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tv   ABC7 News at 4  ABC  May 24, 2017 4:00pm-5:00pm EDT

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hill montessori. they struggled with lead last year. q mccray is there monitor the situation. q? q: the issues are plain disgusting to say the least. the parents say they are fed up. this is the third time this year that the sewage backed up in the kitchen here. that is just the beginning of the problems. sewage covering the floor in a d.c. public school kitchen. the pictures are enough to turn anyone's stomachs. parents at capitol hill montessori theired them with us. the kids' lunches are cooked off-site and delivered to the students. the school district expects the pipe to be repaired by may 30 but the parents are not satisfied. >> sewage leak is one piece of a larger problem we have that is indicative of a building crumbling. q: they shared these pictures with us. rat at the school. roaches crawling around. the a.c. units are
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for a learning environment. now the parents here are not just talking. they are all about action. in my head right now are a number of the testimonies they typed up and presented to the education committee looking for money to fix the problems here. you will hear more coming up in the 5:00 hour. reporting live from north east, i'm q mccray. abc7 news. alison: thank you. right now we want to show you this. antigovernment protesters taking to the streets in venezuela. this is a live picture now. the country top prosecutor says a 20-year-old was killed when state security forces fired a tear gas canister in the crowd. the government says the person was killed by other protesters or criminals trying to make the government look bad. this is the sixth week of protests against the government there. both the government and protesters are claiming the other side is trying to start a coup. nancy: a day
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on the campus of the university of maryland as the tensions rise after a brack student visiting campus -- black student visiting campus was killed by a white student. maryland bureau chief brad bell is live in college park. brad: from this spot outside the university of maryland chapel, i can see where the terrible crime took place, where the murder took place on saturday. a couple of hours ago this area, this garden of remembrance, this labyrinth was filled with people trying to send a message of love. you can see they came to the center and placed flowers in honor of the young victim. ["taps"] >> we are here to honor the life and memory of the extraordinary young man. we are here to grieve together. brad: on a campus still reeling from the murder five days ago, hundreds gathered at the university o
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chapel to remember the life of second lieutenant richard collins iii. >> he was gentle. he was kind. he pledged to defend our country. we are just so heart-broken that his life was cut short. brad: they held a moment of remembrance and walked to the stop where the student was buried on the maryland campus saturday morning. they placed flowers. not just for collins but also as a message that hate and racism being investigated as possible motives for the murder will not win out. >> the hate has to stop. if it doesn't stop, more people that could change the world will not be out there to do so. brad: so when we come back at 6:00, i want to show you what i'm showing you on my phone and tell you about this. this was a twitter campaign started yesterday by the students. #feartheturtle. the students were
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share their story of feeling racism on campus. this took off. there have are many tweets. at 6:00, you will hear what the students say about this and what the campus response is. university of maryland, brad bell, abc7 news. alison: 7 is on stormwatch7 with a risk of the severe weather to the south. strong storms caused the damage here near atlanta. part of georgia and florida could see the tornadoes before the day is done. at home, get ready for more rain. doug hill is tracking the forecast. doug: it's cloudy. it will stay dry until 6:00 or 7:00 at night. the radar, and the big story. the tornado watch from kentucky, tennessee, south carolina, georgia, north carolina, even portion of southside virginia. a lot of action between columbia and charlotte. we do not anticipate severe weather
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that will push off the coast. we do expect rain to be moderate at heavy and a few rumble of thunder overnight. it's cool with an easterly throw from the at lan tick. mid-60's and comfortable. the nationals forecast looks good. i think we will stay dry. the rain will hold off until later this evening. possibility late of a light sprinkle. the future cast is holding things back to 10:00 till 1:00 before the rain moves in. one for unsettled day. the weather will settle down. it's not perfect for friday and the weekend but it will settle down. we will highlight that in 12 minutes. jonathan: turning to terror in manchester now and word that the father and brother of the man accused of the deadly st. bombing were arrested in libya today. four other people were also arrested in terror raids in manchester. tonight, hundreds of soldiers are guarding places like buckingham palace and
