tv Live on 5 ABC September 9, 2016 5:00pm-6:00pm EDT
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getting energy assistance for her utility for years. but then when she moved around the corner quite literally is when she started having problems with cleveland public power. >> at night i'm not really sleeping because i know that tomorrow i'm going to have to worry again. and i've got to one day. and years ago that she was in a car accident that shattered her knees. her life has never been the same. she is disabled, a diabetic, and desperate. she has to keep her air electricity. her electric wheelchair and outside wheelchair would lift up too. but it is not just her health that she's concerned a. >> i have a grandson that is here right now. he is asthmatic and uses a breathing machine often. >> reporter: mary got this notice from cleveland public power that unless she pays her $400 bill in full that her electricity could be disconnected.
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>> ag, other people, caseworkers. they won't listen to them. >> how does it make you feel? >> hopeless. >> reporter: i called cleveland public power that informed me that unlike private companies, they don't have their own long- term assistance program. it will help some people on low income for a few months or extend payment times for people with health problems. but all money owed still piles up. meanwhile mary told me that her teenage daughter just got back to work and might be able to help with the bill. >> it's hard. it's hard. you know, and they don't understand that people who are working and earn one check a week from being in the streets. >> reporter: just this afternoon they called me to say that they are now willing to work with mary to help her out a bit. and also they say that it will accept the federal program known as heat the home energy assistance program. but mary said she has called and called and called and has
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make an appointment. we'll stay on top of it for you. i'm investigator jonathan walsh here in downtown cleveland news channel 5. right now we're going to show you a chilling image shared by an ohio police department on social media to try to drive home the seriousness of the area's heroin epidemic. >> again we want to warn you these pictures are indeed hard to look at. this is james mccord and a little boy in the backseat. police pulled their car over when they noticed it swerving in and out of brakes when a school bus stopped to let children off. then it started swerving again before coming to a stop. east liverpool officers approached. they say that mccord was barely able to speak, but was driving to the hospital. she was in trouble, unconscious, turning blue. in the backseat was her 4-year- old son who witnessed the entire horrifying encounter. while police called for medical assistance and they noted that
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narcan the drug used to revive people during opioid overdoses. that little boy is now in the protection of family services. on their facebook page, children don't have a voice in these situations. they hope that sharing this encounter will make people think twice. the next time they want to use heroin. police also revealing that inside that car they found a folded piece of paper with a pink powder inside. and last month that we told you about the return of the so- called given the name because of its color. we spoke to the narcotics detectives with the lorain county task force who says that the color change is caused by the way that drug makers pro-- make -- that drug makers process fentanyl.
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narcan. sometimes it takes several doses. sometimes no amount of narcan can bring the person back. much of ohio. >> that is why some school leaders are taking action to keep our children safe from turning to the devastating drug. anchor rob powers is live with how they are trying to help. >> reporter: elyria city schools are trying to raise epidemic that has lawmakers calling for an emergency. the marketing department made a 15-minute educational video called heroin. your first time could be your last because there's no telling what heroin could potentially be mixed with. the video warns that you don't have to be an addict to lose your life to the drug. you only have to try it once. they are explaning how difficult it is becoming to save lives when the formula is constantly changing. >> and it consistents
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little bit more clever with what they mix it with. it is like they are fighting us, the easier we can fix something the more they mix it with stuff that we can't fix. >> reporter: and that video is being shown to all elyria school students 4-12. there will be systems in place to answer any questions or concerns that they or even their parents might have. if you are interested in watching the full video from the elyria city schools we have posted it for you on our news net 5 app. >> thank you, rob. theris now on the swat standoff that we first brought to you as breaking news at the noon hour. tonight, we knew that all new at 5:00 that we're hearing the 911 calls that people made after the man crashed his car and then ran into a stranger's home and refused to come out for hours. paul kiska broke the news when the man finally surrendered. paul joins us live with one neighbor's call for help. here is paul. >> reporter: well lee, the parma police have a lot of questions tonight, but they have trouble getting any
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other suspect who is locked up, they are not cooperating. >> there is a car that went off the road and crashed really bad. >> reporter: a 911 caller reports that the car crashed. but that was only the beginning of the tense morning. >> they crashed into a tree and a pole. >> reporter: 9:30 this morning on broadway view in parma neighbors started their daisying a lot of police activity in their neighborhood. and after the car crashed. >> as i was sitting at the house, i was seng units inside the woods with the camo on, i had seen three of them. >> first i saw s.w.a.t., all kinds of cops came running. >> reporter: police say this was not a pursuit. police say the standoff started when this car crashed through this pole and then wiped out in front of this house. one man inside the car was ejected and taken to metro. the other man had a gun and ran into this house. a woman in the house was able to run out safely.
