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tv   News 7 at 11  ABC  September 14, 2015 11:00pm-11:36pm EDT

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>> here. there is no justice here. leon: the race for the white house. new developments on both side of the aisle. clues,are revealing next. abc seven news at 11:00, on your side. leon: up first, question about
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police practices in fairfax county. alison: this comes after two high-profile incidents involving the death of civilians, including an inmate who was tazed. leon: roz plater now has the top story. leon, the meeting lasted more than three hours. the fireworks started quickly. rotesters are frustrated about the death of is being, but nobody prosecuted for the death of the inmate. the meeting began with members of the fairfax county ad hoc police practices commission reading a subcommittee report on recommendations to the board. a half hour in, protesters were frustrated and tempers flared. >> [shouting] >> if you are going to continue
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to interrupt the session, i will terminate the session. leon: dozens of testers lined up to draw attention to the custody death of mckenna, a 37-year-old woman with mental illness died in custody while she was ta zed. >> black women are not your oops and teachable moment. roz: commissioners said they would have multiple recommendations. >> the use of stun guns should be prohibited on handcuffed or restrained individuals, even if they are resisting. clear,otesters were without somebody being held accountable, the recommendations come up short. >> we have to see this is not enough! it's not enough! it is not enough! do something! roz: this commission was put
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together to make recommendations to the police department, but in case, those mckenna recommendations will also be shared with the sheriff's department. clues everysing for murderer and landover hills. the police say that carlos clayton was shot to death last week. officers spent the night combing the area, interviewing neighbors. every word of up to $25,000 is for answers. alison: a teenager was killed by leavingk train in boyd, nearly 200 people stranded during the evening rush. chris papst has the investigation happening now. chris? chris: the police say what happened here is another example of why people need to be careful around railroad tracks, more only just stay away from them. afternoon, friends
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of the 16-year-old gathered new the tracks where the young man had died just hours before. according to montgomery county, the teenager and two friends were walking along the hitks in boyds when he was and killed. he was a sophomore at clarksburg high school, on the track team at the school. the train that had him was an amtrak train that left union station. 184 people on board waited about two and half hours on the train as the police conducted the investigation. they were on their way to chicago. >> there is no business being on the tracks. trains are very dangerous. at this young age, they may think they can beat the train getting across the tracks, but time and time again pedestrians on the tracks versus a train, the train always wins. chris: the two other teens with
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the other went to the hospital, though they were not injured. according to the investigation, they are trying to figure out why he was so close to the train or how he got so close to the train that it could hit him. according to social media accounts, tomorrow at clarksburg high school, students tomorrow will where blue in his honor. chris papst, abc 7 news. leon: a mother is behind bars months after she was found to a playgroundon swing. she is charged with manslaughter in child abuse. the police believe the three-year-old was on the swing about 40 hours and had been dead as long as 10 hours when officers arrived. family members say that simms suffers from adult illness. campaign news as gop contenders get ready for their second pick debate. the democratic side is heating
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up as well. a huge crowd gathered to listen to bernie sanders tonight as he continues to build a battle against hillary clinton. tom roussey has the report from manassas. tom: he got some good news from the polls today and drew a big crowd. even when the gates open at the prince william county fairgrounds at 6:00, it was a big crowd waiting to get in. this is video of tonight's speech by bernie sanders, the democratic senator from vermont. they came to listen to him speak about his major issue, income inequality. he spent over half his speech talking about the issue, and the speech went more than one hour. 99%, andrs: we are the it's time we took power away from the 1%. this great country and our ,overnment belong to all of us
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not just a handful of billionaires. polls fornews in the sanders. you look at these numbers, it looks like clinton is well ahead, 42%, but she is down 21% from two months ago. sanders is up 10% from two months ago. joe biden, who has not said if he is running, is up 9%. some polls have sanders in the lead in iowa and new hampshire. the virginia primary a schedule right now for march 1, almost six months away. live from and assess, tom roussey, abc 7 news. leon: let's talk about the republicans, donald trump held a rally in dallas tonight. while supporters inside the arena were cheering, thousands of anti-protesters were mounting outside -- marching outside.