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parliament. ariel is live in manchester. what prompted the heightened the security? reporter: well, jonathan, authorities examined the bomb that was used in monday's deadly attack determining it was intricate enough to signal a broader threat. british authorities working to untangled a web of terror activity at home and the investigation spreading abroad. they have cob tained the younger brother of salman abedi in tripoli. they arrested five people that were believed to be connected to the bombing. >> the fact he has lived there for so long. to live in obscurity is appalling. reporter: the 22-year-old using improvised explosive to turn a concert to
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senseless carnage. leading police to confirm involvement and causing the authorities to raise the terror level to critical. highest on the scale. >> it's clear that this is a network we're investigating. reporter: they are prompting them to patrol areas with an uneasy public returning to the street pausing to remember the victim. >> there is nothing any of us can do. but you want to do something. just to say we care. reporter: for law enforcement, a personal tragedy. we learned from the manchester police one of their own was killed in the bombing on monday. we know that 20 people are in hospital in critical condition. in
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jonathan: thank you. that attack came days before a big weekend here in the nation's capital. >> we are on the west lawn of the u.s. capitol where they setting up for sunday night memorial day concert. a lot of people plan to attend the concert are concerned about the threat of terrorism and asking if the homeland security raised the alert level. that is no longer in operation. now the d.h.s. puts out bulletins and so far there is no bulletin for the capitol this memorial day weekend. stephen tschida, abc7 news. nancy: t.s.a. rolling out new screening procedures this year. the travelers will have to remove any electronics bigger than cell phones from the bags. they will be screened. there is no specific threat associated with the change. there is no timeline on when it will be rolled out nationwide. alison: new developments
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for a d.c. man that called in a phony bomb threat to union station. james cherry will spend time in prison. he must pay $36,000 in restitution to amtrak. new information about last week's deadly chaos in times scare. the man accused of intentionally nowing down pedestrians with the car indict bade grand jury. richard rojas admitted he was on drugs when he drove along a sidewalk for three books. 22 people were hurt and an 18-year-old was killed. jonathan: this is just coming in. terry mcauliffe announcing on twitter he is pardoning liliana mendez. she is facing deportation after being arrested with a routine check-in with i.c.e. an mcauliffe says it may not make a difference but it could
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decides whether to separate her from her family. alison: in the next half hour, the congressional budget office expected to release analysis of the latest g.o.p. healthcare plan. that is the plan the house passed two weeks ago. this score will tell us how the american healthcare act would impact the deficit. if they determine that the bill doesn't deserve the senate consideration, they can send it back to the house for another vote. nancy: a new effort today to crackdown on the heroin and opioid epidemic in virginia. this morning they met with mark herring. >> when you are reviewing the health plan for your business. check to make sure there are
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part of the plans. so we all have a role to play in this. nancy: he said he wants better enforcement. it's blamed for 200 fatalover doses in northern virginia last year -- fatal overdoses in northern virginia last year. >> oh! >> i was really afraid. >> the monkey threw something at the folks. coming up, what the family thinks they did to get reaction at the zoo. alison: first, a new clue in a cold case brings a family closure and questions. >> sam: with all the concern about the d.c. missing kids, they designated an evaluation center for people who run away.
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nancy: new developments today. 33 years after a father and son walking in a wooded area in beltsville found a man's corpse. he had been shot several times. sam sweeney reports that police didn't know who he was until now. >> we found out he was murdered a month ago. >> for the first time in a three decade old cold case, a name and a face and now a picture. the 27-year-old former marine shot to death in 1984 is benn
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through. no identification on him. skeletal remains. they found fingerprints. sam: the f.b.i. ran his prints and they had a match. >> he had an arrest in louisiana back in 1976 when he was 19 years old. with that arrest they made an i.d. sam: with the information, they tracked down his family. they called his five sisters were shocked. >> i got a from the nephew. we need you to come. >> the family never reported his missing. they thought he started a life of his own.
