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into. >> over the course of my career i've seen a number of challenges to our democracy. the rugoian rnment's effort to interfere in our election is among the most ris. >> and we come on the air this afternoon with a live look at capitol hill, where rob mueller has just wrapped up a day of testimony. the fmer special counsel facing hours of questions about his russia investigation from members of two congressional ee committ >> and at times members from both sides of the aisle seemed kilike they were l for a win in the court of public opinion. many questions went unanswered in part due to limitations put on mueller ahead of his appearance. but in his testony mueller made it clear his probe was not a witch hunt and report did not exonerate the president. sle let's get to sarahdallof with more. >> this wasn't robert mueller's first time testifyi in front
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ofngress, it was his the th time. he was selected for his position with the special counsel ven his long resumé. today he delivered facts, but few fireworks or new revelations as he testified for more than six hours. robert mueller in the hot seat. the former special counsel dismissing president trump's claim his report cleared him of obstructing cejusti >> the president has repeatedly claimed that your report found there was no obstruction and that it completely and totally exonerated him. but that is not what your report said, is it? >> correct that not what the rep et said. >>laining why he did not bring charges despite some evidence. >> we decided we would not make a determination as to whether the president committed a a crime. >>. democrats endeavoring to make their case for impeachment. >> i believe he did uncover substantial evidence of high crimes and misdemeanors. >> republicans attempting toob cast the pr as unfair to the president. >> the fact thaw ran it out two
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years means you perpetuated injustice. >> having desperately tried and failed to make a legal case against the president, you made a political case instead. pa>> following justice dement instructions to remain within the boundaries of his report mueller offered little to no new information, frustrati lawmakers with limited danswer. he lie to you guys, too? >> i can't get into that. >> a lot of things you can't get into. >> but refutingtethe r claim by the president. >> it's not a witch hunt. >> the president appaly watching, retweeting criticism. his attorney releasing a statement that the testimony exposed the troubling deficiencies of the investigation. calling the issue over and the case closed. >> and mueller stuck to his previous statement that his testimony wouldn't go beyond what is in his written report. more than 150 times. leon? >> sarah, quidid what we see to
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essentially amount to the epitaph the entire investigation? is this the last step? the last straw? >> well it depends on who you ask, leo you heard the special counsel's statement there, i'm sorry, the white housens coul, trump's counsel saying that the case is closed and the issue is over. tyt for democrats, this was their opportunito make their case to the american public for impeachment. to weaken possibly trump run at re-election. and that as we know, is going to continue to play out for months. >> yesnd we'll no doubt both sides will find some fuel there. we'll see where it goes from here. erica? >> obviously this was the talker on socialdi me today. the hashtag #muellertestifies is what's been tret trending all over the place. both on twitter and on facebook, instagram as well. we thought we would pull out a
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few tweets. i'll start with one from congressman steve scalisif the mueller h ring is proving anything is that the two-year, $25 million investigation was a witchitch h to note you heard in sarah dallof storsry that mr. mueller refuted that terminology that this was a witch hunt.so hat's one in particular there. let me pull out another one from congressman ma gates this was one of the more fiery exchange that we saw today. today's mueller testimony was he cald it the death rattle for impeachment. another one came from senator emy klobuchar who is running for president on th democratic side as the m eller reportys and mueller made clear today, the russian attack on our democracy is a national security threat and invasion of our democracy and we heard robert mueller say this deserves the attention of every american.th anoer one we've seen, miriam webster dictionary chime in over
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top searches, ex-cull pate. loquacious, one of my favorites. all trending and people looking for those words. we're monitoring for new reaction right now fromthe president. we expect to be to hear something from him very soon. set to address reporters from he south lawn just about any minute from now. on twitter mr. trump sent out a saraastic thank you to dem for holding those hearings, calling it an embarrassment to our countryatement tuned, once the president speaks, we'll >>ing you live reaction on news4. stay with us throughout the afternoon and evening as we take a closer look at the back-to-back hearings, analysis and we'll take a lo at some of the watch parties that were going on here in our area starting in the early hours this morning.
