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he struggled with the decision to canonize father junipero serra. for his cousin it was something that he prayed for and worked hard for for 37 years. to become a saint you need to perform two miracles. he only had one. her sisters at the church prayed to father junipero serra and in two weeks she was healed. >> she taught children and was just a simple soul. never wanted to be in the lime light. i know her spirit is here today. >> reporter: she was flown to rome where she was poke for days till they found no trace of the disease. many people bought rosaries and the pope blessed them. so they be taken the memory of today and a piece of pope francis that they will have forever and i am one of those people. i bought these, i don't know if we can show these, these are the bracelets i bought today and these are the rosary beads they have for sale here and they were made in italy. what is unique about this one, it has a picture of pope francis on it. it is a great momento. so mom and grandmother if you are watching, this is what you are getting when i come back. live in walked, tara moriarty -- in washington, d.c., tara moriarty, back to you. >> can you talk more on the pope and being his fist visit to the -- first visit to the united states. >> reporter: he came back in the pope mobile and you hear these cheers, coming from the far corner of the huge yard here. he is coming. he is coming. he comes by and he has this light and warmth about him. seems so at ease. simple is a very good word used to describe him by the archbishops. easy to talk to. down to earth. he is waving and he made the rounds twice. i think he knew maybe they weren't expecting me so i will make sure everybody can get their photo. we were if he ask people who spoke spanish -- we were standing next to people who spoke spanish. anyone of any religion could appreciate because he is such a historical figure for our generation. >> you were talking on the phone earlier, you told me something interesting, the pope has a busy schedule and yet only has one lung. >> reporter: he does. people don't realize that about him. he had an infection when he was younger. most of his lung had to be removed. but he is healthy. according to the vatican. i don't did you tell that because the -- i don't doubt that because he has stamina. he has been on the go. tomorrow he will appear observe congress and then he will have lunch with the homeless. he definitely has lot of strength. >> definitely does. live in washington, d.c., thank you. the pope's journey included a lot of politics and pageantry. ktvu's keba arnold with a look at his big day. >> reporter: large crowds turned out today. his day began with a welcoming ceremony at the white house. [ music ] >> reporter: pope francis kicked off his visit to washington, d.c. with a meeting with the commander in chief this morning at the white house. a crowd of 15,000 invited guests including leaders from the muslim, hindu and buddhist faith were on hand to give him a warm welcome. standing on the white house lawn president obama greeted the pope who is making his first visit to the united states. >> holy father, on behalf of michelle and myself, welcome to the white house. [ cheers and applause ] >> mr. president, i deeply thank you for your welcome and -- [ indiscernible ] >> reporter: after the welcome the president and pope francis had a private meeting where they discussed a number of pressing world issues, including the refugee crisis and climate change. later in the day he worked his way through the streets of the nation's capitol where he was greeted by massive crowds. during the procession one girl carrying a banner was lifted up and received a kiss and blessing from pope francis. she handed him a letter asking him to help u.s. immigrants. a short time later he had a prayer service at the cathedral of st. matthew. he addressed bishops in italian where he urged them to become closer to their parishioners. pope francis made his remarks before 300 bishops from all over the united states. >> we know today was really busy so what is next? >> reporter: tomorrow he will address the joint congress there. after that he heads to new york city and then ends it in philadelphia. he is one busy man. >> i was adorable seeing the security guard pick up the kid and hand him the letter. >> we were talking about that, she will never forget that moment and her family as well. >> it signifies this type of poem, a people's pope. >> reporter: she shied away when the security came and then the pope called her over. >> so nice. thank you. the canonization was cause for celebration in car nel today where -- car nel today but -- carmel today but not everyone was happy. how protesters and supporters of father junipero serra marked the canonization. if you weren't able to watch it we posted the mass on www.ktvu.com. police say they have made 5 arrests including three teenagers in a violent home invasion that sent two people to the hospital at a home on dill court on july 22. police say the family was sleeping when three suspects broke in and then beat them with a bat. he is still hospitalized. investigators say they have recovered stolen property. two of the teens did not break into the home but police say they conspired with the others. bail is set at $2 million each. the teenagers will be tried as adults. caltrains service back to normal after a man was hit causing major delays after 7:30 a.m. this morning at the san antonio station in mountain view. the man was