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home to new jersey at this moment. tonight we have new details about what may have happened to the pop icon. we'll begin tonight with the video of a cold blooded purrer. good evening. i'm -- murderer. good evening. i'm brian bolter. >> i'm shawn yancy. brittany norwood brutally beat and killed her co-worker jayna murray in the lululemon athletica store. >> brittany norwood was first interviewed in the hospital hours after she was found bound and bleeding on the floor of the store. that was recorded on audio only. four days later norwood was well enough to go to montgomery county police headquarters for her first videotaped interview with detectives. she was a free woman voluntarily speaking with police five days after the vicious murder of her co-worker jayna murray inside the lululemon athletica store on bethesda row. >> he strikes me on my head. >> he strikes you on your head? >> uh-huh. >> on your forehead? >> uh-huh. >> do you know with what? >> no. >> was it his fist or an object? >> it was hard. >> brittany norwood was not a suspect yet, claims she was a victim attacked by two masked men inside the store late on a friday night last march. >> how long do you think this went on? >> forever it seems like. >> i'm sure. >> i don't know. >> of course, we now know it was all a lie. >> she's a great actress and that is just absolutely apparent as judge greenberg said. she thought she was in control. she thought she was calling the shots and for several days she was, but ultimately that was not the case. >> they knew where i lived. they know where i live. >> two days after the first videotaped interview brittany was back at police headquarters. >> they say if i was to pass anyone and open my mouth, i could consider myself dead. >> norwood said she wanted to tell detectives something she hadn't mentioned previously, that the killers had made her leave the store and move jayna murray's star. police had found her blood in jayna's car. >> the whole point of this is trying to come to a successful conclusion. >> detective jim drewry at this point knows some of the forensic evidence isn't matching up with her story. >> people would probably ask why didn't you keep going and not go back? >> because i was scared for life. >> okay. well, if you were in the car and you were driving away? >> because i knew they knew where i lived. >> later that day norwood was arrested and charged with jayna murray's murder. we're also now seeing for the first time the actions of two apple store employees who say they heard screams from the other side of the wall in their store hearing jayna murray's screams for help, but did nothing. >> it's not legally a requirement to report a crime. again morally we hope that people confronted with the same situation would do what we hope people do in a community, look out for each other and make that phone call, but again there's no legal requirement to do that. you can walk away if you choose to. >> as for brittany noshwood, she was eventually convicted of murdering her co-worker and last month sentenced to life in prison without parole. >> what is so chilling is to watch this knowing that she is the killer. she was crying, emotional and all the time pretending to be a victim in this horrible crime. >> there were many definition says for the kind of liar she was described by a judge, the prosecutors and jim drewry the detective just kept asking her details, go over the story again and again and by the last interview they were able to match of some of what she was telling them with evidence at the crime scene and it wasn't matching up. that's why they were able to finally nail her. >> during this particular interview do you think police by this point suspected her? >> i think so, especially since she had found her blood in the car and she called on her own and said i want to come back and tell you something i didn't the first time and it is that i moved the car. we don't know if she found out that she found her blood in the car, but she hadn't mentioned that previously and that was on the day she of finally arrested. i think by then they had a pretty good idea she was the killer. the untimely death of singer and actress whitney houston has left fans stunned, many saying her life and legacy touched them in ways in one else could. fox 5 laura evans here now with the latest on her death. >> houston's body is being taken to new jersey now expected to arrive tonight. it will be given a police escort to wiggins funeral home when it does. the funeral will be held at prudential center in newark friday. that is the city where the late pop star was born. as the services are being planned, officials are trying to work out exactly how she died. these photos obtained by tmz reportedly show whitney houston's last meal in the hotel in beverly hills where she was staying and where she died. the 48-year-old found dead saturday in the bathtub of a room in the beverly hilton. there are reportedly no indications of foul play and no obvious signs of trauma on her body. the pop queen publicly struggled with drug addiction but was rumored to finally be sober after a rehab visit in may. the coroner's office says it could be a while before we know exactly what killed her. they're awaiting results of toxicology tests. >> no matter what medications they're taking until we run a tox and see the level and what's in the system we're not going to speculate. >> from the mid-1980s to the late 1990s houston was one of the world's best selling artists, but she fell from the charts as her voice was ravaged by drug use and her image