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demonstrator said they were angry over his views of immigration. texas holds its primary on super tuesday, march 1. cnn will hold a gop debate wednesday. we will have complete coverage of the fireworks right here. meantime, no debating about the weather. it was a beautiful stretch of weather, clear skies. let's get the happy forecast from meteorologist brian van de graaff, who was smiling tonight. brian: the belfort furniture weather center, good news, another great stretch of weather, but it will be a cold night. this morning was the coldest we have been since last spring. at 11:00 am 66 degrees downtown. frederick, 554 manassas, fredericksburg 59. a clear sky this evening, from the 60's downtown. light wind, the temperatures downtown in the 50's by the time the sunrise cousins tomorrow.
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time the sunrise comes to marshall stop definitely will need a jacket in the morning, putting into the mid-80's. the next seven days coming up. brian, thank you. excessive police force and racial bias, a new report focuses on ferguson. unarmed black teenager michael brown was shot to death by officer darren wilson, the shooting deemed justified, but a commission appointed by the missouri governor found excessive police force, damaging trust, and strained relations between officers in the community. it found that black drivers in missouri were 75% more likely to be stopped by the police than whites drivers. now calls for change. >> if we are clear about accountability and serious about racial equity and we want all to have an opportunity to thrive, it's tough, but it's worth it. alison: the commission
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recommends changing police happens, changing -- increasing the minimum wage, and improving education. leon: back to work for the county clerk in kentucky that refused to grant marriage licenses to same-sex couples. stopavis says she will not her deputies from issuing the licenses, but she will not issue any herself. she up to same-sex marriage on religious grounds. as she sat in her office, a same-sex couple walked in and got their license. >> i appreciate she has her beliefs and is making a stand, but she cannot stand in the way of the people that she serves. davis spent six days in jail after a judge held her in contempt for refusing to wish you the licenses. lawyersast week, davis' says she has been opening letter sent by supporters. alison: wild fires are burning largely out of control in or the california, one north of san
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francisco, the other east of sacramento, and they have the stride more than 500 homes. disabled woman died after being trapped by fast-moving flames. a new report finds that snowpack in the sierra nevada mountains is at its lowest level in 500 years. byn: still to come -- busted his own iphone. alison: a texting mistake that put a drug dealer in jail. plus -- reporter: do you wish you could tell of somebody was lying to you?
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alison: a federal investigation is now underway into how american airlines flew the l.a. all therom way to hawaii. their aircraft was not properly equipped for the trip, lacking extra oxygen and safety
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apartment. american says it has updated its certification software to prevent this from happening again. out, how woulds you like to have the ability to always know when somebody is lying to you? alison: there are ways to ferret out if falsehood. stephen tschida gives us a quick lesson. knowing that somebody is a liar can leave us done. the quest for truth has included the torture chair and eventually the lie detector, but what if you just knew when somebody is lying? >> i would love that. stephen: pamela meyer is a harvard educated deception professional. they give off close. >> looked down, slump, lower their voice, shift posture. there are tales.
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a lie detector measure psychological responses and meyer reads faces. among the most obvious tell, a micro-expression. make one expression and another leaks through in a flash. >> your mama loves you so much. notoriousn 1994, murderer susan smith gave all physical tells. aare flat when instinctively rise in the center expressing grief. she also provided verbal tells. they needed me. she talked in the past tense. stephen: why'd we live? >> women lie to avoid conflict. men lie to pushed themselves. stephen: if you are familiar with the person, it is easier to detect deception, but dealing with strangers, look for overly specific statements, such as, "i do not take that $20 out of that
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more." "are your will say, crazy, i have never stolen anything in my life." leon: i grew up in a neighborhood full of lie detectors. they were called mom's. they always know. alison: exactly. all right, let's talk about the weather. it is stealing our hearts right now. brian: a great stretch of weather. tomorrow, early to start, it will be chilly, the afternoon looks nice. we are a little dry. had some e-mails from the farmers, yes, we would love some rain. unfortunately, mother nature does not have that in the cards. if we have to have a dry stretch, why not a beautiful stretch. since august 1, looking back, we are seeing a rain deficit of almost three inches downtown.
