Transcripts For WRC News4 Today 20160703 : comparemela.com

Transcripts For WRC News4 Today 20160703



. now on news 4 today, a crash knocks out power to hundreds, flips the car and lands the driver in the hospital. the dangerous situation at a busy intersection. you are going to need your raincoat for the rest of the long weekend. storm team 4 is tracking when showers will impact your travel plans for fireworks and parades. dozens dead and hundreds wounded in the baghdad bombings. the latest terror group claiming responsibility. the first. the rain drops, did you hear them, feel them? it's going to be a major holiday factor. good morning, i'm adam tuss. >> and i'm molette green. timing is everything as you plan the fourth of july, the cookouts, the fireworks. the person with the answers, lauryn ricketts. >> yes. you are dealing with rain showers throughout the morning. it's not good on the air situation but hopefully we can improve things because we have a few changes to this ever-changing forecast. let'ow 70s through the afternoon and you can see, look at our radar, we got some heavy rain and we have some areas of light shower out there. again, expect showers this morning and expect showers again for the afternoon. there could be some sunny breaks here and there. we're following a developing story out of mongt county. one person was taken to the hospital after a car crash. this happened around 2:20 this morning in gaithersburg. the person's condition is not known temperature at this time. 200 people don't have pow >> terrorism in the sky, the real threat may be in the car. july 4th being one of the deadliest days on the road. packed highways slowed down by accidents like this one in florida, like a bus and a truck collided. killing 5 people and injuring 25 people. >> on the road or in the air, a call for caution and security as we remember our freedom. meanwhile, at least 83 injured after two separate bomb attacks in baghdad. the deadly aattack was a car bomb went off in the shopping district. it started after families have ended their fast for the holiday of ramadan. an upscale restaurant, 20 people were killed when militants took hodges in the -- hostages in the restaurant. three american students were killed. a u.s. citizen was killed in the attack and did not release the identity. isis claimed responsibility. and hillary clinton was interviewed three hours by the fbi about her use of a server. she talked about the interview and said she every -- she didn't do anything wrong. >> i never received any material that was mark classified and there is a process for the review of material before it is released to the public, and there were decisions made that material should be classified. i do call that retroactively classifying. >> clinton said she had no knowledge for the timeline of the review to be completed. donald trump weighed in tweeting quote, it's impossible for the fbi not to recommend criminal charges against clinton. what she did was wrong. and you can hear more about her interview with chuck todd on "meet the press." grab your umbrella and your raincoat. maybe. lauryn is updating her forecast with the best chances to avoid showers. and a wild chase. a familiar danger that played out in l.a. as an atv lays down the gas. stick around for that. the rider in the rear, he's taunting officers, waving at the officers, going come on, stop us. and they condition. >> wild scene in los angeles as police chase two men on an atv, at one point during the chase, they tease the officers there, blowing through red lights. they eventually surround -- surrendered and taken into custody. and firefighters battle a blaze near curry mountain, it started thursday night and burned more than 1,000 acres. evacuation order for people in the area. time right now is 6:12 on this sunday morning and we want to know what kind of day is in store. a little rainy start to the day so far. >> i know. i had to have my little hat on. bad hair days. you don't have that experience. meteorologist lauryn ricketts and i share that issue as we look forward to the day ahead. >> well, we can expect continued bad hair. it looks like we got rain through the forecast. we also have a few changes i'm happy to say. of course, we have some rain in the forecast. not only right now but also later on this afternoon and then monday, fourth of july, lot of things going on, obviously. let's time everything out for you. 4 things to know. we've got periods of showers today. most lie likely in the morning, we'll dry out in the midday, 10:00 a.m., to 2:00, showers. i think today, this morning is what we're getting right now is going to be the more widespread of really throughout the day. more changes for monday. rain totals, i've decreased them a little bit. maybe about an inch to 1 1/2 inches of rain before this all said and done. here's a look at the latest radar. a few spots of heavy rain but this is moving out of our region. this is what we're watching for, for monday. this will continue to travel to the mid atlantic and right into our area. we're going to plan everything out for you today. showers on the light side throughout the morning and then we could have a few sunny breaks but we'll still have a chance for isolated showers here and there. tomorrow, temperatures only in the 70s. here's the timing. 5:00, showers moving in here. tomorrow morning, 6:00 a.m., we're looking good, but here comes some more rain. it will push in here again by it looks like the heaviest now is staying north of pennsylvania. we'll continue to see some showers push in. by 9:00, maybe a little bit more scattered in nature, not quite as heavy and then we will dry out by tuesday afternoon. guys. lauryn, thank you so much. >> keep an eye on that forecast. >> we will have to and watch very closely and make our plans. reporter's notebook up next. good morning. welcome to reporter's notebook. i'm pat lawson muse. bob mcdonnell's quick overturned. the supreme court overturned his corruption conviction saying the jury got faulty instructions on what constitutes brie brerry. what are people saying about this case? >> well, the current governor, virginia governor m should be the end of it. that it's time to move on. that bob mcdonnell has suffered enough in the public eye and has gone through enough and in mcauliffe's eye has paid a price already and time to move forward. >> i don't know how much he was suffered. he was charged by the prosecutors and lower court and appeals court all agreed that he and his wife violated the law. the chief justice john roberts, supreme court, unanimously said. the lower court has to consider whether or not there's specific acts he could be charged. bob mcdonnell, the supreme court wasn't worried about the tawdry aspects of this. he will be facing charges but his reputation is still bado because of what the chief justice said about it. tawdry acts. >> i got to know the governor pretty well while he was governor when i was hosting a series on tv. governor mcdonnell, the public humiliation, the separation from his wife, all of his children, the costs. he's not a wealthy man. there are a lot of people who say he has suffered. >> apart from what people feel about him, because he's well respected as an individual, is whether or not the lower courts will see any pathway to actually charge him for an official act rather than this broad case of he took a ferrari rides and took a rolex and got this free money from people. the question is will they find a reason to go forward and the prosecutors have to come up with that decision. >> there's also the thinking that this decision could have a wide-reaching impact. >> yes, because it difficult. the federal statute is -- how you bribe a public official is very serious. you must make an official act for some gratuity or something and you have to remember on this case, in the governor's defense, something like 44 -- more than 40 attorneys general from around the country had filed a brief saying this went too far in enforcing the federal law. kai henderson surprised a lot of people this week, submitting her resignation early. she said she was leaving in 2017. we're wondering why she's leaving early. >> she told us in 2014. she said she's going to be going in the end of 2016-2017 year. she announced to a lot of people she'e she's truly retired of this job. >> some people have suggested she didn't get along that well with mayor bouser. >> becauser said she didn't ask her to leave. >> she did not ask. >> where this leaves us with an interim chancellor of schools for the entire school year. the mayor has said they haven't gun the search for a new chancellor. the head of schools is going to move into that position on ain't rim position -- interim basis come september when henderson departs. when she's departing is a slow time for her office, so it's a good time to leave. it means for one school year there will be some ambiguity about who will be leading the schools in the years ahead. >> all the preparation for the coming school year 16-17 has been going on since the spring. fired, and principals reassigned. she's setting the table for the coming year and someone can oversee it. it's not she's going to pull the plug on all the things she's been doing. she was appointed by mayor gray as a chancellor after michelle reed quit. she's done it with less acrimony. >> her legacy is mixed. she's got reforms. she's a tough time to close achievement gaps. >> it's a decades long problem. schools starting to decline in the 30s. she's changed it. >> there have been improvements in some test results but as you point out the achievement gap is still there. she's called it a civil rights issue, that this is, you know, african-american children in the district of columbia. and she also oversaw the tough decisions of closing a lot of schools that made a lot of parents unhappy. nobody likes when their school is closed and nobody likes change. she had on her watch the multimillion dollar food scandal that ended up in a whistle-blower suit. we're in the midst of changing providers for schools. >> she's trying to change decades of poor performance in our schools and not only here but around the country. you have to give her credit for that. those problems in some cases are almost insolvable. it was a big week for metro and another couple of weeks to come. metro is cleaning out. let's talk about this search. 500 positions being cleared out. the general manager says a lot of these are jobs that are not filled, but 500 is a pretty large number. it's not that big of a number. i thought it was odd, no one has said, the chairman of the board, no one has said exactly how many of these are vacant. he will move these jobs out over several months. it's not that people are out the door right away. he's trying to do what he's hired to do. is clean out at metro. >> he's ripping the band aid off. let's not forget, he has jack evans, longest elected official in the district of columbia as the chairman of the board and evans has given this advice to other politicians, you know, if you are going to inflict some pain on the constituents, do it early. don't drag it out. do it early. do it fast. and then let them forget about it as time goes on and that's what he's doing with the track work, the closures, the lay-offs, and 500 jobs is a lot of jobs if it's your job. that decision. this comes after he laid off 20 managers as well. so, you know, he is setting the tone both publicly and internally. >> after going into labor negotiations with the largest union. he was hired to be a change agent. whrfer you like what he's done or don't like it, people are giving him action -- people wanted action and he's giving them action. we've got to take a break and we'll be right back. virginia governor terry mcauliffe is defending his decision to restore voting rights to 200,000 ex-felons who served their time and can register to vote. the governor is facing quite a legal challenge over his executive order. >> there's a second lawsuit basically saying the same thing, is that the governor exceeded his authority by exceeding -- by issuing this executive order rather than going through the legislature. small steps. senator kane had done something along these lines. >> and bob mcdonnell. >> mcdonnell took it even further. but mcauliffe did this and republicans are crying foul because they say he's trying to put virginia into the direction of hillary clinton. it's hard to determine if they are secured democrats or not. that's what the republicans fear is thing going to swing virginia which is definitely a pivotal state come election. >> critics cai database not being scrubbed properly. they are worried if you give them their voting rights back, then maybe gun rights could be given back. the governor is not backing down on this. >> no. because if you are a felon and you have the right to vote, it's not a matter of process. the process has to be fixed to assign the voting rights to the felon. if that's the way it should be, i don't get to vote because the virginia government can't run itself. but mark herring said the governor is doing the right thing. like everything in government. this has political overtones and it's a matter of public policy. sharing the road and the damages. d.c. council has delayed a vote on whether bicyclists and pedestrians will be able to sue for damages when there's a wreck involving a car. tom, that was your story this week. right now, they can't claim damages if they are partly at fault. >> right now, if you are a pedestrian or a cyclist in the city of washington, if you are [000:25:59;00] for damages because you are violating the law. the council is struggling to change the law like it is in other places where you can apportion the damage, so if you are 20% responsible for an accident you can sue for 80% of damages or 60% responsible, you can sue for 40%. this law is very restrictive for pedestrians and cyclists, both of whom we've had lot more in the city than before. >> contributory negligence, does that level the playing field? >> most states do not have this. d.c., maryland, and virginia, all have this and what the opponents of this change are saying is that this is going to put d.c. at a disadvantaged position compared to our neighbors. it's going to raisin insurance rates for drivers because of this, but, you that's what they do. that's what they get paid to say and what is interesting is that council member mcduffy pulled this will legislation, he wanted to pull it much further back than the delay, and there was an uprising on the council, they got it where it will be a first vote until july now. it's been delayed until that. the first legislation would only impact cyclists. they want to add an amendment that would cover pedestrians as well. usually the district governor is leading by example on some of this progressive legislation like minimum wage and gay rights. >> the return of walter fawntroy was arrested for writing a bad check for a kay terer after the obama. many people are baffled and saddened. explain what he means to the city what he's facing. >> his history of being a right-hand man to martin luther king, his civil rights record, is just -- you cannot challenge that. that is the history of the civil rights moment -- movement he was there. he served as 20 years as a delegate to congress. he gave up the seat to run for mayor in 1990 and didn't make it. he's been the pastor of a new bethel baptist church. >> here's what happened. it's not a criminal complaint. civil complaint. he wrote a check for something like $55,000 to put on an unofficial inaugural party from barack obama in 2009. he didn't get enough money to cover the check, some people think that's the reason he went overseas and started doing stuff in africa and the middle east. people h his wife, dorothy, he's 83. he finally came home. out of loudon county, he hugged his wife. he was -- his charge was in civil court. they are hoping he gets hope to get the physical and mental and all the help he needs. >> it was a touching moment, tom. he had the pictures in his story when he hug his wife and we have to remember what she's been doing through these four years. separated from her husband, having to deal with the financial ramifications, obviously they are in financial straits right now. this was a big moment for the family and a big moment for the city. as tom points out the history that walter fauntroy has. and a lot of people are concerned about him. thank you. that's reporter's notebook. i'm pat lawson. news 4 today continues. ♪ ♪ time right now is 6:30 on this sunday. here are the top stories that we're following. one person has been taken to the hospital after a car crashed into a power pole in investigatorsburg. the condition of the driver unknown. over 200 people don't have power due