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and did confront like a female resident inside that home and that he indicated to her that he was armed and able to flee that home. >> with guns drawn, police, s.w.a.t. teams and k9s surrounded the house. police negotiators were able to talk the man to walk out of the side door and surrender peacefully after three hours. now police tell me that they found the suspect's gun inside that house this afternoon. but he faces multiple charges tonight. live from the parma police department paul kiska new developments now on the story that we first told you about last month. our state's publicly funded pre- school can continue to double dip accepting state and federal dollars. and this month the rule that has been on the books for years was suppose to start being enforced. so those schools could no longer receive overlapping payments. but according to the columbus dispatch, lawmakers worry that this change would cut services for some of the poorest children in our state.
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and until next school year. so there is more time to review when the overlapping payments do stop that it is expected to save $12 million a year. well it is day one of a cuyahoga county challenge that we first told you about last month. the county wants to house 100 homeless youths in 100 days. it is all part of the pledge that no child will age out of foster care and homelessness. but the county is focusing on finding homes for 18th deadline. 100 days from today. cleveland one of three cities nationwide are taking part in this challenge. cuyahoga county says that 150 young people age out of foster care each year and face a higher risk of homelessness or unstable housing. well, why don't we take a look at that all-important weather forecast. mark, how are we looking? >> we've got a couple of rain showers, leon. these showers around canton,
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maslin. masseline. they are fading fast. the rest of the region with a shot of dry weather throughout evening hours. akron and canton, 81 in ashtabula and 85 in mansfield. week number three no jacket required. you can leave the umbrellas at home. so your through at least 10:00 p.m. most likely after midnight we're going to see showers and storms returning. we're going to stay dry through the evening once those showers and radar fade out. lower 80s at 6:00. by 8:00 p.m. upper 70s and mid 4670s across -- mid-70s across the board at 10:00 p.m. severe weather tomorrow. we'll track that in coming up. >> okay, mark. a battle that has been raging for decades is showing no signs of stopping. >> we're talking about abortion rights in this country.
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next on 5:00, we'll take an in- depth look at the different fronts on the war of abortion access. and how one mega pop star is hoping to raise awareness. and also the road to the white house is being dominated by the talk of a foreign power. the growing role that russia is playing in this political season. north korea, a nuclear power? the startling new details about a nuclear test in that country and how our own president of the international
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abortion has once again become a hot topic this year. now that debate will get star power. tomorrow grammy-nominated singer sia will be in concert for a free concert. it will be the all-access concert in support of the abortion rights with the events happening in several other major cities including miami and atlanta and during that event people will be invited to share their personal story about abortion access. that concert comes on the heels of the proposal to let ohio
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three ohioans have submitted paperwork for a ballot proposal that would amend their state institution constitution. classifying all abortions as aggravated murder. we spoke to the man behind this effort earlier this week despite the country seeing a wave of laws that are putting tougher restrictions on the woman's constitutional right to abortion access in recent years including here in ohio. he says that they will not go far enough. >> and i always hear the words like roadblock. that we're going to slow it down and i understand why people would t but if we actually do believe that abortion is murder that we're not really treating it correctly. >> reporter: they have until monday to validate the first 1,000 signatures and certify the language on that proposal. but the chances are not looking good here. a similar proposal in oklahoma was ruled unconstitutional. as we mentioned that the abortion access was ruled a constitutional right by the landmark roe verses wade
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1973. adding to this election year on abortion in our state we saw the governor sign a bill stripping planned parenthood of funding because some of their clinics would provide abortions. that cost them $1.4 million. just last month that the federal judge stopped it from taking effect, but the state attorney general has now promised to appeal. planned parenthood, they argue that the law, they would deprive thousands of patients access to the other health services such as hiv and cancer screenings. lee? in the u.s. presidential election? >> and their question is coming up again after donald trump's praise for vladimir putin appeared on the state television. and here is karen traverse with the story. >> reporter: russia is becoming a central figure in this presidential election. hillary clinton off the campaign trail, but sitting down with foreign experts in new york. donald trump is making his case to conservatives in washington.
