Transcripts For KTVU KTVU Fox 2 News At 5pm 20151015 : compa

Transcripts For KTVU KTVU Fox 2 News At 5pm 20151015



detention center and been caught riding in stolen cars before. >> apparently he didn't learn his lesson. >> reporter: now three families are mourning including the family of a former san jose high school student. the san jose unified school district sent grief counselors to schools in the district to help students cope. >> if you know people are going to drive stupid or you are in a car that you know it is not going to be safe, or if you even ever get that horrible chest feeling, and you know something bad is going to happen, then try to -- you know, don't keep trying to go towards it. >> reporter: just absolutely heartbreaking. san jose police, they're still searching for the acura involved in this class. it's unclear if drugs or alcohol played a role. at last check that fourth victim, a 15-year-old, still in the hospital in critical condition. >> seeing their pictures is just heartbreaking. i think i may know the answer to this but i'm curious, the car that they were racing, are we to assume here that the person in that car did not stop and did not try to help even though these four people had just crashed? >> reporter: no, unfortunately the person in the acura involved in this crash, tore car, sped away. and so now police are asking for the public's help, if they know any information on this crash to contact them. >> thank you. now to new developments in two bay area killings, and those three drifters accused of killing a hiker and a tourist. they made their first appearance today in courtroom, and they looked very different from the pictures that we've seen of them so far. that trio is facing first- degree murder charges and life in prison or the death penalty if convicted. kristina recently doan was -- kristina rendon was in the courtroom today. >> reporter: the men sat stone faced, but alligood looked afraid. >> how would you feel? she turned 18 in july. this is overwhelming. >> reporter: cameras were not allowed inside courtroom k, something both the defense and prosecutors wanted. >> we just do not want to do anything to potentially further complicate issues having to do wii dent if i indication, if that becomes an issue. >> reporter: the trio is accused of murdering steven carter on a popular hiking trail, and murdering a canadian tourist at golden gate park in san francisco. the arraignment was postponed so the defendants could secure attorneys. lampley is represented by public defender david brown. brown says they plan to mount a vigorous and ethical defense. >> we do ask everyone to remember that media coverage is not evidence, and that all three defendants are still entitled to the presumption of inno 70s. >> reporter: if convicted all three could face life in prison or the death penalty. there are talks that a gag order could possibly be granted in this case. the suspects will be bang court october 26th. reporting in marin county, kristina rerkz ndon, fox 2 news. we now know the name of a man what started several fires inside a wal-mart. johnson was arrested on suspicion of arson. the customer since this cell phone video. police say johnson leaked lighter fluid around the store, then set on fire. but police are still trying to figure out y. johnson is due in court tomorrow in hayward. time for us to check in with our chief meteorologist bill martin to get a look on the forecast. boy, another beautiful day. >> it was beautiful. more sunshine, a few clouds, and slightly cooler, heather. as we head expwa the next couple of days cooler still. so we had those tied records yesterday. tied a record in san jose, hottest day of the week. now temperatures come down. look how much cooler it is in nap pennsylvania. that's 13 degrees cooler right now in napa than it was last night at this time. why is it cooling down? clouds coming in off the pacific. see them right here? and these clouds, these are some tropical clouds that will move in. check out this next click here. see the green area, especially right here? it's a chance for a sprinkle. so we go from tied records yesterday to a chance of a spring came in your bay area forecast. i'll tie it al together. sigh back here after the break. a chemical spill may be to blame for two recent fish die- offs in clear lake. it is reported that scientists working for trines that area believe that that's what happened. hundreds of fish ended up dying. fish and wildlife officials will only say the incidents are under investigation. >> an astronomy professor at the center of a sexual harassment scandal resigned today. a university investigation found that he had sexually harassed a number of students. in a statement today officials called his conduct contempt i believe and inexcusable. some were upset that he had only been reprimanded and was still teaching after the results of that investigation. officials said today that disciplinary action including termination is a complicated and lengthy process with no guaranteed