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tv   CBS News Bay Area Evening Edition 5pm  CBS  June 5, 2025 5:00pm-5:31pm PDT

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after this. and big brother is watching business leaders in one bay area city launching a new program to track tourists. yeah. well, the sweat had all these bay area gamers lined up in the early morning hours today. well, you probably saw it on social media. the growing rift between president trump and the world's richest man has erupted into a full blown war of words, with the two going back and forth, attacking each other on their own social media platforms. our julia goodrich has been following this split, which could have some serious implications. >>it's >>like two teenagers going at it, but these are grown adults. >>absolutely. and the consequences are huge. two
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billionaires who formed a powerful political alliance are now in the middle of a messy public breakup. both men have taken to social media to air out their grievances, with musk claiming the president is involved in the jeffrey epstein ... scandal and the president threatening to cut musk's government contracts. but let's all start from the beginning, shall we? things started to escalate after the president in the oval office today commented on musk's pushback against his big, beautiful bill. >>elon and i had a great relationship. i don't know if we will anymore. i was surprised. i'd rather have him criticize me than the bill because the bill is incredible. and you know, elon's upset because we took the ev mandate and, you know, which was a lot of money for electric vehicles. and, you know, they're having a hard time the electric vehicles. and they want us to pay billions of dollars in subsidy. >>so elon musk then started firing back on x in real time
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with one tweet saying, quote, without me, trump would have lost the election. dems would control the house and the republicans would be 5149 in the senate. he followed up with such ingratitude under the post. a few hours later, president trump raised the stakes, threatening to use the u.s. government to hurt musk's bottom line. he posted on truth social, the easiest way to save money in our budget billions and billions of dollars, is to terminate elon's governmental subsidies and contracts. to that, musk responded that his company, spacex, will begin decommissioning its dragon spacecraft immediately. that's significant because the dragon is a key space station link for nasa, and the only private spacecraft that can carry humans to the international space station. well, musk then kicked things up a notch trying president trump to or tying president trump, that is, to convicted ... offender jeffrey epstein saying, time to drop
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the really big bomb. trump is in the epstein files. that is the real reason they have not been made public. musk has not provided evidence of his claim. the president in the past has denied any connection to epstein, with the white house calling the claim an unfortunate episode from elon. but when one x user responded that this is reason for impeachment, musk commented yes, i spoke with political science professor caroline heldman to get her thoughts on this very public blow up. >>it's really kind of the scary moment where you have a man who wealthiest man in the world, who owns a very powerful social media platform where he can mobilize 200 million people on that platform to stand against the president. that's an awful lot of power. and so on both sides. i think this really speaks poorly to the corporate connection to government. this is actually, you know, a moment where we have to reflect upon, you know, what it means to have
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men who have a lot of money having so much of a say in politics. >>meantime, investors are also watching all of this drama. tesla shares plummeted 14% today as the feud erupted, with shareholders worried about what all this means for musk's business empire. and some republicans are starting to take sides. during an interview, former trump aide steve bannon suggested trump launched an investigation into musk's immigration status, saying he should be deported. >>yeah, as we're watching this drama play out, at first you want to say it's entertaining, but it's not because there are real world consequences that come from these two interacting right >>now. yeah, absolutely. and that's the thing. as i'm reading this, i don't think we've ever reported on something like this >>ever. >>absolutely. >>absolutely >>astonishing. >>yeah. we'll see if they can kind of mend the fences very soon. all right. thanks, jules. well, now to san francisco, where we're learning more about a new round of ice arrests, this time involving children. the california collaborative for immigrant justice says 15
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people showing up for a scheduled check ins were detained yesterday at an ice field office on sansome street. among those detained were three families with four children, one of them as young as three years old. immigration advocates say the families detained spent the night sleeping on the floor in the immigration office, and some are being sent now to a detention center in texas. >>we are just concerned because we know when people are detained, they're more likely to give up their rights, especially for individuals with children, with them, they do not want their children in that traumatic experience. and so they will take, flight home rather than continue to fight their case. >>cbs news has confirmed ice has arrested more than 100,000 people since president trump took office. ice says it is currently holding 54,000 immigrants in u.s. detention facilities, and one of the people detained last week was miguel lopez from livermore. his family says it all happened as he went into san francisco