hit by a southbound train. he was taken to the hospital. his condition hasn't been released. the investigation into the victims of a serial killer was sophicked in san francisco. investigate -- solved in san francisco. john wayne gracie. a woman who thought her brother was one of them proceeded dna. her dna was uploaded to a database and matched a man killed in 1979. >> never lose home foreclosure that you longed for. believe me although i am sad, the knowing is so much better. >> he was from chicago and that is that is where he will be buried. san francisco police are looking at his case. a shake up at volkswagen because of a scandal involving emissions. who is out of a job and how california played a part in bringing him down. >> and uber is expanding. the marriage restitation it has planned. -- restoration it has planned. >> and the valley fire, investigators found more human remains and where federal money is expected to go first. >> and tracking the warm up around here. how hot will it get? i will let you know for your bay area thursday. new developments tonight from the valley fire. authorities found remains last night in the town of cobb and they are presumed to be a 66- year-old, robert fletcher. based on the location and the evidence found they believe it is fletcher. he is the 4th person confirmed to have died from the valley fire. 75 acres burned and the fire destroyed 2,000 structures. help is on the way for victims. the head of fema from sidewalks in lake county. -- from walked is in lake county. -- weighed is in lake county. >> reporter: the money goes to them if they need a place to stay, a hotel, but they are urging the victims to register for assistance. >> reporter: changes are slowly happening in the after math of the valley fire but survivors know they ever a long road ahead. >> it is getting better. but that you are seeing the fake contractors, fake red cross. >> we lost everything. >> reporter: now that president obama signed a disaster declaration for lake county, local, state and federal officials are joining forces. >> it will take time and patience and effort. >> reporter: fema administrator toured the damage wednesday morning saying federal aid will go to the uninsured. they will help with temporary housing, rental assistances and low cost loans. >> it does mean they need to register with us so we can start the process. >> reporter: they already signed up 100 people at a shelter and if requested they may bring in temporary mobile homes. >> people don't have time to wait. they have to be red to go. -- ready to go. [ indiscernible ] >> hopefully it is quick. >> every little bit helps. >> reporter: fema says people can register online or by calling them directly. we put all of those details on our website, just visit www.ktvu.com. frank? what is it like being up there now? are they starting to clean up the remains from the homes? what is it like? >> reporter: people are going back to their properties, shifting through the damage, taking what they can. everything is just burned to a crisp. crews from local, state and federal authorities have not visited them to clean up. it is mostly the property owners that are cleaning up but it will be some time before they could take it out so they can go back and rebuild. >> so much work ahead. cristina rendon, thank you. we just learned the community of anderson springs will be allowed to go home tomorrow. this is video the day after the fire started. a man driving through flames to safety. because of the extreme fire danger there was a mandatory eevacuation order given. -- evacuation order given. that expires tomorrow at 5:00 p.m. the sheriff will close some roads tomorrow to help people return to homes. more progress against the butte fire in amador and calaveras counties. containment is now 84%. still 70 in the acres burned -- 70,000 acres burned. all evacuations are lifted but they are warning people to be alert for changes. investigators are not determined how this fire started. monterey county, the sheriff's office says the tassajara fire was caused by someone committed suicide. this weekend investigators said they found a man's body in a burning car in the fire zone. they haven't released the person's name. the fire destroyed 12 homes and burned 1,000 acres. it is 81% contained. our chief meteorologist now bill martin, talk about the weather. heated up -- [ talking at the same time ] >> yeah. came up. yeah. a few degrees. warming trend continues into tomorrow. into the next 48 hours temperatures back into the mid- 90s inland. clouds over head. a beautiful sunset tonight. this live camera looking at one of the prettiest cities in the world. clouds off the pacific in response to the tropical activity we had. tromtropical storms and hurricanes. you can see all that moisture. most of it avoids us. this plume right here. you will see that right there. that will give us partly cloudy skies tomorrow morning when you wake up and then it will be gone by the afternoon. no fog long the coast right now. beautiful day, evening as well. beautiful sunset with the clouds. current temperatures, 90 out there. warmer than yesterday. right? fairfield, 93 antioch. how much warmer than yesterday? fairfield 16 degrees up. concord 17 degrees up. sfo 10 degrees warmer. 10 hayward. 12 san jose. a warmer day today. noticeable. tomorrow will be warmer. the jumps won't be as possible, maybe three degrees. high clouds tomorrow morning. and then they go away and temperatures increase. patchy fog along the coast. thursday. 