tv News4 at 6 NBC May 25, 2016 6:00pm-7:00pm EDT
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really work the hardest on. now at 6:00, more fallout for hillary clinton over her use of a personal e-mail server while she was secretary of state. the robber had a gun. the little boy only had his stuffed toy, but it didn't stop him from going after that thief. look what happened in this security video. we've got the pictures coming up. heroin addiction is a serious issue in maryland and throughout our area. tonight, a mother shares her personal story and shares lessons she learned with her son's battle with addiction. >> we kept it to ourselves because he was so sure he was going to beat it. >> reporter: the man who runs the tsa gets grilled on capitol hill about the growing lines at airports across the nation. >> this is unacceptable and it is time for congress to act. first, breaking news. we're keeping an eye on anaheim, california. that's where donald trump just wrapped up a campaign speech. police ar
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crowd and there are reports of at least one arrest there. this morning the police in anaheim -- the chief that is, said his officers would have zero tolerance for violence or any other trouble. police and protesters clashed outside a trump rally in new mexico last night. also tonight, a new chapter in the hillary clinton e-mail controversy. >> the state department inspector general sent congress a report that sharply criticized clinton's use of a private e-mail account during her time as secretary of state. the practice was not against state department rules at the time, nor was it encouraged. the report is just a few hours old and it has already made its way to the campaign trail. steve handelsman has the fallout. >> reporter: this is not the fbi investigation into possible criminal violations by the former secretary of state, but it's bad enough. the internal state department report is a stinging blow as
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california. it says that secretary of state, her using a private e-mail account broke federal rules. that clinton did not reveal it, did not seek permission, would not have gotten okay, and notes clinton did not surrender all of her e-mails as required. clinton has denied deception or wrongdoing. >> my personal e-mail use was fully above board. it was allowed by the state department. >> reporter: but the report found no record that department lawyers did okay her blackberry or her server as she claimed. >> inspector general's report not good. >> reporter: also in california today, donald trump attacked clinton. >> she's got bad judgment. she's got horribly bad judgment. >> reporter: democrats had revealed that trump before 2008 said he hoped housing prices would collapse so he
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>> i sort of hope that happens. >> reporter: back at a rally, clinton took her shot. >> a good result in donald trump's world is he gets his and you get hurt. >> reporter: her world now is more e-mail headaches. pain could get more intense. the fbi investigation continues into possible criminality, asking whether former secretary of state clinton mishandled classified information that she received or sent on her personal blackberry. i'm steve handelsman, news4. the romanian hacker pleaded guilty to other hacking charges today in a federal court in alexandria. prosecutors say he broke into the e-mail and social media accounts of roughly 100 americans, including family members of former
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as for the clinton claim, he refused to show any of the material that he said he found on her server, and federal investigators say they found no evidence to back up his story. now to a situation that was pretty scary for everyone involved. tonight, we're hearing from the parents of a little boy who threw a couple of pint-sized punches at an armed robber. pat collins is near the game stop in silver spring where it all went down. pat? >> reporter: doreen, an incredible encounter between an armed robber and a 7-year-old boy with an assist from yoshi. watch as this little boy takes on a gunman during an armed robbery. he hits the thief a couple of times before he's forced to lie on the floor with his parents. now today i talked to the boy's parents. for obvio
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>> we were just huddled up together, saying silent prayers, just hoping that it would end. >> reporter: the scene, the game stop store at four corners. two hooded gunman barge into the place and when they get everyone under control they empty the register and take off. this was the first time the boy and his parents had ever been into a game stop shore. they went in to buy a stuffed yoshi from the game mario brothers. you can see the boy has the yoshi toy in his hand as he hits that gunman. >> the store manager gave him that stuffed toy to take him. he considers it something that helped keep him safe. he carries it with him everywhere he goes now. he takes care of it like it is his own child. it's become a bit of a luck
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little boy want these two gunmen caught. >> what we want more than anything is to make sure we can go back and tell him soon hopefully that these guys have been arrested and they're going to pay for what they did. >> reporter: now if you know anything about these suspects, if you know anything about this robbery, montgomery county police, they want to hear from you. jim, back to you. >> pat collins. two women and two young children were found tied up and gagged in their own home after a sexual assault in manassas, virginia. it happened yesterday afternoon in a home off king george drive. two men sexually assaulted a woman before they tied up a 19-year-old woman and two children. they were 4 and 5 years old. a toddler also was in the house, but unharmed. the men got away. police still trying to find them. virginia governor terry mcauliffe is threatening to withhold metro funding if