tarnished by erratic behavior. now music fans around the world are mourning the sudden death of the legendary singer. >> her voice was so powerful that i can still hear it. >> we all will remember her. i think this is all you can say about it. it is better to not say a lot of words but rather to remember her music. >> president obama today said he is keeping houston's family, especially her 18-year-old daughter bobbi kristina in mind. a wake is planned for thursday. houston will be laid to rest at new hope baptist church in newark, new jersey. he interviewed houston during the height of her musical career. tonight former radio host donnie simpson will shed more light on her life and legacy tonight on the news edge at 11:00. day two of the murder trial of uva lacrosse player george huguely continues. today more rivetting testimony about how his ex-girl friend yeardley love died and about the injuries he had on his body. fox 5's karen gray houston is in the newsroom. >> lots of testimony today from evidence technicians. they also showed jurors pictures that showed george huguely had bruises and abrasions on his arms, hands, knuckles the day his ex was found dead. in the videotaped interview he did with police huguely tells investigators the injuries were the result of a lacrosse game and practice. the jury also heard from the coroner who conducted the autopsy on yeardley love. dr. william gormley testified the cause of death was clear, blunt force trauma. grim autopsy photographs were shown to the jury to support his case. our paul wagner is in charlottesville covering the trial. we asked him this evening about gormley's testimony. you had some interesting findings. he's a key witness, is he. , for the prosecution? >> two things he said today that was interesting is that one, there's evidence that she -- there was an attempt to smother her and that's where the injuries came to her face, although she didn't ultimately die of asphyxia. the other interesting aspect that came out is the medical examiner says there was no injury to her nose. george huguely has said consistently that the only injury to yeardley love when he left her apartment that night was that she had a bloody nose >> reporter: there's a big fight going on about what kind of evidence the media will be allowed to see. what's going to come of that? don't we have a right to see that evidence, the video tapes, the pictures that the jury is seeing? >> reporter: i've never experienced this in all my years covering trials. you can always see the evidence when you're sitting in the courtroom. it's just part of the process. >> the way the courtroom is set up the jewishors' backs are to the judge and a mon -- the jurors' backs are to the judge and a monitor sets away from spectators. a prominent lawyer tells fox 5 he thinks if the evidence is made public, he thinks the media should be allowed to view it. >> if you think how could you pool punt of this and have one monitor -- publicity of this and have one monitor for the entirety of the media access, i think there's a way to do it. >> the media outlets are planning an appeal. metro is spending tens of millions of dollars on something that may surprise you. hear what the agency is saying about it coming up next. plus snow, not exactly what you want to hear, gas prices hitting a brand-new record high. find out how to track the cheapest prices around. tonight on the news edge a virginia deputy sued over an incident caught on his dashcam, how it played out at 11:00. if you have something you want to say about fox 5 news at 10:00, want to know some of the best stories of the night before they air? hit us up on twitter hatch tag my fox d.c.   >> news, weather, traffic and all the fun stuff in between, fox 5 morning news. join us to celebrate valentine's. at 7:00 we're chock full of chocolate and at 8:00 the sweet truth of dessert for breakfast and at 9:00, not wild about online dating? we'll meet a local matchmaker who may help. dozens of residents of a condo complex in southeast are staying elsewhere tonight after a carbon monoxide leaning in their building. a faulty heating unit is to blame. was safely evacuated. fox 5's audrey barnes tells us some residents are concerned it could happen again with more serious consequences. >> reporter: residents of the condo here say the furnace is a constant problem. the carbon monoxide leak that sent 10 people to the hospital could have been much worse. firefighters were sent here to investigate the smell of gas, but discovered something much worse when they arrived. carbon monoxide was leaking from a furnace in the basement. they immediately began to evacuate residents. >> while searching the building they came across a lethargic and semi-conscious adult in the unit and they immediately brought herb outside. she was in there with a -- her outside. she was in there with a child, too. the child wasn't necessarily displaying symptoms, but we got them outside and began oxygen therapy on them. >> reporter: 18 people were assessed for exposure and 10 had to be transported to the hospital for treatment. >> they had to quarantine people and ship them off to the hospital, make sure they were okay because the level was high. >> reporter: during the evacuation crews jimmied some locks and pried open doors. >> the deck bolts are bent out of shape, so this whole thing will have to come out. most likely this will have to come out. >> reporter: a d.c. police officer was on guard while resident scrambled to secure their property. an even bigger concern, the furnace which residents say is constantly on the fritz. >> i'm very, very