to that accident. even with impending the rain, the preparations for the fourth of july celebrations continue in the district. folks can head on down to the capital concert rehearsal tonight at 8:00. the show is still set for tomorrow. but may be continued tuesday. two separate bomb baghdad. isis claimed responsibility for one of those. a lot of you want to know about your fourth of july weekend celebrations. is it going to get rained out? good sunday morning to you. i'm adam tuss. >> i'm molette green. meteorologist lauryn ricketts is changing when the showers will be in your neighborhood. hey, there. >> hey, there, molette and adam. we're watching this rain. now the rain right now has nothing to do with the rain that we may see tomorrow, but this is a frontal system that will continue to come through the area. we may get a little drying by mid morning. temperatures in the 60s. we'll take them into the 70s for daytime highs today. a little spotty, heavier rain south of d.c. but a lot of maryland staying dry. this will continue to move out of here. as we go through the morning and i do believe we'll have some isolated showers as we get into the after. mostly cloudy skies. this is what we're watching for tomorrow. this will continue to track to the east. we're going to track it for you and time it out for you domg up. -- coming up. >> all right. lar yn. in the race for the white house, hillary clinton's use of a private email server is back in the news. she spent three hours yesterday talking to the fbi. it's a sign the investigation might be coming to an end. >> no campaign appearances saturday for hillary clinton or donald trump. both had other business to take care of. clinton spending three and a half hours at fbi headquarters in washington speaking with investigators about her use of a private email server while she was secretary of state. the year long investigation is looking into whether anyone broke the law by mishandling sensitive information. she spoke on the phone with chuk todd. >> i was pleased to sit down and answer their questions today to try to bring this to a conclusion. >> this was a day after loretta lynch said she would let career prosecutors decide after critics slammed her for being on an airplane with former president clinton. >> he just happened to be at the airport at this time. think of it. just happened to be at the airport. he was talking about golf and grandchildren. >> trump spent saturday looking at potential running mates. newt gingrich and chris christie are on his short list. >> we're not placing any emphasis on that. it's his call and he's got to make up his mind. we'll see what happens. >> republican national convention opens in a little more than two weeks. we're following a developing story out of howard county. detectives are still working to identify the suspect in saturday's double shooting. police have also identified the victims. 29-year-old amanda doher is pronounced dead at the hospital. and derek henderson is in critical condition. if you are. alexandria fourth homicide of the year. people who live alongside first street woke up to gunshots. police found that -- shaquan hall shot. >> my heart goes out for the family. the mother, and her family. >> alexandria police will hold a community meeting wednesday night to talk about this homicide. people are describing the who died this week in a freak accident in mexico as inspiring, selfless, humble, 29-year-old jose franco was on vacation with his girlfriend. they were snorkeling and she got caught up in a rip current. he drowned saving her. family members and members of the team say that's the kind of guy he was. >> he was our little brother. he was -- but he was the one who took care of us. >> he was my best friend. he's a very loving man. >> he always put people before him. he was always look out for people. >> franco coached the river plate boys team. they set up a go fund me page to help his family. we have a link on the nbc washington app. president obama called him the conscience of the world. elie wiesel's book gave us a painful account of the atrocities of the hollocausthol. we have a look at his life and legacy. >> reporter: he was called a messager to mankind. a survivor of the nazi scermings camps. he witnessed the worse of humanitity and dedicated himself to make the holocaust eternal. >> we must speak, we must take sides, for neutrality helps the owe presser, never the victim. >> born in romania, he was just a teenager in 1944 when he and his family were deported to auschwitz. when they arrived his mother and younger sister were sent to the gas chambers and killed. this picture shows him where he was taken to buchenwald where he rurpd to auschwitz nearly 35 years later to confront his memory. >> i was literally taken from my books which speak of humanism and beauty and truth into the kingdom of hell. >> until his death, he taught timeless lessons about hope and despair. warning of the power of indifference. his famous book, "night", a kronl of his experiences. >> i belong to a traumatized generation that often felt forgotten by got. one must not estrange one's self from either god or man. our time now 6:37. 31 people infected about the zika virus, that's according to state health officials. the baltimore sun reports all of the cases of the were travel-related and no one has contracted zika by being by then by a mosquito in the state. a tennessee family is suing the tsa after they say agents assaulted their disabled daughter. 19-year-old anna cohen and her mother were traveling through the memphis airport last year after a visit to st. jude children's hospital when her sequin top. agents pulled her aside, slammed her to the ground and beat her. >> they would do something -- something to someone who is disabled, what would they do to an elderly person who doesn't understand, who is confused. >> hannah is permanently disabled by a brain tumor t confused. the charges against hannah were dropped there. thousands of people are heading to the national mall tomorrow to celebrate the fourth of july. >> as we look back at america's fight for independence, soon a new memorial could be built on the mall to honor those who served in desert storm. aaron gilchrist looks at the effort to get it all done. >> the alpha company. >> it's been a lot of years since fred wellman has flipped through the old photos in the middle east. as a young army lieutenant, he flew operations. >> iran and iraq had fought for eight years. this is a battle-tested army. >> the war sent nearly 700,000 troops to the persian golf. desert storm was a short war that started on january 17th, 1991 and ended four days after february 24th. it was a decisive coalition victory, but not one without costs. >> that's hal and mike on the right. we willman says they were 2 of 2283 fighters who didn't come home. here is the northwestern corner of the national mall where scott stump is spearheading the effort to build the national memorial. >> it would be something that people would be able to see the history of our country kind of chronologically even. >> after six years of work, stump and the organization have congressional approval to build. there is a massive curved wall made of >> it's a left hook design. shows the military maneuver up into iraq and enveloped in u qat to liberate them. >> stump believes it will cost $25 million or more to build the memorial. his group has raised only a fraction of that so far. >> we want to have this up and dedicated sometime in 2018. >> in the meantime, stump is trying to create awareness. on memorial day, 500 desert storm vets marched in d.c.'s annual parade. it mark the first time a large number of its veterans had gathered since the war ended 25 years ago. it was a chance for these men and women to put a face on the memorial effort for the fallen and to honor their own service, the service of guys like hal and mike and wellman. >> we stood up we did our duty and we did it well. >> in washington, aaron gilchrist. news 4. the desert storm memorial organization expects to have it finalized by later this year and to learn more, search the nbc washington app, desert storm. the rain is here. it's dampening a lot of fourth of july plans. lauren is tracking the limited time you'll be able to grill and eat outside. a grandmother with an ambitious goal. she's channeling a ho love of tennis to try to set a world record. cool story coming up. unexpected extra steps to raise healthy chickens with no antibiotics ever. for example, thyme. it's part of our 100% veggie diet that we feed our chickens and helps support their immune system. and we don't need to add antibiotics to their diet. if you want some sage advice, you should use thyme. okay, rosemary. thyme, just one more way we bring you chicken raised with no antibiotics ever. it's not the easy way. it's the perdue way. if you are planning on dpriling out on this sunday, july 4th eve, we're looking at temperatures in the mid to upper 70s. we've got some rain out there right now. i do believe it's you may have a break to go ahead and do some grilling. we're going to time out that storm and rain coming up in a few minutes. thank you, lauryn. hillary clinton on the defense after meeting with the fbi yesterday about her ongoing email investigation. >> moderator of "meet the press" chuck todd talked exclusively with clinton yesterday. he joins us live. what did you take away from it? >> it sounds like they feel like that they are on their way of finally getting this story behind them. they are not completely done and it doesn't look -- this is one of those things where if she gets exonerated, it's going to magically suddenly improve her standing, favorability ratings in this or that. you are still going to have half the country that's not going to believe it. there's nothing like that tarmac meeting to almost give republicans to almost discredit to just introduce some skepticism about the decision, but obviously, if she actually did get hit with a misdemeanor charge or something like that, then it could actually impact her with people that might want to vote for her. i think they are on their way to turning a corner on this. >> donald trump as you mejs taking to twitter to really hit hard on clinton on this. it's been a pretty good week for him, you might say, with all the talk around his pick of the pea. who is stacking up to be the lead here? >> that trust issue. it's remarkable on the trust issue, trump leads, he's being seen as more trustworthy than she is. >> it's interesting he met with mike pence. on paper, pence probably brings him more of what he needs right now than any other potential he's a midwestern guy, sort of a laidback midwestern guy. if he's looking for punch, that's newt gingrich or chris christie. my gut is he's going to end up with christie because he's been loyal. if you look in years past, double down on what got you there, right. if you are trump, what got you there? brashness, a little over the top, you know, have a ticket of that. >> absolutely. >> we'll see how that plays. one media market. who do you got on the show today. >> tom cotton, republican senator from arkansas. wait until you see how he tries to defend trump or not so much and tom v.p. candidate. and reminder being you can see "meet the press" at 10:30. check this one out. a local grandmother is using her love of tennis this holiday weekend to support the troops. >> bonnie is from reston, after months of training and preparing, this week, tennis is all she's been doing. >> and if she accomplish her goal, she's going to be a world record holder. we have the incredible story. >> reporter: you may have heard of someone being called the world's best grandma, well, bonnie may be getting the official title this weekend. she's attempting to break the guinness book of world records of consecutive singles matches. she friday morning and plans on playing one after another, 72 straight hours, only a 5-minute break each hour. did i mention that she's 61 years old and she came prepared? >> i have all these goodies. i've brought with me a pillow and cushions so that if i need to or if i can have some time to, i can get some rest. pickle juice is one of the keys to keeping your stamina going. >> who needs gatorade? >> right. who needs gatorade when you have pickle juice. >> sponsors could raise $10,000. >> this is benefitting the military, and i'm thinking about all those people that i can draw inspiration from, from what they do, this doesn't even begin to c every single day. >> the level of play over the next 72 hours will vary. still, she doesn't expect to win many of these matches. the goal is to keep playing. right into the record books. at the montgomery tennis-plex. go, bonnie! >> better than me. >> yeah. >> and it's not tennis weather today. >> no, not at all. we may get a little break in some of this rain that we're seeing out there this morning, you guys head into rain this morning. >> yes. >> we continue to see some rain this afternoon. it's going to be isolated. what we're seeing out there is probably the heaviest we're going to see throughout the day. we have some changes for tomorrow. let's get into the weather forecast so you no what to expect and when to expect. we're in the 60s. we're going to take those temperatures into the 70s for daytime high today due to that cloud cover that we have out there and you can see low 70s the time we head into the early afternoon. i think we'll top out in the upper 70s by later this afternoon. here's that rain, again, heavy in spots. it's really just a line straight south of baltimore and coming through chesapeake city. this is the rain through today, but this is what we're watching for tomorrow. tracking into the mid atlantic and that could bring some heavy rain. for today, expect some light showers in the morning. we could have sunny breaks in the afternoon, but we'll go with isolated showers later on this afternoon. tomorrow, that rain is going to move in mid morning. if you have things to do, early tomorrow morning is the time to do it. 5:00, tonight, if you need to grill, you'll be able to do it. keep an eye to the sky. 6:00 a.m., shenandoah valley, we'll move through the mid morning, in time for the independence day parade downtown. a break during the afternoon and more rain comes through here tomorrow night. again, it's going to be more scattered, so hopefully we can get those firk we'll have scattered showers early on tuesday. but we clear out early tuesday morning. bethesda's golden girl dominates. the latest on katie ledecky. why should over two hundred years of citi® history matter to you? well, because it tells us something powerful about progress. that whether times are good or bad, people and their ideas will continue to move the world forward. as long as they have someone to believe in them. citi® financed the transatlantic cable that connected continents. and the panama canal, that made our world a smaller place. we backed the marshall plan that helped europe regain its strength. for over two centuries we've supported dreams like these, and the people and companies behind them. so why should that matter to you? because, today, we are still helping progress makers turn their ideas into reality. and the next great idea could be yours. life's morning multitasking for a growing family, and drawers with many layers, to show exactly what you need. life's sharing a meal. and a kitchen with room for everyone. spend $4000 or more on a new kitchen and get 15% back at the ikea kitchen event. >> she finished nearly 10 seconds before anyone else. she's the third fastest ever in the event. >> i'm confident that no matter how the race shakes out that i can get my hand up. she owns the top 11 spots for the women's 800 meter freestyle. >> unbelievable. much more still ahead on news 4 today. >> that includes an hour-by-hour rook at your forecast with our meteorologist, lauryn ricketts. more rain today. stay with us. we'll have more on that. it's a great day for an adventure. surprises are hiding around each corner. come chase thrills that lead in every direction. yet somehow bring us all back together. busch gardens williamsburg and water country usa. vacation packages start at $50 per person. a whole other world awaits. knocks out power to hundreds, flips the car and lands the driver in the hospital. the dangerous situation at a busy intersection. you are probably going to need your raincoat for the rest of the long holiday week. storm team 4 is tracking when showers will impact your travel plans and fireworks and parades today. dozens dead and hundreds wounded in the baghdad bombings. the latest attack and the terror group claiming responsibility. first, the rain is here. we need someone to blame for it. it could be a major factor this holiday weekend. good