tv The Late News CBS April 18, 2023 1:37am-2:12am PDT
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>> it is a nightmare. plus, a local landlord says that covid eviction moratoriums could cost him his house and hi retirement. why he said that about tomorrow at city hall could be too little too late. >> from kpix, this is the late news with sara donchey on cbs news bay area. >> hello, i am sara donchey. oh boy. this was the last thing warriors fans wanted to see tonight. and other game dropped in their series with the kings. it was what happened towards the end of the game that had tensions boiling over at golden 1 center. draymond green got bounced for that. vern glenn ha more on the stop hurt around th bay and some of the dubs' other struggles. this is really not what we wanted to see tonight for a number of reasons! >> reporter: no, not at all. we saw the stop. the optics were bad. it led to a flagrant two
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call, and it got green ejected. but sara, that's not why they lost the game! this was a four-point game that they later tied at 93. they didn't protect the basketball. they haven't ha 22 turnovers in a playoff game since the 2014-2015 season, and that cost them 25 points to make. again, here is the play that everybody is talking about draymond green got tied up afte a kings miss. green got teed up but his leg was grabbed. so his foot goes down on his torso. this was reviewed, and he got a technical. green got ejected somehow. the warriors responded and tied it up. but too many fouls and turnovers cost him, and that is why the kings lift the beam 114-106, andy green obviously did not like how this went down. >> can you walk us through what
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happened there? >> my leg got grabbed, second time in two nights. the referee just watched it. i had to land my foot somewhere, and i am not the most flexible person. >> what do you do when somebody grabs your foot running full speed? just fully grabs your foot and yanks on you? that's not cool, man. were you surprised that he was on the ground for that long? >> no, i wasn't surprised that he stayed down that long. >> reporter: so we will talk about this later on in sports. certainly a first for the warriors in the steve kerr era, dropping the first two games of the playoff series. that will d it from golden 1 center. sara, will talk to you later. >> here is the thing about that incident. draymond green has no been the only one ejected latel from the game. one of the dubs' most famous fans got kicked out of the game saturday in
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sacramento. rapper e 40 had som of the best seats in the house, but he was escorted out after some kind of an argument with a fan. he said that he was forced to leave because of racial bias the whole incident has caused a uproar online. some fans at the game accused the rapper of standing and blocking the view for the people behind him. they said he refused warnings to sit p-40 said that he responded in an assertive and polite manner. he says this experience has bee jarring. i was absolutely humiliated by the king's security team. the kings said , we take these incidents seriously. a lot of us know tha e 40 is a staple at dubs home games. he is a fan favorite. obviously a lot of dubs fans weren't happy at the way this went down. >> i was upset at the way that
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sacramento fans reacted to this whole thing. they were booing and pointing at him. i thought it was not necessary. >> what they did, i thought it was kind of rude, but we will shrug it off. this is a game. this is the playoffs. we are no here for the petty stuff. we ar here to play to win. a debate has been raging in oakland for months, actually fo years, that has pitted landlord and tenants against one another it started at the beginning of the pandemic. tomorrow, oakland leaders are set to vote on a plan to phase out the covid eviction moratoriums. some tenants say they cannot afford rent and they need the city to ensure that they are not kicked out on the street. but some landlords say they have been financially ruined by tenants who have gone years without making a single payment. under the proposed phaseout plan, the city eviction and late fee moratoriums would end july 15th the ban on rent hikes would not
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end until next july. betty talked to a landlord who stands to lose everything. he says the city has abandoned him and left him with no plan to recover years of lost income. >> i owe $65,000 in back due rent. >> reporter: john williams live in the back room of the duplex he has lived in for 50 years. renting it out was supposed to secure his retirement. but he i now facing foreclosure. he says that for years, martina martin, his tenant in the bottom unit, had paid $1500 per month, thoug the checks always came late or bounced. in march 2020, she stopped paying altogether. >> it is a nightmare. it is an absolute endless nightmare, where it is ridiculous that we are put in this situation for three years with no compensatio or any kind of dialogue on how we recapture our funds, other than that we have to go to cour
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to do that. i think that that i really unfair for housing providers. >> reporter: the ordeal has taken a toll on john's health. in the past few years he has amassed a stack of documents. john said she has never provide any proof of a covid -related hardship. in fact, he provided documentation of her storage an transportation business registered to her address. he often spotted movers outside hi home. she also runs a local massage business, according to phone records. >> can you tell us why you can pay rent? >> reporter: i got in touch wit martin over the phone, but she hung up on me. currently, tenants can be evicted over ren debt. >> these folks who are evicting the fraud in the system -- >> reporter: on tuesday, officials will consider winding down the moratorium. they said
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that landlords have cleaned out retirement savings to make mortgage payments. on monday he met with representatives from mayor sheng thao's office. >> she said she has never plan to reimburse these providers fo their retirement savings they have been robbed of, and there is no plan to save people like john williams from foreclosure. >> reporter: john said lawyers fees are costly, and legal proceedings are slow and cumbersome. >> it is a heavy burden to bear there. financially, emotionally and physically. it is just a lot. it is just a sad day for oakland. >> john says he doesn't know if he can come up with the money b the end of the month or what he will do or where he will go if he can't. tenants rights advocates we have talked with i the past say they are okay with the moratorium ending, so long
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as it is phased out. we talked to the director of a tenants rights group at a rally in oakland last week. >> this proposal does not block anybody from getting back rent and evicting everybody and making folks homeless all at once will not get the money back. >> reporter: the city council meeting is set for tomorrow at 4:00 p.m. coming up, y the fire that never spread beyond the walls o one apartment left everybody in the complex without a place to live. they are the unseen. indigenous women who end up missing were murdered. one family's desperate search. >> it's really simple. we want to know what happened, where sh is. >> the frustration over a law that might be standing in the way of closure. don't adjust your screen! that's rain showing up right no on first alert doppler. we already have close to a 10th of an inch of rain out of the nort bay. i will show you where it i going next. we will track it through the night, coming up.