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for his scheduled immigration meeting. andrea nakano reports. his family is now fighting to bring him home. >>bring back miguel, bring back miguel. >>it was an emotional rally as miguel lopez's daughter spoke to the crowd at livermore plaza. >>we stand with you. first of all, i want to thank everybody for being here for my dad. >>holding back tears. this has been a difficult time for the family since ice agents detained lopez on may >>27th. he's been reporting for 17 years, and he always comes >>home. rosa lopez has been married to miguel since 2001. she says her husband is from mexico city and has been in the u.s. for 27 years. for 17 of those years, he has been trying to get the proper documents to live in the u.s. legally. but his daughter says that process stalled after the court discovered a dui conviction in his background >>check. >>even with that on his record,
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rosa and her children never imagined this would >>happen. they don't expect for him to walk in the door, especially my grandbaby. she gets his pictures and she's like, papa loves me. i said, yes, papa loves you, baby. she's he's working. i don't know how to explain things better to her. >>what is clear is the void miguel's absence has left as he's held at a detention facility in mcfarland. >>i miss everything about him. >>stephanie lopez says she does get to talk to her dad every night. >>he shows that he's okay. but deep down inside, i'm heartbroken. he wants to see, i'm sure the speakers. >>the family, though, has been able to show him how the livermore community is coming together on his behalf, providing a glimmer of hope that he will be home soon. >>i tell him, you know, we're going to do what we can, and i
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bring tears to his eyes. and i told him, i'm not going to give up. >>well, the trump tariffs are prompting alaska airlines to cut back on service at sfo and other airports on the west coast. the company says it will not immediately accept two jet deliveries from brazil to avoid extra tariff related costs. the airline says it's now counseling 12 daily flights on its secondary airline. that is horizon. and today, president trump and chinese president xi jinping spoke by phone amid escalating trade tensions between the world's two largest economies. well, a heads up if you visit walnut creek, the city's chamber of commerce may be tracking your movements without your knowledge or even your consent. it's all part of a new effort to track tourism in walnut creek. our very own kevin koh joins us live to explain how it all works. kevin. >>yeah. ryan, let me set the scene for you. if you were here this past weekend, you were at
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the walnut creek art and wine festival. now, if you were from out of town and you were at least here for two hours in the city, you were tracked and monitored. no alert on your phone. but every movement you made will be studied, whether you knew it or not. >>palmyra is a walnut creek chef who ran a local restaurant. >>i used to have a lot of tourists in my restaurant who visited, you know, and they tracked it via opentable, tripadvisor. it does generate a quite an amount of revenue for the restaurant. >>the question is, how does walnut creek attract more tourists to generate that revenue? >>being able to connect with them, that is the key to bring the travelers. >>walnut creek chamber of commerce seems to agree with palmyra. it's partnered with the travel data company, a rival list to track and monitor tourists citywide. they share details of the deal at tuesday's city council >>meeting. we've got some new toys. so arrival
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list is a local intelligence program that tracks, market trends and visitors behavior. and visitor spend data will be having >>soon. some of that data is already available, including information from a basketball tournament at the ultimate fieldhouse. >>as you can see, the majority of the overnight guests came from different places in california, but then pennsylvania and ohio, so we can pull all of that from arrivals. >>some council members wanted more clarification on the monitoring. >>they don't only track the data from when they visit us, but they also wait until they get home. so we can't track the device until it goes home. if that. sorry for breaking up. intrigued. so i'm in from out of town. i came in from napa to come to the art and wine festival. right. and there's something when i get to the art and wine festival, it'll. something will ping that it knows that i'm. we will pick up your device. yes. pick up my device and. you will creep him out. if you're in walnut creek for more
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than two hours, we will track. yes, we'll arrival as well. yeah, it's all very innocent. so to be fair, they're absolutely right. i think their use of the of the data in this manner is benign, right? i mean, it's a useful >>thing. mike katz is the director of research at oakland privacy. he's more worried about broader applications of the technology. >>it's really upon who is using it and to what ends depends on, you know, how creepy it gets in the same manner that they're doing it to track visitors for an event in the city of walnut creek. you could do that for who visits a police station during the day. where do they go before and after they go to the police >>station? so to get the specifics, we went to chamber president bob linscheid. >>can you explain? so if i'm just in the city for two hours, i'm going to be tracked. so this device must be in walnut creek for at least two
