tv CBS News Bay Area CBS April 17, 2023 3:00pm-3:30pm PDT
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>> mike brown knows the dubs won't go away quietly. >> near nba champions. they won't la down and give you the series. >> i don't ever really say anything is a must win until you have three losses then it's actually must win. but we have been through everything in the last decade with this team. they know that -- what it's about. >> a lot of fans that are not making the drive to sacramento will head to thrive city outside of chase center. the warriors have a free outdoor watch party at 5:30 ahead of the 7:00 tip off. local dubs fan rapper e 40 will be missing from game two after he was kicked out of game one on saturday. the sacramento kings say they are still
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investigating the incident. e 40 is usually courtside for warriors games at chase center. he made the trip to sacramento for the start of the series. he was escorted out of the arena after a confrontation with fans. fans say he was blocking their view and he was asked to sit down. witnesses at the game say he refused. security guards then removed him from the game. he said he spoke to a heck her in an assertive manner. he was kicked out because of racial bias he says. gary payton did not see what happens but said e 40 is like an uncle to him. >> it's a little weird. play off intensity and atmosphere. fans, you know, will be fans. so, i really didn't expect it. you never know. >> the kings released a statement saying we take the claims seriously and are investigating the facts and circumstances regarding the situation as we do any time an accusation like this is made.
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still ahead, they are the unseen. indiginous women that end up missing or murdered. >> it's not safe. i could disappear and nobody would know. >> we begin a special series of reports on why this is happening in northern california and what needs to be done. plus, we use it to navigate the freeways. now how google maps is helping you explore nature as well.
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there are disturbing reports of indiginous women that end up missing or murdered in the country and many in california. today we are shedding a enetok begi the series oonspatwew,at is suspected and what needs to be done. >> reporter: northern california is known for its remote, rugged beauty, but within these densely packed forests along the isolated stretches of beach and under the canopy of majestic red woods there is a deepening sense of dread. behind this redwood curtain is a dark and
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devastating mystery. indiginous women are going missing and many winding up dead, mothers, daughters, sisters, all van innerring into thin air. >> i got a phone call one day that my daughter was missing. >> where is my mom, where is my mom. you have to say to them i don't know, honey, i don't know. >> reporter: with many families left in the dark. >> is she worthy of a search? >> reporter: california is home to the largest native american population in the united states. but living in the rural north appears to pose an especially high risk to these women. >> it's not safe. i could disappear and nobody would know. >> reporter: 84% of indiginous women on reservations experience some form of violence and are 10 times more likely to be murdered. 40% of victims exploited in sex trafficking operations are
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indiginous. many of the cases are tangled up with domestic violence, substance abuse and mental illness. as to why these women are vulnerable, it's complicated. one factor involves a brutal legacy of california history. >> up here you are looking at the massacres of which there were a number. you are looking at boarding schools and indentured slaves. >> reporter: nor nearly two centuries the u.s. government forcibly removed indiginous children from their families and put them in federal boarding schools. the goal to assimilate them into a white society and a erase all tribal identity. here is a portrayed taken in 1881. a group of newly arrived children. seven months later another portrait. this time with cut hair, foreign clothes and even a white doll. not a single smiling face. the damage persists.
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>> all this area up here, all of us have dealt with the historic trauma. >> reporter: another factor, a congressional law passed in the 50s as a way to save money that mandates in california, all major crimes committed on indian territory will be handled not by tribal police but the state. in this case, the local sheriff. >> the tribe has been told you can't have jurisdiction for certain things. the county is in charge of that. but we won't give the county any extra money. there is no accurate count on the number of missing or murdered indiginous women. only 9% are solved. the resources are scares. the mistrust runs deep. >> we can't provide an investigation. >> elizabeth will take a look into the issues including the
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federal indian boarding schools and how federal law is hindering investigations and innovative approach to the solutions. a study from stanford finds approximately half of children and teens medicated for mental health concerns were seeing the primary care pediatricians. with depression and anxiety on the rise, researchers suggest pediatricians should be encouraged to make sure that they received evidence based psycho therapy. elon musk just created a new art at the official intelligence company. he is calling it x dot ai 4. the company authorized the sale of 100 million shares. twitter changed the company name to x corp. google maps is rolling out new features to help you explore. the company says the updated app will help you find things to do and see, access trail routes and walking and
