Transcripts For KPIX KPIX 5 News At 6pm 20150501

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few office building and the company faces a lawsuit saying it's not nearly as energy efficient as advertised. so despite the buzz he says there are potential bumps in the road for cars and spinoff products. >> there's a lot of risk still surrounding this company which remains. >> reporter: the announcement will be made at 8 p.m. in southern california. the residential batteries will cost an estimated $13,000. >> that would be a game changer if it all pans out. >> it would allow to you basically power your home at night off of the power generated during the day. big difference. >> huge. all right. oakland mayor libby schaaf has tried to sell her crime- fighting plan in a unique way. kpix 5's ryan takeo is live with the pitch that comes with a couple of beers. >> reporter: that's right. how do you get the public interested in budget issues? you hold the release party at a brewery. that's where we are at linden street brewerry. you see mayor schaaf right here. talking about her budget, a huge part of it is based upon public safety. she says it sets aside money to increase the police force to 762 over the next two years keeping them on track to get to the goal of 800 officers by 2018. it also expands "operation cease-fire" more than doubling the number of case workers to 10 caseworkers so the city can better keep track of at-risk youth. >> it's a strategy that existed before i was mayor but i'm committed to making it effective and also bringing it to scale so it can reach all the people it needs to. >> reporter: there was an $18 million funding gap because expenses outpace income. that gap is being covered by idea with refinancing debts and raising residential parking fees, as well. as for this event, they are probably about 125 people here. and people continue to stream in. the mayor says the budget goes down better with beer. live in oakland ryan takeo, kpix 5. it's a brutal murder that shocked an east bay community. tonight, the family of a 9-year- old is speaking out publicly after finding their sob stabbed to death. the boy's father read a statement describing the energetic little boy, his son, but stopped short of answering questions about the horror that happened in his home over the weekend. police arrested 18-year-old william schultz a family friend who was sleeping over. the victim's family says this senseless murder won't stop them from helping others. >> we will continue to offer our love and home to our family and friends and our children's friends as we know that's what jordie would have wanted us to do. >> the father says the little boy loved playing baseball and was on a youth baseball team. witnesses say it was a freeway drag race that ended when one sports car veered off into the san francisco bay on highway 101 noon south of candlestick point. the orange nissan wound up halfway in the water. the back end completely crushed. a white aston martin pulled over on the side of the road. the drivers deny they were racing. the one in the water had only minor cuts. water shot up in the air in santa clara this afternoon. take a look at this video a viewer sent us. police say a car hit a fire hydrant just after 1:00 on scott boulevard. crews were able to cap the water. hundreds of people could be the victims of identity theft because of a data breach at cal. the thieves got into a server that holds family financial details submitted by cal students. this means they had access to social security numbers, bank accounts and other personal information. the school is sending out letters to students and parents discovering the breach six weeks ago. japan's prime minister here in the bay area tonight as part of a three-day visit to california. he is focusing on tech ties between japan and silicon valley. kpix 5's cate caugiran is live outside the fairmont where he will be meeting governor brown any moment. cate. >> reporter: yes, that's correct, veronica. he is going to be here to meet with the governor to test out a bullet train simulator but first, he will have to get through what appears to be two different protests groups. and it's been like this for the prime minister all day. earlier, we were at stanford university where prime minister abe made a quick speech on a new partnership between japan and silicon valley. but like at the fairmont a group of protestors was waiting. it was chinese and korean- americans upset over what they call japan's wartime crimes. >> we are angry. so we, um, demand and insist that japan government make a formally apology to legislator -- legislation just like germany did. >> reporter: prime minister abe did not address any of the protestors' concerns in his speech at stanford nor did it come up in the question-and- answer session with stanford's president john hennessey. this kind