sunday morning, i'm adam tuss. >> i'm molette green in for angie goff. planning is key. more pressure on lauryn ricketts. [ laughter ] >> she's laughing. >> i'm laughing because tom kierein left me here. this has been a difficult meteorologist would tell you that leading up to the fourth of july. we have some changes. i think you'll like them. we're seeing some rain out there through the morning. heavy at times. i believe it's going to be more isolated this afternoon and mainly to the south. this is what we're watching for monday. this will continue to track to our area but it tracks a little north. we're looking at maybe a change in the rain total. temperatures in the 60s, into the 70s today. tracking and timing for that rain today and time coming up. >> turning now to a developing story in montgomery county. power is expected to be fully restored in the next hour after a car crashed into a power pole. is opened in montgomery village on witman road in gaithersburg. we're told the person has life-threatening injuries. if you are looking something to do late the rehearsal for the capitol fourth convert. the it's set for tomorrow, but tuesday is backup day in case we do see those showers for the holiday. there are special entrances and road closures in place. plan accordingly. you'll also want to be ready for a lot of those road closures for the fourth of july parade and fireworks near the national mall monday. parade on constitution avenue starts at 11:45 tomorrow morning. the fireworks shows starts at 9 p.m. most roads in the area, of course, will be closed and that will start at 6 a.m. until midnight. good news for the folks that choose metro to get to the events on the mall this fourth of july. there's no track work. tomorrow, it opens at 7:00 in the morning and closes at midnight. trains are going to run on a saturday schedule until tuesday afternoon rush hour. large coolers are not expected. expect detours around the national mall. meanwhile, the safe track work wraps up later day. it's going to pick back up on tuesday. service will shut down between reagan national airport and braddock road. the city of laurel celebrates fourth of july last night. saturday's perfect weather made for a great show, and just may have been the best chance for you to see those fireworks this weekend. after the latest round of terror attacks, authorities here are on high alert for the fourth of july as millions of americans hit the roads. nbc's morgan rafort shows how they are keeping the country safe. >> largest cities and airports are heavily guarded by armed officers. >> it's more secure. it feels good to know that there's someone watching and looking out for us. >> reporter: trained canines at l.a.x. >> we flew early morning to beat the rush. >> authorities will be in and out of uniform. >> you'll have behavior detection people that will be in this area. you'll see local law enforcement working with dhs for a presence out there and the airport police as well. >> reporter: at jfk airport in new york, travelers say they are not afraid. this isn't stopping you? >> it is not. we go about our living and travel and do what we do. >> reporter: while many are focused on terrorism in the sky, the real threat may be deadliest days on the road. packed highways, like this one in florida, a bus and a truck collided. >> i've never seen anything of this magnitude, especially this number of fatalities. >> on the road or in the air, a call for cautious and security as we remember our freedom. two separate bomb attacks in iraq have left 83 people dead. 176 wounded. it happened this morning in baghdad. a car bomb killed most of the people in a busy shopping district. isis claimed responsibility for that attack. saying that they targeted shiite muslims. no one has claimed responsibility for the second attack. meanwhile, investigators in bangladesh are looking for clues on the mastermind of an attack at a restaunt students with ties to american colleges. two aattended emery university and another one at university of california berkley. isis has claimed responsibility. the fbi interviewed hillary clinton for more than three hours saturday about her use of a private email server while she was secretary of state. in an exclusive interview on msnbc with chuck todd, clinton discussed the interview and reiterated that she did nothing wrong. >> i never received nor sent any material that was marked classified, and there is a process for the review of material before it is released to the public, and there were decisions made that material should be classified. classifying. donald trump weighed in. tweeting, it is impossible for the fbi not to recommend charges against clinton. what she did was wrong. >> you can watch more of hillary clinton's interview with chuck todd on "meet the press." and he also talks to tom perez. before you head out the door, grab your umbrella and raincoat. lauryn is updating your forecast. look at that. that's what's happening outdoors right now. she's going to tell us the best chances toed avoid the showers and what to expect. >> a wild chase and few ways to stop the people leading that chase. the familiar danger in l.a. as an atv travels down the highway. amazing. the rider in the rear, he's taunting officers, waving at the officer, going come on, stop us and they can't. >> wild scene in los angeles as police chase two men on an atv, at one point during the chase, they tease the officers there, blowing through red lights. driving in opposite lanes. they eventually did surrender and were taken into custody. right now, five homes are burned and three fires are injured after a fast-moving brush fire broke out on a san bernardino hillside. it burned ten acres before firefighters were able to get it under control. one person was treated for smoke inhalation. about 6,000 acres of land in hawaii were burned. the fire called widespread power outages. no injuries reported, several people hiking on trails had to be airlifted out of the path of the fire. time right now is 7:10. let's take a look outside if you are planning to grill, your time is limited. lauryn is tracking when showers will break out and chances of a dry fireworks show as well. this time of year, beaches in florida usually packed. the major health concern as residents voice their frustration. look at that. ♪ ♪ forecast for tomorrow. so outlook for tomorrow if you are headed to the independence day parade, maybe spend some time at the pool, maybe doing a little golfing, whatever you need to do, we have to look to the sky because we're going to have some rain moving in as has been advertised but the timing has change a little bit. we'll time everything out for you and let you know what you can expect it looks like maybe we'll get some fireworks in tomorrow. we'll talk about that in a few minutes. in this crucial time for tourism in florida people are growing in anger and frustration over a toxic algae bloom. nbc's gabe gutierrez has the latest. >> reporter: today along florida's treasure coast. anger. >> wemt our waters back. >> reporter: a foul-smelling algae bloom takes over. >> this is sad, heart b >> reporter: it's been described as resembling guacamole. it can cause skin rashes and if ingested even liver failure. florida's governor has declared a state of emergency as the algae, including lake okeechobee has turned green. these demonstrators want the government to buy land to store extra water. it's attracting the attention of environmentalist aaron brockovi brockovich. >> it's gotten lewd chris that we continue to do this. >> in a written statement u.s. sugar has said sugar cane and not increasing it. and to say otherwise is simply irresponsible. at lake okeechobee, controlling excess water has been a challenge for decades ever since a massive hurricane killed almost 2,000 people in 1928. farther south in palm beach county. tourism officials and authorities are insisting the water is safe 50 miles from the toxic algae. >> we're looking forward to welcoming visitors this weekend and throughout the summer. >> more than a holiday weekend ruined, an ecosystem at risk. a conspiracy targeting government buildings in two cities in arizona leads to a tucson man's arrest. 18-year-old mahin arrested after an investigation. he faces two counties of state terrorism. the arrest and allegations are not related to the independence day weekend and the timing of the arrest was coincidence. what could become a national model for helping young folks stay away from violent crime and get their lives on track, it's all happening in northern california. nbc's steve patterson shows us the city that was full of murder cases until this controversial but effective program began. [ sirens ] >> this was once what anyone heard about richland, california. an industrial city known for gangs, drugs, most of all murder. >> there's always been homicides in richmond. >> five years ago, a radical idea to save >> a community activist got involved. his mission was to offer an al tesh native. the program offering mentoring, workshops, employment help and trips outside the city. >> most of these young men are waiting for us to show up, are waiting for a responsive, credible, legitimate opportunity. >> 68 men have participated. 64 are still alive and the number of murders has been dropping from 47 in 2011 to -- 2007, to 21 in 2015. they keep their fellows anonymous even to police. what the program doesn't do is ask anyone to put down their gun. instead, they offer up to $1,000 if they stay out of trouble and reach personal mile stones. >> did you do it for the money? the money was nice. it was a plus. >> this man spent his life in and out of prison before joining us. >> reporter: how do you feel like this program influenced you? >> if it wasn't for the program, i probably would be running around the streets, doing a whole bunch of stuff. >> he's focused on helping other cities adopt the model. >> it works. it's keeping young men alive and it's a lot less costly than gun violence in this city. >> go, go. >> a radical approach that many here say is working. steve patterson, nbc news, richmond, california. time right now 7:19 on this sunday morning. we had somen rain droops outside. >> it is. it's chilly out there. >> quite a change. >> and yesterday was so beautiful and then today, quite a difference as molette was going to make it out of the 70s if we keep this cloud cover around. let's show you what's going on. we have some showers going on right now. i believe we're going to see to continue showers. it will be more isolated by this afternoon. everything we see is going to be light. especially this afternoon. we could some sunshine midday. temperatures still chilly. low to mid 60s across the board. here's a look at the radar. you can see some heavier spots coming down through southern maryland and annapolis and the eastern shore. other than that, we're looking at clearing skies just to the north and west of our region. back it up a little bit which is what we're looking at coming our way for monday. let's time it out for you. this is 5:00 tonight. more isolated this afternoon and throughout this evening. we're going to keep the cloud cover. temperatures in the upper 70s. now just a few isolated showers moving through the area this afternoon, tonight, and overnight. 7:00 a.m. we're dry. but here comes that rain. pushing in from the south and west. it will be moving to the north and east by 11:00 a.m. what do we got at 11:00? we have a nats game against the brewers. we have a lot of events going on mid morning. that's the time this rain will move in. it will scoot through here and it will be more isolated and scattered as we get through the late afternoon and evening and we could have the fireworks going. it depends on how much rain we have, about 9:00, when that sun goes down. a few showers also around on tuesday morning but tuesday night looks good. cloudy tomorrow morning. rain likely by the midday and we'll have scattered showers by the afternoon and evening. guys. >> an improving forecast. very good. coming up, a le how a student used his tools in the classroom to give his brother a life-changing gift. it is a big deal when local high schools get 3 d printers. very cool. they can make all kinds of interesting things. >> and at one loudon county high school, a student had a very special project in mind. he wanted to make his little we have more on this story of devotion to a brother and the dedication of a teacher. >> reporter: the story starts with this box. it's a 3 d printer, brand-new last school year to the career and tech ed class. when gabriel spotted it. he had a question. >> he kind of asked if we think we can print out a prosthetic hand and i was kind of, you know, taken aback by it. i said i don't know, you know. i guess we could try. >> he and his family had been doing research to try to find a prosthetic hand for little brother lucas. they found an organization that provided the designs free of charge and he spotted the 3 d printer and took the next step. >> it would be nice if he could have two and be like everyone else. >> it took a little while. they kept at it. >> maybe it was a matter of scaling it down a little smaller and knocking out the next one and the next one ended up just right. >> and ten days ago, lucas and his mom came many in to try on the new prosthetic hand. what do you think? looking at his face. it was amazing. >> it's good and like easy to grab. >> lucas is also glad kids woebt -- won't ask him about why he has a little hand. >> i do not like anyone asking me that. >> lucas smiles a lot, even more these days that he can do this and this with big brother gabriel. >> able to grab things with that hand and give high fives and fist pumps like that. >> the planet like him. for sure. >> it makes me thinks my brother loves me a lot. fantastic, big brother. all right. little lucas is going to be grabbing everything. >> well-done. look at that picture out there, folks. scattered showers may rain out your barbecues and maybe the fireworks. lauryn is tracking when to expect the storms. new controversies in 2016. difficulties they face in picking a v.p. our remembering their coach. an inspirational man in their lives. why should over two hundred years of citi® history matter to you? well, because it tells us something powerful about progress. that whether times are good or bad, people and their ideas will continue to move the world forward. as long as they have someone to believe in them. citi® financed the transatlantic cable that connected continents. and the panama canal, that made our world a smaller place. we backed the marshall plan that helped europe regain its strength. and pioneered the atm, for cash, anytime. for over two centuries we've supported dreams like these, and the people and companies behind them. so why should that matter to you? because, today, we are still helping progress makers turn their ideas into reality. and the next great idea could be yours. here are the top stories we're following you. power is expected to be fully restored in just after an hour after a car crashed into a power pole in gaithersburg. even with rain chances today and tomorrow, the preparations for the fourth of july celebrations continue in the district. folks can head on down to the capitol fourth concert rehearsal going on tonight at 8:00. the show and fireworks are still set for tomorrow but may be delayed until tuesday. 83 people are dead. 176 injured in two separate car bomb attacks isis has claimed responsibility for one of those attacks. of course, a lot of us are going to want to know about the weather. >> of course. >> on this fourth of july weekend and if things are going to get rained out. good morning to you. i'm adam tuss. >> and molette green. you can see that rain moving in on storm team 4 radar. lauryn ricketts is tracking when shows thundershowers will be in your neighborhood. >> we're seeing rain in our southeast and east neighborhoods. right now. it's cool out there. temperatures in the lower to mid 60s. we're only headed into the 70s today with added cloud cover and a chance of rain. we have a few changes to tomorrow's forecast. 