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hours to be considered a visitor. that is included in visitor visitation data we received. we do not track all devices. walnut creek resident that's here for a protracted period of time that's never come from outside. no we don't we're not interested in that data. we're only interested in visitors. people need to know that this is safe. it's not as though we're using the data for anything else other than to help us make marketing decisions on where we spend our money to market walnut >>creek. you know, ryan, this also comes down to the data we already provide through our phones. you know, oakland privacy. they tell me that companies like arrival list, they just buy the data from brokers, the brokers, they get the data from the apps on your phone. arrival lists is just one part of this data gathering machine. >>so, kevin, a quick question. can you actually opt out of this service? >>yeah, this one's a little tricky okay. so if you go
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through a rival list they basically do a step by step with you where you take the location off of your phone. so we all know most of us at least know to go to the settings, take the location services off. however, oakland privacy says that can get a little complicated too, because sometimes some apps act like malware and they bypass that setting on your phone altogether. >>okay, big brother is always watching kevin co reporting live in walnut creek, and the chamber says it will not share any information with or share any information with anyone. but the company's privacy policy states it may use or disclose personal information collected for reasons including responding to law enforcement requests. the chamber's president tells us, quote, he does not see that happening in walnut creek. still ahead of five, a renaissance underway in a bay area neighborhood that does not have the greatest reputation, we're going to meet the business owners, bringing new life to the community.
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seven years after the deadliest wildfire in state history, the town of paradise has risen from the ashes. we're going to meet homeowners in one of the most fire prone parts of california about how they are protecting their property. plus, we'll talk to some bay area gamers about why they were lined up at the crack of dawn for the new nintendo switch. >>because i've been a fan of nintendo for pretty much my whole life, and, i'm looking forward to playing with my >>friends. and coming up in the forecast. this is one of those days where, depending on what part of the bay you're in, you might have thought you'd never get out of the marine layer all day. it stayed gray in the north bay for a long time. finally cleared, but as a result, you didn't get out of the low 70s in a lot of places up here. meantime, it was summer for everybody else. we'll talk about how long
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well, tonight, the golden state valkyries are gunning for their first road win in franchise history. our very own matt
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lively joins us live from phoenix, where the valkyries are getting ready to take on the mercury. hey, matt. >>all right. hello from arizona. ryan. the valkyries had a couple of days of rest, but they're back at it tonight in phoenix. and while the record may not depict it, the valkyries getting better and better. and now they've got a chance to gain some momentum before heading back to valhalla. they have lost three straight, but they gave their all against two of the >>best >>in the wnba in the new york liberty and the minnesota >>lynx. >>now they're looking to take advantage of the shorthanded mercury. tonight, phoenix's second leading scorer alyssa thomas, out with a left calf injury. kahleah copper, natasha mack and megan mcdonnell all out for the mercury as well. and we have been slowly watching this. valkyrie's team get their footing. they're starting to gel. kate >>martin, >>a player to watch, will certainly look to build off her big game from >>sunday. >>she set a career high in >>points >>with 14. and oh by the way, kate martin celebrating a birthday today. you know that
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the best gift she can get is a win. we're going to have plenty more coming up tonight in the pregame show that starts at 630 over on pix >>plus. all right matt lively reporting live from phoenix. and you can catch the valkyries tonight on our sister station pix plus channel 44, cable 12 pregame coverage. well, that starts at 630. and bay area gamers were lined up early this morning all hoping to get their hands on the nintendo switch to that highly anticipated portable console went on sale today. these people waited in line at the target in colma. then they got a ticket to buy a switch. that $450 console has a larger, higher resolution screen and new social features. we talked to jacob, who says the switch two is another way to connect with friends online. >>it's just something that we get to do together and, you know, growing up, party games really became an important part of what we can do. >>okay, let's check in with darren with a look at the forecast. are you a big gamer?