of protest that you're looking at now is far different from what the prime minister is used to back home. i can tell you that growing up in japan, most protests are far from confrontational. in fact, they're quite polite. but in this case that you're looking at live based off the signs you see here the prime minister is facing the pressure to deal with japan's past battleground state before forging its future. live in san francisco cate caugiran, kpix 5. >> as cate said something historians are accusing the prime minister of trying to undo history. betty yu on the subject that japan doesn't want u.s. students to learn about. >> reporter: 70 years have gone by since japan's brutal occupation of china and korea. its surprise attack at pearl harbor. and a reign of ruin. u.s. atomic bombs in hiroshima and nagasaki. at the 70th anniversary of the end of world war ii japan's history should have been settled. there's just one problem. this u.s. history book. japanese prime minister shinzo abe wants part of the history erased and rewritten. >> i think what he is doing is wrong and it's stupid and it's going to fail. >> reporter: abe has demanded u.s. publisher mcgraw-hill education edit out two paragraphs on comfort women or wartime sex slaves. the japanese army forcibly recruited as many as 300,000 women aged 14 to 20 to serve in military brothels. the comfort women served up to 30 men a day. at the end of the war, soldiers massacred large numbers of comfort women to cover up the operation. now it's abe who is trying to cover up the country's ugly past says uc-berkeley professor elaine kim. >> he, um, -- the horse has left the barn. there's no way that the abe government can change the way history happened and there are too many witnesses too many people who know. [ non-english language ] >> i was become so sick after the electric shock and all the beatings. >> reporter: including comfort woman lee sue. she says japanese soldiers kidnapped her when she was 16. she has been flown to dc from south korea ahead of abe's visit. she wants an apology. >> -- arguing that the comfort women were willing and japan was trying to liberate asia from imperialism from the west and that's disrespectful and cowardly to [ indiscernible ] only 63 survivors left. >> reporter: this week koreans and chinese people in the bay area will be watching what he says. >> the japanese government has been denying this history for such a long time. it almost seems ridiculous that he would, um, attempt to try to do the same thing again. it seems like at this point who are you fooling? >> reporter: betty yu, kpix 5. >> publisher of the book mcgraw little said that it would not make any changes to the passages about comfort women, according to the publisher of the book mcgraw-hill. >> arming officers with cameras. one bay area's city multi- million dollar plan. >> coming up. >> only on 5 a high-tech way to find small leaks before they become big problems. >> coming up at 6:30 she escaped the violence in vietnam as a little girl. what it took for this journalist to build a life and career here in the bay area. it's all part of our special coverage on the "the fall of saigon: 40 years later. female announcer: get three years interest-free financing on brand name mattress sets. plus, get free delivery, and sleep train's 100-day low price guarantee. sleep train's interest free for 3 event ends sunday. ♪ your ticket to a better night's sleep ♪ big changes on the way for a bay area police department in the wake of several high- profile police shootings across the country. kpix 5's anne makovec in san francisco with the plan to give every officer a body camera. >> reporter: the mayor is proposing spending $6.6 million for 1800 body cameras one for every officer on the force. >> we would be fools to sit here with our heads in the sand and not pay attention to the dialogue that's happening across the entire country. >> reporter: city leaders hope this body camera will breed trust between officers and the public after several killings of unarmed black men by police across the nation sparked outrage and mistrust. >> this is a role for technology to be playing in allowing us to build more public trust and also transparency and accountability with our residents. >> reporter: this killing in south carolina brought the importance of video evidence to light. it was shot on the cell phone and proved an officer shot walter scott as he was running away. body cameras would provide that evidence in every case and help protect officers from false accusations. >> the officers know they are wearing them so their behavior is going to be better and by telling the citizens that they are going to be camera, then the citizens are going to behave better, too. all the way around it's going to make for a better police- citizen interaction. >> reporter: there are still some concerns about