tv The Late News CBS June 3, 2023 11:00pm-11:35pm PDT
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from cbs news bay area, this is the evening edition. >> now at 11:00, a community still changen after a violent rampage claimed three lives. the big question tonight, why it happened. >> i want to know what he was thinking. that's what i want to know. then mock funerals held on both sides of the bay, trying to put pressure on the state to save public transportation. and we're out across the bay area for the first weekend of pride month. good evening, i'm brian hackney. >> and i'm andrea nakano. a south bay community is left wondering why a man went on a deadly rampage. it happened in san jose around 3:00 thursday afternoon. police say the suspect stabbed and carjacked someone in san jose. minutes later he allegedly committed the same crime on hillsdale
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avenue outside a target store. both victims survived, but this case took a deadly turn when he hit and killed a couple on santa clara street and 16th street. an hour later in milpitas, investigators tell us he stabbed and killed a third person in a parking lot on jaclyn road before he was finally arrested by police. this is surveillance video of the hit-and-run in san jose. you can see the suspect plows into an suv. it's too disturbing to show you what happens next, but police say moments later the driver hits and kills an elderly couple. >> as for why it happened and how neighbors there are reacting, jose martinez has this report. >> reporter: yeah, it's been two days since this tragic killing spree here in san jose. the community still in shock. you can see here this memorial in honor of two of the victims. we actually spent some time today with one of the neighbors who also owns a business right
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on the sidewalk. she tells me she's lucky to be alive because it could have been her. maria navarro is trying to comprehend what happened just a few steps away from her house last thursday. her neighbors were tragically run over during a horrifying killing spree. she tells me, i feel nervous and stressed because if that happened to people who were working in their own home, imagine what could happen here. here means right here on the sidewalk of santa clara street. you can see how close it is to the street. she says she's grateful to be alive but devastated to see what happened to her neighbors. she says i feel very sad, very sad because we never imagined that they were going to die. the motive behind the attack remains unknown as the investigation continues but neighbors like jenny are desperate for answers. >> i want to know what he was thinking. that's what i want to know. i want to know what he was thinking when he drives up
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in a driveway and just mows people down. that's crazy. like that's just, like -- and then when they arrested him he was like no remorse at all. you could tell on his face he didn't care what he did. >> reporter: we have reached out to the police department for updates on the investigation but there is no new information available at this time. additionally, we are working to confirm the identity of the third victim who was reportedly stabbed at the final parking lot in milpitas. the community stands in solidarity, offering support and condolences to each other. san francisco's gotten a black eye nationally for crime and drug problems, but now a political advocacy group, together sf action, apologized on twitter following backlash after their advertisement spread false information. their tweet alleged unsafe conditions at civic center had pushed the heart of the city farmer's market to the brink of shutting down. that image of empty awnings is unrelated to the
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farmer's market and there's no indication the twice a week market has had any problems. the twitter notice was part of a together sf's controversial fenta-life campaign, intended to shame the city into action against the drug crisis. fatal drug overdoses have jumped 41% in the first few months of this year, but the group did apologize saying our goal is to push city hall to build a city where all can thrive. we apologize for our inaccurate inclusion of the market and we removed the post. now to san jose, where people were out today protesting plans to build tiny homes for the homeless at the vta station after the city council voted unanimously to build 1,000 interim units at eight locations, including this one. >> we are not against the homeless. we keep saying that. it's just the location is not the right location, and we are sure this is not going to make our community better. when you -- this is actually going to
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degrade our quality of life. >> one of two sites in the plan, other sites include empty lots and the san jose police headquarters. we're going to switch gears because there is a little wrinkle in what you might think the weather forecast is going to be. and meteorologist darren peck's here to talk about that, darren? >> watching a little bit of the marine layer in that time lapse. we didn't get much today and won't tomorrow either. the story for at least one more day is sunny and warm. in fact, we'll switch from that real pretty view and go to another nice one. this is the top of mount diablo looking at concord. it was one degree shy of 90 there today. made it to 89 today in concord. we didn't break records, but you're about 10 degrees above average. tomorrow we're going to do this again. here's how tomorrow goes. this is your sunday. we wake up with a little bit of the marine layer in the bay. concord and livermore, clear skies. what little gray we have quickly evaporates. more sunshine than anything else tomorrow. daytime highs that
