Transcripts For WEWS News 5 At 5pm 20161028 : comparemela.co

Transcripts For WEWS News 5 At 5pm 20161028



started sexting, and the case has been blown wide open again. the fbi spent months looking into her use of a private server for state business, but we just learned fbi director james comey wrote in a letter he needs to supplement his previous testimony. turns out the fbi sees the cell phones of anthony weiner and his wife huma abedin. abedin is a top campaign e-mails pertinent to the investigation when it seized the couple's phones. comey wrote in a letter to congress saying he assigned investigators to find out if any of these newly discovered e- mails contain classified materials. today on the campaign trail, donald trump applauded the move. >> i have great respect for the fact that the fbi and the department of justice are now right the horrible mistake that they made. >> reporter: the fallout came quickly after that letter from fbi director comey was released. house speaker paul ryan is already calling for the democratic nominee to stop getting the intelligence briefings that both nominees are receiving to prepare them for the possibility of becoming president. comey says there is no telling how long it will take to review these newly discovered e-mails. it is not likely this review will be finished before election day. as for clinton, she ha't investigation yet but democrats are already calling on comey to show his hand and divulge what they've already found. john kosich, news 5. >> john, while clinton herself hasn't spoken about these new e- mails, her campaign chair john podesta released a statement calling on comey to release more information about this review. podesta says he is confident the fbi will reach the same conclusion that did it months ago that clinton should not be days before an election is unprecedented. that's why we wanted to reach out to an expert on constitutional law to put all of this into context. we sent our derick waller, who is live at the cuyahoga county board of elections. derrek, the question, is there a chance a future president clinton could face indictment while in office? >> reporter: well, frank, a case western reserve university professor that i just spoke with says that is unclear because all of this is just so unusual, but he says that he says you can point to the watergate scandal during the nicks on administration for insight as to how this might go down. back then a grand jury declined to indict the president. there was confusion over whether a sitting president could even face indictment. nixon resigned and that question has never been resolved. >> nixon could have been indicted after he resigned, but have happened. >> reporter: could that happen here? could president obama pardon hillary clinton before he leaves office? >> it's certainly within the president's power to do. that i would be really surprised if president obama did that. >> reporter: even if nothing comes from this latest revelation, he says one thing is clear. this is fresh ammunition for republicans in the house of representatives. derick waller, news 5. we want to get to breaking news out a terrifying sight on the runway at chicago o'hare. a plane right there on fire. thick, black smoke billowing across the tarmac. we are hearing at least nine people were hurt after this american airlines flight blew a tire on the runway and had to abandon a take-off. the faa says everyone was able to vac you wait. that's the good news. but right now this runway is shut down. more breaking news, this time here at home. it has only been two weeks since young sonny patel was death during a robbery at his parents' restaurant. and the confessed killer has already learned his sentence. perry will spend the rest of his life behind bars for murdering that man at a mr. hero restaurant. sonny, just 15, was helping out at the restaurant when that armed robbery cut his life short. last week we spoke with family members who say support from their community is helping them heal. >> we are so grateful thanks to the community. i mean, we are feeling very good right now. this means a lot to us. >> sonny was a student at mayfield heights high school, an avid supporter of our cleveland cavaliers. so much so that at this vigil mourners came decked out in their best cavs gear. as for perry, only 22 years old, he made a full confession to the murder after police arrested him and agrees to plead guilty and spend his life in prison to avoid the sentenced to death. well, now to the story cleveland has been waiting for, for decades. the indians' chance at a world series title. >> that's right. tonight the tribe is on the road taking on the cubs at wrigley field for game three with the series tied at one game apiece after we hosted the first two games at progressive field. tonight we have crews here at home and in chicago bringing you live team coverage as we count counsel to tonight's first pitch. and news 5 sports repo live inside wrigley. what's up? >> hey frank, hello, lee. the first world series game here at wrigley in 71 years. think about this. seven decades they have not add world series game here. just like the fans, the players are equally as excited to have the opportunity to take part in this historic