Transcripts For WUSA Wusa 9 News At 5pm 20141008 : compareme

Transcripts For WUSA Wusa 9 News At 5pm 20141008



>> reporter: it is going to be up to the cdc personnel to determine if passengers who have fevers or have been exposinged to ebola need to be hospitalized -- exposed to ebola need to be hospitalized or handed over to the local health department here for further monitoring or whether they should be allowed to continue on their way, but the cdc director lab warning there could be a lot of false -- has been warning there could be a lot of false positives here. a lot of people have fevers and those false positives could end up ruining people's trips unnecessarily. back to you. >> we had a couple of those instances recently. thank you. we are getting word from dallas a deputy who accompanied crews into the ebola victim thomas eric duncan's apartment is showing signs and symptoms of the disease. the patient, sergeant michael monne was ordered to go inside with officials to get a quarantine order signed, but nobody that went inside that day wore protective gear. monning checked himself in claiming to have contact with duncan. health officials are in the process of examining patients and staff who were inside the clinic. right now at home hospitals are preparing for possible ebola cases. we'll tell you what they're doing in a little bit. a 29-year-old woman announced to the world she is now planning her own death for november 1st. her emotional and controversial video has gone viral. >> i can't say the amount of relief that it provides me to know that i don't have to die the way that it's been described to me that my brain tumor would take me. >> britney maynard's story has a lot of people talking, but as scott broom explains, it could change the national debate on the issue. >> reporter: the video went up monday and already nearly 3 million have watched. >> i was diagnosed with cancer and told i was terminally ill. >> reporter: at age 29 terminally ill maynard moved from california to oregon where assisted suicide is legal reopening an emotional debate with a new face, much different than old images of dr. jack kevorkian. >> i went from being told i had potentially years of time to i had six months. >> anyone could look at her and say that could be me. >> reporter: me.. >> britney is helping to transition this issue from a red cal concept to one i think will -- radical concept to one i think will be mainstream very soon. >> reporter: but at the archdiocese of washington a new face and heartwrenching circumstances do not change the fundamental issue. >> our view on human dig -- dignity is consistent from the beginning to end and that's not diminished. we can't do anything against that dignity and purposefully end a life that has infinite value. >> reporter: the senator says maynard nor anyone else who ever have to move away to face death in their own way. >> to be able to relate to the personal story that britney and her family are going through raises serious issues of why every state needs to take up this law. >> and i will die upstairs in my bedroom that i share with my husband with my mother and my husband by my side. >> laws in our region vary widely at cysted death in maryland is a fell -- widely. assisted death in maryland is a felony. in d.c. there is no law on the books. for the next hour and a half you are going to see pictures of children on the bottom of your screen missing from our area. inspired by the disappearance of relisha rudd, take a moment, scroll through them and share them with your friends. if you've got any information, call the number on your screen. it is day 25 of the search for missing uva student hannah graham and they brought out a helicopter from the department of the homeland security to try and find her, but today's search like many of the 24 before it yield the little results. debra alfarone joins us now live from charlottesville from the area where the 18-year-old sophomore disappeared. deb, not the information they wanted today. >> reporter: absolutely not. they certainly want to find anything at all. what happens is every morning searchers leave to go out and scour the area that's an 8-mile radius from where we're standing live in the downtown mall area of charlottesville. they searched this entire 8- mile radius all around. today they were on horseback as well. >> are we going right or left up here? >> whichever way we can get around a gate. >> i'm a mother, so if it was my child out there, i'd want everybody out looking, too. >> reporter: the northern most edge of the search area for hannah graham, the beautiful rolling hills and horses in sharp contrast to the grim task of the day. >> we can cover more ground, get into areas. we have a higher advantage looking down. so it's just another tool to use for search and rescue. >> reporter: today's search brought out retired nurse brenda saunders of piedmont search