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tv   The Late News  CBS  October 2, 2024 11:00pm-11:35pm PDT

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. now at 11:00, another blazing hot day across the bay area. which city broke an all-time record. people love it here t. is devastating for us. some of the biggest a's fans were those that worked for him. we talk to those who lost their jobs and drama on the debate stage after a candidate in a south bay race suddenly dropped out hours before he was supposed to show up. plus, the bay area business hit by thieves twice in just a
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few hours. and this giant moose battle makes a little more sense when you hear where it went down. ♪ from kpix. there is the late news with sara donchey on cbs news bay area. hello, i'm sara donchey. october is all about busting out the sweaters and the pumpkin spice lates if you live in other parts of the country. we have a heatwave. the only option for people to cool off outside today was to head to the beach. it was warm there, even. flying over our chopper over pacific beach and it looked like a summer day there f. it was hot there you know it is down in the south bay. take a look at the time lapse here. i know they had an extraordinarily hot day. >> yes, 106 degrees. breaking today's record by 10 degrees. breaks the all-time record in san jose for the month of october by five degrees.
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talking about unprecedented territory here. the good news is, today was the peak of the heatwave. the bad news, we are not done yet. the heat advisories, the heat warnings, let's start there. those have been extended farther into the future. at 11:00 today, pushed back to 11:00 tomorrow, now pushed back to friday. excessive heat warnings in the purple pinkish here. topping out in the lower 90s and 100s. heat advisory for bay area where the warmest spots will be. it is dangerously hot when you don't have air-conditioning. we are looking at that is view of oracle park. 108 in livermore. 106 in santa rosa and 103 in napa. 1 degree off
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record in santa rosa and also in san francisco that got up to 95 degrees once again today. one of the hottest temperatures we have seen in san francisco in almost 30 years. the temperatures tomorrow, stepping back a little bit. 20 degrees above average inland. heat is accumulative stressor. the longer the heatwave is here, the hottest spots, brentwood, the heat risk is down a little bit each day. the coolest day on friday, the hot day, the risk will be in the high category and tomorrow is another spare the air day with air quality in the unhealthy sensitive group range. we will take a look at the seven-day forecast and see if there is any relief in store in a few minutes >> we hope so, paul. >> ditching oakland it was not well received you can say. the coliseum was home for them and for the team for 57 years. and, with major league baseball in the rear view the city of
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oakland is looking ahead to a high stakes deal to sell their half of the stadium to the entertainment group. high stakes because the budget depends on the sale to go through on time. if it doesn't the city could be forced to make millions in budget cuts. last night we talked to a councilwoman who said one of the payments came in late and now we are hearing the buyers have a new time line. we have more on the coliseum confusion. >> $10 million was due on october 1st flavment is what concerns . >> that is what concerns me. >> reporter: she still wants the deal to come through. right now, trying to balance the city's budget since the group has not made the first $10 million payment. something she says the mayor is refusing to talk about. >> why are you leaving councilmembers in the dark. are
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you going to see fire stations ground out tomorrow. a drop in officers and those are my questions, too. >> the founder and managing partner. he says the deal is still on track and their group is in the final stages of negotiating to the amendment of the sales dpeel. a plan to pay the city the $10 million in the next five days. the sale agreement assigned at the end of august. calling for four payments, totaling $63 million between september 1st and january 15th. the amended proposal would provide the city with one $10 million payment on october 7th. then pay the full balance of $95 million no later than june 30, 2025. that is sals an increase in the sales price from $105 million to $110 million. >> we increased the price slightly just because it was important for us to move quicker through the process. >> reporter: he says the main concern with the payment plan a
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rage arement in the original contract was that if something catastrophic happened to the city and they filed for bankruptcy the group would lose all of their money. the amended agreement would allow the group to take ownership of the property immediately after the lump sum payment is made. not sure why they were not told about the proposed changes >> it sounds like there was just a miscommunication among, between the city divisions. >> but, he says the deal with aaseg is a different contract than the city budget. the budget requires the city to cut spending if the payments are not made on time. but, she says the city administrator and the mayor's office are not disclosing which cuts they are making first. >> contingencies kicked in they are starting to make cuts. we, of course, want to know what are those cuts? are they the dramatic cuts to safety? something softer? and we don't
