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tv   Ten O Clock News  FOX  August 8, 2014 10:00pm-11:01pm PDT

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u.s. fighter jets storm off on bombing runs in iraq for the first time since troops withdrew almost three years ago. good evening i'm gasia mikaelian in for julie haener. >> and i'm frank somerville. those isis troops are accused of -- and ken pritchett is here now with this escalation of u.s. involvement. >> reporter: the u.s. military
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has now conducted multiple air strikes on isis also known as isil and delivered aid. a welcomed move by those who are in the path of this radical islamic group. the pentagon says f18 hornets based on the u.s.s. george w. bush and a convoy today near the city verbil. well armed islamic closed within 20 miles of this city. >> they take from the military. they have different kinds. different weapons, very important to attack them by the air. >> reporter: perhaps hundreds have escaped from what john
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kerry calls terror. >> shows all the signs of genocide. >> reporter: troops also dropped water and aid in a mountainous area surrounded by isis forces. president obama says the air strikes are necessary to protect u.s. personnel but that combat troops will not be redeployed to iraq. drawing fire from some critics. >> don't let the enemy know what you're going to do other wise you're showing a lack of will. you're showing a lack of resolve. >> reporter: but many welcome any u.s. action against isis. today in san francisco hundreds of christians rallied in support of stoping the slaughter of religious minorities what they call a modern day holocaust. >> we need to make sure our
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people have a safe haven. >> reporter: there's a large asirian christian population in the bay area. they rallied last week as well in san francisco calling for u.s. involvement. now the question is will that involvement make a difference. >> ken, today we know the faa banned commercial flights over iraq but there were already restrictions in place weren't there. >> reporter: commercial flights over iraq were restricted to 30,000 feet now they are banned all together. there is an open question as to what anti weaponry isis captured. northern california democratic senator feinstein and boxer said today they support military action. senator feinstein said i believe we confront isis or we'll be faced with a bigger enemy in the future. a small group of anti war
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activists tried to rally passer by to their call denouncing air strikes in iraq. they staged their protest on powell and market. they want an end to what they call the world involvement. new information on the case of lin spalding. she's the victim that wandered away from the hospital room and was later found dead in a stairwell. the legal claim has been filed and that's a precursor to a lawsuit. the complaint is against sf general and the sheriff's department which handles security at the hospital. spalding was missing for 17 days last fall before her body was finally found in the stairwell.
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palo alto police are asking for the public's help to catch a man who groped a woman near the stanford campus. it happened last night on amster street. it happened last night as she was approach bid a man walking a white pit bull. she described the man as while in his mid-20s. 6'4" tall with a light beard and a tattoo of some writing on his right arm. people would like to hear anyone with information. a federal judge in oakland has ruled that the ncaa cannot deny college football and basketball players from receiving money that's earned from the use of their names or their likeness. ktvu's amber lee live after speaking too an anti trust lawyer to learns what this really means. >> reporter: frank this is a
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copy of the 99 page court ruling that came down today. it will impact uc berkeley and other bay area universities with a division one basketball or football team. fair competition is the name of the game on the playing field but fair compensation was at the heart of a class action lawsuit filed by current and former college athletes. they challenged the ncaa restriction on college athletes shares the millions of the dollars of revenue made by the ncaa and their schools that make use of the student's athlete names and imagine. >> the ncaa was not providing the appropriate financial compensation for those students. >> reporter: burlingame attorney applauds the decision saying it's a win-win situation. >> the schools get a benefit but the athletes also get a
