tv News4 at 6 NBC June 22, 2016 6:00pm-7:00pm EDT
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committee is ordering a review of the disturbing details. scott macfarlane is outside the employee's home in martinsburg, west virginia. scott? >> reporter: good evening. right by the train station in downtown ma downtown martinsburg. last night we broke this story. the feds had planned to raid that house. when they described why, it got our attention. it now has congress' attention too. according to a court filing by the feds jonathan wienke showed up for work at the department of homeland security headquarters two weeks ago at 7:30 a.m. he was pulled for a random security screening and found carrying a knife, two radio devices, incapacitating spray, infrared equipment, and handcuffs. and in their filing they said 90 minutes later they
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a.22 caliber revolver loaded with five hollow point bullets. his work space was near a high level meeting of top agency officials. there was probable cause to believe he was conspireing to commit workplace violence. though we were unable to reach him or his attorney for comment, the u.s. house committee at homeland security hours after we broke the story last night issued a statement calling the case troubling and announcing its own review of what happened. and it is likely to be discussed publicly tomorrow morning at a committee hearing on capitol hill, news4 is told. wienke's neighbors here told us last night they saw the feds canvassing the area outside the home in recent days. >> i expected him to move out. he was hardly ever up here. you would see him occasionally up here. he was always clean cut. nice guy. >> reporter: and news4 has le
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investigation. there was a hearing on this case just down the street in the federal courthouse in martinsburg today, but the case is sealed as is so much of this federal case. we -- jonathan wienke has been charged with carrying an unlawful weapon. back to you. developing now on capitol hill, a rare if not unprecedented demonstration inside the house chamber is entering its sixth hour tonight. democrats are staging a sit-in demanding a vote on new gun measures. john lewis is leading a group of 40 democrats. paul ryan called the house into recess, which means c-span cameras went dark. democrats took to social media. >> today we come to the well o
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for action. not next month, not next year, but now, today. give us a vote. let us vote. we came here to do our job. we came here to work. >> the president sent a tweet thanking lewis for his actions. democrats want speaker ryan to keep the house in session through its planned recess next week so that a vote can take place. the gun debate on capitol hill was reignited by that terror attack in orlando. tonight we're learning more about the gunman and his victims. chris lawrence has developments. he's at our live desk. >> officials tell us 15 people are still in the hospital and three of them are in critical condition. we're also learning that two days before the attack omar mateen booked flights to california so his family could visit his sick mother-in-law. now they're trying to figure out if
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the attack when he booked that trip. they're trying to piece together what he did in two hours. tonight we're hearing from a man who says he was the one who tipped off the fbi years ago after hearing mateen mention a radical islamic cleric. >> omar mentioned to me he saw videos of anwar al -- donald trump attacked the character and career of hillary clinton, but clinton dismissed trump's
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tried to help her staging that sit-in on the house floor. >> reporter: as republicans have been demanding, donald trump focused on hillary clinton. >> she's a world-class liar. >> reporter: passion from trump, but a reasoned argument. >> the hillary clinton foreign policy has cost america thousands of lives and trillions and trillions of dollars and unleashed isis across the world. >> reporter: clinton was wrong on syria, trump said. on libya and iran. and trump charged clinton supported chinese trade in return for chinese checks to bill clinton for speeches. >> hillary clinton may be the most corrupt person ever to seek the presidency of the united states. >> reporter: clinton was on capitol hill with democrats upbeat about her organization,
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fundraising, and polling. they supported clinton's call for tougher gun laws with a sit-in on the house floor and she again took on trump. >> he's going after me personally because he has no answers on the substance. >> reporter: trump earlier was raising much-needed campaign funds, promising donors he will stay disciplined, telling voters america's problems can be fixed. >> but not by hillary clinton. only by me. >> reporter: trump still tru trumpcentric. i'm steve handelsman, news4, capitol hill. people in howard county are still cleaning up after last night's tornado. it caused damage to homes, knocked out power, closed down roads. now a second round of storms is approachi ining and chris gordos
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on this. >> reporter: doreen, utility crews from along the east coast are here working with bgne in the neighborhoods hardest hit by the tornado. utility crews are working on dozens of power poles snapped like match sticks. hobbs road is closed because of all the work being done here. trees were torn down or uprooted by the tornado. family and friends are helping clear the front yard of silvia and stan charles, who have lived here for 38 years. >> i was in the house. it sounded like enormous trains. i got pitch black and everything went