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them? i've got the e -- evangelicals, you watch. >> and they are using it to attack their judgment. first their comments on vladimir putin. >> he's been a leader far more than our president has ban leader. >> reporter: and that stunning appearance on our key, the kremlin-backed television network, essentially the mouthpiece of the russian government. speaking to larry king, trump walked off the suggestion that russia is the u.s. election. >> i think it is probably unlikely. maybe the democrats are putting that out, who knows. >> and that they would do that rt interview. and that they didn't know that it would be on russian television. not realizing how this plays into russian hands. at worse given the business
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own finances and given putin's proven ability and want to try to play in international politics that it could be a lot worse. >> and this weekend a brief break from campaigning. both hillary clinton and donald trump will pause on sunday. the 15th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks. in the meantime there is new information out on north korea tonight. that country announced that they have conducted a high level nuclear test explosion that stronger and smarter nuclear weapons. it was believed to be the largest ever. south korea is calling it an act of i'm quoting here the fanatic recklessness. they scheduled an emergency meeting to talk about test. president obama, they condemned that test saying that they will never accept north korea as a nuclear power. today an engineer for volkswagen pleaded guilty for charges of conspiracy to
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air act. he helped develop software allowing diesel vehicles to appear to meet the emission standards. >> yes. you're right. [ laughter ] >> what are you thinking? >> yeah, i'm thinking muggy, dry for the evening, and maybe some big storms tomorrow. it will be a cool down for you >> yeah t is still humid outside right now. take a look at their live pics from akron. dry weather there that will be a mix of clouds and sunshine and a dry high school football night. for 99% of you and i will show you the 1% here coming up. it is going to happen very shortly with a couple of showers trying to creep in from the south and the west as they are fading out. there could be an isolated shower from youngstown to
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out as well. but it looks dry. canton just a little light rain now. but again we'll continue to watch these things just shrink and fade out. and good news, it will not be widespread. we've got some sunshine mixing in with clouds and all around their region. we've got a frontal boundary that will stall out ahead. it is just along the lake shore and it will surge just south of ashtabula county now. so ashtabula is actually on the cooler side of the front. where the rest of us are on the the warm and muggy side. here are developing closer to the cold front that will be in tomorrow afternoon and evening. and so right now there's the warm front, cold front combo. it is going to be all warm front here overnight tonight. so we will be here tonight and the humidity will remain high through the day tomorrow and until this cold front will come in and picks up the moisture, creates the big thunderstorms with the heavy kind of rain for a lot of you. maybe even some damaging wind gusts for some of you tomorrow afternoon and evening. and then sweeps the humidity away.
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channel 5 viewing area. in the risk for severe storms and the yellow being the slightest risk i should say for the areas outside that and very little risk at all. now hail, maybe a little bit. the dime to quarter size. the main threat will be some damaging down burst winds of 60 miles per hour or greater taking down some trees and maybe some power lines. there could be some flooding. we've had the heavy rain over the past couple of days with these washers. now, you could get another inch or two of rain if you of cells that will be training over the same area tomorrow afternoon and evening. keep an eye out for some flash flooding issues by tomorrow evening. and tonight 70 degrees, a few thundershowers that will be coming in after midnight. just in a couple of spots that it will be staying warm and muggy. tomorrow 842-- tomorrow 84 to 87 depending on when the rain arrives. cleveland will be easily at 87. if the rain arrives a little bit sooner, maybe a couple of
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primarily that we're concerned about as far as severe weather goes. sunday, there you go. 73 degrees, loving that great weather. low humidity, back into the 80s on monday and tuesday and then more fall-like air on wednesday, thursday, and friday. lower 70s to upper 70s to end the week. thank you, mark. two days until the anniversary of the 9/11 attacks. lawmakers take actions to let survivors seek justice responsible for the horror of that day. and also new at 6:00, people from all over are flocking to a bowling alley in northeast ohio. but they are not there to hit a few strikes. they're hoping instead to become millionaires. the other game that is packing the place.
