another glitch. we begin with the kindergartenning -- scathing report of metro. >> the ntsb is exposing a slew of warnings that could have prevented last june's deadly crash and frightening failures happening today. roby chavez is here to start us off. >> reporter: the ntsb issued a troubling and disturbing report about metro saying both organizational and technical failures are to blame for the deadly june 22nd crash and while they didn't single anyone out, they said most of the board is to blame. safety lapses still exist today despite metro's claims its addressed the issues. >> the layers of safety deficiencies uncovered during the course of this investigation are troubling and reveal a systemic breakdown of management at all levels. >> reporter: there was no holding back. metro was on a collision course before the june 22nd accident killing 9 people and injuring 52 others last year. >> the oh crews could have determined the -- the work crews could have determined they were failing to detect trains and actions could have been taken to resolve the problem. >> reporter: the findings? the ntsb said that metro ignored repeated warning alarms that were being founded and fostered a culture to different safety issues. during the time of the accident, signal malfunctions were unbelievably common, 3,000 times a week and to make matters worse, the ntsb said those alarms were ignored and leading to the crash. more worrisome, such incidents are still occurring today. >> there were multiple gates missed here and there were a lot of opportunities to stop the error train. >> reporter: the board issued 23 recommendations and some urgent. they're just that, no one can force metro to comply and the ntsb said there is reason for concern. >> where employees don't feel that they can report things without punitive action being taken against them and that is going to take a long time to break things down and confidence and trust. >> reporter: none of the metro board members showed up to hear the findings. the family members of those killed did. afterwards, the interim general manager talked safety and was shot on specifics. >> we're going to look at every recommendation and going to take everyone to heart. >> and another yet urgent warning to remove all the older 1,000 series cars from the metro fleet and despite another alarm, they will be for four more years. the safety board said that the federal transit administration lack of authority over metro contributed to the crash as well. several congressional leaders are sounding the alarm that it's time to make metro accountable. >> thank you. if you want to read more about the ntsb findings, we have a link to a synopsis of the report on then site g to www.myfoxdc.com. and we -- the website g to www.myfoxdc.com. a bad valve on a big water main causing major problems in adams morgan. at the intersection of florida and u and 18th shut down for hours and maureen umeh has more. >> reporter: good news here. the d.c. water crews just finished the job of replacing the broken valve and you can see the new piece right now. what they were doing is going for a slow and deliberate process of making sure that all the valves are tightened and that there are no leaks. they telling me that they expect nome have water by midnight. gallons of water rushing down u street northwest. a 20-inch water main at the intersection of florida and u streets to blame. >> i saw water shooting up so high and said unbelievable. i said fill up the bathtub. you may not have the water and not tonight. >> reporter: it happened after 4. the gushing geyser support a foot of water mixed with rock and mud over sidewalks and into some english basements causing moments of panic for home owners. >> it was starting to run down into my basement apartment area and i blocked it with cinder blocks and ran down there and cleaned up the drain and safed it from flooding out my tenant by this much. >> reporter: d.c. water officials say the problem is at a site where work was being done to replace an old valve and they say a 12-inch cuff link gave way and that is being replaced and checked for problems and that that means no water or low water pressure for businesses and home owners. >> we come to quirk and have -- our color. >> reporter: the sky listed urban escape did replacement work and that has left them high and dry since tuesday morning. >> and they have to go home and with -- . >>, has been suffering as they're forced to use buckets filled with water to wash the clients hair. officials hope to have the problems fixed for good soon and so signs like this won't be repeated. >> we feel terrible about the problems like this and we were doing a project to improve the system and this happened. joe the curves have been hard at work all day and as you heard, they were trying to make this problem better and that is what cause the the new problem. the residents should have the water online in a few hours. maureen umeh, fox 5 news. >> and thank you. it's another night in the dark, the power problems continue for thousands following sunday's severe storms. most of the outages remain in montgomery county. pepco reports over 