event, game three of the world series. i will tell you what, the indians are feeling loose right just a little whiling a players playing hack key sack in the outfield. kyle crockett, mike clevenger, cody anderson messing around playing some hack key sack, so that just speaks to the volume of how loose and relaxed this indians club. that turns back to tito francona. mike napoli is excited to be here and thrilled to have the opportunity to get to play in a world series game here at wrigley. >> it is going to unbelievable. going into this, watching the national league play, i wanted to play against the cubs because i knew the atmosphere would be unbelievable. early in my career i got to come here. just so much history. it's a park you want to come to and play. >> reporter: mike napoli at first base tonight, and carlos santana in left field, starting in left field for the first time in his career. of course, he did play in left four years ago for four one with carlos santana, what he is feeling, plus what some other outfielders have given him advice as far as what he should expect out there in left. guys, back to you. >> all right, we said this was serious stuff. plenty of fans praying for a little divine intervention. now the catholic leaders in cleveland and chicago getting in on some of that action. rob powers live in chicago. they're helping the less fortunate out there. >> reporter: they as bishop lennon in cleveland said, both sides' fans are praying for victory. that's not all they have in common. food. both cities known for good food. whoever wins this series is in fore a good meal. here are the stakes now that have been made. if the indians win, chicago -- the chicago archbishop is going to send enough deep dish pete sand baked goods to feed more cosgrove center. pizza, baked goods. what could be better? if the cubs win, bishop lennon is going to feed people here. he is going to send pir pierogies and more. chicago deep dish pizza in cleveland, we could all enjoy that with an we're here all afternoon. we've got more leading up to game time. the tribe against the cubs, game three of the world series from chicago. >> we'll save awe plate, definitely. tonight we are learning the tribe came through for a cubs fan. johnny and his dad were right here in cleveland to see game one of the world series. but johnny didn't get to see much of it. here is why. during the 1st inning an excited indians fans elbowed him in the head. the indians felt awful about it field. how about that, right, mark? >> looks good. that's great. >> happy ending. >> when they come to cleveland, people love cleveland. they end up loving cleveland. you did. >> yes, of course. he saw part of game one, they won. now in game three, they'll win. >> we've already had some pretty good frost. watch the surge of warm air coming in. they call this something after you've had a hard freeze and you get son twitter. markjweather, mark johnson weather on facebook. but look at this. we've got warm air surging into chicago. lower 60s there. cleveland and surrounding areas are in the upper 60s so it's not going to be bad evening for high school football here. just wear those jackets, those fall coats. a surge of warm air into chicago through ball game. they will be in the 60. but it's quite a surge, because the winds are going to be incredibly gusty. miles per hour wind gusts tonight. so that's going to be a big weather story for tonight's game three of the world series. lower and middle sick through 10:00 p.m. should be dry. >> thank you mark. a missing woman mystery in lakewood. >> a woman drops off her son and isn't heard from again. now as police chase down leads, we're learning about the barriers they're facing. banning a bank? the city of cleveland wants one company to stay out of the city limits. we're breaking down the reasons check. what else is on lebron's bucket list? turns out even king james has aspirations, just like a pipeline protest ends with mass arrests in north dakota. more than 140 people are in custody after fighting the dakota access pipeline. >> there are reports protesters threw rocks, logs, even bottles at officers. the group is fighting an oil pipeline project on what protesters consider to be tribal land. lauren lyster explains. >> reporter: protesters and dakota. the tensions building, and then arrest after arrest after arrest. thursday's total, 141. authorities say activists have been using aggressive tactics like fire, throwing things, and establishing illegal roadblocks. the chairman of the tribe saying law enforcement has overreacted, attacking peaceful protesters with pepper spray stand in peace. >> reporter: demonstrators, hundreds on private land, are protesting a four-state pipeline project on would activists consider tribal land. their concerns include a leak pollute ago crucial water source. the situation escalating for weeks. earlier this month actress shailene woodley arrested. more in hollywood getting involved. msnbc's "last word." >> you have cops standing around with ar-15 guns and violent antagonistic action. >> reporter: lauren lyster, abc news, los angeles. confusion and concern about new rules for our state's doctors. the rules require physicians to check patient prescripon history before