tv Ten O Clock News FOX July 7, 2014 10:00pm-11:01pm PDT
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protesters take to the street angry after learning a sheriff deputy will not face charges in the shooting death of a 14-year-old boy. good evening i'm gasia mikaelian in for julie haener. >> and i'm frank somerville. tragic but not a crime. the court decided that he will not charge the deputy for shooting and killing lopez. >> he believed honestly and reasonably that he was faced
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with a do or die dilemma. >> reporter: the judge decided that the sheriff made a reasonable decision. debora villalon live where reaction has been emotional all day long, debora. >> reporter: people marched here and then rallied in the area. the family doesn't live here anymore. they moved after feeling harassed. thousands of people marched through the neighborhood in shirts reading jailhouse for gail house. the gun instructor and sheriff deputy they wanted fired if not charged. >> justice will be done. if it's people's justice we will make sure that people's
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justice is done. we will not let andy's murder lie. >> reporter: it's a given, deputy gailhouse will not be assign third-degree -- assigned this area again. when he angered the community when he jumped out of his patrol car and shot him. several witnesses also thought lopez gun was real and who heard gailhouse yell drop it. >> i disagree with what happened. what he says. >> reporter: this witness says that he could tell by the way lopez was swinging the toy it was fake. >> no because it's very light. when he was walking with that, it's very light. >> this is a painful, painful chapter in the history of sonoma county. >> reporter: on that everyone can agree but today's decision does not to repair the rupture between latino families and law enforcement. >> i don't trust them whatsoever. i don't care. if i'm calling i won't call
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them. i don't care anymore about them. i have no respect whatsoever for them. >> reporter: with the tension boiling over several times since fall, a task force is now examining whether the lopez shooting suggests a larger problem. >> there's been 62 law enforment involved fatalities in sonoma county since 2000 and they've all gone in a very similar fashion. >> as the sheriff's department barricades its entrance in case of protest. there are more demonstrations planned. tomorrow at 2:00 at the das office and a march on saturday downtown. the lopez family has filed its own civil lawsuit which can move forward. in santa rosa, debora villalon, ktvu news. more details now the lopez family released a statement after today's announcement
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saying quote, this disheartening decision leave it is family leaving as though andy had been killed again today. they're also asking for the community to be peaceful. in the newsroom we've been going through documents released today. they show a doctor hired by the da determined andy lopez had used marijuana 60 to 75 minutes prior to his death. the doctor concluded lopez was likely feeling the effects of the marijuana at the time of his encounter with the sheriff's deputy. and a cell phone photo taken by a victim show it is deputies were behind the open doors of their marked police car when deputy gailhouse fired. deputy gailhouse yelled at the teenager to put down his gun but instead lopez turned and raised the gun toward the deputy. at ktvu.com we posted the entire report as well as the announcement by the district attorney. just look for it on our home page. new at 10:00, new questions tonight about an agreement to keep the oakland a's playing at
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the coliseum. the team has the best record and more players than any other team going to the all star game. yet fans still don't know if their team is going to remain in oak land. noah walker live at the coliseum with details about this delay in trying to keep the team in the east pay, noelle. >> reporter: city leaders have said the goal has been keeping the team here. but today i saw the council members leaving late out of a meeting, one uttered it was a waste of time and others were frustrated. it's been a good year to be fans of the oakland a's. donna savino has been cheering for the team since the stadium was built. >> the team has been great this
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year. it's awesome. >> reporter: she has no patience. >> pitch the ball. bring him on. come on. >> reporter: for losing the game or her beloved team. >> this is the heart of oakland. and they need to stay. >> reporter: inside oakland city hall, inside these closed meeting doors, the city council and mayor were talking inside baseball. >> you know we've been working really hard to keep the a's in. >> reporter: the council has to vote on the proposed -- city leaders emerged this evening without the decision. >> yeah i'm pretty optimistic. our goal is to keep the a's in oakland and the council needs a little bit more information and we're going to be having some meetings with the a's. >> reporter: last week a's owner lou wolf says he has permission from major league baseball to move the team if the city does not agree to the
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offer. >> everybody has a right to make any statement they want. if some major league owner or commission they can make a statement if they want. we'll do wall we think is in the best interest of the city of o akland. the fans are hoping, no one drops the ball. >> i would be devastated. >> mayor quan says she's optimistic the city council can reach a decision probably before the council takes a recess in august. noelle walker, ktvu channel 2 news. new video from vallejo tonight where a man was shot and a witness on the scene said he died. the shooting happened on sutter and york street. dozens of casings were on the street and a silver lexus had several holes in it.