84,000 customers still in the dark. much smaller numbers for virginia dominion and bg&e. bob barnard is live in northwest with more on the work to restore power. bob? >> reporter: 55 hours later and signs of the powerful thunderstorms surround us. this tree behind us appears not to have been touched and if your home or business is without power, this is getting old. it's one thing if this was the only event andenings like this happen. >> reporter: but 2010 hasn't been kind to him and his restaurant. >> the latest i heard was possibly tonight and tomorrow night. nothing definite. >> reporter: his pizzeria is one of many businesses in the dark the. >> they should have had this already. this is ridiculous. we have people out of work. >> reporter: they are fielding a few calls while they're here. >> and what did you have in mind? we have no electricity and hope by tomorrow that it will be on. >> you ought to call pepco and give them hell. >> it's one thing if this was the only event this year. after the windert and snowstorms and days we missed from that and the county office building and the courthouse being closed all week and you don't get them back. they don't add them back at the end of the year. >> reporter: throughoutmont georgey county, crews are still busy clearing fallen trees in this part, entire neighborhoods were still without power. >> a little warm, but it's not unbearably warm. >> reporter: pat mcgowan's roughing it at home with his teenage son and dog buddy not knowing when the lights will return and life will get back to normal. >> could come on in 3 minutes or 33 days. >> reporter: the phone and cable companies are working to get service back to their customers. officials unable to tell us how many of theirs have no tv or internet. >> and pepco won't provide information at all and that website was down and telephone lines were useless. i am disappointed it took them this long. >> reporter: in this area with many intersections without lights, it's pepco getting most of the heat. and apologizing, once again tonight, this time for not being able to tell the customers for a time this afternoon how long their power would remain off. a communications glitch they say they solved. thursday, the target date still for getting everybody's electricity back on and pepco tells us they have restored power to more than 2/3 of the more than 100 customers who lost power sunday. >> another big story we're following tonight. prince georges county police close closed one of the mother-daughter murder cases from last year. the grand jury indicted jason scott in the murders of lauren and ebony dewit. scott is a serial killer and, face more charges. >> reporter: 27-year-old jason scott was indicted for the murders of the women. their bodies were found march 16th last year in a burning car in largo stolen that day. the police chief said that jason scott started his criminal career early and grew into a serial killer. scott has a college degree from the university of maryland college and neighbors say he comes from a good family. as far as the murders are concerned, investigators say scott made changes to keep police off the trail and -- police say his word there was a key part of their investigation. >> this individual is a very bad person and i will tell you i mentioned that last week, we think we just began a long your honory that is going to take us beyond -- a long your honory this that is going to take us beyond the borders of prince georges county. >> i investigators believe that me might be responsible for the murders of kara and cariss larry andersenson. the crime scene is about one mile a part and sources tell fox 5 that scott is the prime suspect of the murder of a boy- woman in 2008. at 11 on the news edge, an exclusive introduce with someone who worked side-by-side with scott for years. >> reporter: wisdom martin, thank you. there is another oil spill in the gulf tonight and that is not all. where else crews are working to clean up a massive spill that is causing a lot of concern. and it's supposed to be the final resting ground for those who gave their lives for this country. new disturbing revelations about what is going on at arlington national cemetery. and this may look like a typical family pet but he's anything but. find out how he saved his family's life at 10:30. >> and we're all over a developing story. could steven strasburg be done for the season? you heard right, the season. feldy's working that story coming up. the kincaids live here. across the street, the padillas. ben and his family live here, too. ben's a re/max agent, and he's a big part of this community. there are lots of reasons why re/max agents average more sales than other agents. experience, certainly. but maybe it's also because they care about the markets they serve and the neighbors who rely on them. nobody sells more real estate than re/max. visit remax.com today. >> thousands of graves at arlington national cemetery could be mislabeled. >> a state of emergency is now in effect in southwestern michigan. an oil pipeline broke near kalamazoo breaking -- leaking more than 800 gallons of oil into the creek feeding into