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benefit and the students benefit is a pay for education. >> reporter: the students may choose to have the money put into a trust fund to be used after graduation. no student athlete will get rich on a limited portion of the the revenue. >> they'll be able to walk away with a full degree without facing student loans like other students. >> reporter: the ncaa issued a statement saying in part we disagree with the the courts decision that ncaa rules violate anti trust laws. the ncaa is committed to fully supporting student athletes. at uc berkeley tonight, students weighed in. >> it can be like shared with the students. since they have like their effort for achieving such a great level. >> so i don't think so as they give us the university an
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imagine or a championship or so they also receive something. >> reporter: i spoke with cal's associate athletic director by phone tonight, he tells me he hasn 't had a chance to review the ruling so he can't comment on it at this time. and details still have to be made including a cap on payments made to student athletes. live in uc berkeley, amber lee, ktvu channel 2 news. . new at 10:00, a fatal accident in petaluma. a portable pizza oven came lose as it was being towed by a van. the oven then hit a van carried family out of four. one adult was killed. three other members of the family suffered major injuries. all of this happened on lakeville highway about 7:20 tonight. one of the injured children was air lifted to oakland children's hospital. the other was taken to memorial hospital in santa rosa. a bus load of firefighters just happened to come upon the scene
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and stopped the help. the chp says at this point it's still not clear why that pizza oven came lose. now to antioch where an internal police investigation is under way following allegations of police brutality. witnesses took video of the incident and they say officers went too far. >> it was chaos. >> reporter: this is video of the scene when police were swarming on a possibly mentally disturbed man. >> they tased him, batoned him, kicked him, punched him, it was a bit excessive. >> reporter: at the arco station you can see even with all the officers a police dog was used. >> five cops were on top of him and they sticked the dog on him. the dog bit his face and his leg. >> they had the man on the floor and crying. he was crying. even though he was on drugs he
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wasn't messing with nobody. he wasn't causing any body damage to himself or anybody else. >> reporter: so why witnesses ask did it have to happen in the first place. i talked to officer contendo and he told me he knows about the case but won't comment because it's a matter being investigated. >> the police turned around and tried to take everybody's phones. everybody's footage because they know it's wrong. >> if you ask, you don't just start pulling people out for it. >> reporter: as for the allegations that officers were trying to take witnesses cell phones i asked and chief contano says this is the first he's heard of it. in antioch, i'm john sasaki. this week's death of former house secretary bruce brady has
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now been named a homicide. the cause of the death was a shot wound to the head and consequences there of. this opens a case on hinkley who was ruled unable to under go trial because of mental conditions. it's not just the coast that will see fog this weekend. how far inland clouds and cool weather will reach. and next -- >> a concertgoers dream, a nightmare for some neighbors. the new attractions and nuisance complaints tonight at outside lands. >> toward the end of the night it gets really loud out here.
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happening now day one of the outside lands festival is wrapping up in san francisco's golden gate park. news chopper 2 captured these pictures earlier at the polo theater tonight thousands of acts performed on multiple stages right now thousands of people are heading out of the park. >> jana katsuyama live tonight with the show and also the complaints this evening, jana. >> reporter: frank, we're right outside the vip gate: you see all the people leaving, the kanye west concert just wrapped up. other people say it's as bad as before when it comes to traffic, trash and noise.
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the streets along golden gate park today were a mash up of traffic, taxis, buses and people walking to outside lands. >> this is actually my fourth year. it keeps getting better and better. >> reporter: getting a ticket this year was not easy. >> wristbands out high. >> reporter: crowds gathered to take in 108 acts spread throughout eight stages. >> kanye. >> i've been waiting here since the arctic monkeys and they're finally in the u.s. should be great. >> we sold out the last four years this is the first time that it was an immediate sell out. >> reporter: new sounds mixed with the nostalgic. today a moving tribute to janice joplin as the ups released a memorial stamp.