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will pause to mark the 15th anniversary of the attack of september 11, 2001. >> today memorial events were beginning with a moment of silence and remembrance. at the pentagon today, where 184 people were killed on the hijacked plane that crashed into the building. it was one of four commercial flights that were headed for the west coast that they were overtaken by 19 hijackers that day. two crashed into the world trade center, killing 2,700. today there was a memorial parade in new york city. another plane was retaken by the the passenger as and crashed into the field in shanksville, pennsylvania. in all 2,977 people died that day. >> 15 of those 19 hijackers were of saudi decent. today the house passed a bill allowing 9/11 victims to sue that entire nation of saudi arabia. the saudi government has denied
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never been formally implicated. although recently the classified documents revealed contact between some of the hijackers and people who may have been connected to the saudi government. president obama has promised to veto the bill. up next they work under cover taking on the region's heroin epidemic and the progress that they have made in one of those communities. >> cockroaches and bedbugs? it is a vi residence of the public housing in cuyahoga county. tonight our exclusive story is getting action.
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up. cpc doesn't offer the same energy assistance that she used to get before moving to a new program. cpp tells us that they are working with her to help. a man surrendered peacefully after crashing his car in parma and running into a stranger's home for cover. he was armed with a gun. he let a woman inside leave safely and eventually surrendered to negotiators. another reason for the car was ejected and taken to the hospital. one person in that has no word on their condition meantime. this picture of the man and woman in ohio passed out in a car while overdosing is making national headlines today. an officer reached in to shut the engine off, he noticed the 4-year-old in the backseat. the woman's son. the adults were arrested and the boy is now with the family services. an undercover operation that you have heard about first
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of heroin-related crime in mentor. police there have arrested more than 50 people through their undercover detail. >> they cannot say exactly what they do, but the undercover operation is working. tara molina shows us the latest bust. >> reporter: undercover officers here in mentor have been working cases like these for months. but in their most recent arrests, the shoplifter admitted right away to stealing to support their heroin habit. these two arrested attempting to steal this target. they admitted to police that they steal from local business to support their local heroin habits. the police chief told us it is not unusual, but the reason for their undercover theft operation. funded by a state grant, the operation is meant to target the heroin problem in the community. and so far that they have made more than 50 arrests, recovering more than $8,500 in stolen goods. their police chief told me today that they just got the grant renewed.
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know, to get our officers to work on this detail. >> reporter: in the past six months mentor police have been so successful with this undercover operation that departments across the state are modeling their own operations off of it. in mentor tara molina news channel 5. and now an update to a story that you're going to see only on 5:00. little critters all over the public housing department. today we've got some answers from management. their tr have the situation under control after dozens of tenants complained about the roach and the bedbug infestation. there are 13 units in need of extermination, which is set to begin today. but people in other neighborhoods, they told us that they are having the same thing. >> these are horrible. i'm tired of living here. >> we apologize for any inconvenience that we cost any residence at any time. and we will strive to make sure
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>> chma officials did not mention fixing the problems in the other housing complexes. they tell us that they hope to have the antiinfestation cleared by early next week. well, let's check in on that weather situation for tonight. how are we looking my friend? >> still looking a bit muggy out there with a mix of clouds and some sun over akron. actually the showers are right over canton pointing south on i- 77. and they will slide northeast, south of columbiana county. they are fading out. i'm thinking that we would dry things out by 7:00 p.m. all right, good news for the high school football. players and the fans, 81 degrees cleveland, elyria. 85 mansfield. 86 in akron. 81 in ashtabula. 78 over dover, new philly. by half time you're still in the mid-70s. a comfortable night tonight that should be dry and no jacket required. you know that will change in the next few weeks, right? hour by hour, temps will be
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i'm thinking the lower to middle 70s for the lows tonight. still warm and humid with the thunder chances beginning to increase as we would head towards sunrise. more on the severe weather threat coming up. exercise will continue in south florida today to stop the spread of mosquitoes carrying zika virus. the people that live in the line of fire, they are outraged. workers and hazmat suits, they loaded planes with a chemical called nail it. people in miami beach, they protested outside city hall for a their sprang that they believe will be harmful. they're not buying the government assurances that the pesticide is safe. >> and organic material, it will be spread over the organic farm used in the florida keys for a number of years. >> reporter: the controversy is brewing at the same time that the florida department of health would reveal 84 pregnant women that have tested positive for zika virus.
