tv News 9 Tonight ABC November 11, 2015 1:07am-1:42am EST
1:07 am
grow jobs. mike: the latest system moves through tonight into part of tomorrow with rain for many, but not all. which areas get the most, plus how much we could see tom: salem police say a man used a chat website to find kids to create child sex abuse images. what parents should know to protect their kids. shelley: former president jimmy carter gives an update on his cancer diagnosis. the positive test results he' s sharing. >> no one covers new hampshire like we do. now, wdm you are news nine tonight -- wmur news 9 tonight. shelley: the 4th republican presidential debate of the primary season just wrapped up in wisconsin. eight candidates shared the stage tonight and while the focus was supposed to be on the economy candidates didn' t shy away from mixing it up. good evening, i' m shelley walcott. tom: i' m tom griffith. let' s get right to wmur
1:08 am
political reporter adam sexton with a wrap up of the action. adam: the last debate was panned for moderators becoming too much part of the story. tonight the candidates almost ran away with things a couple of times as they sparred over issues like immigration and foreign policy. >> we should vet all candidates. i have no problem with being fe ted. what i do have a problem with is being lied about, and then putting that out there as truth. adam: an extended exchange on immigration led to an attack on the front runner, donald trump. >> we have to stop illegal immigration. it' s hurting us from every standpoint and causing tremendous difficulty with respect to drugs and what that
1:09 am
>> if people think that we are going to ship eleven million people who are law-abiding, who are in this country, and somehow pick them up at their house and somehow ship them out to mexico? think about the families. think about the children. >> to send them back, 500,000 a and it' s not embracing american values, and it would tear communities apart, and it would send a signal that america is not the kind of country i know it is. >> the politics of it would be very, very different if a bunch of lawyers or bankers were crossing the rio grande. or if a bunch of people with journalism degrees were coming over and driving down the wages in the press. adam: senate colleagues marco rubio and rand paul tangled over national defense. >> the family is the most important institution. i know grand is a committed isolationist.
1:10 am
>> how is it conservative to add a trillion dollars expenditure for the federal government? >> carly fiorina continues to push her outsider, ceo credentials. >> i have led innovative businesses in the most highly competitive industry in the world for a decade. the truth is, the secret sauce of america is innovation and entrepreneurship. schedule, the democrats, this saturday in iowa. and believe it or not, that' s the only debate for the democrats on the schedule in iowa before the caucuses. adam sexton, wmur news 9. tom: four republican candidates ranking lower in the polls debated earlier in the evening. governors chris christie, bobby jindal, former senator rick santorum, and former governor mike huckabee covered issues including the economy, balancing budgets, and creating jobs.
1:11 am
>> i was in new hampshire last week and a woman approached me after the town hall meeting and she said to me, governor, i' m really concerned. i don' t quite know how to describe it, but every month when my bills come in, i feel this awful anxiety in the pit of my stomach that i won' t be able to pay them that month. >> i propse a 20% flat tax, 0% -- 20% on corporations, 0% rate initially for manufacturers. >> the most important thing are to make. are we willing to cut the government economy to save the that' we' ve got to answer. >> nobody who is poor wants to be. that is a nonsense statement, they are working as hard as they can, but if they work harder
1:12 am
they get punished. , tom: two candidates who' d previously appeared in the undercard debate were not invited tonight because of their low polling senator lindsey graham and former governor george pataki. shelley: the next debate is coming up soon. weekend. and martin o' malley will meet saturday night in iowa in a debate that will air on cbs. republicans are next scheduled to debate on december 15 in nevada. you' ll see that on cnn. the campaign trail will bring four republican candidates to new hampshire tomorrow. ted cruz, lindsey graham, rick santorum, and donald trump all have events planned in the granite state. democratic presidential candidate bernie sanders will also be campaigning here. you can find details in the candidate tracker in the politics section of wmur.com. tom: tonight democrat hillary clinton finished her two day visit to new hampshire with event at dartmouth college. she also met with veterans in derry this morning. wmur'
