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one person is dead this morning after a single car crash in silver spring. the accident happened around 9:30 last night in the 8600 block of 16th street. montgomery county police say a white honda accord was driving towards d.c. when it approaches a rideon bus, picking up a passenger. the driver of the honda swerved to avoid hitting the bus and ran off the road, hitting the can curb, a fire hydrant, and a street sign before flipping on to its roof. the driver was pronounced dead on the scene. no one else was injured in that crash. police have not released the driver's name. driving around d.c. can be a -- can cause a bit of road rage, but one man's anger put him behind bars after he smashed his motorcycle helmet into a car. news 4's jackie bensen has more. >> reporter: the driver side window of this blue ford focus is broken out. it was the target of an enraged motorcycle rider who took off his helmet and started angrily bashing the car with it while a father and his infant son were inside. it happened about 8:00 friday morning in the eastbound lanes of i-66 near mile marker 48. police say the focus stopped suddenly and slowed traffic and "the motorcycle decided to go around the ford. as it passed between the ford and the vehicle next to it in the adjacent travel lane, the motorcycle sideswiped the passenger side of the ford and struck the side-view mirror. . when both vehicles pulled over, the motorcyclist started yelling and then began smashing the driver side window. 36-year-old michael edwards of gainesville was taken into custody at the scene by virginia state police. john townsend of aaa says aggressive drivers are a pressing concern for d.c. area motorists. >> it is the congestion that can easily trigger it. we are like dr. jekyll and mr. hyde. we're nice people inside the office, but once we get behind the wheel, we're prone towards aggressive driving and towards road rage. >> reporter: edwards is charged with reckless driving, destruction of property, and misdemeanor assault and battery. edwards cut his hand during the incident and had to be taken to the hospital. he was jailed on a $5,000 bond. jackie bensen, "news 4 today." this morning, the loudoun county sheriff's office says the person responsible for vandalizing dozens of vehicles since april is behind bars. he was arrested and accused of spray painting more than a dozen cars with the numbers 68. he started to add the letters ms after authorities said they did not believe the paintings were gang related. bolt faces a felony count of property destruction. if you drive on the capital beltway, you might want to keep a close eye on your speed. speed cameras are coming to a stretch of 495 in maryland. it's between new hampshire avenue and university boulevard in silver spring. those cameras will be used to keep construction workers safe as they work on the northwest branch bridge. but it won't be your typical camera. they'll be mounted in white suvs positioned at different spots in the construction zones. maryland's highway administration says the plan is to cut down on potential accidents in work zones. >> the constrained area of the work zone, it's extremely difficult for a trooper to safely enforce the speed, and it's very dangerous for drivers to be going very fast. so the combination is very difficult. so by having an automated enforcement, just as if you were having a trooper there, then you can get people to change their behavior and slow down. >> speed cameras won't catch anyone going 66 miles per hour or slower. for the first three weeks, offenders will just get warnings. after that, it's 40 bucks a ticket. the cameras will go into use in the next few weeks. this morning, dozens of alexandria residents are forming a human chain along the old town waterfront. this is in protest to a proposal by the city council to rezone the area for more commercial development. news 4's derrick ward is live in old town this morning, where the city council is about to begin yet another saturday work session. derrick? >> reporter: indeed, kimberly. that work session gets under way in about half an hour from now. right now we're at prince street and the strand in old town. and i'm told that actually the river used to come actually to about what we're standing. and steamboats used to pull up here. it's obvious the change has come to this waterfront and the waterfront is changing again. now, at issue, i want to show you some of the folks who were forming that human chain, is how much change will come and what that change will look like. and the city is looking at a plan that has a lot of facets to it. it includes some hotels and retail, but it also has some flood mission. everybody thinks that that's a good idea. the real hang up is whether or not the character of old town will be maintained. and folks here, especially a core group of people who are behind this issue, they don't want a national harbor on this side of the river. and they've been asking the alexandria city council to sort of step back for some time to consider this plan, which they're actually going to be working on later on today. joining me is boyd walker. you're one of the folk who is have been instrumental in sort of getting this plan or getting at least an alternative plan before the council. tell me what the central issue is here. >> right, well one of the central issues is that there's three developmental parcels. two of them, robin terminal north and south, are owned by "the washington post" company. we would like to work with "the washington post" to find a different plan than building large hotels. everyone's looking for revenue, they're looking for the largest revenue. we are looking for a plan that is better public access and brings activities to the waterfront. they'll be more family friendly, tall ships like the one here on my shirt. so we had a human chain down here this morning forming from the old dominion boat club all the way down to robinson terminal south. we had about 200 people formed a human chain, it was like a flood wall, you were talking about flood mission, we formed a flood wall. >> and you're also asking, again, the city council, they're supposed to vote on this later this month. it's a work session today, but you want them to sort of step back and rework this plan or incorporate some of your plans into this? >> reporter: we would like them to come back and work with the citizens and come up with a better plan and delay the vote on this plan until the fall. once they take a vote on this, it will forever change the zoning on our waterfront and allow this development to happen. we'd like them to step back before they make cheethese chan so we can propose some alternatives. we would like to see a maritime museum, a school for wooden boats maintain. so we would like to see those things on our waterfront. more waterfront activities that are oriented around the waterfront. >> reporter: another battle on the waterfront, at least not in this century, the past couple of centuries, had this much of a standoff. hopefully this will be resolved in a way everyone can live with. bottom line, the waterfront's changing and now it's an issue of formulating that change. in you're driving in downtown d.c., several streets in the dupont circle area will be closed today for the capital pride parade. street festivities start at 3:00 and the parade starts at 5:30. tomorrow, parts of pennsylvania avenue will be closed for the annual capital pride festival. that event kicks off at 11:00 and runs until 6:00 tomorrow. could be slow going on metro tomorrow as well. add at least 20 minutes to your trip on the red, blue, and orange license. trains will be single tracking between grosvenor, strathmore. you may have seen the slogan for d.c.'s transit system. "metro opens doors,," but recently it seems they've been opening the wrong doors. one operator is now off the job after the latest incident happened tuesday. it's the fourth time train doors were opened opposite from the platform since late february. metro does blame operator error. it is 9:09 right now. still ahead, more problems for congressman anthony