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bwi is down quite a bit. definitely a dry stretch of weather. however, a gorgeous stretch of weather. we have to take the good with the bad. the temperatures were they dropping back quickly, a combination of things -- the wind a little gusty at times. that has helped things cool. in addition, clear skies. 59 leesburg, 55 manassas, winchester 57. in town, 62 at andrews, annapolis low 60's. tomorrow morning, as we get started, upper 50's, near 60 downtown. we have some low 50's. 53derick, 53 manassas, called, upper 40's and spots. heading out the door, definitely have a jacket. remembered that the name on the
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back because in the afternoon the temperatures are going up and they will shed the jacket. .he temperatures will fall back the high pressure in charge bringing nice weather. we eventually push temperatures up the next couple days, low to mid 80's, taking us above average. we will be in the low to mid 80's tomorrow, through the day wednesday, thursday, friday. the middle section of the country all the way to the east, not much happening. no complaints. the next couple days, 84 the high tomorrow. be prepared for a cool start in the morning. the temperatures warm nicely. 86 wednesday and thursday. the seven-day forecast, pushing 90 friday and saturday, but a nice stretch. really pleasant. thanks, brian. redskinscan call that rehab weather. robert: exactly.
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they are improving. can you tell if i'm lying? the redskins add insult to injury. the latest on injuries.
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the toyota sports desk, brought to you by your local toyota dealers. thought desean jackson's injury troubles were over after sitting out the preseason. we were wrong. he has been sidelined again. first quarter of the first game of the season, desean jackson going hard down the sideline. if he caught that it would have been a touchdown. goes backwards. he leaves with a pulled hamstring. jay gruden says he is out three to four weeks. aboutr today, i asked
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this. >> he is one of those guys who makes big plays. he is a big loss, but we have some young guys who can step up, including ross. i'm excited to see what he can do as well. robert: eagles-falcons, monday night football. julio jones in the end zone. the three yard touchdown. 20-3.lcons up the eagles rally, only down by 2 with minutes left to play. , rightdford's pass through the receiver's hands, picked off. the falcons win 26-24. the you are 95 games behind division leader, who was keeping count, especially dropping two out of three against the
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marlins, but there is still baseball to be played. extra innings against the phillies. jayson werth already hit a grand slam. the solo shot. nats go up 7-6. here comes the closer, jonathan papelbon. the leadoff guy, freddie ga lpis, and this happen. leon: oh, come on. robert: sorry, leon. the phillies try to get escobar at home, the nets take the 8-7 lead. that is the final. nats win, leon, 8-7. leon: we've seen that movie before. robert: in baltimore, the orioles hosting the red sox, adam jones hits it to deep center. that short hops the wall. davis scores all the way from first, standup double for jones. o's shut out the red sox, 2-0.
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redskins announced they have bathased kicker kai for and signed the saints' former kicker. leon: still ahead, dialing the wrong number lanes a man in jail.
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alison: the clues to deception. how did attacked a lie is the top turning story. arrested for bomb threats at a harris teeter in alexandria. and the great forecast also on wjla.com. leon: we all know the importance of texting the correct number, but a florida criminal has learned his lesson the wrong way. hit the wrong digits and connect it with a deputy instead. he texted the deputy about marijuana and cocaine. investigator said they would meet up with him and arrested him on the spot. alison: thank you very much for leading us write to you. -- right to you. ♪
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♪ (vo) you can pass down a subaru forester. (dad) she's all yours. (vo) but you get to keep the memories. love. it's what makes a subaru, a subaru.
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week ahead. brian: tomorrow morning, could have some suburbs, -- good have some 40's in the suburbs. sunshine and gorgeous weather in the afternoon. we will be in the mid-80's through thursday. saturday we could hit 90. there is a chance a very isolated showers on sunday. alison: thanks, brian. leon: thank you for joining us.
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and now abc's "jimmy kimmel live." >> dicky: from hollywood, it's "jimmy kimmel live"! tonight, sofia vergara. from "abc world news," david muir. and music from kacey musgraves with cleto and the cletones. and now, today's the day -- here's jimmy kimmel! [ cheers and applause ] ♪

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