tv News4 at 6 NBC May 19, 2016 6:00pm-7:00pm EDT
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officials say there are strong indications that egyptair flight 804 was most likely brought down by an explosion. >> but they say it is too early to know whether that blast was caused by terrorism or a mechanical malfunction. there were 66 people on board that plane. three of them were children. grieving relatives are going to the airports in cairo and in paris. they're all hoping for a miracle. egyptair said this afternoon that the first bits of wreckage had been found in the mediterranean sea, but they retracted that statement about an hour ago and although night has fallen in that region, the search for the plane's black boxes is a top priority. >> no americans are believed to have been on board that plane, but president obama and his national security team are keeping a close eye on the investigation as the crash raises questions about the safety of air travel here at home. steve handelsman join us now from
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steve? >> reporter: the fbi director is not jumping to the conclusion that this was definitely terrorism. there's been no claim of responsibility. james comey said there is no evidence this was an act committed on purpose. several officials are advising americans they can still feel confident about flying here in the u.s. and to the u.s. in paris where the airliner took off before ending up in the sea. a u.s. navy plane joined the search for bodies, wreckage, and clues to what looks like possible terrorism. this egyptair airbus 320, 66 people aboard, no reported americans, flight 804 left paris for chiropractairo, but swervedf radar, and crashed into the med terrain -- mediterranean. there was no distress ll
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seven months ago, isis blew up an airliner leaving egypt. police are talking to ground crews at charles de gaulle airport in paris. american intelligence is helping check the passenger list for terror suspects. what about the risk of travel to the u.s. from paris? be confident, says the white house. >> flights that originate from charles de gaulle that are bound for the united states are subjected to additional screening that may not have applied in this situation. >> reporter: tsa insisted today security will not be compromised. >> we're not going to just let people walk through security. there's still going to be that process. >> reporter: and the crash investigation process, the number one question is why did flight 804 crash. the key to finding that answer is finding the two black boxes from the airbus. they're an estimated one to two miles down. y
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step one is for sonar crews to locate the boxes. then for submersibles to go down there and get them. it is doable and difficult, but may take weeks. news4. donald trump and hillary clinton had very different reactions to the crash. trump issued a tweet about 6:00 this morning that says, it looks like another terrorist attack and asking when the u.s. will get in his words tough, smart, and vigilant. he added great hate and sickness. hillary clinton was asked about the attack several hours later in a lengthy interview on cnn. >> well, chris, it does appear that it was an act of terrorism. i think it reinforces the need for american leadership, for the kind of smart, steady leadership that only america can provide in working with our allies, our partners, our friends in europe, the middle east, and elsewhere. >> do you think that donald trump is qualified to be
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>> no, i do not. i know how hard this job is, and i know that we need steadiness as well as strength and smarts in it. and i have concluded he is not qualified to be president of the united states. >> donald trump has not responded yet to clinton's criticism. >> a developing story tonight. a donald trump delegate from maryland is now facing possible prison time. he was just indicted on gun and child porn charges. today, we learned he has resigned from the delegate post. meagan fitzgerald is live now with more on what authorities found during a raid of his charles county home. >> reporter: we're told 30-year-old caleb bailey was elected as a trump delegate back in april. he was illegally shipping ammunition and explosives. additional charges could soon follow. earl redden was home on may 5th
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when investigators surrounded his street. >> charles county police were down at the bottom of our driveway. they had about six or eight cars going down the road. >> reporter: he found out atf agents were raiding the home of 30-year-old caleb bailey. bailey was shipping boxes of ammunition and explosives to a licensed gun dealer in wisconsin. >> it was clear to postal inspectors that the material inside was dangerous and that they contacted the atf right away. >> reporter: one of the boxes split open and postal inspectors found 400 rounds of ammunition along with other projectiles. when investigators received a search warrant, they found evidence he was making and had child pornography. sources close to the investigation say investigators also found equipment related to illegal gambling, which is why we're told additional charges could soon follow. >> that's shocking there. >> reporter: neighbors say