frustrated. the building has not been maintained. that's not necessarily the landlord's fault. it's, you know, the association's fault and whoever owns the building. >> reporter: the faulty heating unit has been shut down leaving residents in the cold. they've been told they can stay if they want to, but no word on for how long. we called the wade road condo association to ask about residents' concerns and to see what accommodations they're making for them and got no answer. >> we have electric heaters that we keep here anyway. so yes, we will be able to stay here. >> reporter: some residents say they will try to stick it out here without heat tonight. others are packing up and heading out to spend the night with family and friends. back to you in the studio. a record day for gas prices and a tough time for drivers at the gas pump. the national average for a gallon of regular is 3.51 a gallon at a time of year where prices typically drop. fox 5's melanie alnwick shows us the impact it could have on prices during the summer driving season. >> reporter: consumer demand for gas is down yet prices keep climbing topping 3.50 a gallon for the national average which, of course, means even higher prices in d.c. metro area. >> i'm feeling the impact on it in my pockets now. >> reporter: aaa mid- atlantic's john townsend said unrest in oil rich nations and trouble in greece are factors and another big culprit now is traders pouring money into the futures market which is leading to the winter price fight now 12 cents a gallon higher than february 2011. >> we're almost at point of no return. once you get over 3.50 gas prices have a tendency to remain there for a protracted period of time. >> reporter: it's a good bet prices will stay inflated in the spring. then as refineries switch over to more expensive summer blends the real punch could land. >> we could be looking at by early spring $3.90 gas and by summer $4 gas and beyond. >> reporter: aaa's figures show virginia drivers now spend $428 a month on gas. maryland drivers about 344 a month. independent businessman james skipwith says it already costs about 75 bucks to fill up his tank and he's making changes to his budget. >> you have to cut somewhere. we have to get around and balance the budget as best i can. >> reporter: if spring and summer gas prices do go above $4 as predicted, the pain will be in our wallets and economy as a whole. melanie alnwick, fox 5 news. >> you can find the lowest price in your area with our gas prices map. go to www.myfoxdc.com. click on traffic, then select prices at the pump. fox 5 is monitoring metro tonight as the public gets its first chance to chime in on a new design for the anacostia metro station. the district was recently selected to receive technical design assistance for that anacostia stop aimed at helping enhance pedestrian and bike safety in public spaces. tonight the design committee kicked off a three-day community work session at matthew's memorial baptist church in southeast. apparently metro also needs help from business consultants. public records show metro is paying more than $51 million to 18 different consultant companies to help better run the transit agency. metro specsman dan stessel says it's actually a small number and the 51 million is less than 2% of the operating budget. the white house and congressional republicans appear to be on another collision course. the president outlined his 2013 budget today from northern virginia while gop lawmakers on capitol hill are calling that budget debt on arrival. here's fox 5's tom fitzgerald. >> reporter: the white house's budget arrived on capitol hill just before the president himself arrived in northern virginia community college to promote it. if congress adopts this budget, then along with the cuts that we've already made, we'll be able to reduce our deficit by $4 trillion. >> reporter: the administration says its $3.8 trillion budget will cut the deficit $4 trillion by ending corporate tax cuts and raising taxes on the wealthy. >> some people go around and say well, the president is engaging in class warfare. that's not class warfare. that's common sense. >> reporter: but the budget also includes spending like $8 billion for community college training and nearly half a trillion in transportation projects. >> we can't just cut our way into growth. >> reporter: but republicans quickly cut into the president's plan. >> somebody asked me if this budget was dead on arrival. i said no, no. it's debt on arrival. >> reporter: the gop says this budget does not cut spending but merely slows it, overestimates savings from the end of the iraq war. >> the president assumes that the money is still there and therefore, you can spend it, but really you just are borrowing money to fund the new spending program. >> reporter: but the top democrat on the budget spending committee challenged republicans to offer an alternative. >> they don't want one penny to go to deficit reduction if it involves closing a corporate loophole, not one penny. >> reporter: as the president faces reelection this year along with control of the house and senate at stake, the budget battle promises to be a big one. tom fitzgerald, fox 5 news. a supreme court justice robbed at knifepoint in his own home. another story you'll only see on fox 5, a former local police officer sentenced to eight years in prison for excessive force breaks her silence, her story minutes away. a little later pop superstar justin bieber makes a 6-year-old fan who suffers from cancer's dream come true.  tonight the supreme court is confirming justice stephen breyer was robbed at knifepoint