tv News at 5pm FOX January 27, 2014 5:00pm-6:01pm PST
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online dating service. >> reporter: the district attorney said the boy looked young. he approached the boy on the street corner and found him with richard hastings. it was the 10th time he convinced the boy to sneak out of his home to have sex in a car. he said don't worry, i am a police officer, we are fine. >> he is using his police status. >> reporter: he turned himself in last week when the charges were filed and he may be out on bail if he posts bound. >> i think this is a fair amount. >> police officers take oaths to protect and because of that and because of using and taking advantage of that, it is in my opinion she a risk to the -- he is a risk to the community. >> reporter: we found out he was involved in a shooting
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death in 2011. we are working on that for 6:00 p.m. cristina rendon, ktvu channel 2 news. a week after a b.a.r.t. police officer was shot and killed the police department is changing its policies. the chief made the announcement this afternoon. ktvu's allie rasmus is now live with what is going to change here. >> reporter: also at the process conference the police chief announced he asked the department of justice to review policies and procedures. >> week after the shooting death of sergeant tom smith the head of b.a.r.t. announced changes. >> i believe in transparency. we are not going to hide from the truth. >> the changes effect the policy manual. when officers conduct a probation search they will be writen approval. it was -- written approval. it was when michael maes shot and killed his boss sergeant
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tom smith. a chief knew about the search before hand but the change means future operations will be put in writing. >> another layer of supervision by getting a written approval that they are aware of what is going on. >> reporter: michael maes who fired has 14 years of appearance with b.a.r.t. police. >> tenure with b.a.r.t. police department, also a field training officer, sergeant and certified to be a rifle operator. >> reporter: he searched the bath room that had two separate entrances. the investigation will reveal more once complete. in the mean time he defended the raining. >> you can have all the training and experience in the world, we can train our people every other day and have them perform in the field, on the
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off days and probably something like this could go wrong. >> reporter: he is canned the department of justice to review the policies. >> reporter: we know some of the officers at the scene of the shooting were issued cameras. what is not clear is whether they were working and whether or not they captured video of the shooting. allie rasmus, ktvu channel 2 news. a funeral will be held on wednesday for sergeant tom smith, it will start at 10:00 a.m. there will be a public viewing tomorrow night starting at save fume 9:00 p.m -- 7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. still no sign of the 14- year-old boy who police say shot and killed his sister after an argument. he is accused of killing his 17- year-old sister last week.
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the shooting happened in their grandmother's apartment. police thought they spotted him yesterday on a a.c. transit bus but he was gone. we told you about a teen from california arrested in pennsylvania for having a weapon of mass destruction. there are new questions about what he could have accomplished. the fbi is still reviewing the case. police say they found drugs and homemade explosives when they searched his apartment and he told police he experimented with the explosives before he moved away. coming up at 5:30 p.m. john fowler digs into what he had and what he could have accomplished with them. one of the worse droughts continues to deepen. noaa released this map today. the brown area is there area where the drought is expected
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to get worse. this is the forecast for the next two months. it is looming over the largest water provider in the south bay. they are conducting meetings to dress issues and water -- address issues and water restrictions. ktvu's robert handa is now with more. >> reporter: we are at the valley water district. it shows the dropping water levels we are seeing all over the south bay and why they are scrambling to take action as soon as possible. >> reporter: she says she saves money by washing her own car but started to do it differently once the area was in the middle of a drought. >> put the water in the ducat so i could go around -- bucket so i could go around. >> reporter: [ inaudible question ] >> yeah. >> reporter: that is an attitude the water district is counting on as it deals with
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solutions. today had -- the state planned to restore the delta. they are trying to decide how much it will get involved but at any level it will be expensive. >> $24 billion. but what do we get and how much will it cost? water is going up. >> reporter: while the board wrestles with long term plans it has a meeting tomorrow to address immediate concerns, a meeting that they thought they would have beening 2 or 3 -- been having 2 or 3 months from now. >> trying to give the public tips on how to save water in the immediate term. >> reporter: she says she approves but it won't be easy. >> it is a big necessity in life. >> reporter: off to concern?
