tv News4 at 6 NBC January 10, 2017 6:00pm-6:59pm EST
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all these counties in pink, also includes northern fauquier, panhandle of west virginia. leading edge of that rain is still quite far away. it's mostly out in the ohio valley now. but once it moves it, there's ra possibility it will be falling on frozen pavement. there could be up to a tent of an inch or less of freezing rain. there is some moisture now coming into the mountains, just about to come into western maryland. the leading edge of the heavier rain is right now in ohio and kentucky. that will be moving in closer this evening. developing news now in prince george's county. a new arrest after the fbi raid at the county
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>> today we learned former council member will campos pleaded guilty to accepting bribe money. tracee wilkins is in greenbelt with more. >> reporter: in the statement that compos sent to me, he said that he is sorry to everyone for what's happened and for the actions that he has been found guilty of and that he has pleaded guilty to. he also offered prayers for other elected officials who are about to go through what he's already been through. >> honest politicians have nothing to fear. >> reporter: today it was revealed by the feds that for most of the time will campos served, he was taking bribes. and today the u.s. attorney urged others to come forward on their own. >> my advice for you is don't wait for us to contact you. reach
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>> reporter: this is the fifth arrest in the ongoing investigation. police say during that time, he received kick backs from businesses in exchange for county grants. >> the evidence in this case shows that william campos treated the taxpayers' money as if it were a literal slush fund. >> reporter: in a statement that campos released to news4 he said as trang as this may sound, i am relieved that this is finally coming to an end. this process has been tortuous and i have learned so much about life and myself. the u.s. attorney says he funneled money through nonprofit organizations and even suggested that players make up nonprofits, assuring them he could get the money. the u.s. attorney vowed there are more arrests to come.
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charges. there will be other people prosecutore prosecuted. >> reporter: we have reason thoo to believe that one maryland state delegate presently sitting in the house may be arrested soon as well. reporting live in greenbelt i'm tracy wicee wilkins. >> reporter: how an fbi investigation of corruption in prince george's county could go far beyond the county line. protesters in white hoods or pink crowns today interrupted the confirmation hearing of senator jeff sessions. his donald trump's nominee for attorney general. the sessions' confirmation process is expected to be among the most contentious. he's a
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he's super deservconservative a allegedly has a history of making racist remarks. he's well liked here on the hill. that helped him in the senate hearing, so did the preparation of the attorney general nominee who clearly sees this as kind of a do-over. >> will be the truth, the whole truth -- >> jeff sessions is very conservative but is he, was he, a racist? >> this character katuaricature6 was not correct. it was very painful. i didn't know how to respond. >> today donald trump's pick for attorney general is a savvy senator, admitting systemic discrimination. >> we can never go back. >> protesters yelled kkk. some black lawmakers opposed sessions. >> because we don't want the fox to guard the henhouse. >> and the h
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>> i'm talking about the lbill that is the law today. >> muslims as a religious group should be denied admission to the united states. >> he said he accepts abortion rights and same-sex marriage, not illegal immigration, but admitted deporting millions is not possible. >> let's fix this system. and then we can work together after this lawlessness has been ended. >> as the first senator to endorse donald trump, sessions called for prosecution of hillary clinton. he promised today to recuse himself if her case gets revived. and sessions said he would say no to donald trump if the new president tries to break u.s. law. frankly a lot of this hearing will continue tomorrow about senators trying to get an idea from sessions about what donald trump plans in the new white house on issues that will be legally controversial, which
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looks like there are going to be a lot of. the russian hacking investigation took center stage at a senate intelligence committee hearing today. cia director john brennan disclosed that he warned his russian counterpart about the hacking back in august. >> and told him clearly that russia was doing this, they were playing with fire and it would backfire and they would be roundly condemned by not only the u.s. government but also the american people. and he said he would relay that to mr. putin at the time. he denied any type of activity along those lines, but i made it very clear to him that basically we were onto him. also today a bipartisan group of senators introduced a bill for increased sanctions against russia for the alleged meddling in the election. president obama delivers hi farewell address to the nation in chicago at mccormick place in
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presidents usually give this speech at the white house. before mr. obama left d.c., he posted a message on facebook saying chicago is where his political journey started. he wrote that it seems fitting to return there to offer, quote, my most grateful farewell to the american people. politicice are searching th west fie westfield wheaton mall right now. the incident follows an argument outside the hollister store. >> what i saw
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stabbed. it looked like he was like walking around with his stab wound. >> there was his friends. his friends were standing by when he got stabbed. so the friends are just like on the side trying to i guess like help him. >> officers have stopped and questioned at least one person. chopper 4 was also over head as police searched some vehicles to make sure a suspect was not hidden in there. now to a tragic case of child abuse in silver spring. a 5 month old baby died after being severely shaken. tonight the baby boy's own father is facing charges. chris gordon was in the courtroom today. >> reporter: it's a clean record according to his defense lawyer. but prosecutors say he did have an offense as a minor, but none of it had to do with domestic or child abuse. roger lee miller jr. was feeding