last week while on his vacation home in the west indies. he and his wife were confronted by a machete wielding intruder who took about $1,000 in cash. no one was heart. the breyers are en route to the united states no, word on whether an arrest has been made. a judge will allow jerry sandusky to see his grandkids. the former penn state football coach at the center of the child sex abuse scandal had been barred from contact with any children. sandusky is accusessed of molest -- accused of molesting 10 boys he met through a charity he founded. the judge also ruled against allowing a jury from another county to hear the trial. the reporter who broke the penn state sex abuse scandal is in the d.c. area tonight. he's a journalist for the harrisburg -- she's a journalist for the harrisburg patriot news and says the whole story started off with a tip from the source and at the time she didn't realize the legs the story would grow. >> i approached it as a crime story but didn't know it was going to be a crime story that might get more recognition than the average person on the street that is accused of the same crimes. while both of them get attention, when it's a public figure, obviously it's going to get a lot more attention, but don't think i really grasped what was happening, the consequences of it until the night joe paterno was fired. >> things are busy for her now, but she wanted to talk to the students about her experiences because it wasn't that long ago that she was in their shoes. some of the youngest cancer patients at risk tonight because of a shortage of a critical drug. plus she was supposed to be putting criminals behind bars. instead she landed there herself for years. tonight she speaks for the first time, the officer's story next. okay, people, let's get started. pete, did you forget yours? me pete, me use pen! 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(laughter) guys, guys. take it easy, ok? pete's mom is videochatting me, and she wants her pen back! ok, alright, well. i just got one. so... yeah, you've got a little... yep, i can feel the wet patch. don't look at it. when it's on your mind, it's on ebay. pierre! your fashion is so "right now," but your banking is so last season! earn more with high yield free checking at capital one bank. instead of some unfashionable rate, your checking could be earning five times the national average. and free atms anywhere. five times the interest? that's hot. oooooo! let's catwalk! you want more interest? open an account at a capital one bank. what's in your wallet? does this make my tuches look big? this is fox 5 news at 10:00. from the rodney king riots to the occupy d.c. arrests, the phrase police brutality brings emotionally charged responses from all sides. tonight for the first time a local police officer convicted for excessive force speaks out. former prince george's county police officer stephanie moore spent 8 1/2 years in prison and speaks exclusively with fox 5's stacey cohan, a story you'll see only on fox 5. >> it was everything i ever wanted to do. >> reporter: stephanie moore always wanted to be a cop and in february, 1993 she joined the prince george's county police department. >> it was exciting. it was thrilling. >> reporter: after just 18 months on patrol she became the first female officer in the canine unit. she calls it a dream job combining her love of dogs with her love of police work. she trained with the dogs for six months. >> i knew that i had to work harder than the average male in order to make my way, but i accepted that and i welcomed that. >> reporter: it was a quick ascent for the young officer but things would take a dramatic turn soon. back in 1995 tacoma businesses had a problem. crooks were braking through the roof. surveillance was set up and two suspects were spotted on the roof of this building then known as the sligo press building. they called prince george's county police canine for help. what happened next is in dispute but it irrev cably changed the life of stephanie moore. the building was surrounded. the men came down from the roof where the officers were posted. >> we were issuing commands for them to stop and get on the ground. they didn't comply. one of them made a move to go down an uncovered alleyway and at that point when he made that movement, i committed the dog. >> reporter: the dog bit the man on the calf puncturing his skin and tearing a muscle. he never filed a complaint, but this night would come back to haunt the young officer. it was a time of turmoil for the prince george's county police department. citizen complaints and strange of media reports prompted a federal investigation of excessive force, but the investigation yielded no major conviction. then on september 20th, 2000, one day before the statute of limitations was set to expire moore was charged with deprivation of civil rights under color of law. in 2001 moore was acquitted on one charge but the jury hung on the remaining charge, so the government tried her again and in august of that same year she was found guilty and sentenced to 10 years in federal prison. her thoughts went straight to her young son adam. >> i'm trying to imagine leaving him for 10 years and how i'm going to do that and how he's going to survive. >> i remember. >> reporter: this is how moore got to know her son over the next decade. every two weeks at first and then once a month someone drove him 5 1/2 hours to visit mom in a west virginia federal prison. adam explains it this way. >> hard, i guess, just not having a mom with me to help me. it was because my dad would have to work a lot and just don't