Transcripts For WJLA ABC7 News At 4 20160519

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came early in may. and where they found mr. bailey's property. 75 acres. behind this gate. video surveillance the sign says. a police dog it warns. well, in there, when they did a search warrant, we are told that a.t.f. investigators found essentially a bunker loaded with guns. and ammunition. much of that illegal. they also found what is believed to be an illegal casino with slot machines. a gaming enterprise. poker rooms. additionally they found some alleged child pornography. and mr. bailey is charged with possession of that child pornography with producing child pornography and possession of that machine gun. this is why the a.t.f. says they take it so seriously. >> the machine gun and the type of ammunition, the explosive ammunition shipped a.t.f. takes the offenses seriously. it was important for us to find out who was responsible for trying to ship the things illegally to make sure the person was held accountable. brad: well, when we come back at 5:00, we will tell you more about what sources are telling us was found in here. it took two u-haul trucks to haul it all away. we can describe the bunker as something essentially a hidden room the size of a three-car garage behind a vault door and then another hidden room. on top of that, caleb bailey was recently elected as a trump-pledged delegate to the republican convention. we will be back at 5:00 with more. in charles county, brad bell, abc7 news. alison: thank you for that. now to a truly disturbing story today from ohio where a father and for the first time after a girl escapes their toledo home claiming she was held captive for a year. they were taken into custody this morning. this is from the courthouse not long ago. the 13-year-old girl is timothy's stepdaughter. she claims she was stackalled at the -- shackled at the basement 06 their home and escaped when the two men left for a run. she said she was fed spoiled food and scraps and no bathroom access except for a bucket. police arrived at the scene two other pets were found in a van. they believe they were planning a get-away until they realized she escaped. the woman who found the girl describes it all. >> she had a long sleeve shirt on, little skirt long past her little legs and all tore up. her little shoes. no shoes. like flip-flops. you could see the handcuff sparks on her she said it hurt. she hasn't seen her mom since 2012. that she lives with her stepdaddy. she has problems at night time. she has 50 points and the she loses 50 points she is in the basement handcuffed. alison: the police say they found the shackles described by the 13-year-old girl and the bucket. they are charged with kidnapping and endangering children. the teen with the two other children found in the van are all being taken care of by toledo child services bureau. michelle: breaking news right now from overseas. egyptair plane going down over the mediterranean. they believe it was an act of terror. the flight was headed from paris to cairo. you see the flight path there. dropping off the radar after several turns. the airs but a-320 holds more than 100 passengers but only 66 were on debris found now apparently not part of the plane. we have the latest on the investigation. >> if you analyze the situation properly, the possibility of having a different action aboard of having a terror attack is higher than having a technical problem. reporter: chilling words echoing around the globe. searching for answers in the disappearance of the egyptair flight that vanished from radar after entering egyptian air space thursday morning. >> confirm the wreckage has been found and the search and the rescue teams are now turning into a search and recovery. reporter: although there were no united states citizens among the 66 people on board -- >> the u.s. military reached out to counterparts in greece and egypt to offer our support. >> navy aircraft has joined the search and the u.s. intelligence talking with the french and egyptian counterparts. so far they haven't found any passengers with names on terror watch list. flight 804 left 11:00 p.m. local time to head for cairo. everything appeared normal until the greek officials say they lost contact with the cockpit before the plane appeared to plummet thousands of feet. and then disappear. >> too early to definitively say what may have caused the disaster. >> u.s. government officials tell cnn the working theory this was an act of terror. the initial suspicion is that a bomb brought down the plane. french official say the plane passed a subject sweep before taking off from paris. egyptair maintains they have good security. >> we are part of an international organization and abide by the international security laws. dianemichelle: for updates on ts and other breaking news stories sign up for the breaking text alert at wjla.com/text. customize which notification you want. you