1:13 am
s message from hanover. >> hillary clinton' s final event of the day was at dartmouth college with a conversation focused on growing the economy mixed in with some questions from the audience including one about donald trump. hillary clinton is keeping an eye on donald trump' s campaign but says it' s not her business to worry about who republicans nominate. >> i will run against anybody they nominate and if it' s him, put on your seat belts, that' s all i can tell you. adam: -- mike the focus of her : visit to dartmouth college was the economy. former governor john lynch asked her questions. >> what do you consider so special about the state of new hampshire? clinton laid out her vision to keep the economy moving. she says the next president needs to invest in infrastructure and clean energy and make it easier for people to start and grow small businesses. >> we need the kind of growth that reveals itself in bigger paychecks and more good jobs for s why i' ve said getting
1:14 am
incomes rising again with good paying jobs is the defining economic challenge of our time. >> nice to meet you. >> earlier clinton meet customers and staff of the bridge cafe in manchester. she talked with voters and took pictures with many of them. clinton began the day at the vfw in derry where she rolled out her plan to help veterans saying she would get government agencies to coordinate with each other. >> as we work to improve the va i will work as long and hard as it takes to prevent republicans from privatizing it and part of a vote misguided ideological crusade. >> back at dartmouth clinton says her economic agenda would benefit the middle class. >> i am running for president because i want every american to go as far as his or her talent and hard work can take them. >> this is the end of a two day swing in the granite state for clinton. as of now she has no scheduled visits to the granite state.
1:15 am
news 9. shelley: investigators say a man from salem used a website to lure young girls into child pornography. police say the victims are under ten-years-old and they suspect there could be hundreds of them around the world. jean mackin joins us live from the newsroom with what we' re learning. jean: investigators say an unemployed man from salem was living in his mother' s basement, and using a computer to target girls around the globe. investigators say 33-year-old brian powell first appeared on the radar of the new hampshire internet crimes against children task force in june. salem police were tipped off leading to monday' s arrest at his mother' s house on lou avenue investigators say he was unemployed, living in the basement, and using the website omegle to find 8 and 9-year-old girls and entice them into nudity and lewd acts while he recorded chats and camera
1:16 am
x -- >> it appears he originally engaged them in chat and disgused himself as someone the would open up to whether he disguised himself as a like aged girl he was certainly representing himself as someone he is not. jean the website says its for friends and cautions to keeps videos clean. investigators say powell' s victims are from around the world one ip address in the united kingdom they say at this point its not clear if any are local. s mother spoke to us off camera saying she did not know basement. >> i don' t know what happened. he' it' s a private time for us and he' s going to get help. >> they design things to get young children to fall prey to them. jean the executive director of : the lil iguana' s safety foundation says monitor all online activity, and teach
1:17 am
children to get permission to talk to strangers. >> always talk to them, tell them that person on the other side is not who they pretend to be. jean: investigators say brian powell was also online researching how to adopt a child of his own. he' s behind bars tonight on $75,000 bail. live in the newsroom, jean mackin, wmur news9. shelley: portsmouth police have arrested a man who tried to solicit a minor for sex. investigators say jon rousseau placed an online ad. he thought he was talking to a 14-year-old girl, but police say it was an undercover detective. officers arrested rousseau when he thought he was meeting the girl. he' s due in court on thursday. tom: plymouth police say a man confessed to two pharmacy robberies today. just before noon, a employee at cvs on highland street said a man showed a gun to the pharmacist and demanded oxycodone. police arrested christopher lenkowski soon after, based on his description and the description of his car.
