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tv   The Late News  CBS  September 24, 2023 11:00pm-11:36pm PDT

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from cbs news bay area, this is the evening edition. now, at 11:00, a skyrocketing rate of car theft in oakland. and, the high cost it has on victims already trying to make ends meet. then, the final home game of the year for the a's after a tough year on and off the field. fans just enjoying what they can, while they can. >> we wanted to suck it up and enjoy one last game in oakland coliseum, historic. >> one beautiful last hurrah. looks like we have a deal between studios and writers,
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so how soon it will productions be open? cracking down on car theft, but recent numbers show they are surging. >> already this year, oakland police say 10,000 cars have been stolen. dolling guys into the numbers and impact the crimes have on people, including a woman on the verge of homelessness. >> reporter: this car owners in tears. she just filed a police report, someone stole her 2001 chevy suburban front of her apartment monday morning. >> a lot. that car was collecting water from the street. >> reporter: jazmin cabrera says she collected bottles and cans for a year to save up $3000 to buy the suv. now, she feels like the world around her has collapsed. >> my kids go to fremont, i
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have to drive them every day to go to fremont, they're not going to go to school. we have to figure out what will be next. >> reporter: jazmin and her kids moved to oakland about five months ago. at one point they were homeless after she lost her job. >> we are close to being homeless here in oakland. >> reporter: police reports from january 7th , they recorded 547,000 stolen vehicles. that comes out to about 40 stolen cars per day. officers say that is a 51% increase compared with the same period last year. >> it is astounding. it is really hard to believe. >> that is insane. i didn't realize it was that bad. >> while the number is staggering, i wish i could say i was truly surprised. because of the lack of leadership in oakland city government. and, the lack of accountability. >> reporter: officer say there are more stolen vehicles and recorded car break-ins. 10,335. officers admit, most officers
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don't report break-ins anymore. we found the family checking out there covered cars on the lot contract with the police department. >> my car was at coliseum park. i took my son to a baseball game on sunday and i came back and the car was gone. >> reporter: the families tell me there were covered cars were totaled. >> all of my tires were stolen, they were all brand-new and all the windows were broken. >> everything was burned to a crisp. there was no steering column, seats were down to the wire, the back trunk was broken and got it, everything. >> reporter: the city is planning to install 300 cameras throughout oakland, by early next year. the interim police chief believes that will help track down some of the stolen cars. >> we do see some of these vehicles being used in other crimes, parted out for money. >> reporter: as for jazmin, she is trying to stay positive for her family. >> i know everything is going to be fine. i know that. >> reporter: carjacking is up
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as well. oakland reports carjacking up 27% this year compared to last. if you can, police say try to park in a garage. >> most of the people interviewed today say they have a hyundai. those and keough's are the biggest targets for thieves but apparently they are easier to hotwire. >> hyundai says they will contact customers with certain makes and models to offer more secure upgrades. san francisco has seen nearly 5000 cars stolen so far in 2023, much lower than oakland 10,000. but, this is still an 11% increase in the city, compared to last year. excuse me. now to san francisco, video of a chp rescue crew flying out to help a man. they say he fell over a cliff at lands end. here, they are touching down after pulling him from the edge of the water. san francisco fire says he was
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taken to the hospital with serious injuries. no word on what caused him to go over the cliff in the first place. turning our attention to the weather, rain is on the way for some of us, tomorrow. while everyone will just be happy to get that smoky air out of the way. >> i think you succeeded with that, didn't you? >> yeah. we cleared the smoke out today, but it is the system coming in with rain that pushed it out before it got here. let's focus on that, now. first alert doppler already has rain on the far northwest coast. let's go to that. that is our system. but the storm is really oriented and aimed at the pacific northwest. this is not a blockbuster storm for us. we will get some rain, but look at what this thing looks like on the big picture. that is beautiful, that is a very well-developed and quite impressive pacific storm for this fall. look at where this is going, this is the storm for seattle and washington in the pacific northwest. that is really where this -- this has
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an atmospheric river, there will be large amounts of rain up there. i'll show you more later but here is the take away really quickly on what to expect from this. with the perspective that we are just on the very southern tail edge of this. this rain does not even arrive in the north bay for us until we get to monday night. it doesn't even get towards santa rosa until 10:00 or 11:00, and there is not a lot of it left. but, there is enough. we will get rain out of this, and there is an organized line marching its way across the bay, probably into early tuesday morning. we will track this in its entirety coming up in the forecast and i will show you rainfall totals coming up in just a bit, for now, guys back to you. >> thank you. a's fans were at the coliseum for the final home game of the year, as their disappointing season comes to an end. and, the threat of las vegas looms larger than ever. betty yu has more on the story, and she talked with fans at the coliseum.
