tv Live on 5 ABC February 22, 2016 5:00pm-5:59pm EST
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we have his response to the controversy. should gun makers be held responsible for their ads? >> he had other firearms on his person, and he didn't use them. >> heart broken parents of manufacturer to pay for the deaths of 20 children in newtown. >> we begin with serious concerns about a local corrections facility, three escaped. police are still looking for two of them. >> we wanted to know what's going on. kristin volk is live on 5 and found out one of these felons has escaped before. >> that's right, frank this was his second successful attempt in less than three months. the latest happened here at the community based correctional facility. we're told that that man kicked out a door window, then climbed over the tall fence. it's almost exactly how two
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22-year-old cody lee is convicted of robbery. he was finishing out his jail sentence at this facility. but when he escaped friday the facility did not notify the public until two days later questions. they say it's because they don't believe he and the others are a risk to the public. all three convicted felons had limited access to the community for work and other programs. the other two who escaped are right here, tucker and shepherd. tucker is back in custody, shepherd, convicted of receiving stolen property, still on the loose, like lee. >> how did it happen? unfortunately many of our clients, as i'm sure a lot of people in the criminal justice system aware, are very sometimes has anti-social actions that we have to deal with. >> reporter: the private agency that runs the facility tells me
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barbed wire to this fence among other measures. wells received the audit of this place from the ohio department of rehabilitation and correction and in that latest audit it says that this facility has been compliant with reporting serious incidents to the state within two business days. butt calls for less down tame for offenders, more structured activity, and the separation of high-risk and low-risk offenders in treatment groups. live in cleveland, kristin volk, newschannel5. now to major bust. this is out of summit county, taking drugs and guns off the streets there. take a look at what officers found in a home in copley. more than a dozen pot plants, marijuana growing equipment, and a number of illegal guns. vehicles were also seized from that home. officers arrested and charged that man in connection with the bust. now, new at 5:00, take a look at this right here. all of these guns. if one was actually pointed at you, could you tell if it was real or fake?
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replicas taken from children over the weekend. tracy carloss is live at the first district headquarters with reaction from the police union. >> reporter: frank, the president of the i don't know tells me they are now considering targeting the makers of these guns. at first glance this picture looks like an arsenal of firepower. >> it looked pretty real. you can't tell the difference. >> reporter: this man works at the corner of west 110th and detroit, the area where saturday night police took these guns and bullets in this picture from three boys, a 10, 13, and 14-year-old. >> it is an absolute recipe for disaster. >> reporter: police tell me they got a call for shots fired in a backyard. >> two young men were playing with air soft guns and bb guns. >> reporter: loomotherwise, s told me the boys did what police told them to do. the guns were confiscated. the guns had the safety tips
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the difference between replica and real. this happened just down the street from where 8-year-old tamir rice was shot and killed by police. loomis explained that guns like these are taken off the streets nearly every day. now they are considering a lawsuit. >> we're looking into that to see if we can do that, because of the risk that it's putting our officers in. >> reporter: and it is illegal to remove those safety tips to make the guns look real. tracy carloss, newschannel5. >> today the north ridgeville police department made a post to facebook to try to drive home how dangerous it is for kids to be playing with toy guns like air soft. it posted a series of pictures of an air soft gun to show how real it looks. the post explains that the air soft gun is stainless steel has a cylinder that slides out so
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the gun operates on compressed air to shoot a small plastic ball. the post also included this plea. parents, it's guns like these that are getting people killed. look at what your kids are playing with. there is to reason that i can see that a kid needs to be playing with this gun in public. nothing goodwill come from it. here's advice to kids who do get caught playing with an air soft gun in public. when an officer pulls up, drop the gun immediately. if the gun is in your pocket, don't reach for it. put your hands up and let the officer know the gun is on you thing. >> this man right here is allegedly dragging an akron police officer with an suv for nearly two blocks. police pulled over 29-year-old johnson for expired plates when officers tried to on the part february door, johnson just sped away with one officer hanging on the side of the vehicle. johnson later crashed that suv later.
