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tv   The Ten O Clock News on KTVU FOX 2  FOX  May 15, 2024 10:00pm-11:01pm PDT

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>> pro-palestinian protesters not backing down at uc berkeley this afternoon. they took over a vacant building near campus. demonstrators breaking windows, hanging flags and setting up camp. >> it's not good to vandalize private property. i'm really glad that people are expressing, like, their opinion. >> tonight, police are on the scene monitoring that situation. good evening. i'm julie julie haener and i'm mike mibach. >> the occupied building is actually owned by the university and located right near people's park. ktvu bailey o'carroll. live tonight in berkeley. bailey, what's the situation where you're at right now? >> hey, mike and julie. yeah, this number of people here in this crowd has grown significantly since we first got here. and since they first got here about eight hours ago, almost at this point, of course, it is pretty dark out here. so it's a little hard to see this building is right near uc berkeley's campus. it is not used, so that is why it is so dark here. and i can tell you this protest has largely been
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peaceful. it's pretty quiet as you can tell. it was definitely louder earlier today. but these people have set up quite the camp here. we've seen just in the last ten minutes a number of cars coming to drop off supplies like water, toilet paper and a whole lot of two, two by four planks appearing that they are going to take it inside this building. and we don't know exactly what they're doing with it. but again, this crowd has grown quite, quite large over the last couple of hours. and they hope, of course, that it continues to grow that way. we will not go away. >> this afternoon a pro-palestinian group took over this property near the campus of uc berkeley, breaking down boarded up windows, climbing on the roof of the anna head complex and graffitiing pro-palestinian messages. >> protesters also brought in pallets and pallets of supplies, indicating this group intends to hold their ground. the protesters denied our request for an interview, but students
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passing by say they don't agree with this style of demonstration. >> i also think it's about striking a balance, gathering the most attention is the primary objective and like depending on, you know, the magnitude of the circumstances, i think there's more leeway with this type of thing. yeah in general, i would say that, you know, it's not good to vandalize private property. >> this latest demonstration comes less than 24 hours after a different pro-palestinian group dismantled their encampment in sproul plaza after coming to a resolution with the university. in a statement, the university said today is the 55th anniversary of people's park and action was first announced on platforms controlled by people's park activists. they are vandalizing an unsafe, boarded up, fire damaged building next to people's park. we have confirmed that the coalition with whom we reached an understanding yesterday did not initiate today's action. uc berkeley police say they estimate 10 to 20 people are inside the building, which no longer is in use because of a
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fire that left it badly burned in 2022. the protest has been largely peaceful, something students like william are thankful for as he was busy moving across the street from the protest. >> i didn't even like, know because we got like a warn me, like, you know, our campus, kind of like news, like alerts, whatever. and they're like, oh, police activity on like, this street. i'm like, oh, like what's going on? and i see, and it's just it doesn't look like too much is going on. >> everyone we spoke to hopes the protest remains this way. >> i'm really glad that people are expressing like, their opinion and are able to like you know, voice their beliefs and everything, especially like in peaceful manners. like it's not like they're disturbing or like disrupting or like hurting anyone. >> well, i did ask uc berkeley if they have any plans to shut this encampment down to get any of the uc berkeley police estimate that there is 10 to 20 people inside the building behind me. i asked if they have any plans to get those folks out. they said right now, no plans. they say they typically
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don't share that any any sort of information like that. i can tell you that right now there are just two chp officers standing right across the street from where we are right now. they have been monitoring the situation all night long. mike, we'll send it back to you. >> yeah. they're not hurting anyone, but they are damaging the property. and i'm just curious. you mentioned the chp officers, you know, over the last five, six hours have their berkeley police, i mean, the city police department. have they been on scene at all or uc berkeley pd? >> you know, we've seen a couple of uc berkeley police officers. and then as far as city police, we've seen just a couple of them drive by in cars, but not actually out of their cars. we also saw earlier today a number of chp cars kind of drive by with sirens on, unsure if that is related to this, but it was about eight cars or so. so again, don't know if that was related to this incident when it was really lively earlier this afternoon. but yeah, just for right now and for the majority of the night, it's really just been two chp officers. >> all right. bailey o'carroll
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with the latest there in berkeley. bailey. thank you. protesters who were out at sproul plaza on the cal campus packed up and went to uc merced, where the regents are in the second day of a three day meeting there on that campus. the protesters are calling on the regents to divest in companies that provide support to israel during the war. you see, investment officers said that the uc system could lose $32 billion of its $175 billion in assets if it agreed to the students divestment demands. uc officials have said they have no plans to divest classes at uc irvine are moving online tomorrow, following a tense standoff tonight between police and pro-palestinian protesters on campus. >> we are. this is the situation that unfolded earlier today. officials say demonstrators blocked the entrance to the physical sciences building, many