recommending painkillers. it turns out a third of the doctors in the state are not following the rules properly. and the state medical board sent stern warning letters to them. they say it worries doctors because most of the infractions were minor. some cleveland leaders want to ban a bank. a councilman just introduced a resolution it would call on ohio to keep wells fargo bank from doing business in the already governor kasich has told wells fargo to stay out for a year. authorities say bank employees created as many as two million fake bank and credit card accounts between 2011 and 2015. the council is expected to vote on the extension monday. lee, we all know this. lebron james seems to have everything. but apparently even king james has a bucket list of his own. he checked one of the items off the list this week when he attended wednesday's world series game. the rest of hi lebron sounds just like the rest of us. he would love to go to the kentucky derby, but we don't want that, because it always runs during the nba playoffs, so he is going to have to wait on that. and he would love to take in an f-1 rapes monaco. the rest of the list may make buckeye fans a little bit salty. lebron would love to see a football game played at michigan stadium. and penn state's beaver stadium. hey, it's his list. he's got some skills. three-year-old carter making a name for himself with moves on the core. look at that guy right there doing the drills. way beyond his years. his parents say he's been around the sport his entire life, just naturally picked up the game. >> look at that. >> look at him. the wrist rotation splash. got some skills. he has a sick jumper. >> travel! >> he fits right in with the nba. >> they don't call at and mark he's only three years old, so don't recruit him. >> colleges are already knocking on his door. >> they're dialing him up. >> is he doing the post-game interview? >> that is great. >> call the kid travel. >> they don't call travel any more. people are talking about the warm temperatures in chicago this weekend saying, hey, you know what that is. called an indian summer. come on, you know what, we beat the odds. why should we expect to the change all of a sudden? let's go. let's go. get behind them indians. >> you get everybody fired up. i love it. >> let's do it. i'm sorry, i shouted there. i'm excited. 56 degrees downtown cleveland. not bad for late october. here we go. we will zoom out, show you parma and richfield at 53. we've got 51 in orange, 52 in kirtland, 55 in westlake, mid- 50s also in 77 there's 55 akron to jackson. lower 50s for alliance and canton. no worries about rain. here's your five live radars. no rain within several hundred miles of you through the evening and through most of the day tomorrow. here is your hour by hour. let's get you through the high school football, just some high, thin clouds floating by, mixing with the clear. notice some inland areas getting down into the upper 40s, but that's not bad for late october. here's 11:00 p.m. 48 wooster to canton to ravenna, 51 akron, 53 cleveland. take the hoodie, long pants. you should be fine. we'll get you up tomorrow morning. temperatures actually going up. 59 in cleveland by 7:15. so rising temperatures, all because of this guy. warm front. coming in with a surge of warm air. i think tomorrow is the day to put up your holiday light displays to clean up the patio, get all the furniture washed weather with the warm surges we call it. watch the warm air. yes, it's coming. moves in. we stay dry until probably late tomorrow night there will be a couple of isolated showers, and then by sunday, as this front drops in, we will see a few showers coming in for the browns game. i don't think it will be a total rainout for the browns game. not total rain during the entire game, but hit-and-miss showers for the browns. should be dry. tomorrow let's do 74 degrees, a sun/cloud mix, and staying warm. akron/canton, 47 tonight, 73 tomorrow. what else is there to say? beautiful weather for the weekend. we will be right back after our partners at politifact busy staying on top of the presidential candidates. >> today we're talking war and taxes beginning with hillary clinton. >> one half of undocumented workers pay federal income taxes which means they are paying more federal income taxes than donald trump pays. >> she made the statements in tampa on wednesday. politifact reaped out to experts and found that while there is no official number of undocumented workers who paid income taxes the best estimates previous records, we know he didn't pay taxes in 1995, 1978 and 1979. but did he pay taxes in 1975 through 1977. for present day he has not released his tax returns so we simply don't know. since clinton's statement is based in the present, politifact rates it half true. and turning now to trump, he's talking about the war in the middle east saying >> we spent 6 trillion, lost thousands of lives. you could say hundreds of thousands of lives, because look at the other side also. so we lost hundreds of thousands of lives. >> okay, so the u.s. alone lists 7,000 casualties in iraq and afghanistan. politifact took a closer look on his statements on spending. projected to be spent. it cost the u.s. $1.6 trillion in direct