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>> yeah. >> reporter: with a reserve it has no immediate plans for conservation. at 6:00 p.m. what could change that and what they will afternoon the public tomorrow and -- robert handa, ktvu channel 2 news. >> final details were released outlining the strategy for increasing water supplies. educating people to make conservation a way of life here in california. also recommends increasing self- reliance. expanding water storage capacity. some ranchers say they could lose everything. others say they have already started to sell off cattle because of the drought. ktvu's rob roth is working on that story for 5:30 p.m. and we dedicated a section of
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our website for the drought so you can have restrictions and what reservoirs are hardest hit. the fam ate of a -- family of a six-year-old girl hit and killed filed a lawsuit. ktvu's noelle walker is live. we reported the driver worked for uber but he didn't have a customer at the time. >> reporter: that is part of the lawsuit. 18 pagles that has potential to clarify the shades of gray. this is because of what happenedover there in that crosswalk. -- happened over there in that crosswalk. >> reporter: there are distractions and dangers in a busy city. buses, cars, bicycles and pedestrians all are have to share the road but sometimes they don't. a six-year-old was hit and killed new year's eve. a photo shows the girl, her
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mother and brother walking and being hit as they stepped into the sidewalk. the driver was a partner of uber although he was not providing service at the time. >> people are not safe on the streets with the uber cars. >> reporter: they filed a lawsuit against uber and the driver. the complaint alleges he was logged on to the uber app at the time of the collision and appearing as a uber driver available for service. implying passenger or not the driver was working. the lawsuit also alleges uber drivers must respond quickly for service, leading to distractions. >> ridiculous. what he was was on their app, available for people to pick him as a driver, which is the essence of their business. without those people having empty cars they have no business. >> to save a few dollars you could ruin your life. >> he says this could be a test
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case for the gray area of ride sharing liability. >> this is a perfect example why we need regulation. >> reporter: he told me he would advise people not to drive for or use the ride sharing services till the legal issues are cleared up. noelle walker, ktvu channel 2 news. they are trying to get former taxi drivers to leave companies like uber and return to the cab companies. >> we need taxi triver cans -- drivers. we would be happy to have them. we raved the application fee. >> san francisco's taxi director was letting drivers know they won't have to pay $155 license application fee if they sign up by april 1. a
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third of san francisco's cab drivers now drive for phone app based car services like uber, lift and side car. the city plans to increase the number of taxi mudannians. -- medallions. one day away from the state of the union address. leaders say president obama will do his best to work with congress but he plans to use his power if necessary to get things down. >> he will use his pen and his phone to advance an agenda that is focused on expanding opportunity. >> during hisdries tomorrow president obama is -- his state of the union address president obama will focus on raising the minimum wage ask wish congress for immigration -- and push congress for immigration reform. republicans don't like the president's attitude. >> if you want to work with
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somebody you don't start with a threat. there was a tone in terms of this i have got my pen or phone speech he has made. >> there is new information on his approval rating. 50% disapprove of his work. 46% approve. up from a low of 42% in november. she will deliver the gop response. she is a high ranking republican. you can watch the state of the union address right here on ktvu. coverage begins at 6:00 p.m. tomorrow night after ktvu channel 2 news at 5:00 p.m. and more coverage following the speech at 7:30 p.m. a weapon of mass destruction inside a college student's apartment? new information on the dangerous substances uncovered and what they were capable of doing. >> rain is finally in the forecast, when the wet weather
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. the economic recovery isn't touching everyone. for the first time the majority of people who rely on food stamps are working aged americans. >> ktvu's tom vacar looked at the numbers. they are eye popping. one mother who has a degree from cal. >> reporter: she and her husband, parents of three, did it right but still ended up at the food bank. >> they tell you go to school,
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get your degree. >> reporter: she has a psychology from university of california at berkeley but it is not enough for the family of 5. >> reporter: her unpaid full time job now is at home. >> we home school. for the first time ever households headed by working age people are the largest users of food stamps. one food bank veteran sees it every day. >> 15 years ago it was homeless and single parents and now today it is everybody. working families. both of them working. they still can't make it. >> keeps us afloet. that is what -- aploat. that is what he need -- a float. that is what we need. >> the mayor says it is bigger
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than mayors, governors, even presidents. >> concord represents the working middle class and we are a testament of the widening gap. >> reporter: johnson said the war on parvety is a war -- poverty is a war we can win. tom vacar, ktvu channel 2 news. >> more details now. as of october of last year there were 4.2 million people on snap in california. that means that about 1-9 people in california use food stamps. deep dutes the food stamp program -- cuts to the food stamp program has been averted. the ledgeilation keeps food stamps in tact and --
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legislation keeps food stamps in tact. they crafted the deal, a vote could take place in the house of representatives wednesday. the southeast is bracing for a blast that is causing big problems in the mid-west. look at these conditions in minnesota. many school districts canceled classes today. chicago, milwaukee and north dakota are experiencing bitter cold conditions. from dallas, to north carolina. our weather now. i was outside yesterday and thinking this is one of the strangers wepters i could -- winders i could recall. >> you see the clouds, you notice it, fog at the coast, changing the dynamics. you can feel it returning to a wet weather pattern. there is good news in the forecast. to the north, you can see the
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showers falling out up there. coming in close. mostly cloudy. showers -- light. real light. scattered. radars here. sacramento radar and davis radar. and mountains. two radars spinning. you see the showers showing up in chico. really light. really scattered. the moisture is streaming in off the pacific. what happens here is the dynamics will get here and we will see temperatures -- temperatures fall and a shot of rain. great news. here we are, tomorrow or right now, cloudy. tomorrow. more clouds. tomorrow morning, 7:00 a.m. more clouds. a break. 1:00. and then we get more clouds. up here you see the moisture moving in off the pacific. things are changing. looks like things are good. rough around here. check out the rain.
