Transcripts For KNTV NBC Bay Area News 20240716

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as we get into friday next weekend high pressure starts to weaken a bit. but notice no sign of rain. winds we hope will start to turn more onshore starting friday, saturday into sunday. but in the meantime with this pattern in place it's looking breezy and dry. these are temperatures expected this week for san francisco, which means 70s in reach. imagine that. halloween, november 1st also in the 70s. as we show you some of our valley temperatures for the middle part of the week. could be reaching mid 80s to start off november. so again, those will be some warm temperatures. weather's going to be pleasant. visibility's going to be nice. ba starting tomorrow night to dh tuesday morning and then perhaps the strongest wind event could actually be halloween night into thursday morning. very wm, no sign of rain in the seven-day forecast. coming up in ten minutes we'll have a closer look at the ten-day outlook to see if there's any pattern shifts ahead. >> such a departure from the rainy halloweens or cold halloweens we've had. >> not starting off this month. >> what about the tornadoes? >> i was going to ask the same thing. >> great minds. >> they were members of the justice league. they had a fun time getting out and doing their first trick or treating this weekend. and they don't have to worry about any rain like the rest of the families in the bay area. >> what are you going to be? >> i'll join them as one of the members of -- batman's dad or something like that. >> you can be alfred the but le. >> there you go. you'd make a great alfred. you're their butler in real life. let's be honest. rob, thank you. just three days until halloween as rob's been talking about. sounds like the weather's going to be fantastic. it's really go time for people, though, who haven't made up their minds on their costumes. >> marianne favro joining us now with some ideas. we can take a look around in san jose and see what the popular choices are. marianne. >> reporter: i can tell you, terry, i'm going to be poison ivy. but here at this pumpkin patch on hillsdale avenue in san jose parents and kids have spent all night selecting the perfect pumpkin. they're also having a lot of bouncy house fun tonight even though it's 9:00 at night, they're still out here having a blast. but parents say picking out a pumpkin is easy, it's finding the perfect costume that requires patience. at halloween stores across the bay area hundreds of people rushed in tonight in search of just the right costume. one of the most popular choices this year, chewbacca, the incredibles and fortnite characters. 6-year-old cody garza is having a really tough time narrowing it down to one. >> spider-man and police officer. and now we're going to go get the other one. cowboy. ind therter: 5-year-olda costume she's been searching for. others are here because they wanted to make a last-minute switch like marcos milan, who has now decided to be thing 1 and 2 with his friend. tonight many parents are hoping that their kids will stick with their choices finally. and this year halloween, as you know, falls on a wednesday, which isn't really that convenient because it is a school night. but now there is a petition under way by the halloween industry association asking president trump to switch halloween to the first saturday -- or rather the last saturday of october. we'll see if that works. reporting live in san jose, marianne favro, nbc bay area news. >> interesting stuff, marine thanks a lot. halloween only days away. we've been talking about it. things are already getting spooky. at an oregon city marijuana shop. take a counter. you see it? it starts to move on its own. >> i don't know. >> it's a pot shop. i don't know. it's a potential. they're calling it potential pair anormal activity. it's at 50 tree, the cannabis dispensary. in the past workers at the store have had ghost hunters study their building but they never actually had footage of activity until what you're seeing right there. >> as it was happening i kind of felt like somebody was standing next to me or somebody was like right here. >> okay. i'm thoroughly creeped out. >> the store is still open. if anybody's -- obviously vicky's not going. >> definitely not. >> but you can go. and they're keeping their eyes open to see anydy else has any suspicious activity to report. >> those halloween spirit stores marianne was there. sometimes the displays are right there and pretty scary. which serves the purpose i guess. stay with us. we'll be right back. and board to court. plus: sky high complaints. our consumer team reveals the maneuver you can make to get your airline )s attention. join us monday morning from join us monday morning from four years ago, we rejected marshall tuck and his billionaire backers for superintendent of public instruction. but they're back. the corporate billionaires and their handpicked candidate, former wall street banker marshall tuck. tuck's billionaires have spent over $25 million distorting tony thurmond's outstanding record on education. all because they know tuck shares their agenda: diverting funds from our public schools into their corporate charter schools. the same agenda as trump and betsy devos. protect our public schools. say no, again, to marshall tuck. major pay cuts to star in >>laries. but some take