Smoke so thick the sunlight could barely shine through. Across the bay area people woke up confused as they looked like night. Ktvu was flooded with photos from our viewers who pulled out the cameras to capture the eerie orange glow that lasted for much of the day. Ktvus Jana Katsuyama joins us with more on how it all unfolded. Reporter this really was a first for many people here. This darkness during the day and the orange glow, for many businesses this was yet another setback. Almost like a dream, the entire bay area woke up to this. It felt like we were living on mars. Weed couldnt figure out what time it was, even if the afternoon was so dark and orange and red. It was apocalyptic. By 10 00 it was darker than it was at 7 00 a. M. Reporter the darkness and orange tent stretched from the bank and east contra costa county, like a nuclear fallout. Ash flying from the sky covered cards and straits. In San Francisco my friend said she had a hose down her car twice before it got all off.
Is blocked after the Supreme Court refuses to step in. A live report from washington with more on the overnight ruling. Plus, a new warning from east bay Health Officials. The restaurant where people may have been exposed to measles. Also, the symptoms you need to watch out for. And today is the first full day of spring. Meteorologist kari hall is tracking your midweek forecast. This is today in the bay. Hello, spring. Good wednesday morning. Its my favorite season. Now the rain is going to come. Im laura garcia. And im marcus washington. Of course well check on the roads in just a bit. Lets talk about spring. It is here, the first full day of school, youve got your new outfit on. Something bright. Its one of those days. Its going to be really nice outside. Weve been talking about rain coming back, we need that, too, to give us more of those beautiful spring flowers coming out. So were seeing a nice, clear view this morning as you get started in San Francisco. We are at 52 degrees. So
past 18 months over the course of the biden presidency so far. that came from the heritage foundation from analysts there that compares it to what is basically taking the titanic into an iceberg. art laffer, the economist that helped turn around this ship under reagan said this in reaction to this report. this inflation number is accelerating. it s not toning down or topping out. brit hume joins us in moments on the political blowback for president biden and what that looks like as we head to the mid-term. first, let s bring in jackie deangelis and mark tepper. thanks for being here. $6,800, jackie, is the bite that s been taken out of people s income if you have mom and dad both working in the home. how does this shape up? first, it was 3,500 and then $5,000 and now it s $6,800. it keeps going on. my biggest problem today even though they re trying to explain it away saying it s backward looking, that doesn t mean it didn t have an impact on people. they re paying more
everybody in new york city was waiting to hear what was going to happen with this case. manhattan da s office says after they reviewed the video and reviewed witnesses and people that called 911, they won t be presenting this case to a grand jury. the mayor of new york supports the decision. i believe after the da s review, he made the right decision. earlier this month, jose alba was charged with second degree murder after police say he killed a man in a bodega in new york city. alba was in jail when this video was released. you can see 35-year-old austin simon around the bodega and attacked the 61-year-old store clerk. alba is shoved in to the wall and grabbed him by the collar. moments later, alba grabs a knife and stabs him to death. this all started after simon s girlfriend tried to buy her daughter a snack with her ebt card that was declined. in the motion, the manhattan d.a. said if alba reasonably believed that alba was attempting to commit a burglary of an occupi
Afoot. Brutal, and violence, and chaotic, they are vicious killers. It was a horrible betrayal. This wasnt supposed to happen ever. It was a chilly december morning, 2020. The high desert outside of los angeles. In there, behind barbed wire and secure blocks of thick concrete, a prisoner was placed in front of a camera. It was a parole hearing, for a life or who was not supposed to be set free. 50 miles away, nervous and worried, the sisters of the mans victim listen to a live broadcast. With her, historic l. A. Homicide detective, now retired. And rick jackson. Powerless to intervene, they waited for the boards decision. And it all came flooded back. As if decades had vanished. And the strange, terrible events had only just occurred. I worked homicide, but by the end of my career what it was 20 years. And you also think that you have seen everything, and this is one of those cases that, that just did not make any sense. No, it did not. Still does not. And maybe never well. It was just