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went into his head. i didn't even realize it until i saw him crying and i saw him bleeding from his head. i took him out of the car seat and he had a hole in his head. >> reporter: this is the sketch of the 17-year-old charged with murder. his 16-year-old accomplice faces weapons charges. police believe the two may have been avenging the 17-year-old's beating in redwood city by gang members on may 31st. >> believing that those two individuals that beat him up in redwood city were in that car, fired upon the car as it was leaving the scene. >> they destroyed my family. they killed my baby and they killed part of my soul too. >> reporter: police think witnesses brave enough to come forward with the swift arrests but want tips to keep coming. >> right now this is partial justice. the justice we want to give this family whiz they're convicted. >> reporter: the family is thankful for that and for the prayers of a community who never got a chance to know baby isaac. >> i want to thank everyone from the bottom of my heart. >> reporter: as you might imagine, this very young family, both parents just 22 years old, didn't exactly have money set aside for a baby's funeral, so they did set up a fund in his name. it's at any wells fargo branch, just mention the baby's name. police urge witnesses to come forward because they want to make sure they have all the information they can get to the district attorney to make sure the case is as strong as possible when it goes to trial. kris sanchez, nbc bay area news. the san francisco fire department says the investigation into the blaze that killed two of its firefighters last week is still under way, but right now sfpd's more immediate goal is to prepare for the large crowds expected to attend the memorial service and funeral for the men. tracy grant is live at st. mary's cathedral in san francisco where services will be held later this week. >> reporter: i want you to take a look at something. these are the signs that are already lining busy goff street of what's coming up on thursday and friday. there's no stopping or even parking anywhere next to st. mary's cathedral in order to make room for all of the people they expect to show up here to pay their final respects to two men who died in the line of duty. >> the realization that we are going to be burying two heroes is weighing heavy on a lot of our hearts. >> reporter: but it's not just the family friends and men and women of the san francisco fire department who worked alongside anthony valeiro and vincent perez who are grieving the loss of the two firefighters. since the men were killed battling a blaze at a home in san francisco's diamond heights neighborhood last thursday, sympathy and support has poured in from across the city, the bay area, the world. station 26 continues to fill up with flowers from people paying their condolences. >> automatically i knew i was going to have to come up here and bring some flowers and let the families know that we do care. we really do care. >> the firefighter died and so we came here to pray. >> reporter: outside members of the san jose fire department showed up today to cook enough food to feed 200 people, including the victims' families. henry isn't even a firefighter but he also came from san jose to prepare the meals. >> they're there for us all the time. it's just something that, again, it's just the least we can do. >> reporter: geraldine drove from atherton to drop off fresh fruit. >> those tragedies are awful, but they bring out the best in people as well. >> reporter: the firefighters say they're also plagued by the question of what happened in that burning building last week that ended up costing the two their lives. >> we can't speculate. we just want to know -- we just want to know what happened and how we can deal with this the next time that we have a situation like that. >> reporter: well, san francisco fire department says and they're hoping by the end of the day they'll come up with a plan on how to deal with what they expect to be an overflow crowd here at st. mary's. they're hoping maybe there's some way they can televise it and show it in an adjacent building for people that can't make it into the cathedral. they're expecting people to be lined up on the streets, fire trucks to be all over the place out here, and a very long ride from here to where the two will be buried. tracy grant, nbc bay area news. >> thank you, tracy. new at 6:00 tonight, oakland's police and fire department better equipped to deal with disasters tonight thanks to a new state-of-the-art radio system. >> radio shop, this is radio one. do you hear me? >> this is radio shop. we hear you, radio one. >> the city showed off the system today, demonstrating how emergency workers can now transmit messages from highland hospital's trauma center, a location that used to be a dead spot. it allows clearer transmissions, eliminates most dead spots and allows emergency workers to communicate with other agencies as well. >> we live in earthquake country, we have dangers of urban wildfires. we need to be prepared to help each other out in the east bay, and we know that this will make all of our emergency workers, fire and police, safer and more able to communicate with each other. >> oakland is the first northern california city to get the new system which meets national standards. the city is hoping the entire bay area will be on boardy 