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are as warm or a degree or two above as today. tomorrow is the warmest day in this warming trend. then a noticeable cooldown. on tuesday morning there's a 20% chance of rain. it's weird for june. we're going to explain that in detail in the first alert forecast in just a few minutes. for now, guys, back to you. hope, love, pride, proudly presented by pet food express and broadway san jose. >> all right, well the weather was great in golden gate park today where the national center of lesbian rights hosted an event. >> it's beautiful seeing the que,r community here. it's welcoming, colorful, and there's so much to do. >> similar scenes for the pride celebration and parade there. this is only the second year of the event, but as betty yu
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shows us, it's already become an important one for the community. >> reporter: live music filled the ingrid b. lacey school where all were welcomed at the second annual pacifica pride celebration saturday. the entertainment at the festival was just one draw for 13-year-old trixie who lives in san francisco. trixie said she became confident in her identity in the fifth grade. >> i identify as gender queer, and seeing other people being themselves like in public is so, like, it's nice that it's possible now. >> reporter: pacifica pride kicked off with a parade. families, couples, and vintage cars rolled through palmetto avenue. >> pride events, they're like good community and, like,
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people -- boflags at the parade and festival. including these happy and proud parents. james mccloud decorated his chevy pickup in honor of his daughter gretchen, who's lesbian and lives in portland. >> i put stop the pandemic of fear and ignorance. we have yet to stop that pandemic. it's just really stupid that people are still hanging on to these old fears and ignorance of people. >> when my daughter first came out, the first thing i thought was, oh, just another reason for people who don't know her to hate her. right? and she told me when she was doing her internship in ohio she said if half the people who i'm providing services to knew i was gay, they wouldn't let me cross the threshold. so it's important for me to be supportive of her. >> reporter: honoring the
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community is especially important now, attendees say, given that across the country hundreds of anti-lgbtq bills have been introduced in mostly republican-led states. the aclu has tracked more th mpared to all of last year. >> in san francisco, like, it's known as one of the most queer cities in the world, so it's pretty accepting. but then like everything in the rest of the country and stuff is not slaying quite as much. other news tonight, controversy brewing in temecula after a recent school board meeting where harvey milk was referred to as a pedophile. this happened during a meeting about whether the district attorney there will allow an elementary social sciences program to refer to milk in optional reading material. >> can i just clarify one point? >> sure. >> the harvey milk section is
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not actually in the fourth grade textbook itself. it's in the supplemental resources of the biography. it just clarifies that he was responsible for some of the movement in california with gay rights. >> my question is why even mention a pedophile? >> several other board members as well as parents and community members in the audience walked out of the meeting after those remarks, but the board did end up voting to ban the material from their classrooms. governor newsom called it an offensive statement from an ignorant person, adding that he now has the governor's attention and that he should stay tuned. no word on what he means by that exactly, but it is the latest clash in communities across the u.s. regarding inclusiveness. elise preston has that story. >> reporter: as pride flags rise across the country so does the heated debate around lgbtq+ initiatives. pride events at a los angeles elementary school
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friday sparked tense protests. >> we want our kids to just be innocent and come to school and not have to deal with sexuality. >> they did not have the right to make people afraid to be a child in this district because you're gay. >> reporter: social media fuelled backlash is putting many companies in the culture wars crossfire. target pulled some of its pride merchandise last week, including items by designer eric cornell, citing security concerns. >> the second it gets hard, if you're going to jump ship, that's a very dangerous thing to tell people. >> reporter: a boycott of bud light has cost the beer giant $27 million in lost sales since it teamed one dylan mulvaney. >> love ya. >> reporter: in florida, disney halted plans to invest about $1 billion into the state following republican governor ron desantis' don't say gay legislation. >> disney's posturing has