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attend all treatment appointments. ready to treat your hiv in a different way? ask your doctor about every-other-month cabenuva. with every-other-month cabenuva, i'm good to go. a really tough break for dozens of people in fremont who could be out of their apartment for months after a very small fire in one unit caused a
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problem with just about the whole building. so the sprinkle system basically drowned out much of the rest of the complex on main street, forcing the city to kill the power and red tag the entire building. people in 44 units were told they won' be coming home anytime soon. th city says that it could take three to six months to fix all the water damage. now we are talking about something that we thankfully haven't seen in a little while, because we had too much of it too quickly, but rain! we have been enjoying this sunny, beautiful weather. are we getting any significant amount of it? >> no, but it is measurable. we have had a 10th of an inch of rain already in the north bay. anytime rainfalls, we want you to know about it. we have a 10t of an inch in santa rosa. first alert doppler is showing us a line of rain that is trying to move across the bay, and look a that! so this is trying to get down to the golden gate bridge at this point. we haven't got any measurable rainfall from th golden gate self. first, let's look at is cp. if we
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put it into the future cast, we can track this over the rest of tonight. so you haven't gotten anything from the city south, but watch that line work its wa southward down the peninsula an the east bay shoreline. by the time we get to 11: 30, it is no moving right across the peninsula and the east bay shore. san leandro, fremont, hayward , you guys will get light rain out of this. it will be less than what we got in the north bay. so this will only be a couple hundreds. it will work its way south from there. by th time we clear 2:00 in the morning, that is done. there might be a few stragglers that show up in the predawn hours, then that will be it. we will have a fairly quiet day tomorrow. look, which we alread have. santa rosa with a 12 inch of rain. petalut a 10th of an i francisco, i think that number will go up. you might get 100 o so out of this. in addition to
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the light rain, the pattern is bringing in cold air. we watch the deeper shades of blue, whic show us the column of the atmosphere. when you look at it this way, you can visualize how cold air gets transported. the numbers tomorrow are going to feel cooler, because we have colder air, but it will also be breezy. watch the wind speeds. we will play that into tomorrow afternoon. the screen lights up we have a 15 to 20-mile-per-hou breeze tomorrow afternoon, on top of the fact that we have pulin cool air from last night. so tomorrow will feel cooler. for tomorrow daytime highs, let's look at where we will be for daytime highs tomorrow. we will check out the numbers across the bay, and we are looking at numbers that are right around 60 in general for just about everybody. 62 in sa jose will be one of the warmer numbers. and let's go to the seven-day forecast. the temperatures will really warm u towards the end of it, and onc
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you look towards friday we are going to get back into spring i a big way. oakland, your number are going back up into the low 70s after being in the low 50s tomorrow. we will see the trend repeat for everybody. north bay valleys, you will up to the upper 70s by friday. san jose will do it. when we look at our microclimates for the inland east bay, that will be near 80 by the time we get to friday an saturday. all right, vern. it's a big night in sacramento. back out to you. all right there, darren. hey, a final word on what happened in this building tonight! the party, once again is outside of golden 1 center. the kings are half way home fro
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-ycal, norcal... -my? 's fur. atms in fresno? fres-yes. encinitas? yes, indeed-us. anaheim? big time. more guacamole? i'm on a roll-ay. how about you? i'm just visiting. u.s. bank. ranked #1 in customer satisfaction with retail banking in california by j.d. power. alive look at sacramento. very, very happy kings fans . vern, i have to wonder, with everything that happened tonight, i know the warriors ar facing an uphill battle, but i know they have trouble on the
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road. what are we >>think the and they protect homeground coming up on thursday. that is their mentality. they have been down 31 in a series before and have come back. so tonight, yeah. big bump in the road for the warriors again. they are in uncharted postseason waters. first time in the steve kerr er they have been down 0-2 in a playoff series! in fact, tonigh the warriors committed five turnovers from the jump and still lead this game. this one was so big that even commissioner adam silver was in the house for this one. picking it up in the third quarter. the kings were rolling! malik monk followed up a stellar game one performance with 18 off the bench. the kings led by as many as 14. in the fourth quarter, i was draymond green. tangled up with some bonus. stepped on th torso. how did the warriors respond? well, they had