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his sister spoke. >> we're always trying to do state of the art activities. so we take security very seriously. >> reporter: organizers have added surveillance cameras after reports of a sexual assault two years ago. about 200,000 people are expected to attend the three day festival but there's a downside, noise complains came in tonight. by late afternoon, trash and empty liquor bottles already were littering the streets. >> lots of people running around, bottles, cans everywhere. trash, yeah. >> reporter: the one silver lining, some residents are cashing in by selling parking spots. >> we usually make like a killing off these places. like you can like, charge like 100 bucks for parking out here. >> reporter: some people contacted us tonight saying they could hear the concert from as far as two miles away from inside their homes. police have also said they've had reports of fake tickets and people trying to jump the
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fence. jana katsuyama, ktvu channel 2 news. more details now, nummi says it has shut down service on the njuta train line to get fans to and from golden gate park. san francisco police say a strong smell of marijuana helped lead them to the home in the mira loma park neighborhood. inside officers found a marijuana farm using with what they think was stolen electricity. 33-year-old alexander leoleod and todd were making a hash oil. groups from bay view neighborhood asked mayor lee for help fighting violence. speakers at the midday valley
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said folks in that area are struggling. they called on city leaders to give low income assistance some economic consideration. >> mayor ed lee gives millions of the dollars and payroll tacks, breaks to tech companies, he spends millions of the dollars to design bike lanes all the while he allows poor working class and the poor to live in segregated parts of san francisco. >> the group also handed out five roses to remember the five people killed this summer in bay viewpoint. the first public tours of levi stadium in santa clara took place today. there were also former 49ers there as well. ann rubin tells us the things that really impressed them. >> reporter: they arrived to plenty of fanfare. the first group of the first public tour at levi stadium
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with a private cheering section. >> i can say that for the rest of my life. i was the first person at the first tour at levi stadium. >> reporter: from the garden to the suites they say their at awe by the amenities. >> there's a sense of pride when you come here and you want to play up to the standard. it's the 49er way. >> reporter: stillthere's one thing that's goes un -- >> it's nice to have a nice locker room. to pull up to a nice stadium, but as a football player having a nice field to play on is the most important. >> there's no feeling like home. truly home and they're walking right through the tunnel and they're out on the field and you have all these screaming fan, they're going to win. >> reporter: of course the history of candle stick won't be forgotten from the museum to the art on the wall there are
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reminders of it everywhere. >> there's a lot of mystique to it, a lot of history. so these guys get to build this history here and i'm excited about it. >> reporter: fans say they're ready for some new memories here, they've taken the tour now they're ready for a game. >> i'm speechless i guess, this is the biggest, probably the best, most beautiful stadium in the nfl. >> amazing, amazing. words can't even describe best day ever. >> reporter: stadium officials expect 200,000 people to tour the facility in just the first year. the first football game here is set for august 17th. fog has cleared from the coast right now. we saw sunset out at the beaches today. fog will return tomorrow and it'll mark a bit of a cooldown. temperatures today were a lot like yesterday. foggy still kind of offshore. as a matter of fact go to golden gate park outside land festival a lot of folks out there and it's been clear out there all evening. they had a good night for them but two -- but as we go into
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the weekend expect the fog to continue through saturday and sunday which marks a cooling trend. 68 in fairfield. look at the low 60s, upper 50s. this temperature footprint very similar to what we'll see tomorrow nigh. so it's not blazing in the inland valleys. still pretty warm in the antioch. in the antioch temperatures will be in the mid-50s, upper 60s. overnight lows upper 50s low 60s. fog input together you'll see fog all the way into concord and livermore. on sunday you will see fog all the way into the inland bay valleys. it's a cooldown as we head into the weekend. as we head into tomorrow, temperatures will be 5 degrees cooler than we were today. as you march through the microclimates you're going to see 60s. mid-80s out toward livermore.
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temperatures slightly cooler tomorrow. as we head into the bay area week, sunday will be cooler still. we'll talk about how cool it'll be. we talk about a chance for thunderstorms as we head into early next week. and the future of driving, we'll tell you how it works and how it can put a stop to texting behind the wheel. >> she was the strength of the family. >> a bay area family working to further their late mother's legacy. the action their taking to warn other women before it may be too late. no problem. you want to save money on rv insurance? no problem. you want to save money on motorcycle insurance? no problem. you want to find a place to park all these things? fuggedaboud it. this is new york. hey little guy, wake up! aw, come off it mate! geico. saving people money on more than just car insurance.
