Transcripts For WCVB Newscenter 5 At Five 20160731 : compare

Transcripts For WCVB Newscenter 5 At Five 20160731



largest jackpot winner in lottery history. tonight the big question -- who is it? if you listen carefully among the role of shopping carts flooding the hannaford's, you will hear a buzz. a lottery buzz. >> the lottery gods rained down on us last night. it's fantastic. reporter: four big powerball prizes in new hampshire, including one who hit the jackpot. a big topic among shoppers. >> that is it, god bless them. reporter: many will cup to wishful thinking. >> i hope it is mean. >> i almost bought one last weekend. reporter: do you pa play the lottery? >> my husband does. home today he will be like, hey honey -- >> i don't think so. reporter: many in this small town are still wondering about what if -- this guy is perfectly satisfied. no upgrade needed here. >> my car is over here. reporter: oh, i see, i see. the jackpot. do not know who that is, but they have one year to claim the prize. nicole estaphan, wcvb newscenter 5. rhondella: taking a live look out over the city. a cloudy day in boston. todd: mike wankum is tracking the rain moving through. mike: i want to show you what happened. this morning we had a big batch of rain. we had another big batch of rain now all that is left is gray skies out there. a sprinkle here or there. not really seeing any moisture. if you look out to the west, a new batch is ready to develop out here. that is the hope we could see more rain through the overnight hours. let me give you a timeline. between now and midnight, showers working their way across the border to spread their way eastward. not everyone is going to get it. pocket here, a pocket there. that means tomorrow early risers may run into a few scattered showers. this will work through. we will be back to the same pattern and the temperature is not going to change much. i will show you when temperatures go back to the 80's and 90's and talk about the threat of thunderstorms. todd? todd: mike, thank you. 2016 coverage -- the war of words between donald trump and with more. diane? diane: the khan family thrust into the spotlight after a speech at the democratic national invention. mr. khan: this candidate for the presidency, to not be aware of a gold star mother standing there and he had to take that shot at her? this is the height of ignorance. diane: to donald trump on "state of the union." mr. khan: she said, you know my condition. when i see my son's picture, i cannot hold myself together. diane: this after trump mr. trump: if you looked at his wife, she just a there. she had nothing to say. she may be, probably was not allowed to say anything. diane: also saying you made sacrifices. mr. trump: i have worked very hard. i have created thousands of thousands of jobs. diane: chum's rival in the race for the white house also weighed in. ms. clinton: what did he get from donald trump? nothing but insults. diane: after khan's interview, mr. trump tweeted, i was viciously attacked by mr. khan at the convention. am i not allowed to respond? hillary clinton voted for the iraq war, not me. at todd: -- this week we'll get an update on early voting in massachusetts. a new law will allow voters to cast their ballots as early as 11 business days before election day. the change is part of an election reform law passed in 2014. the early voting period this year will run from october 24 to november 4. rhondella: new safety rules are taking effect for boston summer camps after the death of a little boy. last week, 7-year-old kaiser kyzr willis drowned at a south boston day camp. now, his family says they're not happy with the police investigation into how the boy got away from counselors unnoticed. mayor walsh says city representatives will meet tomorrow witca >> we are going to continue to work to ensure kids are safe. this is a horrible tragedy that happened last week. it has affected a lot of us indifferent ways in my heart goes out to the family. i cannot imagine the pain they are going through. rhondella: the changes include an hourly head count, smaller child-to-staff ratios, and life preservers to be worn for all swimming. funeral services for willis will be held mid-week. they say more than a dozen suspects attacked the victim. it happened on oread street last night. police say several people were walking away from the scene when they arrived. the victim was found with several stab wounds, but is expected to survive. boston police are investigating a deadly shooting in roxbury. it happened on nazing street near franklin park. no word on any arrests. a boston police cruiser crashed into a building early this morning on harrison avenue at northampton street. this point, it's not clear if th o hospital. rhondella: new at 5:00, a man is wanted by sharon police for stealing from homes he was supposed to be cleaning. 24-year-old aaron moul is accused of stealing several items from clients' homes earlier this year. he faces larceny and criminal harrassment charges. police say moul also goes by the name of aaron simeone and has ties to other states. a taunton woman is cited for this crash in brockton. police say she ran a red light at the intersection of belmont cause it to tip. -- caused it to tip. both drivers are recovering from minor injuries. todd: federal investigators from at least three agencies are now on the scene of that hot air balloon crash in central texas. it is the deadliest in u.s. history. 