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there's no word if the -- a coaster in southern california derailed today. magic mountain's ninja coaster struck a tree branch shortly before 6:00 p.m. and stopped abruptly. at least one car was left kind of dangling. it took more than an hour to get the riders down. the coaster whips through the trees around 65 miles per hour. the entire project is still expected to be completed on time. b.a.r.t. is building a 10-mile extension from fremont to san jose. the delay comes after a judge ruled in favor of the city of milpitas. milpitas won its bid to stop crews from closing dixon landing road during the construction. construction on that part of the track was supposed to take eight months and include a partial closure of dixon road in order to keep this major
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road open, construction is expected to take 10 months longer. the first trains are expected to carry passengers on this extension project in 2017. b.a.r.t. is planning a make over for the busy powell station in san francisco. b.a.r.t. is looking to make $17 million in improvements. the money would come from the an infrastructure fund. most said what they really want is a cleaner station with reliable escalators and elevators. a career college with five bay area campuses announced a massive plan to sell 27 of it schools and close 12 others. schools include four heald college campuses in san francisco, san jose, concord
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and hayward and one yo tech school. students were reluctant to talk to us today but an attorney who often represents trade school students said that students and taxpayers will be the ones who have to pay. >> the student is obligated to repay the loan. if the student can't repay the loan taxpayers repay the loan. the only party that gets the money free and clear without any obligation at all is the school. >> corinthian is under investigation for lying to students and falsifying job finding records. ktvu's allie rasmus tells us the change starts a practice known as spiking where employees can artificially inflate their pension. >> reporter: kenneth is saying goodbye to his colleagues, his
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career and canine. the bomb sniffing dog he's used for decades. he's retiring leaving early because of the way his pension will be calculated. workers used to be able to count their unused sick days and holidays. >> i was mad, i've been through that now it's, i'm resigned to the fact that there's nothing i can do about it. i have to do what i have to do and i have to leave. >> reporter: one of four sergeants, four lieutenants and for officers leaving the department this week. >> it's caused a loss of constitutional knowledge and experience. >> reporter: the next sheriff
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academy doesn't graduate until october. so for now the road ahead means a leaner crew and the use of overtime. 11 deputies and five civilians are retiring early because of it. the union for contra costa fire say three of the battalion chiefs and assistant chief have retired in the past month because of the pension change. a pension reform law signed into law two years ago is the reason why these changes are going into effect. we contacted the governor for comment on this story, they did not get back to us. in san leandro, allie rasmus. one group is hiring the homeless to clean the streets in exchange for housing and food. it's part of a new program for
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the housing clean streets. here's how it works. starting july 1st the downtown street team started getting homes men and women to do debris removing and landscaping. in return the homeless get food vouchers and housing slips. >> if you want to help yourself you're going to be wearing an orange or yellow t-shirt that says street clean. a campaign sign stolen in broad daylight. >> i'm looking at the computer and thinking is this really happening. >> what this homeowner says was the thief's biggest mistake of all. boarding a plane with a weapon in your wallet.
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released pending charges. airport security says there's another type of knife they're seeing more and more people trying to carry through security. >> they're called credit card knives. they're designed to take up as little space as a credit card. ktvu's patti lee found the number of these type of knives confiscated at airports is growing. >> reporter: knives this size are being recovered by the dozen. although so far none have been found at san jose manetta. tsa agents are on the look out for a weapon. a fold out knife designed to fit neatly into a wallet. >> it looks like a credit card. these are plastic and you break it, you flip it and it becomes a knife. >> reporter: pop lockhart a police academy recruiter says credit card knives are designed to be hard to detect. potentially bad news for the tsa. >> i don't know how they do it.