will get the updates straight from our newsroom to your cell phone. alison: in other news today, renown journalist and longtime cbs correspondent morley safer has correspondent in "60 minutes" history. his death comes one week after cbs announced his retirement. the timing of which came partly because of his poor health. he was also known for changing the way america reported on war in vietnam. he was 84 years old. well, back here at home now. take a look at this video from capitol hill today. an s.u.v. burst into flames. it was behind the capitol hill hyatt there. no one was hurt but it made for a frightening scene there. police sources tell the d.c. bureau chief sam ford it appears that the fire was started by faulty breaks. to metro today. updated version of the safe track plan is out today. the revised timeline has things beginning june 4-16. so the first surge will be single-tracking along the orange and the silver line to east falls church. one stretch that the f.t.a. says needs urgent repairs. second up is eastern market to avenue. that covers the orange, silver, and the blue lines. if you want to see the complete schedule you can log on to our website wjla.com. michelle: when relationships aren't working out, it can get ugly. 24-year-old man learned just that when his brand new car was set on fire. as montgomery county reporter kevin lewis found out the man's disgruntled ex-girlfriend told police it started with infidelity. kevin: you could call it "burning love." >> i was really shocked. kevin: but not the sort anyone longs for. >> it was just like a nightmare. kevin: last week, this georgetown man was taking out his trash when he saw orange flames pouring from his chevy malibu parked outside. the man frantically tried dumping a president of water on his car, to no avail. >> i was already shaking. i was in a state of shock and disbelief at that point. the man says he saw his ex-girlfriend standing beside the inferno to admit to torching his brand new $20,000 ride. >> i did not think she would do this. i don't care how mad you are, you don't set someone's car on fire no matter what the situation is. kevin: police arrested her who scornfully blurted out, "i set his car on fire because he cheated on me. i nope he never forgets it." >> like she was proud of it. kevin: this man is living in auto insurance purgatory and concern for his ex. >> i want her to go to like psychiatric evaluation. to see where her state of mind is now. kevin: in georgetown, kevin lewis, abc7 news. michelle: breaking news now outside of oklahoma city where there has been a partial bridge collapse. you see this is a live news conference happening right now. let's listen in for a bit. >> thanks, guys. appreciate it. michelle: you we would have it, it's live tv and we dipped in as they wrapped it up. what we know so far we understand there are no injuries. we understand that a truck actually crashed into the bridge causing it to collapse. all lanes as you can see here are shut down in the area. we don't know if it will be reopened soon. but there is a lot of work that needs to be done to repair it before it request happen. it begs the question also how big this truck must have been and what the history of the bridge might have been for it to collapse. what looks like so easily. alison: let's listen in now. we have a reporters there on the scene outside of ellicott city. >> they went -- outside of oklahoma city. >> they bent down the east side fine and wanted to come back on the west side and that is when they hit the bridge. difference literally between the east side and the west side of this. this was a boom lift on top of this semi. that is what hit it. that is what you see underneath and what came down. that is what brought the bridge down likely right there. so what they are doing, they are diverting traffic around villa. alison: wow! okay. good reminder, we have a lot of bridges around here that have signs up there about the height restrictions. we will continue to follow what is happening with the break news outside of oklahoma city today. still to come on "abc7 news at 4:00" -- >> she grabbed me by my arm, spun me around while calling me names. >> the transgender bathroom assault. the victim opens up about her assault inside a grocery store. and her attacker, alleged attacker faces a judge. michelle: it's the fastest growing surgery in our country. brazilian butt lift ahead. doug: on thursday, the sunshine made a return appearance to the skies. how long will it stick around? it's in the forecast still to come on "abc7 news at 4:00". alison: there is a new post poll that finds 90% of native americans are not offended by the redskins team 2004 poll. despite, of course, a ton of publicity surrounding the push to change the team's name by very vocal native americans and the lawsuits that have gone as high as the supreme court about the issue. some may find this poll surprising. "washington post" polling