Transcripts For KPIX KPIX 5 News At 11PM 20240622

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la quinta! live from the cbs bay area studios this is kpix5 news. a heart stopping day on wall street, tonight five words of advice for your 401k and apple ceo tim cook's unusual move to calm investors. tonight investors have to be wondering what is next after getting taken for this wild ride. >> as soon as the opening bell rang, the dow dropped like a rock. within minutes it had fallen over 1,000 points, but a midday rally started wiping out the losses, not for long, though. it plunged again closing down 588 points, a drop of more than 3.5%. asian markets are off to another shaky start today? >> that's right. since the market in shanghai opened it's already dropped almost 6%. the nikkei is also down. for the past three sessions the opening bell has signaled the beginning to chaos on the stock market with the dow, s&p and nasdaq taking massive hits. michelle higgins is an east bay financial planner and money manager. she has five words for her investors. >> keep calm and carry on. >> reporter: michelle says the u.s. financial markets are playing correction catchup with the world markets, especially china. >> china has been melting down for several months now. >> reporter: michelle emphasizes this is a correction, not a crash. >> when you see a market that's really been grinding higher for 6 1/2 straight years without corrections, the velocity and the trade movement downward's pretty intense. that's what we're seeing right now of. >> reporter: while the urge to grab your money and run may be high, michelle says now is the time to stay the course. >> it's tough now. this is not the time to be selling into the tsunami. i really try to encourage my clients to take a step back. are you making an emotional decision? are you making a decision that's well thought out because of your allocation? >> reporter: now the concerns over the chinese market are so intense that apple ceo tim cook actually e-mailed cnbc's jim cramer of mad money to assure him sales in klein aarp still strong. this e-mail helped -- in china were still strong. this e-mail helped apple stock bounce back a bit. >> a lot of people saying this is overdue, though. >> very much overdue. fuel prices also falling, oil closed below $40 a barrel. who would have figured that? gasoline has fallen to a nationwide average of just 2.59 a gallon. understandably a lot of people are concerned about the markets. ceo of starbucks went so far as to e-mail all of his baristas and asked them to be extra sensitive to stressed out customers. tonight hundreds of trees in san francisco, on the chopping block. why? to make way for a smoother commute, but mark kelly tells us tonight a lot of people are saying not so fast, mark? >> reporter: these trees have sat along this median here on van ness for decades and now the city says their days are numbered. here in san francisco even the trees have been handed their eviction notice. >> the last thing that we need to do is be depleting our green canopy in the city of. >> reporter: terry oxford is worried when they get chopped down the diverse wildlife that lives here won't know where to go. >> it's really important that somebody speak for not only the trees, but the birds and the bees. >> current our average bus speed along venice avenue is only 8 miles per hour. >> reporter: tonight's hearing is packed. many are not happy with the city's multi-million dollar plan to replace these trees with fresh asphalted and a bus lane. sfmta spokesperson paul rose says some of these trees are diseased and a few of the healthy ones will get a new home. >> we're doing everything we can to preserve these trees and at the same time move people more efficiently along this very important corridor of. >> reporter: muni says this is supposed to improve travel time by 32%. to make up for the cut down trees the city will plant 400 nutros on either side of the new bus lane. -- new trees on either side of the new bus lane. terry hopes when that times come, the city plants organic. >> if they don't, what they'll be doing is planting nuclear bomb trees that is poisonous to anything that tries to take a bite out of it. >> reporter: the city will take out the trees in phases starting in 2016 and then the whole projects bus lane included will be done by -- project bus lane included will be done by 2019. tonight people serving in the marin headlands are told don't drink the water. the bacterias was discovered through routine testing -- bacteria was discovered through routine testing. the source of the contamination is not known. the all clear is not expected until later this week. tonight someone has a police chief badge and her gun. u.s. berkeley police chief bennett went for a jog in richmond friday morning. when she came back to the parking lot, someone had smashed the window of her suv. the crook stole her loaded gun, badge, work lap top, diamond ring and other valuables. uc berkeley police said the gun was not in a safe and did not center a trigger lock. park officials say they see a lot of burglaries at east bayshore line park since she are so close to the freeway. a -- they are so close to the freeway. pay lot of speculation tonight -- a lot of speculation tonight whether or not vice president joe biden will or will not make a run for the presidential nomination. polls show voters see biden more honest and trustworthy than democratic front runner hillary clinton. biden has run for president twice. at 72 he would be the oldest president in history if elected. he's expected to announce his decision the beginning of october. jeb bush in some hot water again tonight over