the kalamazoo river. the oil is damaging wildlife in that area. the coast guard is monitoring another oil spill in the gulf tonight. this is near new orleans and that happened earlier when a tugboat slammed into an abandoned well and that is in a -- sent a plume of oil and gas into the air. efforts are underway to contain the spill. they're confident the leak will be stopped. bp is putting a new public face on the oil disaster and hoping to restore its image the first time, an american will lead the company. >> reporter: robert dudley will be taking the helm of bp in a few months. as you said, he will be the first american to lead the british oil giant. it's a tough job, indeed and he said the company faces many challenges, he's up to the task. >> and heard a lot -- >> bp shake things up starting at the top. robert dudley is replacing tony hayward as ceo on october 1st. dudley said the spill is a wake- up call. >> we're going to learn a lot from bp and the industry and i am sure there will be changes. >> reporter: many analysts say replacing hayward with an american is a step in the right direction and still, some are skeptical about bps future. >> it's going to take many, many years for them to repolish their image. because i think that their image is shot here in this country and probably around the world. and they not being truthful with everyone. >> i think they need to make a lot of changes so it doesn't happen again and to do it or not, i'm not sure. >> reporter: the white house is all weighing in saying it's less more than about the action being taken. >> they have obligations and responsibilities as the responsible part in this that have to be met regardless of who the ceo is or who the chair of the company is. >> reporter: from the scene of the spill incident commander thad allen said the change in leadership won't affect the work going on in the gulf. the work is positive. the pressure continues to rise steadily and indicating the with well is in tact. >> all indications are stable, no anomalies detected and the well continues to be secured and demonstrate integrity. >> reporter: the cleanup continues in the gulf. the scientists say 600 miles of coast line have been oiled and nearly 100 days since the explosion and the head of the u.s. travel association is asking bp to set aside a half a billion for a marketing campaign aimed at getting tourists back to the gulf. the man in charge of getting the people of the gulf coast back on their feet is talking about the challenges he's facing. he helped manage the compensation funds for virginia tech, the massacre and 9/11. and this time he said it will be difficult to pinpoint how much businesses and people have lost. >> i'm trying to get the money out to the people and i'll not holding it up. i'm a fiduciary for the people in the gulf. >> reporter: he was not going to disclose what bp is pay pay. >> the president sought to downplay the doubts significant. >> they don't reveal any issues that haven't informed the public debate on afghanistan. >> reporter: military leaders echoed the concern while stressing the material could be harmful but is dated. >> a lot of it is focused on the past and i'm focused on the future. >> reporter: the battleground reports published on wikileaks detail friendly fire incidents and afghan civilian deaths and reveal u.s. distrust about pakistani intelligence officials and concern that iran has been helping the taliban. lawmakers who routinely receive the documents said they need to be understood for what they really are. >> some of them are completely dismissible and some unreliable and some very reliable. raw intelligence needs to be processed properly and generally by people who have a context within which to put it. >> reporter: other lawmakers are expressing concern about who might be reading this once- classified information right now. >> the enemy can spot -- and they can send a real signal and provide valuable information to the enemy. >> reporter: they reigniting congressional debate over the strategy and members of those parties agree that it's against the law and should be prosecuted vigorously. heartbreaking incompetence. the misabling of graves at arlington national cemetery. the missouri democrat believes the number of errors could be in the thousands. an inspector general's report details numerous problems. the cemetery spent more than $5 million on a software system to keep track of the grave sites. >> this is not complicated and not a complex software and it's a simple scheduling. >> a senate homeland security committee will hold a hearing on the matter on thursday. a local man is headed to jail for stealing from the library. has nothing to do with books. check it out. that's a child's head impaled by part of a power washer. his incredible story of survival at 10:32. and if you want a good bottle of wine and don't want to empty your wall tote get it, we have insider secrets to use to get a bottle for a bargain. at pizza hut, everyone loved our $10 any pizza deal so much we decided to make even bigger changes. we've lowered the price of every pizza on our menu. so you can get your favorite pizza at