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their apartment off lockwood drive in silver spring in october. the child started bleeding from the nose and suffered serious spinal injuries. in montgomery county district court, roger miller was told he faces up to 40 years if convicted of first degree child abuse leading to the death of his son and another 25 years if he's convicted on a second charge. his lawyer says miller denies that he caused the injuries to his son. the lawyer says miller has no criminal record as an adult. prosecutors say as a juvenile he was charged with a sex offense. the judge ordered miller held with no bond because of the serious charges now filed against him. his mother came to court to support her son. >> there's plenty good about him. that's all you need to know. >> reporter: the special victims investigative unit focused on
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what happened here the mo. he called 911 to report that his infant son was unresponsive. the court charging documents say that 5 month old darryl lee burns suffered head trauma. prosecutors say at one point the defendant roger miller tried to ma blame the child's mother for the infant's death. but she was at work and they ruled her out. >> a 5 month old child, whether they're crying or despondent or having problems with their sleep patterns, shaking them to the point of nosebleeding and severe trauma is not appropriate behavior. and thus the charges. >> reporter: court papers say doctors concluded immediately that this was not an accidental death. and investigators determined that miller was alone with his son when it happened.
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he told the jury that the massacre was something he still felt like he had to do. jurors deliberated for less than three hours before returning their verdict. the judge will formally sentence dylann roof tomorrow morning. a sinkhole is creating big problems for people in northwest d.c. this afternoon a school bus got stuck with special needs students on board. >> reporter: chris, what a sight here today. i'm on allison street. this is the sinkhole. let's show them how deep this puppy is. this is the shovel. look at that. that's p
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so a school bus meets the sinkhole. you might say the wheels on the bus went down and down. what a predicamenpredicament. a d.c. school bus with special needs kids on board dropped into a sinkhole on allison street northwest. whoa. you might say the back end just bottomed out. corey sanders is a neighbor. he was here when this happened. >> numerous calls br plawere plo a 311 call center with regards to cars getting stuck. no one has come out here as of yet. once i saw the school bus get stuck, i immediately called 911. >> reporter: they safely removed the students through an emergency exit. then they took them to a nearby building so they could stay
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a tow truck lifts the back of the bus out of that hole. and then from the front, pulls it back to dry land. now, there's hope that soon the city will repair what appears to be a broken water main beneath allison street. was there a cone marking the sinkhole? >> plenty of neighbors put a cone in the early part of the week. but the cone was removed and cars have been getting stuck. we pulled a vehicle out of there yesterday evening about 7:00. >> reporter: now the cops did a good job today. the firefighters did a good job today. d dot is on the scene. they're hoping to patch this thing by tonight. fingers crossed. >> looks like they got a cone in the background now. glad nobody got hurt. tension is building between metro, d.c.'s mayor and the d.c. fire and ems
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it stems from a new metro filing asking the court to dismiss many of the lawsuits stemming from the deadly smoke incident in 2015. >> reporter: yeah. and metro has shifted a lot of the blame to d.c. fire. this all got to a point that d.c. mayor muriel bowser felt the need to call a news conference today and stick up for d.c. fire. flanked by d.c. fire and ems personnel, d.c. mayor muriel bowser sticking up for her department. >> i want it to be perfectly clear that the d.c. fire and emergency system is ready and able to respond. >> reporter: but that's exactly what metro says did not happen on that deadly day. in a new filing, metro says d.c. fire personnel ignored obligations and had utter disregard for its
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shifting blame to d.c. fire. >> it was my belief then and it is now that our firefighters ran into harm's way to make sure that they could serve and save people. >> reporter: the mayor's chief of staff a bit more pointed in a tweet earlier today, saying, lawyers run from responsibility by pointing fingers at the very people who run towards danger to save others. sad. in the days after, a senior metro transit police officer told news4 d.c. fire ignored requests for help. the current fire chief, who was not the chief during the episode, did respond today. >> we have our. opinion. we think our people are well trained, ready to go. >> reporter: all of the back and forth after 61-yea
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glover died in that event. they say better training and coordination has helped but underneath the surface this is getting to be a real problem between all these agencies. the district's so-called death with dignity bill just took a hit in a major roadblock on capitol hill. jason chaffetz says he's going to block it. mayor muriel bowser signed the bill to allow terminally ill patients to end their lives with a doctor's help. caught up in controversy, why some parents are now opening up their wallets to support an embattled principal. big changes ahead of the presidential inauguration. what's being built to help those coming to witness history. >> reporter:
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the nearby counties of northern fauquier, loudoun county, northern montgomery, western howard, points north and west are going to be affected by this as it does move on in. rain falling of frozen pavement may accumulate a tent of an inch of ice. that's all it takes to cause slick spots. off to our west and north there's one little batch of moisture coming into garrett county and into the panhandle of west virginia.
