and concern for joe biden. all of this unfolding while president trump starts strong in the nation's first presidential primary. >> with 97% of the results in, nbc news has bernie sanders in first place with just shy of 26% of the vote. pete buttigieg is a close second with 24%. and a big night for amy klobuchar, followed by elizabeth warren. joe biden, though, came in fifth, making this his second disappointing finish after the iowa caucuses. >> new hampshire is a small sample size, but it's significant for fund-raising and exposure. let's bring in nbc's jay gray, who joins us in new hampshire with the very latest. jay? >> reporter: yeah, raj, jess, you're absolutely right. you portrayed it perfectly. they're a small state but they've had a loud voice when it comes to american politics. tonight we may have heard from someone, amy klobuchar, who has become a new contender here. as the votes are counted in new hampshire, a clearer image of what's been a muddled field of democratic presidential hopefuls is emerging. >> and let me say tonight that this victory here is the beginning of the end for donald trump. >> bernie sanders polling just ahead of pete buttigieg. >> so many of you decided that a middle class mayor and a veteran from the industrial midwest was the right choice to take on this president, not in spite of that experience but because of it. >> reporter: the one-two showing for the front-runners here no real surprise. but the surge for amy klobuchar jumping into third is. the minnesota senator parlaying a strong debate showing and tireless campaign schedule into some much needed momentum here. >> we have beaten the odds every step of the way. >> reporter: while behind the top three, elizabeth warren insisting the early setback is not the end of her run. >> the fight to save our democracy is an uphill battle. ♪ >> reporter: it's not the swan song for joe biden either. despite a disappointing finish and leaving new hampshire for south carolina even before the polls closed. >> where i come from, that's the opening bell, not the closing bell. and the fight to end donald trump's presidency is just beginning. just beginning. >> reporter: this was the last stop for candidates andrew yang and michael bennet. the crowded field of democratic hopefuls thinning just a bit as the pace of the campaign now intensifies with the bulk of the race still ahead. look, to stay in this race, the candidates are going to have to continue to gain momentum and votes obviously. but also money, campaign donations. the pace of this thing really is getting ready to accelerate. >> thank you very much, jay. now, on the republican side, president trump is the projected winner with over 85% of the vote. our political analyst, larry gerst sten has the president has more to be happy about tonight than just his first-place finish. >> who's happier than all of them put together is donald trump because right now he sees democrats in disarray. he sees them spending good money after bad to try to keep up with one another, exhausting, exhausting their wallets, and he sits back just gathering funds. and each day gets closer to the election, and each day he looks like a better and better chance. >> next up, nevada. they host the democratic caucuses on february 2nd followed by south carolina democratic primary on february 29th. >> then it's us, the california primary is march 3rd. tonight a lot of people gathering at hmanny's to watch the results in new hampshire. >> unfortunately some of the candidates are dropping, so that will influence how i vote. i'm going to wait until the very last minute on march 3rd. i'm not going to vote early because my candidate might not make it till march 3rd. >> democrats we chatted with tonight said they are voting strategically and not emotionally. our website is a good resource as you prepare to cast your ballot. we have a complete voter guide highlighting issues in every local county. just go to nbcbayarea.com/electionguide. new video tonight of a brazen armed robbery in an east bay neighborhood. let's show you that video posted on ring neighbors, the app. two men run up to a man in the driveway of an oakland home. this happened yesterday near an elementary school. it appears the first man pulls out a gun and pushes the victim to the car while the second robs him. the two of them run off. police say they were in fact armed and that officers are now looking into the attack. new at 11:00, the mountain winery is a legendary spot in the south bay not just for wine but for concerts. now developers want to build a hotel there, but the city of saratoga getting plenty of pushback from the neighbors. many people didn't even know about these expansion plans. ian cull joins us in saratoga with the details. ian? >> reporter: yeah, raj. those plans include that mountain winery might one day put a hotel on its property. the planning commission is going to talk about this tomorrow night, and they'll get an