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tv   The Late News  CBS  February 14, 2023 1:37am-2:12am PST

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now at 11:00, a shooter goes on a deadly rampage
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through the michigan state campus and yet another school shooting. >> from kpix, this is the late news with sara donchey on cbs new bay area. >> good evening. we do have breaking news tonight and unfortunately it's the kind of horrible story we have talked about again and again. four people are dead including a gunman after yet another mass shooting on michigan state university. the shooting suspect is a 43- year-old man who is unaffiliated with michigan state. officers don't know why he targeted the campus killing three people and injured five others before shooting and killing himself. all the hurt people are hospitalized with critical injuries. >> this truly has been a nightmare. giving an update like this is never easy as a father, i can
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only imagine how parents are feeling right now. this will be the beginning of a long healing process for everyone. >> the shootings happened inside two separate buildings on campus. police commended the students for following instructions and acting quickly to run and hide. here's what people on campus are saying tonight. >> we were there locked in the rooms and the guys were telling us to run out the backdoor as quick as we can and run for our lives and i sprinted out there as fast as i can into the woods. >> everyone was looking at the police reports and heard the shooters were getting closer to our location. still thought we were safe, but we started barricading the doors. the cops came in and they all told us to get out of the cafeteria, so we all stormed down the stairs and had our hands up walking out. they had us go to the nearest bus stop and as the shots got closer, they had us run to a parking garage. >> go up against the door just quiet scared, the scaredest
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i've been in my life. >> everyone's freaked out. everyone's terrified. it's a lot. it's truly a lot. >> police say it is too early for them to even fathom what the motive could be in this mass shooting. by the way, this is the eve of the anniversary of one of the worst school shootings in american history. tomorrow marks five years since a gunman opened fire at marjory stoneman douglas high school in florida where 17 people died and 17 more people were hurt. now to a developing story out of san francisco, what was happening inside this sunset district house right before it exploded? police say there was an illegal drug lab inside. we have seen similar drug-related explosions before including these two in may 2022. in los angeles 12 firefighters were hurt in an explosion at a butane hash oil manufacturer. let's go live to the sunset. betty yu has followed this story several days.
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she followed up with neighbors and experts. what's the latest tonight, betty? >> reporter: sara, this block of 22nd avenue behind me is still closed to car traffic and there's an officer keeping watch at the scene. i spoke with long time residents on this block who said that this family kept to themselves. neighbors identified this facebook photo as the man who lived in the home where investigators found an illegal drug lab in the wreckage of the explosion. it was captured on a neighbor's camera. missed 53 itpolice said the 53- year-old is facing charges. this man showed up shortly after the fire and told firefighters he lived at the house and asked if his disabled life made it out alive. a police source confirmed the victim is the suspect's wife. her caretaker was badly
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burned. she was apparently doing laundry and started the dryer moments before the blast. a source said investigators believed price was making butane hash oil, a highly concentrated extraction of cannabis. butane is an odorless, extremely flammable gas used in the process. >> butane lighters, you know, if you think about how they operate, they're designed to ignite immediately. they're very volatile. so if they're using those type of chemicals in an atmosphere or area where you have say a dryer that has an ignition source, you've got a recipe for disaster. >> reporter: former fbi agent jeff harp said the agency will work with dea to assist in the case. a source said neighbors told investigators after the fire they smelled marijuana coming from the property long before the explosion. >> i mean obviously if somebody smelled marijuana, pd is not going to come out and, you know, do a report on that. unless it's like in an area where there's kids on are
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something like that because it's legalized. >> reporter: the state's department of cannabis control confirmed to kpix that there are no licensed cannabis operations in the neighborhood where the explosion took place, but as an investigation is ongoing, we cannot confirm at this time that the early reports of a narcotics lab are related to cannabis extraction. >> folks experiment, right? they experiment and they do things wrong when they experiment and my guess is this person was experimenting around with something they thought was going to be either okay or worthwhile. you can't have a substantial production operation at your house. >> betty, i know neighbors have a lot of questions about this explosion. it affected a lot of people beyond the people who live in that house all the way down the street with a lot of damage and there are questions about how people move forward. what do we know about that? >> reporter: well, the supervisor said this wednesday he will be hosting a private