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most of the moisture here is in ohio and kentucky down into t . tennessee. we stay dry here into the evening hours. then this little pink zone that's that first little fwhaba that comes through. that's between 8 and 9:00 tonight. then the area in green, that's the rain falling on frozen pavement. that's going to begin to move in around 10:00. by 11:00 p.m., that pink zone is where we're still going to begin to see the icing. the leading edge of that is coming into warmer air, so it will just be rain falling. as it moves into the metro area between 11:00 p.m. to midnight, just rain moves into the metro area.
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the mid 30s to upper 30s. we're going to hold steady here but as at or a little bit below freezing. here in the metro area we stay into the upper 30s to lower 40s. the ten day outlook, maybe a few sprinkles of rain thursday morning but much milder. friday the 40s. and then saturday we may get a wintery mix in the morning. a little light snow changing to sleet midday on saturday to some afternoon icing. after that we get some sun back on sunday with highs in the 40s with sunshine. continuing coverage of that federal bribery case with roots i in prince ge
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the information the feds won't tell you and who may be caught in the scandal next. a warning amid a rash of gun thefts in loudoun county. a community divided over the fate of a local high school principal. >> he deserves a fair shake. and a look at a local jeweler's role in politics as the inauguration draws near. >> that is just part a
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rex tillerson put exxon's interests before america's.. i'm not here to represent the us government's interest. instead, tillerson sided with putin. with billions in russian oil deals... he opposed us sanctions on russia... ...for war crimes forced to pay hundreds of millions for toxic pollution... ...putting profits ahead of our kid's health. tell your senators to reject rex tillerson. and protect american interests not corporate interests.
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. you are looking at a live picture. air force one has just landed in chicago. president obama left the white house earlier. he's getting ready to make his farewell address to the nation from his adopted hometown of chicago. you'll be able to see that live on nbc 4 tonight at 9:00. in the meantime, a former maryland delegate and county councilman plead guilty in a federal corruption case. >> will campos was elected to 2004 and then the general assembly in 2014. campos pleaded guilty to conspiracy and bribery charges last week. he took tens of thousands of dollars in kickbacks from businesses in exchange for
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zoning rules. >> all of this comes on the heels of an fbi investigation that resulted in bribery charges against two fiofficials in the prince george's county liquor board. we're learning new deeds. . >> reporter: what a week. last week the feds announced the arrest of members of the liquor board in prince george's county. today they announced the arrest of a former state delegate and former county council member. they won't tell us the connection between these cases but their court filings do. the feds took a curtain call today after arresting former state delegate will campos and suggested more big arrests could be next. might there be another corrupt legislature? >> yes, there might. our mission is we're not the police of the legislature. our job
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evidence we find to its logical conclusion. >> reporter: an fbi affidavit and court filings from prosecutors indicate david sun, the former liquor board head arrested days ago, was funneling bribe money to campos. sun helped secure a $3,000 bribe for a local politician and delivered it in a restaurant bathroom. the plea agreement released toot in the case said on the same dade campos received a $3,000 bribe. it roaeads, individual b and campos left the table and walked towards the bathroom. individual b then gave campos $3,000 in the bathroom of the rest rauntd. the fbi affidavit without naming campos said a state delegate send a text message to sun statg
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bill had passed and that the elected official supported it. nhknhk newsline 9:00-9:109:00 pm9:10 pm nhknhk videos gone viral 9:40-9:509:40 pm9:50 pm940-10 nhk nhknhk little charo 9:50-10:009:50 pm10:00 pm940-10 nhk abcabc coverage 10:00-11:0010:00 pm11:00 pm ernyerny celebrity page 10:00-10:30 10:00 pm10:30 pm nhknhk newsline 10:00-10:1010:00 pm10:10 pm wcauwcau news 11:00-11:3511:00 pm11:35 pm wnbcwnbc news 11:00-11:3511:00 pm11:35 p too is when the sentencing will happen. live in greenbelt scott macfarland news4. the murder case shocked the uva community. today a judge pushed back the civil case against a former lacrosse victed of killing his girlfriend in charlottesville. hughley grew up in bethesda. love's mother filed a $29 million wrongful death suit against him. that trial is going to now start