1:18 am
officers say while in custody, he confessed to this robbery and another one at the same store last month. dover police want to talk to a complex around the time of a car fire last week. surveillance video shows a man at lilac gardens apartments around the time a car was set on fire. detectives say at this time, they only want to talk to the man in these images. call the dover crimeline if you recognize him. shelley: people in bedford gathered to tackle the heroin and opioid epidemic tonight. the police chief proposed the substance abuse summit as a way to open dialogue on the issue and provide resources to those who need them. the focus tonight was what is being done and what still needs to be done to effectively address heroin and prescription drug abuse. >> bedford here has had two drug overdose deaths this year, up from zero in the past year, both
1:19 am
attributed to a combination of fentenyl and heroin. manchester has had 80 drug deaths so far this year that' s enough to fill 4 classrooms of children that are no longer with us. shelley: perhaps most telling about these community forums are the turn outs, mostly family members, who are terrified about a fatal outcome if something isn' t done to shutdown the drug pipeline. tom: former president jimmy carter is fighting cancer tonight, and coming up, the positive outlook on his help. >> it' s worth a shot. if it doesn' t work, i can say i tried. mike: rain for some, and a look at the rest of the week in the forecast, coming up. tom now to our ulocal hot shot. : america will give a special salute to its veterans tomorrow
1:21 am
u-local members, by logging onto tom: doctors say former president jimmy carter is responding well to treatment for cancer. according to a new statement from carter' s spokeswoman, his body is showing no evidence of new tumors. the 91-year-old announced in august that doctors had removed cancer from his liver and discovered four small tumors on his brain. daily fantasy sports companies draft kings and fan duel have been ordered to stop operating in new york. shelley: the state' s attorney general says the companies are
1:22 am
engaged in illegal gambling because they' re promoted like a lottery and are essentially games of chance, not skill. both companies insist their games are legal. draft kings, which is based in boston, says it will pursue all legal options to keep operating in new york. nevada regulators ordered the sites to shut down there last month. a man from quincy massachusetts wants massachusetts to move into a different time zone. the change would mean the sun winter but it would also rise later in the morning. tom: the owner of a water park in candia is refusing to go down without a fight. liquid planet is set to hit the auction block december 2 but kevin dumont has chained himself to one of his water slides in a
1:23 am
business from foreclosure. dumont hopes a potential investor will step forward. he says he needs about a million and a half to pay off debt. >> what went wrong? i opened up a water park in 2008, so the economy crashed and it rained for two years. and 2008-2009, i mean, it rained almost every day in the summer. tom: dumont says he believes his water park is worth the cold days and nights, camped out on top of the slide. shelley: volunteers from across the state were recognized for their commitment to service the 13th annual spirit of new hampshire awards was held at the capitol center for the arts in more than one hundred volunteers and organizations were honored. this is the largest statewide volunteer award ceremony. >> everyone who was nominated is doing phenomenal work for their organizations and it' s such a joy that we can celebrate all
1:24 am
these fantastic people tonight. shelley: gale stanley from the family resource center the upper room was honored with the spirit of new hampshire award, the highest level of recognition. congratulation. tom: nashua and manchester have canceled tomorrow' s veterans day parade because of expected rain. mike: we need the rain, but the timing is not going to work out. 10 days in november with basically nothing, so we really need it. sunshine today, no problem whatsoever. side. to creep into the picture so little bit of light rain is beginning to develop. the heaviest clearly has been offshore and that is where will remain overnight and into the day tomorrow. notice across a good portion of
1:25 am
northern parts of pennsylvania, steady rain is moving in as we go through the overnight, especially the lakes region and points south and over toward the coast. right now quite chilly, right at freezing in whitefield, 36 atop mount washington. the upper levels not all that chilly and the winds coming in on shore at about 5-10 miles per hour. it' s very dry to the north, so that will cut off the northern edge of precipitation right around the heart of the white mountains late tonight and early more morning. there could be a few showers but most of the steady rain will line from the southern white mountains and points south through about midday tomorrow. the rain not all that heavy, moving over toward the coast right now and then that will give way to light showers and more will build in from the
1:26 am
south and southwest as we advance to the course of the overnight stretch. here' s a look at the time line on futurecast. have your showers developing and southern parts of the state and the steadiest rain will likely hit during the morning commute tomorrow. by about 1:00 in the afternoon we will be in the defined back edge of that form. that will pivot offshore after 2:00 at 3:00. the wind will begin to pick up in the overnight into tomorrow after the north and northeast, especially along the coast where we could see wind gusts up to 35 miles per hour at that time. this will band of rain will produce showers thursday afternoon into the early evening. projected precipitation amounts, not all that much. the blue shade, possibly half inch of no little bit more than that.
