shakeup at the top. good evening, i m julie haener. i m frank summerville. the change at the top comes right in the middle of a lackluster season. current ceo, bill neukom is out. he is set to be relaced with larry baer. it s not the giants record here, it there appears to be another issue behind this move. reporter: we re talking about big changes at at&t park. we re talking about changes right here in the giants front office. high drive. right field, it is out of here. reporter: the giants fans turned out for the game, behind the seens another game is playing out. the giants released a statement, that bill neukom will retire from his position. giants president and chief operating officer larry baer will assume mr. neukom s duty. saying that neukom is being forced out. the mainly sticking point, money. spending money without consulting them on items they thought they should be consulted about. it s like, what happened? reporter: tonight, fans are learning about
ann notarangelo is off tonight. there was new information about the teenager kaled yesterday by san francisco police. officers say he s linked to a murder case in another state. linda yee with what she just learned about the investigation here and in washington. reporter: just got off the phone with the police chief. he tells me tonight that the 19- year-old dead suspect was a parolee from washington. police say they did shoot and kill him in self-defense, but hours after the shooting yesterday they didn t have a weapon until they were tipped off by a you tube video. a witness video posted on you tube documents the minutes after the shooting. the suspect is down, police surround him, and the crowd becoming increasingly agitated. on the ground, according to the witness, a weapon missed by officers but picked up by someone in the crowd. police looked at that video, identified the person, and recovered the gun today. investigators believe it s the same .45 caliber weapon used
this is what they are designed to do. the violent earthquake sk shook for five long minutes which felt like an eternity for those that had to ride it out. and watch these people. it s amazing how calm customers and employees, when the shaking inside the department store. good evening, i m dan ashley. people woke up to devastation. here is what we know right now. 413 people are dead, 784 are missing and 1128 are injured. country continues to be rattled by aftershocks, more than a hundred in the past 24 hours, the largest 7.1 magnitude. that is an aftershock stronger than our loma prieta quake. now, the latest. fresh pictures from the tsunami as the sun rises in japan revealing massive plumes of smoke, fires burning out of control and entire neighborhoods simply washed away and survivors gathered on roofs. in one parking lot, a joint s.o.s.. this is where it all starts. 2:46 local time. debris rains down as people rush out into the streets stunned. back inside this book
and villages causing untold damage and misery. ktvu s janna katsuyama is live in san francisco s japan town where this natural disaster is on almost everyone s mind. well, this neighborhood has been the community and the heart of the japanese people here in san francisco. of them have that on their mind as they watch this natural disaster unfolding. the wall of water 23 feet, seven metres high that came crashing down on north eastern japan pushed people s homes and buildings off foundations and swept cars into a swirling tide of tsunami debris. today people are still feeling shock and waves of after-shock. more than 110 of them, larger than 5/0 with the largest registering 6.8. tokyo s modern efficiency which had ground to an uneasy standstill with high-tech train systems immobilized are slowly coming back online, as are the mobile phone networks. experts say yesterday s 8.9 quake is the fifth largest worldwide in the past century. near the epicenter a piles of car burned l
the united states and her real- looking but fake social security card and driver s license. nicky was a friend of our family for nine years. she was in many ways a member of our sended family. i feel badly for her. she is being manipulated and i m sorry about that. reporter: the democratic candidate for governor jerry brown responded, after more of a year whitman demanding immigration policy that holds employers accountable we learn that accountability doesn t extend to her own objections. who should be held responsible here? and do you feel that you bear any responsibility? as soon as we found that she was an illegal immigrant, then we actually did what we had to do as employer was to let her go. anytime one of these illegal people, undocumented, commits a crime or is arrested, they will be subject to deportation. you know, last night jerry brown said illegal immigrants who break the law should be deported. why you can t make that same commitment? i m going to