2013. now, oakland detectives have their hands full investigating three separate shootings that happened over the weekend. a man from vallejo in criticoa condition after he and two hers were shot in a parking lot around 2:00 sunday morning. just before that a 52-year-old man was injured in a separate shooting in a driveway on 90th avenue in east oakland. that one happened saturday. and a 51-year-old man was shot and killed on high street. police are offering rewards for information leading to the arrest of any of the shooters involved in those three cases. the jury in the chauncey bailey murder trial requested another look at key witness testimony today. they asked for a read back of broussard's testimony about the willing of michael wills, the man police say was targeted simply because he was white. the former leader of your black muslim bakery and antwan mackey are on trial for the deaths. the jury has been deliberatinger for than two weeks. attorneys for the man suspected of beating giants fan bryan stow are hoping to secure video footage they believe may clear their client. the move marks the most concrete steps by the defense in its effort to prove the lapd arrested the wrong man. the motion asks the judge to instruct detectives to get video from a comfort inn where he allegedly stayed the day after the beating. hotel video could show that ramirez had a noticeable head of hair. the suspect in stow's beating was described as being bald. the family of missing nursing student michelle le has increased the reward for information to $65,000. highward police are debriefing their field detectives now and we expect an update soon. the department says they are not releasing news on the leads because doing so could hamper the search. the fbi is also involved in the investigation. le went missing last saturday. well, how is this for a twist. several unions in san jose are now demanding that city leaders sit at the table to talk about pension reform. the union showed up at 4:00 this morning, parked an rv across the street from city hall. the message, walk across the street and sit at the table to talk about tweaking the pension system. unions contend the city broke off talks. the city council voted to put a pension reform measure on the november ballot but the unions maintain they want to settle it now. >> this rv invites them to come right across the street and begin negotiations right at our table. we're only 150 steps from the front door. >> the city is facing $150 million budget deficit next year. the mayor is warning the next few years will see plenty of red ink. now, you probably use at least one of their gadgets if not many, but now apple wants your data too, in their cloud. scott budman is here to explain. scott, you and i just had this conversation last week. you said my mobile phone or mobile device already holds more songs than i could ever listen to. why do i need to store them somewhere else. >> reporter: that's true. apple is betting that you'll love its software and apps so much you'll want to put them on multiple devices and organizing all that information can be a handful, so enter the cloud. apple's ceo steve jobs walked out to the cheers of his company's followers today, then admitted that his products are taking up too much of our time. >> and keeping these devices in sync is driving us crazy. >> reporter: so instead of syncing them all up individually, jobs rolled out icloud, a way to store your photos, songs and data on apple's servers, then bring them to any device you choose. >> how do you as a consumer schedule or calendar events as a family or share photos with your friends or loved ones? right now if you're in this apple ecosystem you can extend that to people who are in that environment and now have that shared calendar, shared photos and keep it so that you're not constantly e-mailing. >> reporter: with tens of millions of apple's mobile devices out there and with many consumers buying more than one, the cloud concept makes sense. most of it's free. for $24.99 a year, you can take advantage of what apple calls itunes match, a way to save time uploading your music because apple can match it with songs on itunes. >> and it takes just minutes, not weeks. if you have to upload your whole library into some locker in the sky, that literally takes weeks. this takes minutes, because we're scanning and matching your libraries. >> reporter: in short, apple is now going toe to toe with google in the battle for your data, but are they going far enough? not quite says one cloud veteran. >> i think maybe that's the weak link in the chair today. social was not really talked about that much. facebook wasn't mentioned once. yes, they're building twitter in. steve has got to go a little stronger on social. >> reporter: with jobs talking so much about a post-pc digital hub of devices, apple is trying to get more social, giving you a cloudy place to keep your digital world. now, you might be saying, wait a minute, apple already has a place to store data with its mobile me service. truth be told, many mobile me users were not happy. steve jobs admitting today that it was not a success and he's closing it down. >> okay. well, gambling on the state's dime. next at 6:00, cracking down on welfare recipients who are living it up at taxpayer expense. er changes coming to california, though. and a rarity in these times of dwindling fish. the bay where a fish once floundering is getting a second