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>> we're providing water for individuals who have wells and don't have water. we have available showering and places for charging your devices. >> reporter: a tree tore through this home. two people were inside at the time. >> you should just hear the glass shattering and the breaking of the wood. just every bit of it you could hear like in full detail. >> we want people to be aware of the fact we have more storms coming as well. they've got to be mindful of the fact there could be another batch of storms coming in this afternoon into tomorrow. >> reporter: and howard county residents appear to be rolling with the punches. the power outages, the property damage, because they say the good news is as a result of the tornado no one was injured. back to
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the way. doug, what do we expect next and when? >> tomorrow morning, vance, we could see a line of very strong storms move in through parts of the region. this is happening right now towards chicago. that line will make its way overnight tonight and into tomorrow morning. just cloud cover and a few showers down towards southern maryland. temperatures got into the 80s. right now just starting to see some storms firing around the chicago area. it is expected to fire up more back to the west, start an area of thunderstorms, and then watch. here it is right here around 6:00. watch this line create the potential for a very long-lived line of thunderstorms making its way down across our region. this is 7:30 tomorrow morning. then during the afternoon another chance of
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opinistorms. wind and hail a big factor. stay with us. i'll give you more details. washington boulevard is still closed in arlington near joint base myer henderson hall. the police in arlington conducted a traffic stop near one of the gates there this afternoon. when the officer approached the car, the driver shot himself. that led to rumors of an active shooter on the base and it prompted police to call in a bomb squad. they didn't find anything dangerous. nobody else was injured. the man in the car indeed died. he never drove into fort myer. they're not sure yet if that's where he was intended to go. more than two dozen people have been displayed after a fire inside their apartment complex. took more than 50 firefighters to put out that fire at 2nd and or
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morning. >> everybody on the fire ground is key in doing their portion of the job. it just so happened on that fire that was my job, to bring him down. >> another firefighter suffered burns to her hand, but no one was seriously hurt. investigators are still trying to figure out what sparked this fire in the first place. an important crime-fighting tool. why is one local police department waiting even longer and delaying plans to arm their officers with body cameras? the cleveland park metro station dry as a bone today, but yesterday, man, what a different story as water came rushing into the station. we have another storm on the way tomorrow. what's being done to make sure that doesn't happen again? i'm adam tuss. i'll tell you what officials are saying coming up. plus, the new steps to protect d.c. students after
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sfx: clap, clap, ding the greek flavors of our mediterranean collection.ve your choice of delicious chicken or hearty steak. with crumbled feta and cool, creamy tzatziki sauce. try our mediterranean collection today. subway. fresh is what we do. dramatic new video shows water gushing down the stairs and escalators at the cleveland park metro station. this happened during yesterday's wild rainstorms and with more severe weather on the way tomorrow, some are concerned about a repeat. adam tuss is live in cleveland park tonight with more
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adam, we can see those escalators are working again today. that's hard to believe after all that water. >> reporter: the escalator works, doreen. it is absolutely incredible. yeah, dry as a bone today, but the concern that this doesn't happen again tomorrow. too much water too fast and this is what happened. metro releasing this unbelievable time lapse security camera video showing the deluge at the entrance here yesterday. >> the sewer line probably couldn't take any more water. >> reporter: today d.c. water crews out here, they say they'll flush these drains, but they believe there was literally no place for all the water to go. >> when it rained hard like that, the sewer lines are going to take as much water as they can, as much as they can. when they can't take any more, everything else is backed up. >> reporter: there's plenty of footage of this incid
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rounds on social media. this video shows the water continuing to rush in. >> most people i think were a bit stunned and surprised. >> reporter: josh stanton shot this video as the water came gushing down. he said some people started to panic. >> it was a flash flood in the truest sense of the word. it was just rushing in. in about a span of 30 seconds it went from one side of the metro to completely about a foot deep throughout the entire place. >> reporter: as for people in this flood prone neighborhood, they wonder if something more can be done to stop all of the flooding. >> if we have more than 15 minutes of rain, we'll have geysers in the 3700 block of connecticut avenue where the water has no place to go but up. >> reporter: in this case, all the water was sent down the steps and escalator. metro is telling the district it might want to take action by actually raising the curb height out there by the