64 in washington right now as i said. lower to mid 60s across the board. here we are looking at the radar right now. you can see the rain continues to move to the north and east. we have a few more hours of some showers, but then we have some showers through the day tomorrow. now we have som we'll time it out for you and let you know what to expect coming up. >> let's turn our attention to the race for the white house. hillary clinton's use of a private email server back in the spotlight again after she spent over three hours yesterday talking to the fbi. it's a sign that the year long federal investigation might be coming to an end. nbc has the latest. >> reporter: no campaign appearances saturday for hillary clinton or donald trump. both have other business to take care of. clinton spending three and a half hours at fbi headquarters in washington speaking with investigators about her use of a private email server while she was secretary of state. the year long investigation is looking into whether anyone broke the law by mishandling sensitive information. after the interview, clinton spoke on phone with nbs's chuck todd. >> i was pleased to sit down and answer their questions today to try to help to bring this to a conclusion. >> the interview comes a lynch said she would let career prosecutors decide after critics slammed after meeting bill clinton after a chance meeting. >> i wouldn't could it again. >> he just happened to be at the airport at this time. think of it. just happened to be at the airport. he was talking about golf and grandchildren. >> trump spent saturday looking at potential running mates. meeting with indiana governor, mike pence, newt gingrich and chris christie are also to be said on the short list. >> i would discuss this seriously with donald. we're not placing any emphasis on that. it's his call and he's got to make up his mind. we'll see what happens. >> republican national convention opens in a little more than two weeks. we're following a developing story out of howard county. detectives are still working to identify the suspect in saturday's double shooting. police have also identified the victims. 29-year-old amanda doher is pronounced dead at the hospital. 33-year-old derek hernandez is currently listed in serious condition. police believe the suspect and victims may have known each other. still no suspect this morning in alexandria's fourth hoemed of the year. people who live alongside first street woke up to gunshots. police found that -- shaquan hall shot. he later died at the hospital. we spoke with one woman who saw the victim's mother at the scene. >> when she came -- she said where's my son, because i'm a mother and i have children. my heart just goes out for the family. the mother, and her family. >> alexandria police will hold a community meeting wednesday night to talk about this homicide. loved ones are describing the montgomery county soccer coach who died this week in a freak accident in inspiring, selfless, humble. 29-year-old jose franco was on vacation with his girlfriend. they were snorkeling and she got caught up in a rip current. he drowned saving her. family members and members of the team say that's the kind of guy he was. >> he was our little brother. he was -- but he was the one who took care of us. >> he was my best friend. he's a very loving man. >> he always put people before him. he would always look out for people. >> franco coached the river plate boys team. they set up a go fund me page to help his family. we have a link on the nbc washington app. search jose franco. all right. switching gears. look at that. the rain is here. dampening some of our fourth of july plans, and lauryn is tracking it all and how soon or when we'll be able to have that grill outside cooking up some good food. >> you can do it in the rain too. >> you can. >> also check this out a grandmother with an ambitious goal. she's trying to set a world record. stick around for that one. president obama called him the conscience of the world. elie wiesel's book gave us a painful account of the atrocities of the holocaust. we have a look at his life and legacy. >> reporter: he was called a mess messenger to mankind. a survivor of the nazi extermination camps. he witnessed the worstof to make the holocaust eternal. >> we must speak, we must take sides, for neutrality helps the did he have o -- opresser, never the victim. >> born in romania, he was just a teenager in 1944 when he and his family were deported to auschwitz. when they arrived his mother and younger sister were sent to the gas chambers and killed. this picture shows him where he was taken to buchenwald where his father starved to death. his camp was liberated by american troops in 1945. he first returned to auschwitz nearly 35 years later to confront his memory. >> i was literally taken from my books which speak of humanism and beauty and truth into the kingdom of hell. >> until his death, he taught timeless lessons about hope and despair. warning of the perils of indifference. a passionate suppor israel, he wrote 50 books. his famous book, "night", a chronicle of his traumatizing experiences. >> i belong to a traumatized generation that often felt forgotten by god and betrayed by mankind. and yet i believe one must not estrange one's self from either god or man. it is getting cooler and a lot cloudier outside. you are going to notice that when you step outside this morning. lauryn is updating her forecast with how to dress for the fireworks and what you can expect when you try to open up the grill as well. >> no short shorts for you, adam. a new honor for those who served our country. the challenge, though, in making a desert storm memorial a reality on the national mall. woman: i have a masurprise for you.are you? man: you have a surprise for me? narrator: at dominion, 1 in 5 new hires is a veteran. and when they're away, they miss out on a lot. but they won't miss out on financial support. because we cover any difference between their military pay and their dominion salary, and continue benefits for them and their families. why do we do it? because our vets sacrifice enough. "dominion. depend on us for more than energy." ♪ stand by me. if you are headed out to nats park tonight as we finish up the series against the reds, that game, i shouldn't say tonight, it's at 1:35 first pitch. i do believe there's going to be a few isolated showers out there. it's going to be dry, cloudy, and comfortable. temperatures in the mid to upper 70s. staying in the 70s tomorrow. we have changes to the forecast for the timing of that rain. time it out hour-by-hour from now until tuesday coming up. thank you very much. thousands of people are going to head to the national mall tomorrow to celebrate the fourth of july. >> and as we look back at america's fight for independence, soon a new memorial could be built on the mall to honor those who served during desert storm. >> the alpha company. >> it's been a lot of years since fred wellman has flipped through the old photos in the middle east. as a young army lieutenant, he flew scout operations in operation desert storm. >> iran and iraq had fought for eight years. this is a battle-tested army. >> the war sent nearly 700,000 american troops to the persian gulf after iraq occupied kuwait. desert storm was a short war that started with an air assault on january 17th, 1991 and ended four days after ground forces went into iraq on february 24th. it was a decisive coalition victory, but not one without costs. >> the weather went bad and two of my men, their helicopter crashed. >> that's hal and mike on the right. wellman says they were two of 283 fighters who didn't come home. here is the northwestern corner of the national mall where scott stump is spearheading the effort to build the national desert storm veterans war memorial. >> it would be something that people would be able to see the history of our country kind of chronologically even. >> after six years of work, stump and the memorial association have congressional approval to build. early renderings, there is a massive curved wall made of kuwaiti stone. it surrounds visitors with the images from the gulf war and the names of those who died. >> it's a left hook design. shows the military maneuver up into iraq to liberate them. >> stump believes it will cost $25 million or more to build the memorial. his group has raised only a fraction of that so far. >> we have an aggressive timeline, but we still want to have this up and dedicated sometime in 2018. >> in the meantime, stump is trying to create awareness. on memorial day, 500 desert storm vets marched in d.c.'s annual parade. it mark the first time a large number of its veterans had gathered since the war ended 25 years ago. it was a chance for these men and women to put a face on the memorial effort for the fallen and to honor their own service, the service of guys like hal and mike and wellman. i would hate for america to forget that there was a moment in time when we stood up when called and we did our duty and we did it well. >> in washington, aaron gilchrist. news 4. the desert storm memorial organization expects to have it finalized by later this year and to learn more, search the nbc washington app, desert storm. 31 people in maryland have been infected by the zika virus. that's according to state health officials. the baltimore sun reports all of the cases of the were travel-related and no one has contracted zika by being by then by a mosquito in the state. the cdc is awarding $363,000 for zika prevention. a tennessee family is suing the tsa after they say agents assaulted their disabled daughter. 19-year-old hannah cohen and her mother were traveling through the memphis airport last year after a visit to st. jude children's hospital when her sequin top set off a security alarm. agents pulled her aside, slammed her to the ground and beat her. >> they would do something -- something to someone who is disabled, what would they do to an elderly person who doesn't understand, who is confused. >> hannah is permanently disabled by a brain tumor that's left her blind, deaf and easily confused. the charges against hannah were eventually dropped. a local grandmother, molette, is using her love of tennis this holiday weekend to support the troops. >> yeah. her name is bonnie vona. she's from reston. after months of training and preparing this weekend, tennis is all she's been doing. >> and if she accomplish her goal, she's going to be a world record holder. we have the incredible story. >> reporter: you may have heard of someone being called the world's best grandma, well, bonnie may be getting the official title this weekend. she's attempting to break the guinness book of world records of consecutive singles matches. the record right now she played on her match on friday morning and plans on playing one after another, 72 straight hours, only a 5-minute break each hour. did i mention that she's 61 years old and she came prepared? >> i have all these goodies. i've brought with me a pillow and cushions so that if i need to or if i can have some time to, i can get some rest. pickle juice is one of the keys to keeping your stamina going. >> who needs gatorade? >> right. who needs gatorade when you have pickle juice. >> sponsors and pledges for vona could help raise $72,000 this weekend. all going to tennis for troops, which provides scholarships to military families. that's her sproigs. >> this is benefitting the military, and i'm thinking about all those people that i can draw inspiration from, from what they do, this every single day. >> the level of play over the next 72 hours will vary. still, she doesn't expect to win many of these matches. the goal is to keep playing. right into the record books. at the montgomery tennis-plex. she's going to do it! go, bonnie! hey listen, someone had a question, if the firework are canceled by the rain tomorrow, does that mean and they get pushed to tuesday, does that mean they don't have to go to work on tuesday? >> i would say so. >> you heard it first. >> celebrate fourth of july on the 5th. and then take the sixth off. take the week off. >> we're starting a heat wave on wednesday, wednesday, thursday, friday, saturday, and sunday, 90s and it's going to be humid. >> welcome to summer! >> get through today. we have a few showers out there right now and we will continue to see some showers through the morning. let's go ahead and getar plan out your fourth. periods of showers out there today. we've got changes for monday. if you didn't catch the changes yesterday, we're fine-tuning this forecast heading into fourth of july. rain totals decrease. the heaviest rain has moved north and we're clearing tuesday afternoon. as we don't get the fireworks in tomorrow night, tuesday night will be best. temperatures school. cool. you may need a jacket. lows in the low 60s. we're going to see rain throughout the morning, isolated showers more this afternoon. 5:00, we keep the clouds around. isolated showers as we go through the afternoon and evening. we'll keep a chance of isolated showers overnight. most of us will be dry. 7:00 a.m. tomorrow morning, rain southwest, it could be heavy at times, but we got the independence da tomorrow, the nats game at 11:35. we can have some rain around for that. bring your rain gear if you are headed to those two things or any 'fess i have its throughout our community. it could be heavy through the early part of the afternoon. then will be scattered throughout the late afternoon and into the evening. may be able to get those fireworks going but we'll have some rain around so we'll have to keep an eye to the radar. we have showers around on tuesday morning before we clear by tuesday afternoon and tuesday night. here's the planner for the fourth. by noon, 60% chance of rain. we'll keep it to 80 about 4:00, 5:00. more scattered in the evening. temperatures in the 70s today and tomorrow. humidity starts coming tomorrow. showers in the morning on tuesday. look at this. we warm up. boy, do we warm up and we're going to be humid. lots of chances of showers, thursday and small chances on friday into the weekend. >> we'll take it. have no choice. thank you. >> dominates. the latest accomplishment for katie ledecky, her lowest competitors were left in the deep end. unexpected extra steps to raise healthy chickens with no antibiotics ever. like putting oregano in their water. it has natural antioxidants that keep our chickens healthy. and we don't have to use antibiotics in their diet. more like orega-yes, am i right? oregano, just one more way we bring you chickens raised with no antibiotics ever. it's not the easy way. it's the perdue way. bethesda native katie ledecky, you may have heard of her. she dominated in the olympic trials. >> she finished nearly 10 her 8 minutes 32 seconds is the third fastest ever in the event. >> i'm confident that no matter how the race shakes out that i can get my hand up. >> that's actually not her best time. she owns the top 11 spots for the women's 800 meter freestyle. >> she's incredible. good for you. time right now, 7:56. power is expected to be fully restored at any moment after a car crashed into a power pole in gathersberg. one person taken to the hospital with life-threatening injuries. 83 people are dead. 176 wounded after two separate bomb attacks in iraq. isis has claimed responsibility for one of those attacks. hillary clinton was interviewed by the fbi for over three hours yesterday for her use of a private email server while she was secretary of state. clinton says she has no knowledge of a timeline for the review to be completed. preps for the fourth of july celebrations continue in the district despite lauryns forecast. you can watch the rehearsal at 8:00 for now. tomorrow's show still on. >> we're in an unsettled period. >> yeah, we're. rain for tomorrow still out in the midwest. we have to see where it's tracking as i came in this morning, it's tracking farther north. wee see rain showers tomorrow. zp an inch possible. >> it's supposed to be hot on the fourth of july. >> i agree. next week is hot. >> all right. thanks for joining us. >> we'll be back at 9:00. . good morning and welcome to "sunday today." i'm willie geist. happy 4th of july eve. i hope you have naturally red and blue beverages. we'll spend a day with the delightful ellie kemper talking about her rise from the office

Related Keywords

Arkansas , United States , Alexandria , Al Iskandariyah , Egypt , California , San Bernardino , Mexico , Arizona , Richland , Shenandoah , New York , Panama Canal , Florida , Memphis , Tennessee , Los Angeles , Baltimore , Maryland , Chesapeake City , Iran , Washington , Loudon County , Gaithersburg , Indiana , Virginia , Howard County , Bangladesh , Iraq , New Bethel Baptist Church , Baghdad , Israel , Montgomery County , Pennsylvania , Romania , Kuwait , Hawaii , Kuwaiti , Americans , America , American , Tom Perez , Jack Evans , Steve Patterson , Martin Luther King , Bonnie Vona , Michelle Reed , John Roberts , Lauryn Ricketts , Fred Wellman , Terry Mcauliffe , Aaron Gilchrist , Ellie Kemper , Walter Fauntroy , Kai Henderson , Pat Lawson , Bob Mcdonnell , Jose Franco , Derek Hernandez , Loretta Lynch , Elie Wiesel , Chris Christie , Barack Obama , Chuck Todd , Hanna Cohen , Angie Goff , Gabe Gutierrez , Channah Cohen , Newt Gingrich , Derek Henderson , Hillary Clinton , Willie Geist ,

© 2024 Vimarsana
Transcripts For WRC News4 Today 20160703 : Comparemela.com