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next half-hour. we'll look at some of the biest moments andiggest reactions as well from the hearings today. >> we're going to switch gears to turn to a local football program, devastated, hit twice by tragedy in 72 hours. first one of the woodland tigers football team lost 11-year-old caron brown. days later while they were in mourning, a coach for another woodland team, jamal brandy,was also gunned down. news4's cory smith joins us live. cory, the people who knew them are saying there has got to be an end to gun violence in this city. r that'sht, erica. like many here in the southeast and across the district are fed up with people dying by gun violence. sadly, this is not the first time tragedy has struck this youth sports program. but to have two murders so close togetherhas really compounded the grief in the woodland
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community. but it is also led them to renet their effoto stop the violence. >> michael alexanders has won the woodland tigers youth and sports education football program in 33 years and had to bury more than 20 players, he's preparing for two more funerals, murder of is 1-year-old caron brown and 22-year-old jamal brandy. killu just 72 apart. today he woke up physically sick, struggling to feel anything. >> numb. fighting back tears. you know, w wonderinghat's going on in our society. >> karonas a player and bandy, a coach worked to keep kids like him off the streets, out of trouble and safe. the same thing zanders did for him when he was a child. >> all my coaches, we took this real hard it hurts. and we just try to figure out what is going on.
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>> that's a topic that should be reserved for adults, the kids in the district are being forced to confront it, too. especially karon's friends and teammates, who were looking forward to getting back on the field with him next season. he was always making jokes, he was always making the team laugh. >> he knew how to pay otball. i miss having him here. >> the boys say they'll play next season for karon. coach zanders will be on the sidelines, because even after all the death and despair, life goes on. and so, too, must the figh to stop the violence. >> we can't give up, because these are our babies, these our young people. this is our future. >> as we reported earlierthis week. police have arrested the suspect in karon brown's murder. but they're still looking forror in information for theerson or people responsible for killing jamal bandy.
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>> rough conversations to beha ng with 11-year-olds sand sadly that's a reality for lot of kids right now. cory smith, thank you. facebook fined $5 billion the record penalty ends a federal trade commission probe into the social med's giant privacy practice. as the settlement shows the feds are getting tougher with tech fms, but as nbc's liz mcgloghlin shows us the punishment may not change how silicon valley does business. >> this is a watershed moment in privacy enforcement. >> the federal trade commission's fine for facebook is record-breaking. >> a $5 billion civil penalty. >> part of a settlement ending an investigation into facebook's privacy practices. ceo mark zuckerberg said in a post in part, we've agreed to pay an historic fine. but even more importantly, we'ro going make some major structural changes as to how we build products and run thi
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company. >> this enforcement action provides immediate protections for facebook users. >> the agreement establishes a new board to oversee facebook's privacy practices. some say today's penalties don'r go enough. >> i don't think this does anything to change incentives and because it doesn't change ti incens, it won't change behavior. >> the settlement doesn't restrict facebook's use of personal data for advertising. part of what prompted the ftc's five commissioners to vote against it. >> this settlement does nothing o fix the fundamental incentives of their broken behavioral advertising model. >> the agreement supporters say solely addresses facebook's violation. >> it's not the purpose of this investigation t vindicate every concern the world has about facebook. >> many looking to legislators to govern tech firms, liz mcgloghlin, nbc news. lyseparate facebook must also pay $100 million for misleading investors about
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privacy risks. of facebook settlements, the justice department is reviewing text firms to see whether the companies are unlawfully stifling competition. the redskins are starting on a hump day. started trainingcamp under way. it means football finally back. and as news4's sherry burress reports, the redskins are ready to work. >> hello from richmond, virginia the site of the redskins ng traini camp players arriving today. the official practice starts at 9:45 tomorrow. star left tackle trent williams, as expected did not report. from the quarterback battles to rookies fighting for roster spots will be here throught camp. coming up on news4 at 5:00 we're going to be asking head coach jay gruden about williams' absence and what i means for the training camp. from richmond, scherree burress,
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news4 sports. >> send up a prayer that they're healthy this season. >> one of their prayers has been answered. whether, when training camp opened last year, it was nasty out. it was more like what we had last week. today, nice day to be out there. >> nice day utside. >> the big qstion, how long does the nice weather stick around? >>÷xl looking good out there no just today but the next couple. i'm tracking some showers and thunderstorms, most of us seeing a fantastic afternoon. i'll let you know what it meanst for the ne couple of days. your weekend and w whenll the next heat wave move back in? plus coming up, a remarkable rescue. how a local man's dogs saved him from sinking in quicksand. >> i tell you that mud was literally up to my knees and i couldn't pull my legs out. first the fda ordered a mandatory recall for certain breast implants because of thlir
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breast implants because of thlir nk to switched from dodge. we switched from ford. i switched from ram. i switched to chevy. we switched to chevy. for dependability. for technology. for the muscle. and just look it. adios, lexus. bye, bye, ford. we switched to chevy. couldn't be happier. see for yourself why people are switching. at the chevy all-star open house. or add another chevy to your driveway. current gm owners can get over $5,100 below msrp on this equinox.er chevy to your driveway. find new roads at your local chevy dealer. you ow when you're at ross and that cute dress gets even cuter? yes. or when you can say yes... both? (smiling) sure. or when you find at brand at that price?