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a bay area family is turning their grief into action by raising awareness about ovarian cancer. john fowler spoke to the family and and tells us why this particular cancer is caught
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often too late. >> reporter: karen orofino, today her family is taking action. >> for it to be in 2014 and there not be a test, it's outstanding. >> being able to spread awareness and letting people know what ovarian cancer is all about. >> and that way, my wife couldn'ts to live. >> reporter: karen was 64, worked in bay area television, exercised, ate right, saw her doctor regularly but after a routine exam two years ago, she was referred to oncologist john chan. >> despite this good care of herself, she still was diagnosed in its advanced stages. >> reporter: the sobering truth is that after diagnosis only about 40% of women will survive five years. the reason, ovairan cancer is almost always discovered late. >> deep in the pelvis here on both sides. >> reporter: ovarian tumors are
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rarely obvious. symptoms are vague, bloating and soreness. but doctor chan says new research is encouraging. >> a routine screening test. >> reporter: her son is raising the first $50,000 of walking for karen. her family hopes to make a marin county fund raising hike next month an annual event. >> we don't want any other family to go through this hell. and it is hell. >> reporter: the families encouraging public donations. 100% goes to ucsf ovarian cancer research. you can find a link on ktvu.com under web links. john fowler, ktvu news. and the california state attorney joined the attorney generals from 22 other states. those restrictions will be far
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tougher than the ones proposed by the fda in april. those proposed rules include no warning and banning the sale to children. a compensation set up by general motors for its faulty ignition has received -- has reported 50 deaths so far. steinburg says he has received 124 claims in all. they still have to determine if the claims are eligible for payment. the two global kiosks machines are in the international passport. the machine verifies the traveler through a fingerprint scan on the touch screen.
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travelers have to pay a $100 fee to use the kiosks. that's a double doze of trouble for the hawaiian islands. tropical storm eiselle made land fall today as another storm tracks toward the island. but some say the damage may have already been done. but first a massive trench, a one side on the highway on the north bay is concerning drivers. why it's there and what drivers are saying about the potential danger on the road. a reminder you can get ktvu news to go. download the app, click the live icon and watch all of our newscasts live on your mobile device.
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with why some drivers are concerned by what they're seeing. >> reporter: or what they're not seeing gasia. it's kind of a black hole. we're at the bottom of a deep trench and you can hear and see traffic going by above us. vehicles flying by, many with no awareness this steep drop off is even here. highway37 was known as blood alley before it got a center divider. safe for now but saddled with back ups because it's one lane each direction, grassy marsh on both sides. >> i have seen the big dig. >> reporter: what's alarming drivers now is this unmarked trench. growing longer and deeper by the day. alongside the pavement headed westbound. in some places it plunges as much as 40 feet and startles people to realize it's so deep and so close. >> i think that they should put some cones out for sure. i drive two kids over 37 every day to my house in vallejo and
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it's bad. it's scary. >> there's a good 30-foot drop and it's all of i don't know how many feet from the road. >> reporter: the excavation is part of a massive fish and wildlife project. restoring public wetlands that's already happening in a neighboring project. some wonder if a car will have to crash to the side to get some lights, signs or a railing up. so people know it's not the soft shoulder they've been used to. >> at night there's no light so if you're even tired at all and you veer to the side you're kind of a goner. >> i tell you one thing if i dropped into the trench i don't think i would be coming out of it. >> reporter: we measured the shoulder 7 feet which includes a 2-foot rumble strip that's supposed to arouse a drowsy or unattentive driver. but at 60 miles per hour people
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wonder if that would work. >> the problem is there's no guardrail. if something happens if there's a thunderstorms or you know fog or anything like that, if you veer a little bit like a foot or two you're in the ravine. >> reporter: we did find a few orange cones but they were all tipped on their sides in a deliberate way and certainly not very visible to drivers. we also reached out to a contractor to chp and to wetlands management but no answers back as of news time. reporting live in solano county, debora villalon, ktvu news. new information tonight involving a deadly motorcycle accident in concord. the crash happened about 11:00 last night at the intersection of treat boulevard in oak grove road. today the contra costa coroner's office identified kai phillips of concord. investigators say it appears phillips ran a red light and slammed right into a car coming in the opposite direction. the driver of that car suffered only minor injuries.