earful from neighbors of the winery who are worried about the added traffic in that rural area and question how the city has handled this proposal. the mountain winery is one of the premier concert venues in the south bay with views of silicon valley. right now it's part of the county, but the city of saratoga wants to annex it. part of that plan would include rezoning the property to allow for a 300-room hotel. neighbors say they love the winery but had no idea a hotel could be coming. >> it's really about the impact on the neighborhoods of the hotel and the guests that come to it. >> reporter: the hoa below the winery is against the idea, pointing out the tight two-lane road to the site. and while they tolerate traffic for concerts, they say a hotel would add hundreds of more drivers to it all year long. they also fear what might happen during an evacuation because their homes are in a high fire risk zone. >> it's like if one person wrecks, you're not turning around. you're not getting out. like it's too narrow and windy for full-time people unfamiliar with the road. >> reporter: concert-goers would likely welcome lodging at the winery to spend the night there instead of driving home, especially if they've been drinking. as for the proposal, the city says annexing the winery would allow it to control future land uses and operations when it couldn't before. >> but the truth is how much more development can you really limit by the time you give them a 300-room hotel? >> reporter: the city says there are no immediate plans or permits for the hotel. that would still be another process after it's rezoned. the planning commission is going to be making its recommendation tomorrow night. we also reached out to the mountain winery and are still waiting to hear back. live in saratoga, ian cull, nbc bay area news. the all-clear has been given tonight after a car crash involving a pedestrian in alameda. police say the person at the wheel in a tan minivan hit a woman near alameda high. the woman was crossing the street about 3:00 in the afternoon. that video from sky ranger overhead. paramedics did rush the woman to the hospital. at this point we don't know the extent of her injuries. the intersection of encinal and walnut were shut down for nearly four hours but are now back open. we have new numbers tonight on the deadly coronavirus. the death toll now stands at more than 1,100 people. that's worldwide. another 45,000 people are infected. 13 of those cases are here in the united states, and if you look at this map, you can see seven of those people are here in california. tonight 195 people quarantined at march air base in riverside county are headed home. they've been in isolation for two weeks after evacuating from wuhan, china. among them, this mother and daughter who live in palo alto. >> this long journey comes to an end. i'm very happy to see my husband. >> she is happy. 234 people are still being monitored at travis air force base in fairfield. five of them are in the hospital with symptoms of the virus, still waiting for the test results. in concord tonight, a lot of talk about rent and renters' rights. the city council is one 12e7 closer to putting together an ordinance that would clarify what those rights are. councilmembers heard suggestions of ways to help the city to help renters. among the demands from the tenants union, rent control, just cause evictions and a way to complain about slumlords without fear of retaliation. the future of pot sales in a south bay city is uncertain tonight. right now the santa clara city council is discussing permanently banning the sale of marijuana within the city. for the past few years, there's bhnl a temporary ban on commercial sales in santa clara. tonight, councilmembers are urged to ban pot sales once and for all. they say it would mean extra work for first responders. add sunnyvale to the list of cities to consider banning the sale of flavored tobacco products. tomorrow afternoon it will be the first of three public meetings at the community center. city leaders are concerned that these types of products target young people and pose a major health risk. the meeting begins at 2:00 p.m. a big change when it comes to rape kits. there is no longer a backlog of kits sitting on evidence shelves in santa clara county. two years ago there were 260 kits waiting to be processed in the crime lab. thanks to more than $600,000 in extra funding and streamlining the process, the d.a. says the county has reduced the average processing time from 94 days to 16 days. >> we're prosecuting them better and more quickly than we were before because we're testing the rape kits more quickly. and testing the rape kits more quickly means that we're taking perpetrators off the street more quickly as well. >> the district attorney adds that just last week, a rape suspect was arrested just four days after the attack because the evidence was processed quickly, and it revealed a dna