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are you kidding me? that's yes for less. and that's what ross always has in store. whoa. (sighs) yes... oh, yeah.ve it feels ebetter when you find it for less. at ross. yes for less. back now with a live look outside. we should be doing this show outdoors today. this is the day we should be outside. we're in the middle of a beautiful break from the heat of summer. doug is back with how long it's going to last. the full forecast coming up in twoinutes. and the fda is taking action
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to protect women from a rare cancer that's been linked to implants. news4's doreen gentzler is working for your health with a new evidence that prompted today's recall. doreen? >> this is a story we've been folling for months, now a big new development as allergan recalls its textured breast implants after a requestrom the food and drug administration. the textured implants have been link odd to a rre cancer, alcl. it's not breast cancer, but a cancer of the immune system that gron i the scar tissue surrounding the implant. today's recall comes after t fda says it discovered new idence showing women with allergen's textured implants were six timesore likely to develop ccer, compared with women who had textured implants from a different manufacturerit lso includes tissue expanders, used for breast
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reconstruction surgery. the fda reports an increase in the number of cases globally, 573 women have been diagnosed with this rare type of cancer worldwide. of those, 481 women had allergen implants. and 33 women have died.ay the fda s you don't need to rush to have your implants removed. but if you're experiencing swelling or pain, that could be a sign that something is wrong. 38 other countries have already recalled these textured implants because of the risks. so thes united states behind the, behind the world on this one. erica? >> it'son important informa and definitely something that women need to address with their doctors if they do snse that. reality tv star kim kardashian west is championing
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the issue of prison reform. a spokesperson for d.c. jail tells us that kim k visited their facility yesterday. not going into details ab t what this was all about, but tell ust has to do with a special project that she's involved with. last year kim kardashian lobbied on behalf of alice johnson, the woman who was sentenceif to l in tennessee for first-time drug offense. president trump commuted her sentence after she spent twoca des behind bars. a pennsylvania court threw out rapper meek mills' conviction on drug and gun charges. that case kept him on probation for a decade. in 2017 a judge sentenced mills to two to four years for violating probation. that decision led to high-profile support and made him a celebrity crusader for criminal justice reform. today the court granted the rapper a new trial because of alleged police corruption. the court said woe likely be acquitted if prosecutors retried the case.