privacy and what rules would govern the cameras' use. the police commission will take input from the police union and the aclu. in san francisco, anne makovec, kpix 5. >> the mayor's budget also calls for the hiring of 250 police officers within the next year. it still needs approval from the full board of supervisors. san francisco sheriff ross mirkarimi laid out his case for putting body cameras on deputies in prisons and jails. he wants 30 cameras for a pilot program the cost $50,000. the program would be a first for a california sheriff's department. >> i believe that the national clamor where everybody is saying body cameras, body cameras must also include prisons and jails. >> the sheriff's department has just completed an internal probe into allegations of deputy staged jail fights. mirkarimi plans to fire the suspected ringleader. three other deputies were on paid leave and they are now back at work pending further investigation. people who record video of a police encounter in california will now be able to send the video directly to the aclu. an app called mobile justice is expanding here. the aclu said california is the latest state to get these cell tools. let's talk drought and the drought emergency going on. governor jerry brown trying to break a logjam that's holding up the delta water project. he introduced a revised version of the plan today. part of it involves the twin tunnels for the delta. an animated governor stressed that this is the best option for both the water supply and the environment. >> so yes, this costs money but it -- compared to what? compared to a stadium? compared to what?! i mean, this is the basics of human existence having an environment we can live with that will work for our economy, that will work for our native species, and that will be sustainable and reliable into the future. >> opponents of the delta tunnel project say it would primarily benefit downstate agribusinesses. there is also the price tag which is estimated at $67 billion. the governor is hearing it from his own party when it comes to solving the state's drought problems. a letter from democratic state senators is urging him to start tapping into funds that voters approved in last november's election. they would like to see the money go to projects month not years from now. a new high-tech device makes sure water isn't wasted in the drought. kpix 5's mike sugerman shows us what's helping find the leaks in pipes. >> reporter: there's water leaking on pennsylvania street the equivalent of five swimming pools a day. roxy the pomeranian knew about it a few days ago before it got to the surface. >> walking a couple feet into the street and sniffing along that line and i couldn't figure out why she was doing that and it turns out there's been a leak. >> reporter: it's a low tech way of finding a leak before it bubbles up. there are obviously better ways. this system uses sensitive sensors to hear where water is rushing. shouldn't be hear. there's a leak that needs to be patched. pipes underground leak for all kinds of reasons, somes they are old. this is laid in 1893. some city pipes were installed in the 1860s! ♪[ music ]♪ >> reporter: 145 years later a new device will be looking at them with the highest of high- tech eyes. it's called smart mall. >> it rolls through the pipe and as it rolls by it identifies and listens acoustically for leaks and air pockets. >> reporter: pure tech says san francisco is the latest utility to rent this one of a kind device. it finds small leaks underground before the big ones and ones that don't yet exist. >> they also use it to identify the failures of tomorrow or conditions of pipes where leaks will develop in the future. >> reporter: it uses sound to save water. but at $400,000, is it a sound investment? >> we think so because it's -- once we pro-actively find one of these leaks and repair it, not only are we saving millions of gallons of water, but we also are preventing a large main break which can cost $400,000 in one incident. >> reporter: this leak by the way stopped later in the morning. roxy might have told them about it days ago. mike sugerman, kpix 5. >> san franciscans report over 900 leaks a year, millions of gallons of water wasted. we are not going to waste water this weekend. >> nope. >> time for a look at our forecast. chief meteorologist paul deanno live in sunny santa clara. i bet it's warm down there for that 49er draft party, huh, paul? >> reporter: it's toasty. it's even warmer when you have this extra light thrown on your face but it's about 88 degrees down here. it's april so naturally we're talking football, right, huh? giants a's? no. warriors no? this party is for football. it's the 2015 san francisco 49ers draft party. looks like number 11 just made their pick. the 9ers are picking 15. so within 40 minutes or less we'll know who the newest san francisco 