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of them draping flags over balconies and chanting for total divestment from israel, according to our sister station in l.a, law enforcement declared it an unlawful assembly and started detaining protesters. >> no more business as usual. when 15,000 children were bombed in the past three months. no more business as usual. we all love each other. we all care about each other, our people, our humanitarian standing up for human rights here. >> it is unclear if any protesters were formally arrested. the situation has since calmed down and tonight demonstrators have started clearing out the campus and student protesters at san francisco state university say they have reached an agreement with the school's president on the issue of gaza. >> ktvu christien kafton has a closer look now at the changes. the university says it will be making our collaboration extended beyond our campus, encompassing other universities, community groups and our steadfast faculty who stood by us from the beginning. >> student organizers who've camped on the san francisco
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state university campus for two weeks, say they've reached an agreement with the university's president. addressing three of the organizers for demands, protesters had been calling for the university to disclose the school's investment portfolio and divest from companies that fund war or support israel and clarity on upcoming legislation that they say would curtail their rights to protest on campus. the only demand that we haven't currently met is declared declaring it a genocide, calling it what it is, which is still very important and something that we're going to continue to work on through the summer and into the fall. in a statement, san francisco state's president said there have been times when student activism has pushed for positive institutional change, and she said this is one of those times. the president saying in part, quote, students for gaza has pushed us to reflect on and commit to working with the sf state foundation to review and draft a revision to our existing environmental, social and governance investment policy statement. we will support the addition of a human rights based investment strategy, including divesting from direct investments in weapons manufacturers. the school is
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also pledged to create a website to clearly lay out the school's investment strategies and outline her concerns about any legislation that students say would abridge their rights to protest. student organizers say this is just the beginning. so what we're working towards now that we've gotten this first, really important first step here at our campus, is organizing with students at all of the different csus to come together, go to the board of trustees meeting and make that change on a more systemic level, student organizers have already begun to dismantle the encampment here and say that they're ending the day and night encampment here on campus, but we'll keep a daytime presence in this area to keep interested. parties informed. in san francisco, christien kafton, ktvu, fox two news tonight student demonstrators at san jose state heard from the artist who created an iconic protest sculpture on campus. >> now, this statue is has always been meant to be of service to you so that you could use use it for your advocacy,
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like we. >> rigo 23 created the statue of track and field stars tommie smith and john carlos raising their fists in the black power salute at the olympic games in 1968. they attended san jose state, the artist told us. the sculpture includes an empty spot representing student activism. >> this monument at the center of san jose state university celebrates the very thing that's happening right now. tommie smith and john carlos were students here. they paid a very personal high price for the bravery of their action in mexico city. >> the artists visit followed a statement by san jose state saying tommie smith and john carlos disapproved of the statue being used as part of the encampment. but the statement added that smith and carlos support the right to free expression and peaceful protest. >> new at ten. there was gratitude and grief at an annual event tonight in san francisco,
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a bicyclist who survived a hit and run joined the ride of silence. >> it honors people who were killed while riding on the streets of the city. ktvu is amber lee joins us now. she's here in studio with us after attending that event. >> amber, julie and mike, the survivor, tells me she no longer rides her bicycle in the evening and after dark due to safety concerns. but tonight she made an exception as she joined dozens of bicyclists as they paid tribute to the lives lost in san francisco's ride of silence is a somber remembrance of people killed while riding their bicycles as ghost bikes. painted in white are memorials placed at locations of deadly crashes. >> i would like to see san francisco be a city that has zero ghost bikes. >> alex thomas is a survivor of a hit and run. we followed her journey from life threatening injuries to recovery in february of 2022, she was riding her bicycle home after work as a bartender when a driver hit her