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fogging is under way discovery bay as vector control working to spray the area. point of time road and valley oaks drive. vector control says it's responding to an increase of the number of mosquitoes and animal inif he canned with the virus -- animals infected bid the virus. now to our continuing coverage of tropical storm eiselle. crews are trying to restore power for 3,800 people on the island of maui. eiselee weekend from a hurricane to a tropical storm but still brought heavy rain and strong winds. the weather service has issued a warning for the big island. and at the same time has to the
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prepare for hurricane julio. although hawaii dodged the worse the damage may have already been done in the days before the hurricane arrived. mike dusel is in honolulu with the surprising scythe that a woman from -- surprising sight that a woman from tahoe saw. >> reporter: you saw the images from the big island. but the island of oahu this one they got a glancing blow from this storm too. by noon the first real wave of rain and wind hit the eastern side of oahu and that really started to churn up the surf. >> blowing, it's really blowing. >> reporter: from mid-morning to midday this island saw a heavy wave of rain, gusty winds and those churning waves. but there was little significant damage except for what tahoe resident debby meyer witnessed on her flight, here
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this afternoon. >> in the beginning of august, summer vacation how crowded was the plane. >> we were a quarter flight. we're normally full. because i've been on this flight this time of year. >> you're taling me it was 3/4 entry. >> 3/4 empty. >> reporter: this form forced many hawaii bound vacationers to not come. and because of it this tahoe resident has a message for the emergency responders who reacted the way they did. >> nothing says hurricane today. but it may be the calm before the storm. i grew up in the east coast and we got hit in jersey with one. it just, anything can happen. now to our chief meteorologist bill martin tracking the next threat to the hawaiian islands. >> eiselle has fell apart. it is dropping a lot of rain on
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oahu and some of the other island. what we're tracking are these heavy rain bands. the big island, they got about 8-inches of rain. now we move to round two. this is julio. it's a hurricane two hurricane and it's tracking toward the north of the island. here i've labeled both the tropical storms. here's the hawaii islands right here. category two right now but by sunday it drops to a category one by sunday evening it is a tropical storm and beginning to fall apart. it appears it's going to stay north of the island chain. plenty of showers for this to come. see you back here in a few minutes we'll talk about your weekend. >> three emergency response experts headed to hawaii today to help in the immediate aftermath of the storm. they're from the california office of emergency services and the national guard. the trio is part of a 10 person
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multi state unit. they're set to be in hawaii for about one month. daly city police are investigateing the discovery of a man on the beach. officers were called to mussel rock beach. that's where the remaims of the tkáut man were found. police tell ktvu there were no obvious signs of trauma or foul play. so fall the san mateo county coroner has not released the mans name. playing with rubbing alcohol and fire. the new online dare and an all two personal warning. >> do not try this at all period. >> subtropical moisture moving back into the bay area. i'm dialing in your cloudy forecast for this weekend and into next week. >> and coming up, exclusive military technology could soon be in your car. how it works and why the company says the interactive technology won't distract drivers. evewith the highest levelde of engineering... design... safety... and performance.
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the world health organization today declared the ebola outbreak an international public outbreak. ebola was first reported in guinea then spread to liberia, sierra leone and most recently nigeria. today nigeria announced a national emergency and closed
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the hospital where it was found. 1,700 cases of ebola have been confirmed. 961 people have died. this is the largest case since ebola was identified in humans. the government of malaysian says it is taking over malaysian airlines and removing it from the stock market. the airline was already in trouble even before the two deadly disasters hit. the government of malaysian plans to buy back the 30% of the airline that's in the hand of private shareholders. it's the type of technology once used in the cockpit of jet fighters. but next year it'll be available in cars. it's called navdy. a start up created a hands free device that sits on your dashboard. it's designed for navigation, talking and texting without ever taking your eyes off the road. navdy projects the information
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right in front of you and you can talk to it or use a series of hand gestures to make it work. >> touch screens and knobs and buttons often cause you to take your eyes off the road. and if the car is parked you can see your text messages. if you're moving navdy will read them to you. thousands of jobs and a big economic boost. we'll tell you what california is offering tesla to convince the company to build a planet in our state. >> and our chief meteorologist bill martin has the weekend forecast. and a stunt sweeping the web and social media what children are doing that prompted a bay area county to send a strong warning. there you go. a laser drone for cats. i wish i had lasers. i don't. pew pew pew... the new radioshack is finally here.