16 people are dead. as abc's elizabeth hur explains where the investigation is turning now. elizabeth tonight, new video : emerging, showing the heart of just before 7:00 saturday morning. then at 7:38, the same balloon captured again in these pictures, flying low over a farmland. just 6 minutes later, the crash, and the 911 calls. >> we have a vehicle fully engulfed in flames. elizabeth: among those killed the pilot and the owner of the , company that operated the , skip nichols. >> he loved what he did. his utmost was the safety to his passengers. >> it's very, very rare we see an incident of this magnitude occur in the united states. elizabeth fellow pilots and : friends calling the accident tragic but rare. this crash is raising again questions about safety. just two years ago, the ntsb called for more regulation of the hot air balloon tour industry. in a letter to the faa, citing industry. at the time, the faa deemed more oversight unnecessary. and now, before those recommondations are revisited, officials say investigating this accident early as priority. >> we're looking at the operation of the balloon, the pilot, the company that operated the balloon. we'll be looking at the maintenance aspects of this balloon. elizabeth: in short, ntsb officials say they look at three things when it comes to these elizabeth hur, abc news, near lockhart, texas. todd: new tonight, we're learning details about a murder-suicide involving former rhode island police officer. authorities say 61-year-old franklin osgood killed his wife mary-jo sometime between friday night and saturday afternoon then fled to new jersey and turned the gun on himself. the former providence officer calling his adult children saturday to tell them he'd done something bad to their mother. >> he really expressed sorrow and sympathy for what he had done and expressed he wanted to -- every intent to harm himself. very, very disturbing, sad story. again our sympathy goes out to the family. todd: police say an officer was on the phone with osgood while he was on the run. he shot and killed himself when officers approached. his wife's body was in the trunk of the car. rhondella: at least one person is dead after floodwaters hit hard in maryland. endicott city got nearly seven inches of rain last night. two people are still missing. the water flooded the streets sure help gets to the city. many businesses along main street, which was the hardest hit area, are damaged. todd: pope francis wrapped up his 5-day visit to poland this -- to poland. the youth day mass was attended by 1.6 million people. in his homily, the pope announced panama as the location of the next world youth day in 2019. his farewell ceremony cu a plane, aiming for a target smaller than a football field. rhondella: the man behind the stunt, living to talk about the experience today. todd: new hope for a struggling family thanks to their new community. how soccer and a special program are helping, in tonight's 5 for good. rhondella: he's already tasted success in a big way. in tonight's made in mass how a local brewmaster is creating a ? why do banks treat you and your money like this? they nickel and dime you with fees and minimum balances. capital one won't do that. they've reimagined banking, and built a checking account that's free of all that nonsense. >> you are watching newscenter 5 at no parachute, no winged flying suit. that man was lying through the air with nothing but just a jumpsuit. look at that. amazing. 25,000 feet from that plane. not only did he do this daring feat, but he did it on live television. >> i mean i'm almost levitating. it's incredible. the words i can't even get out guys, everybody who made this happen -- it is awesome. todd: that is luke akins. he has made over 18,000 jumps, but none like this. no skydiver has ever done this before. rhondella: i'm impressed he could speak after this. todd: so smooth. mike: he's doing about 100 miles an hour when he hit that net. todd: get a speeding ticket? they get him on the way down. it really depends on where you are at -- some of us got rain. some places got an inch of rain today. let me show you the rainfall totals. nothing really down toward the cape, the south shore. and then you look up to the from it, a 10th of an engine of rain at best. the berkshires, this kind of sat on top of them for a while. there were isolated reports of over two inches of rain. it was welcome, but it did not go everywhere. for all the gray skies you would think, well, it should have been raining all day. one thing that is nice about the rain, it did fall in this area that is in the severe drought go we need more water in here. we do have a chance tonight, tomorrow, maybe tuesday morning. but much like today, they will be very scattered and not everyone will receive it. we have waves of low pressure moving along this frontal boundary. this is exactly what developed last night, this morning. we watched to see if they could make its way into a very stable air mass. poughkeepsie, this will be fighting eastward. let me give you a timeline. gray skies. you could get a sprinkle out there. by 8:00, we start to put it into the berkshires. then it moves eastward. these kind of fall apart, 10:00, 11:00. they push toward boston around midnight, shortly thereafter. there will be a lot of spaces they will not be getting rain but we might have been isolated downpour. only 72 degrees. did not warm up today. here is why. winds of the ocean, 12 miles an hour. just did not warm up. it stays pretty much in the lower 70's. the dew point