show rents. this is amid allegations she misused a town debit card for personal expenses. beth parker is in the newsroom to sort this one out. >> reporter: this is not the first time that the mayor wright has had troubles. she was censured by the council last month over spending on the debit card and today, an eviction. it's moving day for brentwood mayor xavier montgomery wright. not a move she planned, though. the belongs on the front lawn of 37th place in brentwood. at the site of tv cameras, the mayor jumped in the volvo and took off. her landlord, earl low, said there was nothing quick about how this eviction happened. >> and i have been very sympathetic, very. i have triedef avenue to work with her. >> reporter: lowe said montgomery wright owes him 7,400. when you're sitting there making mortgages and someone's not paying the rent, you know, you're taking food off of my table. >> reporter: as for her title of mayor? you pay your bills like anyone else. i don't care if you're mayor or president, don't matter. you have to pay your bills. >> reporter: that is what the brentwood town council -- town council told the mayor, to. and that is the mayor in her official role. the couple voted to censure her and there is an audit underway, a 320 plane ticket and $2,400 cell phone bill. montgomery wright didn't spoke with us but in the past, denied wrong doing. george denny was mayor of brentwood for 18 years and spet another eight years on the couple. montgomery wright's eviction comes a few weeks before her upcoming election. >> you think there is politicking going on here? >> i don't have a crew and i don't one was doing of what. i ran for the office and not against someone. >> reporter: the mayor's oh popent is the former council member roger rudder, we saw a lot of signs around town and couldn't reach him for a comment. and won't to be clear the mayor is not charged with any cry. as mayor, show make $300 per month and the up to has been duducting money out of her salary to repay the cell phone bill. >> what happens to her now? >> to be the mayor of brentwood, you have to live in brentwood, so she's going have to find a new place to stay that is still inside the up to limits. and we'll so how that works out for her. thanks, beth. it will be at least another 30 days before we find out if the university of the district of columbia takes any action involving its president and travel expenses. that is according to testimony from a d.c. city council meeting today and into udcs budget. tisha thompson has more on the story. they remind people about why udcs president got into trouble in the first place. >> reporter: it started in february where when our fox 5 investigation found udc president allen sesson spent tens of thousands of dollars in first-class tickets and luxury accommodations. why do you care? it was paid for by the taxpayers. after we started asking questions, udc ordered an internal audit and we're starting to see the results and that found udc doesn't have a policy regarding travel. the president's office never submitted a travel budget nor did he get approval to travel by the board of trustees. the auditor said original receipts are missing and udc did pay for personal expenses look family travel. the forms were incomplete or incorrect and that is something we have more evidence of and this is a stack of travel receipts udc found, includeing a $300 suite upgrade for a reunion at sesson's alma maudeer university, a $1,000 first-class amtrak ticket and what appears to be two separate 6338 plane tickets tousles bug, us tray -- salzburg, austria. on this, it said he flow coach to austria and couldn't get a suite for the reunion, conflicting paperwork and these are the kind of problems the auditor and we keep finding in the travel documents and so kwame brown received a draft of the audit at the budget hearing where the school asked for $169 million for next year and when asked about the audit, the chairman of udcs bord of trustees said it was not quite finished and that would take 30 days to repeat. the final report that the bord will review will come likely with recommendations as to how to improve the process and we'll ramp up all of the things related to the internal audit and what we do from there, we will need guidelines so everyone is very clear -- and is clear on what that process is. >> kwame brown nods to ingest what the audit found before make anything public comments. we will, of course, keep you posted on what happened. laura? all right, tish a i understand the mayor had a big announcement about udc today? that's right. udcs bord of trustees are appointed -- board of trustees are appointed by the mayor and the city council for months. the board has been begging the city to fill eight vacancies on the board and saying it's overwhelmed and today, mayor named eight people to fill the slots. george raddenburg from aol and general earl schwartz of the d.c. national guard and there is a long list of other folks who will post that to the website. www.myfoxdc.com. >> tisha thompson, thanks. president obama laying out his plan to fix the financial mess. he said he knows a lot of people won't like what he wants to do. hosts to reduce spending on medicare and medicade and raise taxes on high next owners and said it will save $4 trillion a year. republicans were blasting the president of about the speech and saying he wants to raise taxes. >> reporter: that was the hallmark of the speech. the president made a crew-- it clear he intends to end the bush-era tax cuts for couples earning over $250,000 a year and key component of the plan that the president laid out, speaking atga george washington university this afternoon, president obama said the