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and released from akron general. mark j weather, are you going to take our sunshine away? >> no, look at. that i'm moving out of the way of this live look. blue sky, sunshine, a beautiful february sunset right there. it will last? well, i think we're going to stay dry through teaching and the overnight and even dry tomorrow with adding a few clouds to the mix. so you're still okay. dry weather now in the power of 5 live doppler radar. notice the temperatures. 34 in cleveland, act i don't know at 46. it's a huge temperature difference here because winds are out of the north. a north wind off that cold icy lake, and you are caller near lake erie. will you normally hear me say that throughout march, april, even early may, but we're starting early in february. 34 in cleveland. look at this. akron 41. 39 for canton at 9:00 p.m. and we all drop into the lower
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with a mainly clear and starry sky. we are tracking a winter storm which will impact you. i'll tell you when and how coming up. >> thanks, mark. meantime we want to get to breaking traffic news. this is state route 8. you see there in the bottom cam rat is closed because of a crash. this is between talmadge avenue and hall avenue. it's a pretty bad backup. we're going to bring you more details as they become available. meantime new information on the lead concerns in sebring. today the village manager says some $70,000 has been spent trying to clean up the lead contaminated drinking water. most of the money went to engineering feeds. the village has plans in place to start treating the water to stop lady from old pipes leaking into that area. the state epa says running the tap for a few minutes is going to clear out any of the lead issues out there. meantime, how much money
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to get out of jail when they're accused of domestic crimes? >> that is what stark county decide. this closer look at the county's bond system comes after the december shooting death of a woman. her ex-husband is charged with her murder. he was granted bond. back in december we spoke with the judge who set that bond. >> i felt so bad for his two children and that woman's family. >> the judge set bond at $100,000 on those earlier charges. he told us that was double the suggested bond in the case. the bond for the murder charge was set at $5 million. developing now at 5:00, a michigan man now charged with six murders after police say he went on a killing spree in the driver.
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the latest. >> reporter: jason dalton was just arraigned appearing before a judge via video. prosecutors say he is cooperating but does in the appear remorseful after admitting that he took people's lives. >> is there anything you wish to tell the court at this time? >> i would prefer to remain silent. >> dalton had no criminal record and passed a background check before becoming an uber driver. police have no idea yet what set him off. they say he shot eight people at three different locations in kalamazoo on saturday as he continued to pick up passengers along the way. here's one of those passengers. >> i half heartedly joked at him and said, you're not the shooter, are you? andy said no. and i said, are you sure? and he said, no, i'm just really tired. >> he was kind of driving through medians, driving through the lawn, then finally once he came to a stop, i jumped out of the car and ran away. >> that seconds passenger says
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first shooting, and he called 911 after he got dropped off from his wild ride. dalton's family released a statement saying they're deem sorry. they're praying for everyone affected. dalton is due in court next month. a new plea in the iphone battle pitting security against privacy. the fbi director pinned a blunt letter about the dispute overnight calling on apple to comply with the judge's ordertown lock the shooter's iphone. apple has until friday to respond to the court. a former senior justice department official helping apple fight the order says creating a way to override an iphone's passcode would put customers' privacy and scoter at risk. >> there's no limit to what the government could require apple to do if it succeeds this way. this is a pandora's box. we can't surrender our civil liberties and give the terrorists a victory. >> some of the victims of the
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subpoena fort fbi in this legal battle. while apple supporters around the world plan to rally tomorrow against the agency's demands j. our governor is in hot water. >> it could be a nasty side effect of the extra media coverage he's been getting. now more than ever, every word counts, and his comments about women leaving the kitchen to support him, well, they're not sitting well with a lot of people. also, new at 5:30, there is not a single hoverboard on the market that should be considered safe. the alarge warning from the federal government. new at 5:45, it's the number one cause of distracted driving wrecks. texting and driving isn't the only distraction danger. and a rally of support and plenty of cold hard cash for pop singer kasha who lost a
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tall people, short people, fat won! >> reporter: while the runners up work to catch up after marco rubio just barely edged out ted cruz for second place in south carolina. both men are vying to be viewed as the alternative to donald trump. >> instead of coalescing around the front run tear establishment is trying to runner. >> reporter: rubio now lashing out for retweeting a student newspaper article that mistakenly reported this video showed rubio criticizing the bible. >> every single day something comes out of the cruz campaign that's untrue. >> reporter: donald trump refusing to apologize for his retweet that suggests rubio is not eligible to be president because both of his parents were cube ban. >> because i'm not sure. i mean, let people make their own determination. >> reporter: on the democratic side bernie sanders on the tram
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>> let me bring you the next president, bernie sanders! >> reporter: trying to chip away at hillary clinton's steep advantage with african-american voters. >> thinking outside of the box. >> reporter: the latest polls show the front runners clinton and trump both heading into their next contests in south carolina and nevada with double- digit leads. abc news, washington. republicans in ohio will weigh in three days after democrats caucus on saturday. newschannel5's john kosich joins us now. john, governor kasich already looking ahead to super tuesday. >> 30 delegates up for grabs in nevada but he is looking at the 49 a week from tomorrow in virginia. it's one of the 12 states that gather together to make up super tuesday. kasich visited two others on saturday with voters were voting in south carolina. the palmetto state going big
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points over marco rubio and ted cruz who were neck and neck at second and third with bush and kasich 15 points behind them for fourth and fifth. bush dropped out of the race. kasich, who set expectations in south carolina low, getting a pass from the national media. >> it worked to his advantage. first of all, trump's big win. secondly, the play on jeb bush being the one that dropped out. third, that rubio didn't do as well as some might have expected really kept kasich out of the news loo. as a result, it was to his advantage. >> kasich who picked up support, former homeland security secretary tom ridge has been pushing the polls that showed he it was republican that would defeat hillary clinton by the largest margin. >> thank you john. well, we're hanging on to the sunshine if not the warm temperatures we enjoyed. >> the weekend was great.