is going to stay there, a lot of what we see today tomorrow. some people will get a shower out of the whole thing. tuesday into wednesday. wednesday looking delightful. but it is one day. by the end of the week we are pushing the humidity right back up and we will throw warmer temperatures at it as well. muggy, 64 degrees for the overnight low. at tomorrow, temperatures a little warmer than today, 72 to 80 degrees. water temperatures in the 70's and the air temperature in the 70's as well, high tide at 10:42 tomorrow, a lot like today. tuesday, we do have a chance -- a chance at best -- of morning showers. as we had through the day, what is going to happen, gray skies are going to clear up. that will allow us to warm up with low humidity. wednesday is looking delightful. thursday, even warmer. humidity starts to come up little bit and that sets us up for hot, humid weather. and behind that, cooler air will be moving into the forecast. we start monday kind of like sunday, gray skies and hopefully a few scattered showers. rhondella: thanks, mike. a community reaching out and helping two young boys who are todd: in tonight's 5 for good, feet. rhondella: as newscenter 5's erika tarantal explains, two young brothers, currently homeless are now feeling at home in natick thanks to a special soccer program. erika: it's called the beautiful game, and for 7-year-old jason baptiste and his 11-year-old brother loresson, it is just that. not because they've played long. >> this is totally new. erika: but because they get to play now. the boys just moved to natick. their mom fell on hard times in florida. they don't have a home. so since may they've been here at family promise. >> we really believe that families can pull themselves out of poverty but they need to be given the support and the resources, and they do beautifully. erika: an organization that truly uses a community approach, family promise works with 19 local congregations of all different faiths to actually house the families they serve. >> they open their doors one week at a time 3 to 4 weeks a year, so every night at 6:00 our families go to the congregation that's hosting that week. >> i've seen a mom with incredible dignity who just works incredibly hard. erika: but fitting in without a home isn't easy. when the boys expressed interest in joining the town soccer club though, the response was overwhelming. >> we got a ton of different cleats, people donated money for that. and then the natick youth soccer club said we can definitely get you on a team. erika: no money for uniforms no money for league fees, no problem. from the local men's team, to the high school everyone's pitched in. >> who wants to play soccer in the fall? >> me. >> all right, we need a couple uniforms for you. >> soccer is a really fun sport. i've been practicing to chip the ball. erika: the fun of it just one benefit. feeling that sense of belonging, the real goal here. >> i have no doubt in my mind that they'll be successful going forward, none. erika: massachusetts has the 4th fastest growing population of homeless families in the country , with the average age of someone homeless here just eight. family promise says they're not surprised when people want to erika tarantal, wcvb newscenter 5. rhondella: did you see how proud he was? todd: good organization. rhondella: todd: tasting success with a brewery. how a local brewmaster is creating a buzz. you see what we did here? rhondella: the boston company using crowd-sourcing to fight >> this is an editorial by wcvb newscenter 5 president and general manager bill fine. mr. fine: meeting friends or colleagues at your favorite neighborhood restaurant for dinner with a cold beer, glass of wine, or cocktail is a popular way to socialize and network. and just like the jingle from the tv show "cheers," sometimes you just want to go where everybody knows your name. highlighting an age-old turf battle between city hall and boston-area legislators, beacon hill is scheduled to consider a municipal reform bill that would provide all cities and towns in massachusetts, with the notable exception of boston, the opportunity to take control of their liquor licensing. if the governor and legislator -- legislature truly want to reform the state's liquor laws, many dating back to well before prohibition, why exclude boston? the governor's staff, by way of explanation, points out that the city was already granted the question is not over how many licenses will be awarded, but who has the right to determine the amount and approval of liquor licenses and ultimately oversight over licensees. if mayor walsh and city councilor ayanna pressley have their way, additional permits would be granted to boston's diverse neighborhoods, rather than focusing on downtown. walsh and pressley are looking for that long-term fix. if successful, creation of these new wealth building opportunities for the fortunate neighborhood owners and jobs for local residents goes hand in hand with the city's development of boston's main street autonomy that other major american cities have, and share the wealth with all of boston's neighborhoods. the responsibility for a successful plan will then fall on the mayor's shoulders, an obligation he and the city council are more than ready to accept. >> from boston's news leader -- this is wcvb newscenter 5 at 5:30 p.m. as you know scattered showers , today, and more rain on the way to start the week. mike: usually you say that on a sunday and people say, oh, that was an awful