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town hall for these residents. he will have a police captain present, the fire chief, also a city assessor to talk about potentially possible property tax relief for all these homes affected by this explosion. >> i'm sure that will be very helpful information for people, something we've wondered about as well. thank you for letting us know, betty. united airlines flight from hawaii to san francisco was probably extremely upsetting and very scary for passengers because of this. it plunged more than 1,400 feet in just 20 seconds right after it took off from maui. this happened on united flight 1722 back on december 18th. we are just learning about this now. it dropped so low it came within 800 feet of crashing into the pacific ocean and then went sharply back up into the air. passenger rod williams was on the flight with his wife and two kids coming home from their hawaiian vacation. >> we were roughly 5 to 5.2
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seconds from making contact. so at any point in time i think it brings into perspective for all of us that you're really that close to being separated from your loved ones. >> cannot imagine how scary that was. the plane ended up landing safely at sfo thankfully. there was no mention of that incident on audio recordings. the faa investigated but have not released their report yet. still ahead tonight, one man went from punk rock drumming to wading in creeks to clean up the south bay one piece of trash at a time. also, this man is 77 years old and not slowing down, the bishop trying to solve the biggest issues plaguing the east bay, how he's even getting the attention of the white house. a wind advisory continues until 6:00 tuesday morning along the coast of the bay area, gusts potentially over 50 miles an hour. we're also tracking a chance of showers tomorrow. we'll look at futurecast and tr
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so this is a very different view of the storm damage in the santa cruz mountains. larry reardon was able to ride his bike where cars could not go and put together a compilation called tour day disaster and the storms didn't
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just cause damage, they left a lot of trash. one man took it on himself in his way before waiting for somebody else to do about it. >> reporter: justin is a san jose native and professional drummer who got tired of seeing his hometown fill up with trash. >> we are the voices. we're the hands and feet of mother nature and are trying to clean up as much as we possibly can. >> reporter: so borrowing the energy and diy attitude he knew from the punk rock scene, he formed a new group to clean up the streets and called it the trash punks. >> so you'll notice that we got patches here. >> reporter: what started in 2017 with a few fellow rockers has now grown into a smooth running and respected nonprofit complete with loyal volunteers like this corporate group from asml semiconductor. >> i was looking around for something to do. >> reporter: and los gatos retiree yana arnold. >> if we don't do it, it's not
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getting done. >> reporter: on this day the targeted cleanup is atyote creek and roosevelt park. >> today we're kind of cleaning up the aftermath of the crazy storm we just had here in san jose in the bay area and all the water rose super high and as you can see, there's still quite a bit of trash that washed up here on coyote creek. eventually this stuff will flow out to the ocean, which is eventually going to kill all the wildlife. >> reporter: the water was still too deep for volunteers to wade into. >> i just have a magnet and hook on this rope. >> reporter: so the trash punks came up with a work- around. >> so on the overpass here i just lower it down, kind of just go fishing for metal and right here i have an old -- what is this? -- bug spray. this is really bad to have in the water, too. >> reporter: it fits with justin's original motto of cleaning up the world one piece of trash at a time. >> one little piece times a million people, that's a lot of pieces of trash. so if we all just clean up one
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piece at a time, we can make a massive, massive difference. >> reporter: justin estimates the trash punks have cleaned up over half a million tons of trash since the group was formed. and their e-waste collection days have properly disposed of many tons more of outdated electronics. >> ten more minutes, cool, thank you. >> reporter: justin plans to expand trash punks to other parts of the bay area and this spring he'll travel to africa to share his cleanup and recycling methods with the leaders of a small village. >> we're going global. >> reporter: he knows this type of cleanup work will probably never be finished. >> we start with love and compassion for not only one another, but also for our environment. >> reporter: but in justin's mind, that's no reason not to keep on trying. tomorrow is trash day in your neighborhood, some of that may be blowing around because we have gusty winds in store for us, especially tonight with the wind advisory right along the coast. the atmosphere is getting