a great price every day. now a large pizza with up to three of your favorite toppings is just ten bucks. or any medium specialty pizza, like a supreme pan or pepperoni lover's pizza -- just ten bucks, too. all the time. no coupons and not a limited time offer. just every pizza for a great price. every day. only at your pizza hut. >> well, following a developing story from nationals ballpark. the pitching phenom stephen strasburg is out. for how long? dave feldman is live in the newsroom and working the story. this is a big deal? >> reporter: it's a million- dollar question, when will we see him again. he was supposed to be making the 10th appearance of his much- hyped major league premier and the star was having problems getting loose in the bullpen, stiffness in and shoulder discomfort. enough to pull him. at 6:51 p.m., after talking it over with his pitching coach and catcher, the unanimous decision was to shut it down for the night. an mri on the shoulder was negative. this is nothing new for the pitcher. he had occurrences of this while at college in san diego state. >> well, i think everybody was concerned, you know, that -- everyone knows how good he is and what he means to us. i think everyone got the message that that is precautionary and he's going to be fine then you had to go out and play. everyone did a great job. >> and when asked about strasburg being shut down for the season, they said it was too early to make a determination about that and when they announceed to the crowd that he was out and miguel batisa was in, the sold- out crowd booed loudly and longer a second time when they offered an explanation why he was out the third inning and making the first start the two years and got the win. >> thank you. new tonight, the mayor's race shifts towards 6. the residents got a chance to hear from the three main democratic candidates. >> and to be here tonight. >> promises and speeches are a dime a dozen and what is rare is the results, getting things done and delivering and fulfilling promises. we are a divided city and as mayor, i will work as hard as i can see that the people in ward 8, ward 6 and ward 1, the people in ward 3 and all the other four wards will be working together. >> i want to introduce jobs to our people and to introduceec and give our kids the talented skills they need. >> and this is the second straight day they have squared off. yesterday, they debated in northwest and call one local dog a modern-day lassie, literally saving the lives of every family member. how the english bulldog enzo pulled it off next. have you ever eaten hot dog and fries at the washington center? that may not be all that came with your order. and take a look, this photo here is one of dozens found at a garage sale for $45. tonight, the owner's finding out they worth $200 million. there's oil out there we've got to capture. my job is to hunt it down. i'm fred lemond, and i'm in charge of bp's efforts to remove oil from these waters. bp has taken full responsibility for the cleanup and that includes keeping you informed. every morning, over 50 spotter planes and helicopters take off and search for the oil. we use satellite images, infrared and thermal photography to map and target the oil. then, the boats go to work. almost 6,000 vessels. these are thousands of local shrimp and fishing boats organized into task forces and strike teams. plus, specialized skimmers from around the world. we've skimmed over 27 million gallons of oil/water mixture and removed millions more with other methods. we've set out more than 8 million feet of boom to protect the shoreline. i grew up on the gulf coast and i love these waters. we can't keep all the oil from coming ashore, but i'm gonna do everything i can to stop it, and we'll be here as long as it takes to clean up the gulf. think it's been hot here? try living in 140 degrees heat. that is what it feels like in kuwait where they came. from they have been living in foster homes with no ac since the shelter burned down in march. the washington animal chris cue league is taking them in and getting them up to date on their shots and they will adopt them out. >> there are no programs, really, to take care of animals over there. the partnership with them is valuable to them and to us because we have a way to get them over here and get them cared for. >> the rescue league took in 30 dogs back in april following the fire. today, they received 9 more. a family pet is being called the family hero. enzo an old family english bulldog saved the family. the home caught fire early monday morning and sherri ly has the story. >> here you war. -- are. >> reporter: enzo weaks up bark at 5:30 every morning like clockwork and on murder morning, it was different. >> every morning and enzoo's -- [ indiscernible ] >> that was earlier than usual. >> the first time i yell at him be quiet, be quiet. >> enzo wouldn't stop and that is when john louie came out and smelled the smoke coming from the basement. >> and i walked to the basement, the steps and the backdraft, you know, all the flames came at me. >> reporter: he raced to get his wife out of the house with 1-year-old enzo close