weiner. the clues that sent federal investigators north to delaware. and think you send a lot of e-mails? wait until you hear how many messages sarah palin sent when she was governor of a alaska. ♪ [ female announcer ] have you ever seen a glacier while sunbathing? why not? have you ever climbed a rock wall in the middle of the ocean? or tried something really wild? why not? it's all possible in the n. royal caribbean's floating nation. where you are free to do anything you want. which may be nothing at all. royal caribbean international. why not cruise from baltimore? visit royalcaribbean.com today. identity theft is one of the most common crimes in our country, but you can help protect yourself from becoming a victim by making sure all of your old personal documents are shredded. >> this morning, we're teaming up with pnc bank for community shred. it's going on as we speak at community college in rockville. richard bynum is the executive vice president for pnc bank. we appreciate you getting up early. >> good morning. >> tell us, what's it looking like out there right now? how are things going? >> things are going great. we've got a nice line of folks out here who are shredding their documen documents, and the weather's cooperating. >> richard, you've been out there year after year. is there anything different about this year as opposed to all the years pnc bank has been a partner in this? >> i think the only difference is more and more every day, papers come into our households with our personal information on them, from lots of different sources, so this is a great opportunity to bring those papers out here, get them taken care of, get them shredded, make sure you're protecting your identity, and it's great for the environment. >> and i know in your line of work, you are sensitive. you particularly know how important it is not to have financial data, other personal informs sort of be out there floating around for people, right? >> reporter: oh, absolutely. you know, unfortunately, we've got folks out there who will take full advantage of any opportunity they see to leverage other people's identity for their own personal gain. this is a great way for people to protect themselves. there's other ways you can do that as well. you can always use onlike bane banking. most places allow you to get your statements online. you've got to protect yourself from folks out here who are really doing bad things. this is a wonderful opportunity for people to do that. >> and just before you go, we hear a high-pitched noise behind you. would that be the shredding machine hard at work? >> that would, indeed. we've got several shredders. i think we've got about a dozen shredders out here, another four or five machines, and a load of volunteers who are doing great work for us. so they are out here, they'll be out here all afternoon to help folks if they want to come out. >> all right, richard bynum with pnc bank, thanks. >> he's got to being an old pro. >> and this wraps up at 11:00 a.m. get out there, up to five boxes you can take and have destroyed. >> and interestingly, he said the weather's cooperating. let's check in with chuck. 85 and muggy, i think he samean no rain. >> between now and 11:00 a.m., no serious threat for any real rainfall. so that is welcome news. live picture outside of -- oh, let's see, what's that address again? it's the big white house there in northwest. >> isn't that chuck's house? >> wait a minute! i wish this was my place. anyway, we'll talk about your weekend forecast, coming up in two minutes. at 190 miles per hour, the wind will literally lift ordinary windshield wipers off the glass. so, did we build a slower car? or design wipers that could handle anything? what do you think? the cadillac cts-v, the world's fastest production sedan. we don't just make luxury cars, we make cadillacs fiber one. almost tastes like one of jack's cereals. uh, forgot jack's cereal. 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[ male announcer ] half a days worth of fiber. not that anyone has to know. fiber beyond recognition. fiber one. this morning, a massive wildfire in arizona that has already claimed more than 30 homes looks like it may jump to new mexico. officials were able to make some progress toward the end of the week, but say high wind could push the fire into neighboring new mexico later today. the fire has burned more than 630 square miles of forest and is now threatening power lines that carry electricity from arizona to west texas. nearly 10,000 people have been forced from their homes because of the flames. the more than a week-old blaze is only 6% contained. 9:18 now. let's check in with chuck for a check of our weekend forecast. >> steamy outside first thing this morning. looks like today's going to be very, very similar to yesterday. the only difference is, i think today will have more thunderstorms to deal with than yesterday afternoon. yesterday, most of them stayed away from the washington metro area. today, i don't think we'll be quite that lucky. you will have plenty of dry hours on your weekend. sort of the front half of your saturday looks pretty good and the last bit of your sunday is looking rain free. but anytime between about 2:00 or 3:00 this afternoon and 2:00 or 3:00 tomorrow afternoon, there will lwill be chances for thunderstorms across the area. today will probably be the busiest day for thunderstorms. tomorrow, mainly just showers first thing in the morning. there's a great idea on our city camera view. water skiing. i don't know if i'd water ski on the potomac, necessarily. not necessarily one of the safer rivers to do that. you can see the roller -- the roller? the water skier. we'll keep an eye on them. i think they went down into the drink. >> he disappeared? >> i think he let go of the rope. he's like, no, i'm not going anyfort. right now, 83, our current temperature in downtown. dew points are in the upper 60s. that's the steamy stuff of summertime around here. a light breeze out of the northeast at 8 miles per hour. already above 80 in frederick, maryland, down through southern prince george's county, to leonardtown, maryland, all at 80 degrees. upper 70s across northern virginia. no real rain on the radar. false returns in close to the metro area. one or two sprinkles in far western maryland, but there are more showers further upstream from there. these showers into the mountains of central west virginia, all part of a little impulse that's coming our way. hot and humid to start, kind of on the steamy and stormy part to finish. i know the capital pride parade in downtown d.c. today, at least a 60% chance that there'll be rain at some point during the parade. just sort of have that rain plan ready to go. plenty of humidity around today. a little weather front coming in from the upper northwest. that is going to generate our thunderstorm chances, really starting as early as 2:00 or 3:00 up in the mountains of west virginia. then, again, tomorrow, ahead of the front, maybe another chance for some showers. tomorrow's rain chance will probably be late morning into early afternoon, and things improving from there as cooler, more tolerant air comes back in -- tolerable air comes into the area. a slight risk for severe weather today. i'll be here all afternoon should any severe weather start to cook up. partly sunny today, hot, humid, storms likely, mid-90s downtown. the pride parade can kicks off at 5:30 p.m. at 22nd and "p" street. then tomorrow, more clouds and sunshine, a scattered shower or two, primarily in the front half of the day, but i think tomorrow afternoon, things begin to improve considerably. and very, very nice weather returns for monday, tuesday, wednesday, and thursday. highs in the low 80s, lows in the low 60s. very typical for the middle parts of june. so good weather is just around the corner. >> you said that with real authority. hot, humid, it's going to happen that way. >> that's the way it's going to feel today. very confident in that. >> we'll look forward to the end of the week. average. average is good. we love being average. >> thank you, chuck. no more blowouts in the stanley cup finals. >> dan hellie