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caleb's father collin has been a devoted public servant. he's currently the chair of the charles county republican central committee and was a former school board member. according to investigators, his son faces the possibility of spending decades in prison. >> reporter: now gop leadership in the county tell us that caleb has resigned as a delegate and on saturday a replacement will be appointed. he is due back in court on may 24th. a judge will decide if he will remain in jail. back to you. a u.s. capitol police officer arrested outside his home in maryland today. he's been charged with harboring a fugitive. we're now told and we're learning that is this is all connected to a takedown of a honduran drug ring. pat collins in monrovia, maryland now, talking with neighbors who witnessed the arrest. pat? >> reporter: talk ut
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looking for a drug suspect from nashville. now the cop who lives here is charged with obstruction of justice and harboring a fugitive. sandra lee court, monrovia, frederick county, maryland. big yards, big homes. it has a norman rockwell feel about it. so yesterday when cops moved in and surrounded this house, you can imagine how people felt about it. >> it's my neighbor. apparently they did have somebody in there who was a fugitive. >> reporter: scary? >> yes. can be scary, yes. >> reporter: this is the home of daryl and dana banks. daryl banks is a veteran law enforcement officer with the u.s. capitol police. he's on the canine squad
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yesterday he and his wife were arrested and charged with harboring a fugitive and obstruction of justice. police say they found this man at the banks house. he's 20-year-old freddie reyes, wanted on drug charges in nashville, tennessee. they say reyes is linked to a honduran drug ring there. police conducted a number of raids, seized a variety of drugs, and made six arrests. but they say reyes got away and was hiding here in frederick county. to some people on sandra lee lane, this was unsettling news. what do you make of this? >> i'm shocked. absolutely shocked. i know we talk. she's got little kids and i'm worried about the kids. >> reporter: police believe that fugitive reyes is friends with officer banks'
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so what is officer banks' status tonight? well, no comment from the u.s. capitol police. jim, back to you. new information tonight about a small plane crash in bowe, maryland. maryland state police say a student pilot and a trainer were in the four-seat cessna. they were trying to land when that plane went off the runway and crashed into the fence that separates the airport from route 50. just a short time ago, freeway airport tweeted that the pilot and the passenger are okay. the airport is open. two people face federal charges for allege. > -- allegedly trying to defraud northern virginia community college out of thousands of dollars. ernest taylor and
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face several charges, including wire fraud. the school offered them more than $34,000 in loans last year. tonight, we've learned that part of the defense strategy for the retrial of a man convicted of killing ms. levy will -- levy's remains were found 2002. noah's law is now officially on the books. larry hogan signed the bill into law today. anyone convicted of drunk driving in the state must use a breath test device on their ignition.
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the law is nad after noah lyo lyole lyo lyole leotta. he was killed by a drunk driver last year. we're talking sunshine, but rain isn't done with us yet. doug, when is it coming back? >> why did you have to ruin it? >> about what? >> just keep the sun here. you're already bringing up the rain. >> we have to give the news as it presents itself, doug. >> that's right. i did not learn that in journalism school. yes, we do go back to the rain. but let's focus on the sun. out there towards reston, we have the sunshine across the area. just a few fair weather cumulus clouds moving on through. we are seeing some clearing across our region. a very nice ein
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too. sunshine tomorrow. a washout on saturday. yeah, i have to talk about it too. keep the umbrella handy even for sunday. we'll talk much more about that weekend forecast in just a minute. next at 6:00, metro's safetrack plan explained. you better start preparing for it now. the live report coming up. i'm julie carey at the fairfax county courthouse where the victim of a violent home invasion tells jurors about a night of terror while the attorneys for her attacker say he wasn't really responsible for what happened. the unusual defense they're presenting just ahead. coming up on news4, after a transgender woman is thrown out of a public restroom, we take a look at local laws for gender identity discrimination. i'm mark segraves. we'llalk to an e tx
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heyadded more nonstop airline straight-shot flights than any other out of reagan national last year? here's a hint. did ya catch it? no? here's another: their colors are yellow, red, and blue, and they save you tons of green. still nothing? that's okay. just go to southwest.com for the answer. on this airline, everybody wins. ♪ [clap, clap, ding]
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well, we're in a bumpy ride. that's how metro's general manager describes the upcoming massive safetrack maintenance plan. >> that plan was finalized today. adam tuss joins us live from metro headquarters to try to break it all down for us. which riders are going to get hit with the work first? >> reporter: you know, over the course of the next year,
