tv News Center 5 at 1100 ABC September 26, 2016 11:00pm-11:35pm EDT
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announcer: wcvb newscenter 5 at 11:00 starts right now. ed: a fiery debate lives up to all the hype. good evening. i'm ed harding. maria: and i'm maria stephanos. hillary clinton and donald trump shaking hands to end the night. the two really went at it during their first showdown. live team coverage, from new england to new york and washington, d.c. let's begin with emily riemer, in hempstead, new york. emily: quite a night here. the first time we have seen donald trump and hillary clinton together one-on-one facing off. as you said, there were fireworks. as we expected, both of them not pulling any punches. one of the more feisty exchanges was over trade, over nafta, and whether or not it has worked or helped the u.s. take a listen.
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your husband decides nafta, which was one of the worst things that ever happened. ms. clinton: that is your opinion. mr. trump: you go to new england, you go to ohio, you go to pennsylvania, you go to anywhere you want, secretary clinton, and you will see devastation where manufacturing is down 30%, 40%, even 50%. nafta is the worst trade deal maybe ever signed anywhere, but certainly ever signed in this country. emily: it was like trying to get their points across, not pulling any punches throughout this entire evening. ed: both candidates dealt with the controversy surrounding them. clinton was asked about her e-mails. emily: she was. this is something we have been talking about for weeks now. this dogs are campaign and has fed into the perceived lack of
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and left it at that. this is what she said. ms. clinton: it was a mistake using a private e-mail. if i had to do it over again, i would obviously do it differently. but i'm not going to make any excuses, it was a mistake and i take responsibility for that. mr. trump: that was more than a mistake. that was done purposely. that was not a mistake, that was done purposely. emily: they left it, donald trump saying it was not a mistake, something she did purposely. it did not come again for the entire course of the debate, which is something i'm sure hillary clinton's camp was happy about, not having to explain over and over or keep apologizing. trump was also asked -- this was a pivotal point -- about the questioning of president obama's birth certificate.
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lester holt, really pushed him on this idea that president obama was not born in the united states. this is how that exchange went. lester: the birth certificate was produced in 2011. you continue to question the president's legitimacy in 2012, 2 thousand 13, 2015, as recently as january. what changed your mind? mr. trump: well, nobody was i figured you'd ask the question tonight, of course, but nobody was caring much about it. but i was the one who got him to produce the birth certificate, and i think i did a good job. emily: and hillary clinton criticizing him for that, saying that despite a lack of evidence, donald trump has kept pushing and pushing this issue. that portion came during a section when they were talking about race in america. it remains to be seen who won
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happens there. certainly what we expected, fireworks, not pulling any punches, trying to sway the undecided voters that potentially are making their decision based on tonight. ed: emily live at hofstra for us right now. the debate took a nasty turn right at the end. maria: trump questioning clinton's stamina. ms. clinton: as soon as he travels to 112 countries and negotiate a peace deal, a cease-fire, a release of opportunities in nations around the world, or even spends 11 hours testifying in front of a congressional committee, he can talk to me about stamina. [applause] mr. trump: let me tell you. hillary has experience, but it is bad experience. we have made so many bad deals during the last -- [applause]
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bad experience. ed: you heard a lot tonight. we're putting it to the truth test. maria: newscenter 5's ben simmoneau is here checking the facts. ben: a lot of claims to fact check, so he picked to two instances, one where both credits plainly stretched the truth. the hillary clinton claim donald trump is not releasing his tax returns because he doesn't want anyone to know he doesn't a federal income taxes have a listen. ms. clinton: the anyone has ever seen were a couple of years where he had to turn them over to authorities when he was trying to get a casino license, and they showed he did not pay any federal income tax. ben: that is not exactly true. politifact says that was mostly false. trump did release tax returns, and he did not pay taxes to of those years because he took the loss in those years.