1:27 am
wind speeds not all that strong, five or 10 miles per hour but they do crank up to possibly 30 plus, especially at the coast. later tonight and into the day tomorrow. here we go, breezy and damp with needed rain, not all that great for outdoor plans for tomorrow. by afternoon it begins to dry out from northwest to southeast and the next shot of showers this thursday afternoon. friday is fairly dry and breezy. a couple of mixed rain or snow showers friday night and early saturday especially in the mountains but overall a typical november pattern after the warmth last week. tom: let' s jump over to jamie
1:28 am
1:29 am
straight game. early on. dunk. 16-6 bucks. he scored 16 points in the game. the celts fought back. kelly olynik with a driving layup to tie the game 24-24 at the end of the first quarter. he scored the celts go on a run 11. here. isiah thomas 3 pointer. 20. then evan turner from deep. celts were up 46-42 at the break. a big 3rd quarter for the c' s including jae crowder' s 3 pointer. 66-57. the c' s were up by 17 at the end of the 3rd quarter. no quit in the c' s. evan turner drives and hits the fadeway. c' s win 99-83. buffalo sabres at the tampa bay lightning. sabres rookie jack eichel is off to a good start in his career. the hobey baker winner last year in college hockey scored his 6th goal of the season. eichel is from north chemlsford,
1:30 am
in nashua. eichel adds an assist and the sabres win 4-1. the monarchs played their 4th game in 5 days tonight at the kalamazoo wings in michigan. manchester picks up the 7-3 win thanks to the hat trick by matt white. the monarchs host the toledo walleye for 3 games starting friday night. womens college hockey dartmouth hosted umaine. gets away with taking down a big green player. she skates in and scores up high inside the post. 1-0 maine after 1. they double the lead. audra richards is wide open as she shoots. scored high to the glove side of christie honor, 2-0. dartmouth gets one back, a flurry out front. our view is blocked by some guy's head. hockey etiquette. we missed it. 2-1 maine. black bears win 4-1. new hampshire lost a great one yesterday when hubie mcdonough
1:31 am
jr. passed away at the age of 83. mcdonough played football at central and hockey at unh, but he is most known for his many years of coaching. he joined manchester memorial when the school opened in 1960, coaching football and baseball, and then hockey when that sport was added. winning multiple state titles. the football stadium at memorial is named after him, along with bob chabot. coach mcdonough had suffered recent strokes that left his health in decline. he will be missed. we were at football practice today checking out the newly , rejuvenated wildcats. its amazing what a huge win can do for a program. even one as accomplished as the one in durham. unh took down 5th ranked richmond on saturday afternoon. at 5-4 overall, unh can possibly make the playoffs if they win their last 2 games at 3-6 albany saturday night, and then hosting 3-6 maine next saturday. they are right back in the hunt. >> are think r -- i think our confidence carried over.
1:32 am
week and a half. it' s an opportunity to win games if they do things well. >> a lot of momentum, a really good team, ranked fifth in the nation. it gives us a sense of identity and confidence as well. >> it is a momentous thing for us. the webby play this weekend and the past weekend as well, i think it will just carry over. jamie: we would love to see them in the playoffs for the 12th year in a row. ,: still to come on news 9 this is no ordinary diamond ring. shelley: the record price it
1:33 am
tom: a giant pink diamond sold for a record price at auction today. christie' s auction house says the more than 16-carat stone sold for $28.5 million. the anonymous buyer is from china. shelley: the cushion-shaped pink diamond is set in a ring, surrounded with a double row of smaller white diamonds. it' s part of a two-day auction of high-priced jewelry in switzerland. thanks for joining us for news9 tonight at 11:00. tom: jimmy kimmel live is next,
1:35 am
1:36 am
are you too busy to watch what you're cooking? tired of all that burnt food going to waste? worried about your kids getting burned or a loved one starting a fire in the kitchen? well, those problems are a thing of the past. introducing the revolutionary precision induction cooktop from nuwave, the leader in portable induction cooking technology. the nuwave heats up twice as fast, uses up to 70% less energy and is safer than any cooktop. best of all, the nuwave is the only portable cooktop that gives you precise temperature control with the simple press of a button. professional chefs create great-tasting meals by maintaining the precise temperature for the perfect amount of time. well, now you can get professional results too, with the nuwave precision induction cooktop. >> the key to great food is knowing how to control the temperatures of what you're cooking. >> now the p.i.c. is allowing people at home to cook like you can in a restaurant. >> i know that when i turn it on that temperature, it's going to be that temperature. there's no guessing. >> announcer: not only does the