outcome, and they said that his resignation was entirely appropriate. as the dust settles from last night's debate in the 2016 campaign season candidates from both sides of the aisle are weighing in on who they think came out on top. garrett tenney is in washington with our report. >> we're gonna win! >> reporter: hillary clinton and bernie sanders' camps are both declaring last night a success, the sanders campaign staying senator has raised more than $1.3 million since the debate, while clinton's campaign isn't disclosing any figures they're hoping it will move her past the summer slump. >> we're going to look back at last night as a turning point. >> reporter: many insiders say vice president joe biden may now be rethinking any plans to run for president, a decision he has yet to make. >> i was proud of them. i thought they all did well. >> reporter: while some republicans like donald trump and jeb bush took to twitter to give their armchair assessments, others took to the campaign trail. >> how many of y'all watched the democratic debate last night? everything i've seen of it, it really was a competition to see, you know, apparently there still are some rights in the bill of rights they haven't violated. >> reporter: it's the kind of rhetoric that further highlights differences between the two parties which seem to grow further apart on key issues particular during the presidential primaries. >> this is a race to the base. both sides know that americans are so polarized that it's really about turning out their most devoted followers. >> reporter: the republicans will square off for the third slefn debates on october 28th. democrats have five more on the calendar but many in the party, including some of the canned date, are hoping for more match- ups. in washington, i'm garrett tenney, fox news. >> a new poll shows that californians have mixed feelings about dianne feinstein. she has a 44% probably rating. when it comes to seek relings 2018, 43% of voters think it is a good idea, but 41% are opposed. the poll reports that her current approval ratings are similar to the last two surveys from 2013 and 2014. of course we all know no baseball playoffs in the bay area this year but there was a lot of madness on the field in toronto. >> one of the wildest innings in playoff baseball. it even included security on the field. joe fonzi is here now to walk us through what happened. >> if ore baseball fan this is the best time of year, if you don't after dog in the hunt, but it was an elimination game, fifth and deciding between the texas rangers and toronto blue jays. the 7th inning emotions were indicative of that. this is the play that helped create a 53-minute inning. catcher russell martin throws a ball back to the pitcher that accidentally hits chu. odor comes home with the lead run. the plate umpire signals a dead ball and sends odor back to third, but that's not the proper ruling. they reverse the call allowing odor to score. that was the proper call. the rule book states that on such a play if the batter stays tin batter's box the ball is live, and that's exactly what happened. the fans in toronto were incensed. they pelted the field with debris. one young fan was actually hit and had to be taken away to safety. they then headed to the bottom of the 7th with the rangers leading 3-2, but texas committed errors on three straight plays, this one a bunt that ledded the bases when elvis andrus dropped the ball after donaldson drove in the tieing run, jose bautista hits a three-run homer. that put toronto in front, but the emotions were far from over. the rangers took exception with bautista's bat flip, and the pitcher had words with edwin encarnacion. the dugout emptied. the 53-minute inning finally came to an end. the blue jays held on to win. they will play either houston or kansas city who are just getting underway in their 5th and deciding game. so there you have it. emotions running high. another one just getting ready to start. >> something else. >> you hate to see that little boy or girl taken away. that was disappointing. >> never seen a call like that. >> i have never seen that happen. >> they had to dig deep into the rule book, and eventually, they came up with the proper ruling eventually after the umpires initially didn't get it right. >> that is way deep in the rule book. joe, thank you. bottling water during the state's historic drought. environmentalists say what course doing is illegal. plus, developing news about nba champion and reality tv star lamar odom who was found unconscious at a brothel in nevada. authorities just released information on the illegal drugs they say he took before he was found unconscious. i was sitting at my desk, and it shook. i felt it very vividly. >> what she felt is a series of quakes. 