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know that. >> reporter: oakland mayor denied our request for an interview today. her office released a statement yesterday saying the aaseg deal is on track. no contingencies have been triggered that were not already in place. >> so, with the a's moved on some of the teams unsung heroes got a final send off. we talked to some of the coliseum's hardworking crew at an emotional farewell party. >> reporter: greeting the employees for the final farewell, not a lot to celebrate. many of the employees know this will be the last time seeing each other at the stadium. >> people hugging, crying, you know. walking around, taking pictures and just saying wow. it is amazing. >> reporter: nick works security at the coliseum for the last seven years. he walked in one day as a fan, asked how to get a job there and a month
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later was getting paid to come to the ballpark. he will always cherish the relationships he built with his coworkers. >> great people, you know. i love it here. you know, just like everybody else. as you guys hear people love it here. you know, it is kind of devastating for us. >> reporter: one of his favorite co-workers his boss, larry williams. he is not so sure it is the last thing for all of the a's employees. >> we will see them again. >> we will. >> we will see them again. >> he doubts the a's plan to play in sacramento until their new stadium is built is going to work out. >> that is how i feel. i feel like they are not going, not this year. maybe a couple years from now. but not until they build the one in vegas, whatever. that is how i feel. >> reporter: the void of losing three professional sports teams hits hard. not just employees
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but as a fan of oakland sports. >> you sit and say what happened. what happened? what happened? i was born here in oakland in 1960. you know. raised in alameda. what happened. major league baseball did release a statement last month seeing it is a certainty that the a's will play their 2025 season in sacramento. it is currently working with the player's association to work out the details of the transition. some drama in a south bay congressional debate. lacardo dropped out hours beforehand. when we asked his campaign for response they said they have receipts. he is running for district 16 seat posted he has laryngitis. his team has been
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working to find a new date. in response well lowes says it is suspicious that he dropped out. days after first responders blasted him. when we went back to the lacardo campaign they shared a picture of a prescription to prove it and a note from his doctor recommending vocal rest for up to a week. across the bay, we have been keeping an eye on the recall efforts against alameda county district attorney pamela price. her critics said that she is too soft on crime. now, an east bay congressman is jumping in saying she has to go. wilson walker reports he was joined by mothers who lost their sons to gun violence.. >> reporter: the district attorney of the county is the highest law enforcement officer in the county. pam price does not act that way.
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>> that is eric swallwell. alongside family members of crime victims including the security guard shot at the home depot. >> victim's families deserve a da that will rally with them, support them, and charge proper. >> reporter: the campaign to defeat the recall that protects the win for public safety responded with a lengthy statement that began with this, quote, congress plan's support for the recall surprised and disappointed many of his constituents and democratic party members, unquote, a reference to the county party's official opposition to the vote. >> the people of this county have the right to elect a district attorney. they did that. we should not have to do it again. but we will. >> reporter: price rallied supporters calling the recall an effort funded by powerful interests. they question the motives asking, quote, could
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the support for the recall be to shield him and his former colleagues from their time in the da's office? >> the district attorney's office changed my life. a company targeted not once but twice within a afternoon. california strict about keeping last call at 2:00 a.m. unless you are inside an exclusive club here. and talk about mixed emotions a man says this heavyweight battle was majestic while he tried to rush to safety digest last night's vice presidential debate, which is surprising because
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does mark farrell have the right experience to shake up city hall? in nearly ten years as supervisor, mark grew the bureaucracy by authorizing or creating a commission almost every year. he rubber stamped hundreds of millions to homeless nonprofits with zero accountability and orchestrated a pay-to-play scheme that sold out taxpayers to the highest bidder. mark farrell has all the wrong experience for the change we need.
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. a top fine dining restaurant just got hit in back to back break ins that happened only a few hours apart. the owner shared the pictures of this smashed store front and ransacked office. the owner told us he got a burglary alarm from the restaurant at 2:00 a.m. on tuesday. he rushed over. saw a window smashed up. the police say there was evidence that people forced their way inside of the restaurant and searched it but did not take anything. now, the owner thinks the same people came back. a few hours later, 6:00 a.m., the place was broken into again. this time they swiped electrics and cash. >> coming here and seeing my window shattered and everything broken through. it is demoralizing feeling. everyone that works at the restaurant works hard and we do it for our community of oakland. it feels like a punch in the gut.
