Transcripts For WJLA ABC7 News At 5 20170113 : comparemela.c

Transcripts For WJLA ABC7 News At 5 20170113



smartphone or tablet. jonathan: a developing story where the search is on for a high school student who shot a classmate outside of suitland high school today. tom roussey live on the scene with the latest. what do we know? tom: this happened right here and one student shot another after they came here to fight. the student shot was dragged through the opening here. you can see that you are immediately on the suitland high school property after you go through it. >> we really got scared. a little afternoon suitland high went on lockdown but the students say they weren't told why. >> a group of the students left the school to they came off the school property and one pulled out a gun and shot another in the leg. the neighbors heard six or seven gunshots. one bullet went in a school annex building where the classes are held and lodged in the ceiling. >> to have a disagreement where you feel you need to physically fight is bad enough. but to bring a gun and end another student's life. tom: the student who was hit is not life threatening injuries. >> how secure is the school? we need to do better. >> the school is dangerous. i wish there was another school to go to. >> this appears to be a bullet hole from what happened today. school tell me in the ram where the bullet hole went flu there was a teacher and there was a student. thankfully they were not hit. the bullet lodged in the season. the classes were going on as they often do in the suitland high school while it went on. the shooter is still on the lose at this hour. reporting live, tom roussey. alison: we have new information about the horrific fire in northeast fire that killed six -- northeast bolt march -- northeast baltimore that killed six children. katie malone and two of her children, 4-year-old and 5-year-old boy in the hospital tonight. he is and one of the boys are in serious condition. the 8-year-old girl was release last night. they are trying to figure out what started the fire. you can sign up for bre at our website wjla.com. jonathan: one week before the inauguration the portrait gallery put up a picture of donald trump. it was take 1989. this is not part of the hall of presidents where the officially commissioned portraits are. those are typically made after a president leaves off. will be on display through february. alison: we learned the line-up of the concert before the inauguration. three doors down and they will john actor jon voigt for the welcome celebration and it will include military bands and fireworks. horace: the inauguration will be on the west lawn of the capitol but the crowds could extend down the national we are learning how they plan to keep the spectators safe. >> with 700 to 900,000 folks expected to come to washington, security is top of mind. >> more than 28,000 law enforcement officials will be working around the clock. each working side-by-side at the communication center known as the mac in northern virginia. visiting the m.a.c. friday, johnson said there is no credible threat. but changes have been made when it comes to the security perimeters. >> more heavy fortified against unauthorized vehicles by dum cement and things of like. >> metro is prepping for additional riders throughout inauguration weekend. >> we have 14 transit properties coming as well. >> the department of security saying they received 99 permits for people wanting to demonstrate on the days surrounding the inauguration. >> 63 demonstrations planned the day of the swearing in. as it winds down toward the inauguration the permit numbers could go up. alison: the day after the inauguration a woman's march is planned along the national mall. this could end up being larger than the inauguration itself. look at the numbers making the ryan? >> we spoke with the bus companies who tell us they are seeing a surge in calls from the country. more bus permits issued at r.f.k. stadium for women's march, a lot more than the inauguration itself. the crowds are expected. >> the capitol transformed for inauguration and the workers are moving chairs to get the national mall ready. the president-elect says the ceremony could be record setting. but susan is in town from michigan not to see trump take the oath but for the women's march in august a day she believes that the -- march in washington a day she believes will be larger. >> there are people demonstrating being present they don't share the same philosophy. >> the march is starting the day after. and starting indepe third street southwest. d.c. police received a permit for 200,000 people. >> in ten years i have been in business i have never seen an event demanding demanding demany buses. >> buses will be parked at r. r.f.k. stadium for both events. 