wind. and good evening, i'm chief meteorologist jeff ranieri. some cloud cover out here across the bay right now in oakland, even a few areas of some drizzle. however, we'll talk about these clouds slowly clearing ay and, yes, finally a warming seven-dan llet you know how hot it could get coming up. [ man ] i love you guys. [ laughs ] i mean, just, you know, the whole heist thing. just putting jewels in teddy bears. this guy's wearing a wire the whole time. right? look at that! he's wearing a wire! [ laughs ] all right, let's do this. all right? before my wife changes her mind. go. [ male announcer ] your favorite movies right when you want them. watch unlimited tv episodes and movies instantly through your game console or other devices, all for only 8 bucks a month from netflix. no sequel for that guy. ah, listen to this one. a pair of shoes for a pair of u2 tickets. >> more than 100 people in san francisco gave up their boots so they can hear the rock band play "get on your boots." ♪ >> reporter: what would you be willing to do to get two free tickets to the upcoming u2 concert in oakland? in san francisco more than 100 people were willing to sit in the wind and rain for hours. melissa ryan was one of the first in line in the name of love of u2. >> i haven't seen them since i was in college, but once i got the opportunity to see them for free, it was worth coming out at 7:00 a.m. >> reporter: it was a sweet deal. she donated a pair of shoes and in return got a pair of u2 concert tickets. stubhub donated the tickets. the shoes will go to people in need worldwide. >> i'm hoping some young lady will get an interview. >> reporter: only the first 116 people got tickets. the rest were turned away. cornelia flanery was one of the lucky ones. >> it just seems surreal. i haven't seen bono in two decades. u2 was amazing. to be there now and to bring my kids, it's just an incredible opportunity. >> reporter: and what a show she'll get. we got a behind-the-scenes look at the massive stage going up at oakland's newly named o.co where u2 will perform. >> these are all custom built stages. so rather than just a tower system that takes up and kills a lot of viewing space, this one has opened up viewing. when this stadium is filled up for tomorrow night with 69,000 people, it's going to be a really unique experience. >> reporter: the covered pitcher's mound offers the only hint this was a ball field just a few days ago. now fans will enjoy a 360-degree view of the legendary band and be part of the largest rock and roll tour of all time. in oakland, marianne favro, nbc pay area news. a state assembly bill has been approved that's aimed at cutting down on the misuse of debit cards issued by calworks. under the will they could not be used inside poker rooms, casinos, even adult entertainment businesses. the bill follows an executive order issued by governor arnold schwarzenegger last year to limit where the cards can be used. >> showed over an eight-month period more than $227,000 a month of ebt cash was being withdrawn at various casinos and poker rooms throughout the entire state. so this measure will help stop that. >> state rules put into place last year already prohibit state-issued debit cards from being used at places like casinos and similar businesses. but the author of today's bill says this was never enough. a massive wildfire burning out of control in arizona is threatening mountain communities and forcing people to evacuate. the flames are being fueled by high winds, low humidity. more than 2,000 firefighters are battling that blaze but are faced with rugged, overgrown terrain and a very fast-moving fire. nearly 200,000 acres have already been scorched. >> because of the swirling winds, trying to put water down and retardant down on areas to try to save the town, but here we go. >> blazing heat as settled in from the upper midwest to south florida. temperatures reaching into the mid-90s in chicago. one person died during a marathon. in south florida, drought conditions have been at the lowest level in four years. the official start of summer, still two weeks away. totals for this year's record-breaking snowfall in the sierra are not in yet because the snow won't stop falling. this morning drivers needed chains on 50 at myers and on 80 over at donner pass. the storm warning ended at 5:00, but there could be scattered snow showers through tomorrow so carry your chains with you if you are headed that way. all right, let's turn things over to jeff ranieri. yes, we did see a lot of rain this weekend, but i did see a little sliver of sun and i know you've got some sun in your forecast. >> yes, we do have a much more optimistic look at our forecast as we head throughout the next couple of days. something i think everyone will love. it will finally start to feel like june out there. i did want to look at lake tahoe. winds relatively light and we're not seeing anything in terms of big snow showers. south lake tahoe, a little bit of a snow shower, temperatures at 46. we're seeing a lot of this activity we had on saturday that record-setting rain all pushing out here towards the southwest. so we're winding down as the radar scans in this over 3 350-mile radius. oakland museum with nearly an inch and a half on saturday. san francisco downtown over an inch. san jose airport and san francisco airport with less there at 0.37. a look outside and you can see low cloud cover, even a little drizzle across the bay at times but it is nothing major. these temperatures, though, it's still some major cooling here for june. 65 in fremont, 66 in concord, 68 redwood city and 58 in san francisco. so let's get to those numbers right now. cooling off very, very easily out here with not too much sun today. 