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this is designed for -- a little piece of plastic you can have in your back pocket. it can be in my wallet that's what it's designed for. >> reporter: the tsa would not disclose what materials the agency screens for only that so far this year it has recovered 38 credit card five, 19 at oakland international, 20 at sfo. 10 of those detected in the past month. >> it's concerning, it's concerning. being on the plane and knowing things happening like that. >> reporter: the tsa tells us passengers caught carrying the knives have not been arrested because most simply forgot they were carrying them. they weren't trying to sneak them on board. either way, law enforcement tell us that keeping up with
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the development of new weapons is growing. reporting live at oakland international, patti lee. continuing coverage now on two wildfires on opposite side of lake barriesta. this evening firefighters are getting the upper hand. the butts fire is northwest of the lake. firefighters said the containment of the monticello fire had grown to 25%. all evacuations had been lifted. the butts fire has burned two homes and 400 acres. four people were also hurt. this evening calfire said thatten containment grew to 95% and full containment is expected sometime tomorrow. no word yet on how either fire
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started. needles to say this has been a very busy fire season and departments all over the bay area are stretched thin. as ktvu's john fowler told us no agency is feeling it more than contra costa county where budget cuts have already eliminated about 1/4 of their normal staffing. >> a burned fence, destroyed, shed and garden charred quarter acre next to this home. a neighbor 17-year-old boy scout matt cousin. >> i saw a huge flame going up the tree. at first i thought their house is on fire. >> reporter: cousin said he grabbed a garden hose, firefighters were on the scene in a few hours. >> it could have absolutely been much worse. >> reporter: robert marshal tells me county wide fire staffing was already critically low. plus they've sent five engines
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and firefighters to other california fires. stretching thing thin back up resources -- stretching thin back up resources. had this fire gotten out of control help would have been slow coming. >> i don't recall another time that this early we've been experiencing fires like this. >> firefighters are strained and they're doing the best job they can. >> maybe i got lucky that they weren't off fighting somebody elses fire when i called them. >> reporter: the weed abatement is not as good as in years past. all that should serve as a warning that weed abatement is more important than ever. john fowler. >> reporter: lots of subtropical moisture streaming into the area. we had a few stray showers and
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we're fortunate because this moisture is very humid. subtropical. and we're not seeing thunderstorms. it's not a real deep layer of moisture. if so we would be seeing issues. it's not happening that way. we're getting a few light sprinkles out there as the flow comes out over the top of us. we will see mostly cloudy conditions tonight. not just above us in livermore and santa rosa. the fog is still lingering. we're getting a few reports of light rain dropping out. but it's like you saw today just a couple of drops here and there. not enough to wet the roadways. the current temperatures you see how warm it is. especially inland it's 73 right now in fairfield, it's 79 in antioch. so with the cloud cover, it keeps things warmer out there. so it's going to be kind of muggy and humid in the inland bay valleys. walnut creek as well. your lows are going to be in the six 0s. around -- in the 60s. around the bay we have cloud cover. with temperatures in the upper
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50s and fairfield and antioch places like concord in the low 60s. kind of warm when you get going tomorrow morning. a warmer day tomorrow because the sun is going to come out. it will show you the subtropical moisture in its past and what the timing will be when it leave it is area and when it starts to warm. i'll see you back here. a curious caper caught on camera. >> why would they do that. so i think it was more just shock and disaappointment. >> tonight at 10:30, how the theft of a campaign sign has gotten entire neighborhoods talking about the thief. >> but up, a reagan -- a restaurant goes up in flames. what the owner tells us after seeing the damage. heat shields are compromised. we have multiple failures. what's that alarm?
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fuel cell two is down. i'm going to have to guide her in manually. this is very exciting. but i'm at my stop. come again? i'm watching this on the train. it's so hard to leave. good luck with everything. watch tv virtually anywhere with the u-verse tv app. with at&t, the u-verse revolves around you.