behind. an electrical malfunction ignited a fire while they were sleeping. >> and the flames was coming at me like from here to the top of the steps. the flame where shooting out. >> reporter: at first he thought his house was gone. >> reporter: they managed to get out safely but he was determined to save his house, too and so he grabbed the hose and went back in. >> and -- as much as i can here. >> reporter: he went back maybe 100 times with wet towels over the head and face and not what firefighters recommend. they kept the fire to the basement saving much of the son's 20 years of motor cross winnings and mementos. >> came in and but, you know, we stop the fire and you can see that it's bad but not too bad. >> reporter: the basement is destroyed and the upper floor is heavily damaged by smoke. they plan to live in their motor home and share the small house he built for the in-laws until they rebuild. >> and we're very lucky. >> reporter: sherri ly, fox 5 news. a maryland man will spend time behind bars because of a stolen spider. the 27-year-old randy humple stole a tarantula. the judge sentenced him to 90 days in jail and sentence him to four years in prison for violating his probation in an assault case. he told the judge he knew he did some somea toddler with a metal rod in his brain survived. the doctor said it lodged next to the biggest vein in his head. >> and he didn't sugar coat anything. he said mr. jones, more than likely we pull the screw out of his head, he's going to bleed out and bleed to death. when he said that, i just lost it. >> the doctor said the 17-month- old could have died instantly or had a massive stroke. the surgery to remove the rod was a complete success. it's bad enough when you get booted from a flight for overbooking. southwest admitted it booted one passenger to give two seats to another. if you're a wine lover and hate paying the high prices, we're here to help. exposing the secrets you need to know. first, chevy is finally putting a pricetag on the highly anticipated bolt. details are coming up next. good news in housing, the home prices in 20 major cities -- by more than 1% in april. the prices rising by in than 4 1/2% compared to last year. consumer confidence is falling to the lowest level since february and people are worried about their job and the jobs market. the company, donald trump said, will leave the company and if congress doesn't extend the bush tax cuts n. wall street, the dow is up 12 points and gm is saying the chevy volt will cost money. the volt hits showrooms in november. that is business. i'm neal caview thea. >> listen up, people. >> officials at an arizona hospital say they made a horrific mistake identifying a body because they had too big of a caseload. the 20-year-old marlena and her friend were in a load. they could not be identified by the families. the hospital said that cantu was alive and her friend was dead and now they have learned their daughter was killed. >> this is her baby and this is the most precious thing you have and something has to be done. >> the hospital said that the heavy caseload meant the autopsy was not conducted until five days after the crash. more than six months after the disastrous earthquake in haiti, orphans who came to the u.s. are still having a hard time becoming citizens and that is because the u.s. government considers them refugees. under current law -- current law, they must leave here for two years. the new york senator introduced the help haiti act of 2010 which would speed up the process. >> for any year, the children will be 100% citizenship and have all the pain or work and passports and travel and all the things they need as any citizens would be eligible for. >> and 1100 were allowed to come to the u.s. on special parole visas following the earthquake. coming up at 11, our first look at a suspected serial killer. new tonight, we're hearing from a person who spent years working with them. plus, the video game designed to teach young girls about sex. we're going to show you how it works and why some are calling it a waste of time and mean. those stories and more at 11. rd >> you may enjoy watching games and concerts there, but grabbing a bite to eat at the verizon center could turn your stomach and an espn report on sports venues nationwide found that they had the worst health violations in the country and there were problems with every food vendor. the new owner said changes are in the works and that problems cited last year have already been addressed. he hopes to have zero citations in the future. and the recession is hitting the most cultivated of taste. the slumping demand for eye high-end wine is putting california wineries in peril. americans are drinking more wine and buying less expensive brands. melanie alnwick has the insider's guide to buying wine on a budget. >> reporter: guess what the most popular wine was last year in terms of sales? a box of franzia. i than 5-liters for five bucks is a bargain. if you prefer your wine in the bottle, there are secrets to getting a good value. for wine drinkers, this is the sound they love to hear. what they don't like is the price. >> i