and rescue out of richmond, up to 50 searchers on foot, atv and in the air scouring this corner, too, and thursday the searchers get a boost, the results of last weekend's flyover provided by bea systems is almost here. >> once we go through that data our hope is that we will see things through this that we have not been able to see before. >> reporter: one section searched today panorama farm. >> it's a tough, tough job. >> reporter: steve murray owns it. >> i expect that she'll be found, but still they've searched a long time and haven't found anything. i'm sure that people are getting discouraged. >> reporter: one thing helping lift heart, more than 250 notes written by classmates of hannah's at uva thanking searchers and dropped off to charlottesville police chief tim longo. >> it's beyond frustrating. it's sad. >> reporter: they hope to be able to cover the entire 8-mile radius by the end of the week. the tip line is 434-295-3 of 851. you can -- 38 fifth 1. you can -- 3851. you can also e-mail any tips that you have. sentencing was handed down today for a silver spring man who choked his girl friend's puppy and then texted a photo of its body. he was ordered to spend the next year in prison for killing the 7-month-old jack russell terrier. he did plead guilty to an medical cruelty and will be on pro -- to animal cruelty and will be on probation for five years after his sentence. >> he beat this dog with a mop. internal injuries resulted in this dog bleeding out and he strangled this dog for two minutes and bragged about it by text minutes. >> taylor was immediately suspended from the baltimore police force after admitting to killing the puppy and is no longer a cop. lightning can be to blame for the fire that gutted this mansion on sharps point road in annapolis. the fire was reported around 11:45 last night. it took 73 firefighters two hours to get the flames under control. there were no hydrants, so water was brought in by tank and fire boat. damage was estimated at $1.5 million. we just got to stay a big congratulations tonight to our wash, nationals. >> we sure do. they -- our washington nationals. >> we sure do. they went very far. the boys lost a heartbreaker to the giants in san francisco last night which essentially ended their season. aaron barrett's bases loaded wild pitch allowed the winning run to cross the plate and despite a last ditch effort in the 9th inning, the nats lost 3- 2. it has been a rough two decades for d.c.'s major sports franchises. here's why. with last night's loss washington's big four sports teams have gone 77 seasons without a championship. the redskins super bowl win in 1992 was the last major championship for the city. so we decided to look at a few other cities with one team in each of the four big sports. since that day in 1992 boston has won eight titles, three is from bowls, three world series, one nba, one nhl. dallas has three super bowls, one nba and one stanley cup, but philadelphia has one lone world series win in 2008. >> there's always next year. >> that's what we always say and there is always next year. it's true. we are just getting started on wusa9 news at 5:00. trending now wait until you see how google dusts off an ancient technology to bring you stream view images of this arabian desert, that and some other hot topics at 5:30. >> i'm meteorologist topper shutt accident just about a perfect day. we'll be cooler tonight. low temps 40s in the burbs, 48 college part, rockville and fairfax, 46 toward sterling,ed for 5 in leesburg, mid-50s -- 45 in leesburg, mid-50s downtown. we'll come back and tell you about our friday and the weekend. >> plus president obama said it will take a lot more than airstrikes to stop isis. >> this playground is a temporary oasis in an island of despair, but it can't open without you. find out how you can help them play after the break. >> going into the break a bring them home tweet from a viewer. keep praying. keep - oh, the young. their energy seems like an unlimited resource we sometimes wish would run out, at least for a moment. but as we grow into adults, it's important to learn how to use our energy wisely, especially when it comes to electricity. you can save energy and money by caulking around windows. and by using a power strip, you can turn off several devices when they're not in use, or when you're simply done. it's all about using your energy wisely, and novec is here to help. for more tips, go to novec.com. novec: helping you save. during today's 5 p.m. and 6 p.m. newscasts you will notice he the pictures on the right side of your -- notice the pictures on the right side of your screen. they are children missing from our area. if you recognize any of them, call the number on your screen and perhaps you can help bring them home. every child deserves a safe space to play, but for hundreds of children at d.c.'s largest shelter the bleak reality is there are few