has details in this morning's sports minute. >> good morning, everybody. your sports minute starts with hockey. game five of the stanley cup finals between the canucks and the bruins in vancouver, no scoring until the third period. kevin bieksa shoots wide to the net on purpose, bounces right to pierre, and he played that bounce to perfection, right over tim thomas, 1-0, canucks. the bench loves it. and that's all they needed. they win the game 1-0 and take the series lead, 3-2. game six, monday, back in boston right here on nbc 4. meanwhile, nats out in san diego, and they've got the bats going a bit early. mike morris crushes his tenth home run of the season. a huge two-run blast gives them a 2-0 lead and they go on to win. two more games for the nationals out in san diego before they come back home for a nine-game home stand. and the nba draft less than two weeks away. the wizards have the 6 and the 18th picks in the first round. still looking for some prospects. they're working guys out. seven players on friday came to verizon center, including local guy and duke product, nolan smith. former georgetown and florida bigman vernon macklin was there, as well as au star vlad mold survey gnu. friday, police visited the home of a 17-year-old delaware girl who communicated online with weiner. weiner acknowledged having contacted that girl, but said in a statement the communication was, quote, neither explicit nor indecent. police also said they found no evidence of criminal behavior after interviewing the girl. support does remain high for weiner back in his home district. a recent poll there shows 56% of registered voters there believe he should stay in office. sarah palin's e-mails during her two years as alaska's governor has been released. so what should people expect when they look through the more than 24,000 e-mails? nbc's kurt gregory has the story. >> reporter: a frantic scene in alaska. media members scrambling to get their hands on some 24,000 pages of e-mails sent by sarah palin to top aides and officials in alaska, now released to news organizations. the documents contain e-mails from palin's first two years as governor of alaska. from december 2006 through her vice presidential run with john mccain. some were sent on a yahoo! account rather than government accounts, to conduct state business, an effort to keep her communications private. frank bailey is a former aide who's written a book critical of palin's time as governor. >> there seemed to be almost a paranoia about keeping her communication private. >> reporter: palin said sunday, the e-mails with were not for public consumption, and warns they could be taken out of context as she ponders a presidential run. e-mails that news organizations like msnbc.com first requested in 2008. >> the state public records law calls for a ten-day release of public records. we waited longer for these records than sarah palin was governor. almost 1,000 days. >> reporter: a recent bus tour across the northeast has rekindled speculation about palin's political aspirations. palin says she hasn't yet decided whether she'll enter the 2012 presidential race. kurt gregory, nbc news. well, president obama and house speaker john boehner have had their disagreements in the past. >> yeah, but what better way to settle the score than some good old-fashioned competition. the two will hit the links for a round of golf next saturday. vice president joe biden and ohio's republican governor john kasich will round out that group. this is the first time the president and speaker boehner have played golf together. no word yet if there are any bets riding on next week's game. but you notice they picked golf and not basketball, which might be a little too much contact. >> might be. but i've always been told that golf, on the links, that's where all the big deals are made. >> i guess we're missing out. >> can you play? you've trtried? >> i tried and i'll keep trying. >> i gave up. i just didn't work out for me. it is 9:26 right now. they are powerful, dangerous, and completely legal. a look at the controversy surrounding powders known as bath salts. and dramatic testimony in the trial of casey anthony. the witness that brought the woman charged with killing her not that long ago, many families were priced out of an overheated housing market. but the times have changed. get the facts at remax.com. it's a great place to see all the listings in thousands of cities and towns. with lots of houses to chose from and down-to-earth prices the dream of owning a home seems more attainable than ever. find out what an experienced re/max agent can do for you. nobody sells more real estate than re/max. visit remax.com today. they're being smoked, they're being snorted, they're being treated like cocaine and they are completely legal, at least for now. a closer look at the powder known as bath salts. good morning. welcome to "news 4 today." i'm kimberly suiters. >> i'm aaron gilchrist. it's saturday, june 11th. our top stories in just a moment. first, a quick check on your forecast. chuck bell is back with us this morning. it's already thick out there. this morning, just getting in the car, it was very uncomfortable. >> if you've waited this long to get out and do your saturday morning run, you better pack an extra gallon of water as you go on your way to get out there. it's already steamy stuff out there thirst i think if this morning. it's going to do nothing but get hotter and feel even more humid as we go through later this afternoon. right now, though, plenty of haze and overall summer gunkiness outside first thing this morning, limiting our visibilities just a touch. 83 now at national airport. 80 degrees in clinton, maryland. 78 in indianapolis. 77 now in bethesda and potomac, maryland. 77 in sterling. 79 degrees as you head down towards warrenton and manassas. and there are some showers way back now across parts of central, west virginia. part of a little ripple that's coming our way. it will bring in thunderstorm chances by this afternoon. out to the west, more in the 2:00 to 5:00 time frame. here around town, then more in the 5:00 to 8:00 time frame, a pretty good risk for some thunderstorms. before any chance for cooling showers, it's going to be toasty warm. highs today around town, well into the upper 90s. if you're packing the car and heading across the bay bridge into the beaches, saturday and sunny, both good beaches, but there will be a risk of a shower. not as much as there will be up in the mountains. nonetheless, something you'll need to be keeping a close eye on. spf-30 or better is something i would recommend for anyone going outside today. they are sold as bath salts, but the fine powder isn't being dumped into tubs, it's being used as a stimulant. in maryland, it has killed one person and sickened dozens of other. now the state is considering a ban on the so-called bath salts. >> reporter: we had to go to video liquidators in waldorf in charles county to find the bath salts that maryland is considering banning. the salts are called designer drugs and they're not cheap. this small container of energizing aromatherapy powder cost more than $44. officials say there's nothing wrong with these bath salts when they're used for the right reason. the problem is, some folks are smoking and inhaling this fine powder. maryland secretary of health has launched an investigation into the synthetic salts, which contain two potentially dangerous compounds, called mdpv and methadrone. when ingested, health officials say users can get a high similar to cocaine and methamphetamines. the health department may classify the drugs as controlled substances, which would make them illegal. >> the high that they're getting is a very psychedelic high. there's a lot of psychosis that's involved with it and these are very dangerous substances. there's a lot of agitation, cardiovascular problems. >> reporter: in maryland, there have been 22 poisonings, resulting in one death from the drugs. they are not the common bath salts found in bath stores. officials are focusing on the ones with specific chemicals some are using to get high. >> the poison control centers have