association with high pressure to the north. that s the reason these winds will be really increasing. a lot of moisture and a lot more moisture coming north. that s the reason in washington we are going to see a fair amount of rain now tonight and into tomorrow. there you can see that area of green. folks into southern maryland have barely been catching it. moderate rains continue now. fredericksburg into southern maryland. around washington, it s light to moderate rain. even a band of moderate rain from the panhandle of west virginia around martinsburg into frederick county. this will be the situation, this will be the story, as we go through the nighttime hours. look at the rainfall. well over an inch of rain. some of you folks into southern maryland may be seeing as much as two to four inches of rain before everything winds down. that s not going to happen until late friday. overnight tonight, during the day tomorrow, increasing winds. there are gale warnings along the coa
marine from union bridge. good evening, i m marybeth marsden. sergeant charles cartwright died on sunday. jeff hager traveled to the high school today where teachers and students alike are mourning their former graduate. reporter: american flags line the entrance of walkersville high school. where charlie cartwright made the decision eight years ago to become a u.s. marine. he enlisted before the terrorist attacks of 9/11. and later served three tours of duty in iraq and two in afghanistan before dying in combat over the weekend. we found out on sunday morning. reporter: one of his former teachers and mentor, susan says his death has taken its toll on students here who never even knew him. and finally in the mornings over the p.a. system in remembrance of charlie. i think that s when the students, they realized what happened and we lost one of our own. reporter: he was training, getting ready for his next deployment to afghanistan. reporter: teacher beth who s son
pattern. there is what s been ida combined with a big area of high pressure to our north. it s become a plain old nasty nor easter. with high pressure to the north and in between, a lot of moisture coming in. we are going to see more of the same. northeasterly winds that will just continue to increase. that s not all. the rain, which i thought some of the heavier rains were in southern maryland, but they spread farther north, even up into hagerstown. that will be the story with us tonight into tomorrow, too. with increasing winds, there are coastal flood watches out tonight and more to come tomorrow. as a matter of fact, with those strong winds, there are gale warnings up and a high wind advisory for you folks up into st. mary s county. tomorrow winds could be 45 to 50 miles per hour. the rain continues right on through friday before it tapers off. the winds increase. even around washington. 30, 40 mile-an-hour winds are possible. another two to three inches of rain, especial
i don t appreciate this. reporter: tonight, mayor dixon lashes out, just a day before opening statements in her trial. hello, everybody. i m denise koch. and i m vic carter. here s what people are talking about tonight. difficult balancing act. mayor sheila dixon is trying to keep a normal routine. while under intense pressure because of the trial against her. she is trying to go about her normal business. but it s not easy. wjz is live with complete coverage. mike hellgren has detailoss a third city developer, linked to the case. but we begin with mary but bal balla, who continues to lead our coverage to city hall with more on what the mayor did today. reporter: the mayor basically just lost it on the media. i was there, when she said, get these cameras out of here. problem is, the mayor wants us to cover certain things, like the public events she s going to, to show city residents that she is still running the city. and it s hard to have it both ways. reporter