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>> this is an old wound. they went through the public records check and they came up short. now the family want to know why he was in the washington, d.c. area. when he was supposed to be in north carolina. they also want to know who killed him. if you have any information, you are asked to contact prince george's county police. sam sweeney, abc7 news. alison: what seems like an increase of the number of missing children has more to do with how it's reported now with how many people are actually missing. sam ford is live to explain. sam: we are outside the sasha bruce house on capitol hill, which for years has been a haven for young people. the mayor
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working group designated as evaluation center for the missing youth once they are found. months ago when the city decided to publicize all missing persons under 16 and over 65 that generated more critical missing person reports. particularly among juveniles and d.c. became the talk of the nation about missing kids. city leaders beat down that idea but said that almost all of the messing kids are run-aways. member of the mayor's working group today said there needs to be more evaluation of why so many kids are running away. >> how many kids leave because of a conflict in the home or felt unsafe from the home environment. or sometimes they are running to something. that is part of the process. the mayor asked to us make sure that we are collecting that data so we are creating the system. we are going to
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>> so what will happen is the police will be bringing young people here first. if a young person doesn't feel safe at home they can come here and report him or herself to the place. we understand that the system should be set up in two months. jonathan: thanks. there is word that the silver line will get the 7000 rail cars around june 25. two new trains will run in the week to increase capacity. but they have run with the older and the shorter six car trains since it opened in july of 2014. nancy: this is a cool sight to see. this is the blue angels. this is a practice fight ahead of the naval academy graduation. the offic
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is friday morning at 10:04. keep your eyes open for that if you are nearby. congratulations to all of those graduating. it's impressive to see them fly in formation. jonathan: especially when the wing tip are 18 inches apart. do it all day long. alison: too bad we didn't have more sunshine for that. helped the visibility. doug: tomorrow we may get a glimmer of sunshine at times. friday is the best chance. >> the rain threatened and good stuff. this is the story. the cloudy skies. temperatures in the 60's. the story with the rain here. it's been a busy day. still is. with the
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a large tornado watch. only a few warnings we have seen in progress now. there is a ways to go. we don't expect severe weather at all. there are periods of rain later tonight. isolated rumble of thunder south and east of the city. this is 8 verz. easterly winds from the bay and the ocean to keep us cool and cloudy. but the rain as far west as luray. but at midnight it should move in. period of rain overnight. this is the map set for 6:00 in the morning. most of the steady rain is out of there by then. most of the morning and the midday should be dry. but more showers as the cold front comes in from the west. there are numerous thunderstorms. we could see them through the evening and through tomorrow night. looking ahead to friday. there could be a lingering shower in the morning. we will see improvement in the weather
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there is a half inch of metro. inch north and east as well from the multiple rounds of showers and the isolated thunderstorms. for the next 48 hours. this is what we call for tonight. rain developing. heavy overnight. 60 for a low. 75 with the showers and the storms in the afternoon. memorial day weekend. sunday and monday is 30 to a 40% chance of the afternoon thunderstorms. partly sunny. lower 80's. best we can do for the weekend. steve rudin will be back later this hour to look at the ten-day outlook for you. nancy: next at 4:00, "talk to me, goose." did i nail it? jonathan: "top gun." nancy: what is tom cruise is saying about "top gun 2." jonathan: that was 30 years ago. alison: is it a new frisbee?
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how could this hold the key to solving a soggy situation? kellye: i'm kellye lynn at montgomery college. how their win could "tom went to washington to take on the insurance companies and the credit card companies and the wall street banks... that's what tom perriello is about." progressive causes have been my life's work. i'm tom perriello... and before and after congress i led non-profits to battle climate change, poverty and president bush's attacks on civil rights. now i'm running for governor to reduce economic inequality. because together, we really can build a virginia that works for everyone. introducing fios gigabit connection. superfast internet at an incredible price. with speeds up to 940 megs. that's 20x faster than most people have. and, it's just $79.99 a month online for 1 year.