major pay cuts to star in smaller films they believe in. >> mike wilbur takes a look at some of those movies hitting theaters soon. >> if it turns out i'm capable of much unpleasantness. >> reporter: emma stone puts on her best british accent in "the favorite." >> i was internally sweating the whole time because of the accent. so it does feel like a kind of metaphorical shoop. because i worked really hard on it. i was really afraid of sticking out like a sore thumb, the only american in the cast. >> reporter: bradley cooper's got a huge hit with "a star is born." but he's got a much smaller movie coming out. >> "the mule" is directed by clint eastwood. he has basically been asked, well, okay, he was directing the film "a star is born," why would you go back to just acting in a movie? and he said "anything that clint asked me to do i am do." >> reporter: nicole kidman gives us all the drama in "boy erased." >> i think about men. n't. >> what we love to see nicole do is play a mom. >> i love my son. >> whether it's "big little lies." whether it was in "lion." you really feel the motherly instinct come out. and i think nicole kidman likes to play these types of roles. >> oh, my god. >> mom. mom. >> no, don't! >> reporter: julia roberts also plays mom to actor lucas hedges in "ben is back." >> she plays the mother of a son battling addiction. and she was asked why she would want to do this film. she basically said that her life is so light sometimes she likes to play darker roles. so what i take away from that is that julia roberts, it's good to be julia roberts. >> reporter: mike wilbur, nbc news. lottery luck landed in the big apple. new york's west harlem deli is one of only to-two stores to sell the winning powerball ticket. the other winning ticket was sold in iowa. the jackpot was around 687 million bucks. it's going to be split obviously. some harlem residents who frequent this store hope the winner maybe spreads some of that money around. >> please give me at least 100,000. i'll take 100,000. >> somebody won from here. >> how much? >> more than $300 mim is store ? for real? >> swear to god. >> always. >> i'd be happy with 50,000. 20,000. >> oh, yeah. >> this was the fourth largest jackpot in the history of the united states. >> sprinkle a couple hundreds down on the ground. >> yeah, a few hundred. people would love it. still ahead on this special edition of nbc bay area news, halloween being celebrated at the white house. >> we will show you how the president and the first lady welcomed trick or treaters today. stay with us. this is stonington, maine, a town where almost half the population is self-employed. lobster fisherman is the lifeblood of this town. by 2030, half of america may take after stonington, self-employed and without employer benefits. we haven't had any sort of benefit plans and we're trying to figure that out now. if i had had a little advice back then, i'd be in a different boat today, for sure. plan your financial life with prudential. bring your challenges. ee. children of military families went trick or treating. president trum spooky night at the white house. children of military families went trick-or-treating. president trump and the first lady stood in front of an elaborate halloween display with baskets of candy for the kids. that's got to be kind of wild. here's the president handing out stuff. no tricks. just full size twizzlers and a lot of hershey bands apparently. military band was there too playing the theme from the addams family, harry potter and bewitched. while a fog machine create aid very eyre carrie vibe. trick-or-treating at the white house is an annual tradition. >> that is an incredible get-up. >> i think of the white house at holiday time or easter but halloween they really went all out. look at that little pumpkin. too cute. there are a lot of heroes in the fire department including paramedics who save lives every singley. responded at hto found out how he helped change an entire family. nbc bay area's garvin thomas has the story of a touching reunion in tonight's bay area proud. >> reporter: chris posey has been on thousands and thousands of calls in his nearly 30-year career as a firefighter and paramedic. sadly, some didn't end well. others, though, he discovered turned out great in ways he couldn't imagine. on a saturday morning in september a controlled explosion sent the very last remnants of the old eastern span of the bay bridge underwater and forever out of sight. meaning for those who drive over its replacement memories of that massive steel structure fade with each passing trip. >> but this one for some reason -- >> reporter: although for san francisco firefighter and paramedic chris posey there is oneemy on that bridge that will never disappear. >> you know, i remember it feels yesterday. >> reporter: at 5:00 a.m. on february 12th, 1990 chris, in just his second year on the job, was dispatched to the bridge. >> woman in labor on the toll plaza, number 14. that was all the information they gave us. >> reporter: chris says he arrived just there n. tiin time one who got to welcome marshall passic into the world. over a course of a 30-year career delivering the bay bridge baby remains a highlight for chris. >> i would always remember how he looked and how he cried and how he felt in my arms. and i always wondered what happened to this kid. >> reporter: well, marshall is not a