90s. reds. oranges 80s. yellows are 70s. there is your thursday forecast for san francisco. 79 degrees for a high in fran. san jose, looking at a high 89 degrees. air quality not too bad. the high pressure movers in. 95 vacaville. 93 clear lake. stenson beach 74. even the beaches fog free. patchy fog. fog free. beaches nice too. nice looking day tomorrow. tomorrow will be the warmest day of the week. similar to friday. but maybe cooler on friday. and along the coast, 60s to low 70. consider daly city coastal. warmer into your bay area thursday. warm on friday. saturday and sunday and monday temperatures cool down a little bit. heart of fire season. nothing big staring us down. we will be on alert. no heat advisories. >> nice. >> thank you. training today at sfo on how to respond to a major earthquake. why the airport says it is more prepared than other. >> and b.a.r.t. making changes to its ticket machines to make things easier for passengers. on the best brand name mattress sets. but the best rest event ends sunday at sleep train. ♪ your ticket to a better night's sleep ♪ welcome to subway, what can i make for you? how about our new flavor-packed italian hero, loaded with three authentic italian deli meats. including our new spiced capicola, our new cracked-pepper-seasoned mortadella and our always-delicious spicy genoa salami. enjoy this amazing taste combination on freshly baked bread, toasted with melty provolone, tomatoes and oregano. the new italian hero won't be here long, so try one today. subway. eat fresh. great change comes from doing the right thing. like the radical idea that health isn't an industry. it's a cause. so we do things differently. we combine care and coverage. and believe prevention is the most powerful of cures. so forgive us for not going with the flow. we just think the flow should go with us. which makes us rebels with one cause. your health. an emergency meeting about the refugee crisis. officialsmet in brussels. a deal was voted down by several countries. hungry's prime minister said he would fight back against attempts to settle them in his country. 5,000 refugees converged on the australian boarder with hungry. officials rescued 240 women and children from two camps controlled by a terrorist group in nigeria. it is had same group that -- the same group that kidnapped 270 girls last year. most of those girls are still missing. the president of china is visiting the united states. his first stop is washington state. he toured the boeing factory in everett, washington. china agreed to buy 300 jets from boeing. a deal worth $38 billion. boeing will build its first plant in china. the china's president is meeting with top american companies. >> we desperately need china and they need us. and the better off we can get along together the better off the world will be. >> the china's president will meet with president obama tomorrow and friday in washington, d.c. and president obama is expected to bring up the hacking of american companies by china. officials at san francisco international airport held their disaster drill to make sure they get everything right during a disaster. today's scenario, an earthquake. this helps them to coordinate how the emergency responders work together. >> in the event of a real earthquake sfo will be one of the key gateways for emergency services, support to come into the bay area. we want to be sure we are prepared. >> part of the drill included nimulating how crews on planes would -- simulating how crews on planes would perform. they conduct a drill every year rather than every three years as required. a building has been vacant since last year but not anymore. >> uber is a game changing company and its move is a game changer for us as well. uber is moving into the old sears building. a big deal for oakland but not everyone is excited about it. >> and questions about the response of the valley fire, details about the finger pointing between lake county fire agencies and san francisco. the drought is affecting at pg&e we've definitely put a focus on helping our agricultural customers through the drought. when they do an energy efficiency project and save that money they feel it right in their pocket book. it's exciting to help a customer with an energy efficiency project because not only are they saving energy but they are saving water. we have a lot of projects at pg&e that can help them with that and that's extremely important while we're in a drought. it's a win for the customer and it's a win for california. together, we're building a better california. the newest class of jail guards will soon be on the job. they graduated today. four weeks after the three guards were accused of killing an inmate. ktvu's john sasaki tells us the death led to changes in how they were taught. >> the newest deputies marched into their graduation ceremony in san jose. the start of the day -- the star of the day, he spoke to the graduates. [ indiscernible ] >> reporter: his mother couldn't be more proud of what he wants to accomplish. >> he is committed to the community and youth. >> reporter: this ceremony had a dark cloud hanging over head. the death of michael tyree on august 27. he was beaten to death by three jail deputies. >> we have to deal with people with mental health issues. michael tyree had mental health issues. its another technique in dealing with people. >> reporter: starting with this class they get almost 40 hours of additional training in dealing with the mentally ill. >> the more training the better. in the past we have done mental health