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pain, but the first people to see the work will be orange and silver line riders, doreen. take a look at this graphic. this first piece of the puzzle will start on june 4th and it is between the east falls church and the ballston stations. if you've been on the orange line at any point in time during rush hour, you know it is hard enough with regular service. immediately following that first project, a couple weeks after that you'll see a complete closure between the eastern market and minnesota avenue stations and the eastern market and benning road stations. and that is going to last for 16 straight days. total shutdown. no trains in that section. you'll have to use buses to get around there. it is going to be incredibly disruptive. these are just two of 15 major problg projects that are coming. >> what are
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any, for alternatives, like buses? >> reporter: a lot of buses are being called in right now. what metro is telling riders is as they projects get closer and closer, you want to familiarize yourself with them. they will list in detail where you can find those bus plans and alternate ways to get around. we asked the general manager to rate this whole maintenance plan on a scale of 1 to 10. how disruptive would it be? he said it is about a 7. now that these new plans have been moved to the front it is a little bit greater than that. take a listen. >> those first two are very tough. in one case we're single tracking in a very -- a portion of the system that has a lot of traffic. then we shut down another portion of the system between some stations. it is a tough one. they'll be on the higher end of the 7 and other ones will be a the lower end of the 7. >> reporter: yeah, a bumpy ride is how he
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it is going to be hard for a lot of people whether you ride metro or not. >> but the result is a safer metro service. what about the weekend late night service? everybody still needs to plan around that, don't they? >> reporter: yeah. so that's coming as well. in addition to all of these major shutdowns, on june 3rd, that is the last time metro will stay open late. june 3rd, they're going to start closing at midnight until further notice. on friday or saturday nights, metro stays open until 3:00 in the morning. that is all going away. they need more time to access the tracks to fix things. it is going to be a hard ride. >> all right, adam tuss. thank you. it is going to be a long ride. we wanted to know if metro's maintenance plan will affect your commute. which alternate are you most likely to try?
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others said they don't have a plan b. at least not yet. a d.c. fire captain is on administrative leave tonight. he is facing gun and drug charges. captain brian grace was arrested last night by the police in f fairfax. the d.c. fire department says they are aware of the arrest. grace has been with the department for more than 16 years. earing from the family of a fairfax county fire department for the first time since her death. nicole mittendorff took her own life last month. she had been the victim of cyberbullying allegedly by other firefighters. our radio partner spoke exclusively with her husband. >> do i think that's the reason she went out and made her decision? i don't think that was all that -- i think it was a multitude of things, stress, life in general.
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who knows? those are the answers i'm searching for every day. >> it wasn't something that concerned us in terms of nicole's well-being. we didn't have any indication that played a role in her thinking, but we'll never know. >> they have hired an outside consultant to examine the working environment inside the department. some big changes in the wake of a news4 i-team investigation. larry hogan has formally approved a new crackdown on child predators and child pornography. it is an effort first announced last fall one day after a recent report by scott macfarlane and the i-team. >> reporter: the governor
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a law called alicia's law. months of lobbying and arm twisting ended with a stroke of a pen today. governor harry hogan made it official, boosting funding for police investigators who stop the trading of child pornography, including those who work in this secure forensics lab. maryland state police are facing a soaring number of child porn and child abuse cases. bethesda state senator susan lee saw our report and announced a day later she was formally sponsoring alicia's law to give these investigators more money and more tools. >> that would help our state law enforcement increase their training, their staffing, increase their digital and technological computer forensics capability so they can go out and investigate these cases and also rescue these children. >> reporter: state reports issued to the i-team show the number of cell phones and electronic devices upon which state police have conducted forensic reviews has doubled just since
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why is that so? why are we seeing that exponential growth in cases? >> we think obviously a lot of people have smartphones, and they have the technology right at their fingertips. they're able to take it with them and have it readily available to them at any time. >> reporter: all this new money comes from unclaimed lottery winnings in the state. the new law takes effect in the coming weeks. news4. breaking news on that egyptair crash. 66 people feared dead as investigators look into the possibility that this was the work of terrorists. >> dramatic testimony as a lawyer who went to trial accused of attacking his wife's former boss. he says he was too heavily medicated to know what he was doing. and a transgender woman assaulted at a local gro