been inundated with calls and questions about it. so right now it's a public health emergency. >> reporter: the salts we found at the store in waldorf do not have a list of ingredients. the store owner said to go online to find them. health officials say part of the danger is that people are ingesting these substances without knowing what they are and the risks they pose. >> we want people to find other ways to make themselves feel better. not to have to go to synthetic or other drugs to do that. >> reporter: darcy spencer, news 4. >> maryland health officials will gather information and public comment over the next month before making a decision whether to ban the salts. they've already been banned in seven states. two massage parlors have been cited for prostitution activities. the metropolitan drug task force says a parlor on hanover parkway was illegally performing sex acts for money, and earlier in the week, another massage parlor on bell point drive was busted. police say that had found cash, condoms, and other paraphernalia. charges in both cases are pending. the casey anthony trial is going on as we speak in florida, with more testimony expected from crime scene experts. yesterday, they described how they collected the skeletal remains of casey's daughter, caylee. casey claimed her 2-year-old daughter was kidnapped by a babysitter, but prosecutors believe casey killed her and left her in a wooded area where she wasn't found for six months. and there is testimony in particular that brought casey to tears. >> there is no child that should have duct tape on its face when it dies. there is no reason to put duct tape on the face after they die. based on our experience, we've seen that in cases of homicide. >> that's the testimony that upset anthony so much. her defense team is adamant that caylee accidentally drowned in the family pool. a deadly jut break of e. coli in europe is now being traced to a bean sprout farm in northern germany. german health officials say traces of the deadly train were found in a packet of bean sprouts in a garbage bin at that farm. the discovery came just hours after bean sprouts were identified by scientists in berlin as the likely source. across europe, 31 people have died and more than 3,000 people in 12 countries have gotten sick from this outbreak. syria's government is prepared to crack down on a potential uprising from its own citizens, but that did not stop tens of thousands of protesters from taking to the streets yesterday. the protesters are calling for president bashar al assad to step down, but police are opening fire on the demonstrators. at least 25 people have died. many more are trying to seek asylum in turkey. united nations secretary general ban ki-moon has tried repeatedly to get in touch with assad and convince him to have his forces stand down, but assad has avoided those calls, reportedly, with syrian officials, saying he is simply unavailable. for almost ten years, america's military looked for osama bin laden, and for almost ten years, one new york woman documented the search with a sign that asked a simple question. where is he? cheryl stewart had this signposted in front of her brooke lynn home for almost eight years. when bin laden was found in may, she kept the sign up to honor those killed in the attacks, and now her sign will go to the new 9/11 museum set to open in 2012. >> i'm very happy that it's going to the museum. i think it's the perfect place for it. it belongs here in the museum in new york. >> she was absolutely thrilled we called and said right off the bat, absolutely, you're the perfect place to have it. >> the museum's curator isn't exactly sure where the sign will go, but says it will most likely end up in the historical exhibition. one of the national's recent draft picks has made headlines in the baseball world, and he has not played one inning with the big club yet. news 4 release john schriffen explains why the nats might be questioning their pick already. >> some of these things are really, really scary, you know? and he's white? >> reporter: washingtonians are reacting to the latest twitter rant gone wrong. this time it comes from the washington national's 15th round draft pick, zachary houchins. this is his picture from his youth baseball team's website. according to the blog from for love of the nationals, he tweeted back on may the 1st, "and now they're bleep, bleep rapping and stepping." he went on to say, "at least there's not a bleep load of black people outside yelling right now at lewisberg keeping me awake." another twitter post that included more cursing and use of the "n" word was too graphic to air. >> wow. that's very rude and blatant. quite offensive. >> i would think twice about buying a ticket or going to a game if i thought he was going to be on the payroll. >> he knows that he's going to be drafted bay major league team. he should be more responsible, especially if it's public information. >> reporter: in the wake of another twitter scandal where congressman anthony weiner tweeted graphic pictures of himself, social media expert mike schaffer says people need to think before they tweet. >> people have the expectation, the false expectation, that it's completely private, even when you protect your updates, even when you are very selective on who you follow or who you let follow you, everyone can see, potentially, everything you say. i think a lot of people haven't caught on to that part of social media yet. >> the nationals' prospect has now taken his account down from twitter. but schaffer says whether you have 1 or 1 million followers, as soon as you tweet something, it's safe to assume that it's online forever. if you would like to continue this conversation, you can also follow me here on twitter. in the newsroom, i'm john scl schriffen, news 4. >> a spokesperson for the washington nationals said they are aware of the situation and they're investigating it. this morning, stand-up comedian tracy morgan is apologizing for remarks he made, this time on stage. morgan's appearance last friday in front of a nashville audience was reportedly full of homophobic references. according to a facebook account posted by one audience member, morgan said he would stab his son with a knife if his son were gay. the "30 rock" star apologized to his fans and the gay and lesbian community saying that he is not a hateful person and that his comedy routine simply went too far. he's been tiger woods' right-hand man for dozens of years. >> but what other sport gets his caddie's juices flowing? steve williams talking about his other passions when he sits down to lunch with lindsay. today, you can take a major step toward protecting yourself from identity theft. all you have to do is head to montgomery college's rockville campus and the nbc washington pnc bank community shred. >> joining now a familiar face from that event is montgomery county executive ike leggett. good morning, mr. leggett? >> good morning. >> talk to us, if you would, about how you feel the county has a responsibility to help citizens shred their documents today? >> first of all, let me thank nbc and shred it for this community effort. we really could not have had this without your help and support. it is vitally important, because when you think about identity theft today, you think about the opportunities that people have, we need to reduce that to as few as possible. because once your identity is found, once it is stolen, it is so difficult to reconstruct that and to eliminate the many challenges that you will have as a result of it. so the best thing to do is to try to prevent it in the first place. >> mr. leggett, i would imagine you would encourage, then, folk who is live in your county to take advantage of this opportunity? i mean, you've got an easy way to come in with boxes full of whatever might have your personal data on it, right? >> yeah. people not just in montgomery county, but throughout the region may hear this. you're welcome. we have a large number of volunteers. we've had over 900 cars that have come through thus far. many are still coming. there's still an opportunity to do so. we encourage you to come