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from behind and sped off. she suffered a traumatic brain injury and was in a coma for more than a month. thomas tells me she's still coping with chronic pain and fatigue more than two years after the crash, but she's grateful for a second chance at life. >> the will to live in me is really strong, and i'm never going to give up a message of hope for those mourning the loss of loved ones on this night. >> that's charles. >> charles vincent is among the dozens of bicyclists killed who are being honored. his longtime partner shows me the bicycle that charles gave him grief not only for charles, but for all, all the other 40 plus people that will be observing tonight. the bicyclist made stops at locations where there have been deadly crashes. organizers say, a reminder that the city has made some safety improvements in response to bicyclist killed, a call for proactive instead of reactive measures. >> someone is killed in the community. it really hurts all of us, even though we may not
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even know the person. it really because we always feel it could be one of us that can be killed, thomas says. >> even though the driver in her case still hasn't been caught, she says she has forgiven him and now lives a life of gratitude and advocacy. >> if you see somebody who needs help, ask them if they if you can help them. it's love is always the answer. >> thomas is calling on the city to install more surveillance cameras and protected bike lanes. she is also urging bicyclists to take personal responsibility by wearing a helmet and observing traffic rules. and this is something they do every year, right? absolutely. and it was amazing to see her because we followed her journey from the time she suffered life threatening injuries to her recovery, one month in a coma. >> so good to see her doing what she's doing now and better. amber thank you. >> amber a person shot and killed in san francisco's bayview last month has now been identified. police say charles lawrence was found shot with gunshot was found with gunshot
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wounds in the area of third in quesada around 930. this was april 29th. he was transported to the hospital where he was pronounced dead. no arrests have been made. sfpd homicide unit says it is seeking information about this case from the public. an overdose deaths are down nationwide. >> coming up, the work being done in the south bay. as experts say, this is just one step in the right direction and we are tracking the forecast. >> that does include a bunch of fog, but you see it out there now. it's going to be around tomorrow and it does some cooling this weekend. so how cool will it get? the forecast is coming up. >> also oakland congresswoman barbara lee taking a walk down memory lane. she is opening up about her dear friend and the first black woman elected to congress, shirley chisholm, who is now the subject of a netflix film. >> when black women fight for issues that are important in low income communities and the black community, we fight for ev ybody
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mugs. ♪ bmo ♪ on deadly overdoses. according to the cdc, the number of overdose deaths is down nationwide, ktvu south bay reporter lamonica peters joins us now in san jose with more on the tools being used to help
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combat the drug crisis here in the bay area. lamonica >> julie, the cdc reports that overdose deaths declined about 3% from 2022 to 2023. now advocates say that's promising news, but they still want people to educate themselves about the dangers of drug use. we are hopeful. >> we are hopeful that these trends are coming down, as they have been crushing with the past years of the overdose statistic. >> doctor cheryl ho is medical director for santa clara county's behavioral health department and says although national numbers declined some, the crisis isn't over. santa clara county's data board shows overdose deaths increased from 195 deaths in 2022 to 220 8 in 2023. but ho says they now have more tools to combat the drug crisis. >> we have really increased our prevention efforts through public awareness campaigns. we
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have increased our harm reduction efforts through countywide distribution of naloxone. and we've also stepped up a number of treatment efforts . and so, you know, our hope is, is that all of these efforts combine across as well here in santa clara county, as well as nationwide have really we're really hoping that these are moving the needle on their overdose crisis. >> since 1999, over a million people have died from a drug overdose in the united states, according to the national center for drug abuse statistics. dean schulte is co-founder of finsec, an organization that provides fentanyl test strips and narcan to schools and nightclubs in the bay area. >> what we're seeing now is a change where younger people who have never used any opioid substance other than might have been prescribed by a doctor, are starting to use it. >> drug abuse statistics show that in the u.s. opioids like fentanyl are a factor in seven of ten drug overdose deaths. we are keeping people alive through narcan, which is fantastic, but
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we need to look at how can we actually prevent overdoses, not just prevent death. now, if you or someone you know needs help, or you want more information about narcan or fentanyl testing strips, just go to ktvu.com and click the link for this story. julie lamonica peters reporting live for us tonight in san jose. >> lamonica, thank you. newly released numbers from the 2024 point in time count are showing a slight decrease in the number of homeless people living in alameda county, according to the count. results released by the county. overall, the homeless population dropped by 3% over the past two years, but breaking the numbers down by city, the results are more mixed. some including oakland, hayward and dublin, saw increases in their homeless populations, while others saw declines, including berkeley at 21, new at ten. >> the ceo of san francisco travel has resigned after only months on the job. ryan becker