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across our area. everything so green across the region. that's going to be the case the next couple of days too. 69 degrees the current temperature. winds out of the south at 8 miles per hour. temperature-wise, we've made it into the 70s. as we move on through the rest of the night tonight, one thing we're not going to see, rain chances. satellite and radar showing the clouds and showing the clouds giving way to mostly sunny skies. the south still dealing with the shower activity of those clouds down towards raleigh. they still have the clouds. they're on the cooler side. ha ha for them. for us, we're finally warmer. looking good tomorrow morning. a nice morning. could be a couple areas of fog, but that's it. just great tomorrow afternoon. 3:00 to 4:00, temperature around 75 degrees. here's your high temperatures tomorrow. 72 in
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culpeper coming in at about 77 degrees. a very nice day no matter what you're thinking about doing out there. one thing to think about here, we have not seen a couple of good days where it has been nice to get lunch outdoors. between 10:00 and 1:00, beautiful weather if you're thinking about getting lunch outside. we can finally do that. 60 degrees tomorrow at 10:00 a.m. 71 degrees by around 1:00. future weather shows the change between friday and saturday. here's saturday morning at 7:30. we have the clouds and now we have got the rain moving back in. that rain becoming steady during the morning hours right on through the afternoon. that is saturday at noon. if you're thinking about going to the baltimore for the preakness, that's going to be kind of tough here. notice around 4:00, starting to get more showery. the impact forecast tomorrow, well, that's going to be on the low side for sure. 75 tomorrow. only 58 on your saturday. we do
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new at 6:30, new developments in the search for egyptair flight 804. >> intelligence officials may have a way to figure out what happened to the airliner. >> doreen, vance, former intelligence official tells nbc news if flight 804 exploded, a network of satellites may have picked up on it. the network is designed to detect missile launches, but the official says a launch is basically a controlled explosion and if something blew up on board the plane, the system would see it. but only if it was along enough and intense enough. the plane made a series of abrupt turns before it went down. a former ntsb official says that indicates something catastrophic happened on board. the flight took off from paris with 66 people on boa
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on its way to cairo when it went down in the mediterranean sea. the search for the wreckage goes on. a lot of experts say the chances of this being terrorism are high, but investigators are in the u.s. say at this point there is just too much conflicting information to know for sure and they're not ready to say definitively that this plane was deliberately brought down. >> chris lawrence, thank you. here at home, business as usual at airports today. tsa officials say they are confident in their ability to keep everyone safe. that's despite the manpower shortage that lead to massive backups at security checkpoints in chicago and other large cities just this week. security will be top of mind as we get closer to memorial day. the american automobile association projects that more than 38
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travel during the holiday this year. that is the most since 2005. attorneys for a man accused of terrorizing a northern virginia lawyer and his wife say pain medicines left their client so impaired he didn't know what he was doing. it's an unusual defense as northern virginia bureau chief julie carey reports now. juror are hearing first from the victims who were saying the suspect was very much in control. >> reporter: sue duan was shot and stabbed by andrew schmuhl. his attorneys don't dispute that, but they say he was impaired at the time, that it was his wife calling the shots. victim duncan told jurors today that her attacker knew exactly what he was doing. andrew schmuhl was wearing a trench coat and a fedora hat when he knocked on the door and if your hon
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hours of terror for the duncan family. he tased fisher twice. he said i'm arresting your husband. he flashed a badge in front of my face. the couple was bound with zip ties, ordered to the bathroom. fisher recognized andrew schmuhl as the husband of alicia schmuhl. schmuhl began to interrogate her husband, at times speaking to someone else he called his partner on a cell phone. she was ordered into the bathroom, but eventually fearful for her husband, emerged. he was lying on top of leo and he was cutting his throat, testified duncan. i said, what are you doing? then schmuhl shot her. the bullet grazing her head. she went for the phone. i got to my knees and started crawling and he would jump on me and stab me over and over. duncan says the attack finally ended when she played dead then later called for help. the attorne
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was absurd, bewildering, and bizarre. but they contend it supports their defense. it is called an involuntary intoxication defense. they contend it was his wife calling the shots, saying you'll hear this was alicia's operation and andy schmuhl was the foot soldier that carried it out. andrew schmuhl was clad only in a diaper when caught. his wife is being tried separately. trial resumes on monday when we expect to hear from the other victim, leo fisher. new information just in after a man was shot and killed in the district. the victim has been identified now as a man named dana hill. he was found on southern avenue in southeast d.c. near southview drive. he was found last