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even yesterday not bad at 48 to 50 for february. we'll take it. you the date's a little cooler. but i want to show you, i can't get enough of this live look at downtown cleveland's sunset. that is beautiful. notice staying lighter longer. >> we like that. >> we are gaining two 1/2 minutes of daylight per day now. that's excellent. by the beginning of march -- by the end of march it will be light until like 11:00 at nature, right? no, not quite. we're getting lighter and staying light longer. dry weather, excellent news. the chill is on, 44 wooster to canton, 42 youngstown, but thanks to a little lake breeze here, coming in out of the north and northeast, indeed, we're seeing that cooler near lake eerie thing play in. 34 cleveland. but you had a 10 degrees as you head about 20, 25 miles farther south. so your evening, we're all
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by 10:00 p.m., definitely below freezing or at freezing in most spots. cloud cover, pretty thin here. and i think we're going to stay mainly clear for much of the overnight. a few little wispy clouds. should be a really good night for star gazing. what about this midweek winter storm? i call at swap storm. the reason i do, it's going start out as warmth and heavy rain, then change over to that wet, messy snow for your thursday. not a whole lot of show but enough to get to notice. just slushy wet snow. here's the low. it is still hundreds and hundreds of miles away. it could easily change its track a little bit, but right now here's what we're looking at. we're looking at an i-71 track, or pretty close to the, from cincinnati up toward erie, pennsylvania. that puts utt for the first half of the storm on the warm side of things. so that means rain. a lot of rain, too, beginning
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day on wednesday into wednesday evening. the heavier snow, chicago fort wayne to detroit, depending on the exact track. we're going watch for snow -- rain to arrive first. this is just after midnight wednesday morning. here you go. upper 30s, lower 40s. that is a lot of rain, and then it transitions to snow probably during the morning commute west of i-71, and then for the rest of the morning into early afternoon, for the entire newschannel5 viewing area. look at some of the rainfall totals. by wednesday at 5:15, most of us approaching an inch, some of us going over. so this could be some flooding issues on the front side of this slop storm. 28 tonight, a few clouds, staying chilly. tomorrow should be dry. not a bad day. 44. so we're going warm you up a little bit. cloud sun mix and mild air. we'll track that storm wynn
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jason nicholas is here with our teacher of the week. >> every monday we honor a local teacher as our ohio savings bank teacher of the week. this week's winner teaches industrial airnts medina. take a look. in this week's newschannel5's ohio savings bank teacher of the week we travel to buckeye high school in medina. that's where industrial arts surprise honor. >> congratulations, you have been selected as teacher of the week for newschannel5. >> this is crazy. wow. anything? >> no, you're not.