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nancy: in today's "spotlight on education" they are celebrating a win in the robotics com
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space exploration. the robotics contest attracts students from around the country. >> we were competing with various universities. kellye: it engages them for space exploration. >> if you are going to collect fuel or air, you need to do it before the people arrive. >> they used coating to make robots efficient. >> all of that had to be set up in the code. the team won the virtual competition, l
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computers. the prize is bragging rights and 3,000. now they plan to prepare for the physical competition next year when they get an opportunity to work for the real robots. >> you think nothing is impossible. you have something that you had no idea about. you figured it out. knowledge that could have practical applications in space. nancy: this is what they are doing in college. think about what they do 10 or 15 years from now. jonathan: it's administered by nasa and the university of new mexico. think about the applications as parents. you can round up the kids. send robot in there. alison: good thing for the smart people in the future. jonathan: and still ahead the president meets the pope. the issue that the pontiff is pushing trump not to
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>> respected teen who just made the biggest purchase of his life dies overnight. i'm kevin lewis with that story still to come. alison: new at 5:00, stopping smash-and-grabs in the district. we ask d.c. mayor muriel bowser if police did you know 90% of couples disagree on mattress firmness? fortunately there's a bed where you both get what you want every night. enter sleep number and the semi-annual sale going on now. sleepiq technology tells you how well you slept and what adjustments you can make. she likes the bed soft. he's more hardcore. so your sleep goes from good to great to wow! only at a sleep number store. oh, and right now it's our lowest price ever on our temperature balancing i8 bed. save $700. go to sleepnumber.com for a store near you.
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of providing reliable energy and that'll never change. what is changing, is our name to dominion energy. it's a reflection of our commitment to energy innovation and renewable sources like solar, wind... and cleaner energy like natural gas. and we'll continue to innovate, upgrade technology, protect our environment and serve our communities. dominion energy. more than a new name, a new way of seeing energy.
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nancy: back now with the latest on the terror on manchester. they raided the apartment building in the center of the city. four people were arrested as the police investigate a network of people believed to be behind the bombing at a ariana grande in which 22 people died. ariana grande announced she is canceling all the shows on the tour until june 5. alison: the manchester bombing is the 13th terror attack to hit western europe since 2015. michelle: isil claims responsibilities for most of the killings that killed more than 300 people. we take a look it at what can be done to stop it. the manchester bombing is the latest in the string of a deadly terrorist attack to hit europe. >> this reminds us we must be on guard to protected citizens. >> the european cities are the regu
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terrorists. there have been five terror attacks in western an northern europe that killed 50 people and injured dozens more. >> the wake of the blast, britain deployed military and raised the threat level to critical for the first time in a decade. there is more that the u.s. can do to keep americans safe. >> we have to do more to keep people out of the country who want to do us harm. tightening up on the visa waiver programs. reporter: president trump softened his tone on islam. >> that is why it's so important that the president signaled to the world he wants to have arab allies and muslim allies. now we have to signal that to the muslim communities so they know they can cooperate to help us find people who have become radicalized and want to tell us. >> defeating terrorism is a difficult challenge. but the main focus is for americans to remain vigilant.