49er is. they also unveiled their new alternate jerseys. they are all black with red letters. got to admit they look cool. colin kaepernick was out here about 10 minutes ago. 90s and 80s in the areas. the cooldown actually begins tomorrow. it is tough to get a prolonged heat wave here because we are next to the cooler ocean. tomorrow san francisco down 14 degrees high 70. oakland down to 75. san jose only down a bit so the more significant cooling will be near the water. microclimate forecast if you will be in santa clara the next couple of days still warm tomorrow 84. saturday you're still sunny but 10 degrees cooler down to 74. lots going on this weekend. the a la carte and art festival in mountain view highs in the low 70s on saturday and sunday. of the cinco de mayo festival it's already may starting tomorrow, that is on saturday mainly sunny in the city. 64 degrees in san francisco. we are looking at an offshore wind giving us hot weather today but the wind begins to flip tomorrow. it will be more of an onshore flow and when that happens the cooldown begins near the water first but it will push inland this weekend. highs tomorrow: significant cooling saturday and sunday down to the 70s inland. 60s near the bay. many of us would agree that maybe that's more comfortable than what we had today and tomorrow. and then next week we do not see rainfall in the forecast. but we will be down to highs in the 70s near the bay. and highs just a few degrees warmer inland. it's a festive atmosphere out here, guys. it's just the draft. we're just picking a few guys to be on the team but would you think we're already gearing up for the super bowl which i hear is going to be on our station coming up in february. >> somebody said that. >> we have that countdown clock somewhere. >> we can bring it up at some point here. 282, i think. thank you, paul. still ahead, they have an epic view of the bay. but you're going to find out why some students on the cal campus may be forced to give that up. >> plus, they are trying to fence out neighborhood nuisances. but some people say this is more of an eyesore than a a window could be closing on one of the east bay's most spectacular views! a big condo complex is planned for a prime spot in berkeley. new at 6:00 kpix 5's da lin says cal students want no part of this. >> reporter: if a picture is worth 1,000 words, then this view is priceless. >> i see hope. and i see beauty and i see vastness. and it's kind of like a reminder of where i am and how far that i've come. >> reporter: walking down the campus main drag this is what countless students and alum have seen every day. alcatraz on the left and the golden gate bridge in the middle. >> it's cool. >> reporter: in fact, the road and the view are some of the selling points during campus tours for high school students. >> our view of the golden gate bridge is something that unifies us as a student body. but some students worry they will lose the view. developers plan to build an 18- story apartment complex in downtown berkeley. students say it will block part of their view and if the trees are trimmed, they say it will expose the building even more. >> i am pro-development but not in one of the most cherished views that the university of california berkeley has held on to for over 100 years. >> reporter: she recently started an online petition to ask the city to block the development. so far close to 2500 people have signed it. mayor tom bates says campanelli way isn't a landmark and the city needs housing. >> it's an important way but i don't think it has to necessarily see the golden gate bridge. we need downtown affordable housing built so it's a trade- off. >> reporter: but opponents say that building would be luxury housing. >> this is something we save for future generations. they can do their building on either side. the motto of the university of california is fiat lux. let the light shine. i would like to see the sun shine over the golden gate bridge every day as i walk to class. >> reporter: da lin, kpix 5. >> a cal spokesman says the downtown development is out of its jurisdictional together. the developer didn't return our call for comment. a popular and free san jose workout spot is being downsized. the 233-step staircase at a communication hill neighborhood now has chain-link fencing taking up the left side. neighbors in the past have complained of noise, litter and people drinking there late at night. the city says it's a temporary measure to see if it reduces foot traffic. but some of the joggers who use it feel it's the city's and neighborhood's way of keeping them out. >> it's almost like waiting in line for a ride. >> it's in a way especially if it gets crowded you only have one side now two people barely fit. >> the city says there are plans to build another full sized staircase elsewhere in the neighborhood that will