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cited personal reasons for his resignation. vice president and general manager of hotel niko and marie presutti will serve as interim ceo. san francisco travel works to attract conventions, business travelers and tourists to the city, which is still recovering from the pandemic. san francisco's tourism industry isn't expected to make a full recovery for another 2 to 3 years. >> okay, checking on the weather. we had a nice day today. it was going to do the same thing tomorrow. this pattern, like we talked about early on in the week, is just kind of a flat line with subtle variations today. subtle variations came in the form of a little bit cooler around the bay, maybe a degree or two cooler, especially out there in oakland and san francisco. and then a little bit warmer in some of the inland spots. so that's how it goes again tomorrow. with temperatures generally a little above the average, maybe right at the average. and the story here is, is this low pressure center that's getting closer to us stretching out the marine layer. and so it's going to pinch down tomorrow afternoon
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warm up. it's going to open up again on friday. and when that happens that friday event is really going to cool us down as that pinches or opens up to about well over 2000ft, maybe 2200, 2300ft. and that's going to push fog and low clouds well inland. they're not going. it's going to burn off slow friday, saturday cooler weather in the forecast. no rain. we'll have that full forecast coming up. >> see you in a bit bill. thank you. coming up, a man on the peninsula is crediting a bluetooth device for helping him find his stolen truck. >> also, shirley chisholm, the first black woman elected to congress, will now be the subject of a new netflix film right after the break, the real life role she played in the life of oakland congresswoman barbara lee. >> also, the war in gaza, weighing heavily on many palestinians living here in the bay area today, somber annive ary marking a dark t e
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while a student at mills college in the 70s, lee met her friend and mentor, shirley chisholm. chisholm's glass shattering career is now the subject of a new film, as our political reporter greg lee shows us. >> lee hopes this story inspires future trailblazers. >> oh my goodness. oh, you got to be kidding. now you guys have to get me this congresswoman barbara lee, taking a walk down memory lane at the place where her political roots were first planted inside the library at her alma mater, mills college in oakland. >> she reminisced over her yearbook photo and a newsletter she wrote as the president of the black student union, i was able to receive a an unbelievably good quality education at the same time as i was raising two small little boys on public assistance and food stamps. also on this table of memories, photos of shirley chisholm, the first black woman elected to congress. lee invited chisholm to speak on campus as chisholm began her historic
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presidential campaign in 1972. it was the start of a life changing friendship and mentorship for lee. there was a class here at mills that i was about to flunk because we were required to work in a political campaign. >> i didn't know shirley chisholm was running, so i passed my class because i got involved in her campaign and i registered to vote. >> if all you're doing is outside yelling and screaming, that's all you're ever going to be a yeller and a screamer. you have to be part of the process. >> the process doesn't exist in politics for black women. you're different. >> chisholm's trailblazing presidential run and life the subject of a new biopic titled shirley, released on netflix. chisholm, played by regina king, a young barbara lee depicted by christina jackson. >> it's been the role of a lifetime in the sense of being able to play someone who has made so much change in the past 50 years. >> when i met christina, it was like meeting me. >> lee met jackson during filming, and on this day brought
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the actress to the place where it all began. lee walking on campus, showing jackson where chisholm spoke more than 50 years ago. the echoes of her message reverberating through lee's political career, the progressive icon breaking her own barriers and opening doors for the next generation. in her nearly 30 years in congress, there is no way i would have been able to fight the fights that i have to fight each and every day for peace and for justice and for equity and equality. >> had it not been for shirley chisholm and of course, my mother. >> chisholm passed in 2005. lee and jackson said they're grateful the film honors chisholm's legacy and are hopeful the story inspires young people. >> we have this group of people in this generation who know how important information is, who know how important their voices are, who know how important it is to be able to speak up. >> when black women fight for issues that are important in low income communities and the black community, we fight for everybody because we make this country stronger and more
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equitable. greg lee ktvu, fox two news. >> even when you're at your lowest low, an emotional night in the east bay after the break, the new exhibit shining a light on the october 7th attack in israel and the impact it has had on the bay area jewish community, plus, we've been here with the parma team now for, i think, seven days, eight days. >> i'm beginning to lose track of time. >> a group of doctors, including ten americans trapped in gaza. tonight, the white house's response, as the doctors say, the situation in rafah is growing dire, also had the giants work to secure their first win against the dodgers this season. >> did they avoid a series sweep? our jason appelbaum will have the story a little later in sports. and coming up tonight at 1045, it's napa valley's first vietnamese owned winery. we're sitting down with the ceo a we