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>>not not since i was like >>11. you had the atari 2600 or something >>like. that on nintendo. >>okay. oh, okay. yeah. and the >>nintendo. actually finished super >>mario bros. you finished. you >>broke. it on one >>life. >>what? i'd been home sick for like about a week when i did that, and i haven't >>played since. you know what i miss my nokia brick with? i could play snake >>on there. oh, that one i don't even >>know. that's >>so good. >>that's >>all i need. we'll have to compare >>notes >>in >>the break. >>it's been many years. all right. did you wake up this morning to gray skies. and then it seemed like maybe they never were going to clear. i want to show you where that happened today. look at the time stamp there. it says 10 a.m., so i'm going back to 10 a.m. because this is where we were. most of us by this point had broken clear. you had blue skies, you started warming up. but look at the north bay. in fact, let's get up there if we can. it didn't clear until about 1:00 this afternoon up here. so it was one of those days where the marine layer was just getting shuttled in through the petaluma gap, the way the winds were blowing into the bay today. it really wanted to take advantage of that low spot up here and fill in pretty much
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all of sonoma county and even part of napa. so if we take a look at what happened for daytime highs, watch what happens when we clear out the clouds. i'm going to show you how this advanced into the afternoon and things got so much better. but if we look at today's contour, let's get the high view. and you're going to see a big difference on here. much cooler up here. there's a lot more yellow up here in the north bay. you got reds inland. you got reds in the south bay. and when we put the daytime highs on here for today, i'll just pick out some of the representative spots. you didn't get out of the upper 60s in santa rosa today for the daytime high. now the officials coming in in about the next 30 minutes. so you might pop 70. but as of last, check the maximum temperature up there was 6870 in napa. look at livermore, pretty much on the verge of 80. look at san jose, pretty much on the verge of 80. so that's kind of a unique setup. it can happen like this where the marine layer just picks on one part of the bay a little more than others. let's see what's going on out there for right now. and what we'll do is we'll take a look at what the clouds have been doing for the last three hours. and you can see it's starting to build back onshore now, but a little
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more equally. it's already starting to squeeze in through the golden gate. this takes us from about 2:00 to now. so of course, having seen what it's doing, it's beautiful. live satellite. let's put the forecast on. what's it going to do overnight. here it comes again. and it'll fill in most of the immediate bay. so when you wake up tomorrow morning, 8 a.m., we're looking down here at the south bay. and you can see that we've already got plenty of clouds down here, but a lot of the cities, you can't even read through the clouds tomorrow at 7 a.m., so we'll all wake up to the gray pretty equally. numbers over here for the tri-valley. you'll you'll stay fairly sunny most of the day. i don't think you'll wake up with much of the marine layer. bottom line is these clouds will melt back tomorrow morning, just like they did today. and most of us will get into the sunshine. let's take a look at what this means in terms of where we will be for daytime highs tomorrow. and when we do that, we can visualize the contours on here for tomorrow and get an idea for how tomorrow's daytime highs are going to look. and go ahead and pick out your part of the bay. and it will be very similar, although perhaps just
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a little bit warmer in spots. let's go to the seven day forecast. i think that might be a better tool at this point to see how we're going to end up for daytime highs, not only for tomorrow, obviously, but let's get across the entire seven day forecast, and we'll start out with your inland microclimate. and you're going to see pretty much a pattern on here. it's not a whole lot of budging. everybody stays in the low 80s. maybe a little bit of a cooldown as we get towards early next week. more on that as we get closer to it. if we get it and we likely will, it's not significant. and the real important part about this is the temperatures are going the right way, because we don't want to see those big june heat spikes. we can certainly get them this time of year. and right now i don't have any of that. temperatures are staying very well behaved. i think is a good way to say it because we want to keep june within the range of average. we don't want to start doing big heat waves now. he wants to do that early in the summer for one and two. from a fire weather standpoint, it's those june early heat waves that can really prime the landscape later in the season. thankfully, we're not doing
