackie ward was there. >> reporter: tribal nations from around the world came here to alcatraz island today 50 years after indians of all tribes occupied it. as the sun came up over the bay, 1700 people commemorated 527 years of indigenous resistance. they gathered to honor their resil yensy. >> i came here with my family and they were original occupy years. those were my teachers and educators growing up and so to be able to help to coordinate the event for the past 11 years now, it is really an honor. >> the morning's events were somber and respect fum. it was honing the land through prayer, song and dance and raising the profiles on their
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face like global clat mat change. >> standing up together and saying no, we need to stop fossil fuels at the source and we need to wean ourselves as a country from using dirty fossil fuels because that is the human cause of global climate t physically here were remembered too. this tee pea and these dance searched honored the missing girls in the united states. >> events willacross e city of san ntfrue recognizin jackie ward, kpix 5. san francisco police are still looking for the vandals who defaced this over the weekend. it was discovered yesterday. someone covered the statue in red payment. symbols of an narc ky and messages on the base that says destroy all monuments of
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genocide. a woman and her dog were killed in a three-car crash in santa rosa around 3 clock this morning. it happened and police suspect a speeding driver watoxicated w woman's car. she may homeless and sleeping inside. the driver 21-year-old martinez is facing multiple charges including vehicular manslaughter and dui. they are looking for a driver who killed someone on the off-ramp near cutting boulevard. that also happened before 3:00 this morning. police got a call about a person lying in the roadway. so far no arrests have been made. >> san francisco police trying to piece together the cause of a multi-crash. five people went to the hospital, one with life- threatening injuries. these pictures show three vehicles with major front damage. they used the jaw of life to free at least one person. one of san frbe fr
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he vetoed a plan to lombard str the proposal would have required them to make a reservation and make a tol. everyone should have access. the governor signed some legislation making california the first state in the country to mandate a later start time for squalls for middle school, after 8:00 a.m. for high school, the bells ring at 8:30. the bill is based on three decades of research on teen health and sleep patterns. squalls must adopt this before july 1, 2022. >> the collapse. >> the scene in new orleans where they are still in full forecast. >> the event under way where size matters. all right. it is shaping up to be a beautiful day with the sunshine
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killed. another 30 were injured. here is the latest. >> oh, my still missing is camping out near the site waiting for word, any word including his wife. a i'm not leaving until he comes out. they are a pair. you can't separate them. >> they were more than 100 construction workers there. his family said the grandfather was supposed to be off, but called in at the last minute. >> my brother is the type of person. he would try to get everybody out before himself out. he wouldn't leave anybody behind. >> we need to move back. the structure is still urn stable and could fall at anytime. >> reporter: terrified passengers on a new orleans troller re down and caught up in the giant cloud of dust that spanned several city blocks. david tones witnessed the >> br
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catastrophe. they have been working on the 18 story hotel since 2015. it was set to open this spring. >> obviously we're in rescue mode and looking for this person missing but it is still a very dangerous building. >> reporter: hard rock said they are not involved in this construction. they are mourning the loss of life and injuries of this accident and they flown in engineer experts to try to stabilize the bidding. they are working with local authorities lifornbya power line. so cal edison told regulators of an electrical malfunction related to the fire which exploded inside thursday night.