training. >> reporter: he emphasized the need to treat the mentally ill more effectively. >> if you can't communicate with them in nay way they can understand -- [ indiscernible ] >> reporter: she says she is confident the changes will help. >> i feel like the department and the county really understand that there is an opportunity here to continue to -- [ indiscernible ] >> reporter: they will start their jobs in two weeks. in san jose, john sasaki, ktvu fox 2 news. with business booming uber is looking for room to grow and it picked a building in oakland to expand. they are buying the sear's building on 19th and broadway. ktvu's tom vacar tells us the building will be part of the new economy. >> the 86-year-old four story building has been empty since last year when sear's called it quits. after a $40 million restoration uber will house 3,000 employees on the upper three floors, making it one of the largest private sector employers. >> 1-5 employees is an oakland resident. the bay area is our home. >> uber is a game changing company and its move is a game chammer -- game changer for us as well. it provides that confidence of other tech companies this is a great place to be. >> reporter: early opinion is divided. >> i want there to be more businesses in oakland. i want oakland to thrive. it is fine with me. >> i am worry about rents rising and it being crowded down here. and how crowded the b.a.r.t. station will be. stuff like that. hesitant. >> reporter: b.a.r.t. access was a farct in -- factor in uber's decision. >> oakland has a great transit system. we have more road capacity than we were using and bikeict, walkability, b.a.r.t., it is great. >> reporter: most will be dedicated to retail establishments. >> everybody is investing in it. there is opportunities for everyone. >> reporter: the mayor vows while the freedom of speech tradition will be protected, vandalism will not. tom vacar, ktvu fox 2 news. samsung's new campus in north san jose is open. it features a 10 story tower at north first street. some consider it a land mark. they broke ground two years ago. the company has 700 employees at the location with plans to triple the number. theyopeand new facility in mountain -- they opened a new facility in mountain view. 5-year-old is safe after a amber alert was issued this morning. his father abducted him. the sheriff's office says michael steele took his son at 4:30 a.m. this morning and authorities issued a amber alert. by 7:30 a.m. michael steele called police and told them he was in the sacramento area. he assaulted two adults before fleeing with the child. he was arrested. the valley fire in lake county is blamed for four deaths and the destruction of hundreds of homes. now members of the san francisco fire department are upset, they claim the city didn't do enough to help. henry lee is here now with more merchandise. >> reporter: san francisco fire chief is in -- more. >> reporter: san francisco fire chief is in hot-water tonight. this is a devastating blaze with 4 deaths. the chief says we can only send as many engines as weir able and -- as we are able and they sent crews to the butte fire in amador and calaveras counties. this is politics, we know the chief endured a lot of criticism. she was -- she with stood a vote of no confidence last year. >> was the thought here from the chief saying look, if we send the fire trucks up to lake county we won't have enough to cover incase there is a fire in san francisco? >> reporter: that's right. her priority is protecting san francisco and making sure all the fire stations here are covered. not to say they do not assist in outside aid. they have sent firefighters from san francisco across the state. so this is not the first time they have not sent crews to the fire. the resources, personnel and skegging. >> a letter -- scheduling. >> a letter we received today? >> reporter: he has written a scathing letter to the commission in san francisco. he says there is no reason san francisco could not send more than one fire engine. he said there are plenty of crews and gear to go around and he is saying there should have been morthan one sent to the scene. >> -- more than one sent to the scene. >> we sent what we could in terms of pieces of equipment and the chief also offered personnel to relieve the people that were on the front lines there. >> so, you said earlier that the chief is not popular, she with stood a no confidence vote. say she was popular, all the firefighters liked her, would we still have the same consideration? >> reporter: not as much. everyone will be concerned about the command. you can imagine if she sent multiple fire crews outside of san francisco and we had a tragic fire in the city. there would have been criticism for not having enough firefighters to handle a tragedy here. >> it feels like it is -- >> reporter: it is tough. she proved she can with stand the heat. she weathered many incidents in the past. turned down a job offer for london. she is still here and making the tough decisions. she thought long and hard before deciding to send one engine. >> henry lee, thank you. the man who became a saint today is buried on the california central coast and that was caused for celebration and protests. how they are responding to critics of father junipero serra's canonization. >> and the back lash against volkswagen is growing. what the ceo did today and what a california group is now demanding. he was set for a new contract extension instead volkswagen ceo is out after dealing with a cheating scandal. more now from london. >> reporter: volkswagen is switching gears in the wake of the emission scandal. martinmartin winterkorn -- volkswagen ceo martin winterkorn stepping down saying i am stunned that misconduct on such a scale was possible. as ceo i accept responsibility for the irregularities found. 