out, because it's an opportunity for you to eliminate safely and securely the information that you do not want to have disclosed. so please come out. >> mr. leggett, we always put out a list of the things not to bring. i think we have them for you here in a moment. are you seeing that some people aren't getting that message and they are being told right there on site, well, we can't shred your batteries, we can't shred that because it's flammable? >> well, that's true, once in a while we get some people who have not gotten the word, but we encourage you to look through the information beforehand before you arrive. even when you get here, we'll make a decision as to those things that cannot be shredded. please make note of the things you cannot do and it's available on site. >> this goes until 11:00 this morning at montgomery college in lakeville, montgomery college's ike leggett, appreciate your time. >> let's check in with chuck. >> i wish i had better news for the humidity break. it is coming, but it's not going to get here in time for the weekend. let's talk about your weekend forecast and all this talk about lower humidity, when is that [ male announcer ] want a better way to track what you spend? pnc virtual wallet now comes with spending zone. it organizes all your spending, including your pnc debit card, credit card, and your bills. so you can view them by category... or by month. you can set a budget... and it'll even alert you when you're getting close to the amount you've set -- and when you've gone over. spending zone is built to help you keep better track of your spending. experience everything virtual wallet has to offer at pncvirtualwallet.com. pnc bank. for the achiever in you. welcome back. >> 9:47. yeah, we've been tracking this water skier out on the potomac. >> found. i'm convinced we found the water skier once again. i think he let go of the rope just in time for the weather program last time. >> you need to pay him more, chuck. >> right. we need to pay him something. he wasn't going to get anything up to this point. but great weather for all of your outdoor activity in the front half of your sunday, and i think the second half sunday is looking good as well. but there may be some stormy troubles coming up. >> there you go, aaron, that is a water skier. you're not going to fool me this time and he hasn't let go of the rope yet. great way to get your weekend started out there. >> there he goes in. >> did he really go back in again? >> he's back up. >> almost a waterboarder. >> we're riveted to -- >> let's just watch this. >> because we're stuck at work. that's the tip of haynes point, there they go, in towards the anacost anacostia. beautiful day. if you've got the boat and water ski, get outside and enjoy it. beautiful weather to get the day started today. awfully warm outside. 83 degrees already. so far in this month of june, our average temperature's been 80.2 degrees. toasty warm to june. by comparison, for the last month of june, it was 80.6, and that was the hottest june within record. we're within a half a degree of that now. our temperature trend will go downward as we head into the early parts of next week. that will take us away from record territory. right now, upper 70s and low 80s out there. there's plenty of cloud cover. here's the very latest satellite picture from space. there's the low cloud deck hanging right over washington, but these are not rain-making clouds. here's a check of the radar. just a little false returns on the radar around here. no raindrops in and around town just yet. that will be changing by later on today, as this little area of showers up to our west starts coming through the mountains. hot and humid out ahead, and stormy by late this afternoon and this evening. at least a 60 to 70% chance that you're going to get a thunderstorm around your neighborhood before today is through. and another 50 or 60% chance that you'll have rain to start tomorrow. so be ready for that. hot and humid today. a couple of chances of thunderstorms to flare up this afternoon into early this evening. then right out ahead of that front tomorrow, late morning into early afternoon time frame, we may have another round of showers to contend with. by mid- to late afternoon tomorrow, though, the cooler and noticeably less humid air will start rolling into the area. that will be the big improvement we will see through the early half of the upcoming week. for today, there'll be be a slight risk for severe weather, from the chesapeake way westbound, all the way up into the west virginia mountains. keep a weather eye to the sky. i'll be here all afternoon to keep you posted should any severe weather erupt. today, partly sunny, hot and humid. thunderstorms likely, one or two could be severe. one of the 250,000 people estimated to go down to the capital pride parade down today. at least a 60% chance of storms with kickoff temperatures way up close to 90 degrees. turning less humid late in the day tomorrow. probably going to be the rainier, stormier day today. tomorrow, our chances will be mainly in the front part of the day. should improve a little bit later after that. and then monday, tuesday, wednesday and thursday all look really nice. highs in the low 80. the return of heat and humidity comes back just at the end of the upcoming week. >> i want to thank you. finally my weekend when the weather looks good, monday, tuesday. i'll enjoy it. >> this payment that you -- >> yeah, we'll work something out. >> okay. >> don't get your hopes up. >> they're up. tiger woods will not be healthy enough to play the u.s. open next week. he's still trying to recover from a bad knee and a bad achilles. that also means no u.s. open for his caddie, stevie williams, who spent the last 12 years walking golf courses with tiger. our own lindsay czarniak recently sat down to lunch with williams. >> step into my office. >> yep. >> describe to me your role, because i feel like you were, in a sense, tiger's protector, not just his caddie. >> it's not easy when you have extra people out there all the time, media people and so forth. so i got a bad rap over some of my actions, but i said to somebody, if someone doesn't agree with what you do, come and spend a whole week with me. it's not as easy as it looks. >> if you look at something like horse racing, i think a jockey will say, if you get a win, that it's 20% him, 80% the horse. how do you feel about golf? how much percentage of a win goes to your credit as a caddie? >> you can't really put a finger on that. and that's a very good yes. i don't think you could really put a valid number on that. that's a very difficult thing to answer. unlike a horse jockey, you're actually riding the horse. and you sort of control it. as a caddie, you're giving all the wealth and information and trying to provide to best information you can and the strategy to play the course, but you're not actually physically actually doing anything. you know, it's like being a mechanic on a race car, the chief mechanic on a race car or the crew chief, he can put everything in place to do well, but he actually isn't driving the car. >> you love racing. how did that start for you and tell me about the racing that you're involved in? >> i race on short track dirt tracks. golf and racing are my two passions and probably to opposite ends of the spectrum. there's no question about it. dirt track racing compared to the pga tour is two different things. >> does tiger come to watch you race ever? >> yeah, i've had him in the stockyard. >> how does that go? >> he absolutely loves it and he did well. and he drove my car. i didn't give him brand-new tires, because i thought, well, i'm not going to waste brand-new tires on you, because he wouldn't give me brand-new tires. he's always ribbing me about that. but he loved it. >> absolutely loved it. absolutely loved pit. as everyone knows, i'm kind of an adrenaline junkie, and to get into a stock car down there was a rush, and to get hit and to bump people and, that was fun. i enjoyed that. >> what is it like when you make the perfect read? >> i try to go the whole week without making a mistake. i like to judge myself. not