expenditures. a brown university study finds the number is closer to $3.6 trillion. that includes items like counterterrorism costs, adding in the money set aside for 2017. the total reaches 4.79 trillion. that means trump's statement is partially accurate, but it's off by at least a trillion the statement half true. local police running into roadblocks while searching for a missing woman. we're uncovering the reasons they're rung out of places to look. >> strike out. major league baseball missing the boat with some fans. now a local group is working to change that. the plan to get african- having investigators look into some newly discovered e-mails connect to hillary clinton. the e-mails were discovered when the agency seized phones from former congressman anthony weiner and his wife huma abedin, a top clinton advisor. >> a cleveland heights man who admitted killing a 15-year-old boy in a mr. hero restaurant will spend the rest of his life in prison. perry was sentenced for the shooting death of sonny patel. he was shot during a robbery a sandwich shop. markjweather, we've got a game to watch. >> a watch party downtown. we've got thousands going out for high school football so let's focus in on the temperatures. we're going to stay dry. and right now we're in the 50s just about everywhere you go. we're really not going to cool down a whole lot. the winds are staying manageable. we've got a max sustained wind of 13 miles per hour right now in mansfield. the farther west you go towards chicago, the windier it is going to be. tonight's game in chicago about 30 miles per hour. so your football, mid-50s at 7:00, upper 40s, lower 50s at half, and most of us right around 50 degrees by 10:00 p.m. so wear those warm coats. once again, wherever you are, if you are going to watch a tribe game or go out and about to high school football, we're talking upper 40s and lower 50s all the way through the evening hours. frank and lee. a. now a story we're bringing you all new at 5:00, a mystery in lake wad af and then disappeared. >> here's another problem. that was 12 days ago, and now police are running out of leads. paul kiska is live in lakewood. >> reporter: frank and lee, tonight they're trying to get the word out about this missing person's report that will be two weeks old this sunday. they admit they have little to go on. 16th. her husband husband, fahad saeed told police he dropped off their three-year-old child and then got into an suv with someone. she hasn't been seen since. >> nobody has had contact with her. >> reporter: because there was a protection order he wasn't supposed to be with their child and was arrested for violating the protection order. he remains in jail tonight. the child is with children and family services. >> she's left behind her three- year-old son. >> reporter: ke up for work. no one here would talk to me about her disappearance. police tell me her cell phone goes right to voice mail and that she hasn't used her bank and credit cards. the divorced couple moved here from iraq and have no relatives here. the chief said the couple was order. police say saeed has not been charged. >> we need some tips. if anybody knows of her or has heard from her, has an idea where she may be, they can certainly give us a call and keep that confidential so we just need to clear this up. >> reporter: now, i talked with a man who reported her missing, and he told me over the phone today he doesn't want to talk about this case. live in lakewood, paul the human toll of human trafficking. a news 5 exclusive investigation into this million dollar industry. >> i remember just saying like this is my lot in life this is what i have to do. and so i became numb. >> you will hear chilling stories from the victims. some trapped by trafficking, we're going to take a stroll into our past into world series history. >> the last time the indians won the series was 1948, now 2016 could be their year for a repeat performance. james gherardi is live to show us how a trip to the ballpark has really changed in the last 68 years. >> reporter: that's right, lee. you won't believe how much the cost of a world series ticket was a lot has changed since then, including where the indians play the game. a little nostalgia for you tonight. just to remind you how long it's been since the tribe won the big one. ? take me out to the ball game ? >> reporter: some things never change. the crack of the bat. the roar of that crowd. the sights and sounds of baseball have endured generations. but for all the tradition, there's a lot that's changed world series. >> especially in terms of baseball, it was a different world. >> reporter: perhaps the most obvious, tickets to this year's series are starting at a few hundred bucks. back in 1948 -- >> the cheapest tickets would have been about, in today's money, about $10. >> reporter: $2 to $8 is what you would have paid for admission. $8 on the high end translating to around $70 today. try paying $0.18 for a coke. a far cry from the $4.50 you will >> at the time it was built, it was the largest professional stadium in baseball. you could fit more people into municipal than any other stadium in the country. >> reporter: municipal was a monster. game five of the 1948 series set record attendance