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in washington negotiates negotiates -- negotiations will continue for the funding. and vaccines are crucial to keeping your children healthy. researchers look at the chickenpox vaccine to see how effective it is in preventing the illness. before the chickenpox vaccine, four million people got the virus each year since 1995. that's down 98%. >> i don't think that, wait a minute something is wrong here and any place could be the next target. >> 15 years ago it was 15 years since our lives fundamentally changed. it was that moment that 9/11 moment when the first plane crashed into one of the twin towers in new york. still ahead tonight on 5:00 i share my perspective on a newsroom gripped with emotion trying to fulfill on public service of keeping you informed.
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in my world of weather it is all about you in your world via social media. here is facebook. barb, it's the little things that you really need to pay attention to as she captured this net winged beetle at sandy ridge reservation in north ri great shot of the water lilies at west branch state park. and finally marianne asks what is the ground hog doing? he is telling you that he will be tunneling into your basement soon and that i would kind of call the exterminator. sorry little guy. mark j. weather on twitter, mark johnson on facebook. now here are your winning
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the 15th anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks is on sunday. anyone old enough to remember that day in 2001, they can recall the shock, anger, and the fear felt across the country. >> and sunday it will be 15 years since that horrible day that changed life in the country and much of the world. i thought it would be appropriate to revisit the report that i filed on the 10th
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in our newsroom this is how i remember the moments that we would learn that war had exploded on america's doorstep. >> the day was beautiful, the skies were rising up, the deepest of the blue. the late summer day much as this one. but the nation's postcard was gutted instantly into an ugliness, which would change the worry forever. these videos from september 11, 2001 from the vault was recorded by the video editor. >> emotionally that it was very hard because we knew that it was their own people dying in their blazes. >> reporter: 15 years ago this newsroom was on highest priority. they had two jet landers into the world trade center and a
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would try to do the same with the 4th airplane. northeast ohio skies, that they had been the location of the hijacking of united flight 93, which crashed into the pennsylvania meadow when the passengers fought for control of it from terrorists, driving it into the ground. >> possibly towards the white house. that was the plane that crashed in shanksville, pennsylvania. >> the story that would hit cleveland too. when the airplane would cleveland hopkins airport, news channel 5 cameraman were perhaps there. >> i don't know if we would expect it to blow up. that i don't know that maybe there were terrorists on board. >> i saw the officers going up and down the stairs here to get into the airplane and that they would have their guard dogs with them. >> i don't know if they knew what to expect except that something is wrong here and any place could be the next target. >> reporter: and they were later determined as clean. the entire nation, they were on
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news channel 5 journalist and producers would cover whatever we could cover and all wondering what would or could happen next. and where. >> and when it comes to the situation like 9/11 was that they would hit everybody and that my brother was on the train that i found out afterwards and that they arrived at the world trade center and maybe 20 minutes before they hit. he called me that morning telling me that he was okay. and that he would walk through the city because all of the subway were shut down and traffic was shut down and the only way to do tri-state area was walking out of the city as you're talking about seven to eight million people. >> reporter: news channel 5 covered the hundreds of aspects of the tragic story that they would have a few pictures of the behind-the-scenes here. in such that they will be cameras pointing outwards. the focus was on the terrorist attacks and the defensive measures of america and northeast ohio, to rush help to where it was needed.
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contact with the local firefighters, local police, construction workers, trying to find out when they were going to see if we could do anything to assist them. trying to bring the story home to northeast ohio. >> everything was happening right in front of your own eyes. you just took your camera, you point, you shoot, -- you just gather as much as you can because things are happening all around you. >> in my professional career i cannot equate 9/11 with any unfolded all around us. at the same time there were emotions that flowed through our own bodies. 15 years later it still hits me very hard right here. here are the news channel 5 newsroom, we chronicled the events of a horrible day. at the same time we try to steady our own nerves. >> you can't help, but feel emotion. you have to check it and you have to put it behind you and you have to do your job, but it
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who is working and everyone who is out there from everyone in the newsroom and to all the reporters and the photographers and the field. that it is feeling the same fears that you are. that they just have to keep them down enough to continue to do their job. >> reporter: in the minds of the individuals and the nation's collective memory, they have deeply seared images of 9/11. mental pictures and gut wrenching emotions will never retreat. for america, 9/11 was a turning point. and they are still being drawn as the nation will never forget and neither will the journalist in the newsroom where i labor chronicling the events, which have touched our times and our lives. news channel 5 i'm leon bibb. >> all those memories still so vivid for all of us. and it is a time to remember those who perished and all the first responders who did everything that they could.