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correctness, islamophobia deter us. you have to notify authorities if you see something suspicious. >> the number of the people killed in europe increased in the last few years. in the u.s. there have been fewer than ten deadly terror attacks since september 11, 2001. jonathan? jonathan: thank you for that. right now president trump is in brussels for a series of meetings with the nato leaders. he arrived there after meeting with pope francis in the vatican. they talked about terrorism, peace and climate change. the president visited the sistine chapel. nancy: the pope gave trump his copy of the climate change. >> if president trump reads the pope's writing i'm
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from the agreement. it would be a historic misstep that would massively disadvantage both america's businesses and diplomats and the environment. >> president trump already said he would put off his decision whether to pull out of terrorist agreement until after his trip. 40 senate democrats sent the president a letter today demanding the united states honor the commitment. jonathan: join me tonight on newschannel8. i'll host a town hall. we will call it the "wild, wild west wing." i with the chief political correspondent scott thuman will look at the hectics week for the president since he took office at 7:00 on newschannel8. michelle: doug hill is back. we have familiar with the pattern. clouds and then the rain shows up. will we see it again? doug: yes. the rain moves in tonight. i think it
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the nats will get their game in. and i saw that they are going to move up the game tomorrow to get it in. there is cloudy weather this everything. later tonight, we will see the possibility of showers to the area. they are coming from the carolinas from east tennessee. in that area, they have been intense. we don't know we will see anything like that here. we get heavier rain overnight. rumble of thunder. not the severe variety. temperatures 55 to 60. the winds are light overnight. they will start to pick up out of the east and the northeast. the first big batch of rain goes through. we head through overnight tonight and early thursday morning. this time it's at 8:00. most of us have moved through. we get to the afternoon and the everything with the advance of a cold front with the west. that will fire up the chances of the showers and the thunderstorms. it's numerous. a look at 5:what on the future cast. it's not until friday mid-to-late morning we will
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in the region. we leave you with this, look at the memorial day forecast. partly sunny, isolated thunderstorm. saturday. 80. good day. sunday and monday a good day. it's unsettled. we will call for a 40% chance of the thunderstorms both afternoons. that is it. we will keep an eye on the weekend. jonathan: thanks. developing at 4:00, a teen killed in a car crash driving home from his part-time job last night. this happened along a wanedy stretch of temple hill road in clinton. kevin lewis is live with what happened and how the 17-year-old is being remembered. kevin: absolutely. they are looking at all possibilities here. speed. distracted driving and the potential for hydroplaning. the young man was respected by the peers and loved by his extended family. is there you don't . to bury
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>> kansas still numb to the fact her cousin norman white is gone. >> around 10:00 last night, the 17-year-old crashed into this large tree. along temple hill road in clinton. he had been driving home from the evening shift at pizza hut. white was a junior at gwen park high school in brandywine where he took part in the automotive academy and played on the football team. >> he went to work, he went to school. he played football. he was a really good kid. kevin: last summer white committed himself to god. picture here being baptized at the first baptist church of glenarden. his family confident he is now in heaven. >> he loved everybody. it's a tragedy we lost him at a young age. he had so much life and potential left. so much more to give. it's our job now as a family to carry out his legacy
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kevin: his family tells me he had just saved up enough money to buy his first car. a 1999 toyota camry. all new at 5:00, we will take a closer look at the stretch of road some refer to as death row. we are live in brandywine, i'm kevin lewis, abc7 news. michelle: coming up, good news about the commuter route in d.c. but first, most cafes probably wouldn't want to see this on its table. find out why these are a
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jonathan: back to what could be the answer for culinary question for the ages. how do you keep pizza crust from getting soggy? behold apple's answer. the tech giant filed a patent in 2010. i'm all lost. how will it work? this is a special box they created. the sick lar box's secret is opening at the top to let the moisture escape. they plan to use it at the california campus at some point soon. nancy: so high-tech. michelle: hole at the top. nancy: fancy.
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jonathan: crumbs can be a problem. nancy: but this theater has a show named "rats" so it is creating a rat cafe to help enhance the whole experience for everyone by adding, get this, the real thing. >> this is a story we tell here at the san francisco dungeon. what better way than to have the people experience rats in person with the coffee and danish before they see the dungeon show in person. nancy: rat with the danish. the guys look clean. every table has ambassador rat. by animal rescue. jonathan: it's all fun and games until someone gets bit. nancy: they look adorable. it's letting people know domesticated rat make great -- jo
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michelle: i don't want to see it while i'm eating. jonathan: is that a hot date? where are we going? a rat show. naps it would be memorable. talk to your friends about that. michelle: i don't want to remember that. it wasn't rats that bothered a family on a recent trip to the zoo. >> my gosh. michelle: that is great ape throwing that stone at a family at the zoo. the woman who shot the video was visiting with her daughters. that is a huge stone. her mother and her friends. when this happened. a lot of people could have been hurt.