1:37 am
nuwave give you precise temperature control, it heats up twice as fast as an electric cooktop. >> i put the water in the pan and turned around and the next thing i knew, it was boiling. >> what amazes me about p.i.c. is how quickly it will heat up. induction technology is just unbelievable. >> announcer: and because there's no flame to catch fire, no hot coils to burn you, the nuwave precision induction cooktop is the safest cooktop ever invented. look what happens with this egg: the pan is hot, but the cooktop is not. that's the magic of induction cooking. make pasta in half the time. melt butter with no chance of it burning. melt chocolate to creamy perfection. make sauces with perfect temperature control. >> it's small, it's efficient, it's clean and it's safe. >> announcer: and because it's portable, you can take it anywhere, so it's perfect for buffets and outdoor parties. to tell you more, let's join bob warden and jenny repko at the nuwave test kitchen in chicago. >> let me ask you, do you hate boil-overs and the mess they
1:38 am
make in the kitchen? do you hate burnt grilled cheese sandwiches or shriveled-up bacon? >> what about over-fried chicken that's all greasy, or dried-out oatmeal, overdone pork chops or charred steak? >> well, what if i was to tell you that instead, you could now have perfect grilled cheese sandwiches, perfectly browned evenly every single time? >> all that cheese is melted in there, so delicious. >> perfectly melted. and i could have perfectly grilled steaks set at 350 degrees that give me a perfect medium rare steak or however you like it and it's never going to burn. perfect pork chops, and not only pork chops... >> right, salmon, grilled vegetables, sausage, perfect every time. >> what if i told you, when you fried your chicken, it was going to be fried at the perfect temperature of 375, gently, perfectly, crispy, never soaking up too much oil. >> that's hard to do. >> in fact, that's the problem with the old stovetops, whether it's gas or electric-- you can turn it up and down, but because you don't have precise control, you're going to get boil-overs. because you don't have precise
1:39 am
the cereal on the bottom from time to time. and because you don't have precise temperature control, you can't help but burn a steak or a pork chop on your stove. you see, you're not the bad cook in the kitchen. the stovetop is the bad cook in the kitchen. >> that's right, and those days of bad cooking are over, thanks to the fine folks here at nuwave, makers of the number-one-selling countertop oven in the world. >> well, they've done it again. you're looking at the new wave in stovetop cooking. now, this ingenious invention will make your life a whole lot easier in the kitchen and a whole lot shorter and a lot more fun. we're going to show you how and why every meal-- breakfast, snacks, lunch, dinner, grilled steaks, fondues and buffets-- will be made perfectly every time. becausnow, for the first time, you can precisely control the cooking temperature. >> announcer: now you can live well for less with the nuwave precision induction cooktop. it's the most energy-efficient
1:40 am
the nuwave p.i.c. uses induction technology. the secret is an internal series of copper coils. these coils generate a magnetic and pans. the magnetic field causes invisible molecules to begin vibrating rapidly, creating heat, so the cookware itself heats the food. >> one of my passions are butter sauces. and one of the challenges of cooking a butter sauce is that if you get it too hot, you know, over 135 degrees, it breaks down. if you get it too cool, it congeals. the beauty of the nuwave p.i.c. is that i can control the temperature exactly and keep the sauce for an extended period of time. that's such an added bonus for a professional cook and a home cook. >> let me show you this unusual pan. bob, what did we do here? >> well, we actually cut a pan and cut a section out, because in here you can see we have cereal rapidly boiling, right? >> boiling away. >> i can put my hand right there. >> it's amazing. move your hand. i'm going to put an ice cube right there.
61 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
WMUR (ABC)Uploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=1453901100)