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mass attacks against israel. now we can make it better. >> it's easy to remember. we won't be here. >> the event was held at the piedmont center for the arts. israeli musician a rhinestone was invited to perform. he came to bring attention to the hostage situation. some of his relatives were murdered and kidnaped on october 7th. >> i have a three cousins that were murdered. i have more cousins that were taken hostage and through people's advocacy around the world, some of my cousins were released. so i know we have hope. >> the event also featured a photography exhibition and a war
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diary video. >> and for many palestinian americans right here in the bay area, actually seen the civilian deaths from the israel-hamas war is deeply personal, and today was especially difficult. >> it comes on the 76th anniversary of the 1948 israeli arab war, which forced hundreds of thousands of palestinians to flee from their homes and what they call nakba, or catastrophe. >> ktvu jana katsuyama has more tonight, after speaking with palestinian families right here in the bay area, it was like i finally felt like i was at home. >> it was a feeling i've never felt before. >> it was just last summer. and dana elcar says she was so excited, taking her first trip to see her family's ancestral home in gaza and meeting her relatives. >> i've met so much family and it was so nice because it was like they all knew me and it's just so many cousins, aunts, uncle memories captured in this 15 year old's photos of places. >> now gone. >> over 100 people in our family
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have been killed as news reports tally palestinian deaths in the tens of thousands, according to gaza officials. >> the pain here is personal. >> it's hard, but i feel like speaking for myself and i feel like a lot of other palestinians i know, it's almost like we haven't really had time to fully grieve, because we're still kind of trying to explain to people what's going on and trying to spread awareness and trying to get it to stop, because as we're grieving, more and more things continue to happen. >> heartache like nothing. this 15 year old ever faced before. >> i'm shutting off that part of my brain because my focus right now is spreading awareness and kind of letting people know what's happening. before i let myself kind of feel all and yeah, and i think the youngest person in our family that was killed was four months old, like a baby. >> dana's mother, doctor manal, says relatives are now refugees, as they were all forced to flee and all of them have lost their
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homes. >> we don't know of a single family member that has a house left. >> i have lost 11 members of my family, one of whom is four years old. >> manadel ghazala is another san francisco palestinian american. feeling desperation at the deaths and repeated displacements of his family and other palestinians, especially this wednesday on the 76th anniversary of the israeli-arab war. called the nakba, or catastrophe, it is a continuation of what happened in in the to the palestinians in 1948. >> as they moved from one place to another. we want to simply live like everybody else. >> jana katsuyama, ktvu, fox two news. >> more than a dozen doctors, including ten americans right now, are trapped in gaza after israel seized and closed the rafah border crossing earlier this month. >> the hospital is shaking with the bombs that are going off
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consistently, and this is a scale of destruction that i have never seen before. i've been in wars, i've seen, you know, combat injuries and now natural disasters. but not to this scale . >> the doctors say they're with the palestinian american medical association, which posted this video to x. doctor adam hamoui is a near newark, new jersey, plastic surgeon and us army vet who is just one of 19 doctors stuck in gaza right now. the association says the doctors first entered gaza on may 1st to provide emergency medical care to civilians. they were supposed to leave on monday but were denied exit from gaza today. the white house said it is aware of the situation and is doing everything to get those doctors out. >> if there was an operation in rafah or potential operation in rafah, it doesn't. we need to get them out, we want to get them out and that is our it has nothing to do with anything
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else. these are americans impacted american citizens, and so we're working to get them out . >> the white house says the biden administration is in contact with four of the doctors families, as well as the israeli government. and our coverage of the war in gaza continues online on our website at ktvu.com. >> can i take this obligation freely without any mental reservation? >> new video now as oakland mayor, shengtao presided over the swearing in of oakland's new police chief, his first day on the job was monday. the mayor said chief floyd mitchell has, quote, demonstrated his commitment to enhancing public safety. he is more than 30 years of experience in law enforcement , most recently as the chief of police in lubbock, texas. a public swearing in ceremony is expected in the near future. >> a redwood city man tracked his stolen truck all the way across the bay into east oakland, thanks to a bluetooth tracking device. but as ktvu henry lee reports, when the man called oakland police in the middle of the night asking for help, it was not a priority
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call. >> i feel like the criminal justice system is failing in california, and it's this is a symptom of it. >> this auto theft victim is frustrated. video shows a dodge charger with three people inside pulling up to his redwood city home at about two wednesday morning. they made a beeline to his custom made dodge ram pickup truck in the driveway. one guy drives away in his truck, maneuvering around the tesla that was meant to be a barrier. the victim, who doesn't want his name used, said he tracked a stolen truck to this cul de sac near 99th and plymouth in east oakland, and went there himself at 3:45 a.m, the same dodge charger that was in front of my house was parked across the street facing that car. >> they covered my vehicle with like a tarp, but they could only cover the front half of it so i could see the back of my truck and i knew it was my truck. >> he called oakland police several times, but was told no officers were available to respond. >> i'm telling them i could see the truck. i have a tracker. i can remote start it. i can turn on the lights and they're saying too busy, don't care. >> he noticed people on the
