at nbc bay area news this evening. nbc bay area s cheryl hurd is in san francisco with the new information for us. cheryl. reporter: well, diane, bryan stow is here at sf general. his condition is unchanged. but we are learning about new evidence tonight, a bloody jersey with dna that belongs to bryan stow. reporter: the evening giants fan bryan stow was beaten nearly to death by two men outside dodger stadium, suspect number one was described as wearing a white dodger jersey. giovanni ramirez as suspect number one when they arrested him nearly three weeks ago and now we have learned police have in evidence a dodger jersthey had been dropped off of the cleaners. instead of cleaning it sources say a worker alerted authorities. dna anal sits came back. a match to the victim, stow. the first who first disclosed the shirt to nbc, said it believed that ramirez was the one who brought it to the cleaners. nbc talked to ramirez s attorney, who spoke with us after meeting with his
mccovey cove. fans keeping the faith alive. down to the wire. fans dedicated to the world series champions. we still believe in the giants magic. a great day. they put up the flag. championship flag. tomorrow handing out the championship world series rings. sunday a tribute to buster posey. weekend of giants baseball. we have it covered. reporters all over. lawrence scott, inside. he ll bring you game highlights in a moment. first turn things over to maryann favro outside at & t, basking in the festivities and joys of the giants fans. maryann. having a lot of fun. may be 42,000 fans inside. i can tell you there are thousands of fans out here celebrating nearby bars and restaurants. though they weren t able to get a ticket. they want to be part of the season opener. and i can also tell you that now, after 12 innings. the celebrations are just about to begin. i can hear the screams. the excitement, rivalled the thrill of a world series playoff game. come here, yellin
home. a deadly overnight crash shut down a very busy bay area freeway is both a tragedy and a mystery. and there s one thing you should not do on this chilly first day of december. mornings on 2 starts now. well, good morning to you. welcome to mornings on 2. i m dave clark. i m tori campbell. it s tuesday, december 1st. extended unemployment benefits start running out today for 2 million americans. that s after congress missed the midnight deadline to extend. alison burns is live in our washington, d.c. bureau with more. reporter: good morning, tori. that s right. we re talking about an average of $300 a week that people who are unemployed get from the government but that money stops today for many of them. let s take a live look at the senate floor. we are waiting to hear if there are any new plans today to give another lifeline to the l ong- term unemployed. congress failed to act before last night s midnight deadline. that means benefits run out today for
lethal injection protocol was unconstitutional. we re live with more. reporter: frank, this ruling comes from the same san jose judge who previously halted california executions here. now he s giving the go-ahead and he s giving the condemned man some choice in how he dies. two years old, san quentin s new execution chamber has never been used. but that could change overnight next tuesday with albert brown, convicted of kidnapping, raping and killing a 15-year-old girl in riverside county in 1980. they built a new execution chamber. they did that in secret. reporter: the aclu says the judge hasn t approved the new death chamber or lethal injection procedures so he should not let the state rush into ruling executions. but in the ruling, the judge found a three-drug combination acceptable, so brown can choose if he wants that or one shot. concerns about lethal injection were first raised by murderer, michael morales, who averted execution. analysts are not sure why the st
concerns that the previous lethal injection protocol was unconstitutional. we re live with more. reporter: frank, this ruling comes from the same san jose judge who previously halted california executions here. now he s giving the go-ahead and he s giving the condemned man some choice in how he dies. two years old, san quentin s new execution chamber has never been used. but that could change overnight next tuesday with albert brown, convicted of kidnapping, raping and killing a 15-year-old girl in riverside county in 1980. they built a new execution chamber. they did that in secret. reporter: the aclu says the judge hasn t approved the new death chamber or lethal injection procedures so he should not let the state rush into ruling executions. but in the ruling, the judge found a three-drug combination acceptable, so brown can choose if he wants that or one shot. concerns about lethal injection were first raised by murderer, michael morales, who averted execution. analy