kid anymore. and chris is about to find out firsthand what happened to him. >> marshall? >> yes. >> how are you, buddy? . >> chris? >> yeah. >> nice to meet you. >> nice to meet you too. >> reporter: marshall, now living in southern california, says the story of his birth isr. some late-night internet research led to chris and this reunion. marshall old enough now to say thank you to chris for all he did and share a bit of news with him as well. a year and a half ago marshall himself became an emt. >> i love what you guys do. i love working as an emt. i haven't had any deliveries. but -- >> reporter: marshall isn't sure that what happened on that bridge 29 years ago had anything to do with his choice of careers. but for chris there is special meaning to it. knowing that a life he saved so many years ago is ready to carry on his life-saving service means the world to him. although it was almost 29 years between their two meetings, both chris aall is looking forward toin mentor as he continues in his career as an emt. garvin thomas, nbc bay area news. >> two great surprises in that story. >> i was happy with just the reunion. and then garvin hit us with the curveball. >> i love that. >> yeah. all right. well, stay with us. we will be right back after this two-minute break. nbc bay area responds to a south bay woman whose bank says she went bankrupt. but she believes the bank pegged the wrong person. consumer investigator chris chchlt chmura has been investigating it all. >> reporter: mary smith is newly engaged and eager to tie the knot. >> i would love it as disneyland. >> reporter: but saying i do in disney's fantasy land is just that, a fantasy, at this point. >> i don't feel comfortable planning anything until i get the full story out. >> reporter: mary's hang-up is with her bank. last year wells fargo wouldn't let mer make a credit card payment. so he had called in. >> they said there was nothing they could do me at that time because my account was being overseen by the bankruptcy depa>> reporter: filed for bankruptcy but wells fargo's computer said she had. mary figured this was spm because her real name is almost as common as mary smith. >> very common. to the point where even when i went to the bank, to the branch, he had to ask which mary smith i was. >> reporter: mary smith says various reps assured her they would fix the error. months went by. nothing changed. except her credit score. >> it's gone down significantly. i went from having great credit to i wouldn't be surprised if i was looking into moving or buying a car or anything that impacted my credit score. i would be denied. >> reporter: she showed us her credit report. there's one reference to bankruptcy, added by wells fargo. so mary turned to us. >> help me, please. >> reporter: we immediately asked wells fargo to intee.anilt we found mary smith's name, plus the last four digits of her social security on a bankruptcy filing from last year in los angeles. >> i never lived in los angeles before in my life. >> reporter: so what happened? we're going to print a big p explain. mary lives here, but the bankruptcy court trustee down in los angeles told us she and several others were unknowingly written into a real estate scheme near palm springs. a homeowner down there filed a flurry of fake papers using real names and social security numbers to stall his foreclosure. records show the court eventually caught on and let the foreclosure proceed. a judge also dismissed mary's bogus bankruptcy. we tried to share all this with wells fargo. we also requested an interview. the bank refused to address mary's case with us,ts rivacy poli a general statement, saying in part, "when a bankruptcy case is filed that impacts or appears to impact our customer or account, wells fargo follows the provisions of the united states bankruptcy code and rules." we asked how much longer mary will have to wait to get her record cleared. we did not receive a response. >> it's pretty damaging. >> reporter: ike shulman is a veteran bankruptcy attorney in san jose. he believes wells fargo should have been able to find the paper trail and quickly clear mary's name. >> it's an error by the creditor, and they need to credit that and take whatever steps are required to mitigate the damage. >> reporter: since that hasn't happened yet, we recommended mary apply for a new social security number, which is possible when you're an identity theft victim. >> i honestly didn't even know that was an option. >> it is. >> good to know. i would be open to it at this time with everything that i've gone through. >> reporter: as for her >> reporter: -- mickey and minnie must wait. she's not plannin fairy is over. >> that is maddening. >> poor woman. >> mary says wells fargo is still refusing to take her credit card payments. that means she's carrying an unpaid balance, which could further damage her credit. even though she's ready to pay. mary recently hired an attorney. she feels she now has to serve wel sue wells fargo. please give chris a call. 1888-966-tips. or nbcbayarea.com/responds. we're going to turn it over to rob to talk about something a lot less frustrating which is this incredible frorecast. >> you don't need to worry about any umbrellas this week but the cause of the warm-up may be a little more of a concern as we watch the winds starting to pick up around the hills. ri outside. for the moment it is a sea