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where he died. it has been a violent week in the city. on monday, there were five shootings in broad daylight. two people were killed. three others were injured that day. tonight, there is new fallout after a security guard is accused of assaulting a woman trying to use the transgender restroom at a grocery store. tonight, news4 mark segraves is taking a look at the local laws. >> reporter: belcher called police. >> she opened the door and came in and started calling me derogatory names. >> reporter: in d.c. it is against the law to deny someone access to the bathroom based on their gender identity. 17 states including maryland have similar anti-discrimination law it is that specifically protect transgender people. virginia does not have a
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discrimination law. the u.s. attorney general says title 7 of the civil rights act protects transgender people from discrimination in all 50 states. north carolina is challenging that. the civil rights act does not specifically transgender people. monica is charged with enforcing the district's discrimination laws. >> a local law provides much more immediate relief. filing a claim with the federal government in title 7 could take years for any type of resolution or relief. >> reporter: local laws may help inform local business. >> it gives people their rights live and breathe in their community. >> reporter: the district goes a step further by requiring that all single user public restrooms be gender neutral. since 2014, the d.c. office of human rights has had 300 complaints of public
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not complying with the gender neutral requirement. coming up, the controversial message posted in a high school in a hallway that sparked this response from dozen of students. it got national attention. score one for the redskins. what some native americans are now saying about the football team's name amid a legal fight over its trademark. and we have 36 hours of nice weather. then thinggo downhill again.s
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banners saying i'm not going back. they said the first banner discriminated against latinos. the students who put up the original banner are going to be disciplined. 9 out of 10 americans are not offended by the washington redskins team name. 8 out of 10 would not be offended if someone called them a red skin. "the washington post" polled 500 plus native americans across the country. a federal judge cancelled the football team's trademark registration in july, ruling the name may be disparaging to native americans. the team is appealing that decision. veteran cbc news man morley safer died at his home in manhattan today. it was just last week that he retired from "60 minutes." the program ran an hour long tribute to
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safer joined cbs back in 1964. a year later he was filing reports from front line battles in vietnam. his war reports are often credited with giving americans their first real look at the realities on the ground in vietnam. safer joined "60 minutes" in 1970. he filed his last report for the program in march. morley safer was 84. still to come tonight, the story behind the design of the new smithsonian museum on the national mall. >> it's one of the most eye-catching buildings on the national mall today. we talked to
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if you've been anywhere near the washington monument, odds are you have noticed a new museum rising along constitution avenue. the smithsonian museum of african-american history and culture is arguably the most unique building on the national mall. >> you can't miss it. as aaron gilchrist reports, everyone the outsieven the outside of the building tells the story. >> reporter: a massive monument to the impact black people have had and continue to have in america. these are panels of -- >> those are cast a
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panels. >> reporter: we spent time with a renowned architect whose firm is leading the designing and building of the museum. >> it is derived from a western african architectural form. >> reporter: it is a traditional wooden building column like this and features a crown or corona exactly like the new museum. >> that was very compelling to us ooas a design team. it might be interesting to take that notion and develop it as a protector of the contents inside. >> reporter: the museum's skin looks like bronze, a material that history has seen as high quality and sturdy. in fact, this is aluminum coated to look like bronze. he calls it a merger of modern durable materials. >> that's reminiscent of places like charleston and savannah, new orleans, where african-americans freed and
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enslaved african-americans did a lot of the guild work. >> reporter: the craftsmanship will let the light seep into the buildings windows. >> there are a few points around the building that are important for visitors to pause look out and see the washington monument, look at the capitol. >> reporter: on the south side of the museum at the main entrance, visitors will find calm water on a 240-foot grand porch. a place of welcome, a gathering spot. his team was also careful to acknowledge the museum's neighbors. if you look carefully, you can see the corner of the museum lines up with the top of the washington monument. >> 17.5 degrees, the exact same angle as the corona. can you see that. >> reporter: one of the new features of the museum is called the oculus.