Transcripts For WRC News4 Today 20160703

Card image cap



. now on news 4 today, a crash knocks out power to hundreds, flips the car and lands the driver in the hospital. the dangerous situation at a busy intersection. you are going to need your raincoat for the rest of the long weekend. storm team 4 is tracking when showers will impact your travel plans for fireworks and parades. dozens dead and hundreds wounded in the baghdad bombings. the latest terror group claiming responsibility. the first. the rain drops, did you hear them, feel them? it's going to be a major holiday factor. good morning, i'm adam tuss. >> and i'm molette green. timing is everything as you plan the fourth of july, the cookouts, the fireworks. the person with the answers, lauryn ricketts. >> yes. you are dealing with rain showers throughout the morning. it's not good on the air situation but hopefully we can improve things because we have a few changes to this ever-changing forecast. let'ow 70s through the afternoon and you can see, look at our radar, we got some heavy rain and we have some areas of light shower out there. again, expect showers this morning and expect showers again for the afternoon. there could be some sunny breaks here and there. we're following a developing story out of mongt county. one person was taken to the hospital after a car crash. this happened around 2:20 this morning in gaithersburg. the person's condition is not known temperature at this time. 200 people don't have pow >> terrorism in the sky, the real threat may be in the car. july 4th being one of the deadliest days on the road. packed highways slowed down by accidents like this one in florida, like a bus and a truck collided. killing 5 people and injuring 25 people. >> on the road or in the air, a call for caution and security as we remember our freedom. meanwhile, at least 83 injured after two separate bomb attacks in baghdad. the deadly aattack was a car bomb went off in the shopping district. it started after families have ended their fast for the holiday of ramadan. an upscale restaurant, 20 people were killed when militants took hodges in the -- hostages in the restaurant. three american students were killed. a u.s. citizen was killed in the attack and did not release the identity. isis claimed responsibility. and hillary clinton was interviewed three hours by the fbi about her use of a server. she talked about the interview and said she every -- she didn't do anything wrong. >> i never received any material that was mark classified and there is a process for the review of material before it is released to the public, and there were decisions made that material should be classified. i do call that retroactively classifying. >> clinton said she had no knowledge for the timeline of the review to be completed. donald trump weighed in tweeting quote, it's impossible for the fbi not to recommend criminal charges against clinton. what she did was wrong. and you can hear more about her interview with chuck todd on "meet the press." grab your umbrella and your raincoat. maybe. lauryn is updating her forecast with the best chances to avoid showers. and a wild chase. a familiar danger that played out in l.a. as an atv lays down the gas. stick around for that. the rider in the rear, he's taunting officers, waving at the officers, going come on, stop us. and they condition. >> wild scene in los angeles as police chase two men on an atv, at one point during the chase, they tease the officers there, blowing through red lights. they eventually surround -- surrendered and taken into custody. and firefighters battle a blaze near curry mountain, it started thursday night and burned more than 1,000 acres. evacuation order for people in the area. time right now is 6:12 on this sunday morning and we want to know what kind of day is in store. a little rainy start to the day so far. >> i know. i had to have my little hat on. bad hair days. you don't have that experience. meteorologist lauryn ricketts and i share that issue as we look forward to the day ahead. >> well, we can expect continued bad hair. it looks like we got rain through the forecast. we also have a few changes i'm happy to say. of course, we have some rain in the forecast. not only right now but also later on this afternoon and then monday, fourth of july, lot of things going on, obviously. let's time everything out for you. 4 things to know. we've got periods of showers today. most lie likely in the morning, we'll dry out in the midday, 10:00 a.m., to 2:00, showers. i think today, this morning is what we're getting right now is going to be the more widespread of really throughout the day. more changes for monday. rain totals, i've decreased them a little bit. maybe about an inch to 1 1/2 inches of rain before this all said and done. here's a look at the latest radar. a few spots of heavy rain but this is moving out of our region. this is what we're watching for, for monday. this will continue to travel to the mid atlantic and right into our area. we're going to plan everything out for you today. showers on the light side throughout the morning and then we could have a few sunny breaks but we'll still have a chance for isolated showers here and there. tomorrow, temperatures only in the 70s. here's the timing. 5:00, showers moving in here. tomorrow morning, 6:00 a.m., we're looking good, but here comes some more rain. it will push in here again by it looks like the heaviest now is staying north of pennsylvania. we'll continue to see some showers push in. by 9:00, maybe a little bit more scattered in nature, not quite as heavy and then we will dry out by tuesday afternoon. guys. lauryn, thank you so much. >> keep an eye on that forecast. >> we will have to and watch very closely and make our plans. reporter's notebook up next. good morning. welcome to reporter's notebook. i'm pat lawson muse. bob mcdonnell's quick overturned. the supreme court overturned his corruption conviction saying the jury got faulty instructions on what constitutes brie brerry. what are people saying about this case? >> well, the current governor, virginia governor m should be the end of it. that it's time to move on. that bob mcdonnell has suffered enough in the public eye and has gone through enough and in mcauliffe's eye has paid a price already and time to move forward. >> i don't know how much he was suffered. he was charged by the prosecutors and lower court and appeals court all agreed that he and his wife violated the law. the chief justice john roberts, supreme court, unanimously said. the lower court has to consider whether or not there's specific acts he could be charged. bob mcdonnell, the supreme court wasn't worried about the tawdry aspects of this. he will be facing charges but his reputation is still bado because of what the chief justice said about it. tawdry acts. >> i got to know the governor pretty well while he was governor when i was hosting a series on tv. governor mcdonnell, the public humiliation, the separation from his wife, all of his children, the costs. he's not a wealthy man. there are a lot of people who say he has suffered. >> apart from what people feel about him, because he's well respected as an individual, is whether or not the lower courts will see any pathway to actually charge him for an official act rather than this broad case of he took a ferrari rides and took a rolex and got this free money from people. the question is will they find a reason to go forward and the prosecutors have to come up with that decision. >> there's also the thinking that this decision could have a wide-reaching impact. >> yes, because it difficult. the federal statute is -- how you bribe a public official is very serious. you must make an official act for some gratuity or something and you have to remember on this case, in the governor's defense, something like 44 -- more than 40 attorneys general from around the country had filed a brief saying this went too far in enforcing the federal law. kai henderson surprised a lot of people this week, submitting her resignation early. she said she was leaving in 2017. we're wondering why she's leaving early. >> she told us in 2014. she said she's going to be going in the end of 2016-2017 year. she announced to a lot of people she'e she's truly retired of this job. >> some people have suggested she didn't get along that well with mayor bouser. >> becauser said she didn't ask her to leave. >> she did not ask. >> where this leaves us with an interim chancellor of schools for the entire school year. the mayor has said they haven't gun the search for a new chancellor. the head of schools is going to move into that position on ain't rim position -- interim basis come september when henderson departs. when she's departing is a slow time for her office, so it's a good time to leave. it means for one school year there will be some ambiguity about who will be leading the schools in the years ahead. >> all the preparation for the coming school year 16-17 has been going on since the spring. fired, and principals reassigned. she's setting the table for the coming year and someone can oversee it. it's not she's going to pull the plug on all the things she's been doing. she was appointed by mayor gray as a chancellor after michelle reed quit. she's done it with less acrimony. >> her legacy is mixed. she's got reforms. she's a tough time to close achievement gaps. >> it's a decades long problem. schools starting to decline in the 30s. she's changed it. >> there have been improvements in some test results but as you point out the achievement gap is still there. she's called it a civil rights issue, that this is, you know, african-american children in the district of columbia. and she also oversaw the tough decisions of closing a lot of schools that made a lot of parents unhappy. nobody likes when their school is closed and nobody likes change. she had on her watch the multimillion dollar food scandal that ended up in a whistle-blower suit. we're in the midst of changing providers for schools. >> she's trying to change decades of poor performance in our schools and not only here but around the country. you have to give her credit for that. those problems in some cases are almost insolvable. it was a big week for metro and another couple of weeks to come. metro is cleaning out. let's talk about this search. 500 positions being cleared out. the general manager says a lot of these are jobs that are not filled, but 500 is a pretty large number. it's not that big of a number. i thought it was odd, no one has said, the chairman of the board, no one has said exactly how many of these are vacant. he will move these jobs out over several months. it's not that people are out the door right away. he's trying to do what he's hired to do. is clean out at metro. >> he's ripping the band aid off. let's not forget, he has jack evans, longest elected official in the district of columbia as the chairman of the board and evans has given this advice to other politicians, you know, if you are going to inflict some pain on the constituents, do it early. don't drag it out. do it early. do it fast. and then let them forget about it as time goes on and that's what he's doing with the track work, the closures, the lay-offs, and 500 jobs is a lot of jobs if it's your job. that decision. this comes after he laid off 20 managers as well. so, you know, he is setting the tone both publicly and internally. >> after going into labor negotiations with the largest union. he was hired to be a change agent. whrfer you like what he's done or don't like it, people are giving him action -- people wanted action and he's giving them action. we've got to take a break and we'll be right back. virginia governor terry mcauliffe is defending his decision to restore voting rights to 200,000 ex-felons who served their time and can register to vote. the governor is facing quite a legal challenge over his executive order. >> there's a second lawsuit basically saying the same thing, is that the governor exceeded his authority by exceeding -- by issuing this executive order rather than going through the legislature. small steps. senator kane had done something along these lines. >> and bob mcdonnell. >> mcdonnell took it even further. but mcauliffe did this and republicans are crying foul because they say he's trying to put virginia into the direction of hillary clinton. it's hard to determine if they are secured democrats or not. that's what the republicans fear is thing going to swing virginia which is definitely a pivotal state come election. >> critics cai database not being scrubbed properly. they are worried if you give them their voting rights back, then maybe gun rights could be given back. the governor is not backing down on this. >> no. because if you are a felon and you have the right to vote, it's not a matter of process. the process has to be fixed to assign the voting rights to the felon. if that's the way it should be, i don't get to vote because the virginia government can't run itself. but mark herring said the governor is doing the right thing. like everything in government. this has political overtones and it's a matter of public policy. sharing the road and the damages. d.c. council has delayed a vote on whether bicyclists and pedestrians will be able to sue for damages when there's a wreck involving a car. tom, that was your story this week. right now, they can't claim damages if they are partly at fault. >> right now, if you are a pedestrian or a cyclist in the city of washington, if you are [000:25:59;00] for damages because you are violating the law. the council is struggling to change the law like it is in other places where you can apportion the damage, so if you are 20% responsible for an accident you can sue for 80% of damages or 60% responsible, you can sue for 40%. this law is very restrictive for pedestrians and cyclists, both of whom we've had lot more in the city than before. >> contributory negligence, does that level the playing field? >> most states do not have this. d.c., maryland, and virginia, all have this and what the opponents of this change are saying is that this is going to put d.c. at a disadvantaged position compared to our neighbors. it's going to raisin insurance rates for drivers because of this, but, you that's what they do. that's what they get paid to say and what is interesting is that council member mcduffy pulled this will legislation, he wanted to pull it much further back than the delay, and there was an uprising on the council, they got it where it will be a first vote until july now. it's been delayed until that. the first legislation would only impact cyclists. they want to add an amendment that would cover pedestrians as well. usually the district governor is leading by example on some of this progressive legislation like minimum wage and gay rights. >> the return of walter fawntroy was arrested for writing a bad check for a kay terer after the obama. many people are baffled and saddened. explain what he means to the city what he's facing. >> his history of being a right-hand man to martin luther king, his civil rights record, is just -- you cannot challenge that. that is the history of the civil rights moment -- movement he was there. he served as 20 years as a delegate to congress. he gave up the seat to run for mayor in 1990 and didn't make it. he's been the pastor of a new bethel baptist church. >> here's what happened. it's not a criminal complaint. civil complaint. he wrote a check for something like $55,000 to put on an unofficial inaugural party from barack obama in 2009. he didn't get enough money to cover the check, some people think that's the reason he went overseas and started doing stuff in africa and the middle east. people h his wife, dorothy, he's 83. he finally came home. out of loudon county, he hugged his wife. he was -- his charge was in civil court. they are hoping he gets hope to get the physical and mental and all the help he needs. >> it was a touching moment, tom. he had the pictures in his story when he hug his wife and we have to remember what she's been doing through these four years. separated from her husband, having to deal with the financial ramifications, obviously they are in financial straits right now. this was a big moment for the family and a big moment for the city. as tom points out the history that walter fauntroy has. and a lot of people are concerned about him. thank you. that's reporter's notebook. i'm pat lawson. news 4 today continues. ♪ ♪ time right now is 6:30 on this sunday. here are the top stories that we're following. one person has been taken to the hospital after a car crashed into a power pole in investigatorsburg. the condition of the driver unknown. over 200 people don't have power due to that