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first. >> okay. thank you. power has been restored to hundreds of people in the clarendon area after this transformer exploded yesterday. firefighters had to use a foam truck to get this fire under control. there's in fallout over the water crisis in flint, michigan. michigan's attorney general fly filed a civil lawsuit against two water engineering companies. the drinking water in flint was contaminated with lead two years ago when the city switched water sources to save money. those two companies were hired to monitor the water during the switch. the lawsuit seeks hundreds of millions of dollars in damages. the companies are facing lawsuits from people who live in flint. worried parents
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area is not doing enough to keep lead out of the water here. tom sherwood found out libraries also are a big concern. >> reporter: there are more than 300,000 people with d.c. library cards. they got an e-mail letter this week warning that water in more than 100 libraries has been shut off because testing showed unacceptable levels of lead. it is retesting for strict standards of lead and installing filters wherever needed. the notice came as a d.c. council lead a hearing today. >> we're not necessarily confident that remediation is swift and effective. >> reporter: federal and private medical groups say no amount of lead in the water is safe for young children who might exhibit behavior
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damage, and skin ailments. muriel bowser's administration says it has stepped up its response. >> when we do test, we're going to take action at a much stricter standard and with the implementation of filters that will allow us to maintain those low lead levels. >> reporter: parents and community activists say the whole city government should inform the public more quickly. >> it's not common knowledge the health risk that is associated with lead exposure. it's not common knowledge on where to go to get tested. >> no amount of lead exposure is safe for children. that's according to the american academy of pediatrics. that organization wants stricter regulations to protect children. in order to find out more about the proposed guidelines, we invite you to the nbc washington app and search lead
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15 families did not have water for the last two days. after news4 started investigating, the water was turned back on. it was shut off because the condo association owes more than $20,000 in back water bills. according to the property manager, the majority of the residents rent their units and many owners of those condos have not been paying their monthly fees so the water bill could not be paid. there was a partial payment made today, but another $5,000 is due next month. >> a partial payment is just a band-aid to what's inevitably going to happen. water turned off, electric will turn off. >> when we asked the property manager whether the condo association would be able to make the next payment,
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here's a look at what we're working on tonight. controversy over those police body cameras. why one local department is delaying the rollout. there are a number of communities in prince george's county that could use a little special attention. one of them is forestville and they're going to get it. we'll tell you what county government has planned for the people here. an extra layer of security as people look for alternatives in the wake of metro's safetrack plans. >> first, here's doug with a check on the weather forecast. we have some more heavy weather moving in. >> the potential is there for a very fiery start to
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tomorrow. some thunderstorm activity. maybe the potential for flash flooding, lightning, high winds. take a look outside right now. we see the sun make its way back out after seeing some cloudiness during the day earlier today, but now a very nice shot. 81 degrees. winds out of the west at 5 miles an hour. temperatures into the 80s all across our region. 70s in some spots. 79 in manassas. 75 in quantico. showers to our south. that's going to be the case tomorrow. we're going to see a storm system back to the west and it's going to move our way during the night and be here tomorrow morning. this one will be a lot stronger. wait for it to fire up around portions of iowa and southern wisconsin. then it will move on down. the severe weather threat today around the chicago area, northern indiana. this is a moderate threat,hi
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weather, including tornados and damaging winds. our weather a slight risk overnight. that's through 8:00 tomorrow morning. then tomorrow afternoon we still have a slight risk. this is what we're going to be watching during the day. future weather timing it out for us overnight. not much until about 7:00 a.m. then it starts coming in. it could get here a little sooner than this. look at 8:30 in the morning. numerous thunderstorms. some of them very strong with very heavy rainfall. some of the computer models have this here. others have it farther down to the south. most of the computer models get northern virginia with the bulk of this action. even into maryland, it may hit you too. thursday morning starting to clear out a bit. the more clearing we get, the more sun. the more fuel for thunderstorms during the afternoon. we could see a couple of strong to severe thunderstorms tomorrow afternoon too.