manager scott clement joins us from the newsroom to talk about it. thank you for being here. >> great to be here. alison: tell us, when the poll results came in were you surprised by this? >> we had to rerun the numbers. i was struck. we had seen the survey that suggested they didn't feel offended by it but there were questions raised. so we had to ask numerous follow--up questions to understand the perspective on the issues. it was surprising. alison: how do you describe what the post was hoping for or expecting when you set out to do this poll and this story? >> we were most hoping to find out there have been many claims about what native americans think as a population. there have been very few surveys of native americans for good reasons. it can be difficult to locate native americans. some of them aren't reachable by methods like land line phones. but we were primarily interested in understanding their perspective. it hasn't been at the seat of the table for a long time. alison: i know there are some native americans who are rejecting the results of this poll. what do you say to them today? >> i welcome critiquing of the methodology. some of the criticism has been around how native americans were defined. in this survey were people who said the race was native american who matches how the census defines the different racial groups. i want to know one thing we did in the survey, we didn't stop there. we asked about tribal enrollment and 40% of the respondents said they were enrolled in a tribe. we also looked at the native americans who live near or o reservation land. what was really surprising about the result is the attitude on the issue did not differ much. roughly nine in ten of enrolled tribal members said they were not offended by the issue. majority said they didn't even find the word "redskin" disrespectful. in followup interviews we gained more confidence about the sense in which the native americans think about this. i think tends to be complex. it's a mix of some people passionately opposed to it. a lot of people who don't care much or don't feel about it and others who are proud of the name. alison: very interesting. we really appreciate your time and your insight on this. have a great day. >> you, too. alison: thank you. michelle: "7 on your side" now with a consumer alert. could a driverless uber ride be in your near future? that is what is being tested in pittsburgh right now. uber says it has outfitted a ford fusion hybrid with radars, laser, scanners and high resolution cameras. for now, a trained driver is still behind the wheel until they can prove technology is jamie, whether your job might be different in how your maps might look different if we did have those around here. >> man, that is something to think about in the future. we are starting off in bowie. this is a good view of the airport where we had a small cessna plane crash in the side of the fence. this is not blocking lanes on 50. we are seeing delay. heading outbound on 50. this is the eastbound stretch. this will take you 27 minutes from the beltway to route 97. this is closer to the capital beltway. this will give you a good idea of the volume outbound compared to inbound traffic which is very light. there is nothing light about this traffic crossing the american legion bridge. the inner loop and the outer loop are heavy. i am seeing a little sun glare. that's somethin crash reported. a car fire northbound 395 at the fourth street bridge. that is slowing you down a little. alison: thank you. take a tect here to look at this. the eagle cam. freedom and liberty. are they huge? michelle: giant. alison: unbelievable. this is the national arboretum. we are seeing them over the side and venturing on the edge. out to the tree limbs. we'll see what happens. amazing to see how much they have grown. michelle: they grow up so fast but they really do. alison: parents can relate to that. look at your kids one day and the next day they seem so much bigger. what happened? michelle: it's nice to see the sun ot there. >> it was nice. how many times do you sit in classroom and the afternoon and go outside in the drizzle and well. a delightful image. steve rudin will report live in a few minutes. with sunshine. i am showing you the current temperatures because it only takes sunshine this time of year to take us from the lower 50's to 60's. 70 in hagerstown and winchester. 68 at andrew air force base. 69 at reagan national airport. high fresh building in to push the cloud deck farther south. they will move offshore. the future cast shows the high pressure overnight. that is the moon. it will disae sunshine through the day. late evening the clouds increase quickly. then we start to pick up the rain from the next low pressure area headed this way. it could bring south and east of washington. the timing by early saturday morning, raining everywhere. this is 5:00. look at the seven-day. 100% chance of rain on saturday. on tuesday, 77 degrees with sunshine. look at this. lower 80's on wednesday and thursday. partly sunny with a chance of showers. it's thursday at 4:00. time for the trivia question. here is the deal. we have not hit 80 degrees yet in washington for may. 19 days in. so the question is when was the last time washington hasn't reached 80 degrees by this time in the month of may? was it 2009? 