tv The Late News CBS May 9, 2023 1:37am-2:12am PDT
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the calls from outside city hal to release security video following the death of banko brown. >> from kpix, this is the lates with sara donchey on cbs news bay area. >> hello, i am sara donchey. th killing of banko brown by walgreens security guard has sparked an intense debate about justice and transparency, and brown supporters are demanding the district attorney release video. he allegedly stole $14 worth of candy from a downtown walgreens and was shot by security guard. tomorrow, san francisco supervisors are expected to pass a resolution urging the d.a. to release video and police reports. here is supervisor eric peskin. >> it is important for supervisors and the public to see videotape following the tragic killing of an unarmed individual who was allegedly absconding with $14 in candy to determine whether that was a
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proper discharge of that security guard's duties, whethe indeed, as alleged by the district attorney, that was an act of self-defense and justified. >> earlier today, d.a. brooke jenkins issued this statement saying the case is not closed. she will eventually make a fina decision on charges. the d.a. said she understands the concerns of people calling for transparency, but that releasin evidence could compromise the investigation. there was a protest outside of many's that day, which is where kenny choi met a long time friend. >> reporter: activists rallied in front of manny's. there were calls for the d.a. to release video evidence mounting. >> we want her to release these tapes. if it was so-called self-defense, where is the video? >> reporter: mystic caesar say that she and banko brown knew each other for years. brown was shot by a security guard during
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a theft investigation at the walgreens in union square last month. >> we are out here trying to ge justice for banko. >> reporter: advocates for brow , including recall jenkins organizers, hope that more pressure will influence the top of the prosecutor to release surveillance video of the deadl encounter. >> will be meaningful to see th tapes because people will see that that should not have happened. >> reporter: jenkins originall discharged the case citing lack of evidence and said that a final decision will be made whe the investigation is complete. >> there is no point in holding onto it if it was in self-defense. why not release it? >> reporter: some residents, including antonio morgan, a former security guard, believe that giving authorities time to complete the case without compromising the investigation makes better sense. >> we think that two weeks is a unreasonable amount of time. maybe if after several months they are not doing anything. >> reporter: the club that invited jenkins for an event
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posted a sign saying that was postponed because of a scheduling conflict. that did not stop brown's loved ones fro voicing their frustration. >> this should not be happening to nobody. could have been her could have been me. could've been anybody outside. >> reporter: the board of supervisors is expected to pass resolution demanding all evidence collected so far, including video surveillance be released to the public. also in san francisco, mayo london breed has her first majo challenger for her 2024 re-election campaign. district 11 supervisor file paperwork t run for mayor next year. i spok with him tonight and he told me that mayor breed has not done enough to address homelessness and crying. he feels that he would do a better job of collaborating with other city leaders. >> at the end of the day, i am one of 11. there is only one mayor. 90% of the power in the city rests with the mayor. that is where i can show my track
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record and my ability to work with all of the disparate group in this city, and that has been my style since i have been on the board of supervisors. >> right now city hall is under immense pressure to handle the fentanyl crisis and high profil murders including the bob lee killing and the exodus from downtown san francisco as well. across the bay we have seen some pretty disturbing sideshow videos out of oakland these pas few weeks. the one that happene on friday that you see here ma downtown oakland look like a wa zone. a car was engulfed in flames during his sideshow, and rather than put the fire out somebody repeatedly smashed another car into the burning wreckage. this all happened at oak. participants fired off fireworks. some people were using lasers. police said there were about 250 cars at this one and almost 80 of those end up being told. this evening, councilmember noel gallo said many of these cars were from ou of town, from belmont to sacramento and even los angeles >> there is no excuse and no reason why you are here, especially in our poor communities destroying our streets and jeopardizing the
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safety of our communities and your own safety. >> tomorrow he will introduce a ordinance to strengthen penalties for sideshow promoter and participants. he says the city is also trying to build up a sideshow unit with help from the chp. in the past 30 minutes we have learned that the martinez amtrak station will have to be closed tomorrow after liquid mercury spill in the parking lot. hazmat crews and epa spent hours cleaning it up today. someone said they were outside the station for a medical call when somebody spotted the mercury in the driveway. we don't know how it's billed, but the fire department thinks it came from the train platform an that was a small amount. contra costa county health said that nobody was hurt and the spill i being investigated. game four was a nailbiter
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down to the end. warriors fans packed drive city. fans say tha it is on to the next one. >> they worked hard and play hard. it was a good match. >> we have to go home and then go back on the road. then we have to take care of l.a. after we beat them by 27 points. >> those were some of the more upbeat takes! there are nothing but warriors fans in this building. >> everybody loves a winner, am i right? when the warriors are going great ever but he loves i and when they are going bad, then the haters come out. >> that's everywhere, though! >> yeah, but i don't think anybody feels worse than an poole and klay thompson. in a game four that could have gone either way, i think the dub