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agency's safety standards don't measure up. today he put that in writing. mcauliffe signed the executive directive during the ask the governor program. the order instructs transportation officials to sit down with metro officials to create new safety protocols. >> they do not meet our safety protocols that i'm comfortable with personally as governor, then we're going to withhold state funding. i'm sick and tired of it. >> they're working to create a new safety commission, but that won't be finished until january when lawmakers meet for their next legislative sessions. mcauliffe says he cannot wait eight months to address safety concerns. long lines continue to cause major headaches all over the country. the situation is so bad that today lawmakers called the head of the transportation safety adminia
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hill. they want him to explain what's going on and what's being done to fix it. jay gray reports. >> reporter: with airport lines and passengers' frustrations growing ahead of the busy memorial day weekend, the head of the transportation safety administration was called back to capitol hill today. >> this is unacceptable, and it is time for congress to act. >> reporter: part of the problem, more passengers. an increase of close to 100 million travelers over the last three years, according to the agency, while the number of full-time tsa employees has dropped by more than 12%. >> tsa is dedicated to ensuring better efficiency while remaining acutely focused on our counterterrorism mission. we cannot and we will not compromise on the security of the traveling public. >> reporter: the plan for this holiday weekend, rapid response teams, including chicago's o'hare, where thousands of passengers have missed flights because of long lines, many forced to sleep on cots.
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we have made have dramatically improved the situation at chicago. >> reporter: long term, tsa wants to dramatically expand the pre-check system and automated systems, like one installed in atlanta and hire more full-time employees. hoping to change the tune for travelers heading into summer vacation season that have been singing the blues. a three-year sentence for a man convicted of trying to sell heroin in montgomery county. he was accused of trying to buy $120,000 of heroin to sell on the streets locally. that's more than 3,000 individual doses of the drug. after he serves his time, he could be deported to his home country of ghana. county officials say dealers like him are responsi
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our meagan fitzgerald is here now with one woman's story. >> renee says no one would have suspected that her son struggled with an addiction. she didn't want to tell his secret because he was ashamed and he didn't want to be judged. now she's sharing lessons learned. >> reporter: these pictures help renee to tell us about her son alex. >> again, alex when he was little. >> reporter: renee says he had so many friends, but what many didn't know is that alex battled with addiction. >> he suffered a back injury, two herniated discs, for which he was prescribed opiates. >> reporter: it started with painkillers and ended with heroin. alex went to rehab and was clean for seven months, which was why st
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>> it was wonderful and he had gotten his spark back. he was very happy. >> reporter: just four days after the new year, she kissed her son good night for the last time. >> the next thing i heard was a boy in our neighborhood screaming for know wake up -- mo wake up at 4:00 in the morning saying alex had overdosed on heroin. >> it is the worst nightmare a parent could ever go through. i don't think there's anything worse. >> reporter: but through her pain she found a purpose. renee says she and alex kept his addiction a secret. >> he didn't want to be judged. you don't want to reach out and get help, but it's the time you really need help and support. >> reporter: now she shares the le lessons she learned, hoping it will save the lyes ivinges of o. >>
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>> thank you. they're protesting the suspension of some student athletes. tonight hear from the family of an alleged victim. i'm julie carey where prosecutors reveal new details about what they andrew schmuhl intended to do after he attacked a mclean lawyer and his wife. the move they made that may have saved them from burning in their own house. maryland state police are consid concerned about the increase in traffic fatalities. what they plan to do about it this memorial day weekend. i've got the forecast. there could be some rain. we'll talk about it in just a minute.
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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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porter was tried last year in gr gr gray's death, but that ended in a mistrial. white's trial is in october. some say the suspension of some student athletes is too harsh. others say they deserve the athletes to be punished. david culver has reaction from both sides. >> reporter: if you drove culpeper's main street past radio lane, you heard them. dozens of students and their parents crammed along the sidewalk. >> i didn't expect it to be this big. >> reporter: we first introduced you to breklynn johnson two weeks ago. she was handing out bands to support 12 student athletes punished for alleged sexual misconduct.