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restaurant goes up in flames. and this evening we talk to the owner about what he plans to do now. >> reporter: we'll have that story for you about the restaurant burning in just a few minutes. but first, more on the earthquake that hit mexico this morning. the epicenter was located in the central state of chiapas. a newborn baby died when a hospital ceiling collapsed. the shaking also cracked walls. the quake was felt as far away as mexico city while the morning news was on tv. young immigrants with a legal right to stay in this country can get driver's licenses in arizona. the ninth circuit court in san
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francisco said the arizona that denied licenses suggested a policy hostile to young immigrants. arizona governor jan brewer said the ruling was misguided and she might appeal. wall street started this week with losses after setting records last week. the dow jones dropped 34 points. nasdaq fell 34. analysts say investors are getting cautious before corporate earnings reports begin tomorrow. the sentence went in his favor. but a bay area grandfather isn't celebrating. >> jacob, he was only two years old. it's something that you never get over. why this case had the prosecution and defense agreeing on the definition of justice. >> homeowner on the quiet san jose neighborhood are shaking their heads after someone steals a campaign sign.
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but it's not the petty theft people are thinking. and download the ktvu app, download the app and you can watch the news live on your mobile device. safeway gets that staying on budget can be a real bear. that's why they've got lots of ways to save. real big club card deals, the safeway app and gas rewards. it's a great time for a cookout. fresh sweet corn is 10 for just $2.00. rancher's reserve ribeye steaks are only $6.99 a pound. and refreshe water is just $2.79 a case. there's more savings to love... at safeway. ingredients for life.
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caught on camera, surveillance video here shows a woman swiping a campaign sign from a front lawn but there's something else on this video that has a lot of people talking. this that video you can't see the thieves face or a car license plate however many they can't help but notice her bright yellow pants. >> ktvu's azenith smith talks to the woman who's sign was stolen. and she is live. >> reporter: in this neighborhood a lot of homes are adorned with patriotic flags but the homeowner says what the thieves did was anything but patriotic. the swas era family had just
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returned home from a trip to yosemite last night when they noticed something was missing. >> we were watering the loan and my kids noticed the sam ricardo for mayor sign was gone. >> reporter: they checked their surveillance video. >> i am thinking, is this really happening. >> reporter: on the video you see a woman jump out of her car, grab the sign and jump back in her car. she can't help but make light of it by noticing what the woman was wearing. >> biggest crime of all is, really, why are you wearing the yellow pants. stealing a sign okay, but let's not wear yellow pants. >> reporter: the family has posted it on facebook and it's taken off. >> a friend of mine labeled her as the banana pants bandit. >> reporter: a friend even
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making this wanted sign. >> it just kind of disappoints me how someone went up to our house and steal from us. >> reporter: they want their sign back but aren't planning to file charges. >> i think that she wants the sign because she really wanted my sam ricardo sign. >> reporter: he highlighted one of his proposals to linking surveillance cameras to help fight crime. azenith smith, ktvu news. back now to that fire at a well known rest -- restaurant in los gatos. rob roth spoke to the owner about what he's going to do
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now. >> reporter: the owner and head chef of manresa got a close look at the damage to his restaurant. he was away when the fire broke out and came back to assess the damage. >> reporter: we're devastated. our restaurant burned down. >> reporter: the fire started on the outside of the building not the outside. the cause is still undetermined. for fans of this internationally renowned restaurant there's good news. >> everything is smoky and dirty and wet but there's no fire damage in there. >> reporter: it's received two stars on the michelin restaurant guide six of eight years. it's a destination for foodies from near and far. the owner grows his own produce. >> it's horrible. we've known this restaurant since it opened. >> you know they really put a lot of care and creativity into the food. so that's what made it special.