63 in livermore, 59 in napa and right now 59 in novato. this area of low pressure that spun out that rain and the cold junuary weather we had is pushing over nevada so we'll see patchy fog and spotty clouds. still maybe a little bit of a drizzle. but here's the thing, it's going to bring some mild weather into this week. high pressure will build up from the south and we're going to go, yes, with the wording of mild. it's been a long time since we've been able to use that as we head into wednesday and thursday. we'll start off tomorrow morning with low 50s, not too cold. by 10:00 a.m. still on the cool side but we're going to be getting into some 70-degree weather. i'll let you know when 80s could be returning. that's coming up a little bit later on. back to the both of you. >> jeff, thank you very much. from overcrowded to vacant? a brand new california school sits empty while schools around it are overflowing with children. why the state's budget battlis taking yet another frustrating turn. i know you're worried about making your savings last and having enough income when you retire. that's why i'm here -- to help come up with a plan and get you on the right path. i have more than a thousand fidelity experts working with me so that i can work one-on-one with you. it's your green line. but i'll be there every step of the way. call or come in and talk with us today. undocumented students will continue to get a tuition break at uc campuses. the supreme court refused to review a policy that allows illegal immigrants to pay the same in-state tuition as other students living in-state. some out of state students challenged the rule saying they were being unfairly discriminated against. >> they have to have attended a high school for three years, they have to have graduated from a california high school and then they have to fill an affidavit that says they will normalize their status as soon as they're eligible to do so. >> it's going to be one of the central issues, one of the most important issues in the 2012 campaign. and i think that that's a severe blow to our representative, our constitutional republic. >> here's the rub, out of state students pay up to five times more per year in tuition than in-state students. the high court upheld the decision saying the policy does not conflict with federal immigration law because the tuition benefit was based on a student's high school graduation, not their residency. brand new and maddeningly empty. a southern california high school is a symptom of a much larger economic problem, which affects the entire state. tom yamis connects the dots for us in this report. >> reporter: at the foot of the lake hills in southern california sits a new school and a new problem. there's enough money to build hillcrest high but not enough to staff it or run it. just on other side of this building is a six-classroom building designed for flex technology labs. >> reporter: four years ago voters approved construction. then came the recession which crippled education funding. now, this $100 million state-of-the-art school in a district with overcrowded classrooms could stay empty for two years. >> it's not a case of a mistake, it's not a case of somebody to blame. if you want to blame something, you look at the economy. >> reporter: the school district says they'll save $3 million by not opening the school but it's going to cost them $1 million to maintain the facilities like this football field. >> when you drive by this school, it's a visual picture of what's going wrong in california at that and our yip abiliinabil fund our public schools and serve our students. >> reporter: at hillcrest high they crunch the numbers every month hoping soon to ring that morning bell for the first time. >> what we tell students is you see the things happening to you and your family in the local economy right now. that's the same thing that's occurring to the school district and that's why we are in this situation. >> reporter: teaching a lesson in patience and economics. tom yamis, nbc news, riverside, california. well, dumb and destructive. next at 6:00, a controversy that started on twitter has gotten all too real for a lawmaker in the national spotlight. more about his words coming up. >> to be clear, the picture was of me and i sent it. >> inappropriate photos, lies and it isn't the first time. the democratic representative that went from victim to perpetrator. the investigation coming up next. plus the rare honor for a bay area teach their she hopes will help her students learn they can r f stars. we are back in two minutes. for days new york congressman anthony weiner insisted he was the victim of a hacking. then today a stunning admission by weiner who said it was he who tweeted a woman an explicit photo of himself and that he'd done it before. nancy pelosi is calling for an ethics investigation to see if weiner broke any house rules. kristen dahlgren has the latest. >> reporter: after more than a week of denials, representative anthony weiner was apologetic and emotional. >> i'm deeply sorry for the pain this has caused my wife, huma, and our family. and my constituents, my friends, supporters and staff. >> reporter: admitting it was him that sent an explicit photo to a woman over the internet. >> last friday night i tweeted a photograph of myself that i intended to send as a direct message as part of a joke to a woman in seattle. once i realized i had posted to twitter, i panicked. i took it down and said that i had been hacked. >> reporter: but he also admitted much more, saying it was not the first time. >> i have exchanged messages and photos of an explicit nature with about six women over the last three years. >> reporter: weiner says some of those exchanges were after his wedding to top hillary clinton aide huma abedin last year. these were allegedly sent to another woman. nbc has not independently authenticated the photos, but today weiner was completely candid. >> this was a destructive thing to do that i deeply regret. >> reporter: admitting huge mistakes, but saying he has no plans to step down. kristen dahlgren, nbc news, washington. so what would provoke someone like representative weiner to do something like that? weiner says he told his wife and he says she's standing by him. a certified bay area sex addiction therapist and psychologist here at the studio here earlier told us about cyber sex relationships, how they get started and how they damage real relationships and why someone like representative weiner can get caught up in it. >> well, particularly for public figures, there is tremendous stress in the work that they do paired with often a lot of traveling and a lack of close emotional supports from their primary partner or staff. >> dr. elaine brady also says the internet is a powerful enticement to people and in situations like cyber sex relationships, lies and perceived anonymity for anyone engaging in that behavior. deputies are asking for your help in catching a man who posed as a pest control worker and assaulted a woman in her own home. it happened on porter lane around 8:40 saturday morning. investigators say the man posed as a pest control worker pretending to take soil samples and forced his way into the home of a 73-year-old woman, then assaulted her. she stole julie and fled in a white cargo van. a former peninsula psychiatrist accused of molesting 17 patients did not appear in court today for the start of a competency hearing. prosecutors want to retry dr. william ayers. his 2009 trial, you may remember, ended in a hung jury. the psychiatrist's attorney argues the 79-year-old doctor has dementia now and cannot help in his own defense. the attorney has requested that a jury decide the issue. the competency hearing is expected to take two weeks. sunnyvale police are investigating a body found stuffed inside a garbage bag. police are now saying the victim is a hispanic woman but are not releasing her identity. police got a call with the b bag -- about the bag just sunday morning. if you have any information, you can asked to contact the sunnyvale police department. california's troubled prison system got a little good news today. a comprehensive report now shows that the overall rate of prisoners being released and then rearrested is actually down since 2005. while it's only down 1.6%, the number represents thousands of crimes. the change comes after the state made a commitment to add rehabilitation to the state correction department's mission. most of the prisoners are returned for parole violations, not new crimes. the bad news, almost half of all prisoners wind up behind bars again once they have been released. a dead low day in iraq where five u.s. troops were killed, making it the single largest loss of life for the american military in the country in more tha two years. the troops died in a rocket attack. two suspected militants were found dead in a nearby area but there is no additional details about where the incident occurred or why they died. 4,459 american service members have died in iraq. well, another politician has thrown his hat into the gop presidential race. former pennsylvania senator rick santorum officially announced his candidacy today. santorum gave president obama a verbal bashing, criticizing the president for creating social programs that he says increase dependency on government. >> they don't want to give you opportunity, they don't believe in you. they believe in themselves, the smart people, the planners, the folks in washington who can make decisions better than you can. >> santorum says he would govern by believing in the american people and not in bureaucracy. the perennial question, how was your weekend, never got a better answer than today when a local teacher arrived at school and described to her students how she flew with nasa in an airborne observatory. ma rita beard was only one of six teachers nationwide chosen for the job. kent wilhoit met with beard and the astronomy club to bring this story down to earth. >> anybody see my clicker? >> you can't blame her if her head is still in the clouds. she just got off a plane and not just any plane. >> this is a picture of sophia. sophia is the stratospheric observato observatory. >> the altitude, 43,000 feet, filters out light from the planet and lets scientists and a few teachers see all the way to the center of the galaxy. for beard, the experience was as rewarding as being dhoechb fly with nasa. >> i felt like i had a smile on my face the whole time. i made sure that i spoke to everyone. it was invigorating and rejuvenating. i had all of these ideas that i can't wait to bring back to