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draymond's back. gary payton ii knocked down a triple to tie it up at 93. but the young kings, they look like they have been here before! fox finished with 24 points into the final minute sabonis kicked it out to mitchell who hit from three to put the kings up by nine, and here was the dagger coming up. clock winding down to nine, and sabonis with a celebration dunk the kings earned a 2-0 lead in this series, but the warriors know there is still a lot of basketball to play. >> we know we have to play better, but we will play better these guys are champions. you saw what they did in this situation. so now it is a matte of going home and licking her wounds a little bit. we go home and we will take care of our
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home court. >> i was thinking, this is what we haven't seen yet. we can go and conquer this one. it was a lot of fun. a lot of fun. storm activity baseball. giants on bring your dog to the ballpark day. third inning. david villar found one to drive, and this smash went all the way to the wall. the giants led 3-0. logan webb may be deserved a better fate. in the second, jorge sala or took webb deep, and the marlins steal this one, final o 4-3. the giants fall to 5-10, and this one is going to sting. by the way, the a's today got pounded by the cubs. they have record of 3-14, the worst recor in the biggs. but back to the
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elizabeth cook reports. >> reporter: alongside the klamath river near the side of the road, there is a weather-beaten flyer. on it, th face of an indigenous woman. 34-year-old emily riesling. she has been missing for more than year. >> i think the most heartbreaking thing is that you may never see that person's fac again. >> she had everything going for her in the right direction. the things started falling apart. >> reporter: emily's parents ar heartbroken. her case is going cold. >> it is simple. we want to kno what happened, where she is. >> reporter: what we do know is that as a child, emily was a ra of light, full of joy. so much love. so much potential. from a early age, she embraced her native identity. >> she loved her culture. she
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loved her family. >> reporter: the straight a student had lots of friends and went to college on a scholarship. then her world began to crumble. a boyfriend violently abused her. she began to use drugs. >> so this young woman who was so bright, so capable, you knew the world was her oyster, she kind of became a different person. >> reporter: her parents told m that after the birth of her second child, emily developed postpartum psychosis. she was arrested for igniting a fire at a cemetery and put in jail. her parents hoped she would finally be forced into treatment. >> the d.a.s office, her family they were all against letting her out. they did. >> reporter: a few days later, everything changed. >> give us some perspective of where we are. >> we are on 169 at pequon
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bridge. this is the last confirmed place we know emily was at. >> reporter: this bridge is on yurok land more than two miles from her home. >> on this bridge is where we can confer multiple witnesses. >> reporter: but if a major crime here happened, or anywher else on tribal lands, the tribe has no jurisdiction to investigate it. so who was in charge when someone is murdered or goes missing on tribal land? the answer to that involves a dark chapter in federal indian policy. it is known as public law 280. >> it takes away the tribe's ability, or their sovereignty t be able to have their own people, have their own law enforcement and investigate and put that onto the state. >> reporter: congress passed th law in 1953 without the consent of tribes. it greatly enlarged the power aistatcalifornia, t
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major crimes and reservations, but with no additional funding. >> the sheriff's office has jurisdiction on tribal land. so you are having government comin in and telling a sovereign nation what crimes we are going to enforce on their land. >> reporter: sheriff william hansell is sheriff of the county. and emily's family is growing angry. >> you have the money and resources. where are you when i comes to these cases? >> i think a lot of things have changed over the years. oftentimes there are jurisdictional boundaries. a lo of times there is finger-pointing. who is going t investigate this? >> reporter: both the sheriff and local tribes are dealing with a lack of money and manpower in a county the size o
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connecticut that is home to 11 tribes. it is also way off the grid. >> it is extremely remote. when people talk about rural, there is us. >> reporter: the yurok reservation is 85 square miles. it is easy to see how emily could just disappear. >> i think the system failed emily all along. >> reporter: all the judy and gary have left our memories. birthdays, holidays and her smiling face. emily's son, thei grandson david, wants to know. >> can you take me, grandpa, to go down and look for my mom? if we can find her, we will find her. if we can't find her, i say david, we will just keep looking. >>
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about it, it is fun to hang out but some red sox fans found something fun to do! look at this! this looks like a frat party. that's okay. the shirtless this is a little weird. but look at this! they were drinking out of their shoe during the rain delay. the cameras caught view of that, an that has since gone viral. it i absolutely horrific and disgusting, dare i say, if i am allowed to share my opinion about such a thing. >> isn't that your cousin from boston? remember when we couldn't be in stands with groups because we were ♪♪ >> we understand. >> we understand the feelings of embarrassment of failing teeth and tooth loss. >> we understand the pain of not
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