places for them to just be. so take a journey with me to see how one local organization is trying to change that and help them play. >> the first thing they see is the jail and over to their left there's an abandoned building. behind there there's another abandoned building. there's a meth clinic. >> reporter: so they see signs of desperation and death. >> yeah, absolutely. >> reporter: jamila larson is co-founder and executive director of the homeless childrens play time project. she describes the desolate landscape in clear view of the children with no place to go. their temporary home is no sanctuary. >> reporter: what does that do to a child who sees this as their future? >> i think it makes them feel undervalued. >> reporter: and in the middle of this visual poverty to prison pipeline you have a playground. you have a bright spot. >> not only is it a practical oasis of recreation that they've so deserved, but it interrupts their line of vision. >> reporter: people loitering every turn, a constant stream of loud buses and sounds and other unknown elements roam this sprawling campus in southeast washington where relisha rudd once lived and that's just on the outside. not a safe place to leave children alone. homeless children's play time project worked to get the city to construct this playground, but it came with a catch. it cannot open until the organization has the resources to keep watchful eyes on the kids whenever they are at play. that's where you can help. >> we need folks to make a donation to help fund the staffing of the playground. we need volunteers who are willing to make a weekly commitment. >> reporter: the goal is to raise $150,000 to support this playground and other indoor spaces at d.c. general and four other shelters around the city. >> i bet some of your fondest childhood memories were made at a playground. the children at the d.c. general shelter deserve to make those same memories. so text the word playtime to 25543 and we will send you information how to donate to help the homeless children's play time project. your donation will keep this playground safe and thriving once it opens and tag a friend and hopefully they do it, too. i've tagged my friend here president of we've been talking about it, tweeting and -- here. we've been talking about it, tweeting and facebooking. >> i used to love that tire swing. that was my favorite thing on the playground. >> that's the one thing that's not on that playground, but they've got just about everything else. >> looks really nice. top, that blood moon quite a sight this morning. >> it really was. some of you got up to see it and tweeted me. i'll show you a picture. this is video from this morning, 6:25 to quarter of 7:00 one complaint i heard from someone today it went behind the trees. if it goes below the trees, i can't help you there. >> you have to bring it up from the trees. >> i know i do. if you have a clear horizon, 6:15 to 7:45 was about the best time to see it. the weather was perfect. i have another picture from bowie from jim, gorgeous picture. >> that doesn't even look real. >> it's like somebody put orange in the tree. >> and he's got it framed with the tree, good stuff jim from bowie. we appreciate that. as far as we're concerned tonight on the heels of this blood moon and the cold front, a little bit cooler but nothing crazy. it's gorgeous outside. look how clear it is. 79, dew points in the 40s which means relative humidity 31%. that is some dry air and winds now northwest at 8, the winds are calming down. cooler tonight. open the windows, perhaps not too far because we're talking 40s and 50s, but stop temperatures 45 to 60 -- bus stop temperatures 45 to 62, sweatshirt probably a good idea, nice tomorrow, a little cooler, still probably low 70s and then clouds return friday. there will be some showers on friday. i don't see a lot of activity. so for now we have not issued a yellow alert. we'll keep you posted. futurecast 10:00 tonight want to walk the dog? why not. mid-50s in berbs, mid-60s downtown. by 6:00 now we have 40s 6 a.m. thursday morning, 47 gaithersburg, 48 leesburg, 47 manassas, still 55 downtown. by 8:00 we still have 40s in the burbs and mid-50s downtown. by 12:30 frontal system 60s across the board -- by 12:30 60s across the board. by 4:00 temperatures in the low 7s downtown and a couple spring -- 70s downtown and a couple sprinkles primarily west of the divide. the clouds will overspread. this time tomorrow mostly cloudy skies, dry and by 8:00 tomorrow night upper 50s in the burbs, mid-60s downtown and dry. by 9:00 57 gaithersburg, 58 in leesburg and la plata, still dry. for tonight clear skies, cooler, low temperatures 45 to 55, winds westerly at 10. tomorrow 50s to start downtown temps, so 40s in the burbs, 65 at 11:00, 70 at 1:00, gorgeous. now some clouds and some showers on friday, 69, maybe a few showers for the second half of the high school