breeze which may bring in patches of low clouds along the with some mid 40s around the north bay to start things off. low 50s close to san jose as we'll see. bands of high clouds agn, passi over the region right around lunchtime tomorrow. you see some overcast skies possible and unfortunatelit rain-producing types of clouds staying well to the north of the bay area. by the time it gets toward tomorrow evening skies begin to clear out and the winds are going to start to shift in terms of the trex instead of being cool relatively moist coming off the ocean we'll begin to see the winds turning offshore. not much of a change from the highs you saw today, low to mid 70s from the santa clara down into gilroy. tri-valley seeing temperatures in the mid 70s same out toward concord, pittsburg and antioch close to 70 in oakland but notice the wind speeds getting closer to the peninsula and fris where we'll see upper 60s to low 70s tomorrow. san francisco at least for now in the 60s, likely to see some 70s over the next few days. northwest winds up close to 20 miles per hour. and for the north highsor your monday afternoon. but the big story, by late tomorrow, will be the wind direction and the speed, especially in the north bay hills. notice 3:00 in the afternoon by the time we get to tuesday morning those areas of orange showing up in northern napa county, lake county, northern solano county too. we could begin to see some wind gusts approaching 25 to 30 miles per hour out of the north, which means that's going to be pretty dry even to start tuesday morning. so instead of talking about rain chances, high pressure is going to build back toward california. notice the wind arrows here turning north to offshore time, starting late tomorrow, tuesday. there's halloween. here's the first of november, thursday, which is right now looking to be the warmest day of the week. as you see that high near the coast. to get into friday and saturday, we'll begin to see the high weaken just a little bit, which may allow some onshore breezes to pick up. but really there's nothing in the forecast from tomorrow all the way through sunday to bring any rain in the picture. again, all of that is staying up toward portland and seattle. so we thought we'd expand it out and take a closer look at the ten-day rain outlook. a couple models that will look out beyond election day. now we're to wednesday november 7th and you see the chance of showers maybe across interior northern california. but that's in a weather system that is likely going to drop in east of the sierra which typically is pretty dry. the counterpart long-range weather model we'll look at for the same time e, first week of november. typically a time of year when we pass halloween, we talk about rain chances. that high pressure off to the west is blocking things out. the seven-day forecast for now looks dry. we're hopeful we won't see wind speeds getting too strong in the hills, but it is likely i think for the north bay hills. we could see some fire weather watches going up at some point toward the middle part of the week, which may also include halloween. pay really close attention to the forecast the next couple of days for those dry conditions. obviously trick-or-treat time weather looks great. it's going to be warm around the bay area, but it's really those wind speeds in the hills we'll have to watch for mid-week probably to about thursday. >> rob, thanks very much. >> thank you, rob. coming up in our next half hour, r hour, remembering the victims. our coverage continues with the tragedy in pittsburgh and the lives lost in yesterday's shooting. and tragedy in the sports world as well after a soccer club owner is killed in a helicopter crash. we'll be right back. this is a fight. not to the finish. but to the beginning. a fight that can only be won, if we stand together for one cause. him. expert care for every new beginning. i )m vicky nguyen. and i )m terry mcsweeney. here are some of the top stories we are following tonight... here in the bay area today.... opponents of prop 6 took to the streets of san francisco, dressed up and riding bicycles to prove a point. their message targeted at a republican congressional candidate in southern california. she said if prop 6 doesn )t pas, people would be forced to take bikes and trains...and that doesn )t work with her hair and heels. state senator scott weiner then took to the streets with a bike... and of course heels. prop 6 would repeal the gas tax... a measure used to funds roadway repairs. supporters say the gas tax money iinthose against prop 6 say if gas tax is repealed, our the two men charged in the deadly ghost ship warehouse fire... are set to be back in court. )derick almena ) and )max har) originally agreed to a plea deal in the case... but a judge shocked everyone, by rejecting the deal... back in august. the 2 men have been legally tied together... but harris is now trying to separate himself from almena )s case... for his own trial. and our top story tonight... a city still reeling from tragedy. yesterday )s shooting at a synagogue in pittsburgh is believed to be the deadliest . our top story tonight a city still reeling from tragedy. yesterday's shooting at a synagogue in pittsburgh believed to be the deadliest attack on jew ntz history of the united states. the accused killer expected in court tomorrow facing 29 federal charges including hate