how he's defending his use of the term anchor babies. here's what he said in texas today. >> what i was talking about was the specific case of fraud being committed where there's organized efforts and frankly, it's more related to asian people coming into our country having children in that organized efforts taking advantage of a noble concept with the birthright citizenship. i support the 14th amendment. >> bush said he would not deny citizenship to children born to undocumented parents. he also said people need to chill out about the entire issue. one year ago today a magnitude 6.0 earthquake struck the bay area. buildings toppled over. a mobile home park went up in flames. entire buildings were rocked off their foundations. the road to recovery has been a long and challenging process. napa was one of the areas hardest hit. tonight cbs5's joe vazquez shows us how that community is remembering that fateful day and celebrating its comeback. >> reporter: at precisely 3:20 this afternoon a high school percussion band drumrolled for nearly half a minute, the lengths of the earthquake one year ago -- length of the earthquake one year ago today. >> one year ago our town took a pounding. in just 26 seconds many lives were changed. >> boom, boom, boom. >> just on and on. >> that was about the duration. >> reporter: the earth shook at 3:20 in the morning. >> our bed was bouncing across the floor and our tv came crashing down and almost hit our dog. >> reporter: the south flap a quake cost the city of napa more -- napa quake cost the city more than $200 million in damage. it injured 200 killed one. >> when it felt like the sun wasn't going to rise again, you the community helped me in ways that you'll never know. >> reporter: among the injured nick dillon who is now 14 years old. a year ago his brick fireplace crashed on top of him critically injuring him. three pelvic surgeries later he is running, playing sports, even dancing and expressing gratitude to his neighbors. >> i know without you i wouldn't have turned out so positive. i just want to say thank you from the bottom of any heart honestly, thank you. >> reporter: the mayor tells me that virtually every historic building in downtown napa has sustained some damage and there's a positive side to all this and that is they are getting seismically retrofitted as they're rehabbed they're actually making the downtown a little safer. in napa joe vazquez, cbs5. >> the bail bonds building in downtown napa was hit hard during the quake. this black car covered in bricks and rubble became a symbol of the damage. one year later repairs are still ongoing. the scaffolding is still up, but most of the bricks are now back in place. tonight the mayor says napa is 80 to 85% back to normal. three northern california guys are the toast of france tonight, how they're being honored for taking down a terrorist on a train. >> and we're in the middle of a drought, so what's with all the new green grass at san jose state? tonight the university sets the record straight. >> and tonight a bay area woman says it's a miracle, how she we live in a pick and choose world. choose, choose, choose. but at bedtime? ...why settle for this? enter sleep number... right now all beds are on sale. sleepiq technology tells you how well you slept and what adjustments you can make. you like the bed soft. he's more hardcore. so your sleep goes from good to great to wow! only at a sleep number store. the time is now for the biggest sale of the year, where all beds are on sale! save 50% on the labor day limited edition bed. know better sleep with sleep number. one of the three americans who tackled a gunman on a train in france is getting the red carpet treatment literally. anthony sadler walked the red carpet while attending the premier of straight out of compton in france tonight. he told reporters he fools like he's in a dream. he -- feels like he's in a dream. earlier today sadler and two friends from sacramento received france's highest award. cbs news reporter charlie daggett was there. >> reporter: spencer stone arrived at the u.s. air base in germany today for further medical treatment alongside fellow servicemen aleck skarlatos. earlier today -- alek skarlatos. earlier today both men and friend andy sadler received the presidential honor medal at the presidential palace in paris. president francois hollande said they gave the world a lesson in courage. when police arrested the suspect moroccan national ayoub el-khazzani, they found automatic weapons and 300 rounds of ammunition. he said i just wanted to rob passengers. stone said the gunman was ready to fight to the end. >> seemed like he just kept pulling more weapons left and right, pulled out a handgun out, took that, took out a box cutter, started jabbing at me with that. >> reporter: jabs that almost severed stone's thumb, yet the serviceman put his medical training to use saving the life of an american passenger who was wounded in the neck. >> i just stuck two of my fingers in the hole, found what i thought to be the artery, pushed down. then the bleeding stopped and so said thank god. >> reporter: asked what lessons were to be learned from their ordeal, anthony sadler said simply act. >> hiding or sitting back is not going to accomplish anything in. times of terror like that, to please do something. don't just stand by and watch. >> reporter: charlie daggett, cbs news, paris. >> city of sacramento will throw a parade for the three buddies and the president of sac state says offers are pouring in to help anthony sadler pay for his last year of school there. tonight san jose airport has a solution for a series of embarrassing security breaches, barbed wire and