30 earthquakes and counting around san ramon. we asked an expert about the recent swarm and what it might mean. the shaking started in the san ramon area yesterday and it is still going on. there have been 30 small earthquakes. a live look at the usgs earthquake map. if you look at the center of your screen you can see the more than two dozen small quakes have all been centered around the area of the crow canyon country club there east of 680. ktvu's ann ruben talked with an expert. >> reporter: more than 30 earthquakes have rocked san ramon since yesterday. employees at bay books thought for sure they would be walking into a big mess this morning. >> when i heard there were that many it did cross my mind. >> reporter: instead, there wasn't a back out of place. nor a bottle at the liquor store next-door. while the quakes have been steady they have been small. the largest was a 3.0 at 8:14 a.m. >> i was sitting at may desk and it shook the house. i felt it very vividly. >> the bed shook a little bit but i didn't know at the time it was right beneath my feet. >> reporter: at the u s g logical -- u s geological survey they call this phenomenon a swarm. experts can't say exactly why swarms happen, only that they are more likely in places with a maze of fault lines. >> so it's really the complex areas that have these swarms. >> reporter: they say there is no telling how long it will last. >> we've had in the past swarms that lasted several months. so a swarm that lasts a few days, it doesn't really raise our eyebrows much at all. >> reporter: residents say it does make them a bit uneasy. >> you're scared, because is it leading up to something bigger? >> reporter: experts say not nels but it is a reminder to be prepared. >> good old california. >> reporter: since 1970 there have been four significant swarms in this area. the biggest of which was in alamo in 1990 when they had 350 earthquakes in a span of 42 days. in san ramon, ann are you berntion ktvu fox news. twitter has named a new executive chairman one day after announcing plans to lay off hundreds of employees. twitter lured him away from google. ceo jack dorsey tweeted the move today calling him an experienced leader who will coach him and help recruit the best people to twitter. twitter has not been growing as fast as expected. it is now cutting its workforce by 300 people. the golden state warriors proving that the entire bay area is warriors ground. draymond green and klay thompson were in san francisco today as mayor ed lee presented the team with a key to the city. the celebration was a welcome to san francisco. just days after the warriors officially purchased the land for a new proposed arena in mission bay. >> there is an excitement about this coming season already with us. we're looking forward well beyond these practice games. we're looking to the real games and things are on the line. this is what it means to the players. i know they're looking forward, and we're also looking forward, as a city, to the 2018-19 season where the warriors create a new legacy right here in san francisco. >> the team president rick welch and general manager bob meyers also at the ceremony. let's talk about the weather. i live in oakland and i drove to sunol today. i'm telling you, as soon as you go through that cal-de-cott, it really changes. >> it's funny, because i got this great picture, you seat behind me. you guys will see it in a second, but you can see how the topography plays into it. right at the gap there at the golden gate bridge you've got the fog squeezing through. you go over the hill at tiburon and it's 10, 15 degrees warmer. micro climates, if you will. what we're seeing is high pressure building, impressing the fog so strongly that it is pressing it down low. it is barely getting past 19th avenue. it's out in the sunset, but not on tinner sunset, at least from what i can tell. you can see out here it's not getting up over -- gosh, is that big rock? i guess that's loma alta or big rock. what am i talking about, that's mount tam. the point is topography plays a big role not only in the temperatures bulls in the rainfall. a very active pacific, this makes me very happy. it should make you happy as well because we have a strong el nino occurring in the equatorial pacific. all this energy spinning into the jet stream, tall motion, cloud cover coming towards us that is a product of el nino, or a byproduct of it. and consequently, verifying that, in fact, this el nino is pumping a lot of moisture into the upper atmosphere, the middle layers. it could be very helpful in adding fuel to our winter storms. i know it's a lot bye keep hitting it every night because i want you to understand el nino. el nino doesn't bring aus bunch of rain. el nino creates a bunch of storms by the equator. that moisture gets into our jet stream, and then it brings rain our way. forecast highs tomorrow, cooler than today. forecast highs the next day pretty similar. there's the fog along the coast. here comes the subtropical cloud cover. san jose, maybe tomorrow night around 7:00, maybe a sprinkle. then you see more subtropical moisture bring gup to yosemite, and more on the spine, then you see everything shift this way with another weather. all products of what could be and what probably will be a very good