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today our i man doug throwing out if, you will that nasty heat wave we had. and today this is just as good as it gets. >> 12 days in a row with 90 plus, 95 or better across the area. in our 10-day forecast we don't have another heat wave.e thi wave will be a little shorter lived. in the next couple of das, looking good. it was a great day for this. one of the coolest things we have in our region. this is the chincoteague pony swim. the 94th annual pony swim. this is an event i wish coy get down there for.th they take e ponies off chincoteague island, bring them to the mainland, and they auction them of to help keep down the population in that area. all the money benefits the local volunteer fire department in that hoea. amazing is that? chincoteague and assateague both
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have the ponies. 84 degrees winds out of the northeast at 7 miles per hour. not around downtown. we have a shower just south of washington. temperaturewise, 84 d.c. le 85 huntingtown. 79, yeah, 70s backtoward the north and west. beautiful afternoon for sure. we are tracking a couple of showers here. and i want to take you through this. a tle bit here. i want to take you first down towards prince george's county. we've got showers now, back tosrds the prince george' county area. around clinton, maryland. making their way down indianhead highway. shovir acti there. over around clinton. just south of the beltway, moving off to the east very slowly. quick little downpo, will be all there is to it. up to the north a little different view here. up towards frederick, hagerstown, this is an area
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that's seeing showers and thunderstorms l day long. around theape canaveral. right around, what is that up there? anybody? >> the students weren't paying attention. >> camp david.am c david. >> camp david. >> thank you, leon appreciate that. >> the teacher always calls on you when you're not paying attention. >> shower activity back towards harrisburg as well. other than that, no the a lot on.ng those showers back to the north and west coming as a result of a little system here in our area. a little spin in the atmosphere, helping to provide some lift. all in all, nice weather as we tmove through the nexouple of days. everywhere we're only in the the 8 0s the eire country. on the cooler side of things. 80s. backyard weather with a high of 87, 88 on friday, 90 on
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saturday, 92 on saturday. camp david a beautiful place this time of year. >> the control room is telling me it's camp david. >> they weren't paying attention, either. >> teamlayers around here. yeah. stay with us, folks, a heartwarming reunion still ahead here on newsld >> we ou about the story yesterday. how a metro transit officer went above and beyond to calm a chilw with autism was getting upset on the bus. in about 15 minutes, the momentt that brohe child's mom to tears. mplgt first, a real-life moment straight out of the movies. how a local man says his dogs pulled off as?
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it's my special friend, antonio. his luxurious fur calms my nerves when i'm worried about moving into our new apartment.s why don't weask geico for help with renters insurance? i didn't know geico helps with renters insurance. yeah, and we could save bunch too. antonio! fetch computer!
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antonio? i'll get it. get to know geico and see how much you could sav i on rentersurance. no, these aren't boots. 87-year-old man stuck in quicksand like sand near the potomac river we see how these dogs came to his rescue.en >> you find yourself in a rough situation, who better to stick by your side than man's
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best friend. mean blue and jax and their human, lamar neville. you can say he's the type of guy who sticks in yourd. min you may have noticed, h shirt says his name. >> put it on so people know who i am. that's kind of nice. >> on monday lamar thought it would be nice to take the dogs for a by the c & oca l. his wife was going to see a movie. she told her husband, wait until we come back because if you fall down nobody will know where you are. >> did lamar wait? no, he did not and sure enough, found himself in a sticky situation. >> that mud was literally up to my knees and i couldn't pull my legs out. >> mired in d. the more he moved, the more he sank. >> i was trying to dig it out with my hands, but it just oozed back over. and made a mess. >> lamar stood there an hour yelling for help. he wasn't loud enough to be heard but theseuys were. >> if they hadn't been with me,
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i don't know whether i would have gotten anybody. >> eventually good samaritans o stopped by t lend a hand and the fire department gave lamar a lift home with h thep of a hose he and his furry friends are good as new now. and lamar says being stuck in the mud wasn't the worst thing i the world. >> if you want to try it, it's not that far, if you want to go see what it's like. >> i'll take your word for it. >> in bethesda, amy cho, news4. what's that, lassie? timmy's stuck in the well! thank god for those dogs. >> as many scooby snacks as they want. we goo an act of kindness bringing a local mother to tears. >> i tried to say thank you a million ti.s on the train but it really -- it really justh means so >> we're all going to start ying now. metro transit officer going above and beyond to calm a boy with autism. their heartwarminreunion
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today. plus flyer beware, the news4 i-team show us how travelers might be putting their psonal iernf
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we're the slowskys. we like drip coffee, layovers- -and waiting on hold. what we don't like is relying on fancy technology for help. snail mail! we were invited to a y2k party... uh, didn't that happen, like, 20 years ago? oh, look, karolyn, we've got a mathematician on our hands! check it out! now you can schedule a callback or reschedule an appointment, even on nights and weekends. today's xfinity service. simp . easy. awesome. d rather not.