lots of it. local leaders secured more than $3 million in federal money to try to keep people off the property. a teen who hopped the fence and stowed away on a flight to hawaii last year sparked the change in an area that's known for hi-tech inventions. the airport is going decidedly low tech. clearly the feds thought there was a need at this particular airport to get this done. >> certainly our airport saw the need based upon some incidents that happened here. it entails a 3-foot concrete base topped by 7 feet of perimeter fencing and then topped by 1 foot of razor wire. so there's a lot of components going on there. there's a lot of costs involved for those various materials and then there's the labor costs. >> the airport is now taking bids to build that fence. it should be done by next may. a bay area woman thought she would never get a prized family painting back after someone stole it, but then something unexpected happened. kpix5's christin ayers has her story. >> reporter: nellie hill has loved it since the day her parents brought it home from paris back in 1957. the artist even wrote a note to her parents on the back. >> mr. and mrs. hill. >> i've always loved the painting because of the nature, the kind of quiet nature scene that pulls you inward. >> reporter: so she was delighted last january when her mom gave her the painting just months before she died. >> and she said yes and told everybody that's nellie's. >> reporter: nellie had it shipped from illinois, but within an hour of it being delivered to her doorstep in berkeley someone swiped it. >> it was gone. >> reporter: nellie went on a campaign to find it. she posted a sign on her house. >> please return the painting, reward no, questions asked. >> reporter: and sent information about the painting to the website stolen911.com. its creator, a chp officer that called it's the craigslist of stolen property. last week -- >> the phone call was a complete surprise. he said we have your painting. >> reporter: nellie said the man on the other end had a dubious story about an art collector friend passing it on to him, but when he saw the painting on stolen 911, he called her and then brought it to her. >> it was a godsend, just a miracle. >> reporter: the frame has a feudings, but nellie says those -- few fingers, but nellie says those could be fixed. this is a happy ending that her mother would have wanted. >> she'd like the story. the painting when an adventure and now it's getting seen by a lot of people, which it deserves. >> the chp says this is the first time a piece of art has been recovered through the stolen 911 website. when was the last time you watered your lawn? well, at san jose state university there is some new lush green grass growing. kpix5's devin fehely asks what's that all about? >> reporter: with homeowners across california letting their lawns turn brown or just ripping them out altogether san jose state university is doing something you just don't see much anymore, at least not in the middle of a historic drought. it's planting a sea of brand- new green grass across its campus. >> we're in drought. it's going to wastewater. >> why wouldn't you put in some sort of artificial turf, rock gardens or artificial plants? >> reporter: despite appearances a university spokesperson says the new grass is not the water waster you might imagine. >> this is watered with recycled water, so it's not the same as the water you get through your fan and drink every single day. this water has been -- tap and drink every single day. this water has been recycled. >> reporter: the use of recycled water, drought tolerant happened escaping and -- landscaping and other practices helps save 7 million gallons of water a year. many students question if the lush lawns send the right message when so many others are going green by letting their landscaping go brown. >> they could have made this a pavement. they could have made more parking for people to park, like they could have used it in other ways rather than a grass area. we don't need the grass i don't really think. >> reporter: in san jose devin fehely, kpix5. >> the university says that it plans to use the newly sodded area for student activities and concerts. got some good news. we've got some rain in the forecast, right? >> there is some rainfall, not much but some. yes, there is rain coming up later on this week into the weekend. tonight kpix5 hi-def doppler coming up dry. by friday night, saturday morning there will be rain out there, maybe watering your lawn. fremont 59, mountain view 58, san rafael tonight 56 degrees, sunrise kids back to school 6:33. two big weather elements are out there and both will play a factor in our weather, a big strong ridge of high pressure to our south and an equally large and strong low pressure system to our left. the ridge will be victorious first here tomorrow, wednesday and thursday. less of the onshore flow because of ridge will jack up our temperatures about 3 to 5 degrees. some of you inland may even hit 90 to 91 degrees, so the ridge wins through thursday of then a taste of fall. we begin to -- thursday. then a taste of fall. we begin to look to our north. cooler air is a guarantee, chilly overnight lows, rain with this low pressure area may stay to the north. the latest run of our futurecast model here shows the green making it down to about ukiah. so the rain staying to the north. i'm going to keep the rain in the forecast. wonderful news for the fire danger in the pacific northwest and far northern california. there will be rain. the question is will it make it south enough to get here? a bit warmer the next three days, keeping showers in the forecast saturday. don't