winter, very good winter, especially from san francisco south. the forecast high tomorrow, 69 degrees. forecast high in oakland, 76 degrees. and then san jose, your forecast high, 82 degrees for a daytime high. then the five-day forecast right here. and then you can say, yeah, you're right, the topography is everything. there's 50 micro climates in san francisco alone. >> it's so fun to see tourists in san francisco when they start out in the shorts and the short sleeve shirts, and by the end of the day they've bought one of those sweatshirts. >> i sometimes feel like a tourist, bick eve kind of got this dialed in, and there's days i'm not sure what to we are. two blocks or five blocks can change everything. >> all about layers. >> thanks bill. special delivery brought to you bey uber. the new service the car hailing app will bring that you could be a big holiday help this weekend -- this season. and coming up in the at 6:00 -- coming up new at 6:00, we've learned that the sheriff is not carrying a service weapon. we look into what's behind that decision. also new at 6:00, california is seeing record shortage of teachers. hear what is behind the drop and just how many teaching positions are going unfilled. uber is now offering on demand delivery services in san francisco. the company launched a pilot program around valentine's day last year in new york city. the delivery service was so popular the company has decided to make it permanent and launch it in other cities including san francisco. uber rush will pick up and deliver pretty much anything that a customer wants, or needs, from flowers to dinner. merchants that use the service are charged $5 to 7 per delivery. volkswagen says some new 2016 diesel models also have software designed to cheat emissions test. the introduction of those new models will now be delayed. u.s. regulators say they have plenty of questions for vw about this new software which the company says is different from the so-called defeat device at the heart of the scandal. new software from tesla will give the model s driverless car features including lane changes. it will automatically keep the car inside its lane and maintain a safe distance from other cars. it will also find parking spaces and help the car park itself. the new features will be available for 50,000 newer model s cars worldwide. apple lost a patent lawsuit with the university of wisconsin and could be on the hook for as much as $862 million in damages. a federal jury in madison. wisconsin found that apple used technology owned by the university in chips in some of the latest iphones and ipads. the university said it offered to let apple use the patent for a fee but was ignored. apple argued the patent was invalid but the jury rejected that claim. the jury will decide on damages. wal-mart offered a surprising and rather grim forecast for the next year saying that sales are going to be down. wal-mart said that its plans to raise wages and build its e- commerce division will curb future earnings. wal-mart has been facing tough competition from amazon as customers shop on-line rather than in stores but wal-mart's chief executive says he still expects the company to grow in the future. shares fell 10% on that report today. it is the biggest one-day drop for wal-mart in 17 years. the broader markets closed down on wal-mart's news and concerns about the health of other retailers. the dow was off 157 points, the nasdaq lost 13, the s & p 500 fell 9. he became a star on the basketball court and gained new fame as a reality tv star. we just learned some new information about lamar odom avenue was found unconscious in a brothel in nevada. plus, calfire is calling for a full investigation into the state's use of prisoners to fight wildfires. >> reporter: as the drought has dragged on, bottled water has become controversial, but how much of it do we really use? the california drought is playing a key role in a lawsuit over a permit to bottle water in the san bernardino mountains and allegations that the permit expired 30 years ago. tom vacar in our newsroom with a closer look at the impact of bottling water. >> reporter: frank, in a minute and a half this bottle is going to make a very important point. nestle is one of the world's biggest bottling company. despite the fact that nestle uses 750 million gallons of california water a year, environmentalist peter glick says that's really not tissue. >> the amount of water in question that nestle is bottling isn't a huge amount of water. the question is what's the impact of taking that water out of the national forest, and we don't know. >> reporter: but, he says, we should find out. >> it might be a lot of water for this watershed. the problem is, nobody has asked the question. should this permit be renewed? >> reporter: for its part, nestle says its permit is in full force and effect because long ago it filed for an extension, and under federal law, the permit stays in effect until the government acts on it which it has not. the simple fact is there is no way