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tomorrow. tornado threat a low threat, but it is still there. high winds definitely a high threat. that's the biggest threat we have. hail and flash flooding also going to be on the medium to high threat level as well. this is something we're going to be watching very, very closely. of course, i'll be with you overnight tonight around 11:00. that's why we're calling tomorrow a weather alert day for the chance of severe storms. friday, saturday, sunday looking pretty good. sunshine. highs in the mid 80s. once again, all eyes on the next 12 hours.
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now at 6:30, another delay in rolling out police body cameras in part of northern virginia. >> the investment is one i think we should make. cutting down on crime by sprucing up the neighborhood. >> we try to do the best we can with what we have, but there is a need that needs to be looked further. a local man who trained with isis then quit is looking to avoid prison time. and he's only in fifth grade, but you don't want to mess with this guy. he's arlington's police chief for the day. >> it was cool. it was a once in a lifetime experience. fairfax county police chief says he's ready to start body cameras t
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program for more than a year. >> but the county board has just pushed back the roll out of those cameras for yet another year and a half. david culver is there now with a look at what's causing the delay. >> reporter: this all comes down to policies and money. we're going to have more on that in just a second, but first we did check in with several northern virginia police departments and starting in loudoun, i can tell you when it comes to their pilot program for body cameras, they're been running ru -- they've been running it for about a year now. prince william hope to start one in the fall. alexandria and arlington are exploring pilot programs for body cameras. fairfax county, while they're ready to roll theirs out, the pilot has been put on hold for now. a county supervisor voted yesterday with hi
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members to hold off on rolling out the police body camera pilot program. >> i would like to see if we couldn't do better than that and i think we can. >> reporter: he thinks an 18-month delay is too much. police departments across the country have been giving to cameras to its officers on the street for the past two years. pressure has mounted here in fairfax county. the chief wants it for accountability for his officers and safety. there are a lot of moving parts when it comes to implementing a body worn camera, especially given the size of fairfax county and its police force. they need to determine at what point the officer will actually turn on the camera. then when interacting with a potential suspect, that video could eventually be made public. then they have to decide whether to show that person's fac
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blur it. how do you store that video data and for how long? and money, the initial estimated investment $8 million, costing another $4 million each year. >> it won't be inexpensive, but it's an investment i think we should make. >> reporter: in my phone conversation with the chief today he told me if he were given the go-ahead by the county to start that pilot program he could get it going in 90 days. she and the chief agree they want it done right the first time. there's an article in "newsweek" out this week that questions whether d.c. is ready for a terrorist attack. that article runs down the litany of close calls and lessons learned post-9/11. the article talks about a plane that flew over the cia in 2002, the gyro
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onto the national lawn. >> we train and exercise with federal partners each and every day. we have 3,000 officers assigned to patrol divisions every day. and every individual at the pd understands what role they can play in the event of an attack. >> he also praised police chief cathy lanier has a veteran bwho ran the special ops before she became chief. a man who joined isis and then quit says he wants to warn others about the terror organization. he traveled to syria last year to train with isis and then escaped and turned himself into kurdish forces. in an exclusive interview, his attorney says he was tricked into joining the group. the client wa
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time warning others to avoid the trap he fell into instead of serving time behind bars. he is back in virginia being held without bond. he could get 20 years in prison. prince george's county is working to cut down on crime there, but it is not just by adding more police to the streets. this initiative focuses on transforming neighborhoods to help improve safety. tracee wilkins reports from forestville. >> reporter: at prinjudy tally,s lived here for sometime, has suggestions on what to focus on. >> we need resources that live here. >> reporter: he has ideas too. >> a lot of dumping goes on in the commercial area there. nobody knows who is dumping it. >> reporter: that's the idea behind baker's transforming neighborhoods initiativ
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entering office. >> this is a way you get government to respond to the people quickest. >> reporter: the county executive assigned members of his team to oversee each community, including langley park, river dale, suitland, hillcrest heights, and oxen hill. >> they've been open to us. we've been open to them. now there's work to do. >> reporter: they'll lead their own transformation as county officials plan to take on three new target areas. >> when we recalculated where our challenging areas in the county were, those were the areas that were coming up. >> reporter: in forestville, the issues range from school truancy to poor access to health care, all needs that tni has developed to help navigate. >> we try to do the best we can with what we have, but there is a need that needs to be looked further.