my classroom. >> and so the astronomy club uses the lunch hour to fill up on knowledge as well as peanut butter and jelly. >> it's really fun to me to listen to someone who's done it and not just talking about out of a textbook, oh, this star does this, this star does that. it's more interesting to me to learn from someone who knows what they're talking about. >> i've always been interested in science and seeing that it can happen to people that i know, it kind of makes me think, wow, i could go into something like that. >> beard made a point of telling the students that with a little effort, they too could fly aboard sofia one day. >> i told them sofia has a life of 20 years. the experience that i had, that could be them within the next ten years. that's totally possible. >> and we saw some really cool stuff. >> so while beard may have trouble finding her clicker this week, she won't have the same problem with the cool flight jacket nasa gave to her. >> i'm wearing it every day this week. >> a plane ride she hopes to use to get her students' ambitions soaring. >> yeah, i'd have trouble taking that off too. >> wear it to work, i'd be sleeping in it. >> i'd be like have you noticed, i was in nasa. it's not exact he a fish tale. a bounty of bigger than usual fish have given fishermen in one town a lot to talk about. and teenagers are no strangers to the kind of behavior parents don't approve of but there's at least one group that is particularly vulnerable. we'll explain coming up. and good evening, i'm chief meteorologist jeff ranieri. we had aweittle bit of warmth in the south bay. san jose 71, san francisco still cool with only 58. tonhthave talk, yes, about a warming seven-day forecast. you won't want to miss this coming up in a few minutes. . so here's one for you. among high school teenagers, who do you think is most likely to smoke, drink alcohol or do other risky behaviors? well, teens who are straight or teens who are gay and bisexual? a survey of 156,000 high school students across the country finds that gay, lesbian and bisexual students report worse behavior in half to 90% of those risk categories. the centers for disease control and prevention conducted that study. the students' responses leave more questions than answers, though. the cdc doesn't have an explanation for the differing behavior traits, but researchers say gay, lesbian and bisexual students are faced with more disapproval, stigma and social rejection. they say many risk behaviors are based on how people feel about themselves. skin cancer patients are finding hope for a cure through two new drugs. researchers say these drugs can slow the development of melanomas, extending patients' lives by months, even years. it's working for richard jackson, who was diagnosed with skin cancer four years ago. >> some of the lesions would be sort of golf ball size to as big as tennis ball size on my back and my neck. when i had the treatment, we could see that they changed color instantly from the first treatment. we watched some of the lesions actually disappear sort of overnight. >> doctors call the drugs the biggest breakthrough in melanoma treatment in 30 years. in trials, some patients with the disease lived five years longer compared to those treated with chemotherapy alone. doctors say the drugs aren't perfect yet and still have several serious side effects. lawrence scott is here and the warriors, a new head coach? >> some big news within the hour here. the news coming out of oakland, that they got a new head guy. if you watched game three of the nba finals, then you heard him, perhaps saw him, one of the broadcasters making his way to the warriors bench. big news out of the east bay. plus, the oakland a's getting some discouraging news regarding one of their top young starting pitchers there. in baltimore tonight while the giants are getting ready to start a three-game set against the team from our nation's capital, the washington nationals, we check in in china basin. and i'm chief meteorologist jeff ranieri. yes, some sun breaking through the clouds. we'll let you know about a lot ingo to get this week coming up in my seven-day forecast. in we want to give you some breaking news that we have now on the case of missing nursing student michelle le. she disappeared a week ago on friday while doing rounds at kaiser permanente in hayward. she's a nursing student there. initially this has been covered as a missing persons case. police have been working on this case around the clock. her family out there very outspoken looking for michelle le. we have just received news from the hayward police department that they have changed the classification of this case from a missing persons case to a homicide case. police now saying that they have uncovered compelling evidence during the course of their investigation through the week that they do believe at this point that the nursing student has been killed somehow or has died. it's a homicide case. very few details at this point as to whether they have found her body or whether they have just found evidence that perhaps she has died and is no longer. so again her family just today saying that they wanted more police officers put on the case, that a week has gone by and still no trace of her. again, michelle le, the nursing student from kaiser permanente, her disappearance now being classified a homicide. >> we'll have much more on that tonight at 11:00. let's go back and talk about the