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a bay area nurse is warning
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kids about a social media dare. ktvu's patti lee on the nurse who knows firsthand all about being burned. >> and says warning, flammable. >> reporter: the videos are all over you tube. preteens and teenagers pouring hand sanitizer, nail polish remover anything with alcohol on their bodies then lighting it. today's warning out of santa clara county was not prompted because of any incident here in northern california. >> probably one of the most horrible things someone can go through and still survive. >> reporter: jill spral a victim of an accidental burn himself wants to keep it that way. >> playing with rubbing alcohol and fire is a terrible combination. it's a bad idea and you know we just really want to warn kids to not try this at all period. >> reporter: now a nursing  manager in the bay area's only burn trauma center, she says preventing kids from attempting this stunt is personal. she suffered two years of
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painful surgeries after her accident. and she can't believe that kids across the country are in hospital because of an online dare. >> to intentionally try to do this as a dare, as a joke, for fun or whatever the reason may be is mind boggling to me. >> reporter: because it's not just the victims who suffer. just ask the families. >> i think it's the most painful thing you can go through. >> reporter: steve scott gets emotional talking about his fiance recovering after she received third degree burns saving her children from a fire. >> i don't know why anyone would decide to do that. please stop doing it. if you're doing it out there kids. >> reporter: it's snot -- it's not standard to warn the public. saturday based fico provides the most widely used
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credit scores now it's adjusting to how it calculates those numbers. the key change fico will give less weight to unpaid medical bills. >> and what we found is that for people who don't have any other blemishing in their credit history except for this that it's not a predictor of any trouble. >> reporter: another change, any debt that went to collections or a collection agency but was later paid will not be counted against consumers. if the business that tabulates your credit score using your calculation, your fico score will increase 20 points. republicans say senator gains met with tesla in palo alto and dropped off a golden shovel. it's all part of his push to have tesla build a giga factory.
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the competition includes several other states including nevada. right now gains is working on a bipartisan bill. it would provide tax incentives for tesla to build their plant here. >> we're hoping this would be a good first step for additional employment in california. >> supporters say the factory will return in a $5 billion investment and 6,500 new jobs. temperatures for your friday were just about where they were supposed to be for this time of year in terms of average. these numbers about what you would expect within a degree or two. the antioch got to 95. that was one of the warm spots. concord was 90. highs tomorrow are going to be a little cooler than these with numbers mostly in the 70s and low 80s. we're going to drop about 5 degrees tomorrow. here's the live imagery. the high clouds over head i
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think the real story right now is there's no fog along the coast. it will come back though. we did the same thing last night for a time. we got a pretty good north gradient. the fog is scattering away. but expect fog to start to push pretty far inland too. i think it'll get into the livermore valley, into walnut creek as well. temperatures outside you saw the warm numbers in the inland bay valleys. the winds are blowing a bill. we have 31-mile an hour wind. maybe not fog but the moisture and cool air pushing it well into the central valley. the cooling has begun with these stronger winds pushing the winds and moisture into the valleys and into our area. 7-mile an hour wind in livermore was kind of light. that valley wind or that valley wind in the cardenas straight was significant. there it goes. there's that big finger pushing. doesn't get that far does it. i think you can see a little more in through here. more in through fremont. a good amount of fog coverage tomorrow morning. and further coverage on monday
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so further cooling. tomorrow's high just like today but 5 degrees cooler. a little fog burn off. your 90s look where they are. i showed you 90 in antioch but they're way over there in sacramento and the inner valley. the reason for this cooling is going to be this low pressure center that's dropping right in here. it could bring us subtropical moisture into our area as we head into monday night into tuesday morning. which could bring a few thundershowers. for the weekend this system stretches the marine layer and trends temperatures down. saturday is your warmest day. sunday nice but not as warm. outside lands for the whole weekend there's going to be some clouds but sunshine as well as that low comes in it might mix the marine layer and give you a day like we had this afternoon out there in the park where you had sunshine. it won't be warm. temperatures throughout the day low 60s upper 50s take a jacket. 82 in san, elena tomorrow.