weekend. [laughter] rhondella: on the weekend. mike: but with all of the gray skies, we should all be looking at an inch or two of rain out of this whole thing. let me show you some spot that did get some heavy rain. look at jacob be. 2.3 inches of rain. picked 2.6 inches of rain. you see how this blossomed up to the west? then it winds down as it moves eastward. we had through the day, less and less opportunity for rain. beverly picked up almost an inch of rain. out there right now. we saw a few sprinkles the last few hours. at see what is happening again? we see this organize and that will be pushing eastward. that is what we have in the forecast for tonight. between now and midnight, we have to see some scattered showers. we may get some showers -- the area missing out down to the south. so, here is the map at 4 a.m. if you checking out the eye-opener, you will probably be dodging rain on the way to work. scattered showers with as much of the day tomorrow. hit or miss. not all of us will see it. down toward the cape, may finally actually be getting some showers out of this. i will have more on the timeline , when it clears out and when the temperatures go back to the 80's and 90's and it you moments. -- in a few moments. rhondella: all right, mike. charged with arson. fifty-seven-year-old timothy brosnan is expected to be arraigned tomorrow. firefighters think he set yesterday's three alarm fire on linden avenue. they said the fire seemed suspicious because it spread so quickly. one firefighter was treated for heat exhaustion. todd: people in boston will get the chance to let their voices be heard about police body cameras this week. the department is working to get a pilot program underway. one hundred officers will wear the cameras for six months, a deal with the police union was reached earlier this month. there will be a public hearing thursday night at the mildred community center. southern new england could soon face new restrictions, to stop a drop in the lobster population. this week the atlantic states marine fisheries commission will hold a meeting to talk about ways to help preserve the species. one of the new rules could be a change in the minimum size of lobsters caught. that means more would have to be thrown back. lobster fishing across new england brought in more than a half a billion dollars last year. pay for men and women in massachusetts. the law will ban discrimination on the basis of gender, and stops employers from asking about salary history. the legislation will take effect in july 2018. new video of a rescue by the state police. these infrared images come from the air wing as crews found two lost hikers on wednesday. this was at the mount tom state reservation in holyoke. cell phones also helped state police find the hikers. rhondella: there's a brand new brewery and tasting room opening up on the south shore. ordinary backroom beer maker at the helm. as doug meehan shows us, this made in mass craftsman has a history of creating a personalized beer experience. >> there are only four key ingredient in beer -- malt, a hop's, and water. doug: he is the brewmaster at this fledgling brewery called is a sparkly new facility and company, russell has been at the beer game for some longtime. back in 1986, the freshfaced university of california-davis grad was hired to be a brewmaster at another bierstadt up called mass bay brewing -- you may know it as a a lot has changed over the last 30 years. back then, so-called craft beer is made up less than 1/10 of 1% of the u.s. beer market. today, it represents over 10%. >> it definitely has some chocolate. doug: rising demand -- twentysomethings, who, like the internet, have never known a world without specialty sides. different buying habits than we had. doug: which brings us to the barrel in barrelhouse z. by aging in casks, a new variation and flavor element is being introduced to those for original ingredients. >> in one sense is going back to the old-school way of making beer. doug: he believes in today's market you have to be very large or very local. by beinge specifically on the south shore, and producing 2000 barrels a year, he is deliberately choosing to do just that -- they see being local as their z factor. there seems to be a lot of positive mojo surrounding barrelhouse z. they were granted their license almost 30 years to the day after a harpoon not theirs. their logo, they did not realize that it means "job well done." rhondella: he looked way too comfortable. todd: doug gets the best assignments. drinking on the clock on sunday. rhondella: todd: new medicines for migraines. how a class of drugs could stop headaches. for all those pokers, prodders, shuckers and sniffers, [ inhales ] all stop & shop produce is triple checked. farm, crate, and store. we're focusing on fresh... ...so you don't have to guess. rhondell unexpected health benefit to teens. according to a new study, teens engaged in sports have a lower risk of using opioid drugs without a prescription. over time, teens who exercised daily showed a decrease in non-prescription opioid use. from 1997 to 2014 the%age of -- from 1997 to 2014 the percentage of active teens using opioids recrationally dropped from 8.8% to 4.4%. critics of the study say that non-prescription opioid use is not the problem, but increased opioid prescription for teens. todd: 36 million americans suffer migraine headaches. now the medical community is buzzing about a superior way to treat them. newscenter 5's heather unruh takes a closer