11million diesel cars around the world have software allowing them to cheat emissions tests. it causes the engines to run cleaner during testing. and emitting 40 times the legal pollution limit. >> we want to make sheer martin winterkorn -- clear martin winterkorn had no knowledge. >> reporter: they could have fines as much as $18 billion. they warn of severe action against any wrong doing. >> very important for the victim's interest to be protected. >> reporter: martin winterkorn's contract was set to be extended two years to 2018 on friday. instead a new chief will have to be found. fox news. a consumer group is demanding a car buy back program from volkswagen. they want to make them pay. it says they should take back any of the cars consumers were tricked into buying and issue full refunds. h there are a couple of -- >> there are a couple of victims. one is all of us who have been effected by pollution. we are the victims. and anyone who believed it was clean and it wasn't. paid a lot of money for a car that wasn't what it was advertised to be. >> california regulators helped to initiate the investigation. they noticed high emissions when the vehicles were in use last year and after testing and collaboration they pushed for a recall. when that didn't fix the problem they were forced into talks and then came clean about the cheating. a big screen, a cheering crowd and a school closed nearby. >> i am lucky to be here. >> not everyone, though, was there celebrating. the people who say father junipero serra is more sinner than saint. >> also ahead, no traditional animal therapy, where patients work with everything from a cap tool a -- camel to a parrot. >> clouds out there. it is heating up. 10 degrees today and 5 tomorrow. how hot it will be in your neighborhood and if there is a chance of rain on the horizon. . [ music ] another look tonight that canonization mass in washington, d.c. elevating father junipero serra to sainthood. it was a historic day. ktvu's azenith smith tells us there is controversy over the decision to make father junipero serra a saint. >> reporter: with the bells at the mission ringing, pope francis bestowed father junipero serra the highest honor in the catholic church, sainthood. as the first hispanic american saintust sust credited with -- saint father junipero serra is credited with building the missions in california. students watched the historic event. >> i feel it is really special. i am lucky to be here. >> few feet away, a dozen protesters gathered. >> it is so sad that as a man of god that he doesn't care what thousands of californian indians are saying. >> reporter: she says father junipero serra is more of a sinner than a saint for his harsh treatment towards native americans. but not all indians felt the same way. >> make him a saint, or don't, we don't care. to us, you know, it doesn't matter. as far as the atrocities that were done we read they were done by the span yards. >> reporter: -- spaniards. >> reporter: in response they said they are working with tribes bringing back father junipero serra's message. >> father junipero serra crossed cultural lines. and that is something we need to really try do in our own day and age is respect all people. >> reporter: every year they say they receive tens of thousands of visitors, now they expect that number to increase. azenith smith, ktvu fox 2 news. >> now tomorrow the pope will address congress. thursday night he will head to new york to attend the united nations general assembly and a religious ceremony at the 9/11 memorial and museum and then he will travel to philadelphia and visit independence hall and heads back sunday night. the commission, all those folks, spectacular weather. >> beautiful along the coast today. fog not an issue. temperatures came up. they warm further tomorrow. clouds now, they mean make for a beautiful -- they will make for a beautiful sunset. at the beach, cliff house, you will love it. beautiful night to be out in the city. stunning. over night lows tonight in the 50s and low 60. these are the highs from today. 90 antioch. that is up from yesterday, 5, 10 degrees. fairfield up today. 66 pacifica. cooler along the coast, can is what you expect. -- which is watt you expect. you -- what you expect. the higher clouds, you can see them, yeah, streaming in off the pacific. very active pacific. that spewed tropical moisture into the atmosphere. now -- that was a live picture. this is the satellite. no fog along the coast. what you will see, come in closer, the clouds present at sunset tonight. this isn't fog. just high clouds. it will give you a beautiful sunset along the ocean beach. warm air. high pressure sinks and warms. it will get warmer tomorrow. or as warm tomorrow. warmer today. mild to warm at the beaches. that is nice. the forecast will be patchy fog tomorrow morning. a lot of that is high cloud cover. and temperatures -- the high clouds i showed you. and the temperatures tomorrow into the 90s. 90s in the hottest spots. mid-90s in the hottest spots. 95 fairfield. 85 vallejo. heat inland. 94 brentwood. 