change your weekend plans. it will not be a washout. it will be wonderful for any of us suffering with allergies, all the people sneezing and coughing, rubbing your eyes. san jose tomorrow beautiful day, 83 sunshine, sunnyvale 82, union city hayward mid-70s of upper 80s in danville and san ramon a little warmer, pleasantton 89 degrees, san francisco 69, a little bit of morning cloud cover, blue sky in the afternoon, kentfield and sonoma 82, clearlake 92. the warmest three days are through thursday. we cool off, get cloudier friday. we'll keep that shower chance in on saturday and look at sunday, staying shy of 80 degrees. that's a good problem to have, but that is a little taste of fall coming up this weekend, which is august. >> will the rain fall throughout the bay area or be concentrated in one spot? >> right now it looks like it's going to be in the north bay, but we're hoping because there's five days between now and then the computer models will bring it farther south. >> good. a california dad goes to the toy store with his son and tonight he is an internet sensation. >> now how do you any a dad feels when his son wants -- think a dad feels when his son wants to get this? >> find out next. >> and coming up on the late late show with ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, >> and coming up on the late my name is mark amann. >> and coming up on the late late show with ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, i'm a gas service rep for pg&e in san jose. as a gas service rep we are basically the ambassador of the company. we make the most contact with the customers on a daily basis. i work hand-in-hand with crews to make sure our gas pipes are safe. my wife and i are both from san jose. my kids and their friends live in this community. every time i go to a customer's house, their children could be friends with my children so it's important to me. one of the most rewarding parts of this job is after you help a customer, seeing a smile on their face. together, we're building a better california. you're looking at the lineup for stephen colbert's first week of the light show, george cooney, jeb bush, tesla ceo elon musk, the ceo of uber and amy schumer. you can watch the late show right here on kpix5 beginning on september 8. a california father's priceless reaction has gone viral tonight. >> a trip to the toy store ends with his son picking a little mermaid doll. >> now how do you think a dad feels when his son wants to get this? >> yea! >> yea! that's how i feel. right? i let my boys choose their life. >> the dad went on to tell his sons that he promises to love them and accept them no matter what life they choose. the boy reactioned like you just heard with an excited yeah -- reacted like you just heard with an excited yeah. i think it's been viewed so many times because the kids are so cute. >> i think i'd take a barbie over a gi joe. what about you, ken? >> i got one of my kids a peewee herman doll one time. he loved the heck out of it. you never know. did your stock take a hit today? you might want to invest ,,,,,,, the indy circuit comes to sonoma this week with tragic news. justin wilson died one day after suffering a severe head injury during a race in pocono raceway. the crash occurred with 21 laps to go when the race leader spun in turn 1. debris flew from his car and struck will son in his head. wilson's car veered straight into the inside wall. the driver was airlifted to the hospital in a coma but passed away today. justin wilson was 37 years old. ron washington was named the a's new third base coach today. oakland overcame a 5-0 deficit. a's destroy the mariners 11-5. former australian rugby star jarryd hayne topped his debut last weekend by leading san francisco with 54 rushing yards while averaging 28 yards on punt returns against dallas yesterday. this is just his second football game. his dreams of making the nfl now is looking much more realistic. >> reporter: you were on punt return coverage where you made a fantastic play. you were on kickoff coverage. you ran the football. you caught the football. what don't you do? >> i don't play quarterback. >> reporter: not yet. two more games. what has been the most difficult transition from rugby to the nfl? >> i think the whole game in general. i'm still getting used to lowering my sides and running off the right blocks and the right -- i run plays and whatnot. there's a whole bunch of things, probably not just one single area, playing the whole game in general. i'm just trying my best, studying and just really enjoying the process. >> i'm proud to say that interview was picked up in sydney, australia, by channel 7 tonight. so i'm tied to the local stuff. i've gone international. >> i can't wait to see the guy dive for ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, madam secretary is next. >> our next newscast tomorrow morning at 4:30. previously on madam secretary... well, this can't be good. the secretary of state's plane just went down over the atlantic. i want you to step in. step into what? secretary of state. probably should've brought my own staff. probably. but you know what, their boss had just died. i couldn't just clean house like that. it's an encoded text. saying what? it's from george. vincent marsh's plane crash was not an accident. be careful, bess. this is me not being a politician. trust me. you'd better be right about this. i go the president to sign off. how could you do that without my knowledge? by blatantly circumnavigating your authority. what's wrong? george is dead. that wasn't an accident. i know. woman: uh, sweetie, will you bring this in, please?

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