be used exclusively for runners. still ahead, the anniversary of the fall of saigon hitting close to home for so many people. >> i look back and i think what an incredible journey and it has been quite the journey. >> a well-known bay area journalist tells her story of escape and survival. >> why people in baltimore will have to wait longer to find out what exactly led to the death of a man while in police custody. >> and rescued from the rubble. five days after the devastating nepal earthquake, crews finding signs of [ drums ] san jose is remembering the 40th anniversary of the fall of saigon and the end of the vietnam war. men and women put on their uniforms to lay flowers and place flags at the south vietnamese military memorial. it is the only memorial of its kind in the united states. those who lived through it say it's important for people to understand how the vietnamese community has changed. >> i want your people come here to learn who are vietnamese. why they come here. when. and the reason they come here. >> 160,000 vietnamese call san jose their home. that is the largest population in any city outside of vietnam. all this week we have been bringing you stories of some of the hundreds of thousands of vietnamese who escaped to the united states to build new futures in a new land. among the refugees a face that you will no doubt recognize. but you probably haven't heard her whole story. until now. ♪[ music ]♪ >> okay. tui in three, two, one. >> reporter: thuy vu is a well- known award winning journalist. >> joining us now. >> reporter: host of the venerated kqed newsroom. >> i feel proud of what we've been doing on this show. >> reporter: it's hard to imagine 40 years ago a violent and chaotic moment in history would change her life so dramatically. >> thousands of people were roaming da nang airfield. >> reporter: it all began in vietnam. >> i look back and think what an incredible journey and it has been quite a journey. >> reporter: her parents married and settled in saigon where they raised a family. >> i was the second to the youngest of eight kids. >> angry men left behind. >> reporter: in 1975, as the vietcong invaded the south, fear and panic gripped the streets. when saigon fell, thuy and her family had to flee. >> i didn't really realize that we would probably never return to vietnam to live ever again. i didn't realize we were losing our country and our home. >> reporter: to get out the family had to split up. half went by cargo ship, the other half by plane. on the boat, thuy and several siblings. on the plane, her mother who made sure to bring one son. >> she said she wanted to have at least one boy with her so that if we all died at sea, she would have a son to carry on the family name. that breaks my heart. [ crying ] >> reporter: it was a perilous journey by sea. an american ship eventually rescued them. they were brought to a refugee camp in guam and housed in a tent city. a few months later -- >> they discovered the other half of my family had landed in fort jaffe, arkansas at a relocation center there. >> reporter: a lutheran church group in duluth, minnesota, sponsored the family. >> going from vietnam to duluth, minnesota, wow! quite a shock. >> reporter: it was really cold. >> it was a struggle. my parents, you know, did menial jobs, my mom worked in a garment factory. my dad worked in a pizza factory. >> reporter: after a few years, thuy's mom decided they would move to sunny california where the schools were great. >> it dawned on my mom that -- and my dad that really the only way to better our lives was to make sure to get the kids a good education. >> reporter: the family ended up in silicon valley where chips replaced crops. and mother boards and microprocessors ruled. her parents worked on the assembly lines as did thuy during the summer. >> i would be putting in the transistors and capacitytors. >> reporter: she graduated from cal with honors in rhetoric. at berkeley, thuy fell in love with journalism. she anchored a morning newscast from the campus radio station. >> i did that twice a week and i loved it. >> there's a bag of sweet treats. >> reporter: the young college grad landed numerous local gigs in broadcast news. she worked at kpix 5 as an on air journalist. thuy won a major award for her report on the continuing impact of agent orange in vietnam. >> welcome to kqed newsroom. >> reporter: as for her incredible journey to the united states, thuy marvels as what she calls her life lessons. >> tenacity, hope, a sense of hard work and a sense of sticking it out. those are things that will pull you through a lot of really tough situations. >> reporter: lessons she hopes to pass on to her own daughter. ♪[ music ]♪ >> no doubt an amazing story. we have a lot more on the lives every vietnamese americans in the bay area coming up after this newscast in our special "fall of