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in the summer of 2018. car doors left unlocked, allowingge through and take whatever they want in loudoun county. how gun dealers suggest you handle your weapons. >> a typical glock that could be 500 in here could easily se$500 for a few,0 thousand dollars on the street. >> reporter: customers scoping out the new sleek designs of pricey weapons, guns that at this shop come with a paper trail. >> most thieves that are convicted felons or criminals can't walk into a gun shop, fill out paperwork, pass a background check, so they resort to stealing them. >> that's exactly what's happening all over loudoun county. >> they're in and out of it in probably less than a minute. >> reporter: and taking what they want from inside, including
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guns. loudoun county deputies tell us the thieves are not only focused on cars. they're also targeting homes. in one leesburg neighborhood, they got into one house and got away with 20 guns. what do they do with them? >> sell the gun on the street, trade it for other contraband. >> a lot of people keep their firearms in the car. i usually don't recmend that. my firearm is with me. >> reporter: if you insist on keeping it in your car, keep it in a lock box tied to the seat. >> lock it to the safe, run it around the seat in your car, close it and lock it. >> reporter: there's also more high-tech solutions. biometrics. this safe leareads your thumbpr and unlocks. >> it comes down in my personal opinion to carelessness of the owner. >> reporter: these gun dealers insist there's nox
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in leesburg, david culver news4. nearly a million people could be in town for next week's inaugural festivities and protests. cell phone companies want to make sure they stay connected. verizon and at&t have spent millions to boost cell service in and around the national political. >> people will be able to do anything they feel they need to do. facebook live, instagram, snapchat, making a call, sending a text, sending a picture. >> the companies say you only have one thing to do, don't forget to charge your phone. it's official. there's a new name in the race for a virginia governor. charlottesville distillery owner denver wriggleman says he will seek the snnomination. he joins three other republicans
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gillespie and frank wagner. democratic governor terry mcauliffe can't run again because of term limits in virginia. >> still ahead, a symbol of hope behind the changing political tide. meet the woman behind these iconic pins. >> reporter: the fight to have a popular principal reinstated at his high school is intensifying tonight. dozens of parents signed up to speak before the school board. but we're also learning some parents take a differing view. rain falling on frozen pavement may cause some slick spots. that rain getting closer to us.
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of a popular loudoun county principal. they're packing the school board right now urging the school board to put the principal back on the job at dominion high school. >> reporter: the scene outside the school board auditorium tonight, more than 200 people signed up the speak, the majority there to urge the board to reinstate popular dominion high principal dr. john brewer. >> i want to talk about how the loss of dr. brewer has left a hole in our community that we probably didn't even totally appreciate before he was gone. >> reporter: but there is a quieter group of parents now offering a competing view. gener jen callahan calls her facebook page children matter most. >> the heart of this whole situation is children and kids that have been mistreated and families that had been impacted. >> reporter: school district officials say they're barred from speaking about personnel matters b
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believe he got in trouble for writing a recommendation on behalf of a former band director. in november he stepped down from his next job at a florida school when parents there complained he used inappropriate and sexual language with students. parents at dominion complained act the sa about the same thing. >> it started out with vulgar language, name calling, sexual innuendo. just very inappropriate type of exchange between a teacher and a student. >> reporter: now callahan and some other parents fear the overwhelming support for brewer might be keeping students from telling all they know about damron. brewer's supporters are confident he would not have turned a blind eye to teacher misconduct. >> he has given his life tohe
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dominion community and he deserves a fair shake. >> reporter: brewer's supporters have started a legal defense fund that's already raised $20,000 in just four days. but even though they're making this big pitch to the school board tonight, no action will be taken. the principal still making his case behind closed doors. next, as we look to the future a local woman reflects on robert: i've always had high blood pressure. but now i was getting these terrible headaches. and i was tired literally all the time. something wasn't right. most people don't find out they have chronic kidney disease until it is very advanced.