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they admitted they were being loud. but a warning sign is the loud noises. jonathan: they will throw things. michelle: that would be helpful. jonathan: you just block a sign. if they get loud they will get thrown at. coming up next, the secret to the grocery store success. "7 on your side" with what they do to get you to spend more. >> new leaders at metro cracking down on the fraud and waste. in the first tv interview we hear from the new
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head in now to grab the five dollar footlong spicy italian. loaded with salami and pepperoni. for a limited time, the spicy italian footlong is just five dollars. it's a big value for even gger flavor. only at subway. to take on the "tom insurance companies and the credit card companies and the wall street banks...
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progressive causes have been my life's work. i'm tom perriello... and before and after congress i led non-profits to battle climate change, poverty and president bush's attacks on civil rights. now i'm running for governor to reduce economic inequality. because together, we really can build a virginia that works for everyone. michelle: side side with consumer alert -- "7 on your side" with consumer alert. the convertible seats have harness that may not protect the iz -- protect your kids in a crash. they have a code of 201406 on a tag on the webbing. grayco will notify those who register the seat and replace the harness free of charge. jonathan: metro is working hard to make sure that the passengers stay safe and fix the tarnished image. a new inspector
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big step in the process. brianne carter sat down with him to talk about the challenges in that job. >> if you have an organization, no matter where, federal government, not city, that takes in revenue that pays people and procures product. there is a likelihood for fraud. brianne: bringing what he calls an aggressive approach, the new inspector general hit the ground running. >> i encourage people to open a fake e-mail address. >> it came under fire last year after they report that they were notified of the track reports. cherrington not commenting on the specifics of the ongoing cases. cherrington says they
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technology. additional efforts to prosecute. >> terminating them is great. but we want to prosecute so people know we are serious. brianne: he says that he also plans to bring additional transparency to the o.i.g. so the riders know exactly what is going on. >> if we do 60 audits with no value, and that is a number, that doesn't do anybody any good. i want precise thoughtful, impactful audits that can help them change the system and bring money back to metro. >> the new i.d. says as a yellow line commuter he knows what the riders go through and he plans to bring inclusive approach to make sure that metro is not only efficient but safe. in arlington, brianne carter, abc7 news. michelle: new developments in the last hour about arthur macar boulevard. nancy: after saying it won't be open until friday but it'
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a huge commuter route for people there. the crews spent the day fixing it after water main repair last friday. michelle: we have been there. a short shopping list turns into a much more expensive trip to the grocery store. what if self-criminal isn't totally to blame here -- self-control isn't totally to blame here? john matarese listens to secrets that will get you to spend more. john: do you ever notice if you go in the grocery store to buy milk and bread you spend $40 on things you didn't need? it's designed that way thanks to the super market tricks you need to know about. produce in the front, mill income the back. candy at the checkout. it's designed to get you to spend more time and money. and it works. >> there are two or three aisles now for the snack food. they have one just for
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john: we found secrets that get you to spend more. >> the super narcotics have a lot of strategies to get the consumers to purchase food. john: see the colorful produce? it puts you in a happy shopping mood. and the displays, they are for the products that pay for promotion. >> not always are they good buys but it is placed there to entice you to purchase it. john: when it comes to get you to buy items it's all about the placement. put kids items where kids will find them. that brings us to the checkout lane stopped with the sweets for the kids to demand. >> with a checkout counter at the place to get impulse buying. what we see are candy primarily. john: if you much have it, candy is cheaper in the aisles. another secret, presliced cheese in the milk section can be half the price of freshly cut cheese in deli counter. did ever wonder why there