goal is to reduce the deficit by $4 trillion over 12 years and to do that, he's calling for lowering domestic savings -- spending, reducing the nation's healthcare spending and the tax code and that is a key component and on that tax question, the republicans rejected amounts saying that raising taxes would in effect kill job growth. and worst of all, this is a vision that said even though americans can't ford to invest in education -- afford to invest in education, clean levels or energy, we can't afford to maintain our cometmet on medicare and medyication, we can ford more than $1 trillion in new tax breaks for the wealthy. >> well, the president already announced his plan today and that comes a week after republican his laid out their vision and say that they plan to cut the deficit by $6 trillion the next continue years. the president said that is not serious. it doesn't require the most fortunate americans to carry an appropriate share of the tax burden. melanie? and both sides come at this differently. what are the chances for common ground? >> reporter: you're right about that. the president and democrats are saying we have a revenue problem in this country. we're not bringing enough into the treasury. the republicans are saying, wait a minute, that is not true. what we have here is a spending problem. we spend to much and how die that -- do they come together? we spoke with erskin bowl and he said listen, both of the groups have vastly different opinions on this and the good news? they're finally talking about the deficit. remember, spending went out of control over eight years of the george bush presidency and continued into the obama presidency and as long as the two sides start talking about deficit reduction, they will start to coming it, in some respect to get a grip on this massive problem. >> and still a long way to go. thank you, tom. >> it's happened again. a plane forced to land without air traffic control. the operator? asleep on the job. we're following the fallout next. and the tsa called out for patting down a 6-year-old child. this video has the whole country talking. is the security screening going too far? we'll let you decide next. >> weeks after an air traffic controller fell asleep at reagan national, another one fell asleep. a medical flight was forced to land without help from the air traffic controller. the only controller didn't respond to repeated requests from the plane or airport staff and this happened around 2:00 this morning in reno. the airport chief said one controller was on duty and the faa is investigating. and we're following more trouble in the air and that southwest jet that had the whole rip open is in the air. the boeingef is 37 was repaired and repatiented and left arizona today. the 5-foot pair appeared on the plane last week on the flight from folks to arizona and southwest will make permanent repairs to the aircraft. a viral video raising more questions about the tsas patdown policy. look at this video. that is a six-year-old girl getting a full patdown from an agent at armstrong international airport in new orleans last week. the tsa officials say the agent did follow proper procedures. the controversial airport screenings are supposed to keep us safe in the air but some say this patdown went too far and joining me for more on this, chris calabrisi. i hope i'm pronouncing your name correctly, chris. >> close enough. >> and thank you for being with us -- with us. let's get your reaction to this video. >> i think what is interesting is the agent did the so much as they're supposed to do it and that shows how unreasonable -- how unreasonable this search is. tsa released a statement and they said they reviewed the incident and determined that the officer followed proper current screening procedures as you said; how far, going on "wet on -- with the quote, the agency is exploring additional ways to focus the resources and move beyond a one-size-fits-all system while maintaining a high level of security. the tsa said they're reviewing policies and trying to streamline and improve the screening experience for low- risk populations like the younger passengers. chris, what is your take and response to that? >> reporter: nobody thinks we should be patting down kids but we don't think we should be patting down adults like this either and at the airports, you have twoup reasonable choices. you can go through the naked body scanner machine or get the intrucive patdowns. you need to muff to other tech nothings like explosive trace detection that find things on the bomb airport outgrouping everyone. >> you have received a lot of complaints about this or are travelers getting used to this? we have gotten more than 1,000 compaints from people who have been through the screening process. sexual assault surviving ons saying it brigs back -- survivors saying it brings these feelings and people saying i didn't think it would bother me and i felt violated afterwards and that is very invasive and needs to be modified for everyone. and playing devil's advocate, we know terrorists will go to great lengths to bypass security. who is to say they couldn't recruit a young person to serve as a martyr in. >> they will go to great lengths and we have seen procedures used and attempts to attack saudi prince's, for example, that would get past this patdown and body scanners. there is always another terrorist technique. the fact is that we have to decide in in society what we're willing to accept, whether being groped at airports, naked body images and have to stick to that balance. >> thank you very much for weigh in from the aclu. >> it's officially time to rock the red. the caps set to begin the play- off push toward a stanley