at 86,000 people. progressive field sells out at 35,000. >> in the 1948 world series is all over. >> reporter: legends graced the field then and now. bob feller and bob lemon mastering the mound. their uniforms looking a lot alike aren't the only thing that remains the same. a day at the ballpark can ignite that passion, the love for this game, with fans who rally together, tradition that no doubt stand the test of time. >> the cleveland indians win a 4-3 triumph over the boston braves in the final game to take the series four games to two. ? at the old ball game ? >> repo you about 50 cents. you can find one on-line this year for about $15. but baseball still truly america's pastime. reporting live downtown, i'm james gherardi, news 5. >> i love listening to those old radio announcers. first, a look at your it was once called world's oldest profession. you know the names. prostitute, tramp, call girl, hooker, even whore. if that didn't get your attention, this right here will. most are really victims, people beg sex trafficked. >> reporter: ohio ranks fifth in the nation for human sex trafficking. the victims recruited young and in many cases between the ages of 12 and 14. experts tell me if a child goes with a human trafficker within 24 to 48 hours. >> what did i do? what did i do to deserve to be in this situation? >> her story begins more than two decades ago. and i remember thinking i was going to die. >> a five-year-old girl tormented, building memories of horror for a lifetime. >> my mind shut down because i could not comprehend the moment that i was in. >> mimi diaz add secret. a chilling secret. >> inside, i wanted to tell someone but i knew that i couldn't. >> reporter: that stayed in the dark. >> and every weekend would be the same thing. i mean, like clockwork. >> reporter: a game of convenience store. >> whenever he lost, it was a loss for me as well. >> what exactly did your father do to you? >> besides take away the innocence of a five-year-old girl? i never really open up about it. and i try to pretend it doesn't affect me. >> but it did and still does. it then her brother. by the time she was 10 years old, mimi was being sold and exchanged by her family to complete strangers for a couple hundred bucks a session. >> they were all my uncle, but really they weren't my uncle. >> whenever her father lost a game, daddy's little girl doubled as his pavement mimi was trafficked by her family. raped? >> i can't even tell you. it was bad. it was bad. >> reporter: annette spent a lot of her time on the streets being sold. >> i did it for years. it was the same pattern. >> reporter: at any point in those 15 years did you ever say, enough? >> every day. every day. ther not a day. >> reporter: but like all victims, mimi and annette were trapped. an industry raking in millions and millions of dollars each year. >> city to city, hotel to hotel. >> human trafficking. >> reporter: human trafficking. meet deputy john morgan. he tracks down pimps and locks them up. he knows their world inside and out and says things are getting worse. people see. >> reporter: the underground world of human trafficking runs like a bizarre corporation. on top, the ceo. this is the pimp. right underneath, what we would call the cfo. this is a woman known on the streets as the bottom bitch. a twisted term to describe the first lady, so to speak, of the pimp world. >> they're more brutal than the men. >> reporter: while there's no doubt men run and industry, these women help run the operation, collect money, and keep the other women in line. >> it's different when a woman is betting a woman. >> i struggle with sometime accepting myself for who i am. >> reporter: who is she really? she calls herself tamar, but the role she played? >> reporter: did you ever traffic women? >> no. >> reporter: did you ever help to run the operation? >> she was running these girls. >> reporter: in a world where where tamar found herself, posting ad srksz recruiting customers, escorting women, wiring money, and administering discipline. tamar spent 17 months behind bars for her role. >> i felt so dirty and so ashamed. >> i felt like this is something i was going to be doing forever. >> reporter: victims scared from the inside out. >> it injures them and traumatizes them in such a ba themselves as a victim. they see themselves as harmed in a way that no one is going to love them. >> reporter: trauma so deep it works as a barrier to getting out. >> we fight really, really hard to get them out of it and to make sure that they stay out of it. >> reporter: traffickers continue to walk free. most victims just want to forget about it which doesn't keep these criminals off the streets. >> a lot of people think that when come from human from abuse, when the situation is done, that's it. it's the end of the books. the happy ending. it's not. >> reporter: mimi is not healed, and never will be. >> to this day i still wrestle with myself worth. >> reporter: even though life has moved on -- >> to this day i still struggle with abandonment. >> reporter: her past remains with her. >> to this day, i can't hug a guy. >> reporter: every day. they're going to hurt me. >> reporter: so many of these women. and in some cases, men. they say dark is their enemy. mimi tells me she still has to sleep with a light on, making it even more difficult to arrest the perps, the entire industry has transitioned to the smartphone and sites like back page.com where sex is sold. it's hard to track and nearly dhomonique ricks, news 5. >> such a sad story. and there are organizations who spend their time going into hotels to rescue these women. let's talk about a weather forecast that does include some warming temperatures. let's get right to it now. our radar, first of all this is a beautiful shot from downtown cleveland. a nice take a few photos, it is going to be beautiful here in the next hour. notice temperatures. 