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>> reporter: the restaurant has been closed since july third for cleaning. it was scheduled to reopen wednesday. but will manresa reopen? >> absolutely. i think we're going to be a stronger and better restaurant. >> reporter: but the owner couldn't say exactly when that better and stronger restaurant would reopen. rob roth, ktvu news. the video looks like it was nearly a disaster at two jets came way too close for concert. it happened at the airport on saturday. the rushing boeing 667 was on approach just as a 737 from argentina pulling up ahead of it. the perspective of the video makes it look closer than it was but t faa is investigating. this is inspite of the
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united states to form a new government. a man is accused of break into a home in kensington and getting in bed with an 11-year- old. brian hubbard broke into the home just after 1:00 in morning. the girl woke up and started screaming that's when the man ran from the home. a couple of hours later, berkeley police reported to reports of a prowler in a home not far away. they found the man, identified him in both cases and arrested him. hubbard is from richmond and is now facing several charges. this is erin gimbert he
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worked as a contractor at the fair he was arrested and booked with charges of pandering. a girl said that he gave her a card with topples women with big pimpin inc. as ktvu claudine wong reports the sentence was far lighter man the maximum prison term. >> reporter: steven hayashi walked out of court and headed home. instead of prison he got probation. >> are you remorseful? >> very. i mean even though it turned out good. but jacob is still dead. >> reporter: 2-year-old jacob was killed four years ago after being brutety attacked and mauled by the family's pit bulls. prosecutor argued today that hayashi had shown little remorse. >> it was all about he wanted
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to keep the dogs. he would not take any steps whatsoever to child proof the house. >> reporter: the defense argues this was just a horrible tragedy. >> oh my god, he is so remorseful. >> reporter: in court his attorney referenced this interview with ktvu the day after the attack. when i interviewed him in 2010 about the death of his step grandson he broke down several times. >> having the dog social security my fault. that is my burden that i will carry on for the rest of my life. >> reporter: the only thing both sides agree on today was in this case justice is hard to define. >> a 2-year-old is dead. so, quite frankly no sentence, no punishment, brings justice. >> i don't know if there ever could be justice to deal with this horrific loss of this child. it's a horrible horrible tragedy. >> reporter: while this chapter closes the story doesn't really end. >> it will never really end for
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me. >> reporter: what do you mean? >> the loss of jacob. he was somebody -- he was only 2 years old. that's something you never get over. >> hayashi was sentenced to three years probation including one year in the county jail. he is being allowed to stay out on bail while he appeals his conviction. claudine wong, ktvu news. a wandering dog with a message written on her fur. >> someone treated her like trash but she ended up being my treasure. >> 90-degree temperatures are coming back. >> you've heard about black friday but what about green tuesday? why thousands are expected to line up at one marijuana shop tomorrow.
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kid: hey dad, who was that man? dad: he's our broker. he helps look after all our money. kid: do you pay him? dad: of course. kid: how much? dad: i don't know exactly. kid: what if you're not happy? does he have to pay you back? dad: nope. kid: why not? dad: it doesn't work that way. kid: why not? vo: are you asking enough questions about the way your wealth is managed?
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people in seattle better get in line earl little if they want to legally buy marijuana tomorrow. that's when the state of washington is expected to become the second state to allow recreational marijuana. and only one shop is open, so the restaurant has set up a food truck and free water for those who are expected to line up for hours. demand is so high that growers cannot keep up to production. >> there could be up to 10,000 people here. the downside is we only have 10 pounds of product. realistically we'll probably only be able to sell to 2,000 people. >> reporter: growers say they're going to have to find a better balance once legal marijuana is on the market for a few weeks. donald sterling is expected to testify tomorrow in the trial deciding of sterling's wife had the authority to negotiate a $2 billion sale of the los angeles clippers. sterling wanted to bring the
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trial to federal court but early today a judge denied that request. when a trial started the first witness called was donald. he wasn't there so the trial ended for the day. most californians are connected but there's still a digital divide. the poll found that 75% say they have a broad band internet connection in their home. a small but significant number 8% say they connect solely through a smart phone. now looking at the people who don't use the internet very much, 51% are adults who haven't graduated from high school. 47% are 65 or older, and 53% have a household income under $20,000 a year. today governor jerry brown
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signed legislation that allows wording on marriage applications to spouse. state senator mark leno who authored the bill says it ensuring all married couples are recognized equally. the singer madonna did her civic duty by showing up for civic duty in new york. madonna made her way into court in a dark suit. she didn't have to do a lot of waiting. the county clerk, pulled her aside. reportedly joked about sequestering her and sent her home. it would have caused more distraction by keeping her on the jury. in five minutes, our chief meteorologist bill martin with the forecast and the trend he's
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tracking this week. >> abandoned with a message. written in black marker. the disturbing way a dog was dumped on a downtown street. oh chris, did you remember to pay the dog sitter? oh i knew i forgot something... i'll just do it now. well, we're boarding. no, i'll use citi mobile. takes two seconds, better safe than sorry right? yeah who knows if we'll even get service on the islands? what! no service? seriously? no electricity, we're going to make our own candles, we're going to churn our own butter. oh, we lost one. can't leave a bag unattended. bank from almost anywhere with the citi mobile app. to learn more visit citi.com/easierbanking
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heat shields are compromised. we what's that alarm?ures. fuel cell two is down. i'm going to have to guide her in manually. this is very exciting. but i'm at my stop. come again? i'm watching this on the train. it's so hard to leave. good luck with everything. watch tv virtually anywhere with the u-verse tv app. with at&t, the u-verse revolves around you.