look. heather: megan was just nine years old when she suffered her first migraine. >> i get pain around my eyes and it usually radiates over my head, down my neck, and over my disrupts her life. >> i have a relatively high stress job. it would be better if i did not have to nurture the headache at work. heather: she is hoping a new class of medication will give her relief. ald403 is the first medicine developed specifically to treat migraines. shows what i have never seen anything like this. heather: and he has treated thousands of patients. the treatment uses antibodies given by iv every three months. they block a chemical known as cgrp. >> we have good evidence that cgrp is a major player, major chemical in the body. >> we know there is a good part of the nationwide trial. >> people like the idea of biologics. people like the idea of prevention. >> 75% improvement is shocking, 100% improvement is totally them believable. but i have seen it myself. people come and month after month and say i really have not had any headaches this month. heather: exciting development you have seen in decades? >> this is the most exciting thing i have seen in my entire career. of heather heather: pages like megan, it cannot come soon enough. rhondella: that was heather unruh reporting. capital one believes your bank should work for you, not the other way around. so capital one reimagined banking... ? with a place that feels nothing like a bank. and helpful people that talk to you...not sell to you. that's banking reimagined. rhondella: taking a live look over the city of boston. not to cloudy. kind of a good day for a nap, mike. mike: so true, so true. high temperature, 70 four. normal high temperature 81. a couple days ago we kept flirting with these record highs. it just did not budge temperature wise. look at that. conditions. in boston right now, it is still 71 degrees. breeze off of the water keeping it kind of gray and damp and on the cool side. it's really damp. 67 degrees. that is why it is so uncomfortable when we start to talk about the dew point up near 70 degrees. we have a system working its way through and scattered showers with it. some of you had really weather this morning. there is a new area out to the west. we saw it last night. we are seeing you get -- we are there is a possibility for rain in the overnight hours. let's get a timeline on it. it is running such a stable air mass we cannot get a big area of rain developing. we have a pocket here. few sprinkles at best. overnight hours, a couple bands of showers. finally something south of the city. then tomorrow morning, more showers. really scattered in nature. temperatures will drop into the 60's. it will a the shoreline, low 70's. inland, flirting with that 80 degree mark. oxford, 84. duxbury, lower 70's. attleboro, somerset, 81 degrees. and the cape -- 81, muggy, temperatures holding in the 70's. up pretty much anywhere. this is the way the map looks at 9:00. then once again late into the afternoon, development of to be north and west. will these hold together question mark that is the big question tomorrow. plan for rain. plan for the idea you may not get rain out of this whole system as it works its way through. this is the way the map looks at 8:00 tomorrow night. scattered showers. here. high pressure builds in. humidity will be down. looks like a beautiful day coming about wednesday this week. here is the way it looks the next seven days. tomorrow, scattered showers. wednesday, low humidity. humidity is very high out there right now. by the time we get to thursday, humidity is right back out. several things are coming our way, including a cold front. this could happen friday afternoon. more likely it will happen on saturday. keep that in mind as you make your weekend plans. next weekend we are back in the 90's. those of you who want the summer heat back, you're going to get it. you will also get thunderstorms later in the week. at i'm in meteorologist mike wankum. >> now here is mike lynch sportscenter 5, powered by xfinity. >> hey, everybody. patriots practiced in heavy rain this morning down in foxboro. gronk scored a couple of touchdowns and flipped the footballs into the crowd. they love that. next practice is tomorrow night inside the stadium for season ticket holders and foxboro residents. a good crowd. hardy new englanders, a couple raindrops not going to keep anyone away. tom brady continues to work with jimmy garrotte pulled up a continues to get cheers any time he touches the football. . >> sometimes you see me bend over, huffing and puffing. today, these are probably 20 pounds, a little bihere body physically-wise. you've got to have more type of -- i would say form -- what is that word? technique. more technique when it is rainy out and wet so you do not slip as much. that so you can play football in conditions such as this. mike: red sox are out in anaheim wrapping up their four game series with the angels and try to salvage a split. presently -- the ballgame. the red sox have only won one out of the last seven games out in anaheim. things are not looking good for them right now. mookie betts let off the game with a home run. the third inning, this is a cheap one, folks. 