football game, birds back in town friday, 8:00 game, couple showers possible. morning showers saturday, they nice. we cleaned it up, upper 60s on saturday, sunshine on sunday 70, columbus day showers and showers on tuesday, mid-70s, nice again wednesday, temperatures still mid-70s. there's more talk tonight from the obama administration airstrikes alone will not be enough to take down isis. a trained and equipped ground force in syria must be put in place if the u.s. and its allies want to save one of the major border towns. there's also a focus on turkey and the coalition. >> clearly on their border this is of enormous concern to turkey and they recognize that. >> 40% surveyed say they approve of the job president obama is doing handling the situation with the isis militants. 51% disapprove. lane closures in d.c. that could make a mess of your morning commute coming up after the break. >> plus why lawyers in the adrian peterson child abuse case are asking for a new judge. >> as we head into break a look at gas prices that might be driving you crazy. in northeast d.c. you can get a great deal at the citgo for 3.26 a gallon. we're back after this. in fairfax county we had to cut a lot of waste. we consolidated offices. started sharing printers. we can walk a few feet. replaced computers, but kept the monitors. they still work fine. we even discovered that the phone company overcharged us by three million dollars! i approve this message because congress doesn't need another right winger. they need someone who can balance a budget. oh, and we definitely didn't need so many government studies. during today's 5 p.m. and 6 p.m. newscasts you'll see pictures on the right side of your screen of children missing from our area. call the number on your screen and perhaps you can help bring them home if you have any information. adrian peterson's child abuse trial has been tentatively set for october 21st. he was going to plead not guilty today but that couldn't happen because prosecutors want the judge reduced. judge kelly case called the lawyer involved with the trial and we quote here "media whores." peterson is accused of hitting his 4-year-old son with a switch. new lane closures on a busy d.c. roadway, from 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. one lane will be closed eastbound and westbound on military road northwest between oregon avenue and 16th street. the closures will allow for construction work for a median replacement. the lane closures run through october 18th. if you have a transportation story driving you crazy we want to hear about it. log onto www.wusa9.com and our investigative team will check it out. an american chemist from our area is the recipient of one of the world's most prestigious science prizes. >> eric betzig and two other scientists will share the nobel prize for chemistry to let optical microscopes see finer details than they ever could before. the nobel prize is worth $1.1 million betzig works in ashburn, virginia at the howard burns medical institute. coming up we'll tell you about a trend in prepackaged food. >> google goes old school to bring us street view images of an arabian desert. >> plus arienne thompson joins us with the dish on today's trending hollywood headlines. >> as we head into break we've tweet fr a viewer. thank you for caring about thing is...our crazy tax code actually rewards companies... for shipping them overseas. it's wrong and i'm fighting to fix it. i'm mark warner...i brought republicans and democrats... together on a bill that gives incentives to companies that... bring high tech and manufacturing jobs to virgina. because instead of outsourcing jobs to china...we should be... insourcing them here for our people...and thats why i... approved this message. trending now google goes low tech to bring you some amazing pictures of a desert in abu dhabi. >> we've seen those cars that drive through the streets to capture video for google street view with the cameras on. to do the same thing in the desert a guy mounts a special backpack camera on the top of a camel. the camel named rafia is the first animal named for google's mapping mission. a spokesperson says he hopes these pictures are able to show people what it was like to cross the desert as caravan merchants 3,000 years ago. pretty amazing. obviously it won't look like 3,000 years ago, but you can kind of imagine what it was like. joining us to talk about trending hollywood headlines is usa today entertainment reporter arienne thompson. >> hi. >> we're starting with a creepy story. this is seventh heaven actor steven collins who allegedly admitted to molesting underage girl and then this thing just gets stranger and stranger. >> he was part of seventh heaven, a show about a minister and his family, not that that has any bearing, but it's still sort of ironic. we're all very shocked and saddened by this. he and his wife ar through a divorce