only judge how he plays, but judge myself. and by being able to say the right thing at the right time and not saying something at the wrong time and to be able to choose the right club and read the putt, every bit of information for a week, i grade myself. and i know if i do a good job, it's really going to help and sometimes you're not always right and you cost your players a stroke. so you've got to grade yourself. i take a lot of pride in what i do. every week, i give it my best, what i can do. >> comes across as a very humble guy. >> sounds like a pretty cool job to have too,. >> i think it would be a tough job. there is much more to come this morning on "news 4 today". >> dozens of tsa workers fired. wait until you hear why. derrick? >> shaping the future of alexandr alexandria's waterfront. some citizens sound off as the city counc [ male announcer ] are you paying more and more for cable, and enjoying it less and less? stop paying for second best. upgrade to verizon fios and get tv, internet and phone for just $99.99 a month for a year. want to save evemore? call now and we'll add over 60 premium channels, including showtime, starz, epix, and more for 12 months. fios is a 100% fiber optic network. it delivers superior picture quality, the best channel lineup, more hd, plus america's fastest, most consistent and reliable internet. and there's no annual contract required. why keep paying for cable? move up to the best. get fios tv, internet and phone for just $99.99 a month for a year, plus over 60 premium channels for 12 months. don't wait. call 1.877.729.fios. call the verizon center for customers with disabilities or for other great fios offers, visit us online. get the network that delivers more. get fios. a network ahead. we're coming up on 10:00. welcome to "news 4 today." i'm kimberly suiters. >> and i'm aaron gilchrist. it's saturday, june 11th. our headlines in a moment. but first, a check on your forecast. meteorologist chuck bell is here, trying to paint a positive picture of this weather this morning. >> absolutely. >> i'm not feeling it, chuck. >> it's great summertime weather. you have to find your shady spot and get in it early and claim it as your spot. >> i need a breeze or something going out there. >> there was no breeze this morning. it felt really oppressive, even very early in the dark of morning. >> very stifling outside this morning, and still awfully sticky out there as well, and not much of a breeze expected for today. >> where's the good in that, chuck? >> the good in that, is for most people, it's their saturday. >> o.kay. >> that's the most important thing. and it's colonurrently not rain. that's welcome news. and temperatures will help hold temperatures back oh, so briefly. but these clouds won't last and temperatures will climb quickly, as soon as the sunshine returns. near 80 in just about everybody's backyard. winchester, it's 75 degrees. here's a look at regional doppler. you can see the showers back to our west, in central west virginia, that's all coming our direction for later on this afternoon. you factor in the daytime heating and those will expand in coverage. i think you're going to feed to have your backup plan ready to go. but, of course, thunderstorms don't arrive at the same place at the same time everywhere. as a result, some folks will have extra dry hours compared to others, but you should have your rain plan ready to go by no later than 5:00 or 6:00 this evening. if you're headed down to the beaches, gate weather from ocean city to rehoboth for today. head out on to the chesapeake bay, you'll need to be very weather aware. thunderstorms quite likely in and around the bay by late this afternoon. the minute you hear thunder, you need to get inside, stay safe, stay inside, and stay there until 30 minutes after you hear the last rumble of thunder. lightning and water don't really get along all that well. >> good point. thanks, chuck. >> okay. your time right now is 9:59. here's a look at the top stories we're following this morning. one person is dead after a single car crash in silver spring. police say the driver swerved to avoid hitting a ride-on bus then hit the curb, a fire hydrant, and a street sign before flipping over. the driver died on the scene. no one else was hurt. police in virginia are investigating a road rage incident between a driver and a motorcyclist. yesterday around 8:00 a.m., michael edwards tried to squeeze his way past a car, but knocked the car's mirror off. the drivers got into an argument and edwards slammed his helmet into the car. police are now looking into possible contact between new york congressman anthony weiner and an underage girl. friday, police visited the home of a 17-year-old in delaware who communicated online with weiner. they say the teen did not say anything about illegal conduct. weiner said in a statement the communication was, quote, neither explicit nor indecent. right now the alexandria city council is holding a saturday work session to discuss rezoning the old town waterfront for more commercial development. but some residents are not too happy about it. they formed a human chain earlier this morning to protest that proposal. news 4's derrick ward is live now in old town with more on the debate. good morning again, derrick. >> reporter: good morning again, kimberly. it was sort of a moving chain. there weren't enough people to really set out what they wanted to do, but i think they got their message across. and changes come to alexandria. we're here at prince street and the strand. prince street used to be called water street, it was the edge of the potomac river, so it's clear that there has been change hereover the centuries and another wave is now sweeping the waterfront. and that's what got about 100 or so al zaexandrialexandrians outy and form this human chain around some of the waterfront area. they're saying to the city council, hold back on the plan that you're looking at right now on development. they want to maintain the historic character of the waterfront and they're saying this plan that they're looking at now has too much retail and hotel density for the three big parcels that are at issue. >> two of them, terminals north and south, robin terminal south is right behind us, are owned by "the washington post" company. we would like to work with "the washington post" to find a different plan than building large hotels. everybody's looking for revenue, they're looking for the largest revenue. we are looking for a plan that is better public access and brin brings activities to the water front. they'll be more family friendly. >> now, the city council is well into their work session. we'll go for the better part of the morning, and they're actually supposed to vote on this plan later this month. and that's what has those alexandrians upset. they want to say, hold back, let's incorporate some more community aspects in this and then take it from there. >> derrick ward reporting for us. thank you. arlington national cemetery has brought in a new manager as it tries to rehab its reputation. the army says james gemmell, the former director of minnesota's ft. snelling national cemetery will step in. in the past, the cemetery has had troubles are recordkeeping and graves have been marked incorrectly and remains of service members have been misplaced. this morning, tourists can now see the famed miracle on the hudson plane at its new home. the us airways plane arrived in charlotte yesterday after a week-long trip from new jersey on a flatbed truck. the plane splashed down in the ho hudson river just minutes after takeoff two years ago. that police was destined for north carolina and will be permanently on display there. after being grounded for one month, the blue angels are ready to fly again. >> they were shut down because of a safety violation back on may 22nd, during a show, four of the six angels flew below their specified altitude. no one got hurt and all the planes landed safely, but immediately afterwards, the team was ordered to go on a safety stand down. the team had to cancel a flyover at the u.s. naval academy. they'll resume their high-flying acrobatics