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my friend ron paul was one of those affected. but a simple test can help save your life. talk to your doctor or contact the gw ron and joy paul kidney center to find out how you can get tested. before you find out that way, find out this way. new year, time to get rid of stuff. to find out how you can get tested. simplify, declutter, unplug, purge, or even quit cold turkey. i raise turkeys without growth-promoting antibiotics,
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hormones, or steroids. if you're looking for little ways to simplify life, feeling good about what your family eats is a pretty simple place to start. my name is tammy plumlee, and i raise honest, simple turkey for shady brook farms. i've spent my life planting a size-six, non-slip shoe into that door. on this side, i want my customers to relax and enjoy themselves. but these days it's phones before forks. they want wifi out here. but behind that door, i need a private connection for my business. wifi pro from comcast business. public wifi for your customers. private wifi for your business. strong and secure. good for a door. and a network. comcast business. built for security. built for business.
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we are couldnnting down to inauguration day. the stage and bleachers are set up but there's still a lot of scurrying around. >> a will the to put thlot to p. one local merchant is breathing a sigh of relief that her wares made to the shelves on time. >> tonight ann ham is breathing a sigh of relief because her trump shipment did come in. >> are you looking for something for the inaugural? >> reporter: jewelry signer ann hand has been busy later with shoppers stopping by her georgetown boutique wanting trump inaugural memo bearabilme. >> everything that has a child of world war ii, just very very
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and i just was gravitating toward doing patriotic items. >> reporter: this hallway of photographs filled with faces of well known washingtonians, most wearing one of her signature designs. this eagle and pearl pin is no doubt her most iconic piece. it got no interest from buy ers until she sent one to the newly tapped ambassador to france. >> she walked into the room wearing the eagle. i thought i was just faint. to have her wear it, i was just -- i couldn't ask for more. >> reporter: the piece became popular around the country and has been worn around the world. how do you get ready for an inauguration with all of these kind of things? do you have to make enough for each candidate just in case when you don't know who's going to win? >> as you know in business there are risks.
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didn't think he would win. and i had something in the back of my mind that i would do should he be elected. and of course the morning after we were on the phone to our factory in rhode island and said let's go. >> reporter: ann ham moved with her husband lloyd ham from texas when she was just a young bride. he came to work for lyndon johnson. her husband became chief of protocol and advisor to president johnson. later the tragic loss of one of their five children led ann hand to find solace in hthis her hob. she has been busy for years now making jewelry and memorabilia. her own best career memory came from this pin, the one she made for the first inauguration of president
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through the door to buy the pin, many of whom were crying, sobbing, black, white, different nationalities, so many people that said they had to have this pin because they didn't think in their lifetime they would ever see a black man elected to the presidency. i felt so lucky to be a part of that. >> reporter: as she prepared now for another change, she's reminding of words embroidered inside the top coat of abraham lincoln. >> one nation, one destiny. that is us. that's us today right now. we better pray for this new administration, because they need our prayers and we're all in this together. >> reporter: she has designed many items sold
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the white house historical association. prices range from about $45 for lapel pins to about 35,000 for that 18 carat gold brooch with diamonds and mother of pearl and the donald trump monogram on the back. tom is back on more about our weather and an update on these icy conditions and who should worry about them. >> not here thankfully. a lot of our viewers in the shenandoah valley and the blue ridge, western loudoun county, frederick county, northern montgomery county, watch out late tonight. if the pavement looks wet, that could be ice. we have this
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advisory. that's for late this evening just after midnight it expires. this is a fast moving system. it will be quickly producing some rain falling on frozen pavement. and maybe less than just a toenh of an inch, but that's all it takes to cause slick spots. it's off to our north and west. near frostburg and closer to hagerstown. there's one little batch coming out of west virginia just about to move into shenandoah valley in about an hour or so. that's not the main event. all this rain in kentucky and tennessee is advancing off to the east and that's going to be moving in. the area you see in the green and yellow, that's just rain moving in. but it's coming into cold air locked in the valleys. it will be hitting
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icing. by 11:00 p.m. we see it moving into northern fauquier county. we're going to be hovering in the upper 30s all night long. thursday maybe a little bit of sprinkle activity early predawn. some sun back. highs mid 60s. 40s on friday. then a wintery mix. this is a more serious storm here for the metro area and much of our region. morning snow, midday sleet, changing to afternoon icing on saturday. then on sunday sunshine back. looks nice for dr. king day. good weather for the inauguration too.