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i'm wendy rieger, if you're just joining us, let's get you
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caught up on four things to know on this wednesday, rmer special counsel robert mueller on capitol hill facing hours of questions from lawmakers in two house committees. muellerg declinin say much outside of his 400-plus page report. his answers did directly push back on he president's claim of total exoneration. mueller also made it clear he believes more needs to be done to prevent russian meddling in future elections. id the prest is reacting hight now to mueller's testimony today. s addressing reporters on the south lawn. on twitter mr. trump already sent a sarcasti thank you to democrats for holding the hearings. calling it an embarrassment to p r country. president tru speak right now. we'll have his reaction in moments airily for you. for nearly a week we've been following the shooting death of an 11-year-old boy here in d.c.
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eow we've learned a coach involved in th same football program as karon brown was shot and killed a few days later. the league is devastated and t tonight program's director tells us he's sick of the violence in the district. the federal trade commission slaps facebook with a record-breaking $5 billion fine fo mishandling personal fo ination. the probe was triggered by revelations that a data mining firm had harvested information on nearly 90 million users. investors are taking the fine in stride. the company's stock slipped less than 1% today. back to you. let's go back now to our top story. if you haven't been following along with the robert mueller testimony on the hill, let's catch you up on what you need to know. and that's pretty much sticking 's his report. >> largely thathat he did throughout the day. some eight hours of testimony. dozens ofre times wheueller
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said it's in my report or simply, i can't get into that. that is because of ongoing fbi v itigations. but one thing is clear, mueller was much more willing to talk about russian interferenc than presidential obstruction today. the former special counsel warned of the severity of russia's involvement in the2016 election, saying it's likely happening right now for 2020. mueller did condemn the president for embracing wikileaks in 2016 saying problematic is an nd ustatement. here's what nbc's ari melber had to say. >> we saw bob mueller not only the special counsel, but someone with a lot of security cred as a former fbi director say not only did he fear this is the new normal, attacks from russia, but he thinks and concles from his work that candidate trump boosted illegal activity by russia. i think legally and substantively, that's a wow moment. we also know in fairness to the president, that's not something
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mueller found chargeable. >> mueller also made it cle that he did notxonerate president trump in his findings. but in a rare moment, in a forceful comment he did address the president'sit sim of his report saying quote it is not a witch hunt. as the president has been claiming it is. there true d.c. fashion, were cool beverages and bloody muellers available earlier at many local bars,long day of drinking, news4's tommy mcfly found out why people wanted to get up so early and get they partstarted, shall we say to watch the testimony. >> things heated up on capitol hill today there were coolbe verages and bloody muellers available. we went sside toee why people wanted to belly up and watch the testimony. >> it's just like any game day. everyone is here to watch the big event. >> we're hearing some gasps and growns, almost like a sporting event, are u expecting that?