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1977, he did pay federal income taxes. ranging from a tax rate from about 25% to about 45%. now the second claim, donald trump claimed again tonight he was against the iraq war, and that is not true. mr. trump: if somebody would call up a sean hannity, this was before the war started. he and i used to have arguments about the war. i said it is a terrible and stupid thing. it is going to destabilize the middle east. ben: 2002 that he was for it. question -- are you for invading iraq? donald trump responded, "yeah, i guess so. i wish the first time it was done correctly." ed: let's bring in our analysts. maryanne marsh and rob gray are going to weigh in here. i want to start with his quick
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ms. clinton: at least i have a plan to fight isis. mr. trump: you are telling the enemy everything you want to do. no wonder you have been fighting isis your entire adult life. ed: which obviously if you are checking the facts is an overstatement. maryanne, i will start with you. was trump to aggressive? >> i think the problem republican primary, but not a general election. the voters he needed to persuade tonight, white college-educated women, were turned off by his performance, not only by how he treated hillary clinton, the constant interruptions, some of the language he used -- women don't like that. but you add to it the birther comments -- he had a bad night. ed: rob, what was your opinion of that? >> i thought hillary clinton was
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repeatedly. i thought trump was a lot less aggressive than i expected. i thought he won the split screen against hillary clinton. although he lost it a bit at the end, he showed up with a 30 minutes of material for a 90 minute debate. i thought he looked good, i thought she looked practiced and a little bit stiff. she did look like the defender of the status quo that trump was trying to make her out to be, saying she has been in washington for 30 years. her thought. ed: one word from both of you. was the bar moved? >> trump didn't clear the bar, hillary clinton did. >> i don't think it moves anybody too much. two more debates to go. ed: thank you so much for your knowledge. maria: both candidates have new hampshire on their schedules this week. that swing state, as it usually is, could be key in november. newscenter 5's mary saladna is
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there. mary: most new hampshire voters were in front of their own tvs at home for some serious debate watching. we did find a captive audience at a tavern here at the radisson hotel. new hampshire is a swing state, and voters know it. so while some bars are broadcasting monday night football, you'll also find the debate on many of the big screens -- and voters glued to the face-off. 60 minutes in, we got our first reviews. >> what you going to move the country forward? i think hillary is trying to talk about that. she is right on point. >> hillary is doing better than i thought, being calm, cool, and collected. i don't think she is giving a lot of facts. she is giving a lot of the usual rhetoric. donald is very passionate. mary: new hampshire's importance is clear -- if each candidate wins the states they're currently leading in, abc news projects clinton would win the presidency with 273
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hampshire from blue to red, its four electoral votes are enough to pull him even with clinton, 269 to 269. possibly most telling tonight is that when asked who won the debate or who was more presidential, most viewers told us they thought it was the candidate they admitted they were already leaning toward voting for. live in manchester, new hampshire, i am mary saladna, wcvb newscenr tonight, an arrest in a shooting inside a stoughton cvs store. this is the suspect, marcus pierre-louis. state police arrested him in dorchester tonight. he will be arraigned tomorrow on several charges, including attempted murder. police say he pulled the trigger in the shooting of an 18-year-old teenager inside the store on thursday. that victim is expected to be ok. two juveniles are also charged. maria: a boater missing for a week is due back on land here in hours. but questions swirl about what happened to his mother while
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text message that we are learning about tonight. jorge: maria, was it foreshadowing or just a coincidence? the 22-year-old aboard the freighter that rescued him is on his way to boston. coast guard investigators have a lot of questions to ask him. days after the coast guard suspended a massive search, a chinese freighter found 22-year-old nathan carmen drifting at of martha's vineyard, and remarkably good condition. >> he was found in a liferaft with a life jacket on and food and water. mary: his -- jorge: his mother linda carmen now presumed dead. the two disappeared after leaving rhode island to go fishing. linda's friend said she texted her their plans, writing, call
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got his liferaft, went looking for his mom, and he could not find her. jorge: it is unclear if the boat had a radar, and if they did, why is there no record of a made a call. >> i was thrilled that they found him, and then devastated that linda was not with him. jorge: nathan, who has asperger's syndrome, now lives in vermont. uncanny tragedies striking his family again, this billboard is still offering the reward for the unsolved murder of his grandfather, shot in theea up is headed for boston. >> it was early afternoon, visibility was good, they picked him up and reported to the coast guard. jorge: on that chinese freighter, carmen is due here in the morning. tonight, the hartford current is reporting the 22-year-old has an attorney who wants to be present before any interviews are done. announcer: next on wcvb newscenter 5 --