have somebody to help me a lot with my homework. >> the most important thing to me was that he knew i was okay. so i always maintained a very strong outlook and, you know, i was always good and i was always happy and because i needed him to be happy. >> reporter: but moore was far from happy. she appealed her conviction and maintained her innocence. >> i did what i was told to do. i did what i was trained to do. i did what i was expected to do. >> reporter: the man who prosecuted stephanie moore disagrees. >> in this case you had a situation where two homeless hispanic men were surrounded by police officers and in a very willful and wanton way the police decided to attack them. >> reporter: he says the bite on the man's calf caused significant damage and that numerous witnesses say he did not resist. he explains the man did not file a complaint against the police because he was homeless and in this country illegally and the prosecutor has this response to the sentence of 10 years. >> the case is a tragedy all around. do i think, though, the jury right handed the right verdict and the judge made -- jury rendered the right verdict and the judge made the right decision in the case? i could. >> reporter: the man who was bitten was brought in to testify but later deported. we were unable to contact him for this story, but moore believes her prosecution and 10 year sentence was never really about what happened to that man that day. >> the federal government was desperate to make a case against a prince george's county police officer. after years and years of investigating the only person they were able to indict and try was me. >> reporter: after serving 8 1/2 years moore was released late last year. she describes that first christmas with her son. >> it was just amazing. it makes you realize how lucky you are surrounded by your friends and your family. >> reporter: how lucky you are? >> uh-huh. >> reporter: i think most people wouldn't think of you as a lucky woman. >> i do. i've come out of this pretty strong. >> reporter: is there a moral stot story of stephanie moore? odd -- to the story of stephanie more? oddly enough the prosecutor had surprisingly similar views on judging the actions of law enforcement. >> we need to understand the difficult circumstances police officers face. at the same time we have to understand that a crime is a crime and nobody, even the people who enforce the law, maybe especially the people who enforce the law, can be above the law. >> i think it's very difficult to judge the actions of police officers. i think there should be checks and balances and oversight, but i think the people who judge them need to be better educated and need to be more aware of everything that goes into being a police officer. >> reporter: stacey cohan, fox 5 news. >> stephanie moore will continue to be on probation the next two years. she already has a job and hopes to one day own a home. her son adam says he plans on becoming a police officer one day. trending at 10:00 tonight google wants to pay you to surf the web, but there's a little catch. also ahead pop star justin bieber is making a 6-year-old cancer patient's dream come true, the story behind these heart warming pictures coming up. first you could soon own a piece of new york history. fox business network neil cavuto explains. >> america keeps spending and greece keeps burning. president obama rolling out his $3.8 trillion budget and more drastic budget cuts over in greece sparking still more violent riots in greece. lawmakers there slashing costs to get another bailout payment from their european neighbors. meantime princess cruise lines trying to get travelers to fall in love with europe all over again, years said than done, the company starting a one week love boat sale today. booking sinking across the board since last month's cruise disaster in italy. a new milestone for apple, its stock going through $500 a share the first time. apple is currently the most valuable publicly traded company on the entire planet and soon you'll be able to take a bite out of big apple's most iconic skyscraper. the company that owns the empire state building filing paper to start trading its stock. it hopes to raise a billion bucks. that's business. i'm neil cavuto.   >> this fox 5 stock market report is brought to you by your lexus dealer. live life heroically. we are in the web center now with what is trending tonight at en:00. how -- at 10:00. how would you like to get paid to surf the web? google is about to make that happen. the company is start is going called screenwise tracking users' every single move on line. those who sign up to participate will get a governor dollars credit on amazon.com. for every three -- get a $5 credit on amazon.com. for every additional three months you get another five bucks. sign-ups are on hold due to overwhelming interest. also some amazing video from nasa, views of earth from the international space station. this is real. you can see city lights shining brightly. there are also amazing views of the aurora borealis. the videos of actually made up of hundreds of still images captured one frame per second, a close a proximation of the true speed of the international space station in orbit. if you'd like a closer look, you can visit our website www.myfoxdc.com. m. new tonight on the news edge at 11:00 he was the first to interview whitney houston on tv in the '80s. donnie simpson tells us how he learned of her shocking death. plus is it a case of excessive force? a deputy is facing a lawsuit over this dashcam video, the story next on the news edge. b a health alert tonight