saigon: 40 years later." to the unrest in baltimore now. the city's police department has delivered its report on the death of freddie gray to the state's prosecutor's office a day early. cbs reporter craig boswell tells us that investigation will not be made public. >> reporter: the investigation into the death of freddie gray is no longer in the hands of the baltimore police department. >> our task force charged with investigating the tragic death of mr. freddie gray furnished over the contents of that investigation to -- turned over the contents of that investigation to the state attorney's office. >> reporter: it revealed new information about the timeline on the day of gray's arrest. >> the new stop by our wagon was at freed mon and moshier. that's new to us. >> reporter: the 25-year-old gray died a week later from an unexplained spinal injury. a "washington post" report claimed another prisoner inside the van could hear gray banging against the walls. it cites a baltimore police document in which the prisoner said he believed gray was intentionally trying to injure himself. cbs station wjz spoke to dante allen who says he was the prisoner in the van. >> and they trying to make it say like i told them that freddie gray did it to his self. why would i say he did that to his self. >> reporter: many people are calling for calm writing messages on chalk on this burned-out shell of the cvs. residents are concerned that keeping the police report secret could lead to more violence in the streets. >> the citizens are not going to be very happy. it will be unrest. they want answers. >> reporter: the national guard and police will be back on the streets tonight enforcing a mandatory curfew. craig boswell cbs news, baltimore. >> pretty remarkable rescues going on in nepal again today. crews pulled two more survivors from collapsed buildings five days after the devastating earthquake. a 24-year-old woman was rescued near kathmandu's main bus terminal. she was trapped alongside three bodies in the rubble from the hotel where she worked. sniffer dogs were able to find her. american rescue crews helped to pull a 15-year-old boy from the wreckage of a seven-story building. the teen said that he survived on butter and water from wet clothing. he threw rocks at a piece of metal to get the attention of crews working above. we have a closer look at how complicated this rescue was. >> reporter: rescuers say this area was covered with rubble and they have to dig 200 feet down to get here. he was buried under a cement slap for five days. you can see how small it is next to this motorcycle in the basement of this nine story building. >> rescuers had gone back to that area after finding a survivor just two days ago. still ahead, a pay cut for a bay area tech executive when her company just didn't deliver. >> plus, far from home, how crews managed to rescue this sea lion on city streets. we showed these kids some items from a nearby store, whoa! but they didn't know they were all tobacco products. ooh this is cool. it smells like gum. yummy. this smells like strawberry. ooh, are these mints? with colorful packaging and fruit and candy flavors that kids love, who do you think tobacco companies are targeting? do we get to keep any? just can't seem to escape... another sneeze attack... you may be muddling through allergies. don't get caught off guard. try zyrtec® dissolve tabs. powerful allergy relief, now in a tablet that starts dissolving instantly. zyrtec® dissolve tabs. muddle no more™. female announcer: sleep train's interest free for 3 event! ends sunday. it's your last chance to get three years interest-free financing on beautyrest black, stearns & foster serta icomfort even tempur-pedic. plus, get free delivery, and sleep train's 100-day low price guarantee. but hurry! sleep train's interest free for 3 event ends sunday. ...guaranteed! ♪ sleep train ♪ ♪ your ticket to a better night's sleep ♪ some mixed earnings results from the three big bay area companies. here's the scorecard on whether they were able to beat wall street's expectations. drugmaker gilead saw its income nearly double. visa says its income fell by 3% to start the year. but that was still enough to beat what analysts expected. linkedin stock is down 20% in after-hours trading. a disappointing forecast for the spring sent its stock plummeting. and it was a down day overall for the markets. the dow was down 195. nasdaq down 82. s&p was off by 21. even though yahoo didn't perform as expected, ceo marissa mayer still raked in $42 million last year. mayer was docked $900,000 from her bonus and $12.4 million from her stock awards. the company's board sets performance goals each year for its executives. coming up, stranded in san francisco. what it took to wrangle this little sea lion found just wandering around on the sidewalk. >> some professional franchises cannot get 