next saturday in davenport, iowa. >> do you think they were hot dogs or was it an innocent mistake? >> these guys do this all the time, they should know what they're, they should know the rules, and they've reviewed all the safety rules now, so hopefully they'll be okay. >> they're back up and running again. still ahead this hour, toyota owners who are suing the automaker over those accelerator problems will finally have their day in court. >> and we'll go back live to montgomery college and this morning's nbc washington pnc bank community shred. stick around. [ male announcer ] the inspiration for its shape was an archer drawing his bow. ♪ could that have also inspired its 556 horsepower supercharged engine? ♪ the all-new cadillac cts-v coupe. we don't just make luxury cars, we make cadillacs. a massive class action lawsuit against toyota over a sudden acceleration problem that led to a recall of 14 million cars will not go to trial until early 2013. the trial will focus on the first lawsuit filed after two people were killed in 2010, when the toyota camry they were riding in slammed into a wall in utah. the case will be the first of several suits used to determine how the class action suit will proceed. toyota says they welcome the trial because they can focus on the alleged technical defects at the heart of the class action. the tsa has fired more than 30 workers, not for properly screening checked bags for -- they were fired for not properly screening checked bags for bombs. the agents work at hawaii's honolulu international and reportedly came under investigation after two workers complained that their colleagues weren't screening the luggage. tsa managers had been assigned to the honolulu airport to review bomb screening procedures and employees and make sure other procedures were followed properly. it's 10:08 right now. the nationals looked for a win on the west coast, and the wizards work out some of their potential draft picks. >> here's dan hellie with sports. >> good morning, everybody. if there's a team that needs some good news, it's the nationals. and they did get some last night. stephen strasburg's rehab from tommy john surgery, still right on schedule. strasburg showed up in his native san diego, where the nationals were playing the padres, threw about 40 pitches at roughly 50% during a bull pen session. looked pretty good. in true strasbourg fashion, he ducked out before the media showed up. the people who did see him say that he looked good. meanwhile, nationals with another late start out in san diego. not too late for this guy, though, foul ball in the stands, watch the middle of your screen. blue shirt with a catcher's mitt makes the catch. give it to a kid! come on! jason marquis, the nats' leader in wins, pitching very well last night. look at this. that's just nasty. marquis, man, marquis did great. gets his seventh win of the year. meanwhile, getting some help here in the second from michael moores, who absolutely punishes this ball. an upper deck home run, one of the longest in san diego history. the two-run shot, his tenth of the season. the nationals beat the padres. all right, let's go to baltimore. the rays visiting the os. birds put away the umbrellas and brought out the bats. jj hardy leading off for baltimore in the bottom of the first, and he says, good-bye, my friend! solo shot to left center making one fan extremely happy. 1-0, orioles. check out this guy, i got a home run ball! bottom of the second, still 1-0, bases loaded for nick markakis, first pitch, first mistake from the pitcher. markakis with his third career grand slam. that gives the os a 5-0 lead. they go on to beat tampa bay 7-0. less than two weeks for the nba draft. the wizards have the 6th and 18th picks in the first round. there has been some buzz the last couple of weeks that they could package the picks together and move up in the draft. a few local players also looking to move up the draft boards. they were practices for the wiz' brass yesterday. duke guard nolan smith who grew up in prince george's county could be a possibility for the wizards with that second first round pick. former georgetown former forward vernon macklin also in the house. and vlad moldoveanu also there as well, he played for a minute at george mason, before transferring to american. where he was fantastic last year, averaging 20 points per game. the romanian says he has his resume and sales pitch all ready for nba general manager. >> i think i'm a big man that can do a lot for you. and i think at this point in time, really, what we have left can't really blow anybody's mind. you're not going to really show something that they haven't seen before. but you have to be confident and do what you do and do it really well. that's the way it is with the nba. every guy is really, really good at what they do. vlad mold survey gnu. >> all right. talkie time now. boston net minder tim thomas second in the history books for most playoff saves. last night, he wishes he had one more, as the bruins dropped game five in vancouver, 1-0. the largest man on the ice and in the locker room, 6'9", 255, big didn't matter here, though. third period, no score. kevin biska with the shot wide from the blue line. la pierre is there. 1-0, canucks, and that, my friends, is the game winner. roberto with his fourth shutout of playoffs. game six, monday, back in boston, right here on nbc 4. vancouver leads the series three games to two. that's your morning sports, i'm dan hellie. everybody, have a great weekend. >> thank you, dan. well, 10:12, 81 degrees outside our studios, and it's not going to feel good today, chuck. >> well, it's going to feel industrial strength summertime. >> you can run through the sprinklers, dip your toes in the pool. >> a lot better than thursday. >> i do have a sprinkler with a little mermaid. >> we're with going to kimberly's house. >> i would like a picture of that. >> we'll tweet that. >> and talk about your weekend forecast oh, in about five, six, seven minutes from now. ♪ [ woman ] this icelandic mud was working wonders on my skin. but if it was going to do the same for my spa, i had to figure out a way to get it back to the states. so i called my citibank small business expert. he got me a line of credit to make it happen and even improved my cash flow. now, my spa has more business than ever. ...and so does our cleaning crew. [ male announcer ] at citibank, we believe small business is a big deal. what's your story? citibank can help you write it. so, if you delayed your spring cleaning, today's a good day to do a little summer cleaning. bring all of your personal documents to the rockville campus of montgomery college and the nbc washington pnc bank shred it. >> that's right. joining us now, marion eliot, ladies, we appreciate you joining us this morning. can you hear us okay? >> yes, we can. >> all right. tell us -- >> we're happy to -- >> go ahead. i'm sorry. >> we're both happy to be here this morning. and montgomery college is very proud to be a part of this event today for our community, along with montgomery county, nbc 4, and all of its partners. montgomery county received an award this year for business recycling and so we're always interested in any kind of event that can help the college community as well as the community at large participate in recycling. >> angie, a moment ago, we heard from county executive ike leggett. he said 9 hurrica00 drivers had through. what's the tally up to now? >> i'm not quite sure, probably about 1,200 at this point in time. and we still have about 45 minutes to go, so if someone's close by and still have something they want to bring by, we'll be here until 11:00. >> angie, we're looking at some of the video, but can you describe the process for folks that are coming out there? as you've seen it, what do people do? they just come up in their cars, right? >> they do. they go through their boxes in their cars, they go through a little maze of cones, where we can keep things organized, we have volunteers to help them take the boxes out, they'll go through the shredding process and lighten their load for the next time around. we also have mary eliot