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street looking at him and decided to head back to redwood city. >> there was guys coming out of the street and they were. it was like i could kind of tell. it was about to get tense. >> he decided to call ktvu at about seven in the morning. we called oakland police and that seemed to speed things up. an hour later he got a call from redwood city police saying that oakland police had towed his car. the marine corps veteran says he never expected to be treated this way by a law enforcement. >> it wasn't until the news got involved and they're kicked into high gear. >> we were there as he went to the tow yard and picked up his truck. it wasn't all good news. >> i gave up like this many years of my life. for what? like that's the ultimate feeling. like, what was this all for? because i come back home, my truck gets stolen and they're going to do nothing about it. >> two weeks ago, he believes the same dodge charger had been casing his home that prompted him to install security cameras and use the tesla as a buffer. we spotted that same charger in east oakland on wednesday afternoon. >> the lineman is off, and there they tore apart the whole driver's side, trying to look for the tracker. >> now he fears the thieves might come back a third time. >> only a matter of time till it
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happens again and where is it going to be found next? what are they going to do? how long it's going to take for them to respond? >> there's no word on any arrests. the victim tells me he'll probably install a kill switch so that his truck isn't stolen again. in redwood city. henry lee ktvu, fox two news coming up at 11, a local university president put on administrative leave calls for an academic boycott of israel. >> the controversy after the message was sent to the entire campus. >> and i'm tracking the weather forecast that includes a bunch of fog like you see here. how does that play to the weekend? i'll have that coming up. >> but first, netflix's new business model might be paying off . da
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against tesla can move forward. the judge rejected tesla's bid to dismiss the lawsuit, which accuses the company of misleading customers about its self-driving capabilities. the
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lawsuit says since 2016, tesla and its owner, elon musk, falsely advertised autopilot and other self-driving technology as functional or coming soon. the lawsuit seeks unspecified damages. >> netflix is seeing a surge of users for its less expensive subscription that includes advertising. the los gatos company says the new tier has 40 million active users, up from 5 million a year ago. it says it's also rolling out its own in-house ad platform. netflix is pushing more live offerings, including plans to stream to nfl games on christmas day this year. >> bay area housing prices showed no sign of easing the median listing price of a single family home in santa clara county, just hit $2 million. agents say it's a familiar story of supply and demand. there are more than 2.5 million people in santa clara county, but there are just 755 active single family homes on the market, and those homes are out of reach for many don't see it as a
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milestone. >> we have 60% people in the bay area that can't afford a home to purchase here, and it's the same story really across much of the bay area. >> the california association of realtors says the median listing price is more than $2 million. in san mateo county, 1.7 million in san francisco and 1.4 million in alameda county. >> earlier, we told you the president and ceo of san francisco travel abruptly resigned. we reported the incorrect name. the official who is resigning, scott beck. he says he left for personal reasons. you can find additional details about this change at ktvu.com/web links. well, our coverage of aapi heritage month continues coming up after the break in the north bay, where one winery is breaking cultural barriers for us. >> i mean, being the first carries a lot of responsibility and weight, particularly for i feel that personally coming up next, we take you to the first vietnamese owned winery in napa,
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where its owners are working to create a space of their own. >> and our chief meteorologist, bill martin, will join us next. he'll have the complete bay area fore st com g
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claudine wong tells us the ceo of r.d. winery is hoping to make a mark on the wine industry. >> when we started here in 2011, everything was dead and so a lot of originally it was a japanese garden. they had like four full time gardeners. and then when we took over, we turned on the water and started planting and kind of changed things around a bit. >> a walk through the winery is about honoring the past and breaking new barriers for the future. back in the 80s and 90s, this spot was known as a first for japanese saki in napa. today under new owners, it's all about a first in wine. >> we are the first vietnamese owned winery in napa, so the chairman of the board, his name is don van nguyen. we call him mister dom. he came here and felt the way that everyone who comes to napa feels, which is that it's beautiful and amazing. and he wanted something here for his family. and then it's kind of been a way to share the