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skimmers found a gas stations around town. why morning sickness could be a good sign for moms to be and their babies. >> tuesday morning on the eyeopener, after the big presidential debate. >> emily riemer is live in new york with the big moments and the impact on this critical campaign. >> and we are warming up, plus getting rain along with it, the
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announcer: you are watching wcvb newscenter 5 at 11:00. ed: this cool dropping the ball in its responding to racially charged threats. john atwater is live in boston with the new action being taken. john: parents are racism in the future. >> how do i see a difference in the culture and what my daughter comes home to talk about? i would like to see that be different. john: parents are hopeful the conversation can change now that federal prosecutors have stepped in and worked with administrators to combat racism. kevin peterson: it's a bittersweet moment, really. john: it's been a tough road, but community organizer kevin peterson is hopeful that new recommendations can help soothe tensions here. they include new training for students and staff, a new diversity officer to monitor future complaints, and annual
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>> we are proud of the kind of mobilization and organizing that happened in this case. >> i'm very proud for my school on trying to create a safer environment. and that makes me feel safe. john: the u.s. attorney found that the school violated the civil rights act after more than 100 racially-charged allegations came to light. months of investigation have produced a roadmap to move forward and prevent future tensions, a plan leaders say will be used across the district. not only real at boston latin, but they are real across boston public schools. >> some changes have been made in the school, and now we will take this report and use it as a blueprint, not just for latin school, across the district as well. john: we did hear back from the district. the district says it is committed to making all of these changes. live in boston, john atwater, wcvb newscenter 5. ed: tonight, police in salem,
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at two gas stations in the town. maria: here is why. they say skimming devices have been found on four pumps. the stations hit were the super petroleum on south broadway and dusty's citgo on pelham road. police say they do not know how long the skimmers have been there, but anyone who filled up at the two stations should keep a close eye on their accounts. ed: what is in store for the -- 45 minutes left of this day and tomorrow morning? harvey: tomorrow morning looks like different from this past commute. it was very chilly, 48, the coldest in over four months. bedford was 32, norway 28, even 34 on the vineyard. we did bounce back to the 60's to around 70. tonight, not nearly as cool, 58, wind is around from the south am a warmer wind direction. it is even in the low 60's and the connecticut river valley. we do have changes coming.
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that is approaching. even though it is just a skinny band of rain, it is enhancing a bit around central pa ahead of this cold front. i think that will continue as it moves into our region. do expect it. -- do expect a period of rain tomorrow morning, and then conditions will improve tomorrow afternoon. temperatures will actually reach the 70's, but let's get more specific about that morning commute. 6:00 a.m., rain is into worcester. 7:00 a.m. to 8:00 a.m., it is in boston. once we get past 8:00, 9:00, 10:00, the rain is moving over southeastern mass and the cape. that is where the most significant rain will occur. i'm expecting a quarter of financial inch or less around boston to worcester, but perhaps some bands around half an inch or more around the cape and islands.
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clearing , but the clearing probably won't last, because by the time we get to wednesday morning, the wind is going to complement or the east and it is going to start -- and the wind is going to come in from the northeast and it is going to bring in clouds and missed from the ocean. that is how we are going to spend this week, with cloudiness, cold temperatures, and a northeast wind gusty at times along the coast. i think that will hold for wednesday, thursday, friday, maybe into the weekend. at some point, we may get some part it just looks to be cloudy and cool. the same story on thursday -- clouds, a little spotty missed -- mist and that cool northeasterly wind. this disturbance is probably going to be the next tropical storm olga the next day or two or two or three, which would be named matthew. after the next five days, there is a chance it would make a turn
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to pay some attention to. let's go over your next seven days. tomorrow will be the mildest of the bunch, after the rain and. a wet morning commute, the rest of the day will be milder in the 70's. then, it is cloudy, cool northeast winds with drizzle at times for wednesday, thursday, and friday, possible temperatures will only be in the upper 50's. we should transition out during the weekend. ed: as we 11:00, this is something that pregnant women dread -- morning sickness. maria: it is awful. interviewer: what would you do with fand a smartphone?ll man: check the scores. woman 1 : uh, probably post a pic. woman 2: text a friend. interviewer: how about register to vote? man: really?