there could be this great diversity of brands, styles, and even flavors of water if consumers didn't absolutely demand it. and are willing to pay a huge premium over tap water for it. >> i only buy sparkling water because it's a replacement for soda. it seems a little healthier. >> reporter: many consumers won't pay that premium. >> actually i don't buy bottled water bick feel like the water we have in the east bay is high quality and is unnecessary. >> reporter: combined, california use over 3 billion gallons of water from streams and public utilities. that's less than one reservoir out of more than 207 in the state, and comanche isn't even in the top 15 largest reservoirs night. think it's unnecessary to buy bottled water. >> reporter: now, i bought this bottle of water at a major grocery store. cost 89 cents. for the same money i would get 1,680 times more water from east bay mud. that's more than 200 gallons. tom vacar, ktvu, fox 2 news. >> that's an interesting figure, tom, thank you. we are following new developments today concerning those three drifters charged with murder in both marin and san francisco. all three of the suspects made their first court appearance today. >> ktvu's henry lee is here. >> reporter: they made their first court appearance. they did not enter a plea. what's interesting is that we did learn that one of the suspects, mr. morrison lampley, according to the d.a., shot both victims, allegedly in san francisco and fairfax. so tess main defendant. it will be interesting to see will the other defendants possibly cut deals if they testify against him. >> that is something that we have zion other cases when you go to trial, when you are an alleged participant in something. there's one that is the so- called ringleader, if you will, so that's something we have seen before in other cases. >> that's correct. but as it stands right now, heather, all three are charged with murder for both cases. special circumstances means if convicted they could face life without parole in prison, or the death penalty. it will be later before the d.a. decides whether or not to seek legal injection. >> here you have two robberies. one a woman, the other a 67- year-old man. you have three people here accused of doing that. i just keep thinking, what was the point of shooting the people? robbing them, i get that. shooting them, i don't get that. have police talked at all about that, and also maybe potential drug use and whether drug use was involved? >> some witnesses have told media that the three drifters have been known to use drugs. we don't know if they were under the influence at the time of both slayings. why the victims were shot is always a very good question. we don't know if the victims resisted, not to say that we're blaming the victims. sometimes there are no easy answers to why someone ostensibly lost his or her life. >> so what do you think is going to happen as far as moving forward? do you see them being tried together? do you see the fact that now we know the d.a. has pinpointed one as the person who actually did the shooting? do you see that as making a difference in how things move forward? >> it's quite possible, heather, that attorneys for the two defendants who are allegedly not the shooters could say, hey, let's bifurcate, let's separate these three so we don't lump in our clients with the alleged shooter. obviously that will come into play in sentencing. if all three are convicted the two others could face lesser sentences. the fbi is offering a reward for this person in their search for a bank robber that's dubbed "droopy face." officials say he has committed eight robberies in the last few years. he typically passes a note to tellers demanding money and indicating that he has a weapon. the fbi is offering up to $5,000 for information that leads to his arrest and prosecution. county workers in solano county walked off their jobs and onto the picket line today. members of service international -- service employees international union, the seiu, staged a one-day strike to protest contract negotiations. seiu is accusing the county of unfair labor practices, saying it was not bargaining in good faith. the two sides are at odds over pay raises and who pays how much for medical and pension benefits. calfire is calling for a full investigation tonight after a startling admission that state prison inmates with violent backgrounds have been used to fight california wildfires. for years california corrections officials have claimed that only nonviolent inmates are allowed to work on fire crews but today a corrections spokesman is saying that prisoners with violent backgrounds make up 40% of the state's inmate firefighters and been fighting fires since at least the nineteen 90s. the official blamed the misinformation on differing definitions of what constitutes a violent background. >> coming up, a touching story about 10-year-old boy what nearly died of a heart attack. >> that call was one of the worst calls that a parent could ever receive. >> today carlo and