50s now. we're actually in the lower 60s already in chicagoland. you see rain here, but don't worry about that rain. seat here? it's moving east-southeast. it will hit upstate new york into vermont and new hampshire. here you go, world series, game three. 7:00 p.m., 62. and temperatures are actually going to warm a few clicks by 11:00 p.m. will be the winds. the windy city is going to live up to its name. south-southwesterly winds around 20 miles per hour with gusts up above 30 miles per hour at times. could impact the ball game. for us, dry weather for your evening plans. if you are coming out to a watch party to watch the indians take on the cubs, should be all right. just wear the hood deals. will you be dry. no worries about the rain gear. same for the high school football crowd. we've got temperatures lower, middle, even a few uppe falling down a little bit. greater cleveland, lower 50s for overnight lows, and notice we're actually going to see temperatures warm towards the 60-degree mark by sunrise. that's a hint of what is to come for your saturday. a nice warm-up. here's the warm front. you can see the surge of warm air behind it. 70s for us. there's even some 80s out there but we're not going to see 80- degree weather. not bad for halloween weekend. we're talking cents. now we have trick or treaters weekend. a lot of communities are doing it sunday. and we have a browns game sunday as well. so let's track in the rain. saturday you're dry until evening and overnight. notice a few showers coming in. 9:00 p.m., we'll get a few sprinkles out there. and then overnight we'll see some showers, mainly north towards the lakeshore. here is sunday. this is 1:00 p.m. browns sunday. there's a lot of wet weather. scattered rain showers for the browns. notice if you are trick or 5:00 15, mainly dry weather. so the rain is pulling out of here. looks pretty good for halloween trick or treat on sunday. and then here is your monday. 5:00 p.m., 7:00 p.m., 9:00 p.m. we're the un50s for halloween monday. not too bad. frank and lee. late breaking developments in the race for the white house. >> the fbi bombshell that could change the course of the election. >> the agency is reviewing clinton's e-mails found while investigating anthony weiner. details. cleveland's comeback from the cavs to the rnc and now the indians, the city is on a streak. and we get leon bibb's take. but first at 5:00, turning their backs on america's game. why african-americans are staying off the diamonds, and the world series excitement has taken over the land. >> yes it has. but baseball is striking is out when it comes to one group. many african-americans in baseball have fallen out of love with the game for decades now. this year, though, there are just 69 african-american players in major league base beautiful that's only 8% of all players. as for the indians, they only have one african-american on the roster. but one local group has set out to change all of. that members are making it a priority now to teach the younger generation about the sport and their year-round program. realize what their inner star what their talent is that they can dedicate to this world. >> the program will officially kick off this summer with the young layers being able to connect with those in the to might be can republic. great stuff. that will do it for news 5 at 5:00. >> let's sent over for a look ahead at 6:00. it is another october surprise for the clinton campaign. late breaking details after federal investigators uncovered questionable clinton while conducting a separate investigation. and the director announced he wants to take another look at the case. also new at 6:00, a serial robber stumped police for months. the important clue he left behind that helped brick open the investigation j. and we all know it's tribe time. the indians about to take on the cubs in game three of the world series. we're live in chicago getting you ready for the big game when news 5 at 6:00 starts in two five games to go and we are 1-1. here's the plan. the indians may have a job to do in chicago tonight and that is to get it's a battle that will start with josh tomlin on the mound against the cubs' kyle hendrix. it's a battle that rob powers is out there to witness firsthand. you know, rob, fans are starting to gather out there ahead of the game. >> reporter: not only fans here, but fans back in cleveland as well, ready for game three of the world series, the series tied one game each, the indians against the cubs. yes sting, deans are on the road in chicago but it is a

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