200 buses registered for the inauguration and 1200 buses are a permit for the women's march. the bus reservation service is helping to organize the transportation for the march and he spoke with us via skype. >> we are getting calls all over the country. people have booked buses from chicago and texas. >> harris predicting massive crowds. leading many speculating if trump will be upstaged by protesters. >> the police say if more people show up than the 200,000 the no repercussions will happen. they are trying to communicate find out where the march will end but it is still up in the air. live in southwest d.c., ryan hughes, abc7 news. alison: how is this for a look back in time? they have found negatives from the inauguration of president taft. it has the parade and the evidence of the blizzard that forced taft to take the oath of office inside. the negatives will be on exhibit at the aid trium of will -- atrium of the wilson building. jonathan: that looks cold. we won't have to worry about that. stay with us for the coverage of the inauguration and head to our website wjla.com. there are a lot more images here outlining where you will be able to park and where you won't. a lot of tow trucks are shopping up. it's a week from today. >> virginiatt crimes. he wants to expand the definition of hate crime to include disability, gender identity and the sexual orientation. he has a website. no hate v.a. it's to provide resources for the vulnerable individuals and the groups. horace: we have new developments that change how social workers do their job. former doctor convinced of killing a counselor was sentenced for murder. montgomery county reporter kevin lewis was in court and joins us from rockville. kevin? kevin: jonathan, from the get-go the detects knew that john lutz was the man who committed the terrible crime. by psychiatrists was found not competent to stand trial. he spent 14 years in a mental home but this was the day of reckoning. >> the road has b painful. justice was served. >> she can't erase the day when former doctor john lutz killed her sister nicole. the 23-year-old social worker driven to lutz's apartment for a counseling session but lutz then 64 made sexual advances, grabbed a knife and murdered castro. placing her body beside the dumpsters. police later found bloody pants and newspapers in lutz's-up. >> at the time of the arrest lutz was cagey with detectives but today candid stating i stabbed her three times in the left shoulder. she said, "oh, you're going to kill me? help." i did not help her. lutz now 78 and in a wheelchair claimed to be schizophrenic. >> if you have a man that has done what he did in case that is taking so little responsibility, how can you trust that the person released in the committee would not do it again? judge ruben got it right. kevin: he claimed he only stabbed her six times. accusing the medical examiner's office for the additional 24 stab wounds. comment like that one cause nicole castro's family leaving the courtroom in tears. live at the circuit court. i'm kevin lewis. abc7 news. alison: thank you. coming up at "abc7 news at 5:00" -- guilty plea. find out how much takata will pay in fines for the massive air bag recall. horace: later -- jonathan: later, tells you how he did it so you can protect yourself against someone like this guy. alison: suiting up. why this boy gets to be an officer for a day.u horace: first, even if a case is deemed cold we are looking for new informatio havertys furniture helps even when life isn't.t [music playing] mmmmm.....oohhhh... yeah.... skunks apparently have two glands on either side of the stop talking! the new year savings event at havertys. life looks good. rex tillerson put exxon's interests before america's.. i'm not here to represent the us government's interest. with billions in russian oil deals... he opposed us sanctions on russia... ...for war crimes forced to pay hundreds of millions for toxic pollution... ...putting profits ahead of our kid's health. tell your senators to reject rex tillerson. and protect american interests not corporate interests. jonathan: now a developing story out of florida after you hear it you will scratch your head and say how is that possible? a child stolen at a hospital at birth has been found safe and alive. alison: the nearly 19-year-old woman was found in south carolina and the woman who raised her is now behind bars. marci gonzalez has the latest. marci: kidnapped from a jacksonville hospital hours after birth and now 18 years later a young woman is learning police believe she is that dark haired baby investigators have been searching for her entire life. >> she had an inclination a couple of months ago she may have been involved in this, in some way. she has a lot to process. a lot to think about. you can imagine. i can't begin to comprehend it. woman in south carolina with the same birthday but a different name and a fake documents used the establish her identity. the young woman agreed to a d.n.a. test which came back positive match. the woman she grew up believing was her mother, 51-year-old gloria williams now arrested facing charges including kidnapping. not explaining to investigators why she allegedly dressed as a nurse that summer day in 1998, took the newborn from her mother and walked out of the hospital. >> we have speaking to as many people as we can to paint a picture of what may have happened 18 years ago. >> the birth father telling abc7 he was able to talk to his daughter via skype calling it the end of a night mare. >> i can't wait. i can't wait. it's been 18 years. i can't wait no longer. excitement about a reunion. he will be executed to charges. williams faces life in