1972? 1935? we could have prizes for the winner. probably not. michelle: closeup look as the rescuers freed a hump-back whale off the coast of california. it was stuck in a line from a crab pot. fisherman reported the situation and stayed with the whale until trained crews arriveed. all right. alison: till to come this afternoon a surgical procedure growing in popularity but has deadly consequences. michelle: a bizarre trial getting underway. one man said to have been wearing part of a bachelorette party costume in the home invasion. the testimo vo: for dominion, part of delivering affordable energy includes supporting those in our community who need help. our energyshare program does just that, assisting with bill pay and providing free, energy-saving upgrades. it's more than helping customers, it's helping neighbors. ♪ stand by me alison: a 29-year-old mother of two from west virginia died after the fat particles clogged arteries in her heart and lung. today, "7 on your side" consumer investigator kimberly suiters takes us ins warning now that some of the video and the language you are about to see and hear are graphic in nature. kimberly: this maryland mother of four is minutes away from three-hour, $9,000 surgery to make her butt bigger. >> what are you hoping the final result will look like? >> hoping to have like the hour glass -- kimberly: frustrated she can't get the shape at the gym, she wants result like this. real patient, bowie plastic surgeon of dr. benjamin. when the patient says i want a butt like serena williams, can't do it. >> can't do it. >> he paints a picture for those wanting the brazilian butt life, transfer of fat via liposuction. warn of the risk from lumpiness, weight gain to rare but serious complication like blood clot, stroke, even death. not paid to be injected in the backside can disappear. >> many, many women say that all of it goes away. i don't know that's the case necessarily in my practice. i don't see that. 10-50% of the fat will be absorbed. kimberly: 10-50%? >> correct. kimberly: this patient would welcome any boost. >> we have laughed about how flat my butt was. so it's not like i'm getting a kardashian. it's just normal now. kimberly: normal renews each decade. style in the 1970's was slim. the 1990's, super skinny. today, curvy is cool. thanks in part like celebrities like kim kardashian. the american associate of plastic southern report a 35% increase -- plastic surgery reports 35% increase in butt lifts. >> does it surprise you to hear every 30 minutes someone is getting their butt operated on? >> it does surprise me. it takes me by surprise. >> they don't want you to be surprised. if you are considering making your bottom bi time will take a toll. the bottom will droop. kimberly: nature runs its course even is what is done is unnatural. >> exactly. it's harsh. it runs its course. kimberly: kimberly suiters, abc7 news. alison: so dr. benjamin says he loves the surgery because his patients do. but he has one more warning. it's about the financial risks. beware of companies that want to finance your surgery if they charge more 20% interest. it may not end up being worth it. still to come at 4:00 -- >> efest triian program that -- equestrian program that provides therapy for autism may be forced to shut down. i'll tell you why coming up. >> court testimony today regarding a home invasion. tear-filled emotional testimony as well as details about a fake badge with sexually suggestive wording on it. i'm jeff goldbe coming up. >> here is another look at today's weather trivia question. we'll get the answer from doug in a few minutes. head outside for the forecast when "abc7 news at 4:00" returns. sir, this alien life form at an alarming rate. growing fast, you say? we can't contain it any long... oh! you know, that reminds me of how geico's been the fastest-growing auto insurer for over 10 years straight. over ten years? mhm, geico's the company your friends and neighbors trust. and deservedly so. indeed. geico. expect great savings and a whole lot more. michelle: the jury is seated in the case of andrew schmuhl. he burst into a home and accused of tying up a couple. his wife with him according to police. bizarre testimony coming out today. jeff goldberg is there. even a bachelorette party costume discussed in court? jeff: yeah. that is right. we heard a lot of bizarre testimony about the awful ordeal that took place in november of 2014. authorities say that andrew schmuhl bursting through the front door of the home of leo fisher and sue duncan in mclean. even the defense attorney