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him with an omaha stakes gift card. congratulations, our week. >> those are all one take. we don't redo them. if would you like to nominate a deserving teacher, head over to our website, newsnet5.com/teacher. leigh and frank. >> thank you jason. a new show of support for marijuana. >> looking more and more likely medical pot. next, new at 5:00, the people showing the most support for the proposal aren't exactly who you might be expecting. >> and if you are one of the parents who bought into the hottest christmas trend, you need to listen up. why the government says there
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check to become an uber driver. he was on the job when police say he started shooting people while still picking up customers. prosecutors say he confessed and showed no remorse. authorities are trying to track down three convicted felons who escaped from a halfway house. today we learned the house didn't notify the public until two days later when we started asking questions. the private agency says plans to add more barbed wire as well as enhanced security measures. police find a home littered with marijuana plants and full of guns in summit county. they seized more than a dozen plants, marijuana growing equipment and illegal weapons from this house rate here in copley. one man was arrested and charged in this case. now all new at 5:00, three out of every four ohio voters supports medical marijuana. >> exactly who supports it might come as a bit of a shock. megan hickey has been breaking down the latest poll numbers
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some surprises here megan. >> the age of supporters for one. the youngest voters did not show the highest support. it's not just millennials that aring up to the idea of medical pot. according to the most recent report 46 to 65-year-olds are backing the idea more than any other age group. >> perhaps this speaks to people who need something like this. >> reporter: conditions include chronic back and joint pain or nausea during cancer treatment. >> people who are in their 40s, 50s, 60s are really starting to experience a lot of these conditions for which medical marijuana can be beneficial. >> reporter: also notable were the religions of those voters. catholics and those with no religion led the pack of supporters. women were also more likely to say yes than men. ohioans for medical marijuana told me the data supports their mission.
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or another, a man or a woman, younger or older, people recognize that medical marijuana has benefits. >> reporter: on the other hand, political analyst tom sutton says it sends a message to lawmakers. >> makes it clear the legislature has a pretty easy job in front of them if they want to take the steps toward legalization. >> reporter: the marijuana policy project is supposed to wrap up a draft of a medical marijuana initiative by the end of this month. and if all goes according to plan, voters will see it on their ballot come november. megan hickey, newschannel5. >> thank you megan. now an update to break news for you. there is state route 8. it reopened after a crash. this right here is between talmadge avenue and howe avenue. just a few minutes ago a lot of traffic backed up but that is back open. time for a check on our sunny weather. i feel the sun is going down pretty soon. >> the sun's going down, but twilight in northern ohio in
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46 akron, 44 canton, cooler lakeside thanks to a northerly lake breeze. 34 cleveland. mid-30s for mentor, ashtabula, lorain and elyria. we're going to stay dry on the power of 5. we'll show you cloud cover. high, thin cirrus clouds for the most part. all in all should be a very quiet weather evening. the calm before the storm, if you will. notice temperatures dropping generally into the upper 20s as we head towards sunrise. so enjoy the evening. just take the winter coats. it's going to drop below freezing. we are tracking that winter storm and how it's going to impact you. more on that coming up. retailers across the country are pulling hoverboards from their shelves after a new warning from the government. the consumer product safety commission says none of the self-balancing two-wheeled scooters are certified as safe. the agency sent a letter to manufacturers saying if safety standards aren't met, recalls
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>> it is irresponsible for a company to continue to sell hoverboards that they know do not comply with the standards. >> the crackdown comes after hoverboards sparked more than 50 fires across 24 states since december. one of those fires broke out in the basement of a home in orange village just last week. a woman's son's hoverboard was charging when it burst into flames. the boy grabbed a fire extinguisher and put out the fire. the hoverboard was a christmas gift bought op amazon.com. the retail hear been offering refunds on all two-wheeled scooters purchased on-line. new information about this teenager who successfully posed as an ohio state senator and gave a speech to a class. all of this happened last year at mohawk school. state senator dave burke was scheduled to speak in january but in december an 1-year-old
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officials say looked the part, arriving with a driver and two aids. he claimed senator burg had fallen ill and just resigned, and that he was appointed to replace him. but it was all an elaborate lie that tack weeks to discover when the real senator showed up for his speech. atkins first said it was just a prank, then claimed he wanted to point out flaws in school security. well, now he says the whole scheme was for a school paper on rural school security. the teen is charged with fraud. >> still ahead, all new at 5:00, adam lansa is dead after killing 20 children and six educators. that was in newton, connecticut. but the parents of those kids say he's not the only one to blame. why they're going after gun marks. and you know using your phone behind the wheel can be a real distraction but that's not the only thing keeping drivers'