cup crowd and begin that journey with game number one against the rangers. dave feldman is live with a special guest at the verizon center and i understand a man who believes that experience is going to help the caps this time around. >> reporter: absolutely. mike knuble has a lot of experience, the oldest player and you may not want to del dwell on that but he's playing as good as anyone on the league and do you play the rangers in the previous four have gone to seven games. on behalf of all the fans, can we not have that drama here? y know you don't want that. >> and things were looking great last year and -- >> and ultimately you don't care. you like to play the least amount of gapes and i guess the ultimate thing is to get through any way you can. >> reporter: in december, you have the monumental loss to the rangers. >> uh-huh. >> and there was a big meeting between budreaux and george mcfoe and that we have to change philosophies. it became more of a defensive first team and the team with unbelievable scores and everyone bought into it, moc, and that was not an easy change, right in. it takes time and the times was good. it was early in the season and that is about the halfway point. i think guys are tired of losing and it was difficult in the season, you know, and that gets stressful. i think the players were willing to look at different ways of doing things. we were not getting results previously, and like i said, it takes time and the shots was early enough in the season and that is where everyone accepted their own pace and we have time to get everyone on board. >> importantso to get someone like obie on bord and that team is winning. >> and -- they're the guys you don't want to put shackles on. >> right. >> and you want to keep them doing and do their things. >> and they have beenitol to score and that is not how you're anything to get things done. and you have to give him credit and there are probably doubters and naysayers saying what is wrong with him? >> and that is a product of the system. mike knuble has 49 points and rewarded with a $2 million ecteg, you're 38 years old and playing good hockey as you did when you were in your 20s, mike? the last six weeks have been good. i don't know, in my career, i have had strong marches and the last 20 games of the year. you talk about extending and i'm happy about that and that is something we enjoy in the city and i was happy to get it done. >> and hockey players are supersuspicious, quarterbacks and running backs pay their offensive lineman and we have done a lot of lowe shots and you're having a good season. you may want to take care of me. >> check the mail every day. there might be something for you. >> i will. thank you. mike knuble is giving me some. i will go back to you and we'll have more coming up and lindsey murphy will let us know what is going on outside of the verizon center. >> and sounds like you're stringing long. >> mike's good and if he is going to take care of me, he's going take care of me. >> thanks, feldy. >> thank you. where are the best and worst places to make a live something moneyrates.com released a new survey and virginia is near the top of the best, ranking fourth. illinois is first and followed by washington state and texas. the worst state is hawaii, where the adjusted average income is $22,000 a year and maine, montana, and california are next. the study looks at wages, unemployment and the ease of fining the job. maryland and the districter not on either top-10 list. and looking for a way to get out of the 9-5 grind, you might be closer to home and thens are free lapserring and making big bucks. david martin shows us how they're making a living. >> reporter: try doing this at your office. robert and orlando can break a sweat any time he wants. >> yeah, i mean and that is what i do. that is why i'm here. here inside his home. robert, an internet marketing consultant has been a free lapser for 15 years and making all the money he needious and if i was an internet marketer, i could charge 15, 20 to $100 a hour. >> reporter: he's one ready for hour on the eye worker.com. an online job marketplace and that is based in tampa with 150,000 virtual employers with more than 2500 current open projects ready for bids. >> and with that recession, a lot of the larger companies are no longer hiring and they had to lay off people. people love the flexibility of working at home and not having a commute and the mom doesn't have 40 hours to spend and wants to spend 15 hours or something like that with the spare time show says. -- has. >> reporter: the eye worker.com is one of many in the movement. odesk.com is active in 150 countries, e lancers on elance.com have delivered on projects worth more than $343 million. creative jobs and marketing gigs are getting popular. i.t. is still king. >> technical skills, you know, web development, programming and so much and marketing. anything to be done remotely. >> reporter: robert wears two hats. one as a freelancer and another as a employer. he hires them when he needs them and let's the free market do the talking. competitive? you bet. an american worker might be too expensive. the job could go to someone in new delhi. >> you can turn around and hire someone with the same skill level and hire them anywhere from -- 4, $5 an hour to $20 an hour. >> and even though his rates can be high, his work is good enough to set his own rules. >> i don't work saturdays or sends, i don't care how big the project is. i have as much work as i want. >> reporter: allowing him to have a life, to. david martin, fox news. >> and good work if you can get it, right? i love to see how people can be creative. >> we'll be right back. >> e lick tronecs pioneer