and she apparently tamed one of their phone conversations -- taped one of their phone conversations where he allegedly admitted to abusing several girls over the course of many, many years. >> i heard the tape recordings. she got this in 2012. why is she reporting this now two years later or how did this stuff get out? >> his divorce lawyer says it's a tactic to try to get more money from him in the divorce proceeding. it's very acrimonious, but there's a criminal element, too, obviously. we don't have the full story yet about motivation and the whole timeline. she's saying that she didn't leak the tape and his lawyer, of course, is saying you did because you want more money out of him. >> she was the one that recorded it at therapy. >> she ultimately said she didn't know about it all these years. it wasn't until she knew about it that she said something. >> i think this is a classic case of us not having the full story and there will be more details that come. it's a horrible story. >> a lot of fallout from it, too because he got pulled from the movie tattoo and losing a lot of jobs. >> seventh heaven reruns have been pulled from two networks. then we have the jennifer lauren calling the nude photo hacking a sex crime. what's your thoughts? >> i've avoided talking about whether or not i think this is a sex crime. thanks for putting me on the spot. do i think it sucks and is unfortunate? yes. do i think it's a sex crime? i don't really think so and a lot of people have been using that terminology since this scandal hit a few weeks ago and it affected a lot of other actresses. so i understand she feels violated. is it a sex crime? i don't know. >> she feels exploited and you can certainly understand why. even if she did record this, she certainly didn't think that the whole world was going to see it. >> it's interesting because it is a violation of her individual rights, but some will say don't send anything via worldwide web, anything electronically. >> that's been the whole argument since this scandal broke open, we can't blame the victims. if you don't want nude pictures out, don't take them. >> but they are still victims, right? >> when they did whatever they did, they didn't do it with the intention of everybody else finding out about it. >> there's a lot of conversation around this and about who is right and wrong. we don't want to blame 3 we and say you're wrong -- these women and say you're wrong for taking these pictures. >> but it's a good lesson for all those young teens. these pictures can live forever. this is arienne's favorite story of the day. we all know nick cannon and mariah carey are done, but he has come up with a rather creative way to cover up his huge mariah tattoo, like huge. >> nick cannon. so the mariah tattoo that he had, i want to say each letter was about 5 inches tall across his back. so now he said what do you do when you have a huge mariah tattoo? get a huge crucifix on your back? this is so hollywood and silly. it's so typical of celebrities. don't get the name of your husband or wife in the first place tattooed anywhere on your body. >> certainly don't get it like billboard size. >> i always wonder when you're 80, what happens when it starts to sag and it's going sort of down your back? it's just not a good look. >> i don't know what he's going to do at 40 or 50 with that monstrosity on his back. >> i never thought about that, lesli. i don't want to see that. >> powerful visual. trending upwards today your life expectancy. >> speaking of, which right? the average person can expect to stay on this side of the grass 78.8 years according to a new report by the cdc and national center for health statistics, an increase of about a month since the study was done in 2011. women usually outlive men by five years, 81 versus 76. why? scientists expect men are just bigger risk tears. >> we also take better care -- risk takers. >> we also take better care of ourselves. 1,000 people are heading to college this week thanks to starbucks and they're taking online courses at arizona state university. the coffee chain is going to spend as much as $15,000 per student for these classes. i guess this is just the first wave. so good for them. at&t is writing a big check for cramming its customers. i'm going to tell you about it and how you could get your cut of this $100 million settlement. >> but up next. >> reporter: spotting and containing ebola, a behind the scenes look at how hospitals are bracing for the deadly virus. >> why is play time important? >> it helps us live. it helps us grow. >> emotionally. >> physically. >> and up here wusa9 news is sponsored in part by your local toyota dealers. hospitals across the country are retooling policies and procedures to make sure they are ready just in case a possible case of ebola gets into the hospital. >> doug champion got a firsthand look at preparations inside one new york city