about a crucial cancer drug in such short supply it may soon run out. methotrexate is the key treatment for acute lymphoblastic leukemia. the drug may run out in weeks increasing chances patients will die. >> of the few manufacturers still making this drug, one of the main ones had a factory that had to be closed down and the whole system is fragile. basically we know we've been skating on thin ice for two to three years. >> the fda has a worldwide search underway for a supplier to provide emergency imports until they approve domestic ones to meet demand. doctors say methotrexate can cure thousands of children diagnosed with that cancer each year. family and friends started an online campaign to help a young girl meet pop sensation justin bieber and today that dream became a reality for the young patient. >> reporter: on friday we introduced you to adalonna ruth of massachusetts, a little girl with a big dream. we are thrilled to tell you that dream has come true. >> i cried when i sought pictures because there's no one more deserving of that moment than that little girl and i just couldn't believe that in five days all of that came together. >> reporter: kristen mcveigh and her co-workers at salon dejoli helped make it happen. the little girl has a rare aggressive type of brain tumor and often comes to the spa for a little time after treatment. >> we started calling all root stations, newspapers, anyone -- the radio stations, newspapers, anyone we could get in touch with and people responded. >> reporter: one of those people is our senior web producer kyle bishop who called a friend who works with justin bieber's manager. >> he ended up calling her friday afternoon. we had a conference call with her mom and today there's the result. there's a picture of her with the be yabby. >> reporter: nice work kyle and justin bee -- with the beib. >> reporter: nice work kyle and justin bieber. the two played candyland, ate sour patch kiss and avalonna snuck in a couple kisses. she and her friends hope it will help people become more aware of the type of cancer she has. >> she has atr2 which is a really rare form of brain cancer. pharmaceutical companies just have no incentives to invest in it because of the small patient population. we need to come together and pull together for our care. >> he is a good guy. >> that was nice. >> weatherwise beautiful day today. >> it was nice, wasn't it? >> especially compared to the windy chill yesterday. >> these one day winter days that we're having, it's so good they only last one day or a day and a half with temperatures yesterday in the low 30s. we did rebound today up to 50 degrees and we invite you again our valentine's day gift to you. please download our fox 5 weather app. it's free at the app store, android market. get that 10-day forecast, get radar, our video forecast and follow us on twitter and also you can easily send us a picture there now. here's what we'll focus on tonight because it's not going to be as pretty for valentine's day. we'll have a little light moisture coming through and radar showing us tonight very light snow not even hitting the ground yet that we're watching west of interstate 81 for the most part. there is some moisture coming in our direction. you might see some flurries out here or a combination of rain and snow. we aren't really anticipating any problems at all out there and no advisories are issued for that. wider view on satellite satellite and radar, just the clouds here. perhaps you got a peek of jupiter tonight. watch for venus to get bright now in the night sky. here you can see what is coming, looks impressive on this composite satellite and radar picture. we will have maybe some light showers around tomorrow afternoon and really this will come in two waves, two weak disturbances we'll be dealing with, maybe some flurries in the morning well north and west or a snow shower. hagerstown to winchester, points west, y west of interstate 81, just enough maybe in a few spots to whiten the ground. the rest of us will watch in the afternoon, maybe a couple of light showers around liquid variety into the afternoon and evening. temperatures will climb again to about 50 degrees tomorrow and i think that's around where we'll be most of this week. so fairly easy. we will deal with more rain later in the week. i'll show you that in a moment. high temperatures today close to 50 again, reagan national hit it. dulles hit 49, bwi 48 degrees and while it won't be as cold azelate night when so many places got -- as last night when so many places got into the teens and low 20s, manassas will be down to 30, martinsburg 33, winchester 32, dulles 31 degrees. we will see temperatures in the upper 20s in the suburbs to about 32 degrees in the downtown area and we are finding those colder temperatures on the other side of the mountains. we jump you to the futurecast to get an idea what we're expecting because at 8 a.m. there could be a little moisture in the mountains and i think futurecast probably needs to get in a little bit closer to keep up with the radar, but even so you can see we aren't talking about a lot of precipitation locally. by tomorrow late afternoon, early evening, could there be a couple showers around here and there? yes. most of the snow will stay confined to the mountains and even out there it's only the lightest accumulation piling on. by 10:00 tomorrow night, light showers hanging around especially east of 95 and across maryland. snow showers continue in the mountains. we dry up and brighten up for wednesday. wednesday looks like a nice sunny day, but it's a one-day special it. looks like