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>> the owner tells us to replace the stolen items and repair the glass. it will cost $4,000. check this out. a huge crater was left behind on the taxiway of a japanese airport after a world war ii era bomb, buried beneath the runway exploded. no planes were around. nobody got hurt. 80 flight his to be canceled. the damage was fixed overnight, flights are back on schedule. the cause of why the bomb suddenly exploded is still under investigation. not good. tonight, it is a race against time in north carolina to find dozens of missing people after hurricane helene destroyed neighborhoods. the reporter has more on the recovery efforts. >> it is astounding. the path of destruction in western north carolina. today. >> the united states, the nation has your back. >>. >> reporter: president biden got a firsthand look climbing over a region where roads
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washed away. basic needs like food and water are in short supply. while flood waters may of receded. the level of desperation keeps rising. >> in a moment like this we put politics aside. our job is to help as many people as we can as quickly as we can. >> including the search for those missing >> and dealing with experch rescue crews >> painful. you know t is just like, you know, we have first responders who are working so hard and, you know, they all live here too. >> i can not overstate how much worse this is than anything that ever happened. it is catastrophic. >> in this once vibrant and devastated arts section of asheville. the 12 bone smokehouse drew throngs of bbq lovers including former president barack obama. it is not just the physical damage, the emotional toll is staggering. >> you are hugging, you are
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crying, and just happy that they are okay. it is unimaginable. >> the national guard has been working around-the-clock to deliver food, water and medicine. some places highways are impassable. some people are relying on a very old fashioned deliver method. mule drivers have been delivering medical supplies like insulin to parts of north carolina that have been totally cut off otherwise. we need to talk about the weather here. the focus is the heatwave. san francisco, we talked about san francisco because it is rare to have temperatures like this. after two days in a row of heat, all of the people like me without ac are sweltering inside. >> and 92 today, the warmest october day in the city since 1996t. has been awhile since we have been this hot this time of the year. things will back down slightly. we will still be hot heading through the weekend.
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looking at the big picture. and things will change and they will change a little bit. temperatures will change and be hot heading through tomorrow. we will see some relief heading into next week. let's take a look at where current temperatures stand as we head through the rest of tonight. we will continue to gradually cool off looking at the bay bridge. clear skies, not a lint of fog in any direction. things are looking clear. not much fog developing. even as a weak onshore breeze develops. temperatures mostly retreated into the 70s. down in the 60s and santa rosa, 81 degrees is 25 degrees cooler than where you were this afternoon. atmosphere is doing a descent job of shedding some of the heat at ground level. at least in the valley in the ground area. it does look at the valleys in the region. then you get into the thermal belt. we talked about this. temperatures near ground level, the base of
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the valleys, cooling off overnight, during the heatwaves, temperatures higher up, cooling off, it is in between. layer of air staying very, very warm. we are going to look at a map that is from one of the weather service tools, i have taken all of the automated warming cites around the bay area. 800 to 1200 feet in elevation, all of the orange numbers in the 80s and 90s, still, right now. big rock, still 90 degrees as of 11:00 p.m. and that is just unbelievably warm for this time of the night at this time of the year. the temperatures will not drop a lot heading through the rest of tonight. you can see it in the forecast model simulation for tomorrow morning, all of the higher elevation spots stand out with oranges and reds. temperatures bottoming out to around 80 degrees, little recovery. and little recovery for folks that live in those higher terrain spots to experience any kind of relief from the heat that built up today. the temperatures
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across the rest of the bay area will dip down mostly into the 60s. some of the coolest spots along the coast will be in the 50s by tomorrow morning, then, tomorrow, another day of heat. talking about the north bay first. not as hot. you will still be hot. temperatures in the middle 90s there. middle 70s along the coast. lucky you. 80s, temperatures inland in the east bay. 100 to 105 degrees. reduction from 105 to 110 where you were today. still way too hot for this time of the year. 99 degrees in san jose. it is likely to be another record high temperature for tomorrow. let's take a look at those records compared to our forecast highs for tomorrow. we will fall short in most communities around the bay area. bay area, one of the exceptions. 90 degrees, 97 degrees, there is the pattern heading through the rest of the heatwave. the temperatures will be 15-20 degrees above average inland. checking out the forecast. record, fewer and
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farther between. the temperatures eventually return to closer to normal levels. not going to be likely until wednesday, thursday, friday of next week for inland parts of the bay area. hot weather through the weekend. the temperatures around the bay returning to near to average already by tuesday of next week. the closer you are to the shoreline the faster you get back to normal temperatures, it will not happen for really, anybody, as we begin the next workweek. temperatures staying in the 70s through sunday. and the in the 60s. relief on monday already, vern? >> thank you, paul. straight ahead in sports, the 49ers, what is the source for all pro linebacker fred warner's strength? is it the weight room? all of that bison he would eat for breakfast? diet? we will find out. a little more than six minutes. stay with us
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does mark farrell have the right experience to shake up city hall? in nearly ten years as supervisor, mark grew the bureaucracy by authorizing or creating a commission almost every year. he rubber stamped hundreds of millions to homeless nonprofits with zero accountability and orchestrated a pay-to-play scheme that sold out taxpayers to the highest bidder. mark farrell has all the wrong experience for the change we need. . i feel like we have been asking the same question a lot this football season who is healthy on the 9ers, who is hurt? who is not hurt? what is going on.