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vietnamese culture. this tasting room was designed in the style of halong bay. the art on the wall is original art from vietnamese artists. our our brand names like julie haener not is a story, a fable from vietnamese culture. so it's a way for us to kind of share culture. >> r.d. which signifies sunrise or morning time in vietnamese, he says the goal isn't to fit into a napa mold, but to create a space of their own. >> i think if we look at the napa wine world from the outside, it still feels very exclusive. >> it still feels like it's pretentious. and it's just, i mean, it's beautiful, it's a wonderful place, but that is a feeling that i think a lot of people have. i mean, i've heard comedian jo koy joke about how wine was for white people. so like, there is this idea that it is an exclusive experience and it doesn't have to be right. wine at the end of the day is fermented grape juice, right? this is this is what it is. and it's been a part of many cultures for a very long time, and it can be a part of anyone's
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household. we are entering our warehouse, and this is where we store all the barrels for aging. >> phan says vietnam doesn't have a history with wine, so originally the company intended to export what they created to vietnam, but now they've shifted their focus to the u.s. and opened this tasting room right as the pandemic hit in the pandemic that you guys did that anyway, how has that been? >> really hard. >> there's honesty. it's difficult. >> yeah. so we opened in july of 2020, and that's after we had finished renovating the space, and then suddenly it was only outdoor. but then we also had massive wildfires that year. so it wasn't safe to be inside because of covid, but it wasn't necessarily safe to be outside because of smoke, hoping the toughest part of the road is behind them. >> they are now expanding their offerings with cultural events and with pan-asian food pairings. >> this is our 100, not sauvignon blanc with the lychee chocolate. this sauvignon blanc
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comes from morgan ranch and this one is, won double gold at the san francisco chronicle wine competition. >> hospitality director candice markovich wilson treated us to a tasting of ardi winery wines paired with chocolate made in san francisco, inspired by the diverse flavors of vietnam, including one flavor that is described as savory pho with a side of sriracha. >> this one comes from cherry house vineyard, and i think that's the perfect description of this palate. a lot more kind of those cherry notes. and this is also going to give you a little bit of baking spice, which is going to pair with the chocolate. >> i really like it. i'm trying to taste the. >> room. it's like yeah the back of the palate. >> it is new territory, not just for ardi but also for napa and the industry as a whole. and pioneers don't enjoy the luxury of roadmaps to success. >> for us, i mean, being the first carries a lot of responsibility and weight
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particularly. i feel that personally i think that we fit in in terms of perhaps we don't fit in realistically, like we're trying to make wine more diverse. most of our conversations are about making wine more accessible. >> and so for this team, it's about first steps and next steps. for napa's first vietnamese owned winery, raising a glass to all that can be in napa. claudine wong, ktvu, fox two news. >> all right, back at the weather, we've got some nice weather to talk about. pretty much standard spring summer pattern with fog at the coast, mild around the bay and kind of warm inland as it was today, and in the far inland spots today, mid 80s for the most part, maybe some upper 80s. and temperatures next few days are going to trend. tomorrow is going to trend the same and then they're going to temperatures are going to trend down pretty not significantly, but they're going to trend down a bunch as we go into friday, saturday and sunday instead of 70s, we're going to see temperatures in the or instead of 80. we're going to
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see temperatures in the 70s and 60s. so the marine layer is going to do that and you're just going to get deep. it's going to really open up it. it will. it has been doing it nights and mornings, but it's really going to unload and stretch out on friday. and that means a huge push of fog inland and clouds. so the microclimates tomorrow like just like today pretty much . so really a pleasant day. and then as we get into friday, saturday, these upper 70s turn into upper 60s. friday saturday and probably into sunday as well. but tomorrow is going to be a day just like today. so i'm just thinking more about the weekend because that's what you're thinking about, and it's going to be a nice weekend, but it's going to start off real cloudy as tomorrow morning starts off cloudy. see all the fog, the fog footprint there and then if you look at the satellite, you can see everything going up over the top. that makes sense. and then the sea breeze. this is the current temperatures. you can just see where the sea breeze is. those darker greens representing cooler, higher humidity, air coming in off the ocean. and that's because the winds are so deep. right. so there it is tomorrow morning. big push of it. and then it
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burns back. and then now watch friday mornings. that's the big big push. now it won't really get up in here. this would just be up into it's not going to make it to chico for crying out loud. but it's going to definitely be cooler up in that area as the moist, cool air comes inland, the fog will burn off pretty quickly on friday, but then the work has been done, the cold air has been replaced, or the warm air has been replaced with the cool air. and that lingers. that air mass that cooler air mass is going to linger with us through saturday and sunday. so these are the forecast highs for tomorrow. but like today, maybe a tad cooler. and then there's the five day forecast. so these are real subtle changes julie. nothing really out of control. just the weekend. people don't like it cooler, but it will be a little cooler this weekend. all right. >> thank you bill. we'll see you back here at 11. well how many prime time games will the 40 niners have in the upcoming season? are jason appelbaum will have the story. >> and tonight on the 11:00 news, the kansas city chiefs kicker facing criticism after his commencement speech at a small college in kansas. we take