and ""newsweek"" owner sidney harmon died. he died in d.c. last night of complications from leukemia and harmon is the founder of harmon international industries, the parent company of numerous electronics brands and served in president jimmy carter's administration as deputy secretary in the commerce department. he was surrounded by his wife and former congresswoman from california jane harmon and their children. he was 92. >> well, it was a gray, rainy day out there today. >> and a little schizophrenic, too. it was raining, it was not raining, it was. >> yeah, yeah. >> gary mcgrady s it raining or not in. you're saying mother nature has schizophrenia? and do not haunt her with more problems. >> csa that and that is breaking into some subshine and temperatures are warning up. i can't think of a better analogy there and what is going? >> and go to true view. this is the forecast and that is 58 degrees right now. i think it's 58, breezy and sunshine poke through at 7:00 and clouds at 9 and at 11:00, we're going have some clearing skies and we have been talking about this. it's going to be nicer and tomorrow is fabulous and the question is, how long is the fabulous weather sticking around? we'll have the complete forecast coming up. all right, gary. thank you very much. a horrible unthinkable crime claimed three innocent lives. >> what pushed a mother to drive her van into a river killing three of her children. we're live with the latest on this investigation. just a horrifying scene in new york. a mother drove her children into the hudson river. one son managed to escape. tonight, that mother and three of her which were are dead. family members had -- children are dead. the family members called police concerned about her well- being. officers arrive afterward show plunged into the river. diana has more. >> reporter: in a word, people here are heartbroken and strollelling to wrap their minds around what happened here. and by all accounts, talking to neighbors and friends, armstrong was a good mom who loved her kids. anup thinkable crime, a 25-year- old newburg mother drives her four which were into the hudson water, killing her three youngest and herself. >> information indicates that she intentionally drove the vehicle into the river and city police are still investigating. >> reporter: before 8:00, they got a call from one of her relatives she had a fight with her children's father at her home on williams street. before police arrived, she had packed up her four kids in the mini van, driving six blocks to the water and off the boat ramps. the oldest, 10-year-old vashon, was able to lower a power window and escape. he swam to shore and flagged down a passing car. >> when he came to the fire department -- he was having difficulty speaking, of course, and repeating the car being in the water was his mom and sib links. >> reporter: after an hourlong search, the divers recovered the van 25 yards from shore, submerged in eight feet of water. inside, lashonda and her three youngest, the 11-year-old, 3 and 2-year-old had all drowned. >> she's a good mom and took good care of her which were. if there were any concerns like if the child was sick with something, she would come right away and she worked, i believe, she started taking classes recently. >> reporter: at the kids day care, the 5-year-old landon's clothes are in his locker. the owner said she had taken on a lot lately and was in a difficult rap and showed no signs of trouble. the kids were happy and loved each other and l shawn boyd was always looking after the younger ones. >> i feel for him. i know it's going to take a toll on him not being able to save his family. i know that is the way he's going to feel because he was stuff a -- such a care go of giver. and -- care go offer. >> reporter: a lot of friends and families have been coming by and set up a memorial into the water around 8:00 last night and we know the sole survivor of the 10-year-old is with family members, melanie? >> reporter: we heard one of the people say there was a difficult relationship. do you know anything about the rap that armstrong had with the children's father? >> reporter: police did get a call before the van went in the water from one of the family members saying she was involved in a domestic dispute at her house and talking to neighbors, they said there was no sign of the couple fighting, but it did appear that the father of the three children who passed here with lashoppea -- lashonda, 11 months to five years ole, the father of the children, 26-year- old john pierre may is been on the outs with her. they appeared to be breaking up from what neighbors could tell us tonight, and that was something show could not handle. that is the latest from newburg, new york, tonight, melanie? back to you. >> thank you so much, diana. here at home, 100 police officers flooded the metro rail system in prince georges county in's move called operation blue tide. they're targeting 15 stations with high visibility patrols and reminding commuters to remain alert while riding the rails. paul wagner is live from the metro station. paul? >> reporter: one of the biggest problems metro's facing is the theft of electronic devices like joy joy pads and joy joy pods and laptops. more than 75% of the reported robberies on metro involved a theft of those devices. the one of the of the crime? here in prince georges county on the orange and green line. metro interred into a partnership with prince georges county police. the prince georges county sheriff's office and six other local police departments in an effort to work as a team in, on, and around metro's property in the county. operation blue tide as it's being called, is an antiterrorism