94 livermore. good air quality so far. fire danger will come up. a beautiful bay for your bay area thursday. friday looks like this. saturday and sunday, temperatures trend down. drop off a bit. look at the bay temperatures. inland. coast. or bay and coast. bay temperatures warm. right? san jose upper 80s tomorrow. the five-day forecast. nice looking five-day forecast. look at that picture. sunset tonight -- >> beautiful. >> stunning. drops 4, 5 degrees. stunning sunset. >> great sun sets. thank you. it ain't over till it is over. an athlete is quoted more thanpots but -- poets -- than poets, but yogi berra was. >> and in minutes, new at 6:00 p.m. new developments in the search for a missing bay area family. after a possible third set of remains is discovered in a burned out cabin 100 miles away. >> we are now treating this investigation as a homicide and arson investigation. >> what we are learning from authorities. female announcer: sleep traends sunday.st event don't miss your chance to get sleep train's very best mattresses at the guaranteed lowest price. plus, pay no interest for three years on beautyrest black, stearns & foster, serta icomfort, even tempur-pedic. and rest even better with sleep train's risk-free 100-day money back guarantee. but the best rest event ends sunday at sleep train. ...guaranteed! ♪ sleep train ♪ your ticket to a better night's sleep ♪ >> therapy at john muir hospital, they were invited outside to mingle with a fox, a cat and a porcupine from the lion ranch. the yearly event to celebrate nationals rehabilitation awareness week. a camel was a big hit. she even gave a man a peck on the cheek. >> there is something peaceful, rewarding to see the unconditional love that animals have. >> gives patients an opportunity to come out enjoy -- out enjoy the sun, the animals. >> they have been using animal therapy as part of the rehabilitation program for 20 years. the baseball world lost an icon. the yankees icon and hall of famer yogi berra died at the age of 90 last night. he was one of the most respected players on the field and most interesting off the field. a look pack on the life -- back on the life of yogi berra. >> reporter: babe ruth, lieu garic and joe dimaggio and his brand of wisdom will live forever. lawrence peter berra born may 12, 1945. he was raised in the south side of it st. louis. he left school after 8th grade to work. a friend gave him his nickname, he said he looked like a yogi and it stuck. in 1943 he signed with the yankees. with world war ii, he joined the navy. he was discharged in 1946. by the end of the season he was wearing pinstripes. hitting a home run in his first game for the yankees. >> swings. that leaves the park. what do you know? lawrence peter berra, his first time at the plate against the a's and what does he do? he hits a home run. >> reporter: he anchored the ank yeas to the -- yankees till the 1960s. he was a 15 time all star. a 10 time world series champion. and a three time league mvp. all accomplishments made him a shoe in for the hall of fame in 1972. in addition he also has a special place in america's vunacular. quoted more often than most poets. it ain't over till it is it is over dash -- it's over. throughout his life he was renowned for his selflessness. given his time, his golf tournament, raised a million dollars for special needs scots in new jersey -- scouts in new jersey and. ktvu's ktvu fox 2 news at 6:00 p.m. starts now. >> new developments in the search for a missing bay area family aftera third set of -- after a third set of human remains is found in a burned out cabin. >> we are treating the investigation as a homicide and arson investigation. >> questions about what happened. investigators say it was no accident. good evening everyone. i am heather holmes. >> i am frank somerville. 10 days since a fire destroyed cabin. and today another grim discovery was made inside. another possible set of remains raising the death toll to three. we get new developments from ktvu's rob roth in the news room. have any of the remains been identified? >> reporter: none of the remains have been identified yet but it appears three sets of remains were found and three people from a family are missing. sheriff's investigators try to unravel the history of what happened. >> reporter: they have been missing since a fire destroyed their weekend cabin september 13 september 13th. his son stayed behind. at first the sheriff's department said they found two sets of human remains. today that changed. >> we possibly have a third set of remains that were located inside the cabin at the original fire scene and we are treating the investigation as a homicide and arson investigation. >> reporter: investigators would not say if they believe what happened to the family was a murder-suicide but they do not believe the public sin danger -- is in danger. >> the public does not need to worry about their safety. >> nothing that we are aware of in the personal lives or business dealings of the individuals involved that would give rise to anything of this nature. >> reporter: investigators canvassed the neighborhood where the family livered asking questions about the couple's cars and relationships. -- relationships. >> i am very sorry to see anything happen to those people. they were hard working. and took good care of their kids. >> reporter: investigators have not yet revealed the cause of the deaths or how the fire started. frank? >> rob roth in the news room, thank you. a history making day in washington, d.c. as pope francis celebrates his first mass in the united states and grans sainthood to a spanish missionary. -- grants sainthood to a spanish missionary. 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