profile match. it seemed like a really nice house. >> it was until their rental led to an ugly legal court fight. up next, we investigate the contentious battle between a landlord and her tenants. and a terrifying look at the moment a car hits a school bus, slamming these students against the ceiling. the call tonight from the ntsb. i'm chief meteorologist jeff ranieri. after record setting heat today, we are starting to cool off. we'll have details on that, and i'll show you two things your weather apps aren't showing you as we head into this upcoming weekend. i'll have that nine minutes. tom steyer: listen, every democrat running for president is better than the criminal in the white house. we all have progressive plans to address the big challenges facing our country. what makes me different, is i've been working for ten years outside of washington, to end the corporate takeover of our democracy, and to return power to the american people. i started need to impeach to hold this lawless president accountable. i'm proposing big reforms like term limits... ...a national referendum... ...and ending corporate money in politics. as president, i'll declare climate change an emergency on day 1. and, use those powers to finally address the climate crisis. and, i've spent 30 years building a successful international business. so, i can take on donald trump on the economy - and beat him. i'm tom steyer and i approve this message - because there is nothing more powerful than the unified voice of the american people. well, we all know that buying a place in the bay area is tough, but renting can be just as tricky, especially when the relationship between tenant and landlord goes bad. tonight in our ongoing series on the housing crisis, making it in the bay, we look at how home sweet home turned into a nasty courtroom fight that pitted renters against owner. this san francisco couple moved into their outer sunset home in 2018, expecting the best. >> somewhere in the sunset, it will be safe and closer to my school. >> reporter: instead, they say they got the worst. >> and then it ended up being pretty much hell on earth. >> it was just -- it was a bad situation. >> reporter: jen and her partner ramsey moved into one room of this park view terrace house. sandra fiero and another house mate took the other two rooms. they thought they'd scored, renting out the entire house to themselves. >> it seemed like a really nice house. >> reporter: until it wasn't. >> it was really difficult. >> reporter: and unsettling when they discovered someone else was living there too. >> the garage door opened and then this woman came out with all these dogs, and i was like, who's this? they're like, this is the landlady. >> reporter: that landlady is kristi west. they said they'd never met since they were leasing the house from the former tenants. turns out west wasn't alone downstairs. >> and there are also people sleeping in the garage. >> reporter: the tenants say things really went south when they asked west to deal with some maintenance issues. >> when we asked her to make basic repairs, i started getting barrages of phone calls, texts. her mood would switch from being really happy to incredibly angry. >> reporter: the complaints, they said, led to harassment. fiero, who works as an emt, says west tried to get her fired. >> i get a call from my boss. i'm sorry. she says that kristi called to get me fired, saying i'm a racist and a monster, caused me to have like a breakdown. >> she would follow me in her car. she would try to talk the police into saying that i was a peeping tom. >> reporter: they also say west would enter their rooms without permission, as this surveillance video appears to show. >> ms. west would constantly intrude on any type of privacy that we had. >> you're the ugliest woman i've ever met except for your daughter. that much is the truth. >> reporter: tension between landlord and the tenants escalated. eight months into their lease, they'd had enough. they moved out, sued west for a multitude of issues including negligence and harassment. turns out they weren't the first to rent and go. according to the tenants' attorney. >> it's just been an endless string of tenants who one after the other move in, one after the other move out, and they all have similar experiences. >> reporter: we found at least eight other kwlclaims against w dating back to 2004. also a dozen complaints to the board of building inspection and the sf rent board. last month a jury sided with the tenants. >> allegations made by these plaintiffs aren't necessarily true, and so if i choose not to defend myself here, it's because i have to do it in court. >> reporter: west agreed to talk outside her home last week. while she contends she is a good landlord, she told us she couldn't talk specifics about her case. for west, the lawsuit is far from over as she prepares to file a motion for a new trial. >> defendants are moving for a new trial