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>> can the 9ers get kicked in the gut more? it happens every day. i know, every team, sara every team has injuries. it is part of the game, right? that is what we are told. the 49ers, their injuries stay. telling lucy in "i love lucy" the old show. it is just so ridiculous. mccaffrey, 10 players, limited or did not practice on wednesday and that includes loin backer fred warner, day to -- linebacker, fred warner, day to day. you need him in arizona, right? captain of the defense is downplaying it. >> how are you feeling? >> wonderful. legendary as they say. >> warner's play so far this season has been legendary. all pro level. and during the off season, warner became a first time dad. he credits that for his strong start to his season. >> having my son t clears all,
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all of the gray area in your life of what is important, what is not important so you can be of clear mind, you know, remove distractions things that you realize are not important, serve no purpose in l. you are able to go out there and play free. baseball day three of the buster posey era for the giants. father of four, by the way. if he wants the only team he ever played for professionally, back to the post season. they are going to have to compete with two nl west rivals that are about to face each other in the playoffs. padres play the dodgers. well, guess what, it happened. here is jackson meryl, bringing home two runs, legged it out for a triple. padres held them off. swept the best of three series. the divisional round versus la starts this saturday. so, we
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are still in the nl rockys? that tells you we are in milwaukee. brewers trail the mets, 3-2 in the bottom of the 8th. jackson, the second home run of the game, tied it at three. same inning, pinch hitter. mitchell, connected for a go ahead, 2-run homer. milwaukee came back and won it, 5-3. it is a winner take all game 3 on thursday. american league. home standing astros, on the road to stay alive against detroit. they did it. tied it in the eighth. bases loaded hit. this cleared the bases, detroit won it 5-2. they swept that series, houston's run of seven straight was over. tigers advance to face the cleveland guardians in divisional play. sara, it is going to be fun to watch buster posey and his general manager,
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once he gets one hatch its plan to be a part of that. >> i know, i think a lot of fans are looking forward to a new chapter, if you will. >> the dodgers are like here we are. we are up here. we are own joying the view. >> giants fans don't like admitting that or talking about it at all. the last call for drinks in california is at 2:00 a.m. the state is making an exception for only one place to keep the drinks flowing until 4:00. not a bar, not a pub. it is actually inside of an arena. the clippers arena in l.a. to be exact. the governor signed a law allowing it to be sold until 4:00 a.m. to a specific of vips that pay duce to a private club inside of the arena. where do we sign up. and one guy just needed to walk outside of his house to get a free
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does mark farrell have the right experience to shake up city hall? in nearly ten years as supervisor, mark grew the bureaucracy by authorizing or creating a commission almost every year. he rubber stamped hundreds of millions to homeless nonprofits with zero accountability and orchestrated a pay-to-play scheme that sold out taxpayers to the highest bidder. mark farrell has all the wrong experience for the change we need.
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. image this, you are in your driveway, minding your business and suddenly you are in the middle of a heavyweight battle. that is what happened to a guy in alaska. >> reporter: you can see the scratches right there. lots of evidence of this bull/moose fight happening on this property. plus, toughs of hair everywhere. >> first thing i heard was a loud cracking sound. it was the horns. it caught my attention. i turned around and i saw this bull moose coming towards me there is not that much space and time to cover it. it is best to exit the scene as quickly as you can. >> and exit the scene quickly is exactly what dale did. as these bull moose were fighting on saturday, feet away from him. first, he ran. then, he hid behind a vehicle. then, he
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ran inside his home. all actions in line with alaska department of fish and games advice. he says he saw this report. >> alaska department. >> that mentioned aggressive rues recommendations. >> the tips that put on the air last night were very helpful. you know, i am glad i followed some of them. >> the man that captured the entire bull moos fight on camera said it was terrifying and a moment of admiration. >> once i was in a place of safety, definitely. a lot of admiration. they are majestic animals, they really are. it is a privilege that we can be able to share the same planet with them in a way. >> reporter: from the moment he heard them lock antlers. to the end of the fight. he captured a moment he will always remember. >> they got up and went away. different situation than when
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they got into that point. >> do you think the moose are closer now that they have gotten into the fight and they are closer friends? >> who knows. i got the impression that the winner was saying to the other, this year, my turn. next year, you have your chance. >> okay >> you know, i never worked in a news market to air moose tips. >> i was going to say the same thing. i don't think we will have to do that. >> >> donald trump backing out of a "60 minutes" interview. why he is passing up one of the final opportunities for voters to see him in a prime time event before the election. [ticking] >> i'm lesley stahl. >> i'm bill whitaker. >> i don't want to talk to them. >> i'm anderson cooper. >> i'm sharyn alfonsi. >> i don't have time. >> i'm jon wertheim. >> i'm doing something else it's very important. >> i'm scott pelley. >> donald j. trump here to introduce trump watches. >> so what just happened? >>

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