prison if convicted. abc7, marci gonzalez, abc7 news. alison: incredible. jonathan: i can't imagine. how does she meet her mother on the first time and how did she get an inkling something was off? alison: you wonder what tipped her off. jonathan: a story we'll hear more about that one. jonathan: ice storm making its way across the plains. it's already causing accidents there. the freezing rain from oklahoma to southern illinois. it could bring as much of an inch of ice in some areas. much rather deal with the snow than ice. alison: well, today marks 35 years since this. the air florida flight 90 that crashed in the 14th street bridge. this was the day of the first derailment of a metz row train. three people died when an orange lane jumped the track between the federal triangle and the smithsonian station. jonathan: we have had the conversation about the heroes. ball players not so much heroes but the guy that jumped in the potomac to save the woman. that is a hero. takes off his jacket and dyes in to pull her out and save her. alison: what a day. doug: well today we have ice in the forecast. a little bit. you did a story and inch of ice. ice can bring down entire sections of trees. alison: nothing like that here. it's warm, the surface. doug: the longer it stays warm the better for all of us. the road temperatures are still in the low 40's and the 50's. that is great news. let's root for t longer. that will help anybody. that map i showed you click through. this is under a winter weather advisory midnight to 6:00 p.m. it's still above freezing. this gradual drop will continue. some computer models have us in hours in the upper 30's. the outlook is later to drop near 30's. in the morning freezing near the metro area. we can't pick the exact temperature. all we know is the temperatures will be close to freezing during the process of the system tomorrow. if you are hat 32 or lower for any length of time the icing concerns go up. this will start as a band of snow. this is slushy snow. the area in green represent all rain with above freezing temperatures. the worst is 7:00 to 3:00 or 7:00 in the morning and 6:00 in the evening. it's cloudy with the freezing drizzle possible. sunday gets better and a brief wintery mix. cloudy day on sunday. the future cast, baltimore and frederick before the change over to ice and the freezing rain. it's slushy. the ice, there is a trace for most of the area. tomorrow timeline this is what we talk about. there be a chance of snow in the beginning and rain south and east. looking ahead for the weekend. we have a wintery mix. sunday morning may be early but it's owewise cloudy in 44. dr. martin luther king jr. day. the low probability of that. the extended outlook will shape up like this. it's cold tomorrow and a moderate warmup through sunday and monday. look what happens on tuesday. 50 and 60 to wednesday. then extending the look friday, temperatures are in the upper 50's. stay there through next weekend. jonathan: we can pace ourselves at this rate. >> a big recall for baby product company. >> we will explain that and let you know what happens with the play ground equipment that used to be at the white house. >> but first a look at what is coming up on abc. and a look at what is coming up on monday morning on "good morning washington." >> thank you, jonathan. monday on "good morning washington" -- looking for a volunteer opportunity on m.l.k. day? we are live at several day of service events. to step up and make a difference. >> it's my duty to be here. we reveal a big difference between living dr. king's dream and life of wishful thinking. >> stay with us for it's perfect. it's beautiful. there's nothing we would change about it. it's beautiful. fothere's a seriousy boomers virus out there that's been almost forgotten. it's hepatitis c. one in 30 boomers has hep c, yet most don't even know it. because it can hide in your body for years without symptoms, and it's not tested for in routine blood work. if you have hep c, it can be cured. for us it's time to get tested. ask your healthcare provider for the simple blood test. it's the only way to know for sure. alison: we have a "7 on your side" consumer alert about the recall of a product sold by a well-known actress. the honest company announced a recall of the organic baby powder. the powder could cause eye and skin infections. the honest company cofounded by jessica alba. jonathan: first a senate, and now the house today made the first step toward repealing the affordable care act by passing a budget resolution that gets rid of part of the health law. the senate passed the measure earlier this week despite suggestions from democrats and no replacement plan in place. house republicans say they are voting for what america wants. >> the american people have spoken. they do not want obama's high cost job killing conscious violating he >> they are repeal and displace a plan cut off million of americans, men, women, children from quality affordable healthcare but it will have devastating impacts on the economy. jonathan: some republicans privately voiced concerns about replacing the a.c.a. without a replacement plan. alison: coming up at 5:00 -- >> 7-year-old elijah young becomes an honorary prince george's