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in the morning. simultaneous vigils were held around the world today to remember a british lawmaker, jo cox, who was killed. cox was shot and stabbed to death last thursday in northern england. her alleged attacker spoke about freedom for britain during a brief court appearance. cox supported britain's staying in the european union. tomorrow voters in britain will decide whether that nation will remain a part of the eu, the european union, or break away from the 28-nation block. fewer signs out on the roads in montgomery county. a councilman wants to ban the temporary signs. they are eyesores and a potential safety hazard for drivers. he introduced a zoning law that would make the
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, i just broke up with my boyfriend and i need something to celebrate with. bree? i thought it was mutual. yeahhh. the mediterranean collection. try with chicken or steak. topped with crumbled feta and creamy tzatziki sauce. i feel better. me too! subway. fresh is what we do. the potomac yard metro station is inching closer to reality tonight. the alexandria city council unanimously approved a master permit for the proposed station that would run along the blue and yellow lines. construction is slated to start in late 2017. the station would open in 2020. a boy's dream of growing up to be a police officer or a firefighter.
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chance to experience a higher office firsthand. >> he is just 11 years old, but for one day everyone called him the chief. >> reporter: be honest. wouldn't you like to be police chief if just for one day? hit the lights. crank up the siren. follow that car. meet this little boy sworn in as arlington police chief for a day. he got a chief's pin and arlington police patch. he got to ride in an official police car, lights and sirens. >> it was cool. it was a once in a lifetime experience. >> reporter: he got to process a mock crime scene and take fingerprints, sit at the chief's desk and take a phone call, and take a close up
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police canine unit. well, not too close. then he got to take some questions as chief for the day. what's the most important crime problem we have to face today? >> i think the most important crime problem would be robberies, bank robberies, because they're taking money that belongs to other people and that's not okay. >> what should people do to stay safe? >> i think they should be careful where they go. make sure they don't walk into the wrong neighborhood. >> and how should kids stay out of trouble? >> don't fall into the wrong crowd. there are some kids that are t not -- bad kids at school. they'll make you do the wrong thing. >> reporter: he was named chief for the day because of this winning poster showing cops
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foiling a bank robbery and consoling people nearby. he is a straight "a" student and when he grows up, he wants to be -- well, he wants to be a cop and maybe someday chief for more than just a day. >> looks like he was a school safety person too. hats off to those guys. i did that arlington county. >> you did? >> yeah. we're tracking a line of storms tomorrow morning. we're tracking this. it is going to come through early tomorrow morning. we're talking 6:00, 7:00, 8:00 in the morning. many of us could wake up to severe thunderstorm watches and warnings early in the morning. a
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look at the temperatures out there right now. sitting at 81 degrees. a very nice night. what to expect tomorrow. a.m. severe thunderstorms. remember this when you go to bed tonight. high winds the biggest threat. very heavy rain another threat. that could lead to flash flooding. another round could happen in the afternoon. this area back here under a flash flood watch. does not include d.c. or the metro region. we're tracking the starts starting to develop in chicago. what's expected to happen is the line of storms will develop and move all the way across our region overnight tonight. starting off with severe storms early tomorrow. 72 degrees at
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a possible break around 11:00, 12:00, 1:00. more severe storms developing in the afternoon. the more sun we get, the more of a chance for severe storms. i'll be here through 11:00 tonight with much more on that. 87 on your thursday. much nicer weather friday, saturday, and sunday. all looking great. next week another couple of chances for storms monday and tuesday. we want to clarify a story we reported about the d.c. library system and lead levels in the drinking water. we reported that lead was found in more than 100 libraries and that library was taking steps to install filters. more than 100 libraries were below acceptable levels of lead and lead was found in seven water outlets in four libraries. filters are being installed in those facilities. coming up, king james with