crimes. authorities released the names of the victims today. eight men and three women ranging in age from 54 to 97, who were gathered for prayer and celebration. today flags were at half staff around t two died. nbc's matt bradley reports on the lives of those lost. >> reporter: when there's a death in the jewish community, families remember the dead by sitting him.epter: it's a tradition steven holly has endured twice in the past month. first for his father and now for his uncle daniel stein, murdered yesterday at the tree of life synagogue. >> funny, loving, caring. family men. ♪ >> reporter: this time he's grieving with a community left shattered by one of the deadliest attacks on jews in u.s. history. >> being with family and friends, i think that's most important. >> reporter: among the 11 dead, a married couple and two brothers, david and cecil rosenthal, pillars of this synagogue despite their intellectual disabilities. >> he was somebody who was a part of the community. cecil would always tell me they let him carry the torah. >> reporter: david defeliz a senior at dekane university met cecil through a program called best buddies. >> cecil had his tallis on and he carried the torah around room andtora around and everyone wou go and kiss it and that was his job. he's a big strong guy. he was able to support the weight of it. >> reporter: a weight the survivors of this community say they'll keep carrying. >> i'm not going anywhere else. pittsburgh is home. >> reporter: no matter what. matt bradley, nbc news, pittsburgh. >> well, before today's pittsburgh steelers game against the cleveland browns, a moment of silence was held to honor the victims of the synagogue shooting. that synagogue is less than ten miles from where today's game was played. flags at the stadium also flew at half staff while players and fans looked somber and shaken in the stands. steelers also released a variation of their iconic logo. you see it there. it featured the star of david along with the caption "stronger than hate." we will continue to follow the latest on this tragedy in pittsburgh on our website, nbcbayarea.com. we're updating our top stories section with any new details that come out. you can find us on all of our digital platforms as well. new tonight, president trump ridiculing democrat tom steyer on twitter just days after the californian was targeted in the pipe bomb plot. the president tweeted "just watched wacky tom steyer, who i have not seen in action before, be italian viewed with be interviewed by jake tapper. he comes off as a crazy stumbling lunatic who should be running out of money pretty soon." steyer is an outspoken critic of the president and is and is spearheading a campaign calling for mr. trump's impeachment. he told mr. happier today he blames president trump for cathy a toxic political atmosphere. the owner of one of england's best known soccer teams has died in a soccer crash. leicester city owner was among outside the stadium. there were no survivors. they cleared the stadium before a last boom was heard sending that chopper crashing to the ground in a fireball. the four other people killed were the pilot, a passenger and two members of the owner's staff. the 60-year-old thai billionaire routinely used that helicopter on match days to travel between the stadium and london. he bought the team back in 2010 and ultimately led it to the premier league title in 2016 in one of sports' true fairy tale stories. the team released a statement that read in part, "the world has lost a great man, a man of kindness, of generosity, and a man whose life was defined by the love he devoted to his family and those he so successfully led." well, brazil has a new president who some are calling . jair bols naro won the country's election after promising to get rid of corruption and bring down brazil's high crime levels. during the campaign he alienated many brazilians with homophobic, race kist and misogynistic remarks. in his victory speech he vowed to make brazil a great nation again. continuing coverage of the caravan. thousands of central american migrants. the group took a rare rest break. at first the group vowed to press on but then reports surface of an abducted child. it's not clear if a child was actually kidnapped or just lost in all this confusion. members of the caravan paused in the city of tpanatepac, cooling off in the river, getting? medical aid. members of mexico's migrant protection agency gave rides to stragglers and they handed out water. in el salvador a group of about 300 migrants left that country headed for the u.s.-mexico border. nearly three weeks after hurricane michael ravaged the florida panhandle we are getting new numbers on the numbers of people killed. six more deaths were confirmed by fema today all in the state of florida and that brings the state's total to 35. the overall death toll from mikesale now 45. carolinas and virginia. recovery is expected to take it also affected georgia, the months. it is a kind of defenseless and reporting the assault can be extremely difficult. in an exclusive nbc bay area and telemundo 48 investigation we look at the rise in sexual assaults against women behind bars. speaking out can be dangerous, but one woman told us she had to share her story to give a voice to others. >> translator: i don't feel safe. i don't trust anyone. >> reporter: she's from guadalajara, mexico and