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88 in vacaville. 89 in brentwood. 86 in livermore. good air quality by the way. this is a good pattern. the pattern shows you with that low dropping down, the firefighters too love this. helps with the fuel moisture. helps greatly in fighting the fires and keeping fires from starting. we didn't do any fire stories today in the news. we won't be doing any tomorrow if we're lucky, this pattern helps out. >> it certainly does. the niners last night, raiders tonight. >> it's got to get much better than this for both bay area teams. first exhibition game but fans have to be saying, show me anything. they get absolutely nothing. mark davis is not going to have a lot of patience with dennis sal. matt cassel nice drive they put together. rudolph to the one and they will score a short touchdown right after the second quarter. raiders get a look at their
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rookie derick karr quarterback. right into the hands of coleman. interception vickings take over. garbage time here. 1:35 left. down 10-0 most of the night. mcglowin scampers in himself. that's it they try the two plank conversion fail. got to get a whole lot better than that. and all of a sudden the other team that has the coliseum sight. routine the cruise to victory for the a's. almost, got a little more interesting than they would have liked. almost as interesting as coco's new look but whatever works. he comes back to the plate. bases loaded, everybody going to score as he splits the gap. got himself a 3-run triple. and the a's build up a big lead. in the 5th inning this guy starting to swing it a little
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bit. eric sogard nerd power. and despite giving up, five earned runs in the seventh: scott cashmere wins his seventh. meantime the road trip, suddenly taking a big turn for the worse for the san francisco giants. the struggle with pretty much everything. a complete mad farmer tonight in kansas city. sports part two, next. female announcer: through sunday at sleep train,
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save hundreds on beautyrest and posturepedic. choose $300 in free gifts with tempur-pedic. even choose 48 months interest-free financing on the new tempur-choice. the triple choice sale ends sunday at sleep train.
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giant fans have noticed that this team just does not beat anybody with a winning record. haven't won a series against a team over .500 since june. even the umps were a little sloppy at third base. down 2-0 in the third. rookie back up from double a, matt duffey. even that turns into a negative. one run in but joaquin arias dead duck at the plate. stayed tied 2-2. just horrible, horrible defense. salvador perez, michael. one of three errors for the giants it sets the whole inning up for kansas city.
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yeah michael you did that. next hitter, billy butler homered. baumgartner complete game loss. dodgers the only good news they went down to defeat. and former warrior coach nelson called it the worse trade he ever made getting rid of that guy mitchell. best known for teaming with chris mullen and tim hardaway to form the run tmz. kind of opened the door for lots more players from europe to follow. and of course a lifetime achievement award given to the classiest man in all of sports, al adels. favorite guy around here. >> i love al. >> that's the sporting life for a sporting life. congratulations to him. >> he's a good guy.
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thanks mark. thank you for joining us this friday night. our next newscast mornings on 2 that begins at 7:00 a.m. >> you can find us any time on twitter, facebook and ktvu.com. have a good weekend everyone.
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bravo! [ whistle blows ] [ buzzer ] [ applause ] bravo! bravo, manny, bravo! well, when i heard manny wanted to fence, i was like, "sure. "uncoordinated kid, lethal weapon -- how can this go wrong?" [ whistle blows, buzzer ] [ laughs ] yeah! gloria: and what do you think now? i'm proud of our little zorro. i mean, i worked with him a little, but the kid's got skills. it's in his blood. his father was a master swordsman. he was an artist with his sword.

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