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december 6 was the last significant rainfall and something here on the 11th. 30th. put rain in there for you. north of the bay area. but showers none theless. the low-pressure system -- nonetheless. the low-pressure system. a major pattern shift. the shift -- or the pattern before can't happening. we were dry. this new pattern, which hopefully sticks around, a much more dynamic, potentially wetter pattern. 67 walnut creek. 68 danville. highs for tomorrow. warm. repeat of today. clouds, mild temperatures. and then we get into wednesday. the clouds thicken up. and i -- looks like by wednesday night we get showers in here. here is the five-day forecast with your bay area weekend in view, wednesday night chance of a shower. showers thursday. notice how -- i don't have a
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major rain event. showers. may be quarter inch, half inch, but we are looking sat a weather system, not well organized. not the thing that will break a drought. it will put water on the lawns. but the big story is, it is going to rain. the pattern shift is good. not as dry as we have been seeing. >> well, i guess we could take anything we could get. thank you. a teacher in trouble with the law after bringing marijuana laced food to a staff party. today the new action taken by the school. >> julie haener is here now for what we are working on for 6:00 p.m. >> started with the bolts on the bay bridge, now we learned about the other mishap, plus car after car caught blowing through a stop sign. 2 investigations the changes -- investigates the changes. these stories and much more coming up new at 6:00 p.m.
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umbrella bout ing -- a elementary school brought in counselors after an arrest of a teacher. officers took her into custody friday, she is accused of serving food laced with marijuana in november. 8 people became sick. the district superintendent said the counselors were called in as a recaution. >> they are here -- precaution.
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they are here in case someone wants to talk to somebody. >> she had been on paid leave since tuesday. don't park here unless you live here is what some people want the city to sell commuters and shoppers who park on neighborhood streets. the city counsel will review a proposal to issue special residential parking permits. some people have complain said that all of -- complained that all of their on street parking spaces are being taken up. they meet at 7:00 p.m. tonight. recall for toyota. regulators launched an investigation into break problems with the camry. the national transportation safety board received 59 complaints that power assisted breaks in some camrys could fail without warning. losing that could make it more difficult to stop because you need to put more pressure on
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the break to make it work. 30,000 camry hybrids from 2007 and 2008 model years could be impacted. a victory for google and yahoo and other companies. the justice department announced an agreement today. the companies have been fighting for permission to reveal intelligence orders to reduce speculation about their cooperation with government spying. the court still needs to sign off on the deal. for the first time southwest will have international flights. southwest began selling tickets to abriba, jamaica and the -- aruba, jamaica and the bahamas. authorities say he had all the ingredients to cause a lot of damage. >> these items are used in the
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making of fireworks. >> new information on the arrest of a teen with bay area ties and the materials found in his home. >> signs of life, the video that some say prove as 13-year- old girl declared brain dead is still alive and how doctors are explaining it. >> later, security at the super bowl, the circumstances that make this year's big game especially challenging and what authorities say is their biggest concern. [ sports announcer ] here's another one, alyson dudek. hales corners, wisconsin. nice pass by alyson dudek. can she hang on to that spot? and she does! [ male announcer ] with the u-verse wireless receiver, your tv goes where you take it, allowing inspiration to follow. ♪ [ dad ] looks pretty good, right? [ girl ] yeah. [ male announcer ] add a u-verse wireless receiver today. ♪
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. complete bay area news coverage continues right now, this is ktvu channel 2 news at 5:00 p.m. from a high school to penn state university to prison on charnels of possessions a weapon of mass destruction -- charges of possessioning a weapon of mass destruction. -- possessioning a weapon of mass destruction -- possessing a weapon of mass destruction. the 19-year-old had all the ingredients to do a lot of damage. tonight he remains behind bars and ktvu's john fowler has new information about the man's experimentation with explosives here in the bay area. >> reporter: the family home is in this neighborhood. a woman's voice from inside asked me to leave my card. >> reporter: she said there would be no comment today but she said the family would make