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which is what parents of the accused say their kids received. >> we want to stand up for what's right. >> reporter: those here protesting call it an extreme punishment for several different offenses. >> all 12 are different incidents that happened in the locker room during times and time periods. they should not all be punished the same. >> reporter: after we first aired our report, a mother of one of several alleged victims reached out to us. she asked we mask her identity. she says the alleged misconduct is far more serious than horseplay. >> it was forcible and physical and totally against somebody's will. >> reporter: the attention for the accused is causing people to forget there are victims. >> and that victims have feelings and may be traumatized by what happened to them. >> reporter: tracy and
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daughter say they only want the school system to be more transport and handle each allegation individually. >> david reached out to the school system, but no one there chose to comment in response to today's protest, nor would anyone elaborate on the allegations against the high school students. it's going to be busy out there. 38 million people are expected to travel this memorial day weekend. if you are heading out, expect some company. the number of cars on the road will be at the highest level in more than a decade. this is a look at the bay bridge right now. not bad. no major traffic as people head to the beach. a lot of people make the getaway on thursday, making for some jam packed roads. that's supposed to be the busiest day. chris gordon joins us. >> reporter: it's because of low gas prices that a near record number of people are
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the traffic forecast heavy. 377,000 vehicles are expected to cross the bay bridge between now and monday night. that's a 6% increase from last year. some people headed to the beach today. >> we're leaving today to spend memorial day weekend down at pembroke island for fun. >> reporter: locals are bracing for traffic overload. >> it's going to be heavy. in the back roads, it gets to a standstill. most people over here, they don't do anything this weekend. they stay home. >> reporter: state and local police will be out in force this holiday weekend. maryland highway fatalities rose last year. >> every driver owns part of the responsibility of being safe out there. stay away from what we call the deadly sins of texting while driving, distractd
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speeding, not buckling up. those are all things that contribute. >> reporter: after the memorial weekend holiday, the party continues, but there are warnings for high school graduates coming for their beach week celebrations. >> remember the long-term consequences of underage drinking if you're caught for it, especially in maryland. you're talking about the possibility of jail time and driver's license sanctions. that can apply to parents as well in terms of contributing to the delirg delink -- delinquenc minor. >> reporter: ocean city is ready for a busy summer beginning this weekend. that's the latest live from the eastern shore. back to you. >> on the nbc washington facebook page we asked what are your memorial day plans. most of you told us you're staying home. two people arrested in a
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tonight we know what they left at the scene that helped investigators track them down. a bird strike forced a plane to make an emergency landing at a local airport. an all too familiar noise that left people in one d.c. neighborhood on edge. soon they'll say good-bye to the white house and hello to a d.c. mansion.
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the tornado threat isn't over yet for parts of the plains. western kansas got hit hard by several twisters yesterday. storm chasers caught this one near dodge city. the storms damaged several homes, leaving two people critically injured. more tornados could hit parts of nebraska and kansas tomorrow. it is so much quieter around here and downright pleasant. >> one of us has their convertible out. >> o could that be, doug? >> not me. >> not me. let's take a look. just a beautiful day for that. today is one of those days you roll the windows down. really just quite nice. watch out. that one arm will burn. the other will stay the regular color. current temperature 85 degrees. we've got the sunshine.