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cycling directions. you can download a park without internet access. entrance fees will be waived saturday at more than 4800 national parks across the country. it looks like the weather might be decent if you look at doing a little exploring this weekend. first alert meteorologist darren peck will be joining us. >> it will be fantastic. here at home, our temperatures for the warmer inland spots will be approaching 80. plenty of sunshine. before we get to that, there are issues the next two days. it will get cooler, breezy and there is a chance for a drop of rain. san jose, you have a chance for a drop of rain as we get into late tonight and tomorrow. nothing doing now. a live look over downtown. 60 right now for you. a north breeze at 10 miles per hour. everybody is pretty much in that same spot. there is the system right there. if we put it into the futurecast and track that forward, this persistent line of showers is still holding together to give
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us a small chance of rain. if we come in for a closer view and play that forward, you can sigh through tonight, 9:30, that is a very weak cold front. that is going to hold together long enough at we will likely get some pretty light rain in the north bay and maybe even have that hold together as it skirts through the south bay. that is going past midnight. that is phase one. follow-up showers on tuesday. this will try to move through the north bay and south bay. by sunrise tomorrow, most of that is done. if we let it play forward, probably a few more that try to come across. that doesn't look that likely. the best bet if we get it, tonight through tomorrow morning. look at the totals. technically you get something you can measure. .006 in santa rosa. you can see the cold front. watch the line show up and the winds. the brighter
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the color, the stronger the winds. you can pick out the cold front. that will come through tonight into tomorrow. as that sweeps across, it will get breezy then it will pull in cooler air. watch what happens tomorrow. you see how the screen lights up tomorrow afternoon, calms down wednesday. wednesday the northerly flow is going. daytime highs are below average. in the low 60s. the warmer spots should be like 70. if we look at the seven-day forecast, we will stay in this pattern for the first part of it. look back here. look at friday and saturday. oakland, 71. 58 tomorrow. low 70s in oakland by friday and saturday. looking at the north bay valleys and south bay valleys, same story, upper 50s in the north bay. 77 by saturday. san jose in the mid-70s and the warmer climates for the inland east bay valleys will be near 80. there you go, by the time we get to friday. back to you. still ahead for most
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it's getting sunnier at northern california beaches but the winter storms left their mark. len ramirez reports an extra amount of drift wood piled up and that eativetur e artist in the monterey bay. >> reporter: surf 2 to 3 feet. the tide is going out. for duncan murray the wild winter storms brought a unique silver lining to his craft. it's here on the beaches of monterey county scattered and piled and waiting to be discovered. >> so, here is an example of close but no cigar. >> reporter: duncan is a drift wood artist. he is not just looking for any bump on a log.
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he seems out the most colorful, twisted fragments of trees to carve into one of a kind works of art. >> this is a beast but i think we will give it a shot. >> reporter: after minutes on caramel river state beach he finds something. was probably part of the big sur fire. >> reporter: this redwood log is one of tens of thousands of drift wood pieces on the sand. to his trained eyes it has possibilities. >> you can see how it is get this off the beach. duncan says he has the verbal okay from local rangers to do this and state law espoundsor less w what this weighs give or take. >> i get satisfaction out of having some trouble getting it to the car. >> reporter: after hauling it out, he takes it to his home studio where the real artistic
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work begins. honing it into a gallery piece is a month long process. >> this is a fabulous piece that i got down the big sur coast. i call it echos of the hero with the wing. >> reporter: this spring his artwork is on display at the coast gallery in big sur. he sells to art decorators and homeowners. >> i had pieces sell for as little as $700. i had other pieces sell for 10,000. >> reporter: he is always on the hunt for his next piece at a time when many are still mopping up and digging out from are the floods, duncan is reaping one of the benefits. >> i feel guilty finding such wonderful things on the beach. first the fire, now the floods causing everyone it just makes
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better for me for looking toi l got a bit of a swirl to it. >> reporter: he is an artist and creator making use of something most people consider to be all washed up. coming up, a special honor for this little slugger. why he has an entire police force cheering him on. new technology that equips surveillance cameras to detect weapons is being used as a tool to try to prevent a
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i'm elizabeth cook, an extraordinary number of missing every year. one g family's desperate search to bring their daughter home. at 5 we will take you live to thrive city to the warriors game as they try to even up the series with a win on the road against the kings. the livermore police department has a new guy on the squad. take a look. >> be an honorary member of the police department. will you wear the hat for us? >> that is 6-year-old calvin. he plays for livermore's little league. he got a surprise from some police officers. he was recently diagnosed with cancer. this was the last game of the season before seeking treatment. the officers stayed
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with him during the national anthem and they are rooting for him tweeting #calvin strong. we are all rooting for calvin. next onkpix. local news continues streaming on cbs news bay area. another look at the weather as well. >> it will be ♪ ♪ >> norah: tonight a search for suspects and emotive and a deadly mass shooting at a sw sweet 16 party that killed four and injured 28 others prayed what we are learning about the victims including a hometown football hero. here are tonight's headlines. ♪ ♪ >> norah: a celebration turns to devastation and a small alabama community. >> i was standing right beside him. ♪ ♪ >> norah: a kansas city teen just released from the hospital after he was shot for knocking on the wrong door. >> sometimes you go to a wrong
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