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squeezed by this approaching storm system resulting in the potential for gusts over 50 miles an hour and that storm system will give us a chance for a few passing showers tomorrow. let's talk about the winds first, strongest along the coast, mostly in the 35 to 40- mile an hour range for gusts into early tomorrow morning. the wind advisory expires at 6 a.m., but it's after that point the strongest winds are going to develop farther inland. everybody counted on an even playing field midday through afternoon, 25 to 35-mile an hour gusts which keeps us just below the wind advisory threshold for the rest of the bay area. after sunset winds will calm down. the rain chance is not going to last very long. we'll start off with clear skies overhead tomorrow, lots of sunshine when the sun comes up. the shower chance moves into the north bay quickly by late morning. it crosses over the golden gate as we head towards noon and early afternoon and it goes into and out of the santa clara valley and the santa cruz mountains by midafternoon. this is not going to be a long- led rain chance. if you get some showers and it's less than a 50/50 chance
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of anything measurable, it won't be much more than a trace, then clear skies tomorrow night, which means cold temperatures by early wednesday morning and early thursday morning, inland temperatures dropping to or below freezing. the next rain chance is way off the coast by thursday afternoon. that could go either way, a 40 to 50% rain chance thursday night into friday, but there's a strong chance it stays off the coast entirely, which means those numbers would drop significantly. right now temperatures are backing down to the upper 40s to around 50 degrees, exactly 50 in a number of locations, chilly enough tomorrow morning with 30s inland and low to mid- 40s around the bay. highs tomorrow with those gusty northerly winds aren't going to warm up a whole lot. we'll be a good 5 to 10 degrees below average. that puts us up in the low to mid-50s across the board for highs. chilly mornings and cool afternoons wednesday and thursday, but closer to our average high temperatures for wednesday and thursday. we'll leave the shower chance in the forecast for the end of the workweek friday even though it's only about a 50/50 chance. then we dry out and warm back
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up, low to mid-60s heading through presidents' day weekend. straight ahead in sports, bounce back by the 49ers tonight and the warriors, by the way. if only number 30 was out there. what is steph curry's status anyway? huge effort in the last home game before the all-star break. wait till you hear how many assists
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turning the page on football for now, let's at least start -- >> wait, wait, wait, 49ers, they'll have the first minicamp the end of april. >> it's coming. >> i want something to look forward to. >> let's start with basketball. >> okay, fine. you got what you wanted saturday night. you enjoyed that. >> i did a little bit. >> yeah. the warriors enjoyed this tonight. after the lakers got them a couple of days ago, a response was coming on the chase center floor. gary payton ii to steph curry, a couple injured guys watching their dubs run with washington in white. watch klay thompson get upstairs, two-fisted jam. thompson scored 27 and joint
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was jumping. they struck from everywhere. had a 42-point second quarter, kevon looney before the buzzer, warriors up by five midway. fourth quarter draymond green, great pass to andrew wiggins. wigs had a 29-point night. warriors totaled 40 assists. a couple plays later warriors in command, jordan poole right to the rack and who scored the final points? dante divincenzo, career high five three-pointers, 17 points. warriors got to 29-28 after a 135-136 win. steve kerr on a wiggins game that came out of nowhere. >> definitely his best game since he's been back. he had a lot of good games early in the season, but i loved his aggressiveness. he was attacking the rim all night, got us a lot of key buckets, you know, when we were starting to fade a little bit. so wigs was great. >> here is the latest word on steph curry by steph curry himself. he spoke with the media today
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the first time since suffering partial tears in his two lower leg ligaments. we know curry will be reevaluated after the all-star break. his return, well, we had the feeling it wasn't going to be a straight answer. >> the goal right now is just to try to let it heal while you maintain as much of your strengths and conditioning and hopefully soon i can get back on the basketball court. >> fair enough, you will miss a chunk of games post all-star break. >> i don't know how you define a chunk, but i won't be playing against the lakers the first game back. >> there's 25 regular season games left after the all-star break. warriors got 29 wins. so you wonder do they win 13 of the next 25? does that get them in? do they need 15, more? we got to wait and see. >> we do and we will do that. >> we won't be waiting
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patiently either. >> no, no. you don't do that. vern, thank you so much. up next, he spent decades fighting the biggest problems plaguing
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bishop bob jackson spent decades working to stop gun violence and bridge the gap between law enforcement and the black community. he's getting some recognition from the president. as da lin reports, instead of complaining about oakland's problems, he is trying to be the solution. >> reporter: the passion, the energy, the emotions, this is how bishop bob jackson brings down the house.