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nation is a little bit sore because the warriors lost a lea in the fourth quarter and the lead for good with two minutes left. lonnie walker the fourth! if steph curry makes one of those two open looks at the end we could be talking about a different game. two of the bes of the best. steph curry and lebron james. golden state down two with eight minutes to play. pulled up, hit, bucket, and-one 14 assists, 10 rebounds and later tied with three minutes left. found klay thompson in the corner and he hit a huge shot on a poor shooting night. dubs up three, but l.a. will forever remember this as the lonnie walker i.v. game. he put the lakers back on top there. ann curry went right to the rack! beautiful finish to pull with and-one, and after a defensive stop , to anthony davis, pulled up deep and couldn't get it to drop! how many games has he won like that
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countless! but walker got the rebound and they made two free throws. final chance for the dubs and it goes into overtime. you live by the turnover and yo die by it. turnovers cost the warriors time and time again, but the 16th of the game was a killer. 104-101 as they lead th series 3 games to one. >> they switched and kind of ca see the second layer of defense knowing that he is seven feet and has crazy reach. you just want to create a loop of separation . nice little step back, goes in and out, felt good. second one was a little bit rushed, but obviously i too the shot because i thought i could make it. i am living with those. >> the lakers, they win games like this. lebron james and anthony davis played at least 4 minutes. they are not going to be able to do that on wednesday the warriors will be back home
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for game five and back big, sara! i am telling you, we wil see a game six in l.a. on friday! >> i think everything that is lost -- steph curry had a tremendous game! >> triple-double! >> absolutely. but on to the next, vern! >> hey, the defending champs? take them down! still had tonight, it is a dark part of american history that is often overlooked, and their faces are frozen in time. how two people are bringing their stories to life. >> i still get emotional just thinking about it and seeing those faces and the uncertainty and everything they must have experienced. we started off the work wee with a little bit of rain, less than a quarter inch across the entire bay area , so did not amount to a lot, but still unusual for the month of may. w take a look at a big warm-up
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when i first learned about my dupuytren's contracture, my physician referred me to a hand specialist. and i'm glad he did, because when i took the tabletop test, i couldn't lay my hand flat anymore. the first hand specialist i saw only offered surgery. so, i went to a second hand specialist who also offered nonsurgical options - which felt more right for me. so, what i'd say to other people with dupuytren's contracture is this: don't wait —find a hand specialist trained in nonsurgical options, today. i found mine at findahandspecialist.com.
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marysville several years ago. what they showed was an incredibly painful part of u.s history. japanese-americans photograph before they were sen off to internment camps. tonigh we were able to share their story thanks to one photographe who snapped the images, and two historians working to document an important moment in time. ryan yamamoto has their story. >> reporter: as you look at the faces, you begin to wonder what was on the minds of these men, women and even children. their story can be found in a tiny storage room in yuba city, carefully packed away in cardboard boxes. even today, david reed, one of the caretakers of the photos, still
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wonders what the faces are trying to tell him. >> you would love to sit down and talk with these folks about eir exriences. many or most amican citizens. >> reporter: but who are they, and where did they come from? terry busch, who was an amateur behind the lens, knows the answer to those questions. inside his los altos home he showed me rolls of film that date back 80 years ago. >> he really specialized in women and children. he had a knack. >> reporter: and a card catalog identifying every single person -- >> this is kamamoto, japanese registration. >> reporter: giving names to
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those black and white faces. >> i feel like i am a keeper of history in some ways. >> reporter: the keeper of history, the keeper of his father's story, clyde busch, wh in 1942 owned a tiny photograph studio in the town of marysville. >> the story was an older japanese guy came to his studio which was in the basement of hi parent's house. >> reporter: clyde snapped the photo and told him to come back in a few days. he had no idea what would happen next. >> my dad's mom early in the morning came up and knocked on his door and yelled at him, you need to get down here right now there is a line of japanese fro the back door of your studio ou to the front street. okay. he rushed down and started taking pictures. it went on for two or three weeks. all these japanese were coming to his little tiny studio. toward the end he asked one of the other japanese gentlemen, well, why is everyon
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coming to my studio? he said well, nobody else would either take our pictures, treatise decent, but you did all those okay, maybe i did something goo by just being me. >> reporter: through the lens o his camera, clyde busch offerin a simple act of kindness at a time when local japanese-americ ns would need every bit of empathy. in 1941 with the bombing of pearl harbor by imperial japan, the u.s. entere world war ii. president roosevelt signed executive orde 9066, ordering 120,000 japanese-americans living on th west coast into internment camps, including the families o these photos. >> since there were so many of the same timeframe, let's assum
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that it was related to some requirement to have identification. as part of the internment camp experience. >> reporter: susan moyers is th chief historian of the county. and 14 years ago it was clyde busch's wife myrtle who gave he the original rolls of film. sue realized she had stumbled onto something important. >> i was worried that i would not be able to do justice to it i am just one person who came upon this treasure trove of history, and i wanted to get it to the right place. >> reporter: that is when she reached out to david reed, executive directorthe yuba center for the arts of in marysville. years ago, they brought the photos to life. >> that was quite an experience >> reporter: they put 100 of them on display. >> we worked for weeks carrying