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right now remember that warm and windy weather weekend? some of you via facebook and twitter sharing some of the damage done by 50-plus-mile-per- hour winds. nobody hurt or injured. a lot of tree limbs coming down. but then you had this to end the weather weekend. let's go back. i want to show you the sun there is 70. danielle brooks, nice job. here's a dandelion. how dare it start blooming in february. good out and put your weed and feed down, right now. red winged black bird, a sure sign of spring northern ohio. some of them have overwintered here. they knew el nio was coming. denise shaffer sent this in. here's the thing. we're not done with winter yet. in fact, by the end of this week things are going to get quite chili after the winter
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tonight as the nation deals with another mass shooting this time in kalamazoo, michigan, there are questions about who should pay the victims of gun violence. >> the families of the sandy hook school shooting say it should be the gun maker so this week those families are going to court over that issue. here's a closer look at the debate. >> reporter: it lasted less than five minutes. but when the shooting at sandy
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stopped, 20 children and six educators lay dead. one was david wheeler's seven- year-old son benny. his other son who was nine was also there. >> he spent that entire time hiding in a box of t-shirts in a supply closet, and he heard every round, and one of his first questions to me was, how many people were there, dad? how many were there? and i said, there was one guy. >> reporter: 154 rounds fired from an automatic weapon. (please stand by, audio
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>> reporter: both parents are part of potentially press did he understand setting lawsuit alleging remington, its distributors and sellers have a legal obligation to safely market such a dangerous product. instead, the lawsuit says gun makers do the opposite, using adrenaline-fueled ads and targeted product placement like in video game "call of duty." >> i would like to see them stop looking at violence-prone young men as their ideal customer. >> that's their target. >> reporter: the lawsuit focuses on a 2005 law passed by congress that protects gun manufacturers from liability if essential a firearm is misused in a crime to kill people. remington declined cnn's request for comment citing pending litigation. however, in papers to dismiss the suit, their lawyers argue
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complete immunity to the remington defendants. since 2012, the the ar-15 has been used in seven of the most deadly mass shootings. >> do you think if the gunman had used a different kind of firearm, that maybe, just maybe your children could have survived? >> he chose that because he wanted to. >> right. he had other firearms on his person and in his car, and he didn't use them. he didn't take them, beck knew what he was doing. andy knew what he wanted to do. >> reporter: deborah fayrick, new york. >> recommending top is trying to have that case dismissed but if they fail the gun maker could face charges. new details about why you need to think about what you're
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the centers for disease control says because of a math error, it underestimated the health risks of some flooring. the report about formaldehyde in some flooring imported from china was released earlier this month. now it turns out government scientists forgot to convert feet to meters in some of their calculations. so the formaldehyde levels are higher and cancer risks are now three times higher than expected. you hear it all the time. put down the phones while driving. >> now we have some important evidence about why researches at virginia tech put video cameras inside of cars and recorded what drivers were doing moments before the crash. two-thirds of the crashes, the drivers were distracted and risk. texting triples the risk, and if you are dialing a call, you crash. compare that to eating while danger. another cause that researches
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today governor john kasich is getting slammed on social media for some comments he made about his women supporters during a town hall event in virginia. listen. >> how did i get elected? i didn't have anybody for me. we just got an army of people who -- and many women who left their kitchens to go out and go door to door and get out there. >> the governor was talking about the support he received when he first got elected to state office at the age of 26. he followed it up by saying the times have changed, and today everyone is out working when campaign volunteers call homes. the backlash over his comments started immediately right there at that town hall. >> first off i want to say your comment earlier about to women came out of the itch ken to support you, i'll come to support you, but i won't be coming out of the kitchen. >> i gotcha. >> governor kasich's campaign released this response. it reads in part, many of his early campaign teams were made up of stay-at-home moms who
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he wanted to bring to. try and twist his comments into anything else is just desperate politics. >> anything those folks say now goes everywhere. >> right. everywhere immediately, and we'll hear about many more things they say between now and november. instantly. tweet, facebook, instagram. all right, i want to show an instant shot of downtown cleveland. we've been tracking the our sunset, and it is almost down behind the buildings. blue skies. that looks almost like a warm summer-like sun?ee. really does. >> it's a fooler. >> all in all things are looking pretty good. we've got our five live radars going ran and round. we don't miss snowflakes or raindrops with five radar, no way. we're going to stay dry through the overnight.