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new at 10:00, a heartbreaking dis discovery in benitia. a dog is dumped on the streets with the word free spray painted on. >> reporter: the woman tells me she found the animal next to that tree. it was shaking and whimpering. it became clear this dog was not lost but rather abandoned. >> come on girl. >> reporter: by the look of things you would think this human dog relationship began years ago. but this canine connection is just a few days old. and was born out of an unfortunate situation. >> i was so sad, my heart just
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like broke. >> reporter: shannon betancort was headed home last thursday where she works as a bartender. she had only walked a few blocks when outside this chinese restaurant she came across this scared and whimpering dog. >> this is exactly where she was when i found her. it was really sad. >> reporter: with the words spray painted free on both sides of her body and i need a home on its head. >> someone treated her like trash but she ended up being my treasure. >> reporter: the abandoned nameless dog now has a name. >> i decided to name her will recollect ibby for liberty. >> reporter: on the same day this small town threw a birthday bash for america, threw this dog out. >> he was the oldest one there, and they said they were going to euthanize him. i took him home. >> reporter: can't understand
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why. >> i don't know what the reasons were. but you have to think before you just put a sign on something, you put out the effort to put it in a safe place. >> sit, shake. good girl. >> reporter: as you can see, libby is healthy and well trained making it all the more confusing as to why why someone would dump her. frank and gasia by the way that marker not so easy to remove bettancourt tried. but it wasn't until a pet groomer offered to clean libby up for free. a huge task to pick up trash after the 4th of july holiday. an army of people picked up trash and what they collected
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was 323 poundsover trash. cans, bottles, dirty diapers and at least 1,500 cigarette buds. >> shocking. it's like someone dumped a dumper. >> it's not atypical. we've been dealing with this for years. >> reporter: the crowd appeared to be larger this year than last year and left behind more trash. organizers of the clean up offered a message for future visitors to please pick up and pack out anything that you bring with you. california's red legged frog is about to become the state amphibian. red legged frogs compete every year at the calaveras county. starting in january they'll join the grizzly bear, california redwood and gold as one of california's 36 state symbols. governor jerry brown signed the legislation on june 30th. temperatures today were
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cooler around the bay. about the same inland. it was cooler because of all that cloud cover out there in the sprinkles. very light sprinkles showing up in the bay area. you may have seen some. check out antioch a full 10 degrees warmer than livermore. it's very cool. you think these temperatures would be cooler than this. there was some heat in the inland valley. 73 in oakland. here's what happens tomorrow, less cloud cover. warmer around the bay and actually a little cooler inland. so that's what we're going to see. this is that flow of moisture we talked about earlier. you're seeing more showers starting to fall out. we have the live radar sweeping here. it's showing some stuff here but most of this is not hitting the ground. there's a real dry layer about 1,000, 2,000 feet up. it's -- as the rain and showers fall on to it, they dry. the warmest spots there's going to be a mild overnight low. here's the forecast model.