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in the collection, getting the enlargements created, then hanging them on the wall of our gallery in marysville. it was overwhelming. i still get emotional just thinking about it, seeing those faces and the uncertainty and everything else they must have experienced. >> reporter: the photos literally grew into something much bigger. just outside of town, sue and david led the charge to give the people in th photos and their story a permanent home. >> so many things happening in this area. people driving by saying, what happened here? >> reporter: the photos now flank the memorial park, a former migrant camp, the site where local japanese-americans were rounded up and imprisoned before the government shipped them off to internment camps. t
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through, and i put myself in that position, what would i hav done if that had happened to me and my children? >> discrimination is certainly still with us today on many levels. maybe there is a lesson in that regard. >> reporter: lessons from people who lived in that community. their stories captured through the kindness o a camera, the faces of the past now never to be forgotten. >> our ultimate goal with this story is to connect the people and those photos with their descendents, who might be livin in the bay area. if you can do that, please let us know. we would love to hear from you. we have posted more than 80 of th photos and have had at least a last name on our website, kpix.com. talking the weather, i came in from out of town this weeken
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and said oh my gosh! it is raining! >> yeah, it is raining again an still chilly! we went from march weather to likely july or august weather for the upcoming weekend. whether whiplash going in the other direction now. things are eventually going to change. right now it is a clear look as we look to the east fro salesforce tower. not seeing fo just yet but we are going to se that developing by early tomorrow morning along the coas and it will maybe bring a littl bit of drizzle. the cool weathe will continue through wednesday but then the warming trend is going to start to kick in and will be much more noticeable by friday, saturday and sunday. temperatures into the 80s inlan and some spots even topping out in the low 90s. again, no fog out there just yet. clean look at downtown. we are seeing a mi of high clouds overhead and som fog right along the coast. temperatures are in the mid to low 50s across the board. those numbers will drop back into the 40s by early tomorrow morning,
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which is pretty close to normal for this time of year. let's look at futurecast visibility map for early tomorrow. does indicate some of the fog just along the bay and really toward some of the inland valleys. inland it backs up quickly. it is going to be gone by 9:00, 10:00 at the latest. still some fog hanging out closer to the water at that point, but even visibility there should be improving as we head towards lunch time. it is possible fog will be dense enough along the coast to register as a trace or maybe a couple hundred seven inch of drizzle. that is the only precipitation chance that we have for the next couple of days. there is a chance out there by sunday and monday that some monsoonal moisture will drift into the desert southwest and could drift all the way up towards us, but we will be on the edge of that weather pattern. that is something we will keep an eye on and we will not worry about if you have outdoor plans next week. temperatures tonight drop down into the upper 40s and high temperatures tomorrow are still two or three degrees of of average. temperatures inland ar still about five to seven degrees below normal. similar temperatures on thursday, then the warm-up starts to kick in. more noticeable by friday with
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the warm-up continuing through the weekend and saturday will b the peak with highs being close to 80 degrees in oakland and well into lat of upper 80s inland he80s saa clara valley and still 80s once temperatures start to back down for mother's day and the beginning of next week. some of the hottest spots inland toppin 90 on saturday and even along the coast, temperatures will ge up in the mid 60s and that qualifies as a heat wave along the coast in the month of may. vern? still ahead in sports, one last look at the warriors who fell shy at the lakers. the champs are down 3-1. they have come back from
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that? as we segue to the warriors and lakers game four folks, big stars off and on the floor, but not le, thony davis, the headliner? a guy that led the lakers bench! lonnie walker iv! he may never pay for a meal in los angeles again. he score all of his 15 points on 6 of 9 shooting in the final period. darvin ham played a hunch and h told him to always be ready. he was tonight. he even grabbed a couple of steals! >> he fell out of the rotation through no fault of his own. we made the trade and he had an injury. there were a lot of different circumstances and it wasn't his fault. kudos to him, shut out to him. he was a huge force tonight. >> we don't win without him. segue to baseball. the giants hosting the nationals in the first a three-game
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series. anthony desclafani on the mound tonight and he gong u middle from c.j. abrams who drove in a couple and kept up a five-running for the nationals in the first. desclafani did settle down and did not give up another run for seven innings, but the offense did not give hi any run support. giants went 0- with runners in scoring positio and the nationals won it, final of 5-1. back to the warriors. it is all about 7:00 p.m. wednesday a chase center, warriors playing for a chance to extend their season to a game six on friday.
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an apb out on my front lawn. it will probably remain on the black market where the green market. i don't know how they pulled it up. it must have been a terse gang or somebody. >> yeah, his day job is he is a independent comedy filmmaker which explains why he is reinstalling the turf with curved nails. >> with the writer's strike i guess he can't write any new materials. i guess he is doing it for the news cameras. >> it worked! the tv crew showe ♪♪ >> we understand. >> we understand the feelings of embarrassment of failing teeth and h >> we understand the pain of not
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