asked that we hide her identity. we'll call her lucia. she's serving the second half of a two-year sentence at the san joaquin county jail for possession of a controlled substance for sale. >> translator: i got hurt. >> reporter: she says after she was injured in jail last september sheriff's deputy daniel swanson drove her to a medical exam at the hospital. >> translator: he told me that i was pretty. i said thanks. that was it. i didn't think anything of it at the time. >> reporter: but at her next appointment she says swanson got physical. >> translator: my examination room had a curtain. when the nurses left, he opened it. and while i was handcuffed he placed my hands by his private parts. when the nurses came, he pretended to be having a hard time removing my handcuffs. >> reporter: lucia says after the appointment swanson was the only officer there to take her back to the jail. >> translator: he took a dirt road. then he parked in a corner and got close to there was nobody around. he was insinuating that he wanted to have sex. i thought about getting out of the car and running away from him. but if he to see my kids anymore. >> reporter: so lucia kept silent. but she says after another appointment swanson stopped and showed her naked photos of himself on his phone. >> translator: after a while i said to myself, if i don't say something it could happen to others. so i gave it a lot of thought and then i decided to go to an officer and tell her what happened. that same night the detectives arrived. >> reporter: deputy swanson, a 16-year veteran of the department, has been charged with felony assault by a public officer and misdemeanor sexual battery. he's currently on paid administrative leave wearing an ankle monitor. swanson's lawyer did not respond to our requests for an interview. >> there's actually a long history of sexual victimization of women in custody. >> reporter: brenda smith is a professor of law at american university. she served on the prison rape elimination commission, a task force created to protect inmates from rape. >> they experienced rape. they experienced viewing of them while they are nude. touching, improper searches. >> reporter: the latest data from the department of justice shows reports of sexual victimization of inmates by staff have more than tripled in a five-year period, from just over 4,000 to more than 14,000. the number of substantiated reports rose from 433 cases to 619, up 43%. dr. snith says the task force failed to issue guidelines for one key area, transporting inmates. she urges each facility to te its own safety standards. >> do you think the commission should have enacted? sort of policy recommendations when it comes to transporting inmates? >> yes, i do. >> reporter: the san joaquin county sheriff's office declined our interview requests, citing the pending litigation. in a statement steve moore said our investigators and the deputy's office worked diligently to seek justice and we will continue to do so in the future. >> when i talked to this lady i seen the emotion in her eyes, the pain she had. >> reporter: attorney stanley goff is suing deputy swanson sheriff steve moore and the county on behalf of lucia. >> the egg egyptianness of what happened. it was a sexual assault, sexual battery case upon an inmate from a deputy. >> reporter: he says there are many more women like her suffering sexual abuse in silence. >> translator: they have the same fear i had. nobody will say anything. >> reporter: lucia has filed a federal lawsuit seeking $2 million in damages from san joaquin county. the county attorney is asking a judge to dismiss the case against the sheriff and the county saying in part, they are were not participants in the sexual abuse. if you have a story for me or anyone in our investigative unit, call 888-996-tips or you can visit our website, nbcbayarea.com/investigation. still ahead, the woes continue for the 49ers and the raiders. they're both playing terrible football. and they play each other on thursday night. could be entertaining for a lot of reasons. >> i'll be tuning in. >> here's a preview of what's coming up in sports. >> dave feldman here at the xfinity sports desk. warriors, 49ers, raiders, sharks. busy day for bay area sports. no question about that. but it was two out of town teams, the red sox and the dodgers, that played the most meaningful match-up of the day. sports coming up after the break. hi, everybody. dave feldman here at the xfinity sports desk. this year's fall classic, well, it did not lack drama. 18-inning seven-plus-hour marathon in game 3 and then the yasiel puig post-bomb booty shake only to be outdone by steve pearce's heroics in game 4. what would happen in game 5? i can't wait to find out. would the red sox be able to close it out? and would clayton kershaw have anything to say about it? steve pearce did, taking kershaw deep to left in the top of the first. one of two home runs on the night for pearce. 2-0 boston. top six, potential a.l. mvp mookie betts, picked a great time to deliver his first career playoff home run. 3-1 red sox on top. an inning later skr d. martinez goes deep to straightaway center. his third this postseason. four home runs on the night. the red sox go on to win their fourth world series since 2004. 