accident. even with impending the rain, the preparations for the fourth of july celebrations continue in the district. folks can head on down to the capital concert rehearsal tonight at 8:00. the show is still set for tomorrow. but may be continued tuesday. two separate bomb baghdad. isis claimed responsibility for one of those. a lot of you want to know about your fourth of july weekend celebrations. is it going to get rained out? good sunday morning to you. i'm adam tuss. >> i'm molette green. meteorologist lauryn ricketts is changing when the showers will be in your neighborhood. hey, there. >> hey, there, molette and adam. we're watching this rain. now the rain right now has nothing to do with the rain that we may see tomorrow, but this is a frontal system that will continue to come through the area. we may get a little drying by mid morning. temperatures in the 60s. we'll take them into the 70s for daytime highs today. a little spotty, heavier rain south of d.c. but a lot of maryland staying dry. this will continue to move out of here. as we go through the morning and i do believe we'll have some isolated showers as we get into the after. mostly cloudy skies. this is what we're watching for tomorrow. this will continue to track to the east. we're going to track it for you and time it out for you domg up. -- coming up. >> all right. lar yn. in the race for the white house, hillary clinton's use of a private email server is back in the news. she spent three hours yesterday talking to the fbi. it's a sign the investigation might be coming to an end. >> no campaign appearances saturday for hillary clinton or donald trump. both had other business to take care of. clinton spending three and a half hours at fbi headquarters in washington speaking with investigators about her use of a private email server while she was secretary of state. the year long investigation is looking into whether anyone broke the law by mishandling sensitive information. she spoke on the phone with chuk todd. >> i was pleased to sit down and answer their questions today to try to bring this to a conclusion. >> this was a day after loretta lynch said she would let career prosecutors decide after critics slammed her for being on an airplane with former president clinton. >> he just happened to be at the airport at this time. think of it. just happened to be at the airport. he was talking about golf and grandchildren. >> trump spent saturday looking at potential running mates. newt gingrich and chris christie are on his short list. >> we're not placing any emphasis on that. it's his call and he's got to make up his mind. we'll see what happens. >> republican national convention opens in a little more than two weeks. we're following a developing story out of howard county. detectives are still working to identify the suspect in saturday's double shooting. police have also identified the victims. 29-year-old amanda doher is pronounced dead at the hospital. and derek henderson is in critical condition. if you are. alexandria fourth homicide of the year. people who live alongside first street woke up to gunshots. police found that -- shaquan hall shot. >> my heart goes out for the family. the mother, and her family. >> alexandria police will hold a community meeting wednesday night to talk about this homicide. people are describing the who died this week in a freak accident in mexico as inspiring, selfless, humble, 29-year-old jose franco was on vacation with his girlfriend. they were snorkeling and she got caught up in a rip current. he drowned saving her. family members and members of the team say that's the kind of guy he was. >> he was our little brother. he was -- but he was the one who took care of us. >> he was my best friend. he's a very loving man. >> he always put people before him. he was always look out for people. >> franco coached the river plate boys team. they set up a go fund me page to help his family. we have a link on the nbc washington app. president obama called him the conscience of the world. elie wiesel's book gave us a painful account of the atrocities of the hollocausthol. we have a look at his life and legacy. >> reporter: he was called a messager to mankind. a survivor of the nazi scermings camps. he witnessed the worse of humanitity and dedicated himself to make the holocaust eternal. >> we must speak, we must take sides, for neutrality helps the owe presser, never the victim. >> born in romania, he was just a teenager in 1944 when he and his family were deported to auschwitz. when they arrived his mother and younger sister were sent to the gas chambers and killed. this picture shows him where he was taken to buchenwald where he rurpd to auschwitz nearly 35 years later to confront his memory. >> i was literally taken from my books which speak of humanism and beauty and truth into the kingdom of hell. >> until his death, he taught timeless lessons about hope and despair. warning of the power of indifference. his famous book, "night", a kronl of his experiences. >> i belong to a traumatized generation that often felt forgotten by got. one must not estrange one's self from either god or man. our time now 6:37. 31 people infected about the zika virus, that's according to state health officials. the baltimore sun reports all of the cases of the were travel-related and no one has contracted zika by being by then by a mosquito in the state. a tennessee family is suing the tsa after they say agents assaulted their disabled daughter. 19-year-old anna cohen and her mother were traveling through the memphis airport last year after a visit to st. jude children's hospital when her sequin top. agents pulled her aside, slammed her to the ground and beat her. >> they would do something -- something to someone who is disabled, what would they do to an elderly person who doesn't understand, who is confused. >> hannah is permanently disabled by a brain tumor t confused. the charges against hannah were dropped there. thousands of people are heading to the national mall tomorrow to celebrate the fourth of july. >> as we look back at america's fight for independence, soon a new memorial could be built on the mall to honor those who served in desert storm. aaron gilchrist looks at the effort to get it all done. >> the alpha company. >> it's been a lot of years since fred wellman has flipped through the old photos in the middle east. as a young army lieutenant, he flew operations. >> iran and iraq had fought for eight years. this is a battle-tested army. >> the war sent nearly 700,000 troops to the persian golf. desert storm was a short war that started on january 17th, 1991 and ended four days after february 24th. it was a decisive coalition victory, but not one without costs. >> that's hal and mike on the right. we willman says they were 2 of 2283 fighters who didn't come home. here is the northwestern corner of the national mall where scott stump is spearheading the effort to build the national memorial. >> it would be something that people would be able to see the history of our country kind of chronologically even. >> after six years of work, stump and the organization have congressional approval to build. there is a massive curved wall made of >> it's a left hook design. shows the military maneuver up into iraq and enveloped in u qat to liberate them. >> stump believes it will cost $25 million or more to build the memorial. his group has raised only a fraction of that so far. >> we want to have this up and dedicated sometime in 2018. >> in the meantime, stump is trying to create awareness. on memorial day, 500 desert storm vets marched in d.c.'s annual parade. it mark the first time a large number of its veterans had gathered since the war ended 25 years ago. it was a chance for these men and women to put a face on the memorial effort for the fallen and to honor their own service, the service of guys like hal and mike and wellman. >> we stood up we did our duty and we did it well. >> in washington, aaron gilchrist. news 4. the desert storm memorial organization expects to have it finalized by later this year and to learn more, search the nbc washington app, desert storm. the rain is here. it's dampening a lot of fourth of july plans. lauren is tracking the limited time you'll be able to grill and eat outside. a grandmother with an ambitious goal. she's channeling a ho love of tennis to try to set a world record. cool story coming up. unexpected extra steps to raise healthy chickens with no antibiotics ever. for example, thyme. it's part of our 100% veggie diet that we feed our chickens and helps support their immune system. and we don't need to add antibiotics to their diet. if you want some sage advice, you should use thyme. okay, rosemary. thyme, just one more way we bring you chicken raised with no antibiotics ever. it's not the easy way. it's the perdue way. if you are planning on dpriling out on this sunday, july 4th eve, we're looking at temperatures in the mid to upper 70s. we've got some rain out there right now. i do believe it's you may have a break to go ahead and do some grilling. we're going to time out that storm and rain coming up in a few minutes. thank you, lauryn. hillary clinton on the defense after meeting with the fbi yesterday about her ongoing email investigation. >> moderator of "meet the press" chuck todd talked exclusively with clinton yesterday. he joins us live. what did you take away from it? >> it sounds like they feel like that they are on their way of finally getting this story behind them. they are not completely done and it doesn't look -- this is one of those things where if she gets exonerated, it's going to magically suddenly improve her standing, favorability ratings in this or that. you are still going to have half the country that's not going to believe it. there's nothing like that tarmac meeting to almost give republicans to almost discredit to just introduce some skepticism about the decision, but obviously, if she actually did get hit with a misdemeanor charge or something like that, then it could actually impact her with people that might want to vote for her. i think they are on their way to turning a corner on this. >> donald trump as you mejs taking to twitter to really hit hard on clinton on this. it's been a pretty good week for him, you might say, with all the talk around his pick of the pea. who is stacking up to be the lead here? >> that trust issue. it's remarkable on the trust issue, trump leads, he's being seen as more trustworthy than she is. >> it's interesting he met with mike pence. on paper, pence probably brings him more of what he needs right now than any other potential he's a midwestern guy, sort of a laidback midwestern guy. if he's looking for punch, that's newt gingrich or chris christie. my gut is he's going to end up with christie because he's been loyal. if you look in years past, double down on what got you there, right. if you are trump, what got you there? brashness, a little over the top, you know, have a ticket of that. >> absolutely. >> we'll see how that plays. one media market. who do you got on the show today. >> tom cotton, republican senator from arkansas. wait until you see how he tries to defend trump or not so much and tom v.p. candidate. and reminder being you can see "meet the press" at 10:30. check this one out. a local grandmother is using her love of tennis this holiday weekend to support the troops. >> bonnie is from reston, after months of training and preparing, this week, tennis is all she's been doing. >> and if she accomplish her goal, she's going to be a world record holder. we have the incredible story. >> reporter: you may have heard of someone being called the world's best grandma, well, bonnie may be getting the official title this weekend. she's attempting to break the guinness book of world records of consecutive singles matches. she friday morning and plans on playing one after another, 72 straight hours, only a 5-minute break each hour. did i mention that she's 61 years old and she came prepared? >> i have all these goodies. i've brought with me a pillow and cushions so that if i need to or if i can have some time to, i can get some rest. pickle juice is one of the keys to keeping your stamina going. >> who needs gatorade? >> right. who needs gatorade when you have pickle juice. >> sponsors could raise $10,000. >> this is benefitting the military, and i'm thinking about all those people that i can draw inspiration from, from what they do, this doesn't even begin to c every single day. >> the level of play over the next 72 hours will vary. still, she doesn't expect to win many of these matches. the goal is to keep playing. right into the record books. at the montgomery tennis-plex. go, bonnie! >> better than me. >> yeah. >> and it's not tennis weather today. >> no, not at all. we may get a little break in some of this rain that we're seeing out there this morning, you guys head into rain this morning. >> yes. >> we continue to see some rain this afternoon. it's going to be isolated. what we're seeing out there is probably the heaviest we're going to see throughout the day. we have some changes for tomorrow. let's get into the weather forecast so you no what to expect and when to expect. we're in the 60s. we're going to take those temperatures into the 70s for daytime high today due to that cloud cover that we have out there and you can see low 70s the time we head into the early afternoon. i think we'll top out in the upper 70s by later this afternoon. here's that rain, again, heavy in spots. it's really just a line straight south of baltimore and coming through chesapeake city. this is the rain through today, but this is what we're watching for tomorrow. tracking into the mid atlantic and that could bring some heavy rain. for today, expect some light showers in the morning. we could have sunny breaks in the afternoon, but we'll go with isolated showers later on this afternoon. tomorrow, that rain is going to move in mid morning. if you have things to do, early tomorrow morning is the time to do it. 5:00, tonight, if you need to grill, you'll be able to do it. keep an eye to the sky. 6:00 a.m., shenandoah valley, we'll move through the mid morning, in time for the independence day parade downtown. a break during the afternoon and more rain comes through here tomorrow night. again, it's going to be more scattered, so hopefully we can get those firk we'll have scattered showers early on tuesday. but we clear out early tuesday morning. bethesda's golden girl dominates. the latest on katie ledecky. why should over two hundred years of citi® history matter to you? well, because it tells us something powerful about progress. that whether times are good or bad, people and their ideas will continue to move the world forward. as long as they have someone to believe in them. citi® financed the transatlantic cable that connected continents. and the panama canal, that made our world a smaller place. we backed the marshall plan that helped europe regain its strength. for over two centuries we've supported dreams like these, and the people and companies behind them. so why should that matter to you? because, today, we are still helping progress makers turn their ideas into reality. and the next great idea could be yours. life's morning multitasking for a growing family, and drawers with many layers, to show exactly what you need. life's sharing a meal. and a kitchen with room for everyone. spend $4000 or more on a new kitchen and get 15% back at the ikea kitchen event. >> she finished nearly 10 seconds before anyone else. she's the third fastest ever in the event. >> i'm confident that no matter how the race shakes out that i can get my hand up. she owns the top 11 spots for the women's 800 meter freestyle. >> unbelievable. much more still ahead on news 4 today. >> that includes an hour-by-hour rook at your forecast with our meteorologist, lauryn ricketts. more rain today. stay with us. we'll have more on that. it's a great day for an adventure. surprises are hiding around each corner. come chase thrills that lead in every direction. yet somehow bring us all back together. busch gardens williamsburg and water country usa. vacation packages start at $50 per person. a whole other world awaits. knocks out power to hundreds, flips the car and lands the driver in the hospital. the dangerous situation at a busy intersection. you are probably going to need your raincoat for the rest of the long holiday week. storm team 4 is tracking when showers will impact your travel plans and fireworks and parades today. dozens dead and hundreds wounded in the baghdad bombings. the latest attack and the terror group claiming responsibility. first, the rain is here. we need someone to blame for it. it could be a major factor this holiday weekend. good sunday morning, i'm