his family got to meet the people who helped restart his heart and literally saved his life. we are going to take you to their emotional reunion. also, we have an update on a man arrested for that series of freeway shootings around the phoenix area. the alibi that involves one of his relatives that his lawyers say could get him released. it took joel silverman years to become a master dog trainer. but only a few commands to master depositing checks at chase atms. technology designed for you. so you can easily master the way you bank. lawyers for a man accused of some of the phoenix highway shootings claim that he has an alibi and should be released. the 21-year-old man is charged with four of the 11 shootings. it happened between august 22nd and september 10th. but an attorney says that leslie alan merit was calling his grandmother from home right before two of the shootings and was sleeping at home during the other two. he is held on $1 million basement his attorney wants him released on his own recognizance with no bail. there is heightened security in israel tonight. israel has deployed hundreds of troops and set up check points but so far those measures have done little to stop the violence. conor powell in jerusalem with more. >> reporter: a man stabbing a woman at the bus station before trying to board a bus. that the special patrol units shot and killed a terrorist. >> reporter: he rushed at them with a knife. palestinians throwing rocks who fired tear gas at the protesters. this latest round of tensions beginning last month with clashes at a mosque. israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu calling for peace talks to resume after initially rejecting them. >> above all, in order for peace to be achieved the palestinians must finally recognize the right of the jewish people's nation state to exist. >> an islamic movement leader says blame lies with the israeli prime minister. the first and last reason for the stressful situation is that israeli government policy. >> the obama administration condemned the deadly violence. >> we continue to urge all sides to take affirmative steps to restore calm and prevent actions that would further escalate tensions. >> reporter: these latest attacks come despite increased security efforts to prevent more attacks in the capital. conor powell, fox news. russia today is denying responsibility for the downing of a passenger jet over ukraine last year. dutch investigators have concluded that flight mh17 was hit by a russian made surface- to-air missile, fired from territory controlled by russian- backed rebels. the rebels also insist that they had nothing to do with it. >> we have said before, and we still say that we did not shoot down the plane. >> a total of 298 people from 10 different countries died in that crash on july 17th of last year. 39 of them were from australia. that country's prime minister says he won't stop trying to bring those responsible to justice. >> late this afternoon new information was released about former nba star lamar odom. up next, the large amount of drugs that authorities say he was using before he was found unconscious inside a brothel in nevada. and a 10-year-old bay area boy was rock climbing with friends when all of a sudden his heart stopped. the special reunion today that brought him together with the people who saved him. it did cool off a bit today. a little fog at the coast. there's the chance of a sprinkle back in the forecast. we'll talk about that and your bay area weekend. ford. i would say the ram. ok, lets move to the second door. best v8 horsepower. the ram. i say ford on the v8. chevy. what about this year's motortrend truck of the year? chevy. what do you think? the ford. there's no reason why they shouldn't be. let's see how you did. oohh! that's the chevy silverado hd, the chevy silverado, and the chevy colorado. no way?! chevy, chevy, chevy. wow. that's a clean sweep. former nba player lamar odom is fighting forces life tonight according to tmz. there are other reports that he is on a ventilator and he may have suffered brain damage. he was found unconscious at a brothel in nevada yesterday. >> support for lamar odom has been flooding in on social media. his soon to be ex-wife, khloe kardashian and other kardashian family members, kobe bryant, and even reportedly the reverend jesse jackson have reportedly been there to see him. officials held a press conference two hours ago to update the player's status. first responders say when they found odom at the love ranch brothel he was unconscious but breathing and had blood coming out of his nose and mut along with a white substance. the brothel owner says odom had been parget at the love ranch west of las vegas since saturday. officials say it was an employee at the ranch who called 911. >> during that call the reporting parties informed the sheriff's office dispatch the male had been using cocaine. they confirmed his usage on saturday but wons sure if it had continued to the weekend. they also informed dispatch that he had used