police officer for the day. i'm amy aubert. i have the touching story coming up. >> most people ain't worried about getting caught. it's fast money. they figure it is better than drugs. jonathan: this is a guy you want to listen to. what is sending him to jail and how you can protect yourself from what he has to jonathan: the company made air bags with defects. today fines and restitution was announced after the indictmentment of -- indictment of takata executives went public. lisa fletcher broke this last summer and you spoke to the former takata engineers. you knew there were problems. any surprises from the indictment? >> not really. basedon us last summer we knew there was concealment of data that misled the car makers and the consumers thinking they were safe. it was far from it. this indictment validates what all the sources told us and what we reported that the high level executives knew early on certainly by the year 2000 that the chemicals they were using in the air bags could not be sure they wouldn't explode to shoot shrapnel to the passengers and drivers. part of it reads due to the misleading test information and data original equipment managers placed tens of millions of air bag systems with faulty, inferior, nonperforming, noncompliant p-san in the vehicles sold in the united states. to see the original reporting go to the website. search on sudden impact. jonathan: they are putting the replacements in but the replacements are also bad. what is a consumer to do? >> in two days there have been a 1.5 cars added to the original recall list. check the site and see if the car is on it and get it replaced with a potentially defective air bags. it will buy you time. it will buy you time until they get it figured out. this is a maximum of the 250 air bags. this is not an easy fix. jonathan: really dangerous. alison: thank you. update on the playground equipment that used to be at the white house. we told you about this last week. the obamas don set they put up for the daughters eight years ago to a local charity. we didn't know which one then but today we learn it went to the jobs have priority nailer road program and we learned that the obamas plan to take part in service project with the group monday for martin luther king junior day. >> a lot of the kids saw that. just one day after being surprised by the president with the medal of freedom, joe biden visited "the view" today and he told the hosts he was shocked. >> i had not the slightest idea. i didn't know, what i was told we'll have a toast. i thought that meant my family, his family, we have become close over the years. my granddaughters and his daughters are best friends. i thought the family would reminisce about the last eight years. what we went through. i walk in and i see half, everybody who is important in my life in the room. that shocked me. >> then we started after time to walk out. i made my comments and i started to walk out. there were military line up on one side. they said no, the other side. i thought well, maybe they want me walking out through the military. he came up with a medal and i thought who the hell is this for? alison: you can tell yesterday he had no idea it was happening. jonathan: there were funny moments yesterday with that. touching as well. alison: speaking of touching. we have to show you this. a special day in prince george's county. 7-year-old battling brain cancer for the second time gets to put on a uniform and become one of his own heroes. amy was there for a special tribute for elijah young. amy: you might know this 7-year-old better as officer this makes you honorary prince george's county police officer. experiencing being part of the force through eyes of a child. >> he was being a child. >> his mother ebony washington says that her son is battling brain cancer for the second time. >> he is still fighting. s. >> continue to fight and keep smiling. >> i just want him to be happy. i want him to grow up. >> they are part of our family now. >> he brought elijah and the the tribute continued. >> this is special. one of his wishes and dreams come true. >> he taught me how to be a mother and how to love and have patience and keep fighting. amy: amy aubert, abc7 news. alison: if that could relieve the heartache for one day. jonathan: officer elijah get well. 7 salutes a group working to make sure wounded warriors know they have reasons to live. >> jewelry worn by madonna to costumes worn by the village people. find out why music and politics are coming together before the inauguration? i'm ryan hughes with the story ahead. alison: new at 6:00, a worldwide effort that is sending pink knit hats by the thousands to a reston home. what the hats will be used for ahead at "abc7 news at 6:00". steve: the weekend is here. we have a winter weather advisory set to go into effect at midnight. it will expire at 6:00 p.m. but i think it will end earlier than that. let's talk about the rest of the weekend. wintry mix tomorrow. more sun on sunday. a lot of folks have the day off on monday for the holiday. the right when i walked in the door of bassett you could tell the quality was there. the quality of what we do is phenomenal. it's perfect. it's beautiful. there's nothing we would change about