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the details are still unknown and investigators haven't determined a cause yet. meanwhile the fire is holding at 8,000 acres and now 43% contained. one person died and more than 30 buildings damaged or destroyed. the number of people killed where a powerful typhoon made landfall flooded towns in central and eastern japan. that number is expected to rise as the watt tore resaid and rescuers fan out to find the missing. taking a ar scienti are hard at work right now aboard the that till lus research vessel in the octopus garden deepthe waters off the monterey coast where last year they discovered more than 1,000 tape sea octo pods, mothers cradling their precious
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eggs. researchers will be there for the next five days. it is 10,000 feet below sea level. you can log onto nautilus live.org and ask these scientists questions. they are researching this entire area to find out more about the octo pods. >> nautilus, i have that on my twitter page@an kpix. so look it up there. mary, hook ing up witharea afte temperatures and areas with clouds and fog. you can see that sunshine. we're starting to warm up as you look east at the bay bridge. right now in concord you're at 71 degrees. oakland 60. 59 in san francisco. looking at 66 in san jose rosa. there is a ridge of high
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pressure building in for us. that will be the case as we head to tomorrow, as well. some changes for the middle part of the week. i'll show you in just a moment. futurecast as we take you through the day with the sunshine bass we head through the rest of the afternoon, starting off tomorrow with maybe some cloud as long the coast but not as much of that fog compared to this morning. then we'll see that sunshine. temperatures similar for your tuesday. looking ahead to wednesday, we have the strong low pressure system that will bring the rain to the pacific northwest. that will drop a weak cold front for us by wednesday night. there is the chance to see a few showers for the north bay as we look ahead to wednesday night with thfronso ac ytime his fotoday, low cos d san jose. uppethfocast
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and what to expect again. similar for your tuesday. temperatures on wednesday will be cooling down with the weak front. a chance to see some showers especially for the north bay wednesday night. you can sea temperatures will stay below average through the workweek and into the weekend. behind the front, breezy conditions, not expecting extreme fire dangerous because it will be onshore winds. relative humidity values will be higher. >> thank you. >> you may have heard of the new trend of tiny homes. tonight in our original series project home, we're looking at a potential solution to homelessness. fitting your life into a small space can be a sacrifice but they are aware and want to live off the grid. some are building them for the homeless. is that going to work? do, right? it doesn't cost -- right now, it is probably costing more
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money not to do it than to righ to ask a homeless person to make that compromise when that wasn't their idea of what home was, i think is rather defeating the purpose. tonight we will give you a look at living tiny. you can catch our project home series monday and wednesday nights at 11:00. >> let's see how stocks are trading starting this workweek. the dow is down about 19 points. this may look like a perfectly good green pepper, but a few years ago it would have been thrown away. i'm kenneth craig with the
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2170 pounds. this year's goliath gourd will be on display this weekend at the half moon bay art and pumpkin festival. go big or go home. >> your local supermarket is like a beauty counters where a less than perfect food is tossed in the trash, but now they are reducing it rescuing it's. kenneth craig reports. >> reporter: up here in this area right over 2,000 acres. a we met juan gonzales in the farm country whereabouts 90% of america's cauliflower is harvested every year. but lee said until recent years, his farms were also the site of a staggering amount of food waste. ten million pounds a year. a vegetables rejected simply for looking a little different. >> so a store will say this is a little bit too yellow for me up top, we can't take it.
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>> that has caused millions of tons lost each year. >> you're going to get peaches, plums, nectarines. a one man's trash has become another man's treasure for ben who saw imperfect produce as the perfect recipe and name for anubis nes model. >> when you founded imperfect produce, what was the goal? >> the goal was really to fix apart of the food system. >> in four years the doorstep delivery service expanded to more than 30 markets and over 200,000 customers. including caroline's home in cambridge, massachusetts. >> lemons. a where is the imperfectiontion here? >> good question. [ laughter ] >> you think it is this? the food has been just as good as grocery store quality. when i lack for imperfections, i'm like is it really imperfect? it sales fine. and it is a great price.
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>> other companies do something similar. prices vary but a box of produce can start around $15. it is nice to think there is a small consumer impact i can make just choosing these vegetables. >> kenneth craig, cbs news, watsonville, california. a >> you're fighting over your mother. >> there is little love between brother and sister. >> this woman stole money from my mother. >> did you scream she kidnapped your matt? >> i have the police report here and he got a misdemeanors for lying to the police. >> i want to point out the character of this man. >>onavto point it out. i have got it. next judge judy. >>
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even happen? >> brooke: flo is katie's kidney donor? flo? >> sally: uh, where does hope keep the extra diapers? >> wyatt: what? if you went through all the extra diapers in the nursery, i mean, we got problems on our hands. >> sally: ah. your uncle thinks he's so funny. oh, no. >> wyatt: [ laughs ] >> sally: no, i wanted to restock them before hope and liam got home, you know, just so they didn't have to do it whenever they got back. >> wyatt: well, then let's just, let's look at the list. >> sally: what list? >> wyatt: the list that hope gave us with all the instructions. i mean, i'm sure it tells us where all the extra diapers are, right? it's just i gotta...
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