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alienated a lot of people now. >> reporter: thousands flocked to orlando this weekend for the annual gay days event. >> all month long we'll be bringing you special pride stories from around the bay area. to see the entire collection of stories, just head to kpix.com or watch us streaming on the cbs news bay area app. all stories will be added -- or i should say more stories will be added throughout the month. as for now, a week after she won the national championship in golf for stanford, rose zhang is now a wpga pro. details coming up. but first, advocates mourning the possible death of public transportation in the bay area. but it's not too late
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our deals are just so epic. i know, todd. i know. ♪ grocery outlet bargain market b.a.r.t. trains are up and running again on time after a power issue created huge delays earlier. affected the lines between daly city and the embarcadero, which means most of the lines through the city were impacted. but as we mentioned, they have since gotten things back on track and trains are running on time again. and public transportation advocates say that's just a taste of what we may see in the future if the system runs out of money. cuts could mean less trains and longer wait times. >> so today folks in support of transit staged a last ditch effort to get money from california, a rather unusual effort. john ramos has that story. >> reporter: the 19th street
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b.a.r.t. station was quiet as a tomb on this morning, and up on the street advocates staged a mock funeral procession. it's part of an effort to pressure gavin newsom to offer more subsidies to keep public transit from plunging over a fiscal cliff. >> it would just be like a downward spiral of all of our transit agencies in the bay and, you know, it would just be so much harder to get around. >> imagine if no one could take b.a.r.t. half the people have to get in cars. traffic's going to be catastrophic. >> reporter: you don't have to imagine, that's already happened. three years after the pandemic shutdown, b.a.r.t. is still missing more than 60% of its previous ridership and fare revenue is only supplying about 25% of the cost of service. transit agencies in the area have burned through most of the emergency funds provided by the federal government, and ac transit board director jean walsh says her bus system needs support from the state to keep what riders they now have. >> if we cut funding now, that
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means cut service. and when we wecut service, fewer people ride. and when fewer people ride, we cut service more. fewer people ride, it's the death spiral. >> reporter: later in the afternoon, a similar death march proceeded down market street in san francisco. here the pressure is on muni, which is still trying to recover ridership, hampered by remote work and businesses leaving the city. >> the epicenter of all of this advocacy is right here in san francisco. muni, b.a.r.t., ac transit are the three most vulnerable agencies in the entire state of california. >> reporter: mun y director jeffrey says tunnel patterns have changed dramatically and transit agencies are scrambling to adjust to them. there is talk of a voter initiative in the next few years that would provide permanent funding for transit, and they're asking for help to get them to that point. >> the meantime, we've got
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three or four years of a fiscal cliff gap that we're asking for support from the state of california in order to fill so that we don't have to severely cut transsit just as we're expecting transit to be recovering. >> reporter: california faces a deficit of billions of dollars, so it may be tough to ask the rest of the state to pay for transit service in the bay area that so few people seem interested in using right now. the pandemic may have subsided, but now it's causing funerals of a different sort. all right, from funerals to the weather. >> the queen of transitions. >> there was no transition there, so we're just going with it. how about some warm temperatures. >> transitions are overrated. we all know we've got to get on to another subject. it's going to be just about as warm tomorrow as it was today, how's that? and the change is going to be real noticeable for monday and tuesday. and that's really what i want to focus on in this visit. monday and tuesday are interesting. there's a chance of rain. we're going to be about 10 degrees
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cooler than the numbers you see here for tomorrow. tomorrow doesn't look or feel any different than today, but it'll be technically about a degree warmer in some spots. we'll pull out more detail in the north bay. the farther inland you go. so here's how things are. totally different by monday and tuesday. that which doesn't look like anything when you look at it on the regular satellite, but if we switched to the water vapor, we can see things in more detail. now we're looking at all the water vapor. we don't just need the clouds. you can see the circulation is better. i know it's subtle, but that is spinning counterclockwise. a little spin. let's watch that again. a closer look. this is tuesday morning. and i'm going to play this forward for just a few hours of tuesday morning. now, it's not going to go exactly like this. in other words, it's not going to be raining exactly there at