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a public statement later this week. he has made conflicting statements to police. the russian citizen was arrested friday near a penn state campus. documents detail that he first told officers he was going to blow things up. police say in addition to marijuana they discovered a pound of magnesium and potassium perchlorate. >> it depends on what it will be used for. these items are also used in the making of fireworks. >> what was his intent is the key. >> reporter: he said he did not intend to blow anything up. a device was flash powder and he experimented in california and planned to go somewhere
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remote to set it off but was afraid to do so. the chemicals are available online. he remains in jail on half million dollars bond. john fowler, ktvu channel 2 news. >> on www.ktvu.com you can read the complaint about the suspect for yourself. we posted it under hot topics. police arrested brothers in connection with a deadly stabbing over a weekend. @and duc tong -- anh tong and duc tong were taken into custody. they were arrested because witnesses saw both at the scene and were not sure which carried out the stapping. richard phan was stabbed to death yesterday morning after a birthday party for his girlfriend. investigators say he may have been trying to break up a fight moments before he was stabbed and killed. 21-year-old is in custody
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after he fired inside a bar this weekend. it happened yesterday morning. most of the shots hit the ceiling but one person was shot in the back side. he was arrested for assault with a deadly weapon. a push to prevent the homeless from camping is meeting resistance. they say it unfairly targets the homeless. ktvu's ann rubin is live where leaders are planning to discuss the idea in a couple hours. >> reporter: the ordinance tackles urban camping. it gets a first reading tonight and officials are expecting a heated debate. the mayor says they have been receiving lots of complaints about homeless encampments springing up so it bans those
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dept and shelters, calling them -- tents and shelters calling them a public safety hazard. advocates say there aren't enough shelters to help everyone. they feel it is an attack on the homeless. they would fine $100 for the first offense and $300 for a second offense. but the mayor says this isn't about taking money from people who have none. >> that is not the point. not the issue. it gives us the authority to remove encampments and protect public safety. >> i would go to another spot. it isn't going to run the homeless people out. >> reporter: the mayor plans to hold a summit in the next month to figure out how to work on the problem. the city counsel meeting here begins at 7:00 p.m. tonight. live, ann rubin, ktvu channel 2 news. berkeley's summer camp for a program for families found a new home. the city was forced to find
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another site after the rim fire destroyed the camp. this summer it will be at echo lake off highway 50. registration opens february 12. there will be 3 different sessions between june and august. angry birds and google maps are among the popular apps they are using to spy on users according to documents by edward snowden. they show they use the apps to access personal data like age, location, sex. the nsa says it focused on foreign intelligent. google is expanding in the uk. the purchase price is $500 million. a support group for jahi
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mcmath says the brain dead 13- year-old is responding to cold and moved her feet. jahi mcmath was moved out of children's hospital earlier this month and taken to a long term care facility. the group posted a video on youtube that showed her feet moving slightly after ice was rubbed on them. however, that video has now been taken down. doctors say movements like that are not uncompen among patients who are -- uncommon among patient whose are brain dead. college stupidities back on campus today but the school -- students back on campus today but the school is not the same. >> and later making a statement at this year's grammies. the wedding ceremony that made for a very memorable performance. >> tossed in the trash and left
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[mom and dad] [laughing] [boy] whoa,whoa,whoa... [mom] you've got two left feet,boo. sofa... desk... you know what? why don't you go get some frozen yogurt. i got this. you're so sweet. you got this, right? i do got this. from the shelf, and to your home. starting at $99. police arrested a sex offender who walked on to a school campus in sunnyvale. police say the man has been dressing like a woman as seen here in this photo from police. he is 42 years old of san jose.