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there is nothing short of spectacular. below ground, an illuminated water fall will be surrounded by benches in what the designers call the contemplative court. with all the meaning and history built into the museum, the architect is aware of what's become a point of controversy too. the building is dramatically and deliberately different from its surroundings and most other museums in town. >> we believe it is important for the building and the museum to make a statement about what the institution is, not just to be a pretty wrapper around exhibits and artifacts. >> reporter: news4. >> really looking forward to seeing this new museum. it opens in september. it will be the most sustainable national museum ever built with solar panels to heat water and a roof garden to help with storm water management. during the break, you can open up the n w
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scenes stories about the museum. storm water collection thing on our roofs right now, we could use that. >> that natural garden helps to absorb it. i love that. i didn't know that part. you mentioned that. our water table is quite high right now. we don't want any more rain, but unfortunately we're fwoigoing tt some. we've not had too many days where we have seen over an inch of rain. that could happen on saturday. the sun goes down at 8:18 tonight. we'll actually see it. 69 degrees currently. beautiful. around 67 degrees at 7:00. down to about 61 at 11:00. 70 gaithersburg. 72 down towards warrenton. 67 in annapolis. nice all the w
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no rain tomorrow. like i said, we've got about a 36-hour period where we're not going to see much at all. tomorrow is bike to work day. 75 degrees. 58 degrees on saturday. don't bike to work on saturday. on sunday, scattered showers. you may be able to miss some of those showers on sunday, but 100% chance of rain on saturday. 58 degrees. if you're headed to the preakness, kind of tough. rain most of the day, but it looks like the actual race may be drier than the rest of the day. that would help a little bit. look at next week. how about the 80s tuesday, wednesday, and thursday? we get nice and warm. 84 on wednesday, 86 on thursday. >> something to look forward to. we like that. thank you, doug. we've got sports
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heyadded more nonstop airline straight-shot flights than any other out of reagan national last year? here's a hint. did ya catch it? no? here's another: their colors are yellow, red, and blue, and they save you tons of green. still nothing? that's okay. just go to southwest.com for the answer. on this airline, everybody wins. ♪ [clap, clap, ding]
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the nats have a long way to go. >> here's what i can't believe. i can't believe they played 40 games so far this season. hasn't it gone so fast? >> it has. >> can't believe it's almost june. >> they're a quarter of the way in. jim's right. they have a long way to go. but for those of you who say you should start if you mean to go on, this is a good start. 24 wins, 16 losses. best start in team history and holding onto first place in the division after beating the mets last night. dusty baker has to be breathing a sigh of relief. jason worth, who swapped spots in the lineup, on base five times. he had two hits, three walks.
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2 rbi. nats scored 7 runs. the most in their last 4 games. stephen strasburg on the mat tonight. going against matt harvey tonight. orioles and mariners. everybody loving some early baseball. we're going to pick it up second inning. seattle up 1-0. he just smokes this ball to right. it stays in the park. jonathan scope, where are you? you can come on in to score. alvarez to second with an rbi double. campers getting up on their feet. birds even things up at 1. sixth inning, mariners back on top with a run.
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three-run homer for lind. mariners take the series with a 7-2 victory. maryland could be called lacrosse land. the terapins, as for the men, four of the teams that are still alive are from the state of maryland. the terapins seen practicing on grass for the first time this season. they're going to play syracuse this weekend on the natural surface up in providence. they haven't lost a game since march 5th. 14 straight wins. now the number one season of tournament. they know it will not be easy. >> being the number one seed, you automatically have a target on your back and a team that's been in the final four four years that a row.
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things in perspective. we haven't lost in, i think, 14 games or something along those lines. >> maryland men on saturday, they play syracuse in providence and the women on sunday in college park. this is a segment we call to call happy news. >> oh, okay. >> we don't often get to do this, so we're celebrating with this special graphic. the segment is starring the good guy award winner max scherzer. >> this is a dream. joe's playing catch with max scherzer. are you kidding me? how's that? >> amazing. >> i'm never letting this ball go. max scherzer making one fan's day. no reporters, no cameras, just max being a great guy. one day, i hope
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breaking news tonight, air disaster, egyptair flight 804, why experts fear it could have been a bomb. what u.s. officials tell nbc news are strong indications of an explosion. the plane making abrupt turns before plummeting off the radar into the ocean. could someone slip an undetectable device past security at a western airport? hillary clinton unloads on donald trump more than ever before accusing of being a recruiter for terrorism. an isis recruit that trained with the enemy then escaped. what he saw and what he knows now helping u.s. intelligence. and morley safer dies at 84
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