5-1 is the final. warriors visiting in brooklyn. first quarter warriors up one and steph curry does something i don't know if we've seen. you see it about five times at least every game. he's just getting started. second quarter warriors up 16. curry. that's like a layup. another record for steph. seventh game in a row with five threes. game-high 35. fourth quarter warriors up 13. beautiful pass. alley-oop to alley-oop to andre iguodala. warriors w it 120-114. 49ers and cardinals. both teams looking for their second win of the season. third quarter san francisco up two. c.j. beathard finds marquise goodwin. marquise goodwin was a former track star. i mean, he's still a track star. 49ers go up 12-3. 55 yards on that score. under a minute to play, cardinals need a touchdown, josh rosen, christian kirk. back of the end zone. cardinals take a two-point lead. but the 49ers still with a shot. trying to get in field goal range to -- oh, my goodness! over beathard's head. backup center eric magnuson with the costly mistake. the cardinals win. 18-15. raiders hosting the colts. oakland still looking for its second win of the season. derek carr. third quarter. he was doing his part. two passing touchdowns on the day. this time taking care of himself. they had to review it but it crossed the plain. 21-13 raiders. later in the quarter tied up now. carr does a nice job of getting up front, slipping the pocket and then brandon lafell is open for the score. carr responsible for four touchdowns in this game. 28-21 oakland. but then came the fourth quarter. colts third and goal sill down seven. marlon mack runs it in for the four-yard touchdown. tie game. two minutes left in the game. more mack. breaking through for a second touchdown of the game. indy scores 21 unanswered in the fourth. 42-28. sharks in anaheim taking on the ducks. second period. 2-1 sharks. and it's timo meyer time. 3-1. san jose on top. we're heading to overtime, tied at 3. and guess who gets the goal. meier again. timo time in anaheim, all over the pond. the sharks are winners 4-3. and that's it for sports. i'm dave feldman. there's more news after the break. kids anxiously count down the days to halloween. so is uber. the rideshare company is preparing for a busy halloween night. uber has a team of engineers making sure its infrastructure is able to handle all of the traffic it's going to be seeing come wednesday. the company says it is confident everything's going to work out as they always plan it to. in 2014 when uber was a much smaller company really getting going, engineers were not prepared. they weren't prepared then. they say they're prepared now. the incredible demand led to sky-high prices and that outraged some customers. this time around they say it's not going to happen that way. the duke and duchess of sussex were in new zealand today on the final leg of their 16-day tour of the south pacific. the royal ce in new zealand's capital and later meghan markle, who describes herself as a feminist, spoke to a group of mainly female guests including the country's prime minister. she congratulated new zealand on becoming the first country in the world to allow women to vote 125 years ago. >> bravo, new zealand, for championing this right 125 years ago for the women who well deserve to have an active voice, and acknowledged vote, and for all of the people that this effort has paved the way for globally. we all deeply thank you. >> it has been a big trip for the royal couple. earlier this m they announced they are expecting their first child in the spring. all right. all eyes -- i mean not all eyes right now are on halloween, but it's going to come around, and when it does are you going to be dressed appropriately? >> you've got fair rning. it's going to be warm this year. no worries about rain. really it's the winds we'll have to watch very closely starting as early as tomorrow afternoon as our sea breeze which helped keep temperatures down this weekend is replaced by a round of some north winds. look at the visibility. looking back out across san francisco, the bay there from the sutro tower camera. 59 degrees. it is busy right now in san francisco but notice the humidity for now. marine air still being pushed in across the bay. fire danger relatively low. obviously as we head toward tomorrow morning with 40s and 50s to begin the day and highs tomorrow very similar to the numbers we saw today. some low 70s around san jose. one change we'll notice for the afternoon is it will be a bit more breezy later tomorrow as high pressure tries to build back in from the west. tri-valley in the mid 70s tomorrow. close to 70 in oakland. upper 60s around for half moon. san francisco in the mid up toer 60s tomorrow before 70s are in reach for san francisco starting by tuesday. and you see north bay temperatures mainly in the 70s. notice tomorrow we'll see a mix of some overcast skies, likely some thin high clouds around mid afternoon clearing toward the evening as the winds begin to change direction. look at this. by tuesday morning, north bay hills starting to see some gusty conditions. here is the culprit. high pressure building in, strengthening, all the way leading up to halloween and thursday. likely to be the warmest days of the week for the halloween forecast. actually short sleeved around 5:00, still some mid 70s inland. trick or treat time likely seeing numbers in the six60s ine bay area. and a warmer day expected to set up for thursday. so the month of november begins with warm and dry conditions. mid 