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>> absolutely. that's usually why people come here. they want to have the feeling, you know, of what other people are saying about what's going on the screen. >> i looked around for a bar in philly that was showing it. so i when my son overheard me talking about , to one of my friends, he asked if he could come, too. it's something he'll always remember. he was a high school student. it our generation's watergate. >> like she said it's really history. it's important to see. it's fascinaitng. educational. it's -- hilarious at times. >> is thishe atmosphere you thought we would have? >> absolutely. i mean it's so much better being here live than it is watching it in your living room on twitter. >> like any big event. sportswise or otherwise in d.c. there was boos and cheers, enjoy the testimony responsibly. in the northeast i'm tommy mcfly, news4. >> that young man very for being up so early in the
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morning. suit and tie to watch that continuing coverage of the ureller testimony during o next through hours of news, including more from tommy and the bloody muellers. probably would not have ordereda th plus you can find more right now hill t's happening on the in our nbc washington app. >> you have to have the proper attire if you're going to drink a bloody mueller. a tearful reunion today between a metro transit police officernd a 4-year-old boy. this picture went viral showing the officer help the little boy with autism. today the two got a chanceano see one her again. news4's mark segraves has their reunion. >> tears of joy from a mother as sheinally got a chance to say thank you to the metro transit officer who came to her resc last week when her 4-year-old son, who is autistic was having meltdown. >> i know i tried to say thank you a-mile times on the train, but it really -- it really did mean so much. >> officer dominick case says he
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was just doing what any father would do, helping a mother and her jung son who were in distress. >> as having a 4-year-old myself. it's not something i hav't seen before. he did seem a little distraught. so i thought maybe he could help them out a little bit. >> the photo of case holding the 4-year-old's hand went viral over the weekend after the boy's mother posted a story of how officer case offered the helping hand when her son was having a meltdown. >> we were by the tracks, and weighs rolling in the irt. lling my hair and kicking me there was nothing i could do about it. >> i approached her son. she advised that her son did suffer from autism and i just crouched down to his eye level and just tried to talk to him. explato him who i was, why i was there. just thought maybe the next best thing was to give him something from my vest so he could have and hold and kind of distract him a little bit from what was going on. >> case, who has been a metro
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transit officer for about five years, not only helped to calm andrew down, he rode the train home with him. a 35-minute ride. >> he was a very sweet kid. veryweet boy. once, once he was able to calm down, the whole train ride he was calm, soe politand just seemed like a very kind kid. >> tomorrow officer case will be honored at the metro board eting and andrew and his mom plan to be there as well. gallery place, mark segraves, news4. as if moms don't have a tough enou go of it, anyway. and in the morning and rush hour, like the last thing tt e needed you know, he was right there to help. >> wo go. still ahead, the news4 i-team reveals how cyberthieves can access your personal information. >> it only tkes a quick or swipe. >> you're justonnecting up to
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a computer you can't see. >> the potential traps are hidden in plain sight. amelia? >> leon asoews4 cinues to talk about our changing climate today i'm talking about the por of trees, environmentally por of trees, environmentally they remove carbon
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news4 is committed to bringing you coverage of our
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changing clate. today something you can do to slow the shift. me m ae.a li>> before i get into it, i wa to let you know i posted two great resources on myacebook and twitter pages. so after this segment you can head there and check it out. something fun to do this summer, lant a tree and here's why they have so many benefits. one of them being in a year an acre of mature trees absorbs the amount of carbon dioxide produced by driver a car 26,000 miles. how many miles are on your odometer? think about it and how beneficial a tree can be.o if yre going to plant a tree, you want trees with low maintenance that are native to e area and you need them to live long. t once aee hits ten years old it starts helping out the environment by absorbing the co2 ale reing oxygen back into the air. in our area oaks and ginkos are great trees to plant. guys, back to you. >> good deal. easy it still ahead.
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a new video of a police shootout in maryland. we'll walk you through the e. footag sightkers hidden in plain before you hit the rport, the news4 i-team shows you how cybercriminals are targeting your cell phone en you
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back with another live look outside. enjoy the break from the summer heat. bdoug isck in two minutes with a word on when we're going to be warming up. >>ost of us know how to protect our credit cards and bank accounts and social security numbers. but there's a whole market for other information that makes you st as vulnerable. >> in the height of the travel season you're likingiz it. in onight's flyer beware report. investigative reporter jodi fleischer shows you what you need to know bef you take off. >> you wouldn't leave the door
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to yourte ho room wide open, hand your wallet to a stranger or post your passports online. >> people who travel they go to great lengths to protect their credit cards. but they don't think about this. what every hacker wants is your data. >>d cybersecurity expert james lee says they're constantly coming up with new ways to get it. skree name email addresses, where you shop and what you buy. and at the airpo you keep it all in the palm of your hand. until you're running low on power. >> when you connect up to one of these power chargers, you're just connecting up to a power you can't see. >> he said avoid the usbport, the old-flagsed plug is safer. you forgot your cord? an identity thief might be the one who left theirs bind. > some of the newer cords have chips in them, you can add malware to the cord. >> it can steal your data. stored passwords and p.i.n. numbers are the most valuable.