initiative with officers looking for suspicious activity. but metro said the saturation patrols are also designed to prevent crime and educate writers on the need to protect themselves and their property while riding the rails. >> this is an effort to get 75 to 80 prince georges police officers on to the stations and trains and platforms to do a high visibility, meet some of the customers and 58 rones, hear the concerns and work with us. and that is what we want to show here is the sign of unity and that law enforcement is working together. jot officers are encouraged to commute while in uniform and if they do that, they'll be allowed to ride the system, bus and rail, for free. in addition to that, he said that you should not use the electronic devices while on the rail system. especially if you're standing near a door. he said that nowadays, if you're standing near a door, the thieves wait for the chimes. as soon as they go, they grab something and run off the train, laura? paul wagner, thank you. the caps make their play- off push on home ice tonight. are you ready to rock the red? we're checking in still ahead. and this student's quick thinking may have saved a life. how he kept the distracted driver from running another child down. next. . >> a health alert on food safety. maryland officials released now recommendations for rockfish consumption. they say that it's safe to eat rock fish for three meals a month up from two under the old guidelines. maryland is no longer recommends that which were and women pregnant or breast- feeding avoid the striped bass. the new recommendations are based on new test results. rockfish season opens on saturday. a fifth grader in oregon is being hailed a hero after saving the life of a fellow student. meet evan seagull, one of the few students in a safety program helping kids across the country crossing busy roads in front of their schools. in december, one of his younger classmates was not paying attention to patrollers and started on the crosswalk on her own. she started going down the street. the second and third light, i ran out there and no, i can't let her get hit. i had to pull her in. it didn't matter to me. i wanted to keep her safe. >> go evan. >> next week, evan and his family will be here in d.c. where he will be honored with the highest patrol award given, the triple-alive-saving award. >> good for him. a wet, soggy start to the day. the weekend is almost here. >> so the question is, will the wet weather stick around in gary's full forecast is coming up next. plan om and happy baconalia! baconalia? mm-hmm. why, it's the sacred festival of bacon. a celebration of baconian delight. come celebrate baconalia! denny's. america's diner is always open. we're open to 7 new ways >> we have a news alert from san francisco where barry bonds has just been found guilty of obstruction of justice. and he faced four counts for lying to a jury in 2003. the jury reached a have are the -- verdict on the obstruction charge. the judge accepted the verdict and is declaring a mistrial on the rest. again, barry bonds found gy of obstruction of justice by a san francisco jury, the seven-time mvp could face between 15 and 21 months behind bars for each count he's convicted on. and cap fans have been waiting all season for this and this is the play-offs. >> reporter: it's a familiar rivalry and they played the reasoners in the play-offs and this year, the ragers got the best of them and winning 3 of four and in the final three meetings, they outscored them 15-1. what everyone expects is a close, tough series, at least the people that know hockey and what about the fans? and let's go outside and check in with landsy muffy. >> reporter: last year, the capitals won the conference and the trophy. fans were not only optimistic, but that were sure the capitals would go all the way and we know how that turned out and this year, yet seems fans have learned a bit of a lesson and still feel good about their team. ♪ ♪ everybody at this game has a story on why they're here and what they're doing and you brought a crew with you. what are you doing? >> we're from freedom high school and in woodbipartisanship, consider virginia, got a call last week to perform at the concourse and outside, we started from scratch here and trying to make a name for ourselves. >> my second grade class is following them, the schedule and now we're ready for the cup. >> clearly, quality craftsmanship here and we plan to have the cups come back to d.c. every year. >> and not worried about the play-offs for this year until melrose picked the cats -- caps to go all the way and i don't like his track record and we're hoping for the cats and going all the way. -- caps. >> would you say you're optimistic this year? >> cautiously yes, since i bought tickets for all the games. >> reporter: what is the best way for caps fans to take the edge off? >> and that ovechkin drink is a crowd fate. >> our challenge for the great- a dredge, that has to be great and have eight fronts. can you do -- ingredients. can you do it? >> i can do it. >> and that is lots and lots of vodka. and sweeten that up. the juice. >> and with that flavoring of the cherry blossom here and that is coming running in. the alex ovechkin drink. >> reporter: and capitals fans said it was a generally dripping. what is your opinion? it's not a marren toy glass. that is good. >> reporter: and the freedom high school band is performing in front of the verizon center. the alex ovechkin drinks are flowing and if you're coming to verizon center, rock the red. number two, davfeldman, if you can, grow the play-off beard. >> we'll see about that. you didn't drink any great apes, did you in. no, was encouraging them to