hospital. >> reporter: this is a look inside an isolation room at new york city's belleview hospital. there is controlled access and it is an airtight room. any suspected ebola patient would be immediately sent here. once inside doctors and patients would treat the patient -- doctors and nurses would treat the patient wearing protective gear like this. >> it has to be taken up to a very high temperature and sterilized in the way you would sterilize an instrument in the operating room. >> reporter: the precautions taken inside the hospital with potential ebola patients are listed on a detailed checklist sent out by the centers for disease control. there are guidelines even of what first responders should do. in the field paramedics and emergency medical technicians have to wear gear to protect them from fluids. they are also urged to limit use of needles and similar equipment while transporting a patient. crystal wilfong is an emt in north carolina. >> we never know what we're walking into in an emergency, especially when someone invites us into their home. >> reporter: hospitals are hiring actors to pose as ebola patients to test readiness. >> they're seen, observed and as soon as they're isolated the exercise stops and we then sit down and learn which things worked really well. >> reporter: health officials urge anyone who has fever and abdominal pain and has recently traveled to west africa to not wait to see a doctor. don champion for cbs news, new york. >> even with all the precautions some worry not all hospitals are prepared for ebola. in a recent online survey of 1,500 nurses 77% reported their hospital had not yet told them the policies on handling ebola patients. the owner of a philadelphia cleaning company says he is ready to tackle ebola no matter where it spreads. james macarthur's company called bioone has a branch in texas that helped decontaminate the first responders that treated thomas eric duncan. he said you must take precise measures to remove ebola from the property. >> no. 1 thing to burn would be bedding, sheets, anything that the person had physical contact with, definitely burn. >> macarthur says most hard surfaces can be cellically treated to eliminate the ebola virus, but -- can be chemically treated to eliminate the ebola virus, but if they are not treated, the virus can survive for weeks. the sick weather app helps you locate reported illnesses so you can look at a national map when you are traveling and even see how cases are spreading over time with what they call a sick radar. it uses data from social media feed and government reports to update the data business. you can set it to alert you in case you enter an area where people have certain types of illnesses. coming up they had a great run this season, but now the washington nationals will be home watching the giants and cards play saturday. we'll take a look at our home team's spectacular season coming up next. >> reporter: americans' eating habits may be changing. sales of lower calorie foods are on the rise. i'm injure reekyour ju -- i'm jurica duncan from new york. you could call it cell phone robbery. at&t took money from its customers, but some of them never noticed. the nation's chief law enforcers did and today they came together to announce at&t will pay a $100 million settlement for cramming its customers. cramming involves unauthorized third-party charges for things like ring tones or horoscopes and those charges are often disguised so you don't notice or question them on your bill. so if you do use at&t as your carrier, you want to take a very close look at that bill. if you think you were crammed, you can file for a refund by going to the website on your screen or call 1-877-819-9692. americans are spending more for low calorie foods. a report today from the hudson institute shows sales for products that are low in calories increased $485 million over the last five years while the higher calorie products rose just $2 million. jericka duncan has the story behind the numbers. >> less fat and the calorie count is always pretty low. it's 60 calories. >> reporter: this college student pays attention to the health labels on her food. she prefers low calorie options. >> a lot of people are being more health conscious and i think that supermarkets are kind of tailoring to those needs. >> we want lower calorie foods and surprise, consumers are buying them. >> reporter: supermarkets are trying to capitalize on the trend. an increasing number of stores are offering sales on lower calorie foods to get more people in the door. but shoppers like frank peretti say low cal foods aren't as important. >> price is the key. >> reporter: lower calorie foods and drinks can sometimes be more expensive and have to be eaten in moderation to be effective. >> it's important to stay healthy. health has always been important for me. >> reporter: nicole is willing to pay the extra money now for