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>> it was so lovely meeting you guys. >> reporter: alameda resident rachel delgado savored her time at the coliseum with fellow a's fans after sunday's game. >> torkelson, and that will do it. 3-1. >> reporter: the a's lost to the detroit tiger during the a's home game this season. >> i came with my longtime friend of 25 years, and to see the low clouds was really hard to come into that and not see that anybody wanted to share this beautiful spirit of baseball with everybody. >> reporter: the a's lost for the ninth time in 11 games and the game only drew a crowd of 13,000 fans. >> i would love to come to the stadium. i've been coming since i was eight years old. i would like to continue to, as long as they will have us. >> reporter: some enchanted cell the team, but the owner says he intends to move the team to las vegas. >> just because officious history. he does not spend it all on his team. until they break ground in vegas i will be
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going to games. as soon as they break ground i'm looking for another team. >> the nevada's teachers union launched a campaign this summer to stop public funding for the construction of the proposed stadium for the a's in las vegas. >> nevada's priorities have been misguided for years. we have said, jokingly, that the efforts of nevada politicians to get the a's is basically why we get all the s. we are 48 in education, we have the highest vacancy rate among teachers, and we have the largest class sizes in the country. >> reporter: the nevada state education association is pushing a schools over stadiums referendum, that it hopes will make the november 2024 ballot. >> in the meantime, the a's have said the team will still play at the coliseum for the 2024 season. what happens after that is up in the air. >> we wanted to suck it up and just enjoy one last game in oakland coliseum. >> one beautiful hurrah. nice. >> reporter: rachel and kaylee
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said the a's are accessible for northern california fans. >> i came here as a kid because i could afford a barch ticket and and a's tickets. we can't all afford to be giants and warriors fans, but it's a beautiful atmosphere out here, and it's something i've enjoyed since my childhood. >> the a's lease at the coliseum runs through next season. now to the big news out of hollywood tonight, the writers guild reached a tentative agreement with movies studios, ending the strike after five months. the guilt released a statement , in part, we can say with pride the deal is exceptional with meaningful gains and protections for writers in every section of the membership. the new three-year proposed contract would raise both pay rates and residual payments for streaming shows, and also would impose new rules on the use of artificial intelligence. exact details
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have not yet been released, and while picketing has been suspended, members of the union still have to vote on it. governor newsom , for his part, so that he is glad to come to an agreement, because this is strike cost the economy about $3 billion. as to when productions will begin again, we don't know because talks between the studios and actors union have not started up again. at the california state capital there are a number of bills awaiting the governor's signature. some measures have already been signed into law. he signed several bills supporting lgbtq californians, including one that direct the department of social services to amend the foster care vetting process to make sure lgbtq fostered youth are not placed in hostile homes. but, he vetoed another that would force judges to consider a
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gender identity and their parents attitude toward it in custody battles. in other unrelated bills, he vetoed one which would have required human drivers on board autonomous trucks. still, no hints about if you will sign the new bill to let people grow some psychedelics, like mushrooms. we are also learning more about the state new care court initiative signed into law by the governor earlier this month to combat the states mental health and homelessness crisis. fueled in part by the state's failure to provide adequate mental health care , so under care court, judges will order people suffering from mental illness to get help . and, counties will be required to provide it. the governor says a new law emphasizes accountability and consequences. >> foundational, what care court is about, is accountability at all levels. >> was the billions of dollars you will spend on this? >> we are spending more on the backend. we can save taxpayers billions of dollars and save lives. i'm done with the excuses. you should be done as a taxpayer. everyone watching
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should be sick and tired of the excuses. >> care court will start with a phased-in approach. san francisco will be among the first cohort of counties to implement the initiative. still ahead, combined, less than a week left before a partial government shutdown. lawmakers back in washington are working over the weekend to try to make a deal. >> things aren't much better for public transportation in the state, as we look back at the history of muni in san francisco. first, how caldor fire is using artificial intelligence to help them spot fires before they have a chance to spread.