10,000 people to a game. the san francisco 49ers have 10,000 folks here for a draft party! how about that? we are live in santa clara as the 9ers are about to make their pick. that's coming up. >> and i'm dennis o'donnell. coming up, did the raiders score in today's nfl draft? >> with the fourth pick, the oakland raiders select -- >> did the a's score in the bottom of the 9th? >> told them -- > it's how low you score at harding park. >> in closer -- ricky makes another one! >> ♪ at kaiser permanente everything you need is under one roof. another way care and coverage together makes life easier. okay, a little easier. become a member of kaiser permanente. because together, we thrive. ♪ and here are our top stories tonight. about an hour, test will is expected to go from cars to homes when it unveils a brand- new battery designed for hopes and businesses to allow people to store energy for use at night potentially going off the grid completely of the. japan's prime minister shinzon abe is making a swing through the bay area to emphasize tech ties between japan and silicon valley. he made stops today at stanford and tesla. he is having dinner with the governor ton. oakland mayor libby schaaf release her budget today with the goal of 800 police officers by the year 2018. a sea lion is stuck out of the water. his name is rubbish. and check out this little critter. he was spotted early this morning between some cars in the marina area every rear in san francisco. the marine mammal center was able to capture the puc in february stranded in santa barbara county. wow, that's amazing. that's a trip. veterinarians say finding pups out of water is becoming more and more common. >> there isn't enough fish for the sea lions mother to take care of their pups so the earlier this year we had hundreds and hundreds of little sea lion pups like rubbish back in february, march and april come in and just because they are starving to death. >> vets will try to help rubbish put weight back on and release him back into the wild again. the mammal center says it has rescued more animals in the first four months of this year than in all of 2014. people are waiting longer in life to have children. that also means children are growing up without grandparents. we'll tell you more about the grandparent deficit and how it's affecting families tonight on bay area nightbeat at 10:00 on our sister station, kbcw 44/cable 12. we are talking about the huge crowds down in santa clara. a lot of anticipation at the 49ers draft party. paul deanno is talking about weather. >> it's amazing how many people are here for a draft party. here's the breaking news. the niners were just supposed to pick, they traded their pick to san diego so we are waiting for the 9ers first pick but up to about 10,000 9ers faithful are here. and they are just waiting to find out who the newest 49er is. of course right across the street from the levi's stadium where the season will end with super bowl 50 coming up in about 8 months from now. so let's take outside. folks are excited. yes, they are! we are down to 81 in san bruno but warm. oakland 80s. livermore 89. san francisco after a high in the 80s down to 77. san jose 87. santa rosa 85 degrees. it will be a mild night. it will be clear tonight. lows will be in the 50s. san francisco 55. oakland 55. vallejo 56 degrees. we were hot today because mother nature completely eliminated the influence of the chilly pacific ocean. we do that with an offshore wind or an east wind of the we have that today. that's why we were hot. starting tomorrow, the onshore wind comes back. and the ocean influence does return. as that happens we cool down at the coast and near the bay and not until saturday away from the water so clear tonight, it will be mild to warm. sunny tomorrow. not warm for everyone. if you are away for the water you will be. cooling down tomorrow afternoon and cooler for the bay area by this weekend. taking a tour of the bay area talk about highs for tomorrow. half moon bay only 66. cupertino 86. mountain view high 82. pleasant hill 86 degrees. san ramon 83. dublin 84. kentfield 82. napa tomorrow 85. and san leandro 74 degrees. windsor your high tomorrow 84 and ukraine 90. your extended forecast, call for warm weather tomorrow. everybody cools down on saturday cooling down more on sunday down to the 70s inland 60s near the bay and nice weather for the first half of next week. no rain for the next seven days. morning fog, afternoon sunshine starting saturday. look at the sea of red! not a pre-game. still 8 months from the super bowl. this is a draft party as we await who the newest 49ers will be the first round is tonight. the 9ers faithful ready already for the 2015 season. dennis will have more live with sports coming up next. the raiders hit a home run last year picking up three players that should turn the franchise around