here with shred it. >> we're really proud to be here today. we're very excited to partner with nbc, pnc bank, and the montgomery county recycling. at our last event at shred it, we had 54 tons of paper, which equals 100,000 pounds. to put that in a better perspective, 100 pounds equals one tree. so at our last event, over 100 trees were saved, and that is a huge impact to the environment. shred it works on helping you keep your identity safe with our shredding services. and again, i want to say thank you to everyone for making this a successful community event and we're real proud to be here today. >> mary and angie, we are very proud to have partnered with you. thank you so much for all you've done for our comment today and throughout the year. >> oh, you're most welcome. >> all right. and of course, the event goes on until 11:00 this morning, so grab your boxes of papers and personal documents and head on out to montgomery college. >> i like how angie said, we like to help you lighten your load. i bet there are people that drive away feeling, oh -- >> got rid of all that stuff that i was afraid to throw in the trash. talk about a power lunch. how much somebody would pay to dine with warren buffett. we'll tell you just how much was ponied up for a meal with a multibillionaire. and these were supposed to be dancers doing more than entertaining. doesn't look like they're doing a whole lot of dancing, does it? but they are showing a potentially life-saving lesson in flash mob form. you've got to hear what they were so-called dancing to when we come back. at 190 miles per hour, the wind will literally lift ordinary windshield wipers off the glass. so, did we build a slower car? or design wipers that could handle anything? what do you think? the cadillac cts-v, the world's fastest production sedan. we don't just make luxury cars, we make cadillacs you know, a buffet lunch is supposed to be cheap, but a lunch with warren buffett is apparently a different story. an anonymous bidder won a meal with the billionaire for $1 million. it breaks the record as the most expensive charity item sold on ebay. all proceeds will go to the glide foundation, that provides services to the poor in san francisco. buffett will meet at a new york steakhouse and discuss a topic of the winner's choosing. >> do you think the lunch has to be at least three hours long to get your money's worth? >> probably longer than that. you've probably see a flash mob that dances or sings. >> but a flash mob in new york used music and props to send out an important message. this mob broke out at the walden galleria in new york. it's all about practicing cpr. the dancers saved their dummies to the tune of dj jazzy aaron is going to -- >> i would be the the dj who would lose his job -- >> "staying alive" by the bee gees. they say it helps people learn the life-saving technique. cpr is supposed to be done at 100 beats per minute and that's the exact beat of the song, "staying alive." >> how silly do we look. >> we got it! we can do it now. >> live! >> don't that. i should turn that off. >> hey, jazzy aaron, can you -- >> we want to hear now. >> you can pay the fee now. >> we hit 30 seconds! >> so for us, if you're going to be staying alive in the heat today -- >> good segue. >> get your mug of iced tea ready now. >> get the bucket. >> get ready for the iv. >> anything you can do to stay hydrated on a day like today will be much appreciated by your inner workings, because, man, is it going to be a sweat factory today. temperatures climbing way up into the 90s again today, with plenty of humidity as well. outside, though, on a saturday morning, the sunshine trying to break back out here in downtown. we've had a nice little deck of low clouds around here for the last hour to hour and half. those are starting to show signs of giving away. as soon as these clouds break and the sunshine returns, this temperature now at 83 degrees at national airport, that's really going to jump very, very quickly, as soon as the sun comes back. dew point temperatures, that's measure of moisture in the atmosphere. anytime that number is close to 70 degrees, that's the steamy stuff of midsummer around here. a light breeze out of the northeast at only 6 miles per hour. 81 now, at dulles airport. 81 at manassas. 81 at andrews air force base. 83 downtown. 84 already in frederick, maryland. here's the latest picture from space, and there is the thinning spots in the overcast, out west of town. bright sunshine across much of the shenandoah, and down across beautiful southern maryland as well. here's a look at radar. not much in the way of rain around town. one little shower to the southeast side of the capital beltway. not anything big out there just yet. but there are shower chances on the up and up, as we go through later this afternoon. this little cluster here in central west virginia now, you get that another three or four, five hours, it will have time to interact with the daytime heating and travel just far enough east to have the mountains where it will start to impact weather around town. lots of humidity outside for today. a couple of chances for severe thunderstorms to fire up in the intense heating today. first round probably going to get going up in the mountains between 2:00 and 5:00, and then the next chance for thunderstorms around town could be between 5:00 and 8:00 p.m., so that really could impact the pride parade down in downtown d.c. today. then another chance for showers in the front half of the day tomorrow. i think tomorrow afternoon, the sunshine comes out, and the humidity starts to fade a bit. that will be welcome news. not so much tomorrow, but today we will be under the gun for the potential of some strong to severe thunderstorms today. primary threat will be some damaging winds and some small hail. i'll be here all afternoon to keep you posted should any thunderstorms cook up. sunny, hot, humid. that's the way it's going to look. storms likely this afternoon. some of them strong to severe. if you're headed down to the pride parade this afternoon, 5:30 to 8:30 between dupont and logan circles, have the umbrella or rain gear or just be ready to get wet and take a little cooldown from mother nature. tomorrow's highs only into the upper 80s. that's a little bit of improvement there. not as much of a rain threat tomorrow. and again, like i said, i think most of the threat today is in the second half of the day and most of the threat for rain tomorrow is in the first half of the day. could be kind of a stormy night outside, as well tonight, late night. so that's our chance to check up on a little bit of the rainfall that we actually do need. it's been really warm and dry around here for the last couple of weeks, so we'll take every little bit of a break that we can get. >> we will. 80s, that's awesome. >> get my car washed when it rains. >> that's true, but you've got a garage. >> that's your silver lining. >> been looking for it all morning. >> just park on the street so -- >> last year i had the clunker out in the pride parade and it did not rain. >> the clunker? >> the clunker's getting a facelift. clunkers of a certain age need a little bit of refreshing every now and again. so maybe next year we'll try to get it back in the parade. >> that is it for "news 4 today." we appreciate you spending some -- i'm always in the wrong camera. >> that's all right. you look good for everything angle. >> thanks for joining us. >> the french open is coming up next -- >> no, that was last week. wasn't it? >> of course it was. "it's academic" is next. >> we'll be back tomorrow, i think. >> i watched the french open. great match! [ male announcer ] washington, d.c. a landmark of liberty and opportunity. at bank of america, we live and work here, with thousands of employees and hundreds of branches and atms. every day, we're working to help set opportunity in motion... from supporting the arts and howard university to helping revitalize anacostia and downtown d.c. because when you're giving, lending, and investing in more communities across the country, more opportunities happen. ♪

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