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per hour. 86 right now leesburg. 84 warrenton. annapolis 78 degrees. nice on the bay, by the way, if you're out there doing any boating. storm team 4 radar, no problem. no rain to talk about. we'll stay dry. most of us over the next 24 to 48 hours, there will be a chance for shower activity. the heat we're going to get along the mountains tomorrow, maybe a couple of showers, maybe a couple of thunderstorms. no problems tomorrow morning. a great morning. a warm morning. a very warm morning. here we are at around 1:00. no problems here. nice afternoon. lunch looking good. we'll be on the hot side. around 6:00, 6:30, here come the showers and the couple of thunderstorms. it is all to the north and west of i-95. that's where it stays. by 10:00, it is just about all out of here. most of us, as i mentioned,
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evening you may want to keep that umbrella just in case. perfect at noon. 82 degrees. low humidity looking nice there. by 4:00, sunny and hot. 94 degrees. that would be our first 90 of the season. 88 frederick. 85 annapolis. 91 down towards fredericksburg. same deal on friday. hot again. 89. friday dew point is up there. that humidity will be higher. saturday, beautiful. lower humidity. 87 degrees with sunshine. sunday looking good. 85 with just a slight chance of a shower. now what about the beaches? if you're heading down towards the beaches, i'll be down there on friday. our first backyard weather. i'll be in ocean city. here we go for the weekend. saturday near perfect. 78 degrees. 73 degrees, chance of showers on sunday. monday, good chance forra
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but it will not be all day rain. i still think it is a pretty nice memorial day if you're headed down towards the beaches. if you're inland, going to be on the hot side. a local lawyer on trial for terrorizing a couple. police say they alleged perpetrator and his wife had a plan to do much worse. we'll tell you what got in the way of them carrying it out. they don't necessarily mix with airplanes. just yesterday a bird strike here that required an emergency
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tonight, we are learning that a vicious home invasion attack on a couple in mclean, virginia, might have been a lot worse, far worse. it's based on evidence from the crime scene. >> that's the revelation from prosecutors in the trial of andrew schmuhl today. bureau chief julie carey joins us from the fairfax county courthouse. >> reporter: victims leo fisher and sue duncan survived the serious injuries they suffered in the attack, but prosecutors presented physical evidence that
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they say suggested the couple planned to burn down the house. soon to be charged for a violence attack on a law firm partner and his wife in their mclean home. leo fisher had recently fired alicia, but the suv packed with incriminating evidence. a crime scene detective showed it all to jurors. schmuhl was wearing only a diaper when he was arrested. the clothing left behind in the suv included a shirt sustained with blood. leo fisher had been tased twice when andrew schmuhl burst into the house. a semiautomatic handgun like this one in a best buy bag, one cartridge gone. sue duncan was shot once, the bullet grazing her head. a folding pocketknife. both victims were repeatedly stabbed and cable ties.
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pair of men's shoes soaked in gas, and that automatic timer deviced ealtered with clamps. detectives found the entry rug also soaked with gasoline. i put that together, testified the detective, that we have the components of an incendiary device with this being a triggering device. prosecutors think andrew schmuhl intended to activate the device when he left the house and torch with the victims inside. before schmuhl could finish it setting it all up, sue duncan hit the house panic alarm and he fled. detectives found bottles and bottles of prescription drugs inside the schmuhl home. the attorneys plan to present an involuntary intoxication defense inis
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client was so heavily medicated he can't be held criminally responsible for his actions. tonight, we know how police tracked down two fairfax county jewelry heist suspects who injured a bystander during a shootout. the search warrant says one of the suspects left a cell phone in a car he tried to steal during the getaway. he didn't take the car because he didn't know how to drive a stick shift. william franklin and the other are charged with robbing dubai jewelers in springfield this past saturday. one was found trying to board a flight in new jersey. a man from culpeper, virginia, who was killed in a small plane crash is being remembered now for his decades of volunteer work. john joseph quinn, jj, as he was known, was the passenger in a single engine plane that went down in orange county yesterday. he was a flight instructor, a navy veteran, and he flew 30
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he also spent the last 20 years giving medical air transport for patients who could not afford it on their own. >> he was just so comfortable in what he did and his method of instruction that it made you feel comfortable behind the controls. >> you know, he would bring people in and make them feel at home. even if you didn't care for aviation, you did after you spoke with j.j. for a little while. >> the pilot was a man from florida. his name was charles caldwell. he was also killed. why that plane crashed is still under investigation. a bird strike forced an american airlines plane to make an emergency landing at reagan national airport today. this evening we're hearing from one couple in northwest d.c. who heard a big bang when the engine went out and thought the worst was happening. adam tuss is at gravelly point near reagan national airport with more on all this. hi, adam. >> reporter: he
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this incident definitely rattled a lot of nerves. that couple that we talked to actually thought that the plane was going to crash, and they should know. they've experienced a plane crash firsthand up close. in the skies above d.c. yesterday -- >> i look up and i hear this plane. >> reporter: mike working in his shed when it all started to get scary fast. an american airlines plane hit a bird right after takeoff and was down to one engine right above his house at fox hall road. >> it just made this crazy noise. i look for my wife. she's standing there and looking at it. >> reporter: for mike and his wife, it wasn't the first major plane incident that they've dealt with. they were in new york city in 2001 when an american airlines plane crashed in queens. they were just a few blocks away from that. >> what are the chances of somet
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again? you get used to hearing the planes. when you've had that experience, any noise out of the ordinary causes panic. >> reporter: the plane did eventually land safely. reagan national officials confirm it happened on a flight headed to memphis. bird strikes have become a major issue in recent years. over 13,000 alone reported in 2014 according to the faa. the most famous bird strike incident the miracle on the hudson where former captain sully sullenberger landed his u.s. airways plane in the hudson river after both engines were knocked out. back here in d.c., they're just happy to hear the regular rumble of jets. and more rumbling of the jets here at reagan national airport as you see another plane taking off. so
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tell us there were 44 passengers and 3 crew members on that plane yesterday. new calls for change after the news4 i-team discovered capitol hill is not nearly as family friendly as some would look. a look inside the d.c. mansion that the obama family will call home once they leave the white house. i'm taking a look at a possible tropical system. if you're thinking about heading out to the dulle ♪ hey! ♪ they go ooh ooh. ♪ hey! ♪ they go oh-ooh-ooooh.