because of significant misconduct by plaintiff's counsel. >> reporter: west points to monetary sanctions the judge imposed on harborman related to witness intimidation during a deposition and documents mistakenly provided to the jury prohibited at trial. >> there is video in the trial that shows you going into the tenants' apartment without permission. is that true? >> no, it's not true. i've never -- i will say this. i have never entered a premise that belongs to someone else in my entire life as a landlord. never. >> reporter: as west marches forward with her fight in court, her former tenants say they're still shaken and they want the city to take action. >> i feel like she's preying on people that have nowhere else to go. we're low income. we had nowhere else to go. >> we did talk to some of other west tenants not involved in this lawsuit. a woman who currently lives there told us she's had no issues with west and that she's been great. but a former tenant told us exchanges would quickly escalate into verbal abuse and threats. we did check with the court, and the motion for a new trial has yet to be filed. >> i'm sure we'll stay on that story. jeff ranieri here with us and we can talk about this weather as the weekend comes in. >> i think we're going to have definitely some noticeable drops in our temperatures as we head throughout the next 48 to 72 hours. and some changes this weekend that your weather apps aren't highlighting yet. i'll get to that here in just a bit. i do want to start right off with what we're seeing right now and that warm area of high pressure that brought us soef70 even a few 80 degree temperatures today, record setting heat. beginning to move off a little more towards the west and that's allowing cooler air to filter in. right now we're seeing the result of that with temperatures dropping anywhere from 13 to 10 degrees cooler from the north bay down to the east bay. as we start off tomorrow morning, mostly clear and chilly temperatures. 39 for the tri-valley. 40s for the peninsula and south bay. 40 in the east bay. san francisco 46. and the north bay at 38. by all accounts, a really great start for us. look, tomorrow is still going to be warm and above average, just not as warm as we have been used to lately. down in the south bay, we have 70s, but it is dropping a couple of degrees, and i have you at 69 in cupertino. for the east bay, closer to the water, 67 in oakland. instead of upper 70s throughout the inland valleys, i have you down to 73 in concord. 72 in danville. 68 in san mateo. san francisco, 60s from the embarcadero down through the ingle side and after a few 80s today in the north bay, we're dropping it down to 72 in sonoma, 72 in santa rosa. 73 in novato. numbers going down a couple degrees tomorrow. then we're going to see another change once we hit thursday and friday. brand-new system will drop down real close to us, and it looks like that will be good enough to get us some morning fog again thursday and also friday morning. that will continually keep our temperatures down. so changes on the way, especially thursday and friday with some morning fog. then the two changes your weather apps aren't keying in on yet. i want to make sure you're ready for. the first one, a slight chance of some spotty showers once we hit sunday. doesn't look like anything big. it's coming from this dryer system dropping down from the north that could bring us breezy conditions sunday but definitely windier conditions monday. 15 to about 40 miles per hour. for the v a slight chance of showers on sunday and also that wind kicking up. right now it doesn't look as bad as the wind we just went through this past weekend, but we may have to go into a microclimate weather alert sunday night into monday as well. so no big storms but definitely a dynamic pattern as we head through the next seven days. >> thanks for the warning, jeff. up next at 11:00, the happiest place on earth just got more expensive. yep, disneyland. we'll tell you how much. and we have jimmy. >> we're singing barbershop with the backstreet boys. plus we have constance wu, music from skip marley and h.e.r. "the tonight show" starts in just a few minutes. the city council unanimously approved a plan about an hour ago. the homes will be built at west san carlos and mcavoy streets. since the plan has the go-ahead, construction is set to start next year. we're back in a moment. obama: he's been a leader throughout the country for the past twelve years, mr. michael bloomberg is here. vo: leadership in action. mayor bloomberg and president obama worked together in the fight for gun safety laws, to improve education, and to develop innovative ways to help teens gain the skills needed to find good jobs. obama: at a time when washington is divided in old ideological battles he shows us what can be achieved when we bring people together to seek pragmatic solutions. bloomberg: i'm mike bloomberg and i approve this message. tak