rainy weather we've been having lately. the late rain causing a lot of headaches for agriculture and outdoor events but it may also be behind some other strange occurrences. joe rosato jr. shows us how it may be causing a population explosion among one bay area fish. >> excuse me, peewee. >> reporter: it doesn't take a lot of imagination to figure out why a bait shop owner has a lot of feathered friends. >> well, ever since we've been here, which is 40 years now, we've had a number of what we refer to as pet wild birds. >> reporter: though keith frazier's pals may have motives beyond friendship, he's happy for the company at his san rafael loch lomond bait shop. >> all of them at one time or another will just walk right into the bait shop and help themselves. here you go. this is nasty sr. who we lost a couple of years ago. >> reporter: family photos take up much of the store, but frazier still has plenty of wall space left for fish stories. >> it's a seven to eight-foot sturgeon. he was fishing right off china camp. >> reporter: and this year the nearby waters of san pablo bay are generating plenty of tales. the last several months, recreational fishermen have encountered an unusual bounty of sturgeon. >> this is the best sturgeon season possible of all time. >> reporter: biologists aren't exactly sure what's behind the sturgeon explosion. frazier's sure it has something to do with the abundance of late rain. >> you could launch your boat here tomorrow, and ten minutes from the launching ramp, you're fishing. >> chris randall remembers when sturgeon fishermen were happy just to get a bite. today he came home with one of the two huge fish he landed. >> for sturgeon to grow that big, they're pretty old. so it's like i don't want to harvest too many of them. so we take one once in a while. >> reporter: fishermen are only allowed to keep three sturgeon a season. frazier encourages his customers to release most of what they catch. >> come on, nasty. >> reporter: a piece of advice not necessarily welcome by all his guests. joe rosato jr., nbc bay area news. >> okay, i love that story. we have to go there. that looks super fun. >> excuse me, peewee. >> listen, nasty. well, we've had our share of nasty weather, jeff, but now you're promising some peewee weather. >> yes, some sunshine or peewee weather, okay. yes, maybe i wasn't listening close enough to that story beforehand. 58 in san francisco, winds westerly at 13 in san francisco. let's take a look down here at at&t park. temperature of 57 degrees, winds westerly at 8 miles per hour. the giants getting under way just after 7:00. we'll look at mostly cloudy conditions as we continue tonight. if anything, we may see a slight drizzle but nothing that would produce any rain delays. as the radar scans around the 350-mile radius, we are currently finding dry conditions here for the bay area. it was cool for los gatos, only 65. we also had 58 in san francisco and 63 in santa rosa. other numbers dropping off very, very quickly. already upper 50s and low 60s in the east bay. 56 in san mateo. tonight we'll find some patchy fog mainly at the coastline and for tuesday, yes, dry and even warmer. we could even have some 80-degree weather coming in our seven-day forecast. we have all this clearing out here all because high pressure is starting to build in just the right spots. over the next 48 hours we are actually going to go from the wording cool right into mild. as we head into tuesday a few 70s possible inland and even a little warmer wednesday. 11:00 p.m. tonight some clouds and patchy fog off the coastline. we'll start off cloudy by 6:00 a.m. by the noon hour and 6:00 p.m. on tuesday, possibly some of the sunniest weather we have had in a long time across the bay area. so tuesday shaping up pretty good. 48 in los gatos, 50 in san jose, 51 in contoerd and 57 in santa rosa. let's get you into these numbers for tomorrow. large increases from this weekend. these are not -- 66 in san mateo, 64 in san francisco, and as we continue inland, napa, also upper 60s to near 70 degrees. you can always get more on your weather on the weather channel on cable. if you're doing any traveling in throughout the southwest. on your seven-day forecast, close to 80. when could it get here? by thursday and friday inland. we are looking at numbers close to 80 and mostly sunny skies. peewee, was that the name of one of the birds? >> yes, one of the birds. >> it also reminds me of pee wee herman and he was always happy and sunshiny. >> that's the connection you made? >> yes. that was maybe a wrong connection. if you can have junuary, why can't i have peewee weather. >> you totally can. >> lawrence is here with sports. good evening. the warriors have a new head coach tonight and, mama, here comes that man. mark jackson is leaving television to join golden state. this is his first coaching job ever. he's not been a coach at any level, the nba, college or high school, but he has been a top-flite analyst on tv currently covering the nba finals and he's a former star player. the warriors owner citing his playing experience a key to running this young team. jackson is 46 years old. he played 17 years in the nba with seven total teams. he made the playoffs in 14 of those seasons. played in the nba finals in 2000 when indiana lost to the lakers. during his college and pro career, he played for five hall of fame coaches. jerry sloan, pat riley and larry brown. big warriors news in the east