moisture will be on the increase late wednesday night and by thursday morning we've got a round of rain on us and it looks like that will last the better part of our thursday. that's the way things look on our forecast. here's the five-day. it's just a couple hit or miss showers in the afternoon tomorrow and maybe rain/snow mix in the mountains we'll be watching, we have our sunny day wednesday, rainy day thursday. friday and saturday we're back to sunshine with temperatures at or above 50 and would you believe we are within one month of daylight saving time? it begins march 11th. . >> we like that. about 25 people spent the day on the slopes at white vail today. the event raised money for people with disabilities teaching them how to ski. some wounded warriors we're even there despite the uphill battles they faced. >> it's very therapeutic to be out here. it keeps my mind good. >> what this does for him, these kind of activities, it puts him on a playing field just like you and i. mine for him to get out here and -- i mean for him to get out here and ski with no legs is quite an accomplishment. >> if you'd like to learn more about the program, go to www.myfoxdc.com and click on web links. fox 5 sports is brought to you by acura. >> the fallout from the university of maryland's 2-10 football season continued today. a key member of the team decided to leave the program. sports director dave feldman is here with the latest. >> maryland football has granted quarterback danny o'brien's request for release from the program to play football elsewhere. the university confirmed offensive lineman max garcia and linebacker mario ralphson will leave, also bringing the number of players to 12 who departed since the end of the season. danny o'brien was the acc rookie of the year in 2010, passed over for hundred yards, but this past season he struggled -- 400 yards, but this past season he struggled under the new head coach. he passed for 478 yards and seven touchdowns. today he was granted release from the program and earlier i spoke on the phone with the head coach about the latest development. >> i was disappointed by danny's decision and after our conversations on wednesday of last week i told him to take a few days to think about it and we'd get back together on monday and when we came back together today, he told me that he still felt the same way and from the other day when he told me that, you know, wasn't committed to the program and that it wasn't all in and, you know, if -- i just want to make sure die what's best for all our players. i -- i do what's best for all our players. he wanted to get a fresh start and we wish him well. >> edsel has reason for optimism. wide receiver stefan diggs and running back albert reed from friendship collegiate are still there. >> i'm curious. what's the word from the athletic department about these departures? >> so far the only one speaking on it is edsel and he says i want people who want to play for this program. so the guys here are the ones that want to be here and the guys that don't want to be here, they weren't terps and i let them go and wish them best of luck, but i'm just worry about the people who are still here in. other words, they aren't really answering that question, but probably has one more year where he can answer it before he will be forced to answer it somewhere else. >> yeah. that's what i was thinking. thanks for the update tonight. we'll be right back.   >> this fox 5 sports update is brought to you by acura, acura advance. ♪ [ male announcer ] for our families... our neighbors... and our communities... america's beverage companies have created a wide range of new choices. developing smaller portion sizes and more low- & no-calorie beverages... adding clear calorie labels so you know exactly what you're choosing... and in schools, replacing full-calorie soft drinks with lower-calorie options. with more choices and fewer calories, america's beverage companies are delivering. ♪ [ male announcer ] offering four distinct driving modes and lexus' dynamic handling, the next generation of lexus will not be contained. the all-new 2013 lexus gs. there's no going back. ♪ in more ways than ever. and our networks are getting crowded. but if congress frees up more wireless spectrum, we can empower more people to innovate, create jobs, and put momentum behind our economy. and a spectrum auction could raise as much as 30 billion dollars to help fund the payroll tax cut. it's simple. more spectrum means more freedom. for everyone. forget about flowers and candy. one florida family received the ultimate valentine's gift. their daughter and son-in-law both serving in the u.s. military traveled thousands of miles from afghanistan just to surprise them. we have the story. >> reporter: u.s. army lieutenants heather and aaron frazier are a long way from the war zone in afghanistan they left a week ago. >> they're going to be shocked. i'm sure there will be happiness all around. >> reporter: but their brief homecoming wouldn't be complete without seeing her mom and dad. the pair sent them on this all expense paid vacation to orlando as an anniversary gift. >> it would be great to send them way and give them something to do to relax and recover from their busy life as pastors and also for making it 35 years of. >> reporter: but the two had a bigger surprise and trickery to get them to come down from their hotel room. >> i have a pass. if you don't mind, can you come downstairs for that? thank you. >> reporter: then after a few nervous moments sharon and allen toyne saw their

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