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>> absolutely. i remember right where i was. don't you remember were -- where you were? sitting right there and they couldn't believe it. >> it changed our lives forever. >> forever and our children's and their children's children lives. >> nice job leon, great story. all right, we've got some cumulus clouds now hanging over worcester. that's all part of the little system of showers that are pulling away and fading away over the canton area. worcester is dry. i'm thinking you'll stay dry over the football field here as we look west from worcester high school. currently 80 degrees downtown cleveland. then again dry and humid. here we go. we've got a little small craft advisory that kicks in tomorrow especially during the afternoon as some of those stronger winds come in. we could see winds gusting with the front tomorrow afternoon of 25 to 30 miles per hour. and then any thunderstorm that does sit over you could produce
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that would be a severe thunderstorm and that could produce some wind damage. that would be primarily mid to late afternoon into the evening hours. we will keep an eye on things. here are the showers weakening right now over canton moving over towards robertsville there. maybe they will get a sprinkle up towards carroll county, columbiana county into the youngstown area fading out. akron currently 86 degrees. jackson 78. 84 in canton, 82 currently in barberton and they will swing 80 downtown as well as in euclid and solan. 83 at sugar and falls. muggy. i'm not going to say that it will be cooler as it is a little bit cooler than the past few days, but all in all the muggiliness that will hang around for one more day and a nice cool down for your weekend. look at 88, mentor. 90 in millersburg, 90 degrees. could a few spots touch 90 tomorrow? i would say dover, new philly that you could and could
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all depends on the speed of the showers and the storms. if they arrive, i think that there will be a few showers here that will arrive west of i- 70, wondering in the morning hours. that could effectively give us the cloud cover to prevent 90 degrees in cleveland and i will go w-8 7. we -- i will go with 87. all the humidity in the air and plus the approaching cold front will pick up the humidity. you remember yesterday those big heavy rainers, those thunderstorms that produced the torrential rain to pull over to the side of the road. we've got more of that coming tomorrow. plus the threat additionally for the damaging straight line winds. storm saturday, that is your weather headline as i want you to stay up to date with the latest storm shield app and keep the twitter feed going. we will probably do some facebook live broadcasting during the severe weather event. during your football games, we will not interrupt your games, all right. we will keep it on facebook and on the app. there's the slight risk
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for potentially a little bit of hail, but i'm thinking that it is high winds. it is 60 miles an hour winds. any torrential rainfall could cause some brief flooding to keep that in mind. 70 tonight with a few thundershowers after midnight. those aren't the big ones. tomorrow mid to late afternoon into the evening. strongest severe storms. 87 degrees for the high. leon? >> okay, thank you, mark. they were just trying to get rid of the bedbug problem. >> but what was done to kill them ended up making a lot people sick. next at 6:00, what went wrong when a local government office called in an exterminator that left them scrambling to warn anyone who might have visited the building. also someone posted a very personal picture of you without your permission. sounds like something illegal, but in ohio it is not. now there's a movement to make revenge porn a crime in ohio. and to protect victims.
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new video as a car comes crashing into a convenience store. >> it was in connecticut. everything was caught on camera as well. the dark blue suv could be seen outside backing away from the store. then they would need to drive and accelerate smashing through the front door all the the store. the crash sent them flying from the other angle that you can see behind the counter when they came crashing in. all he had to do with it was a lot of aches and pains. >> we knew about the business and we were back there to help out. they need to take some of their personal belongings out.
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crash from outside the store. police believe they were trying to avoid the van and hit the gas instead of the brakes by mistake. he is charged with reckless driving. that'll do it for live at 5:00. >> what's coming up at 6:00? >> another massive car recall over the potentially deadly defect. they may not protect you in a crash. >> we'll tell you the problem and whether your car is involved next at 6:00. plus they are now learning th people sick. what went wrong and the warning for the public tonight. and new information on the story that still has so many people talking and asking why. the man accused of gunning down the fellow driver after a crash that police say he caused. news channel 5 at 6:00 begins
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the war is being waged in homes and hotels and offices. but toxic dust used to treat bedbugs in one downtown building, they may have made workers sick. >> and now that they have fears that members of the public may have also been exposed. derick ninth and lakeside tonight. derick, this all happened at a social security office? >> reporter: that's right, right here in the breezy building right behind me. but the state investigation about that toxic dust was only recently made public. >> it was immediate. people were coughing. >> reporter: they said that is before her co-workers started vomiting. it happened in their building
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