better health later. jericka duncan, cbs news, new york. >> it's not just the food companies offering lower calorie options. a new study found dozens of large chain restaurants are slashing calories on their menus, too. we told you yesterday industry analysts are forecasting a jump in holiday sales. if you've got lots of disposable income and we mean lots, how about looking through the annual christmas book from neiman marcus. you could splurge on his and hers quad skis which go from land to water. those are just 100,000 or if you want to stick to the pavement, go with the limited edition neiman marcus maserati for just $95,000. top, that has your name on it. there are plenty :hof other pricey goodies up for grabs. i like just to look at the book. you don't actually get anything, but you can dream about it. >> who really gets this stuff? who can really afford this stuff (. >> i don't know. i guess somebody -- stuff? >> i don't know. i guess somebody. >> it is fun to look at it, though. >> i like the water thing. >> i can totally see you in that. a gorgeous morning and day and night. now a little cooler tonight. open the windows but maybe not too far. we're tracking a front now for friday. let's start with a live look outside, our live michael and son weather cam and we're looking at a gorgeous, gorgeous evening. i'm sorry, first look at fall colors, talk about this. we're almost peak toward oakland west of the divide. there's some color in our northern western suburbs and good color along i-81 and back in the shenandoah, but you're still a little off peak. i think sky line drive has another week to 10 days before it hits peak. now let's start with a live look outside, our live michael and son weather cam, temperatures still 79. national has run warm the last few months, everybody else about 73, 74, okay, 79, relative humidity 31%, winds northwest at 8. so cooler tonight. open the windows, not too far, talking 40s and 50s. bus stop temperatures 45 to 52 and that's 6 a.m. to 9 a.m. take a jacket or sweater. nice tomorrow, just a little cooler. instead of upper 70s, low 70s, which is average and the news edge clouds return on friday with some showers, have not pulled the trigger on a yellow alert just yet. i don't think they'll be that widespread and not that heavy. 10:00 tonight want to walk the dog, 50s and 60s across the board. by 6 a.m. chilly to start, upper 40s gaithersburg, leesburg, manassas, la plata 50s, mid-50s downtown. by 1:00 70 to upper 60s and clouds returning to cumberland and oakland, some high and midlevel clouds into the metro area tomorrow but still a good day, maybe not postcard perfect but a good day. 71 by 4:00, showers back toward oakland and maybe all the way to cumberland, not much. by 7:30 we've got clouds across the metro area with temperatures in the 60s. it's dry. by 9:00 tomorrow night upper 50s in the burbs, low 60s downtown but dry but mostly cloudy. for tonight clear skies, much cooler, 45 to 55, winds westerly at 10. tomorrow morning mostly sunny and pleasant. grab your sunglasses, maybe a sweater, too 45 to 68 and then by afternoon returning partly sunny which means cloud will be on the increase. that's why we have a -- clouds will be on the increase. that's why we have a little clouds later in the day, high temperature in the 70s and wind west, southwest at 10. showers for oakland, 56, cumberland 56, upper 60s in hagerstown and martinsburg and winchester hits 70. you'll have clouds but dry. low 70s in culpeper, around 70 in warrenton and manassas and leesburg, probably 70 or 71 in reston and fairfax, say 71 downtown, gaithersburg and rockville and annapolis near 70. no winds to speak up, so no small craft advisory for the bay or tidal potomac tomorrow. day planner, these are downtown temps, 50s downtown, but 40s in the burbs to start, 65 by 11:00, 70 by 1 p.m. next three days again showers on friday, we'll monitor that for a possible yellow alert day, 69. saturday looks like derek can do a bike ride, morning cloud, dry, nice, temperatures in the upper 60s. next seven days, sunday nice, too 70. columbus day showers, milder, mid-70s, mid-70s tuesday, nice wednesday and birds are in town now friday and saturday. some showers are possible friday evening. the washington nationals time in the postseason was short of, not that sweet. -- short. not that sweet. now it's over. the nationals fell to the giants 3-up with. they couldn't bring -- 3-1. they couldn't bring the series home. we'll start with what was the play of the night, jayson werth nailing a pitch in the 6th inning, which went sailing, but hunter pence robbed werth of extra bases. in the 7th nats heroics would not be denied, bryce harper with a monster home run. that ended up many mccovey cove, 2-2, but the bottom of the inning giants untied it thanks to one of the strangest plays. sandoval is walked and the pitch and they go home. players see the silver lining in