adam tuss. >> i'm molette green in for angie goff. planning is key. more pressure on lauryn ricketts. [ laughter ] >> she's laughing. >> i'm laughing because tom kierein left me here. this has been a difficult meteorologist would tell you that leading up to the fourth of july. we have some changes. i think you'll like them. we're seeing some rain out there through the morning. heavy at times. i believe it's going to be more isolated this afternoon and mainly to the south. this is what we're watching for monday. this will continue to track to our area but it tracks a little north. we're looking at maybe a change in the rain total. temperatures in the 60s, into the 70s today. tracking and timing for that rain today and time coming up. >> turning now to a developing story in montgomery county. power is expected to be fully restored in the next hour after a car crashed into a power pole. is opened in montgomery village on witman road in gaithersburg. we're told the person has life-threatening injuries. if you are looking something to do late the rehearsal for the capitol fourth convert. the it's set for tomorrow, but tuesday is backup day in case we do see those showers for the holiday. there are special entrances and road closures in place. plan accordingly. you'll also want to be ready for a lot of those road closures for the fourth of july parade and fireworks near the national mall monday. parade on constitution avenue starts at 11:45 tomorrow morning. the fireworks shows starts at 9 p.m. most roads in the area, of course, will be closed and that will start at 6 a.m. until midnight. good news for the folks that choose metro to get to the events on the mall this fourth of july. there's no track work. tomorrow, it opens at 7:00 in the morning and closes at midnight. trains are going to run on a saturday schedule until tuesday afternoon rush hour. large coolers are not expected. expect detours around the national mall. meanwhile, the safe track work wraps up later day. it's going to pick back up on tuesday. service will shut down between reagan national airport and braddock road. the city of laurel celebrates fourth of july last night. saturday's perfect weather made for a great show, and just may have been the best chance for you to see those fireworks this weekend. after the latest round of terror attacks, authorities here are on high alert for the fourth of july as millions of americans hit the roads. nbc's morgan rafort shows how they are keeping the country safe. >> largest cities and airports are heavily guarded by armed officers. >> it's more secure. it feels good to know that there's someone watching and looking out for us. >> reporter: trained canines at l.a.x. >> we flew early morning to beat the rush. >> authorities will be in and out of uniform. >> you'll have behavior detection people that will be in this area. you'll see local law enforcement working with dhs for a presence out there and the airport police as well. >> reporter: at jfk airport in new york, travelers say they are not afraid. this isn't stopping you? >> it is not. we go about our living and travel and do what we do. >> reporter: while many are focused on terrorism in the sky, the real threat may be deadliest days on the road. packed highways, like this one in florida, a bus and a truck collided. >> i've never seen anything of this magnitude, especially this number of fatalities. >> on the road or in the air, a call for cautious and security as we remember our freedom. two separate bomb attacks in iraq have left 83 people dead. 176 wounded. it happened this morning in baghdad. a car bomb killed most of the people in a busy shopping district. isis claimed responsibility for that attack. saying that they targeted shiite muslims. no one has claimed responsibility for the second attack. meanwhile, investigators in bangladesh are looking for clues on the mastermind of an attack at a restaunt students with ties to american colleges. two aattended emery university and another one at university of california berkley. isis has claimed responsibility. the fbi interviewed hillary clinton for more than three hours saturday about her use of a private email server while she was secretary of state. in an exclusive interview on msnbc with chuck todd, clinton discussed the interview and reiterated that she did nothing wrong. >> i never received nor sent any material that was marked classified, and there is a process for the review of material before it is released to the public, and there were decisions made that material should be classified. classifying. donald trump weighed in. tweeting, it is impossible for the fbi not to recommend charges against clinton. what she did was wrong. >> you can watch more of hillary clinton's interview with chuck todd on "meet the press." and he also talks to tom perez. before you head out the door, grab your umbrella and raincoat. lauryn is updating your forecast. look at that. that's what's happening outdoors right now. she's going to tell us the best chances toed avoid the showers and what to expect. >> a wild chase and few ways to stop the people leading that chase. the familiar danger in l.a. as an atv travels down the highway. amazing. the rider in the rear, he's taunting officers, waving at the officer, going come on, stop us and they can't. >> wild scene in los angeles as police chase two men on an atv, at one point during the chase, they tease the officers there, blowing through red lights. driving in opposite lanes. they eventually did surrender and were taken into custody. right now, five homes are burned and three fires are injured after a fast-moving brush fire broke out on a san bernardino hillside. it burned ten acres before firefighters were able to get it under control. one person was treated for smoke inhalation. about 6,000 acres of land in hawaii were burned. the fire called widespread power outages. no injuries reported, several people hiking on trails had to be airlifted out of the path of the fire. time right now is 7:10. let's take a look outside if you are planning to grill, your time is limited. lauryn is tracking when showers will break out and chances of a dry fireworks show as well. this time of year, beaches in florida usually packed. the major health concern as residents voice their frustration. look at that. ♪ ♪ forecast for tomorrow. so outlook for tomorrow if you are headed to the independence day parade, maybe spend some time at the pool, maybe doing a little golfing, whatever you need to do, we have to look to the sky because we're going to have some rain moving in as has been advertised but the timing has change a little bit. we'll time everything out for you and let you know what you can expect it looks like maybe we'll get some fireworks in tomorrow. we'll talk about that in a few minutes. in this crucial time for tourism in florida people are growing in anger and frustration over a toxic algae bloom. nbc's gabe gutierrez has the latest. >> reporter: today along florida's treasure coast. anger. >> wemt our waters back. >> reporter: a foul-smelling algae bloom takes over. >> this is sad, heart b >> reporter: it's been described as resembling guacamole. it can cause skin rashes and if ingested even liver failure. florida's governor has declared a state of emergency as the algae, including lake okeechobee has turned green. these demonstrators want the government to buy land to store extra water. it's attracting the attention of environmentalist aaron brockovi brockovich. >> it's gotten lewd chris that we continue to do this. >> in a written statement u.s. sugar has said sugar cane and not increasing it. and to say otherwise is simply irresponsible. at lake okeechobee, controlling excess water has been a challenge for decades ever since a massive hurricane killed almost 2,000 people in 1928. farther south in palm beach county. tourism officials and authorities are insisting the water is safe 50 miles from the toxic algae. >> we're looking forward to welcoming visitors this weekend and throughout the summer. >> more than a holiday weekend ruined, an ecosystem at risk. a conspiracy targeting government buildings in two cities in arizona leads to a tucson man's arrest. 18-year-old mahin arrested after an investigation. he faces two counties of state terrorism. the arrest and allegations are not related to the independence day weekend and the timing of the arrest was coincidence. what could become a national model for helping young folks stay away from violent crime and get their lives on track, it's all happening in northern california. nbc's steve patterson shows us the city that was full of murder cases until this controversial but effective program began. [ sirens ] >> this was once what anyone heard about richland, california. an industrial city known for gangs, drugs, most of all murder. >> there's always been homicides in richmond. >> five years ago, a radical idea to save >> a community activist got involved. his mission was to offer an al tesh native. the program offering mentoring, workshops, employment help and trips outside the city. >> most of these young men are waiting for us to show up, are waiting for a responsive, credible, legitimate opportunity. >> 68 men have participated. 64 are still alive and the number of murders has been dropping from 47 in 2011 to -- 2007, to 21 in 2015. they keep their fellows anonymous even to police. what the program doesn't do is ask anyone to put down their gun. instead, they offer up to $1,000 if they stay out of trouble and reach personal mile stones. >> did you do it for the money? the money was nice. it was a plus. >> this man spent his life in and out of prison before joining us. >> reporter: how do you feel like this program influenced you? >> if it wasn't for the program, i probably would be running around the streets, doing a whole bunch of stuff. >> he's focused on helping other cities adopt the model. >> it works. it's keeping young men alive and it's a lot less costly than gun violence in this city. >> go, go. >> a radical approach that many here say is working. steve patterson, nbc news, richmond, california. time right now 7:19 on this sunday morning. we had somen rain droops outside. >> it is. it's chilly out there. >> quite a change. >> and yesterday was so beautiful and then today, quite a difference as molette was going to make it out of the 70s if we keep this cloud cover around. let's show you what's going on. we have some showers going on right now. i believe we're going to see to continue showers. it will be more isolated by this afternoon. everything we see is going to be light. especially this afternoon. we could some sunshine midday. temperatures still chilly. low to mid 60s across the board. here's a look at the radar. you can see some heavier spots coming down through southern maryland and annapolis and the eastern shore. other than that, we're looking at clearing skies just to the north and west of our region. back it up a little bit which is what we're looking at coming our way for monday. let's time it out for you. this is 5:00 tonight. more isolated this afternoon and throughout this evening. we're going to keep the cloud cover. temperatures in the upper 70s. now just a few isolated showers moving through the area this afternoon, tonight, and overnight. 7:00 a.m. we're dry. but here comes that rain. pushing in from the south and west. it will be moving to the north and east by 11:00 a.m. what do we got at 11:00? we have a nats game against the brewers. we have a lot of events going on mid morning. that's the time this rain will move in. it will scoot through here and it will be more isolated and scattered as we get through the late afternoon and evening and we could have the fireworks going. it depends on how much rain we have, about 9:00, when that sun goes down. a few showers also around on tuesday morning but tuesday night looks good. cloudy tomorrow morning. rain likely by the midday and we'll have scattered showers by the afternoon and evening. guys. >> an improving forecast. very good. coming up, a le how a student used his tools in the classroom to give his brother a life-changing gift. it is a big deal when local high schools get 3 d printers. very cool. they can make all kinds of interesting things. >> and at one loudon county high school, a student had a very special project in mind. he wanted to make his little we have more on this story of devotion to a brother and the dedication of a teacher. >> reporter: the story starts with this box. it's a 3 d printer, brand-new last school year to the career and tech ed class. when gabriel spotted it. he had a question. >> he kind of asked if we think we can print out a prosthetic hand and i was kind of, you know, taken aback by it. i said i don't know, you know. i guess we could try. >> he and his family had been doing research to try to find a prosthetic hand for little brother lucas. they found an organization that provided the designs free of charge and he spotted the 3 d printer and took the next step. >> it would be nice if he could have two and be like everyone else. >> it took a little while. they kept at it. >> maybe it was a matter of scaling it down a little smaller and knocking out the next one and the next one ended up just right. >> and ten days ago, lucas and his mom came many in to try on the new prosthetic hand. what do you think? looking at his face. it was amazing. >> it's good and like easy to grab. >> lucas is also glad kids woebt -- won't ask him about why he has a little hand. >> i do not like anyone asking me that. >> lucas smiles a lot, even more these days that he can do this and this with big brother gabriel. >> able to grab things with that hand and give high fives and fist pumps like that. >> the planet like him. for sure. >> it makes me thinks my brother loves me a lot. fantastic, big brother. all right. little lucas is going to be grabbing everything. >> well-done. look at that picture out there, folks. scattered showers may rain out your barbecues and maybe the fireworks. lauryn is tracking when to expect the storms. new controversies in 2016. difficulties they face in picking a v.p. our remembering their coach. an inspirational man in their lives. why should over two hundred years of citi® history matter to you? well, because it tells us something powerful about progress. that whether times are good or bad, people and their ideas will continue to move the world forward. as long as they have someone to believe in them. citi® financed the transatlantic cable that connected continents. and the panama canal, that made our world a smaller place. we backed the marshall plan that helped europe regain its strength. and pioneered the atm, for cash, anytime. for over two centuries we've supported dreams like these, and the people and companies behind them. so why should that matter to you? because, today, we are still helping progress makers turn their ideas into reality. and the next great idea could be yours. here are the top stories we're following you. power is expected to be fully restored in just after an hour after a car crashed into a power pole in gaithersburg. even with rain chances today and tomorrow, the preparations for the fourth of july celebrations continue in the district. folks can head on down to the capitol fourth concert rehearsal going on tonight at 8:00. the show and fireworks are still set for tomorrow but may be delayed until tuesday. 83 people are dead. 176 injured in two separate car bomb attacks isis has claimed responsibility for one of those attacks. of course, a lot of us are going to want to know about the weather. >> of course. >> on this fourth of july weekend and if things are going to get rained out. good morning to you. i'm adam tuss. >> and molette green. you can see that rain moving in on storm team 4 radar. lauryn ricketts is tracking when shows thundershowers will be in your neighborhood. >> we're seeing rain in our southeast and east neighborhoods. right now. it's cool out there. temperatures in the lower to mid 60s. we're only headed into the 70s today with added cloud cover and a chance of rain. we have a few changes to tomorrow's forecast. 