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that. see you with more on this coming up in the next half hour. ryan, >>back to you. i like the june gloom. all right. thanks, darren. up next, we're going to meet the san francisco restaurant owners, bringing new energy and attention to the bayview hunters point neighborhood. the program, they say, is helping them thrive. plus, the growing concern over the health of crews who spent weeks fighting the deadly southern california wildfires. >>all the plastics, all the metals, all the unknowns that definitely poses some health concerns. and, you know, a lot of us were
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a string of new restaurants in san francisco now. getting a lot of attention. the main corridor in bayview hunters point has its fair share of challenges filling vacant spaces. like many other bay area neighborhoods, kenny choi spoke to some restaurant owners about how city funded programs are
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helping them shine. >>there's no time to slow down for kim cheung. as soon as the doors >>open. i got your food ready. okay, let me go get you guys a rag for your table. okay, give me one second. i'll be right with you. sir. >>she and her husband george opened frank grizzlies restaurant in the heart of the bayview less than two years >>ago. >>it all began with a pop up at the now closed anchor brewing company. >>and we did that pop. and we had a line out the door, which was crazy. and we were like, we couldn't believe it. we're like, oh my god, oh my god, this is actually happening. >>regulars say their cuisine using locally sourced, fresh ingredients is generating plenty of buzz around the >>bayview. love you bro. >>but it's not just the food, the energetic vibe throughout the day and events. they host like beats >>and eats. >>featuring live music and food at the restaurant, add to what has become a thriving hub of
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commerce and community. >>this is like the heartbeat of san francisco. like this community. >>but all this wouldn't be what it is today if not for city funded programs like the bayview makers kitchen, which trung and ellis used to get their pop up started. their lease at third and bancroft is partly funded by the >>city. >>diana ponce de leon works for the city of san francisco and is director of community economic development. >>the benefits to the community is now right. it's more vibrant, it's more lively. >>the office of employment and workforce development says between 2016 and 2024, there's been an investment of $8 million of public funding into third >>street. the storefronts are more beautiful. it attracts people to the services that they need as well as create this this level of economic opportunity for for the neighborhood. >>just down the street from frank grizzlies, gumbo social also opened its first permanent location thanks to similar city funded initiatives. >>we are seeing more places pop up. you are seeing more places
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open. little by little customers that we have to this day have been coming since the pop up days, which ends up being really cool. we wouldn't have been able to open a restaurant in san francisco had it not been for e-dot and the baby makers >>kitchen. they're helping to create a more vibrant community where they can work and spend time >>together >>with family and friends. >>had this space never opened up? like i have no idea what would have happened and it all just kind of worked out beautifully. >>it's a win for small businesses and for the city >>too. >>up next at five, we're heading to the site of the deadliest wildfire in california history. we're going to talk to a homeowner about how she convinced the ceo of a major insurance company to significantly drop rates in the fire prone community. plus, state workers are fighting back against governor newsom's order to return to the office four
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days a week. why? they tell us it will have hidden costs for everyone. plus. with a veteran from contra costa county as he makes his return to the shores of normandy 81 years after the invasion that turned the tide of history. >>the bay area concert calendar brought to you by live nation. >>1077. the bone presents two nights of metallica live at levi's stadium with limp bizkit and ice nine kills on june 20th, and pantera with suicidal tendencies on june >>22nd. >>tickets on sale now at ticketmaster.com. next friday, sticks heads to toyota pavilion at concord on june >>13th >>with special guest kevin cronin and don felder. tickets
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