up to 10 tabs of sexual performance enhancer supplements over the last three- day period. >> detectives requested and were granted a search warrant for odom's blood. it has been booked into evidence and is awaiting processing. earlier this afternoon i spoke with tmz's harvey levin about odom's condition. >> we are told he now has a "fifty -- he now has a 50/50 chance of survival. he has add series of strokes in the hospital, and doctors are having trouble figuring out the extent of the brain damage because they have to treat the organs which gets in the way of dealing with a scan on the brain. we are also told he is having significant heart issues, and he is unconscious, in a coma. it is a pretty desperate situation. >> according to harvey, even though the divorce papers were signed, because of a backlog in the family court, chloe and lamar are still technically married, so she is said to be there by his side and also making medical decisions for him. keba arnold, ktvu fox 2 news. federal agents were in california today touring the areas ravaged by the butte fire. the service that everysees the forest service got a firsthand look. the forest service and cal fire focused on damage assessment and restoration. cal fire identified 26 years within the burn zone where stripped soil and steep slopes might lead to dangerous flash flooding. >> there's a lot of severely burned land. >> it's hard to predict. we've done the best we can based on the geological processes, the engineering and the modeling that we've done. >> nearly 500 homes and two lives were lost during that fire. obviously after you have a fire of that magnitude there are always concern, especially as we head into our rainy season. let's check in with our chief meteorologist. it's like two extremes. we go from really dry, then a fire, then potential for rain. >> i would imagine there would be the same concern with the valley fire. >> absolutely. this time of year now is sort of a race between when the rain gets here or when the real heat gets here. so far we've been doing okay in terms of fire danger because we haven't seen those diablo winds, and it looks like we have a few sprinkles in the forecast. light sprinkles, but that's going to increase the humidity. knocking on wood now, but we're not doing a lot of fire stories the last couple of weeks even though we're in the fourth year of an historic drought. we had tied records yesterday but those diablo winds, those easterly winds that come ripping through the canyon, it's not happening. fog along the coast. when it's pinched like that, when i say pinch, the deck of the bridge here is 220 feet. i think it's 220 or 230. i can't remember. 720 on the tower, 220 on the deck. i can't remember. but, anyway, i'm splitting hairs. but when it's down that low, it tells that you high pressure is really pressing in and that it's hot inland, and pretty cool right at the coast where visibilities are low. but the pacific is so active right now. it is lit up out there. it's lit up right here, real close to us, and those clouds that are in the area could drop a shower or two as they move up. let me loop this up for you and you will see the motion of those upper clouds. see how they're kind of coming up from the south? that's how it is going to be the next couple of days, the next two or three days. we're going to see plenty of subtropical moisture. what does that do in the makes for some killer sunsets. 88 in fairfield. the forecast, there's the southerly motion. fog stops when it gets to the coastal hills, or, you know, the coastal hills, the headlands, then those higher clouds come in over the top and give that you partly cloudy partly sunny condition, and a cooler day tomorrow. fog at that time coast, and aloft, those clouds coming in. so tuesday, yesterday, today, more clouds. and then saturday and sunday temperatures are going to start to come down as this system comes closer. i'm not pulling the umbrella out. i just -- you've got to put it in the forecast, you go, hey, bill, you didn't say it was going to spring cal, a little. but you are not getting the umbrella out, i don't. but it's encouraging with how active the pacific. i keep talking about it. but this is what an el nino year can produce. lots of subtropical moisture. when it lines up or phases in with one of our weather systems in the next month or so could it just go no. there was a system now and this could all feed into it, we'd be getting two, three inches of rain, based on all the moisture. >> when you look down the line, maybe a month away, are you seeing anything? >> yeah, there's some indications that things are starting to flip around. nothing massive, but it's not going to take much. just a mean trough offshore that stays there and then this moisture keeps feeding in, and we could be wetter than we want to be. >> thanks bill. paramedics are used to rushing to help people, but many times they never know the owfnlgt well, today we were at a special reunion where first responders got to meet the people they saved, including