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it took 52 years and we're showing it right away. massive crowds in cleveland as lebron james fulfilled his promise. doreen, why are you not in cleveland right now? >> i wish i was there. >> this parade has been the longest parade in the history of championship parades. it drew an estimated 800,000 people, almost double the city's population. you see jim brown. browns legend passing the championship torch to king james there and the rest of
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i'm happy for the city of cleveland. that was amazing. 800,000 people. unbelievable. >> they're partying like they're going to have to wait 52 years for the next one. >> that parade will spill over into tomorrow and possibly the weekend. >> i remember the parades we had for a championship series. there's nothing like that in the world. you remember it for the rest of your life. good for them. all of them. >> guys were high-fiving kids. lebron james declared he's not going anywhere. he loves it there in cleveland. >> why would you go anywhere? >> people want to come to him now. we're going to move on to baseball now because we have to talk about the nationals. they're hoping for a championship parade of their own in d.c., but right now they are stuck in a rut. four straight losses for dusty baker's club. the nationals can't seem to get that big hit to break open some of these games. the good news though bryce
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swing. harper hit his second home run in his last 20 games. the nationals, joe ross is on the hill tonight. another late start for the nationals. 10:00 from l.a. the last time we saw tiger woods at congressional he hit three straight balls into the water. today woods was back on the golf course. carol maloney has more. >> reporter: tiger's tournament is turning ten, but the former world number one is relegated to hosting only duties this weekend. still recovering from back surgery in august. tiger today saying he wouldn't miss this event. the tournament is near and dear to him. his message, thank you for keeping all of us safe. tiger says in his recovery he is making progress.
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back to competitive golf. >> it's not fun. it's tough. i want to be out there. i feel like i should be able to compete against these guys. i miss playing against these guys. i have to sit on the sidelines just like everybody else. i might get an inside the rope pass though. >> reporter: if you're headed out here, this is something you might want to try. it is called shot for heros. fans will have two attempts at getting the ball on the green or in the hole in this location. a hole in one and $10,000 goes to you and military charities. 100 if you're within 14 feet of the pen and $10 for everyone who attempts a shot. one of the stars at today's pro-am not a pro golfer, but ken griffey jr. round number one of the
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tournament gets under way tomorrow. from congressional country club, carol maloney. >> that's our badcast for now. ro man: hey baby, how are you? woman: i have a surprise for you. man: you have a surprise for me? narrator: at dominion, 1 in 5 new hires is a veteran. and when they're away, they miss out on a lot. but they won't miss out on financial support. because we cover any difference between their military pay and their dominion salary, and continue benefits for them and their families. why do we do it? because our vets sacrifice enough. "dominion. depend on us for more than energy." ♪ stand by me.
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tonight, dramatic revolt. unprecedented in modern times, a sit-in protest on the house floor. democrats shouting, demanding action on gun control. to tell the truth, donald trump unleashes a blistering takedown on hillary clinton. but nbc news found his all-out assault was filled with falsehoods and questionable claims. a famy vanished, a frantic race against time tonight for a father and his kids missing at sea. a stunning twist after the monster truck bust, with an arsenal of weapons. tonight, the rescue mission they were on spurred by a tragic loss. cliffhanger as the crowd goes wild. streets so packed, people hanging from buildings to catch a glimpse of history. and one of the greatest songs of
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