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authorities say he walked on to the day school last month. he is charged with violating his terms. authorities are asking anyone with information to contact them. a hearing on chil focused -- chil focused on sex trafficking at the super bowl. lawmakers want to reduce prostitution. 10,000 were forced into prostitution at the 2010 super bowl in miami. flight attendants are participating in a program to spot human trafficking. hotels are also working to detect trafficking. in 15 minutes the security preparations underway for this sunday's big game and how worryicide everyone about the cold weather -- worried is everyone about the cold
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weather. weather.there -- russian president banning non- traditional sexual relations. that provoked outrage from critics. the mayor says all visitors will be welcome that winter olympics as long as they noll law. the puppy that -- follow the law. the puppy found in a dump is now ready for adoption. the pup found last month, she looks better than when she was rescued. she was taken to care and control where she received medical care. there are 200 people on a waiting list, all hoping to take her home. up next the major hollywood director who is suing over a
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movie script. plus -- >> dairy farmers having to make tough decisions, how cows are victims of the drought. >> and a naked man walks into a high school locker room in san francisco, the clue police hope will lead to his arrest. >> main makes it back into the five-day forecast, i will have a time line so you can plan your day accordingly. see you back here.
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room naked. the man got in through an unlocked door. he is white with an average build and a potbelly at south san francisco high school. the man said nothing is left without touching any girls. thousands of steven seagaller are not be -- south san francisco university students are not being let in after toxins were found there. they are working with experts to determine health affects from those who spent time in the building. >> a lot of our class were moved and our schedules were changed. it was inconvenient for us since we have to move away from classes. >> the university says it doesn't know when the work will
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be completed. we are under a drought emergency and desperate times call for desperate measures. farmers are choosing to sell off live stock to avoid losing everything. ktvu's rob roth is in petaluma. >> reporter: many dairy cows may not have the chance to produce milk for much longer. >> reporter: he has been a dairy farmer for three decades. he is worried he will have to cut his heard of 300 cows. >> i spent 30 years doing this. and it is -- you know, this is your life. >> reporter: he says without water he doesn't know how he could afford to keep operating. >> these are your animals. we raised them from young. >> reporter: high says at this time of year -- he says at this
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time of year it should be green, not brown. we found a beef rancher who says he already sent 20% of his heard, 60 cows to slaughter. >> we have had to make that difficult decision. >> more may follow. >> if we don't see moisture in the next 30 days we can write off the entire feed season. >> reporter: dozens of farmers gathered for a meeting this afternoon with local officials to compare notes and get updates. some complain they want truck water but they have an ordinance from water being trucked outside city limits. >> we can't be subsidizing others. i think we can make that work out. >> reporter: ranchers say all they can do is hope that it rains and soon. >> this thing is going to get
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tough, unless we get rain. i don't know. hopefully we get rain. we will have to get a lot of rain. >> reporter: that is because without a lot of rain a lot of cows are destined to become casualties of a historic drought and dairy farms as well. rob roth, ktvu channel 2 news. >> close to tears about the drought. now to our chief meteorologist bill martin. for some it is their lives. >> we will get rain in the 5 day but it is not a drought breaker. we will need a lot of rain. we had two dry years and this year. it will take a lot. right now this rain isn't going to dent much of anything. 58 in pacifica today. 59 in hayward. temperature coming off a little. cooler than yesterday. 67 livermore because of the cloud cover. a lot of clouds out there. and the clouds are an
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indication of what is happening. the jet stream is changing its position. it is focus more in our area. moisture to work with. showers showing up north of our area. showers will be widely scattered but not enough to create any measurable precipitation. but you get the idea. startingstarting to organize. tonight cloudy right now. the cloudy conditions last all night. and into the next couple days. increasing clouds. by wednesday night we have scattered showers back in the forecast into thursday. this high pressure center will vacate and the low comes in and temperatures fall. we get that shot of rain on wednesday night in the thursday and friday morning. most of the activity will be north of our area. commute model. major pattern shift. tomorrow morning 7:00 a.m.