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the poor air quality we have had over the last several days is coming from wildfires burning near the oregon border. the upcoming rain will not only improve our air quality, but hopefully give firefighters a leg up on the fires. >> they are also getting a leg up on detecting fires before they spread with the help of thousands of cameras across caldor fire and local departments. they can spot local flames the moment they pop up and then computers run a software routine to detect changes in the video and spot even the faintest hit hint of something on the horizon. >> there is nothing on the horizon. then, something appears on the horizon . the camera will pick that up and say, that is not normal. >> we have had successive fires overnight that had gone
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undetected that we were able to suppress before a 911 phone call had even come into command centers. >> the pilot program works so well that california recently expanded it to all 21 of its dispatch centers, and they say that their goal is to keep 95% of fires , to 10 acres or less. we have that big firehose in the sky headed to northwestern california. >> yeah, we will take a moment and is forecast to spotlight the exact moment when this storm puts an end to the smith river complex fire, which has been giving us all this smoke. we deserve a moment to enjoy that. let's start out, here is first alert doppler, you can see plenty of rain on the northwest corner of the state, already. that is the start of this. welcome to fall. officially, we did it . now, the weather maps are starting to look at it. you look at this storm in the big picture, you can really see how impressive this is for this time of year.
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watch what happens when we look at the water vapor, this is beautifully well-developed, but if we look at it in even more nuanced way, let's pick out the atmospheric river, and maybe you have heard there is some height with this. this storm does have a moderate strength atmospheric river feeding into it but that part of the storm is not coming to us. that part of the storm will feed into large amounts of rain for washington state, where this will be quite impressive. keep your eye right here, that is where the smith river complex fire is. look at how much rain this storm will drop up there? two inches along the coast, more like 3 inches in the footprint of the fire. if it does not put the fire out completely, it is definitely going to put an end to the smoke production. this is the storm that does that, of course. we are more interested in what it will do, here. let's watch the timing on this. our start is really not until monday afternoon before we start to notice rain and we are on the southern edge of this.
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we are getting the weakest aspect of this storm. this is where the southern edge is going to fizzle out, right over us. and, you can see where the line is. there is the cold front, it is held together through the bay, that is now so late into monday, by the time it gets down to the golden gate, it is actually tuesday. 1:00 in the morning on tuesday, and then it fizzles out through the south bay. i don't even think san jose will see measurable rain from this and even santa rosa will only get a couple hundredths of an inch of rain. so, it is not big totals but rain nonetheless. one other thing that this storm is going to do, there is so much energy from this, that it is actually holding the wave height out in the pacific, and as a result, there is a high surf advisory in place, now, for the coastline from sonoma county all the way down to monterey. that is on tuesday when all that wave energy gets here. other aspects of this? tomorrow's daytime highs, you're not getting rained on, tomorrow, because that rain is not reaching santa rosa until 7:00 or 8:00 at night. will notice increasing clouds, daytime highs only in the 70s but you can see what the seven day forecast looks like. everyone gets a drop of rain on monday exit for san jose. everybody else does. and, you
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can see the warm-up in the low 80s by the time we get to wednesday and thursday. so, it would be 70 degrees in santa rosa tomorrow than the low 80s by wednesday and mid-80s for the inland east bay. back to you. >> thanks, darren. still ahead, details on what the scientists hope to learn about our solar system from a piece of asteroid that just touched down on earth. 49ers had the day off. the taylor swift travis kelce romance on display in chief kingdom. a bay area tennis whisperer has another grand slam tennis champion. plus, 100
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live look at the u.s. capitol building tonight, where we are days away from a potential government shutdown. federal departments and agencies are preparing to stop all nonessential work, meaning 2 million americans are having to start planning for when their paycheck stop on the 30th. >> republican speaker, kevin mccarthy, pushed his party members today to support a short-term spending bill, but a small group of hardliners are holding things up. >> i think we made some progress. those who have been