it. jonathan: tonight in 7 salutes saturdayly many warriors who return from combat find themselves in a bad and dark place. many turn to alcohol or drugs to numb feelings of uselessness or depression. tonight you meet one warrior and a group that stepped him to help him save himself. most think doing this is risky. but for marine an dry einstein it's therapy. >> the first jump i knew i was hooked. gave me something i was look for for five years. jonathan: he like many returns from war found himself in a lonely place. >> at one po verge of suicide. bad place. jonathan: but a fellow marine got him a service dog gunner. lifesaver. there was something missing. >> i had recovered but i still had areas i needed to fill. i hadn't gotten the adrenaline rush, the fare of death fix since -- fear of death fix since being home. i was looking for that. jonathan: where did you find that? >> 38,000 feet in the air. jonathan: he got up there after meeting walter from operation enduring warrior. >> he is a unique person but the story is typical of veterans we see coming back. they come back and feel lost and alone. jonathan: it gets the service members up and moving. in andrew's case it put a chute on his back. >> after the first jump, andrew sent us an e-mail that said i just found freedom at 13,000 feet. >> if he is not jumping from planes now he is practicing his weightless moves at i-fly. indoor ashburn. >> this is the fun part? >> this is freedom. i don't like roller coasters. i won't go on a roller coaster. i love jumping out of planes. i can't wait. i want to get back up. >> he is really good at it, too. pleasure to spend time getting to know andrew. he is now part of the formation team for the operation enduring warrior jump team. if you know somebody who is struggle oger needs help we have linked operation enduring warriors information right to the website at wjla.com. covering the 7 salutes and working in the military community it breaks your heart to see the folks coming back after they have been responsible for so much in the field. they get here and they are not entrusted to do anything. nice to see groups like that. no therapy. get them off the couch and get them in the field, parachuting or running mudders, anything. alison: small step. jonathan: that is it. jonathan: take the first step. alison: you had a chance to go up and give it a try? jonathan: i crashed in the wall. andrew said c'mon, you parachute with us. i'd love to go but the boss nixed it. i'm work the boss over. alison: coming up, bryce harper will see more dollar signs in his future. how much for how long? robert burton has the answer in sports. sam: the owner of this closed barbershop is headed to prison for identity theft and he wants to talk about it. i'm sam ford. at dominion, we're putting our energy to work creating a cleaner environment by using cleaner energy sources like solar, wind and natural gas. we've reduced carbon emissions by nearly 25%, which is the equivalent of taking close to two million cars off the road. cleaner air and cleaner water. it's good for all of us. dominion. depend on us for more than energy. jonathan: "7 on your side" with a consumer alert. for some people who may count on tax refund the i.r.s. is delaying refunds for 40 million low-income families. the agency says it needs extra time to get a handle on the identity theft and fraud. tax filing season starts january 23. but the families claiming the earned income tax credit and the additional child tax credit won't get a refund until at least february 15. alison: a d.c. man getting affairs in order before heading to jail on identity theft charges. he spoke to bureau chief sam bars to give us a unique perspective on the crime. this is an interview you will see only on 7. sam: 46-year-old kevin brown in the hat. the attorney in the middle and develop brother on the other -- twin brother on the other side is headed to federal prison, identity theft. >> this is fast money. better than drugs. >> talking about the earned income tax credit. plug in valid social security numbers, even stolen one and ups pop a refund. >> what refund would you get? >> $2,000 to $6,000. >> a lot revol everred around the classic cut basher shop. this is a promotional video. >> he recruited othersfo this group got or sought some $120 million in fraudulent refunds. >> they submit it and hope they get refund in the mail. sam: yes, the i.r.s. caught on. >> i knew they'd catch up eventually. >> he pleaded guilty to several counts including identity theft. his attorney said he did not advice brown to do the interview -- >> what is striking to me is the desire to tell the story. part of the redemption. sam: brown will report to federal prison when he finds a space for him. he doubts the scheme will stop. >> they won't stop it. two dependent form 1040. anything less than $10,000, they will mail it in and get a refund. sam: sam ford, abc7 news. jonathan: we'll check on the roads with jamie. jamie: heavy volume leaving the city outbound from 395 to the pentagon closer to duke street. you can see a solid line of the heavy traffic. there may be lighter volume from 395 and the freeway in kenilworth avenue because the government had early release. the inner loop is slowing 50 continuing south to branch avenue. heading to tysons to the 270 spurt. this is the inner loop. the outer loop is starting to hit brakes heading south to annandale and bethesda. a live look shows through bradley boulevard the heavy volume we are seeing. 