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tomorrow afternoon. wednesday morning. moving down. wednesday afternoon. starting to drop. here we are on thursday morning. right? you see an opportunity. long range model. not dialed down. not precise. shows you the pattern. the clouds in place. dropping south. that is what we need and that is what is happening. 64 napa. these highs are for you tomorrow. 68 brentwood. 68 antioch. valley mid-60s again. cooler or about the same as where we were today because it is almost the same conditions. lots of cloud cover. five-day forecast pops in. pattern shift. moisture in the air. showers wednesday night, thursday, perhaps friday morning. the story is it hasn't rained since december 6 but the pattern shift is putting us -- you can feel it. hopefully it will provide more
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opportunities for rain. >> thank you. he is suing for a leaked movie script. he reports he gave the first draft of a western to six people and it was leaked. he filed a lawsuit today saying he provided a way to download the screen play. he is denying wrong doing and said it only posted links to other websites. millions watched 33 couples get married last night. we will show you the grammy performance everyone is talking about. plus -- >> and we are going to over time. >> the final score in the video game version of the big game. >> julie haener is here now for what we are working on for 6:00 p.m. >> car after car caught blowing through a stop sign. >> shocking to me people ignore a stop sign. >> 2 investigates what neighbors are doing to make a
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shooting. visitors are allowed to float flowers and sign a guest book. darion marcus aguilar skipped work saturday, took a taxi to the mall and gunned down two people before killing himself. investigators are looking through hisjournal for a mote -- journal for a motive. the super bowl is expected to be one of the coldest on record and one of the most secure. a look at security preparations underway right now at the stadium in new jersey. >> reporter: while 80,000 fans are enjoying super bowl xlviii inside met life stadium, thousands of police and agents will be watching everything but the game. prepared for a list of emergencies and worse case scenarios, including fire, shootings and terror attacks. >> biggest fear, disruption of the event. same fear most americans live with day to day in a most 9/11
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era. >> the police is in charge of super bowl security, working with 100 state, local and federal agents, facing unique challenges. 40% of ticket holders will ride buses and trains to the stadium so they will have to be screened before they board. met life is near water so parole boats, a few miles from new york city. a command post build near the staidio -- studio. they will monitor everything from road and weather condition to raidation -- radiation levels. >> they are focused on the security. we are confident.
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i don't think there is jitters. we want everything prepared. >> reporter: police will have to dress warm with temperatures expected to drop to the single digits this week and another concern is not getting people inside on a rainy, snowy super bowl sunday, it is handling a mass exodus of ticket holders. fox news. and we are going to over time. >> the seahawks heading to over time. >> the super bowl simulation of sunday's game and it is a barn burner. the contest hends into over time where peyton manning -- heads into over time where peyton manning gets a goal winning field goal. and you can watch the real thing right here on ktvu channel 2 news. kickoff is at 3:30 p.m. this sunday. tomorrow i am heading to new jersey for the big game. i will have live reports
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starting wednesday night. and posting my preparations, cold weather gear, everything on twitter. and on facebook. follow me for bay area stories from the super bowl. in a ceremony 3 dozen couples got married during the grammies in los angeles. >> 33 couples who chose this moment to celebrate their vows with us here in los angeles. >> they filled the filled filled the aisles. after the exchange of rings they declared them all married. as for the awards themselves, punk took home album of the year. best group performance and record of the year. best new artist macklemore and ryan lewis. best solo performance went to lord. and pacific mambo won for best
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tropical latin album. the band is based in san francisco. now at 6:00 p.m. a bay area police officer accused of molesting a teen boy. we are digging into the officer's past and his role he played in a police shooting. >> employees pistol whipped and beaten, the key evidence investigators are going through. >> a problem in plain sight, what neighbors are catching on their video recorders. >> i can tell you my son was hit by a car, a liability will be significant. >> the changes the community is calling for to make the intersection safer. >> complete bay area news coverage starts right now, this is ktvu channel 2 news at 6:00 p.m. in a jump suit and from behind bars, a san francisco police officer pleads not guilty to child molestation
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charges. hello. i am frank somerville. >> and i am julie haener. >> today's hearing for richard hastings offered new insight in the case. he may have misused his authority when investigators approached him. now ktvu's cristina rendon listened to his past and his role in a police shooting. >> reporter: richard hastings is on the other side of the law, sporting a jail jump suit. richard hastings was with a 15- year-old boy last august trying to get the teen to have sex in a car. it was the 10th time he met the teen on the street corner till police showed up because the boy was out past curfew. >> don't worry, i am a police officer. we are fine. he is trying to get out of the trouble. >> reporter: richard hastings' attorney said the relationship was
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