said when schmuhl came in the house he was wearing a trench coat and indiana jones style hat and had a fake badge. the type of badge you would get for a bachelorette party with sexually suggestive comments on the badge itself. it followed a three-hour ordeal according to the prosecutors. they say andrew schmuhl zip two victims, beating them, stabbing them repeatedly. firing a shot to graze the head of sue duncan. also lodging wild complaints or claims, rather, about a mexican drug king pen taken out by fisher. defense is taking an unusual tragedy to say he was up to ten different prescription drugs. they said his judgment was impaired and it's the result of andrew schmuhl, his wife. we heard tearful testimony from sue duncan. she played dead and tripped the alarm to alert the authorities who made the arrest. alison: larry hogan signed noah's law. it's named after montgomery county police officer noah leotta who was killed in december by a drunk driver. luis reluzco's blood alcohol level was nearly three times the legal limit. yesterday he pleaded guilty to vehicular manslaughter. michelle: let's go outside now live to harriet tubman elementary school where steve rudin is by the soccer field. you have the right idea. get out and enjoy it now. it won't last. steve: absolutely! this is the best job of the day. the sun is finally out. just a few clouds here and there. the kids are so excited. get this. this is the first time this month that they have been able to play a game on this field. that is because the weather has been so awful with the rain and the clouds and the cool temperatures. some changes are on the way. let's take a we are looking at mainly clear skies. temperatures northern and the western suburbs fall to upper 30's to the lower 50's in downtown d.c. tomorrow it will be nearly perfect in terms of the biking to work day. we will see the temperatures that will go from the 50's eventually the 60's and then the lower to middle 70's. so you want to dress in layers, warmer for tomorrow morning. then as you move in to the afternoon hours a little bit doug: this is a good question. the warmest we have been month of may has been 78 degrees. so the question was when was the last year that during the month of may we have gotten so deep in the month of may without the temperature hitting 80 degrees? so the question is was it seven years ago in 2009? was it in 1972? or in 1935? alison, your guess? alison: i'll start. i think 1972. michelle: i'm with alison. 1972. doug: we have nice prizes for you. alison: we lost? doug: so sorry. 1935. alison: no way! michelle: we thought it was too long ago. doug: a long time ago. we think next wednesday/thursday, that time period we'll hit 80's here. alison: that's a surprise. steve will be back importantly in 15 to 20 minutes with a real detailed look at the weekend forecast and all that rain. alison: sounds good. all right. horseback riding, everyone would say is a thrill. but for children with autism, it's used to ease their symptoms. in some cases their pain. michelle: a farm that serves hundreds of clients in the property goes through a rezoning process. cheryl conner follows the saddle of one horse and his companion. >> good job, michael. cheryl: when michael henderson rides the horse for about 30 minutes, his dad says he feels the effects all day. >> that's nice posture. straight and tall. cheryl: he has severe autism. he will often rock back and forth. but when he is on a horse the symptoms and the pain fades away. >> the type of movement that the horse gives the three-dimensional motion, you can't replicate it with anything else on earth. cheryl: mike henderson showed us a community newsletter, the property that houses spirit open equestrian in herndon may be rezoned and handed over to a developer. a spokeswoman for the county supervisor confirmed there is an application for rezoning. >> it's pretty much clear message. it will cheryl: the founder of the nonprofit program which served 670 clients over a decade. you might remember the farm made the news five years ago. three of the horses were attacked with a knife. they survived but now there is a new challenge. >> the horses and the people they serve the not have another home to turn to. >> it's how much the horses can change lives. there is no time frame when the program may be asked to leave. >> nice work. chevy in herndon, cheryl conner, abc7 news. michelle: life expectancy worldwide increased about five years over the last 15 years. the bigger increase was in africa due to better healthcar reported yesterday about a security guard accused of refusing to let a transgender woman use the women's bathroom. that security guard in court. and stephen tschida picks up our coverage now. hi, stephen. stephen: the security guard just appeared in court. this happened at the giant. we have video that involves a video we can show you now. it involves a transgender woman jovan ebony blecher. he said you