including derek carr but the young quarterback desperately needed a receiver. here's the raiders first pick in today's draft. >> oakland raiders select amar'e cooper. wide receiver >> he was considered by cooper by most analysts the best receiver in the draft. he caught 142 passes over 1700 yards last season with alabama and tied the sec record with 31 touchdowns in his three years at alabama. >> you have to have speed and play making ability on the outside. that was a goal coming into this weekend and you know that was a real fine football player that we added to the organization today. >> the first two picks were both quarterbacks with heisman trophies on the resumes. the bucs selected "jameis winston" followed by the titans picking marcus mariota out of oregon. the 49ers traded down to number 17. so they have not made their pick yet. they also unveiled this. a new alternative uniform that they will wear twice this season. can you say mo money? augusta has raised creek you know. harding park got lake merced day two match play championship. bradley taking out his frustration on the bag. ricky fowler had the putter working down the stretch. he beat j-lohe is a winner. shot of the day charles pitches in for eagle. he came back from three down with just 7 holes to play beating dustin johnson. mcilroy and snedeker were tied until 15. he beat snedeker and will face billy horschel tomorrow with a chance to advance. bubba watson won. another domination sensation -- oh, god bless you veronica. >> thank you. >> he beat hunter mahan who needed 27 holes to win. >> allergies. >> is that what it is? >> going around. >> horrible. >> the a's are the only team in baseball not to win a day game this year? >> come on. >> huston street trying to protect a four-run lead but then mark khanna base hit reddic is across 6-4. three batters later a line drive to center. mike trout plays it on a hop. lowery scores. it's a one run game. two out for ike davis. >> who? >> it's deep. it could be -- it is! caught. the fish mike trout ends the game with that catch. the a's lose 6-5. they lost five of six on the home stand. ike davis, oh, so close to a walkoff home run. >> i knew i hit it pretty well. went back to the track and just jumped up and caught it. >> pulled the oblique doing the fist pump. it was, um, -- that's the mvp. >> and the warriors finally back on the court sunday at oracle when they begin their second round series against the grizzlies. golden state will have its hands full with the memphis big men. draymond green will be matched up against randolph and you can guarantee the former michigan state spartans will have plenty to say about each other throughout the series. >> we saw a lot. we played a lot. so -- but it's all fun. now, um, all love. >> is he on your level? >> he is. he quiet about it though. he ain't like -- you won't notice it but if you out there, he may not be like that with everybody but he always talking to me. >> i think draymond green kind of asked for it the way he -- but you know, memphis beat the warriors one game this season but then andrew bogut didn't play. >> right. >> bring them on. >> four straight maybe ken? >> could be. >> i'm thinking four. >> yeah. >> 49ers i understand my sources say are on the clock. i'll have that pick for you at 11:00. >> very good. >> and 10 on nightbeat at 10:00 on our sister station, kbcw 44/cable 12. >> don't forget that. >> for this is a kpix 5 news special. >> it was a scary time. >> saigon had not fallen yet. >> we left with nothing. >> the front was moving south and it was going to be a matter of hours. >> if i had stayed, i would probably have died. >> if they don't rescue us, definitely we will die. >> i think i'm a lucky one. >> made for a richer country. >> i'm so happy today. >> why? >> because i love america. ♪[ music ]♪ >> welcome, i'm veronica de la cruz. >> i'm kiet do. things for joining us at the presidio at operation babylift 40 years since the journey of thousands of children from vietnamese to america. >> it marks 40 years of the fall of saigon as the north rolled into the capitol and ended a long brutal war. 40 years since three million people began to leave vietnam, cambodia and laos. a look at the exodus that brought thousands of vietnamese to our shores the chaos they escaped and the new futures they built. we begin with allen martin to explain how it all came to this. >> reporter: april 1975, for the u.s., the vietnam war has been officially over for two years. the last combat soldiers were gone. and only military advisers and marines protecting u.s. interests remained. but south vietnam has been trying to hang on, to no avail. the communist north and the vietcong are relentless in their drive south. the u.s. marines and air force use helicopters to airlift more than 1,000 american civilians out

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