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♪ i surrender. ♪ >> reporter: but bishop bob is an unlikely preacher. >> i didn't grow up in the church. i grew up in the street. i grew up being a thug and a criminal and they used to call me dirty red. >> reporter: a drug user, an alcoholic, even spent time in the military jail. bishop bob in his 20s, he keeps the picture in his office to remind himself to stay grounded. >> this guy was part of the problem in this city and now god has blessed me to be a part of the solution perform. >> reporter: he credits his faith for his transformation. he became a christian at 31. seven years later, in 1984, he and his wife opened a small church with 13 members. >> this is the first church right here, 5927 foothill boulevard. there i am standing there, just received the keys. >> reporter: today acts full gospel is the biggest church in oakland with close to 4,000 members. his story could have ended there, but he said god had
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bigger plans for him. about 15 years ago he noticed a troubling trend. >> members of our church began to leave like the city was on fire. it's almost impossible for them to live here. many of them have moved out of oakland. there's been a tremendous black flight. >> reporter: the housing crisis turned the preacher into a builder. >> no thought in my mind i would ever be doing anything like i'm doing. >> reporter: in 2016 acts partnered with the city and developers to break ground on their first affordable housing complex at 9400 international boulevard. families moved into the complex the following year. >> it's a family unit, one, two and three bedrooms. >> reporter: across the street from the first building they're about to finish their second low income housing complex with 55 units. >> 5,500 people applied for this, 6,500 applied for this, okay? so that shows you the need for affordable housing. >> reporter: the bishop has
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long expanded acts' impact beyond its four walls. about 30 years ago he started the men of valor academy at their old church site. the intervention program aims to reduce gun violence and recidivism. >> i'd have been right back to jail if it wasn't been for men of valor, but i had some skills like working, how to keep a job, how to talk to people. >> reporter: today the program has 68 formerly incarcerated men who live in dorms, attend life skill classes and learn different trades through on-site job training. >> they feed me three times a day. i have somewhere to shower. they have excellent employees here that helps with job resources and helps with job placements. >> reporter: bishop bob also helped launch oakland's okay program which mentors a couple hundred black youth. oakland police officers serve as program coordinators and work with students to improve their grades and break down fears of law enforcement. >> walk them through their
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education, keeping them in school, getting them the clothes, the shoes, whatever they needed to stay in school. >> reporter: a few months ago president joe biden recognized bishop bob with one of the highest civilian honors, the president's lifetime achievement award. >> the largest thing that ever happened to me in my life. i'm still pinching myself. >> reporter: at 77 years old, he's planning his next big project. >> you'll be able to get everything you need to get your feet back on the ground. >> reporter: he intends to turn this large property at the corner of international boulevard and 73rd avenue into a one-stop homeless shelter from transitional housing to substance abuse treatment to job training. >> god's not telling me to slow down. there's still work to do. when do we want it? we want it now, now, now! >> reporter: a lifetime of preaching and service with the focus on the black community. >> come on, somebody, give god grace. give him the glory! we are taught to keep our pets far away from coyotes,
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but in this case it was the coyotes that saved a pet's
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i personallye y? so for monthsthere were rumors of an all-white dog roaming the nevada desert living with a pack of coyotes. he was nicknamed ghost. turns out the rumors were true. a group of animal trappers rescued the little guy who they think was dumped in the
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desert as a puppy. >> somehow or another the coyotes just accepted him. >> we were very nervous about where he was, how he was. he is the sweetest, most loving dog. he comes up to you. he wants to be petted. he wants to be held. he's good in the car. he didn't want anybody to catch him out there, but he does like people. >> they say the coyotes raised the puppy in the desert outside of vegas. people spotted him from time to time and posted about him on social media. they said he was injured. the animal trappers rescued him because they were worried the coyotes would turn on him. he was in pretty bad shape. he's got grown bones, scars, an infection. his scrotum needs to be removed. the vet also cks his stomach probably because they say he got hungry and ate some while he was in doesn't sl e paces. >> oh, no. >> an insomniac raised by
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coyotes. >> i can understand. it it's going to take him a little while to settle down. >> he is going up for adoption. so it requires a special kind of person, maybe somebody like us who keeps odd hours. >> odd hours and has just a lot of patience. >> if you play certain music, does it howl? >> get some of that soothing like the dog youtube channel, see if you can calm him down. >> see what happens when you cook a steak. >> chew on that. >> now i'm hungry. thank you for watching! "the late show" with stephen colbert is (upbeat music) - hi everyone, and welcome to legal help center. this is where we have professionals standing by to answer your questions regarding personal injury. so if you've been injured in an accident that was not your fault, like a car accident

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