bay. now to baseball, the a's came into their game against the orioles having been swept by teams from the a.l. east. the scene at camden yards in baltimore this evening. might not want to panic. four unanswered runs. nick markakis took the orioles to a four-run lead with the rbi single in the second. but the a's cut the lead in half with one swing in the fourth. a two-run home run and that's as close as it got. 4-2, the a's fall to the orioles. the a's also getting troubling news today. brett anderson, who started yesterday in boston has left the team and returned to the bay area for an elbow exam. if the lefty has a torn ligament, then tommy john's surgery may well be on the horizon. tonight the major league baseball draft, the a's selecting vanderbilt right-handed pitcher sonny gray in the first round. he's 11-3 with an e.r.a. just over 2.00. we'll have the giants pick tonight at 11:00. the giants riding some momentum. three games against the washington nationals are in store. their ace, tim leincecum going tonight. the giants have won four of their first five games here in june. it's the nats for three games and the reds this weekend as they work to keep building on their success thus far this month. >> we're always confident that he's going to pitch a good game for us. he's proved that over the years. i think we always come to the park knowing that he's going to pitch well. >> he's one of the best. he's fun. every time i go out there, he's pitching, he's fun. i love to watch him pitch, all our pitchers, but it's going to be fun tonight. i cannot wait to start. >> comprehensive coverage of every bay area team is on comcast sportsnet bay area at 10:30. go deep with sportsnet central every night at 10:30 on comcast sportsnet bay area. the fallout from the reggie bush scandal dating back to his days in college has now come to roost many years later. the bowl championship series today unanimously deciding to strip the usc trojans of the 2004 national football title. this is the final major penalty for usc in the aftermath of the ncaa's investigation of the school over violations regarding former running back reggie bush. usc was also hit with a two-year bowl ban they're in the midst of. today in the nfl, former new york giants wide receiver plaxico burress was released from prison. there to greet him on the outside, agent drew rosenhaus. burress spent nearly two years behind bars on a gun charge and was released about three months early for good behavior, just in time for the lockout, how about that. and the new warriors head coach, mark jackson. that's big news. that's going to be exciting. >> oklahoma was number two that year. i wonder if they become national champions. >> i don't think it works that way. i know you're a big boomer sooner. swipe your card please. excuse me...? this belongs to you... o...um...thank you. excuse me... this is yours... thank you! you're welcome. with chase freedom, you get cash back on what you buy everyday. this is yours! thank you! that's 5% cash back in bonus categories every three months. and an unlimited 1% everywhere else. activate your 5% cash back today at chase.com/freedom, or at your local chase branch. tonight at 11:00 from rescued to rescuer. we'll take you inside the bay area kennel helping train dogs to respond to disasters around the world. plus we'll have the latest on the case of the missing east bay nursing student. within the hour, police have fiedsihe t case as a homicide. those stories and more tonight at 11:00 after "law & order los angeles." michael jackson fans, you can now own a piece of music history. that red and black jacket that he wore in the "thriller" video is up for auction starting at 400 grand. one of the many rock items in the music memorabilia auction to be held later this month in beverly hills. a denim jacket worn by bruce springsteen and a smash guitar that stan destroyed by nirvana's kurt cobay. >> i wonder if the jacket would fit? >> $400,000. why not for you for birthday. >> brent is here to talk about what's coming up at 7:00. >> more on that sex scandal and why politicians and people in high-profile positions toned cheat in the first place and also the nuance of how high technology plays a part in that. also, we're going to talk about steve jobs. he's got that new book out. a co-worker wrote a book about him called the steve jobs way and we'll hear a little more detail about that coming up on comcast 186 in just a few. e >>hank you for joining us. when it comes to our children's health, we expect passionate feedback and we got it. you agreed support ab 1319 and ban bpa from baby products. sherri fumes, there is something wrong when we have to fight this hard to protect our children. banning bpa needs to be a top priority for any elected official in sacramento if they want to keep their job. deb concurs, any lawmaker who sides with the chemical industry and its highly paid lobbyists rather than protecting california's infants and children from toxic bpa should be ashamed. the author of ab 1319, assembly woman betsy bulltler thanked us. the plastics industry has yet to respond. thanks for commenting. keep the conversation going at nbceditorials.com. ♪ [ woman ] sam begged and pleaded... so i sent him to camp. we'd earned lots of points with our new citi thankyou card... and i put them to good use. he told me about his bunkmates, and how he signs up for every activity.

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