64 in washington right now as i said. lower to mid 60s across the board. here we are looking at the radar right now. you can see the rain continues to move to the north and east. we have a few more hours of some showers, but then we have some showers through the day tomorrow. now we have som we'll time it out for you and let you know what to expect coming up. >> let's turn our attention to the race for the white house. hillary clinton's use of a private email server back in the spotlight again after she spent over three hours yesterday talking to the fbi. it's a sign that the year long federal investigation might be coming to an end. nbc has the latest. >> reporter: no campaign appearances saturday for hillary clinton or donald trump. both have other business to take care of. clinton spending three and a half hours at fbi headquarters in washington speaking with investigators about her use of a private email server while she was secretary of state. the year long investigation is looking into whether anyone broke the law by mishandling sensitive information. after the interview, clinton spoke on phone with nbs's chuck todd. >> i was pleased to sit down and answer their questions today to try to help to bring this to a conclusion. >> the interview comes a lynch said she would let career prosecutors decide after critics slammed after meeting bill clinton after a chance meeting. >> i wouldn't could it again. >> he just happened to be at the airport at this time. think of it. just happened to be at the airport. he was talking about golf and grandchildren. >> trump spent saturday looking at potential running mates. meeting with indiana governor, mike pence, newt gingrich and chris christie are also to be said on the short list. >> i would discuss this seriously with donald. we're not placing any emphasis on that. it's his call and he's got to make up his mind. we'll see what happens. >> republican national convention opens in a little more than two weeks. we're following a developing story out of howard county. detectives are still working to identify the suspect in saturday's double shooting. police have also identified the victims. 29-year-old amanda doher is pronounced dead at the hospital. 33-year-old derek hernandez is currently listed in serious condition. police believe the suspect and victims may have known each other. still no suspect this morning in alexandria's fourth hoemed of the year. people who live alongside first street woke up to gunshots. police found that -- shaquan hall shot. he later died at the hospital. we spoke with one woman who saw the victim's mother at the scene. >> when she came -- she said where's my son, because i'm a mother and i have children. my heart just goes out for the family. the mother, and her family. >> alexandria police will hold a community meeting wednesday night to talk about this homicide. loved ones are describing the montgomery county soccer coach who died this week in a freak accident in inspiring, selfless, humble. 29-year-old jose franco was on vacation with his girlfriend. they were snorkeling and she got caught up in a rip current. he drowned saving her. family members and members of the team say that's the kind of guy he was. >> he was our little brother. he was -- but he was the one who took care of us. >> he was my best friend. he's a very loving man. >> he always put people before him. he would always look out for people. >> franco coached the river plate boys team. they set up a go fund me page to help his family. we have a link on the nbc washington app. search jose franco. all right. switching gears. look at that. the rain is here. dampening some of our fourth of july plans, and lauryn is tracking it all and how soon or when we'll be able to have that grill outside cooking up some good food. >> you can do it in the rain too. >> you can. >> also check this out a grandmother with an ambitious goal. she's trying to set a world record. stick around for that one. president obama called him the conscience of the world. elie wiesel's book gave us a painful account of the atrocities of the holocaust. we have a look at his life and legacy. >> reporter: he was called a mess messenger to mankind. a survivor of the nazi extermination camps. he witnessed the worstof to make the holocaust eternal. >> we must speak, we must take sides, for neutrality helps the did he have o -- opresser, never the victim. >> born in romania, he was just a teenager in 1944 when he and his family were deported to auschwitz. when they arrived his mother and younger sister were sent to the gas chambers and killed. this picture shows him where he was taken to buchenwald where his father starved to death. his camp was liberated by american troops in 1945. he first returned to auschwitz nearly 35 years later to confront his memory. >> i was literally taken from my books which speak of humanism and beauty and truth into the kingdom of hell. >> until his death, he taught timeless lessons about hope and despair. warning of the perils of indifference. a passionate suppor israel, he wrote 50 books. his famous book, "night", a chronicle of his traumatizing experiences. >> i belong to a traumatized generation that often felt forgotten by god and betrayed by mankind. and yet i believe one must not estrange one's self from either god or man. it is getting cooler and a lot cloudier outside. you are going to notice that when you step outside this morning. lauryn is updating her forecast with how to dress for the fireworks and what you can expect when you try to open up the grill as well. >> no short shorts for you, adam. a new honor for those who served our country. the challenge, though, in making a desert storm memorial a reality on the national mall. woman: i have a masurprise for you.are you? man: you have a surprise for me? narrator: at dominion, 1 in 5 new hires is a veteran. and when they're away, they miss out on a lot. but they won't miss out on financial support. because we cover any difference between their military pay and their dominion salary, and continue benefits for them and their families. why do we do it? because our vets sacrifice enough. "dominion. depend on us for more than energy." ♪ stand by me. if you are headed out to nats park tonight as we finish up the series against the reds, that game, i shouldn't say tonight, it's at 1:35 first pitch. i do believe there's going to be a few isolated showers out there. it's going to be dry, cloudy, and comfortable. temperatures in the mid to upper 70s. staying in the 70s tomorrow. we have changes to the forecast for the timing of that rain. time it out hour-by-hour from now until tuesday coming up. thank you very much. thousands of people are going to head to the national mall tomorrow to celebrate the fourth of july. >> and as we look back at america's fight for independence, soon a new memorial could be built on the mall to honor those who served during desert storm. >> the alpha company. >> it's been a lot of years since fred wellman has flipped through the old photos in the middle east. as a young army lieutenant, he flew scout operations in operation desert storm. >> iran and iraq had fought for eight years. this is a battle-tested army. >> the war sent nearly 700,000 american troops to the persian gulf after iraq occupied kuwait. desert storm was a short war that started with an air assault on january 17th, 1991 and ended four days after ground forces went into iraq on february 24th. it was a decisive coalition victory, but not one without costs. >> the weather went bad and two of my men, their helicopter crashed. >> that's hal and mike on the right. wellman says they were two of 283 fighters who didn't come home. here is the northwestern corner of the national mall where scott stump is spearheading the effort to build the national desert storm veterans war memorial. >> it would be something that people would be able to see the history of our country kind of chronologically even. >> after six years of work, stump and the memorial association have congressional approval to build. early renderings, there is a massive curved wall made of kuwaiti stone. it surrounds visitors with the images from the gulf war and the names of those who died. >> it's a left hook design. shows the military maneuver up into iraq to liberate them. >> stump believes it will cost $25 million or more to build the memorial. his group has raised only a fraction of that so far. >> we have an aggressive timeline, but we still want to have this up and dedicated sometime in 2018. >> in the meantime, stump is trying to create awareness. on memorial day, 500 desert storm vets marched in d.c.'s annual parade. it mark the first time a large number of its veterans had gathered since the war ended 25 years ago. it was a chance for these men and women to put a face on the memorial effort for the fallen and to honor their own service, the service of guys like hal and mike and wellman. i would hate for america to forget that there was a moment in time when we stood up when called and we did our duty and we did it well. >> in washington, aaron gilchrist. news 4. the desert storm memorial organization expects to have it finalized by later this year and to learn more, search the nbc washington app, desert storm. 31 people in maryland have been infected by the zika virus. that's according to state health officials. the baltimore sun reports all of the cases of the were travel-related and no one has contracted zika by being by then by a mosquito in the state. the cdc is awarding $363,000 for zika prevention. a tennessee family is suing the tsa after they say agents assaulted their disabled daughter. 19-year-old hannah cohen and her mother were traveling through the memphis airport last year after a visit to st. jude children's hospital when her sequin top set off a security alarm. agents pulled her aside, slammed her to the ground and beat her. >> they would do something -- something to someone who is disabled, what would they do to an elderly person who doesn't understand, who is confused. >> hannah is permanently disabled by a brain tumor that's left her blind, deaf and easily confused. the charges against hannah were eventually dropped. a local grandmother, molette, is using her love of tennis this holiday weekend to support the troops. >> yeah. her name is bonnie vona. she's from reston. after months of training and preparing this weekend, tennis is all she's been doing. >> and if she accomplish her goal, she's going to be a world record holder. we have the incredible story. >> reporter: you may have heard of someone being called the world's best grandma, well, bonnie may be getting the official title this weekend. she's attempting to break the guinness book of world records of consecutive singles matches. the record right now she played on her match on friday morning and plans on playing one after another, 72 straight hours, only a 5-minute break each hour. did i mention that she's 61 years old and she came prepared? >> i have all these goodies. i've brought with me a pillow and cushions so that if i need to or if i can have some time to, i can get some rest. pickle juice is one of the keys to keeping your stamina going. >> who needs gatorade? >> right. who needs gatorade when you have pickle juice. >> sponsors and pledges for vona could help raise $72,000 this weekend. all going to tennis for troops, which provides scholarships to military families. that's her sproigs. >> this is benefitting the military, and i'm thinking about all those people that i can draw inspiration from, from what they do, this every single day. >> the level of play over the next 72 hours will vary. still, she doesn't expect to win many of these matches. the goal is to keep playing. right into the record books. at the montgomery tennis-plex. she's going to do it! go, bonnie! hey listen, someone had a question, if the firework are canceled by the rain tomorrow, does that mean and they get pushed to tuesday, does that mean they don't have to go to work on tuesday? >> i would say so. >> you heard it first. >> celebrate fourth of july on the 5th. and then take the sixth off. take the week off. >> we're starting a heat wave on wednesday, wednesday, thursday, friday, saturday, and sunday, 90s and it's going to be humid. >> welcome to summer! >> get through today. we have a few showers out there right now and we will continue to see some showers through the morning. let's go ahead and getar plan out your fourth. periods of showers out there today. we've got changes for monday. if you didn't catch the changes yesterday, we're fine-tuning this forecast heading into fourth of july. rain totals decrease. the heaviest rain has moved north and we're clearing tuesday afternoon. as we don't get the fireworks in tomorrow night, tuesday night will be best. temperatures school. cool. you may need a jacket. lows in the low 60s. we're going to see rain throughout the morning, isolated showers more this afternoon. 5:00, we keep the clouds around. isolated showers as we go through the afternoon and evening. we'll keep a chance of isolated showers overnight. most of us will be dry. 7:00 a.m. tomorrow morning, rain southwest, it could be heavy at times, but we got the independence da tomorrow, the nats game at 11:35. we can have some rain around for that. bring your rain gear if you are headed to those two things or any 'fess i have its throughout our community. it could be heavy through the early part of the afternoon. then will be scattered throughout the late afternoon and into the evening. may be able to get those fireworks going but we'll have some rain around so we'll have to keep an eye to the radar. we have showers around on tuesday morning before we clear by tuesday afternoon and tuesday night. here's the planner for the fourth. by noon, 60% chance of rain. we'll keep it to 80 about 4:00, 5:00. more scattered in the evening. temperatures in the 70s today and tomorrow. humidity starts coming tomorrow. showers in the morning on tuesday. look at this. we warm up. boy, do we warm up and we're going to be humid. lots of chances of showers, thursday and small chances on friday into the weekend. >> we'll take it. have no choice. thank you. >> dominates. the latest accomplishment for katie ledecky, her lowest competitors were left in the deep end. unexpected extra steps to raise healthy chickens with no antibiotics ever. like putting oregano in their water. it has natural antioxidants that keep our chickens healthy. and we don't have to use antibiotics in their diet. more like orega-yes, am i right? oregano, just one more way we bring you chickens raised with no antibiotics ever. it's not the easy way. it's the perdue way. bethesda native katie ledecky, you may have heard of her. she dominated in the olympic trials. >> she finished nearly 10 her 8 minutes 32 seconds is the third fastest ever in the event. >> i'm confident that no matter how the race shakes out that i can get my hand up. >> that's actually not her best time. she owns the top 11 spots for the women's 800 meter freestyle. >> she's incredible. good for you. time right now, 7:56. power is expected to be fully restored at any moment after a car crashed into a power pole in gathersberg. one person taken to the hospital with life-threatening injuries. 83 people are dead. 176 wounded after two separate bomb attacks in iraq. isis has claimed responsibility for one of those attacks. hillary clinton was interviewed by the fbi for over three hours yesterday for her use of a private email server while she was secretary of state. clinton says she has no knowledge of a timeline for the review to be completed. preps for the fourth of july celebrations continue in the district despite lauryns forecast. you can watch the rehearsal at 8:00 for now. tomorrow's show still on. >> we're in an unsettled period. >> yeah, we're. rain for tomorrow still out in the midwest. we have to see where it's tracking as i came in this morning, it's tracking farther north. wee see rain showers tomorrow. zp an inch possible. >> it's supposed to be hot on the fourth of july. >> i agree. next week is hot. >> all right. thanks for joining us. >> we'll be back at 9:00. . good morning and welcome to "sunday today." i'm willie geist. happy 4th of july eve. i hope you have naturally red and blue beverages. we'll spend a day with the delightful ellie kemper talking about her rise from the office

Related Keywords

Arkansas , United States , Alexandria , Al Iskandariyah , Egypt , California , San Bernardino , Mexico , Arizona , Richland , Shenandoah , New York , Panama Canal , Florida , Memphis , Tennessee , Los Angeles , Baltimore , Maryland , Chesapeake City , Iran , Washington , Loudon County , Gaithersburg , Indiana , Virginia , Howard County , Bangladesh , Iraq , New Bethel Baptist Church , Baghdad , Israel , Montgomery County , Pennsylvania , Romania , Kuwait , Hawaii , Kuwaiti , Americans , America , American , Tom Perez , Jack Evans , Steve Patterson , Martin Luther King , Bonnie Vona , Michelle Reed , John Roberts , Lauryn Ricketts , Fred Wellman , Terry Mcauliffe , Aaron Gilchrist , Ellie Kemper , Walter Fauntroy , Kai Henderson , Pat Lawson , Bob Mcdonnell , Jose Franco , Derek Hernandez , Loretta Lynch , Elie Wiesel , Chris Christie , Barack Obama , Chuck Todd , Hanna Cohen , Angie Goff , Gabe Gutierrez , Channah Cohen , Newt Gingrich , Derek Henderson , Hillary Clinton , Willie Geist ,

© 2024 Vimarsana

comparemela.com © 2020. All Rights Reserved.