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r next president. go to register to vote m-a dot com. it's that easy. woman 2: done. i just registered. man: that was easy. galvin: register by october 19th. ? ? grocery shoppers of america! take your o organics baby carrots. take your eggs. even your o organics chips. now everyone can afford to go organic. o organics,
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upside to morning sickness. to which i do not know anything about. maria: and i know twice. researchers at the national institute of child health studied almost 800 women who'd had at least one miscarriage and then became pregnant again. they found that the women with nausea early in pregnancy were half as likely to have miscarriages and stillbirths as those who sailed through the first few months. however, they say it is not clear whether the results would apply to first-time pregnancies. ed: josh, hang with me here. the red sox are so hot -- how hot are they? josh: there are so hot that rex ryan probably has a joke about them. he is a joke about everything. wait till you hear what he says
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she begged... she begged for help, saying mom - please help me. doug griffin: our family's tragedy could happen to any family... pam griffin: we knew we had to save other families from losing their children. kelly reached out to us. doug griffin: she came to my family to learn more. pam griffin: she listened to what we had to say, who we were - she cared about us... she didn't know us. pam griffin: we talked about the ways to remove the stigma of addiction so parents can get help. n and recovery act - this act will save kids' lives... ...and enable families to get the help they need. doug griffin: we don't want courtney to be remembered for her substance abuse, but rather for her struggle to achieve recovery. pam griffin: kelly believes recovery is possible.
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fios is not cable. we're wired differently. which means we can fix things differently. thanks for calling fios, this is ryan. you can't tell me this cord isn't in, i know it's in, it's in but it's not working. yes...mr. mcenroe. see that cord? just plug it into the connector on the right. so you can clearly see what's in and what's out? oh, absolutely. i like that.
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announcer: now here is josh with sportscenter 5 powered by a xfinity. josh: 11 wins in 11 days. i'd say the red sox deserve this night off, but they're watching the other american league contenders closely. rangers, indians, and blue jays all in action. jays and yankees were supposed to play baseball, and they decided to have a debate instead. a lively one. non-partisan, bench clearing, and likely not about nafta. they did actually put the bats in their hands for long enough to get a final score. yanks hold on 7-5. the rangers keep slumping. they lose to milwaukee. cleveland holds serve in detroit. so here is your race to home field advantage. sox' magic number to win the east is one. they are now half a game up on
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jose fernandez' marlins teammates, all wearing his number 16, circling the empty mound. and sometimes the action writes the perfect script. leadoff hitter and close friend dee gordon had not hit a home run all season long. and there it goes, emotions overwhelming gordon as he crosses the plate, greets his teammates, and looks skyward in memory of fernandez. tom brady -- remembe has been in italy, something we learned in his weekly conversation with jim gray on westwood one radio. brady is back with the patriots one week from today. that was fast. but he had nothing but praise for the two quarterbacks who have been filling in. >> you never know when your number is going to be called. hopefully jimmy is healthy, hopefully jacoby is healthy. i know how hard they work, those are very tough guys.
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outcome of these past three weeks, they have provided great leadership, and hopefully they are healthy to go out and play a great game for us. josh: anthony johnson, the patriots defensive lineman that looked great with a half sack in the pre-season, has been released. john hughes will take his roster spot. he was most recently with the browns. rex's bills got their first win of the season, with a convincing 33-18 victory over the cardinals. after the game, he poked the bear. and today he was at it again. here's his best belichick impression, and some praise. >> all right, we are going to start with the injury report. you are good on wednesday. simple as that. my admiration is really for belichick more than anything, because as a coach that is the guys -- that is the best. he will go down as probably the best in the history of the game. josh: bears on ice, give and go. jimmy hayes to 2015 first rounder jake debrusk, back to hayes and in.
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a shootout loss to the blue jackets, though. they fall 3-2. a bruin not on the ice is the proud new owner of a $49 million extension. brad marchand is currently in canada playing in the finals of the world cup of hockey, but he'll call causeway street home for the next eight years. he had a career-best 37 goals and 60 points, plus 90 scrappy penalty minutes last season. busy night in sports. ed and maria? maria: busy night in news. ed: busy gh morning. around commute time. ed: if you wanted avenue, just add water. harvey: wednesday, thursday, friday, all looking cool, breezy, little bit damp. we could use simpson never get, i'm not sure when that will happen. -- we could use some significant rain. maria: kind of a lousy seven-day.
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>> dicky: from hollywood it's "jimmy kimmel live"! tonight, the cast of "mast are minds." zach galifianakis, owen wilson. kristen wiig, vice presidential hopeful tim caine and music from the lumineers. and now, back by popular demand, here's jimmyme [ cheers and applaus [ cheers and applause ] ? >> jimmy: hi, everybody. i'm jimmy. i'm the host of the show. thank you for watching. thank you for coming. thank you for joining us.
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