the bartender. and you're working tonight. we don't want you in the locker room. >> absolutely not. i agree. >> all right, thanks. lindsey muffy outside of the verizon center and by the way, this will be the fifth play-off series under bruce boudreau as the head coach of the caps and we may get another nailbiter and that is it, we'll have more and hear from the head coach and for now, back to melanie, laura and the pride of seguine, texas. >> a nice city. >> yes. >> gary grow up there. >> knew that was where he grew up. and i am trying to remember the old mascot. >> and your family vitale? >> rakill -- . >> our producer yo and -- . >> oh. >> trying to get brownie points and that is north of stockdale and that is that hold in the wall and. >> who knew we would have geography 101 for texas at 5:45. >> and yesterday, i didn't know where china grove was. >> yeah. >> and let's talk weather. whatever feldy wants to talk about. judge okay. >> and there you go. and talk go about schizoen frommia. >> and the weather's gone schizo and some rain this morning and lots of cloud cover and some sunshine, to, breaking through and that is nose and tomorrow, fabulous out there and that is not going to last long and goes downhill. we'll get there, 58 degrees for d.c. and that is that high today. culpeper, 63; and some sunshine goes a long way and we may warm the national temperature up more and 58. and 53 at 9, clearing skies at 11 and down to 51. the winds will be breezy this evening. the sunshine returns and at least for a couple of days and it will be good to so sunshine coming back. the rain is moving out. the big area of low pressure is opening up. and it's beginning to wakened. and that can move faster, and you see the bump to the west? this is the weather the next fewdas, the high pressure which will fill on in and that is going to bring us sunshine tomorrow and some warmer temperatures and the weak frontal system will come through and that will cool things off and to the west, we're seeing weekend storm that will bring rain and some showers and thunderstorms and that is looks like we're going to be wet and some heavy rain out there, too and this is your overnight forecast, clearing skies and lower 40s possible in the suburbs and may have a couple of upper 30s before it's all said and done and sunny tomorrow, mild, too, as temperatures climb into the upper 60s and lower 70s and down in the warmer areas, south and west of up to and we start off at 46 and get to 63 at noon and 68 degrees at 4:00 and again, notice all the sunshine and the future cast is calling for yet. and friday looks good, to. you see the rain back to the west and we may have a few clouds here coming in friday afternoon and evening and we'll have enough sunshine and to say partly cloudy. the rain is coming on in and that may be coming in for just about everybody. i think we have at i a chance of showers at least as early as 91 on saturday and that looked to the west here and you see the yellows and openers. this comes on across and some imbedded thunderstorms in there, too and will they be strong, severe? that depends on the temperatures andament of sunshine before it's looking there. we're going to stay cool on saturday and not much sunshine. we'll have showers and thunderstorms. nothing strong or nothing severe. by as they come through the plains, they will be severe the next few days. no doubt about that and this is our five-day forecast. pretty good. next few days and 68 tomorrow. real nice out there, partly cloudy, friday, 65 and there is that rain on saturday and the high of 60 and some of you will be in the 50s and bit or sunday, clouds and 63 and some time to go back to work j. yeah, right? >> 68 degrees and mold. >> is that what happened last week or this week? >> and i would like to so 80s on there, too. >> and -- >> that is my wish. >> thank you. rain is almost here. >> and tourists and royal watchers are expected to pack london hoping to get a glimpse of the royal wedding. for a price, hotels are promising to make yet happen. the mandarin orientientalhood park is offering packages with unrestricted vows and drinks at kensington palace. the s-day trip will cost you $16,000. the rubens at the palace hotel across offers a similar package, or you can camp out. and we set up a price camp and to the royal wedding and have space for 2010, about 5,000 people within the camping area. >> and that signs like fun. the wedding is less than three weeks away on april 29th at westminster abby. >> and in coming up in minutes, the police in new york expand their so much on long island for more victims of a killer and they're considering the possibility the remains they have found belong to two different serial killers. hundreds of millions of dollars on the way to fairfax and montgomery counties, we'll take a look. >> and it will be legal to gamble online in d.c. we will have the details for you. as's rig >> you ever wonder what happens to the laptops, keyboards and computer monitors? they kicked off a recycling initiative in d.c. to help make the recycling, lick tronecs as easy as buying them. the campaign will dramatically increase the amount of responsible e-cycling conducted nationwide. the goal? to recycle 1 billion pounds of consumer electronics annually by 2016. and thanks for joking us at five. thena -- joining us at 5. the man 6 starts now. -- the news edge at 6 starts now. president obama unveiling his plan by reducing the deficit. a big part of the plan, raising taxes on the rich has republicans blasting it. tom fitzjell was with the president. there were sharp words over the gop. >> reporter: the plan did not go over well with some republicans. paul ryan called the campaigner in chief a r