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wizards are rolling by going for their tenth straight home win. as ceo of exxonmobile... rex tillerson put exxon's interests before america's i'm not here to represent the us government's interest. instead, tillerson sided with putin. with billions in russian oil deals... he opposed us sanctions on russia... ...for war crimes forced to pay hundreds of millions for toxic pollution... ...putting profits ahead of our kid's health. tell your senators to reject rex tillerson. and protect american interests not corporate interests.
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question tells me people are starting to notice what they're doing. they started the year 2-8 in their first ten games. now they here looking for their tenth straight win at home. >> reporter: the wizards were one win away from having a winning record once already this year, but tonight they have a second chance at that if they're able to beat the chicago bulls here at the verizon center. this team is going for their tengt straight win at ho tenth straight win at home with a win tonight. the last time the wizards lost at home was over a month ago on december 6th. they're trying to get over .500 for the first time this season, something that would certainly be a building block for this team. >> it would probably be like a big sigh of relief a little bit. just being
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confidence moving forward knowing we can get over that hump. >> we just want to keep playing well and keep winning games and closing out games. we're working on that. being over .500 is a step in the right direction. just want to continue to play well at home also. >> reporter: and the chance of them keeping that home win streak alive, looking good tonight. jimmy butler and dwyane wade are out tonight. butler is sick while dwyane wade has a rest day. when you're a 13-year vet you just get those perks sometimes. the other team that calls verizon center home is lighting the ice on fire these days. the capitals won their sixth straight game last night. their captain closing in on history with a goal and two assists, now at 999 career
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second straight selection for the holtby by ovechkin is making his 12th trip. the terps coming off a big road win at michigan this weekend. before that it was a heartbreaking loz in nebraska. lots of lessons early on this season. >> we learned a lot from the lost in nebraska. we learned a lot from the wind versus michigan. and hopefully what we learn from the win we'll do to prepare for indiana. >> i think we gain add lot of confidence in michigan. when we play hard, things can happen. >> we just know that they're going to learn. it's going to be like a track meet. we just want to be ready to get up and down and just play for 40 minutes and play hard. >> late night for the terps. we might be saying
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according to multiple reports carl edwards is set to retire from the sport. edwards one of the top drivers for joe gibbs racing finished fourth in last year's cup series. just 37 years old, edwards is in the prime of his career. no word yet on why he's walking away. going to miss his signature back flip. the college football season, though, reacts to this. it's over after what many consider the greatest champion game ever played desean watson throws two first quarter touchdowns including this one to win it with just a second to spare. that cements his legacy. christian wilkins cements his legacy as one of the greatest dances we've ever seen during a confetti shower.
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he's 310 pounds and he showed the world his moves last night. >> exciting game. nbc nightly news sup next. at dominion, we're putting our energy to work creating a cleaner environment by using cleaner energy sources like solar, wind and natural gas. we've reduced carbon emissions by nearly 25%, which is the equivalent of taking close to two million cars off the road. cleaner air and cleaner water. it's good for all of us. dominion. depend on us for more than energy.
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tonight, dramatic showdown as president-elect trump's nominee for attorney general takes on accusations of racism. also asked about trump's comments on grabbing women in that infamous conversation caught on tape. trump and vaccines, an uproar as robert f. kennedy junior said trump asked him to lead a vaccine safety commission. nbc news exclusive, president obama laying out his legacy. what he's telling lester in chicago hours before his farewell address. dylann roof sentenced to death for that massacre in charleston. flash flood, rescues, millions tonight in danger.
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