need white wine and -- >> reporter: the wine steward of the georgetown safeway hears that all the time. >> love people and kind of shy. >> reporter: that is because consumers can find good wines at every price point as long as they don't fall for the tricks. >> be adventurous and there are a lot there and labels can be orter: so can price, said chef michael waggoner in of the international college. >> you see the expensive bottles of wine. it's not a reflection necessarily on their equality and it's just a reflection on how difficult they are to obtain. >> reporter: wagner recommends this strategy for navigating a restaurant wine list. >> eliminate the cheapest bottle and the most expensive and in that middle of the road is the sweet spot. >> reporter: popular wines will have a bigger markup. >> and some can stick it to you on the wine list. >> reporter: be aware that a single glass of wine can cost you the most. >> they charge you $6 and that is -- >> right now, say the experts, the best values are in lesser- known wines. wagner is in to supertough kins from italy at the moment. >> the quality of italian wines is exceptional. >> reporter: and recommending average teen a portugal and spain. >> very, very nice. >> all around $15 or less retail and if you live in an area allowing byob, even better. >> you can safe a lot of money. >> reporter: opentable.com lists restaurants with free corkage nights meaning you tonight have -- don't have to pay extra to bring your own bottle. other restaurants may charge a fee between 10 to 15 and make sure the bottle you bring is worth it. he said wine with a screw cap is not necessarily cheap but that just means it's ready to drink right now and said that if you find a wine you like in that 20 to $30 range, you might want to buy several of them to hold on to. five-plus years from now, they'll be perfect to drink and worth much more than you paid for them. melanie alnwick, fox 5 news. and back to the weather situation here, there are 26 montgomery county public schools that still don't have power as we know. it's not a big deal and montgomery county was hit the hardest in the area and if the schools don't have the power by 6:30 tomorrow morning, the summer schools, the camps, the rec programs and summer meals will be cancelled and that will be cancelled. if you know where to find the list, get online and figure it out. >> and those numbers are coming on. >> finally got power back this evening and that was good news. >> a good night sleep for you, sean. >> and with the air on. >> yes. >> it's been a brutal summer, obviously. today was 87 degrees. did you know that was the coolest day since july 13th? felt fabulous, you know? >> and for the folks without power, it's not too terrible and we believe that it's going to warm up a bit. the next two days look warmer. we wanted to talk about the hot stretch that we have had and our above-average summer continues. june was a record-setter, 6 degrees above average and the warmest we have had. we're on a pace with july being over 4 degrees above average and to set maybe a record for july, too, above average this year, 42 days at or above 90, that is going back even into april and may and temperatures have been running above average as you well know for the warmest june on record and july right now, tied for the second hottest and all of those numbers will be factored in closer to the end of the month which, is later this week and the popular number, 87 degrees. the humidity stayed in check and as we go to the overnight hours, we're going to see the humidity riding. the temperature now is 79 degrees and that won't be as cool as it was last night because the south wind and the increasing humidity will keep temperatures in the upper 60s and low 70s and didn't see much in the way of storms. that looked like it wanted to rain a bit today and a bit of jet energy bringing clouds and storms pop up. there were flash flood warnings for awhile. tomorrow, maybe a few storms in the late afternoon and the high pressure is off the coast and the frontal system that brought us the damaging and violent storms on sunday and the next player is this line of storms, this is where the front, they getting a lot of reports of wind damage across minnesota and wisconsin and that is the line of storms in our region on thursday and that is going to bring a nice change of air mass again into the region with temperatures dropping into the 80s for the weekend. a few clouds tonight, the humidity is climbing and tomorrow morning, you will step out and say that is back again and looks -- looks like up to 92 degrees and that will be more humid and we're going to apply up the heat and humidity. at 7 in the morning, 75 by noon, 88 and at 4:00, maybe storms around south and west and 92 degrees. much more widespread on thursday and that is why we want to show you the future cast and not mu at 5:00 and something could pop up by here and there. by thursday at noon, future cast suggesting showers could be around and a line of storms swinging through fairly early, most east of us by thursday at 6:00 and that keeps on moving and thingsinglo like they will move out of the