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♪ i tell you one thing, you never knew it. ♪ ♪ at the back of the bus ♪ there is so much to give, so dream big. ♪ ♪ yeah. ♪ and when they screaming get out, get out. ♪ ♪ all i wanna hear is get down, get down. ♪ ♪ yeah. ♪ and when they screaming get out, get out. ♪ ♪ all i wanna hear is get down, get down. ♪ ♪ get down, get down.
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committee work to make the capitol more family friendly. last night the i-team revealed that the building doesn't have the number of accommodations required by federal law. the capitol building, that is. the capitol has less than half the required changing tables and less than 1/3 of the retired la -- required lactation stations. congress exempted itself from those federal rules. in a letter to the senate rules committee, senator bob casey said, i am deeply concerned by a recent report from nbc washington. i respectfully urge you to take steps to improve the facilities for parents working and/or visiting the capitol complex. we're getting the first look at the place the obama family will call home they're planning to lease this
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the real estate company home visit provided us with these photos of the inside. according to online real estate information, the house is 8200 square feet with nine bedrooms and eight and a half baths. the owners are joe lockhart and his wife. >> kind of like your house. >> just like mine. coming up tonight, we'll find out how a local student is making it her mison to bringsi
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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] your home can be perfect.re, even when life isn't.
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a 16-year-old high school sophomore from the district has become a history detective. she's trying to find any surviving relatives of a soldier who was killed on d-day during the invasion of normandy. she's hoping to finish a mission that began more than 70 years ago. >> reporter: it began with a letter written march 30th, 1945. writing from her apartment here on wisconsin avenue where she lived with her mother, margaret was writing to the war department, asking if they knew where her brother robert was buried. like so many others,
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robert left washington, d.c. to serve his country and he never returned home. there are no known pictures of private first class robert. she is o he is one of the thousands of young men killed on d-day. margaret and her mother got their answer. his remains were most likely not recoverable. his name was added to the garden of the missing in normandy. he has no tombstone. the only part of him that made it back home to washington were a few personal belongings. now 72 years after d-day another young girl is asking the army about the private. a 16-year-old sophomore goes to school just a few blocks from what they lived. she is on a request to find the private. >> we can't find anything of his past family history. we just know about him. >> reporter: she i
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in a national history day project in which high school students research a soldier from their hometown who died on d-day. in the past, students would research their silent hero and then travel to normandy to deliver a eulogy at the soldier's grave site. >> he was only 20 years old when he was drafted. >> reporter: but ortiz has a biggest tribute in mind. she wants to give him his own burial site and tomb. >> and be sure that i was able to live up to what he did as a soldier and just make sure that i find that closure not just for myself, but for their family members too. >> reporter: with
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her teacher, she's been pouring through records to find a living relative of him. >> we need to have dna in order to give him a real burial and close the door. right now, he's kind of in limbo. >> reporter: his remains are most likely comingled with at least one other soldier. if ortiz is able to find a living relative of the private, the military will exhume his remains. if a dna match is confirmed, he will at last be given a proper burial and headstone, bringing closure for his family who have been waiting for generations. >> to go and pay their respects and be able to bring the soldier flowers and not just think, oh, i wonder where he is. >> reporter: ortiz and her teacher will travel to normandy next month. they hope they'll have found the private's family before they leave.