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tanya bonds loves to travel. but didn't realeer personal information could be on the move. >> i always plug in my usb into the lamp. i thght i was safe doing that. >> no. and those fancy hotel lamps and alarm clocks are so convenient, aren't they? hours er know who spent in that room before you did. >> it's ea to alter one of these kind of ports. >> which means the port in your rental car or ride share can so be risky. on board cmputer andbluetooth systems can capture your data. >> you're left your footprint from that phone in that car. >> the electronic privacy informati center says hackers stealing your data shouldn't be your only concern. we all interact with plenty of legitimate businesses that are really after our data so they can sell it to marketers. >> they're collecting more ha information t's required for your interaction with that company. that's part of the problem. >> have you tri these fancy new ipads to order your lunch or a drink? while you're dvouring lunch,
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the tablet is gobbling you have information about you a when you swipe your card to pay it marries that information with whatever else you've done onat tablet. >> even the games you play prompt you to answer your perso feeling social? you just need to enter your log-in and password. >> look at instagram, twitter. >> but any posts you make or photos you access can be stored. >> fcuom a serity perspective there'su not as risk here as there is privacy risks. >> the privacy policy. which most users never read clearly states we may build and store eer profile preferes based on your use of the tablet program. it lists the ways they may sure personally identifiable information with third parties. the factthat they disseminate to other third parties makes it impossible to track down all thep icies. >> you never know how the data will be used in the future or if the third parties fall victim to a data breach, don't know what
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information they had. even when you scan your boarding pass to pay with miles or get flightalerts that convenience also costs you. your frequentlyer data rewards program and trip information. >> you have to be savvy wherever there is the ability for somebody to siphon off your data, they're going to try and you need to protect it. >> his best advice? flyer bebeware. >> a tablet privcycy poli does say that users can contact the company to review personal information. that's been captured and you can request that it be deleted. most of us probably will not do that unless you know about thiso more information, visit our innbc waon app and click on flyer beware. she mentioned the car we were like, what? >> think about that.m >> can youine rental cars? every time thaw plug in? >> something to think about. speaki of cars, today's a
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great top-down kind of day for a nice ride outside. >> i'm a convertible type of guy, but i was behind a convertible today and i thought it looked really nice. the nice ferrari convertible is great this time of year, everybody. out there right now. >> the fiat convertible also great this time of year. we've got some cloud cover out there and even a shower. and you can actually see one of those shares, right here, there you see the rain coming down from this one we had one over here towards a andrews force base. we're at 84 degrees. temperatures dropping into the 70s by later this afternoon. 10:00, 11:00, nice night for dinner outdoors. 86 annapolis, beautiful along the water over towards the bay. re's one of those over here
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towards prince george's county. we had water around andrews air force base. it kind of died off but this ong fired up r around the beltway. can you see it to the north and west of bo e. it will stay north and west of bowie. making its way towards the lanham area and over towards 193 nd farthernorth, tracking showers around frederick and the heaviest storm around haguers town. heavy downpours around that area. amelia, that's your house right about there. >> i'll checkif to see i have a text from my mom. >> i want to include the allergo , because my allergies have been driving me crazy. y.re's mold spores continuing to run high.n they've beerunning high with each report this week. i suspect they'll continue to run high tomorrow. despite that, it's a beautiful day. a refreshing start. go to poo have a barbeque. now that i planned your
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thursday, just know it will be e nice, py of sunshine and high temperature of sunshine, 8 7. a little bow low normal. with this i bring t out iced tea meter. going up, a large friday as well. over the weekend it feels a little humid out there saturday and sunday, probably want to upgrade to an extra large. our average high is 88. we're starting to go down. our average high yesterday was 89 degrees. starting to see the daylight get shorter. we're just below normal tomorrow. normal on friday. and over the weekend we start to head back into the the 0s. thankfully we're not tracking dangerous heat this weekend. great for the pool or beach. feeling a little humid on aturday and sunday. >> second time you mentioned the pool. you must know i'm going to the pool for backyard ather tomorrow. >> on thursday, backyard weather day. >> i'm excited about it i'm going up against a lot of kids that are going to be out there. they invited me to their swim