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holding up progress on these bills. >> we will make sure that we can get it done, and that means getting the support of both sides, to the table. >> but, with details of the bill already having been agreed in june, even some republican lawmakers are starting to turn on their colleagues. >> the arsonist had lit their house on fire, they are whining about their house burning. they are going to want credit for putting the fire out and then they will set up a gofundme to get paid for what happened. 5 news kpix 5 news kpix 5 news kpix 5 news kpix 5 news kpix 5 news kpix 5 news 12:01 on saturday night to come up with
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public transit began around the same time san francisco did, which is one reason the city still brings advantage streetcars and buses every year for the annual muni heritage weekend celebration. that have been highlights of the city's tradition cannot just getting where you need to be but doing it in style. >> bay area transit ridership is currently down but this was not always the case. up until
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the 1940s, the city thrived, not just with tourists looking for san francisco adventures, but also locals filling the trolley cars, headed to offices with briefcases in hand. >> that is why san francisco thrived as a big , booming office and retail center. the cause, you could get downtown quickly from great distances, and muni heritage weekend reminds people of the role transit played in building the san francisco that we know today. >> it was the 50s and 60s when people fell in love with their cars and individualized travel. but, there are still dedicated transit riders, many of which attended today's celebration. coming up next, a handful of dust dating back to the beginning of the solar system has landed in the utah desert. the boat, it was not easy.
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a nailbiter return for a cup fold of asteroid unfolded over the utah desert and the stars of san francisco this morning. the latest stop from a seven-year mission to find out where it all began. first, though, they had to land. >> reporter: what left earth seven years ago in a blazing liftoff, came home today, after 1 billion miles in space. a one half pound sample of an oddball asteroid, carried back to earth, released from the osiris rex spacecraft, limiting to earth at 7:42 a.m. this morning. >> at this point we have entered in over san francisco, and we will quickly be approaching the utah testing range moving east.
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>> reporter: with the probe dropping from space to desert floor, it was scorched by 5000 degree temperatures as it reached a speed of 27,000 miles per hour. >> wonderful to see that deployment. >> reporter: the sample canister slowed to 11 miles per hour. the probe, after being on the other side of the solar system, a few years ago, dropped right on target. >> touchdown. >> this is the team of love he decelerating that achievement. >> reporter: from there, the sample canister, about the size of a tire, was approached very carefully. >> from day one, this mission has paid attention to keeping that sample pristine. >> reporter: it was packed up and lifted by chopper to a temporary location on the utah test and training range, were inside this building, it was carefully unpacked by experts. and wheeled into a temporary
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clean room , marking america's first sample return mission of its kind in opening a time capsule to our ancient solar system. >> they will take that off the johnson space center, tomorrow. to their clean room and then look at it for the next century. >> usually when things return from space, a lot of these capsules land in the water. >> for the cruise land in the water. >> is there a reason why it was in utah? >> yes. the reason is because they wanted to protect it from contamination and there was less potential for contamination by landing it in the desert, then there was landing in the ocean. >> okay. >> i guess, you know, how will you make that thing totally watertight after coming through the atmosphere at 27,000 miles per hour? so, they figured the desert was better than the sea. >> okay. have a really interesting week.
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the first spangles of fall? >> monday, second half of the day monday in the north bay, into monday night. don't expect a blockbuster rainstorm. but, at least we are starting and we are going to get some light rain out of this and then it warms up a bit by the middle of next week. >> thank you for watching. game day is next. news and weather updates are on kp ( ♪♪ ♪ ) ) welcome toto big tobacacc's fantasylyland. a new, heaealthier wororld withouout cigarettttes. as long g as you donon't cot the 6 trilillion sold d worlde every yeyear. and vapiping won't leadad to smokining, if you igngnore the rereseah ththat says ototherwise. in bigig tobacco''s fantntasyl,
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this is the bay area chevy dealers game day on cbs news bay area! >> game day for september 24th, and have we got some storytelling for you tonight! your san francisco giants, stress level high. they were showcased on sunday night baseball at the dodgers where miguel rojas was mic'd up. >> sorry, guys! i need to make this play real quick! >> eighth inning and he was interrupted by lamonte wade jr.! 17th home run for wade. ninth inning. giants with the bases loaded and a chance to take the lead, but mitch

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