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segraves. news4. >> what a memorable project for a high school student. what a spectacular day once again. we'd like to start the holiday weekend right now if we could. >> wouldn't we though? people were complaining about how cool it was and rainy it was. now i have some on my facebook going it is too hot. >> not us. not us. >> i've ignored them. look outside. i respond to all my friends on facebook. out there right now, take a look at national harbor. some boats, the capitol wheel looking pretty good out there. a little bit of haze in the atmosphere. 85 degrees. temperatures dropping through the 70s by around 9:00 to 11:00 tonight, but all in all a very nice night. it's really going to be a great night to get out downtown.
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rockville always a little bit too high, i think, but the first 90 on the map this year could be tomorrow that we see a couple of 90s around. going for a high of 90 in d.c. no rain to talk about. we're going to be on the dry side. storm team 4 talking about the bus stop. no problem at the bus stop. tomorrow afternoon it's going to be a hot one. 90 degrees. plenty of sunshine early in the day. by evening, we have a chance for a thunderstorm west of the i-95. most of us remain dry. now that memorial day forecast for the weekend, we've got an area of low pressure that's going to form. 50% chance for this to become tropical. it is going to bring on an onshore flow. what that means for sunday and monday, maybe a shower or two on the beaches. with
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all next week we're also into the 80s. again, there's that 90 tomorrow. >> no complaints. coming up, we've got football practice. kirk cousins giving high-fives to doug williams. also why not showing up in ashburn is costing desean jackson some big money. here's lester holt with a look ahead. >> putting hillary clinton's e-mail problem front and center at a critical moment in the campaign. we're with the president overseas as he gets a public dressing down by a world leader and makes an apology. are stress tests always ne
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them. hey, carol. >> reporter: you just took my whole lead in. >> sorry to do that. >> reporter: it is football in may 2016. this is the unofficial start to the season. voluntary practices for three weeks. then a mandatory week of practices for the veterans. everyone agrees that what happens here is crucial to success in the fall, but at the same time they say no big deal that desean jackson is not here yet. who doesn't want to have some fun on the football field in may? coach jay gruden getting some work in, pumped up. meantime kirk cousins is taking the reins of this team. now the official starter. wants to see how he measures up to some of the redskins great, cousins, and doug williams, who was watching. they're comparing hand size. kirk knows this off-season is hands down more challenging than last year, but he is up for it. >> you have permission now to take ownership. as a backup or a guy competing for the
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received well if you take ownership. it looks like you're trying to jockey for the position. now as the starter, you can take ownership. it feels like it does when you were back in college and you were the starting quarterback. i enjoy being able to do that. i think it helps me as a quarterback to have ownership because at the end of the day i'm the one holding the football in my hands. >> reporter: cousins does have plenty of weapons to throw to. some analysts have said that the redskins have the best receiving core in the league entering the fall. the star pass catcher is foregoing a half million dollar bonus by skipping more than 10% of the off-season workouts, but that is his business. redskins know d. jacks is special. he will get in town and at redskins park eventually. >> he's popped in, had a cup
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coffee, popped out. last time i looked up the word voluntary, it is his choice. >> he was here the last few weeks and was able to work with us. he knows what's best for him and what he's got to do to be ready this fall. >> last year he pulled his hamstring. people are going to say he was out of shape. i don't think he was really. i think he'll be ready to go. >> reporter: no desean jackson here on the field in ashburn. at nats park, no bryce harper, sort of, on the field there. the nats and the mets, game three. harper given a day off, a mental day off, for the slumping star. tann tanner roarke, he was great today. mets up, 1-0. the
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better. bottom of the fourth. seven strikeouts in the game for matz. to the bottom of the eighth, look who it is. harper called on to pitch. 2-0. > mellow has until 11:59 p.m. tonight to decide whether to stay in the nba draft or withdraw and depart for college. one of the final underclassman in the country who hasn't decided to go pro or not go pro.
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breaking news tonight. new violent clashes erupt at another donald trump rally. again, police in riot gear confront chaos. the first independent investigation into hillary clinton's e-mails. the warning she got revealed. hot seat. the tsa chief forced to answer why tens of thousands are missing their flights. and what a tsa insider is telling nbc news tonight about what's to blame. demolished by a deadly tornado outbreak. dozens of twisters. new warnings on the radar. despicable crime. the president apologizing over a murder case that has shocked ja ban. and stress test alert. millions get them. but top heart doctors are warning theyay
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