the loss. >> we don't want to lose, but losing to one of the best teams in the postseason, i got so muching are for the fans -- much respect for the fans and the giants and bruce bochy. they're a class act. >> it's not easy to win in the postseason. obviously our goal like everyone is to win the world series, but i think we have a lot to be proud of with the amount of games we've won in the last three years, where we came from and i think the future is still very bright for this team. >> we played the way we wanted to play and did a lot of things right. so it's tender and bitter and all those things, but i'm proud of them. >> nats have some decisions this offseason, increase payroll or lose players. here's some guys up, asdrubal cabrera, free agent, adam laroche, a $2 million buyout and club option for denard span with a $500,000 buy out. up next brandishing an eye disflag and speaking english, u.s. intelligence experts need your help finding this guy featured in a recruitment video. it's believed he's american. >> here is another tweet from a viewer about our bring them home campaign. sonny tweets so many children are missing in the dmv. follow, bring the fbi is reaching out to all of us to potentially identify a machine in an isis recruit -- a man in an isis recruitment video. >> the man speaks perfect english leading investigators to believe he could be american. >> reporter: the fbi is asking for the public's help identifying this jihadi speaking in what sounds like an american accent in an isis video. for weeks the fbi have been using facial recognition and voice analysis trying to trace his accent and comparing to what they find other americans in the intelligence committee has been watching. fbi director james comey said there are about a dozen americans currently fighting in syria, but he's more worried about the americans not currently on his radar. >> i don't know what i don't know. >> reporter: the effort is part of a broader public appeal by the fbi to identify americans seeking to join jihaddist groups fighting overseas. it comes on the heels of a 19- year-old chicago man arrested saturday. cnn has learned mohammed hamzah khan wasn't on the fbi's radar until recently. the fbi says khan was in contact with someone online allegedly trying to get him help to get into syria to fight with isis. when khan was arrested at chicago international airport, fbi agents were simultaneously searching his house where family members refused to talk to reporters. notebooks found inside the home indicated he paid $4,000 for a round trip kick the flying from chicago to very -- ticket flying from chicago to austria, then into istanbul turkey. >> it tells me probably he was trying to evade being caught by purchasing a round trip ticket versus a single one way ticket, by spending more than the el cheapo ticket you could get and also by not going direct. so that he is more likely than not not raising a red flag for intelligence services. >> that was pamela brown reporting. as for the chicago teen accused of wanting to john isis, 19- year-old mohammed khan is scheduled for a detention hearing tomorrow. unprecedented new steps to screen passengers arriving here at dulles from west africa for ebola, i'm bruce leshan. we'll have the details coming up. >> reporter: the group helping a local family in the search, i'll tell you what they're doing and why coming up next. >> reporter: i'm debra alfarone standing at the last place that anyone ever saw missing uva student hannah graham, on this 25th day of search, no signs. tonight we begin with ebola and there's a lot to talk about. let's start with the man thomas eric duncan, he died today at a dallas hospital. >> duncan was the first person to be diagnosed in the united states with ebola. he traveled through liberia, europe and dulles airport arriving in dallas september 20th. dunn van visited a hospital emergency room september 25th but was sent home and on the 28th he was rush back and admitted to the hospital. he died this morning. right now doctors are isolating and evaluating another possible ebola patient in the dallas area and we want to emphasize the word possible. the patient is identified as a sheriff's deputy who went into the dallas apartment where duncan had been staying to get a quarantine order signed. the deputy did not have any direct contact with duncan because he was already in the hospital, but the deputy is showing some symptoms associated with ebola and the head of the cdc says the deputy is being closely watched out of an abundance of caution. >> we expect as people are more concerned and there's a higher index of suspicion, people will be assessed. there will be rumor and concerns in potential cases. that's as it should be. we should just keep it in perspective. >> while hospitals in the d.c. area and around the country are reviewing their oc

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