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club and i'm getting in the pool s d racing some of these kids. putting my skill the test. here's the heat wave next week, chance of storms late next week. getting in the pool tomorrow. >> nothing could go wrong. doug competing with the kids. >> braggatg about beng up on a 9-year-old. come on, man. >> that's a guarantee. >> so check out the next story. a mama duck in florida who gave a firefighter a piece of her mind this week telling me she didn'want his help with her ducklings. >> she swoops in. smacks him on the head. pu myabies down she knocked off his glasses and he put the duckling down so ld get back to its mom. >> all four baby ducks were rescued and the firefighter? he's fine. no problem. >> she said sir, take your hands
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off my child. >> firefighters do so much for all of us. >> and for them, too. >> look out for ducks in that pool tomorrow. >> did doug say he's wearing speedo tomorrow? >> i have two i'm just debating which one to use. >> you might want to put both of them on. just saying. >> are you saying his butt's that big? >> let's change the conversation. >> let's look at what's coming up. >> so a man's dog -- a man's dogs, no speedos, please. >> look what you started. >> a man's dogs helped him out of a sticky situation, literally. >> boy, did they, amy cho talks to the 87-year-old man who got stuck knee-deep in the mud on a bethesda trail and hear from his wife, sheas a few choice words she told him to stay home. >> we're working for your money. identity theft is on the rise.
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a number of companies are trying to cash in with identity theft protection. >> our usen hogan explains what you need to know before you sign up for coverage. >> a small city finds itself in the middlebi of a political drama. >> an employee says when she ran for mayor it caused her to be fireepfrom the police dtment where she had worked for years. we have that and more coming up. just ead onah shopping for backpacks... ...a-t mom also gets a backo-school bag? that's yes for less. ross has the brands you want for back to school. n and it feels etter when you find them for less. es at ross. yor less.
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we're getting a look at some dramatic body cam video released by baltimore police as their officers responded to reports of a man with a gun inside of a methadone clinic last week. the suspect shot and killed there. an officer also shot. barry sims from our baltimore affiliate has more. >> go back. anybody injured? >> baltceore poli say this is footage om a body camera. police tell a worker to get out of the hallway. >> come on, come on. >> he's got a gun. >> in the video police and others tell 49-year-old ashanti pinckney numerous times to drop the weapon, .357 magnum. police say pinckney fired first. >> i'm waiting for someone. >> put the gun down, i will
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shoot you right here. >> put the gun down. >> put the gun down. >> police edited out the gunfire exch ge in which pinckney was shot. >> for whatever reason this person became volatile and violent. >> investigators believe pinckney shot and killed clinic employee david caldwell. he was found in another area during search o the building, they don't know if pinckney was trying to get something from caldwell. methadone or oher drugs. >> there's a possibility in that area there is no methadone. lhe hallway in which you see the incident take pace is the dispensing area. >> the sergeant involved has
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been released from hospital and is expected to make a full recovery. news4 at 5:00 stas right now . >> it was theater today on capitol hill as former special counsel robert mueller testified about his report on russian interrence in the 2016 presidential campaign. >> spent seven hours before two committees today, answering questions as best he could. >> the here are some key findings from today's hearing. mueller largely stuck tohis report. even when given a chance to clarify some points, he gave simple answers,ften referred back to the document and did not exonerate the president from committing obstruction of justice. >> mueller said he believes russian interference is still a great risk. heading into the 2020 presideial election. republicans are largely celebrating today's hearing.
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saying once again it clears the president. >> and we have team coverage of, we have president trump's reaction and what happens now as we move forward. nbc's mark murray will join us with analysis. >> let's begin this evening with news4's eica gonzales with the live desk information coming in now. >> it's been a long day of testimony. we've been glued to our screens, we know a lot of people have spent the day at the office and may have missed some of the big moments. so here are few of theor m memorable sound bites and exchange from today's hearing. >> the russian government's efforts to interfere in our election is among the most serious. as i said on may 29, this deserves the attentionofvery american. >> the president has repeatedly claimed that your report found there was no obstruction that it completely and totally exonerated him. but that is not what your report said, is it? ? correct, it is not what the eport said.

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