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the lake breeze, the north and northeasterly breeze coming in. it's 32 in westlake, 31 avon lake, 34 downtown. we've got 33 mentor, char don, madison. chilly. but then you slide a few miles inland, peninsula jumps to 43. how about 44 in canton, 43 in barberton, 49 in killbuck, and 46 in new philadelphia. so warmer inland, cooler lakeside. it begins a little bit early this year. normally we start saying that in march as we get warmer air coming in. the lake breeze really plays. 42 mansfield. big contrast here. ashtabula 34, same for mentor, akron 46 degrees. all right, your evening planner and beyond. watch those temperatures falling into the middle and upper 20s. notice we stay mainly clear through much of the overnight. clouds begin to move in during the day tomorrow, but temperatures should still go up.
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mid-40s for highs tomorrow afternoon, staying dry. we'll track in this winter storm that's just beginning to develop out here in portions of new mexico and western texas. this is the beginnings of the winter storm. it isn't fully formed. it's just starting. here's the low. it is still hundreds of miles away from northern ohio. but right now computers are suggesting, look at that, really begins to build. there's going to be some severe weather over the course of the next 48 hours. mississippi, louisiana, over into alabama, with tornadoes likely here. so our spring severe weather season, it's almost spring, february, this is the normal area you see tornadoes. and i think we're going see some. this low begins to track this way. and right now it looks like it goes right through bye secting ohi-- bisect ohio. it looks like rain, then we'll wrap in some snow. unfortunately for those who
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thursday, this doesn't look like right now enough snow to get you closed down. i'm thinking two to four inches of snowfall from this system during the day thursday. but that will carry us into thursday evening. so it's going take awhile to get in here. 28 tonight, a few clouds, and chilly. let's show you tomorrow. how about a high of, let's go 44, why not. cloud/sun mix, staying drive. your seven-day shows the snow and the rain, then a big cool- down, coming up next. thank you mark. here's what's coming up at 9:00. >> two men hitting the same department store chain in multiple location. police need your help locating the systems. we'll tell you how they are getting away with it coming up. and an emergency in a local emergency room. we're going to tell which you hospital and how it's handling the patient in need. >> but first, when live on 5 return, a number of celebrities are coming to the help of pop star kesha after a judge failed
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. tonight, pop's biggest stars are showing support for one of their own. lady ga gas, kelly clarkson, and now taylor swift backing kesha and her legal battle with her longtime producer. >> kesha says that man abused her but the judge won't let the singer out of her contract. brandi hitt brings us up to date. >> reporter: music's biggest stars are coming to pop singer kesha's defense. the star caught in an ugly legal battle with her producer just received a $250,000 donation from taylor swift to help her case. on friday fans posted this video outside court on twitter, while inside kesha was seen devastated after a judge denied her release from a recording
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gotwald, also known as dr. luke. a hit producer who has worked with countless stars including katy perry and miley cyrus. >> the reason this case is such a big deal is frankly it's the ugliest of its kind that i think i've ever seen. >> reporter: in a 2014 lawsuit kesha alleges for the past 10 years dr. luke has sexually, physically, verbally and abused her to the point where ms. siebert nearly lost her life. he disputes that saying her allegation were de vied of sexual detail. >> that civil lawsuit goes forward. the focus is going to turn to the underlying actions. >> reporter: kesha's famous friend demi lovato posting this is only going to make you stronger. lady gaga adding, i am in awe of your bravery. kesha is obligated to record
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dr. luke said does he not need to be involved in recording or producing those albums. brandi hitt, los angeles. >> and that is it for live on 5. frank and danita are here with a look ahead. >> coming up at 6:00, thieves targeting one store in particular hitting multiple locations. we'll tell you where and how. calls for shots fired ends with air soft guns being confiscated. it's where those shots came from that has some within the department concerned. newschannel5 at 6:00 stars in
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they say are targeting a popular clothing chain and stealing hundreds of dollars worth of clothes. >> police say they are hitting all the same store chains in different cities, though. only on 5 we have video that police hope shows who these men are. bob, as we can see these crooks had some very distinctive looks. >> reporter: well, frank, police say it's very important when you see this video that we show you that you focus on their hair ties. about 500 to $800 worth of clothing was stolen from this burlington coat factory store last week. police tell me it was the third similar crime by the same people in three months. first take a look at these surveillance pictures taken from inside the burlington coat factory. notice one crook has bleached afro, the others have what police call a white skunk line. now to the video officers tell
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