270 the stretch heading northbound closer to germantown looks good. 95 in maryland there is stop and go traffic. a look at the traffi b weather with doug. you have weather alerts. doug: we do. starting at midnight. the majority of the area is under winter weatherry advisory from midnight until 6:00 p.m. for possibility of wintry mix of snow and sleet and freezing rain. plain rain the temperatures will drop. the longer we stay above freezing the better for everyone. the areas where we drop below or at freezing for several hours the precipitation will have more of an impact. this is what we have on radar. there is plain rain and area of snow to the west. when the precipitation begins overnight it will start as snow and it may pick up a little accumulation, half inch, three quarter of an inch we will transition for the day. this will make the difference because as hard as it tries it's not going to freeze. some areas are close to the borderline all afternoon and everything but the prospects improve for sunday. the concern for the weekend it's fine. overnight there is a wintery mix. that is my story. what is yours? robert: athletes making more money. bryce harper in the nationals avoided arbitration agreeing to a multimillion deal for 2017. he made $5 million last year. not a great season. he hit .243. 24 86 r.b.i. a big dropoff from 2015 season. he had 42 homers with 99 r.b.i. when it comes to basketball it's benefit to be taller than most but not for one gonzaga player. he is taking the conference by storm despite being the tallest player in the gym. scott abraham has more. scott: the point guard on the court. >> captain of the team. meet your guys at a certain spot. >> standing 5'7al" the senior -- 5'7", the leader of the eagles. he goes by simple motto. heart over height. >> you can't tell me i won't do that. i try to prove that i belong. >> he is not only one of the best high school players in >> he is one of the top 20 players in the country. >> he is the reigning conference player of the year and he stars in the toughest basketball conference in the country. before he heads south he has unfinished business with the eagles. that is what we are focused on. scott: relentless and talented. robert: mugsy boggs, spud webb. jonathan: there are guys that have done the same thing. >> a leaper. he mate win dunk contests. jonathan: thanks. if you are looking for something to do a new exhibit at the newseum that cou at the man of the year. the canadian actor ryan reynolds is this year's pick. this morning the hasty pudding organization is proud to honor a talented and diverse actor. the "deadpool" star will be roasted by the students next month. the woman of the year yet to be announced. jonathan: good choice. music the focus at the new exhibit opening at the newseum in time for the inauguration. ryan hughes has a preview of the project louder than words. it's called "louder than words." there are a lot of neat things like jewelry that madonna wore in "like a virgin" to cyndi lauper's shoes to the costumes worn by the there is jimmi hendrix and the guitar at woodstock. this is looking at changing peace, equality and freedom and it brings freedom of express. 11 administrations are accounted for from eisenhower to president bill clinton and saxophone leading up to trump. this is coming to d.c. in time for the inauguration. we hope they will understand the first amendment that art its exercise free express singing the songs pro or against war. how it's the soundtrack of the social justice movement of the modern time. ryan hughes. >> this is a storm watch 7 winter weather alert. maureen: schools across the area canceling the weekend events ahead of the we'll be right backry weather headed our way. we be -- on the wintery weather headed our way. we begin with chief meteorologist doug hill. what can we expect and when? >> after midnight is when the precipitation will move in. we are on the eastern edge of a huge ice storm continuing to the central planes. we will get a mix. snow, sleet, freezing lane. there are no problems locally. there could be a raindrop but it's after midnight when the precipitation will begin. the suburbs are under a winter advisory for the wintery mix. the temperatures are key. roadway temperatures. we checked in the weather center. the roadway temperatures in virginia answer maryland. most of 52 degrees. the longer that it stays warm and the air is above freezing it could lesson the impact a bit. we expect precipitation early. starting with the snow to make transition in the morning to the freezing rain and the sleet. plain rain later on. worst driving issues are 7:00 in the morning to 3:00 in the afternoon. we'll complete the weekend forecast in 15 minutes. that is it. jonathan: you the stay connected with the storm watch weather team on wjla.com or social media. or act now to get alerts sent to your phone. maureen: this is just in the newsroom. attorney for d.c. serial sniper lee boyd

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