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so many flavors of cheerios and oreso? to dominate shelf space so you won't see the other brands. >> the more shelf space they have the more consumers sees the products. >> shopping carts have gotten bigger. lauren says use the smart cart and you will spend less. grocery stores are like casinos. it's daytime inside and hard to leave. but knowing the secrets will help you be a better shopper. do you decide to put something back at the last minute? some are removing flax shelves to make it tougher to remove stuff behind. so you don't waste your money, john matarese, abc7 news. jonathan: breaking news to tell you about coming to us from the congressional budget office c.b.o. the report that we are waiting earlier in the show. we told you it may come out. it shows that the
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jonathan: we need to teach people to relax. they need time away to recharge. michelle: some members of the military enjoy down time in new york this week. the ships started arriving along the hudson river for fleet week. this is the 29th year for the u.s. navy and the coast guard event. jonathan: they will have a go
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for speed, tom cruise has you covered. >> before we let you go, "top gun 2" is it true? >> it's true! >> really? >> it's true. >> really? >> yes! >> really? >> the actor went on to tell the tv hosts filming will start on a sequel to the wildly popular 1980's film next year. no word which other actors or actresses from the original may have signed on. the first movie did a lot to help people sign on as avreateors in the naver -- aviator in the naver i have and the air -- navy and the air force. michelle: he looked thrilled to let the secret out. nancy: steve, what do you have? steve: we have weather. if you are going for the baseball game, there could be showers if it goes to extra innings. it's to the west of us but on the way. the day planner shows a high of 75. the showers and the thunderstorms are likely moving toward the late
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this is the future cast and what it looks like 6:00 a.m. tomorrow morning. wet along the beltway for the commute. lull in the action. peaks of the sunshine mid-day. and wet driving home tomorrow. with the better chance for showers and the few thunderstorms. once we get all this out of the way it will begin to improve. let's talk about the weekend. going to the delmarva beaches, the temperatures are in the lower 70's. a better chance of thunderstorms on sunday and monday. if you stay closer to home in the district, arlington, alexandria, prince george's county, lower 80's. challenge for thunderstorms on sundays and monday. it's not a washout. just be sure to keep watchful eye to the sky. look at the ten-day outlook. but will fall in the 7 o's for
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jonathan: it's an annual trip for maryland women lacrosse. robert: the final toush. they have been there nine straight times. won three titles in that time. not to mention they were undefeated this year. 17-0. if architect needs no introduction. kathy reese. she is as humble as can be. >> i got to give the players all the credit. they are coming out, working hard, flaying together well. enjoying
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they have put together a great season so far and looking forward to continuing to compete this weekend. robert: but she has a right to brag a little. nine straight final fours. head coach for ten years. >> i can't speak highly enough of kathy as a coach. in that regard, her steady and the calm manner in trying times is something that rubs off on the whole team. >> this year wasn't a given. they trailed by four goals to stony brook but a come back was almost inevitable. >> no matter what position our team is in. i know she believes in us. i know she whole heartedly believes she can do what needs to be done. i know they will come out on top. robert: with the coach of the week, i'm robert burton. larry: at
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tonight. a cockroach, a rodent. sewage in the school cafeteria. abc7 has outrage from the parents. new developments piling up after the manchester bombing. why they are zeroing in on the suspect's family. and you'll regret the overstuffed carry-ons and what is being looked at by the t.s.a. backed up sewage, rodent and roaches, a few things that the staff at capitol hill montessori school in d.c. are dealing with now. alison: this is a year after leading with lead in the water at the same school. q mccray live with how they are trying to fix the problems. q? q: this was the issue of sewage that brought us to the montessori school today. but when we got here, we found out that sewage was the tim of the massive iceberg of problems at the
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feces, urine and toilet paper covering the floor. >> the smell, if you could have smelled it, you would have been appalled. >> these are pictures of montessori. the kids' lunches are cooked off-site and delivered to the students. the broken pipe will be repaired by may 30, the school said. >> it's disgusting and disturbing that this is the third time this has happened. >> but there is more. parents say rats roam the school. roaches creep around. the it toes back up. and the a.c. you wanteds roar in class time. >> everything is a problem. it causes stress. q: they agree that the teacher and principal have outstanding learning environment. >> we appreciate that. q: the problem was tha

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