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a look at what was said and the nfl's response
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the dodgers. they had not beaten l.a. in five tries so far this season, 36,000 at the ballpark in san francisco. hey there, little fella. mike yastrzemski, hitless in his last five games. but he changed that in the third with a big fly to right. if it stays fair, it's gone. and it is gone. two run homers, fourth of the season was all the giants would need because logan webb proved to be the stopper that they were looking for six innings of shutout baseball. his defense a big reason why. watch this play by luis matos, leaps to make the catch against the
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wall and take a home run away from teoscar hernandez. great concentration by matos, who is playing for an injured jungwoo lee, who was dislocated his shoulder sunday leaping against that very same wall. and then duvall time under the lights. closer camilo duvall makes his dramatic entrance. he walked. mookie betts gave up a single to shohei ohtani, freddie freeman the tying run at the plate. but duvall gets him to ground out to second. thairo estrada throws the first game over. giants finally break through against the dodgers with a 4 to 1 win. they get tomorrow off before the red hot rockies come to town. a's in houston with this young fan is like look what i got. yeah he's got a nice souvenir there. aaron brooks making his first big league appearance in two years. and on his sixth pitch of the game, kyle tucker pulls it to right down the line. jose altuve, he had singled to lead off the game headed for third, but a bad throw by zach gelof allows altuve to trot in
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for the first run of the game. and that was really all the astros needed because framber valdez was dealing. he gets estuary ruiz swinging and then abraham toro golfs it one down in the dirt. valdez seven shutout innings, eight strikeouts. astros win three. nothing a's will try to avoid the four game sweep tomorrow. it has become a made for tv event. the nfl schedule release is indeed a big deal. here's how the 49ers revealed their upcoming season. >> the 2024 schedule is finally here. i know just the right person to get me fired up for this upcoming season. >> we got the schedule released, and it looks like we're going to be playing a lot of tough teams this year. >> i don't really sound like that, do i? >> yeah you do. i always get a kick out of 49ers podcast or steph sanchez. great nick bosa impersonation. >> the 40 niners are one of three teams along with the
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cowboys okay. and the jets to have six games televised in prime time. as we take a look at some of the key games this season. for the first time since 1998, the niners open up against the new york jets and aaron rodgers. and they'll do it on monday night football. great stretch in october beginning in seattle on thursday, october 10th and ten days later, it's a super bowl rematch on fox with the chiefs coming to levi's. and then the following sunday, the niners welcome in the dallas cowboys on sunday night, two more prime time games in december, including a week 17 matchup with the detroit lions, who are back in town for an nfc championship game rematch for the third straight year, the boston celtics. they are playing in the eastern conference finals. jayson tatum and company , no problem. closing out in game five at home against the cavs, who were without their star player donovan mitchell, and tatum knocks down the three to pretty much seal it. he had 25 points ten rebounds nine
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assists. celtics win by 15 to take the series four games to one and will face either the knicks or the pacers. shai gilgeous alexander and the thunder versus luka doncic and the mavs two mvp finalists going head to head, mavs up 11 late when derek jones watch him kind of come out of nowhere to block seven foot one chet holmgren. doncic rewards him the other way. easiest of his 11 assist. doncic triple double mavs win pivotal game five 104 92 to take a three games to two lead in the series. okay, caitlin clark's debut with the indiana fever last night averaged 2.1 million viewers, making it the most watched wnba game in 23 years. and former stanford star. take a look, cameron brink looking sharp for her pro debut with the la sparks and she knocks down the corner. three brink finished with 11 points but the sparks lost to the atlanta dream 92 to 81. but like we said, we said we
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were going to mention to the numbers on the wnba game. most watched in 23 years. unbelievable. yeah, amazing. that's good to see. >> it is. it really is. sure is jason. thank you. next at 11 her college career. >> tonight demonstrators occupying and smashing windows vandalizing the outside of a building in berkeley located right near campus. and it's owned by the university. 11:00 news on ktvu. fox two starts now. and tonight university officials say those protesters are not the same ones who set up camp for weeks at sproul plaza. good evening everyone. i'm mike mibach and i'm julie julie haener. >> police are monitoring that situation. ktvu bailey o'carroll was on the scene all day and has our report out. we will not go away. >> this afternoon a pro-palestinian group took over this property near the campus of uc berkeley, breaking down boarded up windows, climbing on the roof oan

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