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this sets you up for tomorrow morning. that sets you up for the coast. the high clouds, they're not impacted by terrain as much as the fog which is right along the coast. you can always tell fog because it's right there on the coastal hills you see the high clouds. the fog doesn't do much. it stays coast side. but the high clouds drift away. tomorrow by one clock you still have showers, and thundershowers. we've been fortunate that this pattern hasn 't produced thunderstorms for the bay area proper. there's more sprinkles in the forecast tonight but i suspect tomorrow as we go through the day a chance of thunderstorms up in lake tahoe area and that's not great news because the atmosphere is relatively dry so they should be dry thunderstorms if they do occur. that's not what you want to do in the area. temperatures in san francisco right now is 58 degrees. the marine layer stretching out so after tomorrow, temperatures are going to start to cool down a little bit. so tomorrow remains warm as i mentioned a little warmer around the bay. about the same inland maybe a little cooler. on wednesday, you will see this
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on the forecast. it's not going to get cold. it's not a heat wave for sure but temperatures are trending back into the mid-80s, upper 80s and warmest spots on wednesday. temperatures a lot like they were today. warmer at the bay. clouds clear out by tomorrow afternoon. by lunchtime you get mostly cloudy skies. and temperatures you're in the mid-80s. mid-70s around the bay. so a better pattern for fire danger not bad for air quality. and we do i feel fortunate that we didn't get any thunderstorms because this pattern is the pattern that gives you thousands of lightning strikes some areas. >> thanks, bill. that time of year again when people risk their lives to run with the bulls in pamplona spain. the bulls are let lose and the ring accompanied bid thousands of thrill seekers is on the way. one person was gored in the thigh. three others have less serious injuries. at the end of the day the bulls are used in bullfights and they're usually killed. mark is off tonight. joe is here and boy the giants learned tonight why the a's have the best record in
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baseball. >> they were running with the bulls today getting injured. one first place team won the chance to be in first place today as the a's and giants met. steven bow with a fly. but instead gets in on the action he will no doubt hear about it back at the station house. the early half of this game is a pitching duet by chavez. chavez when that battle striking out -- chavez tied his career high with nine strike outs. a's broke through with a run in their half of the fifth. callasco finds the run. the a's though totally shutting down the san francisco bats. they got two more to put it away in the seventh. all star drop donaldson with the base hit to score cespedes.
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four pitchers combine on the shut out which gives chavez the record of 7-5. >> i think tonight was the one that okay we can do it without having to hit the ball off the wall like we have in the past. it's just, good condition we have going and good line up that we have going. i think us as pitchers work off of that. the angels when this monday night sports cast continues.
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northern california baseball teams conscious with what's going with their counter part. they left the inning with a 5-2 lead. kendrick with a single up the middle after happ: that scores trout. the angels get four in the inning and win 5-2. they stay 3- 1/2 games behind the first place a's. three stages of the first 100 tour de france are in the books. the yellow jersey did not change riders today. this was italy's nebali after winning yesterday's second stage. congratulatory kiss by one of
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the women in yellow and a heimlich maneuver by the other. >> reporter: make his way through the streets of london. the winner of the stage. kittle not considered the first. nebali will continue to wear yellow. which actually takes place for the first time in france as for the kisses, stay tuned. >> world cup resumes tomorrow the semi final match between brazil and germany then it's the netherlands against argentina on wednesday. >> those are going to be good games. thanks. >> and thank you for choosing ktv you -- ktvu channel 2 news. >> our next newscast starts at 4:30. if you missed part of the newscast you can always catch it on tv 36. you have a great night all right. see you later.
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(telephone ringing) night. no. middle of the phone. i got it. get it. oh! my arm's asleep! my arm's asleep! phil, get the phone. oh! (beep) that's me. hello! hi. (grunts) yes, this is she. who is it? okay. oh, god. tell me what's happening here! haley has been arrested. what? (telephone ringing) phone! phone. i bet that's mama. i was just dreaming it was raining chickens! mitchell, answer the phone! (beep) look what i am doing. look what i am doing, huh? hello? hey, mitchell. i'm sorry to wake you up, but haley got arrested. oh, god. haley got arrested. that explains the chickens. it does. it adds up. what did she get arrested for? oh, she got caught drinking at some party. look, could you drive up to the college with us? i think we're gonna need a lawyer. yes, of course. and cam and lily can come over and stay with alex and luke. i'll guard them with my life. yeah, yeah. i hate to bother him.
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