hot and humid mode with the high pressure moving away and the frontal system coming in to show a comfortable air mass. what i want to say about the weekend, though, we think the temperatures will stay in the 80s, thanks to the frontal system and we may not be totally storm-free this weekend. there might be a couple of storms on sunday and week see them for the weekend and 92 degrees, we could be even warm or thursday and some suggestion that it could be getting closer to the mid-90s and we think the showers will come in early enough that we should be capped at 93 degrees. friday, 87; saturday, 86 and sunday in the mid-80s and that will be refreshing. again, could be a few storms around here and there and unsettled and i bet people would rather have that than 101. >> yes, i think so. >> all right, thank you, sue. the temperatures heading into the 90s a few days, the beach would be nice and going to ocean city, you'll be visiting one of the best boardwalks in the united states. the website sherman's travel named ocean's city as the fifth best boardwalk atlantic city, new jersey, number one, followed by coney island, new york; kema, texas, and mission beach, california. one man's trash is another man's treasure. that saying couldn't be more true for a california man. a collection of glass negatives he bought at a garage sale for $45 has been authenticated as a lost work of famed photographer ansel adams. they're worth a whopping $200 million a team of experts spent six months examining the negatives and they believed to have been destroyed in 1937 during a fire at the yosemite national park studio. >> these photographs are the missing link and they fill that gap in the artistic development and career development of anel is adams and there -- ansel adams. there is a historical value and there is an artistic value. it fills the void in his career. >> an exhibition is planned for october at fresno state university. michelle obama and her youngest daughter, they are travelling to spain next month. the white house describes the vacation as a private mother- daughter trip with 9-year-old sasha and longtime friends and they expected to fay an -- pay an official visit to the queen and king of spain. a former first daughter will get the royal treatment this weekend at her wedding. chelsea clinton will tie the knot. it's the talk of new york. clinton and her fiance will reportedly have 400 guests at their wedding and that is not including the global media and there is the security paid for. the bill is $2,500 that does not seem like a lot and that is expected to cost $3 million. wow. a petite airline passenger booted for an overweight teenager. how southwest is justifying this one tonight. and in minutes on the news edge, fast food outlets, grocery stores, pharmacies could be putting your health in danger amount surprising place a worrisome chemical is turning up. eef tes ecic eef tes [trumpet playing ecic"reveille" throughout] reviving the economy means reinventing the way we do business. here's to the owners showing us the way. [trumpet playing "reveille" fades to silence] >> more controversy for southwest airlines after forcing a woman to give up the seat to accommodate an overweight teenager. the woman was flying on standby and that teenager had a confirmed seat but needed more room. opinions are divided over whether the woman was treated fairly. >> reporter: it's irritating enough to get bumped from a flight, but to be told to get off because an overweight passenger needs two soots, southwest airlines admits it happened to a petite woman on a recent flight from vegas to sacramento. >> that was her seat. how dare they kick her off of something she paid for. that was totally wrong. >> reporter: the woman was flying standby and had just settled in the last available seat when the flight crew told her an obese 14-year-old passenger who showed up late needed two seats and so the 110- pound woman was kicked off the plane even though the teenager paid for only one seat. >> i think they made the right decision. it could have been traumatizing for the young boy, 14 years old, to be removed from the plane because he needs two seats. >> reporter: this is not southwest's first run-in with plus-size problems. the director kevin smith criticized the airline several months ago after getting kicked off of a flight because of his girth o. twitter he wrote, if you look like me, you might be ejected from southwest air and was outspoken over the incident in a pod cast. i said lady, i'm not going to sue you for calling me fat, i'm telling you i'm fat. >> reporter: this type of thing bad publicity for southwest in sure, but legally, they're within their rights legally. >> it's a sensitive and real issue because the airlines have seats a certain size and can't retool the aircraft. it would be cost prohibited to do. that. >> reporter: the aviation attorney said that southwest could have handled the situation better. >> and the airline has been criticized for the -- requiring passengers to pay for two seats. >> they should have asked for volunteers to get off to make a seat for this 14-year-old. >> reporter: in a statement to