80s likely inland. but the item to watch will be those winds around especially the north bay hills. it's going to be turning progressively dryer toward the middle part of the week with no signs of rain at this point through the first weekend of november and likely carrying all the way through the election day coming up on november 6th. the ten-day forecast still looking dry as well. >> look at all those 80s. >> crazy. >> thank you, rob. still ahead on this special edition of nbc bay area news, from san quentin prinson to the santa cruz warriors. >> former inmate getting a shot at chasing a dream he thought was gone. we're going to show you when we come back. and board trustee head back to court. plus: sky high complaints. our consumer team reveals the maneuver you can make to get your airline )s attention. join us monday morning from join us monday morning from four years ago, we rejected marshall tuck and his billionaire backers for superintendent of public instruction. but they're back. the corporate billionaires and their handpicked candidate, former wall street banker marshall tuck. tuck's billionaires have spent over $25 million distorting tony thurmond's outstanding record on education. all because they know tuck shares their agenda: diverting funds from our public schools into their corporate charter schools. the same agenda as trump and betsy devos. protect our public schools. say no, again, to marshall tuck. play for the warriors. but his journey into pro basketball -- goes to the well, his goal and dream is to play for the warriors, but his journey into pro basketball goes to the prison yard of san quentin. >> nbc bay area's joe rosato jr. shows us his unlikely path back to the court. >> when i was in college, my main thing was always to play professionally. >> reporter: the intersection of dreams and reality. that's where harry smith found himself seven years ago. >> i was in an unhealthy relationship. but at the time i was playing ball, i was in my junior year at san francisco state. >> reporter: through a series of bad choices, the aspiring student went from a college basketball court to a court of law. >> but i was convicted of domestic violence, catching a case that sent me to prison for eight years. >> reporter: this is where smith landed, viewing the bay, his dreams, the missed opportunities from the confines of san quint prison. >> the transition was hard because i'm going from a college campus to being dropped off into a war zone. >> reporter: but amidst the clamor of prison life smith began tracing a new path. he started ministering to young people. he found religion. and he found solace in the familiar game of basketball. >> i didn't want to allow that place to change me, to change who i was. so basketball was my main avenue. >> reporter: every year members of the golden state warriors visited the prison to mentor inmates and to play a game against the prison team, the san quentin warriors. >> this is one of the -- if not the biggest events on the yard, i think that day was a day that a dream that was lost started reopening up. >> reporter: smith's playing caught the warriors' attention. so when he was released a few weeks ago after seven years behind bars the warriors offered him a chance to try out for its santa cruz farm team, trading prison blues for blue and gold. >> my hope is that he gets to achieve his dream. and the only thing i've ever seen him want to do is to make amends and help other people. >> reporter: while smith says making the warriors' roster would be a dream, it's no longer his only dream. he spent his first few weeks of freedom mentoring young people about the power of choices. >> it's even bigger than making a team. it's really getting out here, surviving, living, being a law-abiding citizen. >> reporter: so now as smith awaits his next tryout, his life is on the rebound. a new journey on the court of second chances. joe rosato jr. >> second chance at a first-class life. >> reporter: nbc bay area news. >> we wish him well. >> yeah. well, finally tonight, a halloween-themed story to end with. check out this drone footage. hundreds of witches and warlocks picked paddles over brooms yesterday during an event in oregon. you are watching as they glide down the willamette river in portland. organizers say the goal is to have fun and to collect clothes and coats for local non-profits. this is the second year that event was held in portland. what a sight to see. might i add anytime you shoot video way drone no matter what it is it just looks so cool. >> you're not used to that perspective. >> exactly. >> we're going to be back tonight at 11:00. >> in just one hour. >> hope you can join us then. >> have a good night. it was a whirlwind love affair. >> i felt like this was the one that i'd been waiting for. maybe it was too good to be true. did he love me, or was this all a game? >> a beautiful businesswoman falls for a dashing doctor, but her daughters have doubts -- >> i had lots of suspicions. >> she thinks his fingernails are dirty. this does not look to her like the hands of an actual doctor. who was this guy? nicame was "dirty john." >> this woman knew him all too well. >> i startd i und everything. >> this reporter made some unnerving discoveries, too. >> he scared a lot of people. he swindled a lot of people. >> the story of his "dirty

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