20th of the year. the angels good, three-two, they stretch that lead out, 5-2. jackie grassley junior is again looking at a backdoor curveball there. and andrew miller pitching for the new york yankees, traded or players, minor-league -- four players, minor-league prospects. this guy is 6'1". all right, toronto blue jays and orioles. they avoid the sweep here. the 12 inning, tied to-two in the 12, and then baltimore wins it, 6-2. second place. coming up on sportscenter 5 o.t. -- we will talk about patriots camp and talk with bill gates, our nfl analyst and what may happen before the trading deadline tomorrow. see you then. todd: all right. thank you. coming up local startup rhondella: crowdsourcing, but probably not quite like this. a local startup company is collecting tiny samples of blood. todd: mike wankum tells us it's all for some cutting edge medical research. mike: thousands of samples, blood and tissue all stored at , orig3n's lab in boston. >> this is that minus 196 degrees. mike what this biotech startup : is doing is alst unbelievable. it's like science fiction every day. mike robin smith is orig3n's : ceo. >> we call it a living snapshot of humanity. i want to capture samples from diverse cultures around the globe. mike: the company collects blood samples, by crowdsourcing, finding people who are willing to simply give up a few drops of blood in the name of medical research. >> we collected 2000 samples of the boston marathon just that one event. races. they even set up shop at comicon events across the country. orig3n then analyzes, catalogs and preserves the samples. they're used by biotech and pharmaceutical companies to research targeted medications and treatments for all sorts of diseases. and then there is the super scientific part, what's called regenerative medicine. >> one of the things we can do, we can take a few drops of your blood and then we can actually , turn those into your heart cells, your liver cells or your neurons. mike those re-programmed stem : cells can become healthy tissue in vital organs. >> you : scientific officer says, as medical technology advances, these cells might even help the people who donate if they get a life-threatening illness or get hurt. >> if science gets to a point where you can create organs or maybe a new joins prompt -- joint from your own tissues, i really believe this can change medicine. mike all of the science and the : possibilities coming from people who are simply willing to >> it is a question we ask all of the time. why are so people -- why are people so interested in donating? mike orig3n is doing a lot of : things including these dna kits you can buy. they give you analysis of things like the genetics of your physical fitness and even the genetic qualities of your skin. you can look at it and say, am i running slow or is it part of my dna? your skin, unless it is city. perhaps it is a dna thing. they of the largest repositories of blood and sell samples like this going on. eventually we will figure everything out, you know? and maybe they can fix my knees. and the weather involves a little bitter rain. i want to say little bit of rain. we have a chance of scattered showers tomorrow. it's not a great chance. just like today. some of you had nice rain. some of you did not get much at toward tuesday afternoon. then the sunshine comes back. wednesday and thursday, lower humidity on wednesday, higher humidity on thursday. with that humidity, it will be on the muggy side. talking about next weekend, never too early to talk about the weekend -- maybe you want to head to the cape on friday. looks like you will have decent in weather. keep in mind there will be scattered thunderstorms. look at the temperature at lake winnipesaukee. like, saturday. cooler heading toward sunday's forecast. less of a chance on friday for thunderstorms. a better chance as we look at saturday from forecast. hopefully -- hopefully -- we will get a little bitter rain tomorrow. we need it. todd: but it is still not going to make much of a dent. mike: no, we need a three-day nor'easter. rhondella: don't let it happen on the weekend. [laughter] tonight. rhondella: did you happen to buy your powerball ticket in new hampshire? you could be a millionaire. fios is not cable. we're wired differently. so we wired the wagner's house with 100 meg internet. t takes mr. wagner to pour a 20 oz. cup of coffee, tommy can download 30 songs, and jan can upload 120 photos. 12 seconds. that's the power of fiber optics. and right now you can get 100 meg internet with equal upload and dowloads speeds, tv and phone for just $69.99 per month online. cable can't offer internet speeds this fast at a price this good. >> now on newscenter 5 -- todd: the powerball winner, sold in a small new hampshire town. the search for the person rhondella: the parents of a fallen muslim soldier, hitting back at donald trump. her message about why she stayed silent during her husband's dnc speech. mike: a few showers right now. i'm tracking when the skies clear, and when the summer heat returns. [captioning performed by the national captioning institute, which is responsible for its caption content and accuracy. visit ncicap.org] >> from boston's news leader, this is wcvb newscenter 5 at 6:00. todd: right now, the search is on for the powerball winner in new hampshire. someone bought the ticket inside this grocery store. good evening. good to have you with us. i'm to k richardson. newscenter five's nicole estaphan is live in raymond, new hampshire where that ticket was sold. nicole: this is a good one. the eighth largest lottery prize in history. the question -- who is it? if you listen carefully among the role of shopping carts flooding the hannaford's and raymond, new hampshire sunday,

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