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exactly that time. these systems are notorious. everything has to come together just right. and it is unusual. certain re can happen e past, b dot happen often. we're going to switch from looking at what it might look like on the radar to go more general. from monday afternoon through tuesday night you have a chance of rain for maybe about 0.1 or 0.2 inches of rain out of this. wouldn't be a lot. there's one other caveat in there. mixed in that 20% chance of rain is an even smaller 10% chance that if we get that rain it could come in the form of a thunderstorm. and then you get a lot more than this. you get some brief downpours. it's possible, not super likely, but it is possible. closer to tuesday we will refine this. we'll get more detail on it. that's what we've got for now. technically there could be a chance of rain on monday, it just doesn't look super overwhelming at this point. stay tuned on that
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forecast. microclimates show the same story. mid 80s for daytime highs tomorrow inland. low 70s by tuesday. and that's where we will stay. rain is exciting, but really the more impactful part of this is the cooldown. we're 10 degrees cooler by monday, which is average, and then we're staying there for the next seven days. charlie, over to you. >> darren, gracias. two weeks ago, rose zhang won the national title. her encore could be even more impressive if she could take it tomorrow. and alex cobb took on his former team. looked good
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orioles. a rare moment where casey schmid's not the youngest on the diamond. bottom three, two on for wilmer flores. off the foot of the pitcher into center field. a couple of runs score. giants up 3-0. rewind to last night. aaron hicks thought he had a home run. sent one deep into right center field. but look at this. brett wisely reaches up, makes the catch, hicks can't believe it. he would get even tonight. mitch haniger with a drive, looks like the exact same spot, and it's hicks. one upping wisely. a leaping grab to rob him of extra bases. the star of the night was alex cobb. he was dealing. cobb struck out seven over 7 2/3 shutout innings. dropped his ere e.r.a. to the fourth lowest in the national league. giants get a 4-0 win. to miami, this is baseball
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in 2023. you're good. third inning miami's luis. bases loaded. and he clears them with a line drive just over the head this be in the mawin 12-1. the yikes. stanford baseball trying to get back to the college world series for the third straight year, but their road to omaha hit a little speed bump tonight. oh. bottom ninth against texas a&m. cardinal down three with the bases loaded, but owen cobb flies out to end it. the aggies win 8-5. stanford plays cal state fullerton tomorrow. and they now need to win three straight elimination games to move on. san jose state's cinderella run came to an end. the spartans sent home after a 9-5
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loss to fullerton. santa clara also facing elimination in fayetteville, but they came out swinging against arizona following a six-hour rain delay. michael o'hara, the senior from danville. how about a two-run blast in the sixth. one of three homers for santa clara as the broncos knock out arizona with a 9-3 win and santa clara stays alive for another day. less than two weeks ago, rose zhang was celebrating a second straight ncaa title with her stanford teammates to cap off her sophomore . the eaold is g the ga up this week in new jersey for her professional debut. so much for rookie jitters. she had four birdies on the front nine, two more on the back, zhang shot a bogey-free round of 66 and will take a two-stroke lead into the final round tomorrow. let's go to vegas. michael buffer getting the crowd ready to rumble in game one of the
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stanley cup final. six minutes to play, florida down a goal. they turn it over in their own zone. oh no. mark stone makes them pay. the golden knights scored three times in the final period to take game one 5-2. still to come, the finish in chicago that left this guy absolutely stunned. it'll leave you stunned as well. and aaron judge made his mark on
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welcome back, if we're showing tigers/white sox in the bay area, something whacky happened. wild runs, a crazy ending. ouch, yes, 96-mile-per-hour fastball off the mask of the home plate umpire. chicago's mankata scored the winning run. that guy stunned. take another look. that will give you a migraine. the ump walked off on his own. the other umps asked how many fingers they were holding up, he said forty. but he's good to go, no worry there is. mookie bets and the dodgers, aaron judge and the yankees, speaking of taking a big hit, aaron judge here chasing it down, and oh, goes
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through the fence. come on dodger stadium, got to work on the infrastructure. the fence there not enough to hold judge in. that is a splendid catch right there. all rise for aaron judge. spike lee was even there. took off his jacket to reveal a judge jersey. new york beat l.a. 6-3 the final score. does it for sports. >> all right. >> okay, charlie, we got out our handyman kit, fix the fence an ♪ ♪ every day, businesses everywhere
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♪♪♪ ♪♪♪ ♪♪♪ male announcer: "in touch" with dr. charles stanley, reaching the world with the gospel of jesus christ through sound biblical teaching. next on "in touch," dr. stanley begins his series "welcome home: parable of the prodigal" with part 1: "the condition of the heart." dr. charles stanley: the condition of your heart determines the direction of your life. i don't know what direction you're walking in right now, but
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