can't use this. it's for women. he did use it. and then the security guard forcibly shoved her, pushed her out of the store, she says. moments ago we talked with blecher again about the reaction. she spoke to a comment earlier in the day and this is what she said about what >> she grabbed me by my arm. spun me around all while still calling me the derogatory names, embarrassing me, humiliating me in front of another giant employee. stephen: jones pled not guilty to simple assault and agreed to stay a thousand feet away from blecher until she is back in court. she was released on her own recognizance. we will try to catch up with her. she will come out any minute now and hopefully we'll have her side of the story at "abc7 news at 5:00". reporting live, stephen tschida, abc7 news. alison: thank you. michelle: next on abc7 news. mad max scherzer is larger than life. his bobblehead is as well. where you can get and meet this version of the all-star pitcher coming up. alison: next, on "abc7 news at 4:00" -- our high school team player of the week. you will meet laura crawford. she is breaking records at but that is not the only reason why she is a team leader. we'll let her coach explain. coming up next. alison: well, first it was bryce harper, of course. now it's max scherzer's time for bobblehead glory. if you pay close enough attention downtown you can get free ticket to a game. michelle: life-size bobblehead the d.m.v. if you see it, snap a selfie and tag it using #maxabouttown to try to get seats. fans will have the opportunity to get photo with the lifesize max bobblehead at nat's park prior to the start of the game on may 23. alison: this junior is breaking records at her school leading by example. erin hawksworth takes us to arlington for this week's team player. >> just like the feeling you get when you play. it feels great. >> laura crawford isn't one to embrace the spotlight. she is quiet and humble in person but i guess when she steps on the field it is a different story. >> she is humble, quiet. but on the field she comes out and rages down >> a force to be reckoned with. erin: yorktown high school m.v.p. that played in the under armour all american game. >> she is phenomenal. she leads in most of the stat. hit her 200th career goal soon. erin: after beating battlefield tuesday night she help yorktown to advance to playoff. >> it was the last game of the season last year. should be a good game. >> do you have extra motivation because they knocked you out? >> yeah. >> while seasons come and go, one thing we know for sure is her passion for lacrosse never wavers. erin hawksworth, abc7 sports. michelle: still ahead for us at "abc7 news at 4:00" -- a warning before closing guantanamo bay. y the hundreds of bikes involved in the dcps bike in the park program. i'm kellye lynn in the northwest. i'll show how students are faring in the first year coming up in "spotlight on education." >> when you are in the high school you depend on life saving equipment. what if the c.t. or x-ray machine could be hacked, turned against you and made lethal? it can happen. i'm lisa fletcher. meet a man who discovered the vulnerabilities in hospital equipment used across the country and find out why the nowwhich means it's the perfect time to create the perfect home. now through may 30th, take an extra hundred dollars off every thousand dollars you spend. plus, enjoy 36-month, no-interest financing. with havertys, your home can be perfect. even when life isn't. sfx:nocking. we're early! the memorial day sale. from classic to contemporary. havertys. amazing sleep stays with you all day and all night. sleep number beds with sleepiq technology give you the knowledge to adjust for the best sleep ever. it's the semi-annual sale! save $500 on the memorial day special edition mattress with sleepiq technology. know better sleep. only at a sleep number store. alison: this school year d.c. public schools added first of its kind program involved teaching second graders to ride a bike. michelle: in today's spotlight on education, kellye lynn takes us to west education campus in northwest where students are steering their way to success. >> go ahead now. second graders in the d.c. public schools are going >> you don't feel like walking. you ride your bike. >> for the first time students are tasked with learning how to ride a bike. the idea was burst when the education leaders realized they were teaching bike safety to students who didn't know how to ride. >> they learn bike safety and culminate the learning with a ride to a park. this year alone more than 2,000 students learned a skill in some urban neighborhoods goes untaught. 