wild weather 24 hours after storms ruin houses and flooded streets, shock sets in. the families left homeless and the clean up under way tonight. hello everybody i m denise koch. and i m vic carter. here is what people are talking about tonight. homes condemned. people are forced out after strong storms roll through the baltimore area. weijia jiang talks to people left cleaning the mess left behind by storms. reporter: many people we spoke with said they can t believe just how quickly their homes were destroyed. this is the water line where the water stopped. reporter: gadire is desperately looking for a place to live after the storms lifted the roof of the baltimore county home she called home. packing, packing. it s the worse thing ever. i wouldn t wish it on nobody. reporter: that just as men were trying to recover, another round of severe weather pounded parts of maryland friday. the streets of downtown fredrick were flooded. wires made a mess of the w
[captioning made possible by constellation energy group] what are we expecting today? we ll see another depay of thunderstorms. we are not out of the clear with that just yet. there are changes on the way. that s what s going to be good. let s take a look at the radar. there is not too much showing up right now. there was some blips on the radar earlier on south of us. in carroll county, some strong storms. that will change as we go toward the afternoon. as we get the daytime heating, it will become more active again. then we finally see the changes that we want to see. we will look forward to that. thanks, ava. our big story is the search for a missing police cadet. it has been three months since kelly rockwell vanished, and her disappearance is still a mystery. sheldon dutes has more. lindy russell s last conversation with her sister was in march. she sent me pictures. how are things? and i said things are good, and how are things with you? she never responded
nothing. mid-60s here. 65 at reagan national, 69 at the naval academy and 69 also in southern maryland. angie goff it is 5:00 a.m., here she is with time saver traffic. we are following an issue for you, we begin with the yellow light. good monday morning to you. we begin in fairfax, virginia, we want too let you know we have confirmed a fatal accident on picket road. it has the roadway closed between colonial avenue and mabry drive. to get around it, use the prince william drive to glen brook road or of course you can use old lee highway. it will be out there for at least another hour. let s move out and take you up to 270, we re tracking southbound, and from 80 to 121 no significant delays yet. your live conditions past that show drivers are at speed. back to the maps, the focus over to the outer loop north of the district. a report reveals we have lanes open from 95 to georgia avenue. a good example at university. let s move it over to travel times, quickly 66 eastboun
swath. reports of dozens of twisters. meteorologist john collins with the weather. big upper air storm over minnesota has been dragging a front across the mississippi valley. and on the radar satellite combination you can see these storms lined up from texas to the great lakes moving to the east slowly. these are nighttime storms. we even have storms in the mid-atlantic region. we want to talk, get a report frow from frances co-for the tour of the damage there. from the skies above minneapolis the extent of the devastation was stunning. on the ground reactions were deafening. glass was flying everywere. tornados dumped debris for miles and left thousands in the dark. furter south in reding, cans, mother nature delivered a cripping blow on saturday. the attorney packed winds up to 165 miles an hour. the twister crushed 20 homes and sparked a state of emergency across 16 counties. in missouri a close confrontation was powerful nouf rattle even a seasoned team from the wea
good evening, for months a trip to the pump was painful for many with gas prices topping $4 a gallon. is welcome news tonight that the prices are slowly coming back down in time for the holiday travel. it will be interesting to see how that affects memorial day travel. either way judging by the latest numbers it seems americans are used to paying more to travel. despite fuel prices hovering around $4 triple a projects 35 million americans will travel over the memorial day weekend. that number is basically the same as last year even though the average price per gallon is $1 more this year. sure, paying a dollar more is not good but lately prices here have gone down by a dime per gallon. it is somewhat atypical because they typically rise a little before a holiday. but we are actually seeing them decline. many analysts predict we can continue to see them decline and hopefully by july or august even see them as low as between $3.25 to $3.75 per gallon margin. we hope that