that 10-year-old boy. also new at 6:00, a san francisco restaurant locked in a legal battle with the city is staying in business, at least for now. the last-minute move that's keeping sinbad opened. and a happy ending for a puppy kidnapped from an animal shelter. how officials say l otherwise, sy made his way -- louie made his way back. air-traffic controllers are calling it a crisis across the country. the national air-traffic controllers association says their control towers are chronically understaffed, and they say that could increase delays, even create safety risks for passengers. the faa is blaming a past government shutdown that closed their controller training academy for nine months. air-traffic controllers have told fox business that the shortage will lead to problems. >> once in awhile you'll get an honest pilot who will come on and say, we need to circle because air-traffic control is so jammed up we can't land. it happens every day. >> after a fox business investigation found the faa had lowered its hiring standards and dismissed thousands of qualified air-traffic controllers, the vice president in charge of safety resigned. halloween came early for some children who really could use some fun. children's hospital oakland held a big party thanks to a philanthropic group called spirit of chirp. they brought in costumes and fun things for the patients. the idea is that hospitals, well, they're scary enough already. >> our staff has helped the kids pick out their costumes, they put them on. it's a great day for everybody. >> this same group hosted parties like this for kids in hospitals all over the country. oftentimes paramedics respond to someone having a medical emergency but they never really know what happened to the patient. today in the east bay paramedics were reunited with some of the people whose lives they saved. rob ross tells us one of them was a little 10-year-old boy, and he wanted to say something to them. >> the last time this paramedic saw 10-year-old carlo, he was in the hospital with a heart attack that almost killed him. so what did carlo want to say? >> thank you for saving my life. >> the 10-year-old 5th grader was on a rock climbing wall in livermore last march when all of a sudden his heart stopped. >> i think it was like i was really nervous or really excited, and it got my heartbeat up, and when i was on the rock climbing wall, i fainted. >> reporter: at the annual banquet of alameda county emergency medical services, carlo and his family got to meet all the firefighters, paramedics, and counselors that restarted his heart, stabilizing him and airlifting him to the hospital. all of them received medals of commendation and a thank you from a grateful mother. supervisor johnson says the camp counselor used a defibrillator to shock carlo's heart as emergency responders worked on him. >> anything with a kid gets everybody. it just heightens that sense of urgency. >> reporter: carlo's father said they never knew their little boy had a congenital heart condition. shoe that call was one of the worst calls a parent could ever receive. >> reporter: carlo's life has changed. he now has a defibrillator and a pacemaker and no more sports, but his family says life is great. >> they're a part of the family now, and we're grateful. >> it's awesome to see him. i know he's totally overwhelmed, but it is super cool for us. >> reporter: rob roth, ktvu fox news. >> i was there today. i didn't get a chance to talk to the little boy, but it was really emotional. the one thing will say about those first responders, they are so humble. they all just say, we're just doing our job. >> really sweet, though, that moment, and the way the parents feel about the first responders. really, they gave their son a second chance. >> they literally saved his life. it was a really nice event. san francisco's sheriff may once again but in hot water, this time for failing to adhere to his own department's policy of carrying a gun. good evening everyone. i'm frank somerville. >> and i'm heather holmes in for julie. we learned that the sheriff failed a required gun test. some in his department are fuming over it. >> reporter: sworn employees will carry authorized handguns when on duty and in public. that's per san francisco sheriff's department policy and procedure. but ktvu has learned that september 18th the sheriff failed his firearms requirement at the shooting range. >> we are sworn not just to sit behind a desk. >> we are all required to go to the range. we are all required to keep up what we call perishable skills, because our job, first and foremost, public safety. >> reporter: according to department regulations, anyone who fails the test has up to 21 calendar days of the original failure date to take the test again. but as of today he hasn't tried to do that, and it's got deputies furious. >> i found in the last four years working with him that there is one set of policies for himself and another set for the employees

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