950 bikes provided by the d.c. department of transportation and private donors. a program teaching students a new version of their abc's. >> make sure the bike is safe to ride. b is the brakes. make sure that the chain is not rusted. >> for many braking is the biggest this is hard. i use the feet to stop. not the hand brake. >> but they are learning a little practice can take you a long way. >> good job. in northwest, kellye lynn, abc7 news. >> kids haven't been able to get out to enjoy a bike ride. hay, steve. kids look to have a great time where you are. steve: they are having a blast. i'm having a fantastic time. this is the first time this month they have been able to play a soccer game because the weather has been so lousy. we have had rain every day. not the case today. this weekend. half inch around the district. lighter amounts further north and west but further south you go, chartsville we could look at an inch before it moves out of here. sunday the inaugural d.c. bike ride at 17 miles. no traffic. middle 50's. nice mix of sun and clouds. sunday is the better day with a temperature in town at 70 degrees. the kids are enjoying themselves and having a blast out here. the weather will hold off this evening. if you have any plans outside. going for a barbecue or in the backyard, go for it. >> i wish ic fantastic. but getting to the barbecue or enjoying the dinner outside is rough. this is the american legion bridge. both directions. we have a stalled car blocking the lane on the outer loop. so this is heavy. in d.c. slowing. virginia, same thing. no major crashes. right now it's 16 minutes. southbound 295 toward national harbor. in the teens. same thing as you head northbound kenilworth avenue toward eastern avenue. michelle: thank you. next at "abc7 news at 4:00" -- michelle: we have an exclusive from our sister station in washington. government leaders were warned before releasing detainees from the guantanamo bay prison they would return to terrorism. correspondent joce -- joce sterman has details. joce: released from gitmo and ready to return to the battlefield despite warning to the obama administration. that is the bombshell coming foreign apairs committee to the secretary of state john kerry. i details classified reports dating back to 2013 that show several countries receiving free terrorists did not have adequate savegards in place to keep them from returning to terrorism or help with future attack. >> the president's committed to taking all those people out of guantanamo and close it even if it puts americans at risk. joce: representative raised questions in march whether the countries were prepared to handle risks associated with the returning detainees. joce: the report in the may 16 letter obtained by the circa news detailed derogatory assessment of the countries where the prisoners were transferred. some of them before prisoners were they are questioning why they were let go. >> we can see that the americans were put at risk. all kind of reports, secret reports. joce: recent congressional testimony shows 30% of the gitmo detainees released under the obama administration have gone back to lives involving crime or terrorism. in this letter they question the state or the defense officials that told congress they were unaware of the countries able to keep control of the released prisoners. that is a direct conflict with the classified reports. and the chairman says it is difficult to view that testimony as anything other than an effort to conceal the truth. in washington, joce sterman. leon: tonight a local donald trump delegate caught in an f.b.i. sting. >> a.t.f. takes these offenses seriously. leon: among the charges, metro releases new version of the plan. and we are told to avoid eating rock fish but "7 on your side" asks did officials move too quickly on that. breath-taking vacation apartment. that is not near the eiffel tower. it's in the eiffel tower. announcer: now, "abc7 news at 5:00". on your side. alison: explosives, ammunition, illegal machine gun. child pornography. and now the trump delegate who allegedly had those items in charles county is facing federal charges tonight. maryland bureau chief brad bell live in waldorf with the developing story tonight. brad? brad: this is a setting. country road near waldorf. we pan across the street, you can see the car coming out of the gated community. side. this is where a.t.f. agents say they found evidence of that illegal activity. according to the federal criminal complaint, postal inspectors intercepted a shipment of illegal explosive high caliber ammunition on its way to this man. 30-year-old caleb bailey. that touched off an investigation. and when federal agents raided bailey's gated 75-acre property, sources say they found dozens of illegal machine guns and ammunition including grenades and even tear gas. all of that hidden in a subterranean fortified room under his home seen in this google earth image. additional searching sources say led agents to what appeared to be a casino. including poker tables and slot machines. a.t.f. special agent says the agents also found reason to charge bailey with child pornography. >> service to the warrant on may 5 led to

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